For those interested in learning about Operation Paperclip:
Although he officially sanctioned the operation, President Harry Truman forbade the agency from recruiting any Nazi members or active Nazi supporters. Nevertheless, officials within the JIOA and Office of Strategic Services (OSS)—the forerunner to the CIA—bypassed this directive by eliminating or whitewashing incriminating evidence of possible war crimes from the scientists’ records, believing their intelligence to be crucial to the country’s postwar efforts.
Although defenders of the clandestine operation argue that the balance of power could have easily shifted to the Soviet Union during the Cold War if these Nazi scientists were not brought to the United States, opponents point to the ethical cost of ignoring their abhorrent war crimes without punishment or accountability.[1]
I just posted a video of Annie Jacobsen talking about Nuclear War, she also wrote a book about Operation Paperclip.[2]
In the days and weeks after Germany’s surrender, American troops combed the European countryside in search of hidden caches of weaponry to collect. They came across facets of the Nazi war machine that the top brass were shocked to see, writer Annie Jacobsen told NPR’s All Things Considered in 2014. Jacobson wrote about both the mission and the scientists in her book, Operation Paperclip: The Secret Intelligence Program That Brought Nazi Scientists To America.
“One example was they had no idea that Hitler had created this whole arsenal of nerve agents,” Jacobsen says. “They had no idea that Hitler was working on a bubonic plague weapon. That is really where Paperclip began, which was suddenly the Pentagon realizing, ‘Wait a minute, we need these weapons for ourselves.’"[3]
Operation Paperclip was publicized, because it’s easy to pretend they were all just apolitical scientists.
Operation Bloodstone was not, because you can’t twist sending nazi officers to facilitate torture and mass killings in South America and Eastern Europe into anything but what it was.
For those interested in learning about Operation Paperclip:
I just posted a video of Annie Jacobsen talking about Nuclear War, she also wrote a book about Operation Paperclip.[2]
[1] https://www.history.com/news/what-was-operation-paperclip ↩︎
[2] https://lemmy.world/post/24646542 ↩︎
[3] https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/why-us-government-brought-nazi-scientists-america-after-world-war-ii-180961110/ ↩︎
Operation Paperclip was publicized, because it’s easy to pretend they were all just apolitical scientists.
Operation Bloodstone was not, because you can’t twist sending nazi officers to facilitate torture and mass killings in South America and Eastern Europe into anything but what it was.
Thanks for the information about Operation Bloodstone!