GEHLEN Reinhard CIA File VOL 3
GEHLEN Reinhard CIA File VOL 3
GEHLEN Reinhard CIA File VOL 3
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21 JUN 1956
AnaN:
Kr. J. Daunt
RR:
AUGUST WILEES21
Licist= Agent
PASIII.
Dear Sir:
3)1c).- 319-
raatter.
00j7,
1 Incl.
Memo Pr 031, r 2,
dtd 5 Ur 56
co Director
Central Intelligutiee A.cancy
2493 "E'' Street, W. W.
-77710" Washington 25, D. C.
ATTIC: Deputy Director, Plans
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and his fathor is now deceased. He stated that his mother is 1 :ARY/DURBAN, was
MARY\ PAS'.3}4 present address: East Flanders Street (Street number(unknown)
Portland, Oregon. PASCH advised that his mother lived at 233 West Belmont,
Phoenix, Ariczona prior to movint; to Portland * rASCH advised that prior to being
deported frop the United States in June or July 1934, he was married to Eta:ENE
?ASCU, nee: LFO3TER and was divorced from her. PASCH stated that he had a
daughter JCAN ASCH by that marriage who is presently resiuinc with her mother
at Casb 15th Street, Portland, Oregon. PASCH added that he is presently married
ASCH German National, who lives at Amburg, Altona. Gilbert Street 21,
to
Germany. The undersigned inspected PASCH S passport which disclosed the following
atsport No 772/54; Deutsch No. 18C1231; issued to AUGUST WILHaM
information:
PASCH, born 14 Ari1 1913, on 13 September 1354 at the German Consulate, San
Francisco, California. (PASCH advised that the reason the passport was not issued
in Germany was due to the fact that he' had lost a passport that had been issued in
7Jermarly).
.
PASCII advised that he was raised in the United States since the year
L922 and his adiress prior 't..o bnc doported to errr.an,y in June or July of 1:434
ras 695 East 11th Street, Portland, Oregon.
. PASCH advised that 'prior to beim- deported from the United States in
.une or July 1934,. he had been errployed by 3013 .; 1A2S vino was a bootlegger and he
: ASCHI was involved In a robbery with three (5) ther Men and the victira was
illect and he was charged urith manslaughter. PASCH advised that, he was also charged
ith two (2) charges. of bank robbery and was ' deported to Germany for having cortaittel
criminal act. PASC,7. Stated that (luring the year 1D34, he was convicted of larceny
7 a Gera=-CI\
ourt, and was sent to prison in Eamburg, lermany. . PA3Ci! advised that
3 met.:NICLD
I-UU,'"P.AS:1:2 author of "Cut of . The . N. ight" (pot ., ,,,,,
,,,, JA7S,,
'Ii:11,"2.1".:) in this
.i.io n: and a 'that tim.e .;132 :.3 tol :i him that he (C1-0,4*!-:;L:11) had beer.'Yteported to Geri arly
9rn the United Jtates after having byen convie ,ed of ro"..)bc..ry in San Francisco,
J..ifornia during i- he year. .i.J21. or If ..'.: . :'3 ..:i. statt- .i :Ala . C..7 .41.2:1; told him the
.ciclOnt was actually an assault for politiCa. , reasons bewever was passed cff as a
bberY. ;13CP. auvisei ., t..nco. the :2, :1'::1at13 . al !rov .-.(1 C.,Ii.A7.1::.S to escape from this prison .
1i)35 in order 01.1.t, ;: ,..k:-; cnuld act as an 5.e.;:dx-..lant for the Geri rkl.t18. l'ACIf . .
at(.d ina.L '...Z.A2:-',..;. l'urni( u 1.11..: -German; .wIth.,Ilortnation which led to . the execution
. the G::imans of a banish fisherman who Iri.4,: ; ..pp_l_Yinc
;li
thee underground with forged'
:;t:perts. :A.; .;:: ae..lel t:1;:t ,A1- ',.; then o oa :ft: to 'At.. United Jtates ti.e same .
ir (i)3).
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were
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liberated by American Forces on 3 Nay 1945. PASCH stated that he told the
Americans his story aria gave them his correct name. He was then issued a pass
and a. vehiale and was to1e! to drive it to Hamburg, Germany and deliver it to the
Feritish Military Government. PASCH stated that he did this and was not held by
the Allies. PASCH stated that from 19e5 to 1946 ne worked as an interpreter for
the Royal Navy (British) ana in the first part of 1946 he stowed avey on a ship .
and went to England wnere he remained or awhile. He stowed away or another ship
and wont to Cuba. He aavised that he spent approximately ten (10) months in Cuba
stowed away on another ship and went to Niani, Florida, wnere he entered the United
States and was caught by American officials and receivea a six (6) month sentence
in the Federal Prison in Tallahassee, Uorida. leti :A stated that he escaped from .
this prison approximately thirty (50) dais before his time was up as he had told
the ofiiciaes that he was FRZD RAILZY, a oeitish subject from = trigepore and. he dia
not want to be deported to Singapore. eASCH stated that he was recaptured in I
Jacksonville, Florida; was tried for escape in the Feeeral Court of lallahaseeee
end was'sentenced.to a year and a. dayC eAsen stated that he served his sentence;7
told the officials his true identity ano was deported . to Germany in February 1969.
PASCH advised that he has been in the lierehant earine since that date.
in
most
recent being approxihately three (5) years ago, offered. him Five Hundred Thousand
'Marks to kidnap , FNUA_MeN (Phonetie), a former : German General and presently
empleyed zy the United States Government as a ' key. intelligence official, ance.to
turn him over to he Russians and la he could. not capture GEHLEN, to kill him.
. : PAsCH stated that whils . he was in HamburgvUerMany.on approximately
15 February 1955, he visited the office of Arbeits Amt in. an attempt to find out .
why he had not received his . "unemp\1),
oyment money" for tele past five (5) . weeks. PAH
SC
auvised that he was referred to FNU zumn who is the. head of all the.3erman employment aeenclee, namely, Arbeits Arht (Bevenbenderhoff), Hambure, Germany. PASCH
stated,.that he was very surprised to see DZUBER because he - had last seen him in"
prison. PASCH stated that DZUBER talked to him privately and asked him if he had
been propositioned to kidnap GEHLEN and failing that,. kill him.. PASCH indicated that
le. had whereupon =TER asked him how much money FELLIMBORG had offeredhim to do
:he Job, .PASCH - etated that when he told MUM. that he as offered Pile, :iundred:'
lhousand Marks, DZUBER . told him that the Job now was Worth Five Milleon egarks and
as . an'easy way : to be net for.lifu. . PASCH would be paid in American money and could
ly e anywhere in the world. M.SCH stated thateDZUIER toldK I4m that' the let, would be
esy because . aithour,h LiEHLE .6 is under heavy guard "thera,keimii7that he is in. the
abit of visiting a woman and at such times he is net under 6uard. PASCH advieed .
lat ee told DZiael; that he was not interested; that he may be a crook but heLdn't eet mixed up in this type thing. PASO Leivieed teat he asked Da T ER why he
ented him to do , the job and DZUMO told him (:- - MCV) because !.Its spa .. 1,w1 .A '....nclish, Ls oducatcd in the 'United States and could Let closer tc GE:.!,.::: Ulan ..cric elec./ .
advir.vJ tnat both DZUW. and FELI.r.2A2, told , htm tnal
/TES want ,id to ty:t
ani indicated to Wm
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ro rec ivinL !,h(!lr order!J frwl
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A!!KS, hvwtv
Heights 519n
Weights 152
Build, Heavy
Hair: Red with streaks of 'gray; widow's peak,
combed straiaht back.
Complexion: Ruddy (rod faced).
Eyess Liahablue; was not wearing glasses..
Occupations umpman, Merchana Karim . (oil tanker)
Speedhf Speaks : alightly broken English, Getman
Scars and Marks: Faded tattoo is follows:
On atop.of left hand has crossed flags,
British flag on left, American Slag
on right, American spread eagle On
.4. At the time the undersigned talked to PASCH he: was not evasive alOd 'appeared to be truthful.. PASCH advised that his employers know nothing of his
past and'requeste)d that if they are contacted, that no mention . or his past be made.
ismomn toAhom nor the reason for their being contaeted*be made known to them. :-/13.;i!
