This study takes a documentary approach to examining the most spectacular, controversial, and myth-shrouded aspects of the Third Reichs historyranging from centers of power and covert operations to the postwar hideouts of Nazi criminals. Drawing on archival records, eyewitness accounts, and contemporary research, the author re-examines cases that continue to capture the imagination: Rudolf Hesss secret flight to Britain, Heinrich Himmlers "shadow play" with the Allies, attempts to secure a separate peace, and the behind-the-scenes decisions made during the Reichs final phase. At the heart of the book is a gallery of Nazi criminals and regime insidersincluding Mengele, Reinefarth, von Alvensleben, Eichmann, Stangl, Rauff, Skorzeny, and Degrellewhose post-1945 lives reveal the extent of impunity, escape networks, and the tacit protection afforded by the Church, intelligence agencies, and Western governments. The author reconstructs the mechanisms of escape to South America, life underground in Europe, and the subsequent efforts of "Nazi hunters" such as Simon Wiesenthal and Beate and Serge Klarsfeld. Furthermore, Drozdowski analyzes dark symbols and myths: the "Werwolf" and the alleged "Nazi underground," ODESSA, the legend of the "Alpine Redoubt," the German nuclear project and "wonder weapons," the "Lebensborn" program as a "master race factory," the mystery surrounding the final U-boats, Hitlers special train "Amerika/Brandenburg," and "Operation Paperclip," through which American agencies recruited former Nazi scientists. He juxtaposes these stories with documentary evidence to show where thriller-like legends end and historical reality beginsand how the unresolved, distorted, or deliberately suppressed episodes of that past continue to weigh on our memory of the Second World War to this day.
Details
English text, 80 bw-illustrations. 224 pages.
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Church Street 47 S70 2AS South Yorkshire Vereinigtes Königreich