![]() occupiers of Germany after World War II declared that all military research in Germany was to cease, as part of the process of denazification. Some of the Nazis brought over were frauds who had passed themselves off as scientists, some of whom subsequently learned their fields while working for the U.S. Some trial transcripts were classified in their entirety to avoid exposing the pasts of important U.S. government to Argentina to protect them from prosecution. government for years, as they lived and worked in Boston Harbor, Long Island, Maryland, Ohio, Texas, Alabama, and elsewhere, or were flown by the U.S. Some were protected from their past by the U.S. Some of the Nazis tried at Nuremberg had already been working for the U.S. military hired sixteen hundred former Nazi scientists and doctors, including some of Adolf Hitler’s closest collaborators, including men responsible for murder, slavery, and human experimentation, including men convicted of war crimes, men acquitted of war crimes, and men who never stood trial. history books, movies, and television programs.Īfter World War II, the U.S. But the basic facts have been available they’re just left out of most U.S. Jacobsen has added some details, and the U.S. It isn’t terribly secret anymore, of course, and it was never very intelligent. Annie Jacobsen’s new book is called Operation Paperclip: The Secret Intelligence Program That Brought Nazi Scientists to America. ![]()
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