Wriaed that he eigned a one (1) year contract to work on tha ship Febcal and he has
incia told that the ship f s noxt port of oail Will bc the West Indies. The undersitmed
adP1Bed PASCH that he may be coth.aoted at a future date and he said that that would
ba perfeetly all aizht.
7.1,4
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COOPER also advised that the Febcal arrived at the oil dock, St.
George on 2 !-,arch 1956, discharged it's cargo to Esso Oil Company and left in
ballast fcrAruba, West Indies on 5 March 1956.
6. This memorandum is ciassified SECRET pursuant to the authority
contained in AFR 205-1.
1'
7r1
ic rtAr
7 MAR 1956
ank ffe
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trns.
ri3O71
eltri
Nr. 13431
17 July 1;66
TO:
88
FROM:
801
t's
3. Our efforts to check out this rather fantastic report have brcught !!!!!=
out sane intereating,:but . inconelusive facts. In the first place, there were
no traces on,Pg414,...134ILErjor'NADEVXAACH; the latter name id, however, ob- !!!=q4
viously a garble. KREB3 was born 17 December 1905 in Darmitadt, Germany.
He lived. in Hamburg in World War I, and vas active subsequently in Hamburg
in the. International of eamen and Harbor-Workers (19H); working under
'IGLU:EDER. In 1924 he attended the. Lenin school in Moscow. In 1925 he
attended'a special school of the Profintern in Leningrad for six weeks,
Cer0
lulu;
attending courses in organization of 'workers, direction of strikes,.radicalisation of strikes, etc. Altar returning to Hamburg he shipped out aa a
seaman and vent to San Francisco, vbere he vas arrested for assault with intent to kill and sentenced to can Quentin prison. After 39 months be vas
paroled and deported to Germany. After his return to Germany he was active
07/./ /K /Vc://..'1///,
Nr. 13431
Psi' 2 ---
. In the ses27421's cell of the International Port Bureau. The attsmiled the
33remen Nautical. Amdesey at the sem time there he vas suppoo..Ni to organize
Commottist celi =fug student chips officers. After graduation ire became
secretary of the Dateralub in Met= vhich in 1933. became the Internine of
the.ISH. In August 1931 he became Secretary of the laterelub at Beefourg,
ialaich sewed to Coparabsseca after Eitler man to poser, au& he vas sent on
ISE instrustion missions to various European countries. In the fall of
1933 VOLIAIEBER sent KRIM to Getesay to do enderground vork among semen,
harbor miters and rive:nem. He ma arrested shortly after =riva l bat
prier for crcex tro years, then =ranee& the Gestapo be heit defected.
Be vas et by the Gestapo to Copenhagen to set as en intbrusat gaceg Comamarlet 010.
persons there. Upon his return to Copeaso= be acted. as a.
double, but vas matrons& by the Coneenists vho, through ki ted. seicini
formattien. to the Gestapo. Antagonism dentiaPed bet-veal: him scaWOIZMIE/0
cal 'the Ccessenists be. cuspidious.of hic. meording to his oun
statehe esneped being ?t to the USSR by =king his.vey to Primes-end then
to the U.S. (in 193T). Hie book "Ont of the sight reeited hiS iniiver-ea a
Cazesnaiat *gent1 Germeny Waimea 1923-193T; the book is a niiinife of truth
tagliatian. In 1942 after California pontos:0& him, be vas oideiii& deported
again. Vila sat during tbeI=.end. deportation me inpessible. -.41ta Vas Par doned as an
alien end drafted into the . erny. He was the -Bianne 'Star
Medal; for -valor against the aparase at random in 1945 end earlY.-in. 1947
Iniagranted Alis. citizenship. He died in January 3951.
Altbaggh the above traces areinocee.basive they do seem to bring
out a 0===. denoninetor in that tPASCS is a nerehelt seaman In toueh vith
a HenbUrg affielal, and tba bath 1131213 ant a tau TZLLEN;1331/12 vant for strati
pars active in the Ilanbarg area in illegal Ccensraist activities.
801
21 Sept 56
Extract from a memorandum for the record of a oonversationnbetween
' the DOI and General Gehlen, Chief Of the West German Intelligence Service
which took place in Frankfurt, Germany on 27 August 1956. Fied$ Policy
"14, Dulles asked Gehlen whether he had decided to send his
daughter to the U.S. Gehlen replied that he hoped to do so in the
second half of next year. No specific mention of support was made
though I believe Gehlen must have recognized from the general tenor
of the conversation wwillingness to provide some."
EMI 2005
Ow.
VIA:
D. ATCH NO,
EGNA-9935
CLASSIFICATION
TO
: Chief, EE
DATE.
4 October 1956
Operational
1. UTILITY and alias RAINER came to tea the afternoon of September 30.
2. There seem to be no worrisome problems involving us. Personnel and
other problems arising from legalization are UTIL1TY's major concern (Dr. 'Born
said to me at dinner the other night: "If he (UTILITY) keeps on with, this
Ausverkauf, he wont have any decent people left.") As you know, he has given
up 80 in the past few months. This assures him friends in important places,
but it doesn't produce reports.
mamma
commusem.
number basis. We agreed that this is probably just as well., since the opposite galMC.
number will be Wieland; who will know how to handle it. USAREUR is certainly
entitled:to this representation, and it helps complete the normal overt picture.
4. We agreed that it wOU1d be well for Colonel Clay, the new)0tOPAL:chief,' to be briefed bylP0Band UPSWING. This visit may be combined with
theSvisitizif General Willems.'
. .
5. 'UTILITY' thinks' that the time has come to enter further into the.
.
:BOFIGHTER pietlire.under his new colors. This:seems reasonable enough., It is
a -subjeOt . that might 'well be explored during UTILITY's . Washington visit.
.;6..,..As:ricent .: cable traffic hasindicated,,UTIL1TY is:anxious-tO.see4iPWING;. ,
, as,a'hosst SrViOe.,.. begin to play a.spontoring . and'isupporting role foritthol4Littella.0
services in their relations.with . thearman aUthorities::,....Thismaysbesdhje.**
1. interpretatiOn , us:a:deitira...0 move in and 'cut US Out.'',I-am:ratherjnclined
- :regard-it:ts..sinoere and to believe that hi'would. reallY help.. Thisifiliatin,'
willnotmature fast, however, if only becausOPSW1NO t s prestige is'onottho:r.-'
oughly-established among the Germans, and will not be for some time .Indeed,;.
one of the objectives of . the exercise is doubtless the boost to prestige that
.1
might be expected to derive from it.
UTILITY would 'like to meet the Ambassador. I . think he Should, and shR)1.
arrance. ' .
7.
DAyE 2005
- ""
"' 51-28 A
MAR. 1949
fit
Hi
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SECRET
,
-2-
SECRET
Qom
07=ZA
Car,
OCT 1958
=mai
01:1
szcz
nammai
issemest
THROUGH:
EUWECT:
RICX:
lismOmma
COPPJO
Laji
0:1
5,, . Homer, in visit Of Geblent.s torthaosdng -visit here and considaringthe possibilitr that e1Aber be .or =I sight . raise the aim*
to. bring these netters
elevations during-that:Visit I : consider it igr .
wish
to initiate a premight
to ?air attention, esPedielL- Since you
liminarjejenhtinge.ef visiewith either 0/g ., CAI or MI. In . m. espizion
we aro '1.04.1siterosted.u...4iiint PP.operaions with the GIS, audios eircr nfl
AC]
6. In terms of
SECRET
.-
poligr objectives
6. Interns of
ander the prent
n otrcensUneem as long es/Awes=
oppose ocoperattna
foreign policy
heads thalWnd:CheriesnNivermsNat colas lane as 143. aIa-sponsoned PP
Remo eantinnts to ociumievseitildemanees
our
eperationsi. eipecialli into ItsiSternaessagro..V111 preevembir be in Atkaiat=
Marto
lasts
interestst this happy stst40AtAaffaiivis,set
choneenor firmer and svoititowIthez, are incased= pater
zM.
