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Martin Bormann - Nazi in Exile (Paperback)
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Martin Bormann - Nazi in Exile (Paperback)
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Anticipating the defeat of the Third Reich, Reichsleiter Martin
Bormann set up 750 corporations in neutral countries, primed as
vehicles to receive the liquid wealth of Germany in addition to
patents and other proprietary industrial information. An
organizational genius and the real power behind Hitler, Bormann,
known as the "Brown Eminence," successfully fled Europe for South
America and administered a "Reich in Exile" in the years following
the war. With remnants of the SS as an enforcement arm, former
Gestapo chief General Heinrich Mueller as security director, the
750 corporations as a base of economic power and the willing
silence and cooperation of the Western Allies, Bormann guided his
organization to a position of consummate power. One banker quoted
by Manning termed the Bormann Organization, the "world's most
important accumulation of money power under one control in
history." Controlling Germany's major corporations, the Federal
Republic itself and much of Latin America, the Bormann Organization
also maintained a formidable circle of influence in the United
States. Paul Manning has written the definitive text on the Bormann
Organization. Manning worked with CBS radio during World War II in
London as a member of the elite Edward R. Murrow/Walter Cronkite
team. As part of his coverage duties, he was the only member
actually allowed to fly on U.S. Air Force missions as a fully
functional crew member. Having qualified as a gunner, his flights
included B-17 missions with the 8th Air Force over Germany and
several B-29 missions to Japan. On behalf of CBS, he broadcasted
the surrenders of Japan and Germany. In 1948, along with fifteen
other distinguished war correspondents, he was awarded a medal for
his reporting of the unconditional surrender of the Germans at
Rheims. After the war Manning continued his journalistic profession
and also served as a speechwriter for Nelson Rockefeller.
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