Did Reinhard Gehlen’s microfilmed archives contain any information on Victor Abakumov, of SMERSH?
share.google/aimode/syJY7yuv…— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
Month: May 2026
Did Reinhard Gehlen’s microfilmed archives contain any information on Victor Abakumov, of SMERSH? – Google Search google.com/search?q=Did+Rhei…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
Gehlen microfilmed his vast archives on the Soviet military – Google Search google.com/search?num=10&new…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
#CIA #FBI #ODNI
x.com/mikenov/status/2051706…
German Intelligence After WWII:
Reinhard Gehlen: Major General Reinhard Gehlen was the head of Fremde Heere Ost (FHO – Foreign Armies East), the military intelligence branch focused exclusively on the Soviet Union. Anticipating Germany’s defeat and the coming Cold War, Gehlen microfilmed his vast archives on the Soviet military and surrendered to the United States. The Pragmatic Alliance: Recognizing the immense value of Gehlen’s intelligence networks in the emerging conflict against the USSR, the U.S. Army (and later the CIA) made a highly controversial, pragmatic decision. They sponsored and funded Gehlen to rebuild his intelligence apparatus. Personnel Continuity: To build his new network, Gehlen recruited heavily from the ranks of former German intelligence. While this included some former Abwehr officers, it also controversially included many former SD, Gestapo, and SS members.German Intelligence After WWII gemini.google.com/share/fbc6…: Germany’s Post-WW2 period: Was it secretly and invisibly managed by the changed and newly adapted Abwehr?Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) #History #PostWW2 #Abwehr
Revisiting the Complex History of Post-WWII – Articles and Tweets thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com…
Recent historical analyses clarify that World War II ended with a total Allied victory rather than secret treaties, though the aftermath was far from simple. We are seeing a closer look at the complex legacy of the USSR’s victory and the messy truth about postwar escape networks.— https://x.com/mikenov/status/2051706824080908414— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
#CIA #FBI #ODNI
#CIA #FBI #ODNI
x.com/mikenov/status/2051706…Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) #History #PostWW2 #Abwehr
Revisiting the Complex History of Post-WWII – Articles and Tweets thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com…
Recent historical analyses clarify that World War II ended with a total Allied victory rather than secret treaties, though the aftermath was far from simple. We are seeing a closer look at the complex legacy of the USSR’s victory and the messy truth about postwar escape networks.— https://x.com/mikenov/status/2051706824080908414— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
#History #PostWW2 #Abwehr
Revisiting the Complex History of Post-WWII – Articles and Tweets thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com…
Recent historical analyses clarify that World War II ended with a total Allied victory rather than secret treaties, though the aftermath was far from simple. We are seeing a closer look at the complex legacy of the USSR’s victory and the messy truth about postwar escape networks.— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
Nazi Ratlines: Postwar Escape Networks gemini.google.com/share/28a8…
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Gemini: The “Ratlines” were not the product of a single, centralized organization. Rather, they were a series of overlapping, decentralized escape networks facilitated by a complex mix of ideological sympathizers, opportunistic bureaucrats, and pragmatically motivated intelligence agencies.While popular culture sometimes portrays a monolithic mastermind behind the escapes of high-ranking Nazis and fascists, the historical reality is that multiple distinct entities contributed to—and often exploited—these routes.
Here are the primary entities and networks that organized and fueled the Ratlines:
1. Elements Within the Catholic Church
Some of the most critical logistical support came from high-ranking clerics within the Catholic Church, operating primarily out of Rome. While historians debate the extent of the Vatican’s official, top-down complicity, it is well-documented that powerful individuals within the institution used its infrastructure to shelter fugitives and secure travel documents.
Bishop Alois Hudal: An Austrian bishop based in Rome who was openly sympathetic to Nazism. Hudal used his position to secure identity papers and visas for prominent war criminals, including Franz Stangl (commandant of Treblinka) and Adolf Eichmann.
Father Krunoslav Draganović: A Croatian Franciscan priest who organized the “San Girolamo” ratline. He was instrumental in helping members of the fascist Croatian Ustaše regime (including its leader, Ante Pavelić) and later other Nazi figures escape to South America.2. Allied Intelligence Agencies (The Cold War Pivot)
As the geopolitical landscape rapidly shifted from World War II to the Cold War, Western intelligence agencies prioritized the fight against Soviet communism. In doing so, they became active participants in the Ratline ecosystem.
U.S. Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC): The CIC and early iterations of U.S. intelligence actively utilized the Ratlines to extract and protect former Nazis who possessed valuable intelligence regarding the Soviet Union. The most infamous example is Klaus Barbie, the “Butcher of Lyon,” whom the CIC employed as an anti-communist asset and later helped escape to Bolivia via Draganović’s network.
British Intelligence: Similar to the United States, British intelligence services occasionally facilitated the escape or protection of fascist collaborators who were deemed useful for postwar anti-Soviet operations.3. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
The ICRC did not intentionally set out to help war criminals escape, but its postwar humanitarian infrastructure was heavily exploited by the entities mentioned above.
Travel Documents: In the chaos of postwar Europe, millions of displaced persons lacked passports. The ICRC issued temporary travel documents to help refugees resettle. Sympathetic clerics (like Hudal) and intelligence operatives easily exploited this overwhelmed system by submitting false identities for Nazi fugitives, essentially laundering their identities to allow safe passage to South America or the Middle East.4. Sympathetic Destination Governments
The Ratlines required a safe terminus, and several governments actively facilitated the arrival of former German military officers and scientists.