10111
. It appears therefore dottinlee to tosittepiie
diffttitopeAsi t4lo nOking
assets In Oensar as passible cud to hoop
meme4000isidebts.valAteral PP
support if Oehlen!is PP operations, if men to the unavoidable. minienew.
_
. .
17
Aliete"
i_tgtrt
PP/OPSARt
8 Oiteber 1956'
Distribution: Orig 8c 1 - Addressee
2 - PP/OPS/PR1 - RI
SeCRET
P.127008/01.
Oktebor 1956
12.11.s.1 "Ausesteallnt".P
erliC=1411
311initatt"
gegen Allan 'EMS
BEST AVAILABLE C
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kehrte la-
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trial ausenasnavitellea t darn sick an Prepagnalaaktionen
pen aostiestselts relitikei signet.
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12 Oototer 1956
/Mc Er.liessi,
Attes4o4 Z cowl you reporb oailoto . may
of istotesi tOroot It -iv two poliettlo that Ole
tries to ectapoeo sateria
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;
ZOX1195-6
1 T71.116ENICE 4GEN.C)
SOrg ES'p ilT 130SEXEMPT ON 3B2t;
i44k4
c),k
SECRET.
NAME: GEHLEN, Reinhard
(ex-Brig. Gen.)
C_
Dr. Richard SCHNEIDER, b. 4 Mar 1905. Covername used within the Org.
Nt, .
10044Lx.0
g:06mi
MaimJI
mamma .
CC:b
Brizasza
commumm
El=
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE
AS:ENC`f
SOURCESMETHODSEXEMPTIO
0B2E
T 1005
CAE
OTHER RELATIVES: ' Subject lit one of four children resulting fr om three marriages by his
father; each following the death of the previous wife.. One of these
marriages resulted in two children and each of the others in one. At
least one of the wives had been previously married and had children.
Thus Subject has full, half,step ).roth9Fo and sisters.
GEHLEN, Giovanni .b, 15 Mar 1901, Rome, Italy.
---' et)
GILMER, Walter (DO b. ca 1905, Germany. Book
tor.
'd - Killed during bombraid cm
-Nuremberg on 20 Feb . 1945.
.
GEELEN, fnu / (male). Died in' the Orient (Shanghai). during the war.
von GEHLEN, Barbara (nee GEHLEN) b. 5 J1111912 Breslau, Germany. (Barbara married a
distant relative, Walter Carlos von GEELEN, ex-German Navy eariplayeq, trained
lawyer, 'who had Worked for the British on a Navy Project in Kiel, also listed
.
as an accountant. He was transferred to Lisbon from Brazil where he is
presently listed as the Counselor for ECODAMic Affairs of the German Legation,
.
Lisbon, Portugal),.
SCENEEMILCH,' Hate Dietrich (Dr of medicine) b. 4 Jan 09 Schoppinitz, Kra. Kattowitz(Step-Br.)
..
.
Inu,fnu
'
(Dr) also a step-brother.
.
SEIDLITZ-K7ORZBACH, Joachimlians Sigiamund von b. 7 Dec ll Loebschuetz. Brother-in-law:
cr.srorr
OrAJAZT
ZIPPER EMPLOYMENT:
EOD: 1946 (USIS Co-operstion)
Payroll No: 3002. Jan 55 pr, from "S" to "P" category: DM 1845/2500.
Emergency No:
Position: Chief, Section 88 (ex-Section 30).
_
Organization: .
Cover Unit: Industrial' -Research Unit.
7924 Army Procurement Team.
Subject is connected with Bavarian Light Metals Works.
Special Connections - ; 20
Housing Loan No. 8, ,..ed 1 Apr 51.
Bank: Bayerische Vereinsbank, Munich.
Page 2
012*St
DOCUMENTATION:
Passport: Reinhard GESLEN van VAERNEWYCK, TTD # 0006485 (50-51).
Reinhard GEHLEN: TTD 0006440 issued Stuttgart, 30 Sep 49 valid to
30 Mar 50 for USA.
TTD 0006329 valid for Switzerland, Austria; Italy,
Spain and France (50).
TTD 0587767 issued 20 Jun 51 for UJDRACO purpose.
0.7411
tZaticwavg'
Ir,v
414..mTasr
2646,4
61101
krz,72:
e.07.4;ii!
.
....-Pg
SECRET
SECRET
Page 3
GT:RU N, Reinhard.
b. 3 Apr 19C2.
Chronological Informationr
190C-20
1920, Apr
1923
1928
1931, Oct
1933
1933, Fall1935, Jan
1934,/
19371937-38
1937-45
1938-39
- , 1939; Mar
39 Sep-Nov
1939, Nov194D, Jul
40 Jul-Nov
1940 Nov1942 Apr
1941 Jul
1942-Apr1945 Apr
1942 Dec
1944 Dec
1945 Apr
1945 May
1945 May
1945 end
1946 Jun'
1946 Jul
1946
Chief Gruppenidter I, Ost (Sect Chief within Dept for Plans and Operations).
Promoted Lieutenant Colonel.
Chief ABT Fremde Heere Ost.
Promoted Colonel.
-0,-.-z-c..a.)
4-14,
' Promoted Brigadier General
421-1-nut-Al
Dismis3ed by Special Order of Hitler on h of April.
Prisoner of War, U.S. Forces, on 23 May.
Prisoner of War arrived at the 12th Army Group IC on 27 Nay.
Prisoner of War sent t6 USA by War Department.
Prisoner of War returned from the States on 5 June.
Since has cooperated with USIS.
Reinhard GEHLEN
Profession: Merchant
Address: c/o Dr: ERHAREC
10 GuenthersbUrg Allee
Frankfurt a/M.
55 Jan 19
n
19
22
It
23
23
23
56 May 30
"
30
'.
30
Jun 1
n
I
German stamp.
London Airport..
Barwick, England..
Hock'otHolland.
Kon. Marechaue'Venlo stet. .(Dutch border
German stamp.
.Dover.
,Belgie-U Favenoostends.
Belgique 7E Herbesihal 27.
Belgique-S Herbesihal.
Belgie-S HavenoOStends Zeevaartpolitie
Boyer..
This Information
was extracted from
Robert GRABER's1
loaasport,.
(Imigration stampings).
I I
SECRET
M/R: Only for the record info: compiled thru dredging, 19 Oct
56.
GONTARD, Robert
b. 4 Mar 1905, Breslau, Germany.
. Father: Franz:G6NTARD, German..
Mother: Elsa 6ONTARD, German.
174 ems, blue eyes, dark blond hair, wears spectacles.
.1945Apr
48
27 Dec 48
19 Jul 50:
Jul 50
SECRET
''\SECRET CONTROL"
US OFFICIALS - ONLY.
0E111E11., .Reinhard
page -3-
195 1
ter
istian
:Iis cssisting
Peter S BOA
an for immigration U
rD
Or.,
brother "Verlagsb
to become US citiz
the 'young mszi 1st
Ter,
Officer: H
career as US
unit in
German
into Tank
SECRET
US Or-Ti(>
ONLY
-P.
1928
1929-32
1933
. 1934
-
- 1 935
1936
1937
At:16.
q:41
atlawta
4=C:
.161.11
C".
.-rs 7.)
c
Capt. GEHLEN, in his 18th year of service, had never commanded a unit of his own.
1938 General von MANSIZIN on 1 Apr 38 took command of 18th Infantry
Division whose 18th Artillery Regiment had grown out of AR 3,
GEHLEN's parent unit; Capt. GEHLEN assigned commander of the
8th Battery of the 18th Regiment at Liegnitz.
In Polish War, Major GETTLEN was First General-Staff Officer (Ia),
213d Div.
Recalled to General Staff of the Army; first fUnctioned as liaison
officer to various armies (16th of Gen. BUSCH "where so difficult
a man as Gen. MODEL vas C of S; and armored groups of ROTH and
GUDERIAN).
