Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Nazis in South America
Episode Date: May 23, 2024On May 11, 1960, an auto worker who went by Ricardo Klement stepped off the bus after his shift at a Mercedes-Benz automotive plant in Buenos Aires, Argentina. As he was walking home, he was abducte...d by several men and thrown into a vehicle. This was no ordinary kidnapping, however. There was no demand for ransom. That was because this was no ordinary autoworker. This was actually Adolf Eichmann, one of the masterminds behind the holocaust. Eichmann wasn’t the only member of the German Nazi Party to have found his way to South America. He was one of thousands. Learn more about the Nazis who fled to South America after WWII and how they managed to escape on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Available nationally, look for a bottle of Heaven Hill Bottled-in-Bond at your local store. Find out more at heavenhilldistillery.com/hh-bottled-in-bond.php Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free offer and get $20 off. Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month. Use the code EverythingEverywhere for a 20% discount on a subscription at Newspapers.com. Visit meminto.com and get 15% off with code EED15. Listen to Expedition Unknown wherever you get your podcasts. Get started with a $13 trial set for just $3 at harrys.com/EVERYTHING. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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On May 11, 1960, an auto worker who went by the name Ricardo Clement stepped off the bus after his shift at a Mercedes-Benz automotive plant in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
As he was walking home, he was abducted by several men and thrown into a vehicle.
This was no ordinary kidnapping, however. There was no demand for ransom.
And that was because this was no ordinary auto worker.
This was actually Adolf Eichmann, one of the masterminds behind the Holocaust.
cost. Eichmann wasn't the only member of the German Nazi party to have found his way to South
America. In fact, he was one of thousands. Learn more about the Nazis who fled to South America
after World War II and how they managed to escape on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? Throughline is a podcast that takes you back
in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the Thulein podcast from NPR.
At the conclusion of the war in Europe in May of 1945, many members of the Nazi party and
of the German government knew that they would be in big trouble if they were captured
by the Allies.
High-ranking Nazi officials had been captured, and many of them were to be put on trial
for war crimes at the Nuremberg trials.
Herman Goring, for example, was captured, put on trial, and committed suicide before he could be executed.
Heinrich Kimler tried to escape, was captured by the British, and also killed himself.
These were two of the very highest-ranking Nazis, but there were thousands more lower-level officers in the SS and Gestapo
who committed countless crimes over the course of the Third Reich.
They knew that their options were either to be captured, which meant execution or imprisonment,
possibly life imprisonment, or escape.
Staying in Germany was not a good option because it probably would have only been a matter of time before they were discovered.
They would eventually have to provide documentation for jobs or ID cards leading to their discovery.
Thousands of Nazis went into hiding in an attempt to flee somewhere where they could be safe.
In the months after the end of the war, an underground movement of former Nazis began to develop escape routes to countries mostly outside of Europe.
These escape routes became known as rat lines.
The term rat line doesn't come from the fact that the Nazis were rats,
although they were.
Rather, it was a nautical term used to describe rope ladders used to climb up mass to access sails.
There were multiple rat lines used by the Nazis,
and they received help from many different sources,
some wittingly and others unwittingly.
There were multiple ways that former Nazis escaped,
but there were two primary routes they took to escape Europe.
The first route involved going through Spain. Spain wasn't party to the Second World War,
but it also wasn't totally neutral. They were very sympathetic to the Axis powers,
as the leader of Spain, Francisco Franco, had been supported by fascist parties in both Italy and Germany.
In Spain, fleeing Nazis may not have been actively supported, but they also wouldn't have been
actively hunted down. The other ratline went through Italy. Nazis would find their way to Rome,
and then from there go to the port city of Genoa.
In the chaos of Europe after the war,
there was enough confusion to allow the Nazis
to take advantages of services offered by the Allies,
the Catholic Church, and the Red Cross.
The Catholic Church had a system in place
to settle Catholic refugees during the war,
which was co-opted.
The International Committee of the Red Cross
also offered passports to displaced persons.
In theory, the displaced persons' passports
were issued after an investigation,
but during this period after,
the war, these standards were very lax.
This allowed Nazis to travel under-assumed names and to escape attention.
In addition to exploiting these programs designed for legitimate refugees,
they were also aided by those who were true believers and Nazi sympathizers.
An Austrian Catholic bishop named Alois Houdal lived in Rome and actively supported Nazis
trying to escape Europe.
Likewise, there was a small group of Franciscan monks in Croatia, led by an ultra-national
nationalist priest by the name of Father Khrunislav Dreganovich who ran a rat line.
There's no evidence that there was any knowledge of this at the highest levels of the Vatican
or that anyone approved it. Likewise, there's no indication that the Red Cross knew how its programs
were being exploited. Some other rat lines went through Finland. The Finns had some sympathies for
Germany because they had a common enemy in the Soviet Union. The Nazis who got to Finland
could then go to neutral Sweden and from Sweden to other countries. And along the way of
there were also officials who were simply corrupt and would help or look the other way for money.
Countries such as Spain, Italy, and Finland were not the final destination for these fleeing Nazis.
Overwhelmingly, most Nazi officials attempted to flee to South America.
Why South America?
Several reasons made South America an attractive destination.
The first is that every South American country was formerly neutral during the majority of World War II.
Second, many countries had significant populations of German immigrants, which would allow them to blend in,
and some members of that community were even Nazi sympathizers.
However, there was one country that was particularly attractive to Nazis on the run,
Argentina.
Argentina had a particularly large German population.