Argentina (Juan Perón’s Government): President Juan Perón was a primary architect of the receiving end of the Ratlines. He set up offices in Europe to actively recruit German military officers, scientists, and technicians to help modernize Argentina’s military and economy. Perón’s government worked directly with the clerical networks to arrange immigration visas.
Francoist Spain: Spain often served as both a transit hub and a final destination. The ideological alignment of Francisco Franco’s regime made it a safe haven for fleeing fascists, who could either settle there or wait for passage across the Atlantic.In summary, the Ratlines were less a formal agency and more a state-crime nexus born out of postwar chaos. They functioned through an alliance of convenience between ideological sympathizers inside the Church, humanitarian systems ripe for exploitation, Cold War intelligence services seeking anti-Soviet assets, and opportunistic governments eager to acquire European military and scientific expertise.
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
#CIA #FBI #ODNI
German Intelligence After WWII gemini.google.com/share/fbc6…
Search: Germany’s Post-WW2 period: Was it secretly and invisibly managed by the changed and newly adapted Abwehr?
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Gemini: The short answer is no. Post-WW2 Germany was not secretly or invisibly managed by a newly adapted Abwehr. Following the total collapse of the Third Reich, governance was strictly controlled by the Allied occupation forces, and the Abwehr itself had already ceased to exist before the war even ended.However, the premise of your question touches on a very real and highly consequential piece of intelligence history: the structural evolution and institutional continuity of German espionage from the Nazi era into the Cold War.
Here is the historical reality of what happened to German intelligence, and why the idea of a “shadow government” managed by former spies often surfaces.
The Fate of the Abwehr
The Abwehr, the German military intelligence service commanded by Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, did not survive World War II.By 1944, the Abwehr had fallen out of favor with Hitler. Many of its high-ranking officers, including Canaris, were deeply involved in the German resistance and the failed July 20 plot to assassinate Hitler. In the aftermath of the plot, the Abwehr was dismantled entirely. Its remnants were absorbed into the SS’s Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA), under the control of Heinrich Himmler.
When the war ended in 1945, there was no cohesive Abwehr left to adapt or go underground.
The Kernel of Truth: The Gehlen Organization
While the Abwehr did not survive to manage post-war Germany, a different branch of German intelligence did manage to adapt and survive—not to govern, but to serve the new geopolitical order.This was the Gehlen Organization, which serves as a fascinating case study in how intelligence agencies adapt to shifting national security interests.
Reinhard Gehlen: Major General Reinhard Gehlen was the head of Fremde Heere Ost (FHO – Foreign Armies East), the military intelligence branch focused exclusively on the Soviet Union. Anticipating Germany’s defeat and the coming Cold War, Gehlen microfilmed his vast archives on the Soviet military and surrendered to the United States.
The Pragmatic Alliance: Recognizing the immense value of Gehlen’s intelligence networks in the emerging conflict against the USSR, the U.S. Army (and later the CIA) made a highly controversial, pragmatic decision. They sponsored and funded Gehlen to rebuild his intelligence apparatus.
Personnel Continuity: To build his new network, Gehlen recruited heavily from the ranks of former German intelligence. While this included some former Abwehr officers, it also controversially included many former SD, Gestapo, and SS members.Espionage, Not Governance
It is crucial to differentiate between running an intelligence network and managing a country.The Gehlen Organization (which eventually became West Germany’s official foreign intelligence agency, the Bundesnachrichtendienst or BND, in 1956) wielded significant influence in shaping Western intelligence assessments of the Soviet bloc. However, they did not manage the German state.
Post-war Germany was geographically and politically divided. West Germany (the FRG) was rapidly integrated into the Western democratic and economic sphere under the watchful eyes of the U.S., Britain, and France. East Germany (the GDR) was tightly controlled by the Soviet Union and its own brutal state security apparatus, the Stasi. The political leadership of West Germany, figures like Konrad Adenauer, were firmly in control of the civilian government, and they frequently clashed with Gehlen.
Why the Misconception Persists
The idea of a covert, intelligence-run post-war Germany usually stems from a few factors:The “State-Crime Nexus” and De-Nazification: The Western Allies prioritized anti-communism over thorough de-Nazification in the intelligence and judicial sectors. The sheer number of former Nazi-era officials who smoothly transitioned into roles within the Gehlen Organization and the West German government created a lasting public suspicion about who was really pulling the strings.
Lack of Oversight: For its first decade, the Gehlen Organization operated with minimal democratic oversight, funded by the CIA and acting almost as a state within a state.
Soviet Propaganda: The KGB and Stasi heavily emphasized and exaggerated the presence of former Nazis in West German institutions to undermine the legitimacy of the Bonn government.Ultimately, while the transition of German intelligence into the Cold War is a masterclass in bureaucratic survival and institutional compromise, it was the United States and the Soviet Union—not a resurrected Abwehr—that dictated the structural realities of post-war Germany.
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
#WW2 Surrender: No Secret Peace gemini.google.com/share/7f94…
Was WW2 concluded by a secret #SeparatePeace between US-UK and #NaziGermany?
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Gemini: No, World War II did not conclude with a secret, separate peace between the US, the UK, and Nazi Germany. The conflict in Europe ended with the unconditional surrender of all German armed forces to the joint Allied powers, which included the United States, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, and France.— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 5, 2026