Diplomatic talents exhibited by GEHLEN as liaison officer prompted
Chief of the General Staff, General BALDER, to name him as his .
Adjutant.
After his tour as adjutant, GEBLEN called to Operations Section
under command of then Colonel MUSING-ER; GEBLEN became director
of Eastern Group in Operations Section.
Replaced Colonel KINZEL as chief of Section "Foreign Armies East";
Colonel GEMEN for the first time came in contact with variant
of intelligence service functions. ' GEMEN promoted successfully,
within a year, inclusion of intelligence-service duties and
evaluation of results in Ic sectiOngi to extent that' Ic officers
of army-group high coMmands had so-called "front reconnaissance
troops" at their disposal in regimental strength; front reconnaissance formations were divided : up into Commands1 (procure-'
ment of secret info), II (demoralization of enemy. and, sabotage)
and III (counteract and render . harmless the foreign Intel.
and itself infiltrate the enemy services with its own undercovet.
agents) and the newly, organized. (RtstUngsaufklArung.- 47112511
armaments reconnaissance). As Admiral CARARIS's counterintelli,P.
rs
gence fell apart GEBIER's own intelligence service-took . form;
May '44 CARARIS was removed and:at this tine:GEHLEN had his own
6
,
ArmyIntelligence Service standing in the 'East which could con-a
tinue its . work relatively un(li stjLrbed under protective cover oi!
the General Staff and the Ic service of the high staffs; GEHLE4%gema.
according to classical pattern, of hie function on General Staffgne5D
should have been reviewing enemy's situation on eastern front
but was in fact chief of counterintelligence in eastern theater of war.
i
Dec 24 GUDERIAN, last Army Chief of Staff, gave situation briefing to Ammameg
HITLER based on General GEBLEN's statements; .EUTLER scoffed. ggitlig:
ire
194-4
g:Z4
1945, Jan 9
soraeg
Or:tg:
a
,
OEHLER Surrendered near Elendsalm (Schliersee) to American patrorifaxsavax
.
a
_,
, summer
flown to Washington with some of his officers and files.
n
80
headed a German staff (resurrected Section Foreign Armies
East of the German General Staff) of specialists to 'work on
intelligence about Soviet union and its sphere of influence. =opt4
.1T
Idug
AIR
(--
SECRET
0-iiEru
Chief. EE
(Attu.
Chierir:Doso Pul/ooh
22 October- 10-6
iOporitionalltPSWIW
Info: COS
Bann
I.
OfCLASS IF I
ED AN)) REL
EASED BY
I P T7LL IS
ERRE A DENCI
6008:45 NE11933EXENPI ION 3021
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VAR
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.AC1
14. 1.i HOS
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" AitV,#Opleive.
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';
. .
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U0at
''.:i4.4";
C.F.HI.11;1Reinhard
:_Dr. SC H UF4/0? ._-.
: 3 Apr. 11Q2
BIRTHPLX.: .
Srfurt. Thuriggla
la.SIDLUCZ .
Vr
1
BUTI.D
scull
IIJIR
dk blord.
balding
bearing, looks
DoBipin:
0 in_L te tmitz
28n,F,eb.:.,194. 3 in Liegnits
UPSWIS3 . .W101131314
RAUK:
COD:
SLCV011: .BNO
FROM: Origin
TO:
posil'10U2 President
For details of CEHLEN's background and experience See followlg pages.
Notes
DISC
MRI41IlATI011 OSaARATIOU
7.TATUSI
4,414.-1PI,iati-wts
Chronological information:
.Htscaniatisohas Gymnasium Breslau. Graduated.
1908-20
1920, Apr Entered military service (artillery).
1923
Commissioned 'Second Lientanant
Promoted First Lieutenant.
1928
1931, Oct MarriedBerta (nee von SUBLITZ-EURZBACR) GEHLLN on 11 Oct 1931, Glogan.
Travelled to iome, ItelY ()Aare).
1933
1933, Fall1935, Jan Attended War Academy, Berlin.
1934
Promoted Captain.
56 ray 30
3C
zun 1
Dover.
Havenooatends.
Belgique-E Harhealhal 27.
Belgique-S Herbesibal
Havensos tends 2.aavaartpolitie
Dover.
(ix-Brig. Gen.)
acti C!'
SIMOZOK; PYot.stant
Berg a/Starabe'rger Be., Wedetr 614 (near. .kich, Gerraay)
4.
.....
,41.1818cRIPTIOis iboto.
Weight: 65-,72
ileightt 174 cms.
xywit blue
ram...hams rod Comp1exiont light .-- 8uild: medium
central baldaini.
.
:
et
Prominent idant. Natures, military bearing,,extraMly ripekr .loain4 00,,pazial.4,04
abronologide years, small mustache, wears glasses.
a'
*:
'
IMMO :-C1211111, Walther; b..34 Jul 1871 in toblail. leamee4.1943.'
AA!'
(Dirldtor of.a Publishing Pim
Leipaig. Tarmer,:bate
offiocri 'retired aft:r
/ with the rank of L44 Cal, AM. activatod in WW II, hold tsaispertsest admint ottectime,:posittnis).
.
Marmite,
' YOT8111 -MOAN; Katharina/b. 111ma 11381 (nee -cps VAM/IltICK). Deceased 1921.
..
'..?
Ii
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tc-or-rmt.!):1;
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boorionoy No,
Position' Chet, Section A8 (ex.-8ection 30).
1!!..;5/250,%.
Or ganisa ti on
Cover ;Unit t Induat.ria.1......................
--.-79.24..Arny...Precereseat, Ted.>
Subject ia . co nneated .
Bavirlan Light Ke
Special Cc:enaction, lot 20
Housing Loan No. 8, &It'd 1 Apr 51,
Bank: bararischs Versinabank, )fitilah.
Ral-nhard
G XH I a 1 1 f
49 valid to
Austria, Italy,
Spain and !ranee (50..
_ TTD 0587767 issued 20 . Jan 51 for UJDRACO purpose.
-. PasapOrt Mo.. 849/51.
. Robert 00/frAiDi Passport I goe
166o7cti":)
-1
. . ..
lo. 4.9203 , .
.. Robert GRIMM, PPassport
assport No. 7203699, Rag, Ir. C.A.
-1004/54 Issued
5 Nov 54, Watich, profs). sion I Xastaann.
i : ..1101A-20774.
4.). 500-1271.4.
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Vol V/TI,
Fether: hod been actiAe otricer in old army; retired emrly; becaAe publication iirector at publishing house Of erdinand Hirt in Breslau .
:
2nd
1923,.
C/cC 1
ComoiLeuioned/Lt.., 2nd 'battery
I;chweidnitz 3rd Artillery*Aegiment,
formed from the Gth 'hrtillery Regt.
2hree more yecr..; in battery service in the stables and in the
barrack:.
U2 5 f11, one of the most brilliant riders in the regiment, wa-;
ordered to Mnnover ea:airy school fur 2 years (imtruction
of officer; of mounted and horee-drawn troops in "the comprehensive training of the Aeddier e horse and its rider.").
1
e years
l28
192)-32
ordered to
1.:;t Lt. 111R1,2. .1 from AA ./Military Area III, Berlin for train1
I Fill
1.37
"
""%. '0"""'
7,,...infle.71 a unf t
, oc
hru:
never cum-
:: e called to ;eneral
Or the Any; first functioned as liaison.
officer to various armies . (16th
EUSCH "where so difricult
e. man as Gen. MCDEL wo.s C of . S; and armored ' groups of . 1-0I'll and
.
Diplomatic' tillents 'exhibited by
as liaison ofiice prompted
Chief of the General *::taff, General
to name him r. s his
Adjutant.,
:.ter hi:: tour
rkijuDant,
called to o i;erations .:ection
under. commandof then t.:olor-el
b:7carie director
Of ::.1:zurr. ;roup
i.peretions -.ection.
