Anonymous ID: 223e67 Jan. 2, 2019, 3:50 p.m. No.4570642   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0649 >>0681 >>0707 >>0729 >>1253

Red Cross and Vatican helped thousands of Nazis to escape

 

The Red Cross and the Vatican both helped thousands of Nazi war criminals and collaborators to escape after the second world war

 

Gerald Steinacher, a research fellow at Harvard University, was given access to thousands of internal documents in the archives of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

The documents include Red Cross travel documents issued mistakenly to Nazis in the postwar chaos.

 

They throw light on how and why mass murderers such as Adolf Eichmann, Josef Mengele and Klaus Barbie and thousands of others evaded capture by the allies.

 

By comparing lists of wanted war criminals to travel documents, Steinacher says Britain and Canada alone inadvertently took in around 8,000 former Waffen-SS members in 1947, many on the basis of valid documents issued mistakenly.

 

The documents – which are discussed in Steinacher's book "Nazis on the Run: How Hitler's henchmen fled justice" – offer a significant insight into Vatican thinking, particularly, because its own archives beyond 1939 are still closed.

The Vatican has consistently refused to comment.

 

Steinacher believes the Vatican's help was based on a hoped-for revival of European Christianity and dread of the Soviet Union.

But through the Vatican Refugee Commission, war criminals were knowingly provided with false identities.

 

The Red Cross, overwhelmed by millions of refugees, relied substantially on Vatican references and the often cursory Allied military checks in issuing travel papers, known as 10.100s.

 

It believed it was primarily helping innocent refugees, though correspondence between Red Cross delegations in Genoa, Rome and Geneva shows it was aware Nazis were getting through.

 

Steinacher says the documents indicate that the Red Cross, mostly in Rome or Genoa, issued at least 120,000 of the 10.100s, and that 90% of ex-Nazis fled via Italy, mostly to Spain, and North and South America – notably Argentina.

 

Former SS members often mixed with genuine refugees and presented themselves as stateless ethnic Germans to gain transit papers.

 

Steinacher says that individual Red Cross delegations issued war criminals with 10.100s "out of sympathy for individuals … political attitude, or simply because they were overburdened".

Stolen documents were also used to whisk Nazis to safety.

 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/may/25/nazis-escaped-on-red-cross-documents

Anonymous ID: 223e67 Jan. 2, 2019, 3:51 p.m. No.4570649   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0681 >>0718 >>0738 >>1275

>>4570642

 

Nazi abuse of Red Cross humanitarian service

 

The recent presentation in Argentina of an International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) travel document used by the Nazi official Adolf Eichmann to flee Europe has been widely covered in the world's media and led to questions about these documents.

 

The ICRC has previously deplored the fact that Eichmann and other Nazi criminals misused its travel documents to cover their tracks.

 

The document that has now appeared in Argentina is authentic.

Adolf Eichmann obtained it after submitting a request to the ICRC in which he us ed a false name and a forged identity card.

Neither during the immediate post-war period nor today does the ICRC have the means to verify the identity of applicants for travel documents.

Such identity checks can be carried out only by the authorities of the countries to which they are travelling and which have accepted the ICRC's travel documents.

 

https://www.icrc.org/en/doc/resources/documents/feature/2007/travel-document-feature-310507.htm