Although neutral during the war, they ended up joining the Allies in March of 1945,
less than two months before the war in Europe ended due to pressure by the Americans.
However, in 1946, a new president came to power in Argentina, Juan Perron.
Peron had been sent to Italy as a diplomat in 1938, where he became enamored by the fascist
party that ruled the country.
Even before Peron came to power, Argentina was seen as a destination for Germans fleeing
the war.
Two cases in particular proved this point.
When Admiral Karl Donuts ordered all German submarines to stand down on May 5, 1945,
two submarines refused to obey the order. U-boat 977 and U-Boat-530 completely and independently of each other
decided to sail to Argentina. U-boat 530 arrived on July 10th and U-boat 977 arrived on August 17th.
With Peron in power, he began to actively help former Nazis escape and set up a new life in Argentina.
Peron actually publicly denounced the Nuremberg trials.
He commanded Argentinian embassies to issue visas and travel documents to Nazis that wish to come to Argentina.
When Nazis arrived in Argentina, they were often given cover and sometimes money to establish a new life.
Argentina accepted the largest number of Nazis, but there were also significant numbers that fled to Chile, Brazil, and Paraguay,
with smaller numbers in other Latin American countries as well.
It isn't known exactly how many former Nazis fled to South America, because no records were.
were kept and most of them were never discovered. Some of the best estimates put the number of
Nazis who found sanctuary in South America at 10,000. At least half of that number, and perhaps
more, settled in Argentina. The primary exodus of Nazis took place between 1945 and 1950.
While most of the Nazis who fled to South America were never arrested or even uncovered,
several of the highest ranking officials in the Third Reich were pursued for years after the war.
The best known Nazi fugitive was Adolf Eichmann.
Eichmann was the architect of the Final Solution.
He was considered to be the world's most wanted Nazi.
He arrived in Argentina using a falsified Red Cross passport,
which he used to board a steamship from Genoa in 1950.
He used the alias Ricardo Clement,
lived outside of Buenos Aires with his wife and four children,
and worked at a Mercedes-Benz factory.
He was abducted by agents of the Israeli Mossad in 1960,
smuggled out of the country dressed as an L.L. flight crew member and taken to Israel. There, he faced a
public trial and was executed minutes after midnight on June 1, 1962. The manhunt, abduction, and trial of
Adolf Eichmann will be the subject of a future episode. Dr. Joseph Mengela was probably the most
wanted Nazi after Eichmann. Mangala conducted medical experiments at concentration camps on twins,
pregnant women and disabled people.
He literally tortured people to death in the process of conducting his macabre experiments.
Mangola arrived in Argentina in 1949, married in Uruguay, under his own name, and returned
to Argentina to live in a suburb of Buenos Aires.
The government of West Germany asked Argentina to extradite him, but they never granted the
request.
After the arrest of Adolf Eichmann, Mangala spent the rest of his life in hiding moving between
Paraguay and Brazil.
He died while suffering a stroke while swimming in 1979.
His remains were positively identified in 1985.
Walter Ralph was a colonel in the SS who implemented the mobile gas chambers that were responsible for killing over 100,000 people.
He was actually captured by the Americans after the war, but he escaped.
He made it to Ecuador in 1949 and then moved to Chile, where he openly lived under his own name.
His whereabouts became known because he literally sent a letter to the West German government
with his new address so his pension could be forwarded.
He was arrested in 1962, but the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet refused to extradite him to West Germany.
He was never put on trial and died naturally in 1984.
These are just some of the more high-profile cases.
However, there were many more Nazis who were known to live in South America.
Klaus Barbie, the butcher of Leone, lived in Bolivia.
Fran Stangle, known as the White Death, ran the Nazi euthanasia program.
He was arrested in Brazil and put on trial in West Germany for the murder of 900,000 people.
Joseph Schwamberger was the commandant of three labor camps and organized the execution of hundreds of people,
personally killing at least 35 with his own hands.
He became a citizen of Argentina and ended up standing trial in West Germany in 19,
where he died in prison in 2004.
In 2015, researchers from the University of Buenos Aires found the ruins of a building built during the war that had German coins from the period as well as other Nazi artifacts.
The building was located in the rainforests of northeast Argentina, very close to the border of Paraguay.
The theory is that the building was constructed during the war in the event that Nazi leaders had to flee the country, but it was never used.
There's one more thing that many of you might be thinking at this point.
Given all the high-ranking Nazis who fled to South America,
what about the rumors that Hitler himself may have made it to South America?
Rumors have swirled for decades about the possibility that Adolf Hitler may have survived the war
and lived out the rest of his days in hiding somewhere in South America.
The death of Hitler and the rumors surrounding his survival are worthy of its own episode.
Suffice it to say that one of the reasons why the rumors persisted was because of the lack of evidence of the death of Hitler that was provided by the Soviets.
Even the Americans issued memorandums during the occupation of Berlin regarding the whereabouts of the body of Hitler.
The true stories of German U-boats that traveled all the way to Argentina only fueled the stories of Hitler surviving the war.
There were many accounts of people who claimed to have seen someone who looked vaguely Hitler-esque over the year,
but there has never been any hard evidence that Hitler actually survived the war or ever even made it out of his bunker in Berlin.
The escape of Nazi war criminals to South America was facilitated by a combination of organized networks, sympathetic and corrupt officials,
as well as exploiting legitimate services designed for refugees.
This allowed many high-ranking Nazis to evade justice for years, with even more having never been brought to justice at all.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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including the show's producers.
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