Replaced C.olonel
chief
.ection "..treitsn Armies
or the first: time cs-ime in contact with variant
Ct,lonel
.cf intelligenc r service functions.
promoted successfully,
within a
Inckusion of*.intelli.?,ence-service duties and .
evaluation if results in Ic section: to extent that le -officers
aray-zroup' nigh' commands had so-calle d, "!*rnnt . reconn,lissance
::t tneir 6.isnosal in regimentr. str.m-...1.th; front reconnrds.:ance formations were
ecjup
tC3
(procure nv.:nt of
c:cat
11 -.1emc.) .ralization
er.n:ay and sabotage )
ni II I (counteract r.nd rerbier harmless the 'oreIgn inte.l. services
and i csclf infiltrete the: enemy services with its own undercover
N...,. .--!nts) and the newly scrganized group Fat (iitistungsaufklRrung armaments reconr. p.iss:,ncc
As Admina
5 ccUnterintollig ,-ilic fell anart
r,wn intelligPneti scriic -.. took form; in
: 1.:14-3 at
time
anr: his own
; ..rmy Intelligence ; r : ce
-:n
-;:.st which could continuo its work
uni...Lit rbed i.cr protr. ctite cover of
tilt! -ner . 11
ser:ice cc.
.unctf,r1 or: .;eneral
;;; :.7 ,
r).I
ye
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'
.
//.
GONTARD,Aebert
...Rol'
Father:
, ,* -
Frans
flea
Mother:
174 ca,
1937-45
1945 2 Apr 48
27 Dec 48
19 Jul 50:
Jul 50
blur 'II
.1
Giit;3016
linieben'
' to _Writios' ftersbarg . nue, Frankfurt a/Kain.
isn3".1 e 478339, PranIcfurt/K by Police Preside:14,
D-2831. Sobjelt had passport I 49203.
.
TTD 18001THtinoe11d thin date. (had nmpiind)1
TID f' 03471116 timed.
Subject
't
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+.
GEHLEN, Re!nhard
6 Dr. S,CHNEIDER
27 Nov 56 t'at
-In a recent discussion re :08W1NG7Staff Fersonnol
, UTItITY stated that although i!e_bad given up 6Ver . 80 individuals to
the Defense Ministry and elsewhere he had since legalization been
- SUc. cessful in recruiting sOMe 200 new (mostly young) Stuff nembers.
He l'arther stated that slots and money were no -probler for him.
regarding personnel. The main d!ffieulty was finding the suitable.
people,. net only from a point of view of their ability/3nd . promiie-L
but from a security standpoint as well. -
keN
Ar4
ORIG
UNIT :
404t
..Hm/mRL
.
CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
DATE :
EE fiPlans -8206
6 Nov 56
TO
FRANKFURT
FROM
DIRECTOR
CONF
INFO
ROUTING
SECRET
757
Nov -
EE 1-6
DC1 , 1, D/DC1 8. , COP
9, A/Do/PM7 to,
:10
1 0 z5;
OUT 99576
ifti&11:4)=Ld1=til-E '
37-38
ROUTINE
CITE
TO FRAN
.58738
FOR
gbome
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mamma
ratamsbn
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1114611
Cra
COLONIAL COUNTRIES;
B.
SECRET
RELEASING OFFICER
DECLASSIF TD '
DATE 2005
AUTHENTICATING OFFICER
Copy No.
;,-
CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
ROUTING
ORIG
UNIT
19(T
CATE
4
5
6
2I
TO
'
FROM
PAGE TWO
CONE
99576
INFO
PRECEDENCE
k;
ea7:12:1;Mb
ITC.=
X,
rir:
BE GREAT;
C. MAY MAIM SMALL SCALE AIR OR SUBMARINE ATTACKS
AGAINST FRENCH/UK IN EAST NEED TO CREATE PRESSURE TOWARD
Lajj
UN SETTLEMENT SAI
4'5
eAcroRT TO THEM;
COOROINATINO ,OFFICERS
C RE T .
RELEASING OFFICER
AUTHENTICATING OFFICER
IJJ
444
asth
CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
ROUTING
ORIG
541
UNIT
IDCT
SECRET
DATE
2
3
TO
FROM
PAGE THREE
CONF
INFO
PRECEDENCE
dje
COP
COORDINATING OFFICERS
SECRET
RELEASING OFFICER
Q/EE
AUTHENTICA1III0 OFFICER
(t)-2
',
Der
Leiter
des
Bundtsnachrichtendienstes
, No" 1 th
Mun i
COP
BEST AVAI
Deux Mr. Dulles,
. . .
.hot
-Visit as seen as
repeat
get
annar y .. ':":-
..
14 4
to
arY:Seie vibe! .
on Ai.
,
t': lie
tion
:?.1 '
and.
this
s: .: ;
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the .. :nve.A3.8
:
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17;;...111 I
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ty to send
'rite* AU tttrottetitl""'IY
r
ous
(Air I s :.:
Yeti!'
bol;?eqewiWtri.:.1.1ay. I
r::::itiriclivregafict
.7,
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'
, ;.
cess
%.
Ch
Attn:
tChief
16-November _1956
EE
Ba
Info: COSI,
Bonn
ilarach
741 7
are brows!.
3. ,;C
asked UTILITY
if there
was
selection- 7dt -St. George for the medal since he is the Patron Saint of England.
VTILITI:regied that this had not occurred' to him at all but assured no that
there ..was.no % special significance and then added with a twinkle that . it vas
probilArfiqietter choice mho*, than 'would be St. Patrick, the Patron Saint
of Ireland vhidh, after ;11, is s neutralist state.
.. Incidentally, UTILITY. has several ether medals for distribution to
former 'MARK friends and supporters of :ciTplrlp Previously stationed with the
German Mission. So far none of these metaentO-6 . have been given to any other
Service.
DM:
3-ES :Veep car . att. (Medal
2005
R ET
-,"
4"2 41.P
DEC
Si
CACl/ C
Dist:
Orig AdIressee
1 - DCI
Chiet7,
1 - FIC
1 - ER w/basic
1 - Rending
/3i:warmly,
SIRED
Allen V. Dulles
Director
"C(.
AIR
:
Chief of Bade, Pullach
Chief, KB
: Operational
Transmittal of Letter for UTILITY
Distributiept
340.344h1DIRIOT) Wiatt
34rackfurt w/o att
1-RI
2-3E/G/11::
ES:lan
22 Deocaber 1956
EE/G/G
'I 1.
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ISCLOSURE AC1
L ; 1 .1:E 20405
1-8.1
2-EV0/11
17 Doomber 1956
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(NatECT)
1-RI
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19 Dec:ember 1956
1.
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ED AND RELEASEVD.Y
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENC1
SOURCESME
THOOSEXEMP1 ION 3132t
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D ISCLOSURE ACI
SATE 2005
Cer/U..;:`
\V1;'
EE/G/U.
DECLASSIFIED AND
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CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENO
SOURCESME
NAZI WAR
CR IMES DI SCLOSURE AC1
DATE 2005
..f114
CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
DATE t
20 DEC 56
TO
DIRECTOR
DEC 20
FROM g
FRANKFURT
IN
ACTIOtit
EC,f;16'.
S-E-C-R-E-T
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CONSTRUCTIVE FUTURE FOR EUROPE ONLY POSSIBLE WITH U.S. FRIENDSHIN M g tOM RAJ!
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LO BE IF FIRM EVIDENCE WESTERN HELP GIVEN. DOES NOT EVEN 5ELICV6 THAT
ma
FOR SOME TIME. UTILITY BELIEVES PERFORMED REACTIONS NAGY CSC WIEH MAKE
ANXIOUS NOT BE ACCUSED OF FAILING TO LIVE UP TO AGREEMENT.
Ttiwtqww1.14.1.42.
EtrzZ.
AND INTELLIGENCE ADVISOR AND COLLECTOR FOR J-2 OR MILITARY *nth 1111 HE
BELIEVES. WOULD RETAIN AUTONOMY HIS SERVICE GIVING BEST RESULTS PLUg
ex
e.:,,,AS .
/Ds .
PR@V HIM WI14.It:Z1
...;-.esm .
PROPER STATURE AND POSITION TO ENABLE HIM PERFORM MOST EFFECTIVELY: KA DINUtSEO :=';',Ix
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ON TRIP US THOUGH "ILL LET US KNOW BEFORE HE LEAVES. . TOLD HIM
SUBJECT IN WHICH MUCH INTEREST IN
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f:/.11 2005
AC
Em-11,043
4 February
Chief, BE
1957
INFO: COS.
Pup
operationalibmun
--
1. We are
beginning
to
get
his great battles fought =dim, may be drawing to a cloee. His old
enemy. , Achim Oster, has been whispering into Strauss' emr, and be his net
been Whispering sleet nothings.. The burden of his Bluesterlieder hie been
that a. lenister . of Defense cannot afford to by dependent for intelligence
-collection upon a Civilian organization not under his cOntrol. Be should
have biz own, and Achim Oster would be just the men to head it. Strauss
buys the idea if not, as we are told, the man. Oster has alsomade-Strauss
autreref themumber ofDTIL1TY men, including particularly alias WIELAND,
by. 'whoa be is surrounded in key positions. The foregoing we have ficii a
ibutiont
tz-Zg
24,98
-elOB
DECLASS IF I ED AND
RE LEASED BY
CENTRAL
SOURCES METH
ODSEXEMP1 t";;', 30 .2E
NAZI WAR
DATE 2005
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6..t, -0 RIM
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AIR
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gLERET
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DATE
SUBJECT
4 Fte5/ 3 3 z
INFO: Chief
Chief, WE
FROM
lammALOperatiOnal/q.SG
WIN'
.
.
SPECIFIC Travel byWILITY
3.
a KUBARK-sponsored visit
ting is being arranged
drid and Rome to
Since UTILITY will
he entire trip by a
not join in the
with KLMARK
.71.msEi y plinosoms,social
.
-Vs
.0in*iew of ,C.
1: IVINI10..rePresentatiVe)
crstated inAS1014,3693lat'ziot changed,
enough.isaue:to . e0Phasiie by a refusal
sal irouid ..be in : any way embarrasding.
1957
'
30 January
Distribution:
3
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JUK 1949
5 1_29
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Chief,
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Chief at $1.7)Pullach
i957
:sitar C463
Socui.:
Sea.paraOraph 3..
2. mittri
. with.
Eiietioser :'.aiee UTILITtls il'frierdr-ps
proxinateli threet"Asin.
'ally, harry's:. (nWarlord, 1711LITI. doi
s-know'of
. , 1.:ecessinck-
coverage, on - 0In
stight
wwww9,.,
czmxd5
=zit
cro
ros
EZZ
Ain
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ElammpOS
Vrs,
16Adi
this respect' be requests any Sid all ird'ornation which wore= farnish- his
regard ing &MP activitie ir_and contacts In or
to ass is t urn= in
keeping his nose alien !hire poisib/e. By the way, CEISfrCoryptoma appears to beivallICCITEM.,
.
Dint
73-EE
2-COS.
2-Boon
Nis am 51.43
see 11
SECRET
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CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
0o9 CT/DB/WS
DATE
14 FEB
TO
FRom u
BONN
AC11ONt
EE
ROUTINO
57
FEB 1 11
IRECTOR
oltitaz 57
I N 46523
6
FI, (I/OPS,(-6.2).,S/C
INFO
C '
/L/
ROUT
NE
PRECIDINCe
EMBASSY PRESS ATTACHE QUERIED BY UNITED PRESS WHETHER IT TRUE l./ -1; 1 L. I TY
V IS IT I NG STATES. WE ADVISED HIM ANSWER EMBASSY AWARE OF TRIP BUT THAT IT
UNOFF I C I AL. THIS SEEMED PREFERABLE TO DENIAL SINCE
ED FROM FOREIGN OFFICE SOURCE THAT LATTER HAD PROCESSED PASSPORT . FOR TRIP. WE
MUST ASSUME THAT UNITED PRESS HAD SAME TIP.
BEFORE HIM, WISHED KNOW I F 'UT IL I TY TRIP RELATED TO CAUSAV'S AND WHETHER THEY
WOULD GET-TOGETHER.. WE SA ID NO CONNECTION.
END OF MESSAGE
CENTRAL
IN TELLIGENCE AGENCY
S011:?CESPIETW1EXEMPT ION 382E
NAZI . 141AR CRIMES DI SCLOSIJRE AC1
DATE 2005
S-E-C-R-ErT
OFFICIAL DISPATCH
VIA
(51>okair
or
DISPATCH NO.
Sea Pouob)
CZPALTIN
TO
DATEZ I FE8
Ohio.f C
FROM
I I
08
INFO, Chief c-
Ciaiofj,
marnaktop,oratiagna
GENERAL
SUBIECT
51
SPECIFIC
Trulrel by UM=
112=210Zs C1283-376
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(Authentloatim caloor)
FORM NO.
/UN 1949
51_29
SnflET
DECLASSIFIED AND
RE LEASED
By
NTEL!. 16ENCE AGENC1
SOURCES14ET:100SEXENPT ION 382E
NAZI WAR CRIMES
SCLOSURE Ad1
BATE 2005
CENTRAL
..a
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. 2171: ;
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ROUTING
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. .
AUTN.ENT.I.CATINO cOlifle:ER
MESSAGE :ccip"r
'
:957
Director
Federal Bureau. of Investigation
Attention: Mr. S. J. Papich
TO:
Director, Flans
SUBJECT: Visit of OS Officers to the United Ststes
ropul,
ram
CI 8890) dated 1
1. ./LeferenoCe is mks to our genorszalun (csaisherti
Gehlen, Chief
g
ccnorrning
the
visit
of
Genern1
.
Noverdber 1956
etaff
senior
his
of
of the liernin: Intelligence Service, sad two
visit
of
Novel:lb=
ss
the
officers to the Tit:Used States. Inasemech
completed
awing
to
the
intergrocp ices act,
tregieeal:Geolonnati
itgroup
returning to the United
national sitietien the 610310
g :Ude 'mantis.
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A?.,';04
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.011
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15 ?.ferch 1957
a'A
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DECLASS IF I ED AND RELEASED BY
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SOURCES M ETHODSEXEMPT ION WE
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CR IMES DI
E T E 2005
SEC RET
SCLOSURE
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3LUil 1
by
and
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Armies East,
'
DE CLASS IF
I ED AND
REL EASED BY
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NT:LLIGENCE
SO URCES HE
pEwci
THOOS EX LEP,
I VON 3821
4MES1ISCLDSURE
ACI
E4TE 2005
NAZI WAR CR
FILE: R. GEHLEN
; ,
OFFICIAL DISPATCH
A33/
VIA
DISPATCH NO
OPL13-134
61-2-1
aki
5t1,107 I I 5Gz
Chief
TO
ITIOM
SUBJECT
DATE
I Odes
17E
=UM/
GENERAL
Traxe1
SPECIFIC
FXLMIRICGS
tar inn=
-or
Om
(Relaaning Blow)
FORM HO.
/WI 1949
(Coordinating officer)
SEGRFT
51-29
DE LASS1F I E0 AND
REL EASED ,RY
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENC1
SOUCESNETHOOSEXEMPT ION 382E
NAZI
WAR CR IMES DISCLOSURE AC1
BATE 2005
,I
A6/ww5
(Authenticating Him)
"441
Der Prisident
des Bundesnachrichtendienstes
DECLASSIF I ED AND R
ELEASED BY
CENT RALTELL ID ENCE gGENC1
SOUl:ESi4E
THOOSEXEMPT I CIN 382E
NAZI WAR CRIMES
DISCLOSURE ACI
DATE 2005
TO
PRO:C:
Director
Federal Bureau of Inva 3 tiEation
Attention: It. . S. J. Papich
.957
, .......
ILED11.0
CVO .
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Attachments Letters to General GEHLEN
from :Jack MARNE' - A I
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WA
SpctIT Ar orS,
32-,2.-1.
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SECRET
'T
CLASSIFICATION
TO
I Chief :
FROM
Chief,
Bee
'Pullaah
DATE
Ji:13
SUBJECT (GENERAL
Operattcml
TIM= Repeat for Ctenetral Sibert T s Dearer:1
SPECIFIC
During AMC 8
4
asked that ye find cat
8ibect l e address
RID 23, Tirze_ymi.
&men, Maas.
M I CR CD F1 LM ED
FEB 1 4 1962
DOC. MICRO. SER.
CLASS IF I ED AN RELEASED
B.Y
TRAL INTELLIGENCE AENy,
UR C ES METHOOSEXEMPT ION
3B2E
NAZI WAR CRIMES 01
SCLOSURE
flATE 2005
.
'59,
listril;ttiont
24iii3i0h;
s
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15 Any 1957
--
lboleasing 0 ;r
4
--,=
CLASSIFICATION
EE/6/U
Eze/G/u
cd.1.004
7 June 1957
u/R
SUBJECTt UTILITY Visit to BRUECKE
. Jtmited . UTILITT to make his first official
1. On 50 May 1957
visit and inspection of BRUECKE. He was given a complete tour of the entive entablishient.and surrounding grounds. I am happy to report that his
reaction was enthusiastin . from the time he entered through the electrically
operatad400rOheikmediately told #HASTRIO to duplicate it for UPSWIN3 in
theNikiled* . Chmpound), through his inspection of the Conference roan!, the
librarjtheiten0he'dining,-living and barrooms, to the Sauna (incidentally
'paid fOrty.DT5sital aetheir contribution) and Reports Reproduction offices.
I took the occasionto have a discussion with UTILITY over lunch in conference room ill after*hichaeparatebriefinge on Security and RLINT'were held
i and 'a and 0 BERNHARD and 0 MUM joining Us.
with
2. UTILITY found the. lunchmost appetising (we arranged a light menu
reflecting his personal preferences) and the atmosphere ideal for discussions.
He VAS completelyrelaxed . and'articulate. hat he especially liked about it,
he saidi.*4-the proximitYto'his office but the freedom from interruptions
even ::from telephone calls as well.
3. Regarding' the social side he recalled that his daughter had thoroughly
enjoyed herself at our Nee-Year's Eve Party held at BRUECKE and went onto say
that hethOugfit it was an ideal . place for larger scale entertaining.ofbie
people with mmxim
pecurity. He carefully inspeCted the Sauna, recalledthe
Comfortit'used . to- bring in wartime, and declared he hoped to availhimself of
its use.
Re
4.
VAS
COMO.
DISTt
LliPSW110 Desk
1403
1401
1File
. C.
..
EGLA 2-3%c
7 June 1957
2. subsequently, it was learned that the photographer waft one fnu WOLTER,
appreccimately 26 years old, who is a member of the Jut3ge Union of the 017J. The
negatives, they believe, are on file at the editorial offices of Quick.
(110TEt,According to L
3,
Quick
and
Weltbild
that ..ire--might be. able to purchase them. trrILITI jumrped at this prOspect. A
tually, it.tasty be that the alleged AP.purchaser represents..)C,
a e clstndes7. earaParM
tine atteiapt. We than wait and see.
1110 Desk
CC%
It
lI
his position is quite unlike that of Robert A. Ascham win represents a Giant
DURK compalled to.a Pigmy UPSWING and who does, by the very nature of the
world.cammitments and size of its intelligence comnunity, play a public end overt role. In addition Ascham enjoYs the moral strength of the
TTITIO.Dight to protect him as 411 si a superior security service and seeuritransportation facilitiea. On-ETILITI t s part, hover, the situation
dogn to the fact that therein a pride on his
.headi he is a tirget:for enemy assassination and being Iodated in Europe as
Chief of a vervide.in a divided natian, he is matt venerable to physical
danger. In kesOing .vith this, and since he has . to travel incognito frequently
triaiportation he is desirous that be not be . readily recognizable
byeliviri.:Szali'lliiiioard.and ..11einrieh. Also, it is notjuat the enemy he worries
*ebdut . titialeo the :Ireedoi4oving WaSt German preeerepresentativea she might
GaVUy stdible across him in the many trains and Bahnhofe he utilisee in his
travels.. .
6. Farther infortestion will be reported as learned.
SEC
(JuaC 1,47)
OUTGOING CLASSIF
d MESSAGE
CABLE
Tot . . FRAN C
PRECEDENCE:
FROM:. PULL G
. .
...C.02IFERIKATION:
NOTE
fi)
C.2
ii
20 JUNE 57
DATE:
MESSAGE OUT NUMBER:
. : INFORMATION:
.
. .
Tyrisrs Itsrrnms:
IttAiX:
_;
"
BLACK 220 MERCEDES WITH LICENSE NUMBEi:AB4ji.i..5''
2 HE SHOULD BE !ADDRESSED AS .
"DR SCHNEIDER" .i ?ILL HAVE
WITH ;: itiv.hia
-
SHOULD ALSO
BE-. FFII IF .LUNCH ON THE SCHEDULE .
.
3 . UTILITY? S EATS LIGHT * LUNCH WITHOUT WINE PREFERS .MINERAL ITAT4C qt.
*
.
CE WITH..4MEAL AND: SkiiKA NOT COFFEE AFTER. IF COCKTAILS
SERVED HE
,
.
CE . : OR ,COCA; COLA
LIKES:.A Goa) CIGAR: -(S0 DO I) .
14C....t...S5,111...ED AND
RELEASED BY
fliTEIL,1 E N CE 'AGENCY
:::S0DR.CEMETHODS'EXEMfT.ION-382E
SECRET
cookriug kiiii6 oriiisainu
'
. TOD:
A UTITENTICAIING
" ;62-e-44Z54(
DECLASSIFIED AND R
ELEASED DY
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE ASEN.C.).
S -0 1.1 R C ES 14
. NAZI WR
..
SECRET
0.6k19.0
To:
FRAN Z.
PROM:
PULL
.3 WIES
T 1-I 0 0 S
PRECEDENCE:
M P t 10 N
31. 4,:''
DATE 2-005
CABLE
. .17}
,
N0TE
PRIORITY
0JUlIE!
DATE:
: r CONFIRMATION:
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- .
!COL...:10GERS -.BY ICES.
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-
I GEN REINHA RD . GEHLEN , PRESENT CHIEF AND ORGANIZER WEST GERMAN FEipitur
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INFORMATION:
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POSSIBLY UNDERSTANDS. SOME:/ APPARENTLY CONMNIAL BUT HANDICAPPED BECAUSE .HARDA.,::,.
'
. OF REARING' IS CONSIDERED-. VERY * HIGHLY BY FORMER CFA STAFF OFFICERS, .AS.2.",.TAITD:,-,
'
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"...-
RE LiNE- TO . BE TAKEN BY ROMS AS DISCUSSED' WITH. IfGEHLE
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TYPIST'S INITIALS
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Chief, EE
FROM :
Chief,Munichj3iilee
SUBJECT: GENERAL-
OPeraiibnii/UPSWIHO
PWO: ;Cos-.
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Di-
2. Although it is too early to speak of any firm agenda at this t .!me. such
a visit would be centered chiefl y around talks with ,Robert:A. -- ASCHAM; C
Specific topics for discus,:FletCher-M. Knight and
sion will probably jell between now and then, but will undoubtedly include ;.1E
cooperation, PP Activities, P14 proposals, and the political situation in general.
Certainly an item of value would be to arrange for:UTILITY to meet with one or
two high level ODACID or other important governmental officials as a means of
broadening and influencing UTILITY vis-a-vis PBPRIME:
1
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A translation
B. curcumo
Chief, atern European Divielen
JANES
AWACID11711:
.
Gitacike.
est DDCI
16 October 1957
Ezia/ui,C
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DISTRIBUTIOff:
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1 - DDCI1uric-tOgr.
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2005
4010-41ew
2'- EE/GAU
(77,-)n!--
by amble ea receive&
JARES E.-CRITCEFIRID
Chief Eastern European Division
AITACEICIITs
Letter from General Gehl=
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(1) A mooting to foster better relations betwean the various
levels of or iwieel polioe iLvolved with oases of "political signitioanco u was
held in 008141t
24 . .25 and 26 Ootobor 1957.. The prime objootive was to
opportunity to discuse
supply officials
the var ious
the
on agencies with
tual
mums
proble onand
ofof 000pe rati
000rdinntion.
(2) Lectures were given by Dr. Ernst BRUMENER, DG ahiof,
Proeident SCRUM= of the lifV- ETV officials Dr. ROLLO and Lamm: BESSEJ-.LORC,_ral GI Of
Lt Col Armin int o? MAD, IfV Chief HOFFMAN
and othors. -- Eaolmr
prix fl on his own organization and problems confYontod
ia its partitioned-
CH
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(4) A police official stated that he did not think the mooting
e z.
had
really
accomplished
the parpcso he felt it had boon set up for. .lb felt
a C-1
that
It
was
mooting
for oporational personnel to Iron out probloms of
to
be
a
Ko
7.9 mutual essietanao on the routine and evorylay level. It was felt that the
presence of so many hig11y7placed officialS(!Bonsoe) had diedouragod a
*working-level" mooting.. . fievorthelosa l the gathering did give the various
officio/tithe cippoittritity . to -outlinel the roles of thoir.Various organizations'
and
viows on ooOperntion andeoordinationbetween the sorvicoe. The
officials wore alec.given the opportunity to Mingle with one another on
noutra1 ai ground, :whioti may have tendered a better acquaintance and understanding of one another : their
.
.
.
b.
.
.
Release by Criminal Polio and the State Criminal Moos of
Information to AzerioakAgencties
.--
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ASSIF I ED AND.RELEASEOIE
CENTRAL
INTELL 16.EN
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Copy No.
OFFICIAL DISPATCH
VIA
DISPATCH NO
Ffl-W-5271
201-19358
CLASSWICATION
:DEC 1 1 1957
DATE
TO
Operational/UPSWING
1958 UTILITY Visit to Headquarters
RETEREME: EGLA-25247
ACTION REQUIRED: See Paragraph 4.
um=
. 2. I can.personally
accompanying.MILTTY --ammunition on the comptro
ylsit in January.
(R.:flooring fiber-)
(Coordinating Meer)
CLASS! F1CATION
FORM NO.
mu 1 94 9
51_29
DECLASSIFI E AN0 R
ELEASED tilr
CENTRAL INTEL!. 16ZVE. C3Ek0
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NAZI WAR CRIMES 01 SCL0811RE Ad1
DATE 2005
(Authena6ating <Moor)
10:251-5271
4.. If UTILlerrjauvues the idea of bringing Herta/ with him, would. you
.elicit from UZELETI his very specific anddetelled ideas on briefings and
entelitainment tbet houtould consider suitable-in team of both the prot000l
and professienel factors. 14s-the latter Inman simPlytte . fact that tbere &re
msny things thet makuldal openly discuss with U211121:atieh vs would not .
undertake todiseuse with anyone outside 'of the prelession --- and this has
nothing to do with security.
TAME R. CRITCHYTiLD
4.Deoceber 1957
Distribiztioa:
2
COB,: Germany
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UTILITY, Dr. Ri.chard
24TARD--'
: Richard GARNER, Roberf..,00
Hans HOLBaN, Dr. GROSSi.'...Dr*44:f.-ERNSI
NUS
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SUBJECT:
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DECLASSIFIED AND RELEASED BY
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February, 5, 1958
Oritrriir
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*mamas
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to ascertain the fact that this journey has undoubtedly again furthered the understanding between our ser-.
vices.
With kind regards I am, dear Mr. Dulles,
I.
DECLASSIFIED AND REL '
EASE0 BY
CENTRAL INT ELLIGENCE AGENC1
SOURCESMENBOSEXEMPTION3B2E
NAZIWARCRIMEGBISCLOSURE AC1
sincerely yours,
DATE 2005
1.4.., /1/4
AL ".4.4-.
0 147
CWTWC
MAR 5
DATE t
31
TO
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OPERATIONAL
IMMEDIATE
It.4TIALS
SiC 2
CITE DIR ).
FRAN
17PSWINO
I Li z5li
CABLE SECT.
tzAAA'l
: DIRECTOR
5572
HIS BIRMA/
ECIMEST YOU coo= TO UTILITY CO4aRATUTATIO0 01 OCCASION'
An
ASCRAM AND
= FLUME
TO COMO VISIT.
MID OF gcsataz
Cik
.4:.
\\.*St
. ."*3\411.C"4
::.
W, ..4:4.C.I.ASS.IF.1i0 A NO Rii.EASE0 OY
.:1 A
1:' . VCENTRAL iNTELLIGENCE'VIENCI
SOUnESM IJHOOSEXEAPTION 302E
NAZI WAR-cRImEs01 9 CLOSURE A.C1
DATE 2005
.
C101F,
ranisIox
1.1LEASINC OFFICE',
9.(ALNJ 7)4)1_
BXCR/CT
I
AUTHENTICT
174 LmG/4AciP2-/tV
DATE t
ACTION:
CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
S-E-C-R-E-T
05 APR 58
-1=kei1613:ff'
DI RECTOR
FROM
1.6
APR 5 1905z 58
MUNICH
DCI
ROUT! NE
* D DC1, - COP, C EE
TO
CITE
DI.R (ASCHAM)
UPSW I NG
MI WAR CRIMESDISCLOGDREArt
DATE 2001 2005
S-E-C-R-E-T
REPRODUCTION BY OTHER THAN THE ISSUING OFFICE IS PROHIBITED.
Co py No.
r 7t cr
g.
lt,o
MU-ChM
' hiefs,
C
29 April 1958
EE
Transmittal of
Attadeact
01)
t1SC it
for
COS
Annomusissat
139best A. ASCHAM,
iz
ert
AiTitOVED
E.
Attainbasant:
Distributimat
3 . Ei*att
'leo-vett
DECLASSIF I ED AND R
ELEASED fly
CENTRAL I NTELL IGENCE AGENCY
SO U RC
ES METHOOSEXEMPIION 2fat
NAZI WAR CR114E501
BATE 1005
SCLOSURE AC1
SECRET
gEgzov;Re,,,L,c1-
-oa-A
SECRET
(When Filled In)
DATE
9 I4ay 1958
. _ .
HBIAIMITE/USDRACO
pRoJEET
.
FROM:
EE/G
..
(Division)
SUOJECT
SO FILE NO.
TRUE NAME
_nEinallatezezia_pstjahard
CRYPTONYM OR PSEUDONYM
Subject will visit Wa hin ton from 2-6 June, will atiAnd briefings and will meet
the DCI
1_,
PROVISIONAL
APPROVAL
OPERATIONAL APPROVAL
PROPRIETARY
APPROVAL
SPECIAL INQUIRY
field
(SO
Investigation)
OTHER1
IS ATTACHED.
IF OBTAINABLE
ART
FIELD TRACES
X
AS ATTACHED
INFO.
ACADEMIC
CONNERC I AL
OTH ER I
RI
TRACES
RECORD
'
DEROGATORY*
-
No
NOPO
DERO GATOR
(.1
DIVISION TRACES
NO RECORD
' DEROGATORY'
RECORD
derog
info.
o
r Prii 6.
',"
u AAAAAA Or CIA
SUBJECT
IS
,
HAS
U AAAAAA Of U 8
AWARE
U AAAAA C Of iNIENOI
.X.
IICEN
NDT
*CCM
ONICICO
ON
!
1
.
AUG 56
1 "
combs,.
NO RECORD
1 '9
..,..,
$-
Itzr T
..
0 I AAAAA I4ATION
A
. COVCA
EXTENSION
25055.
SIGNATURE Of
528
F.REvtous
is: .
v
. .
":
'
.3
NON O
DER GATORY
. !,. .
..
a
d.r. I .t.rY attch
DEC!.
kf
i rtill
BRANCH CHIEF
Chief, EE/G
ED AND RELEASED B Y
,
(RI
,ork's
nut
01 447711
3ECaST
Chief, WE
Attar Chief, aln
Iti Branch
Chiof e
-4
,t.uglaut 1958
Chiof, ES
Frackflut
fnu4KOILFli
1.9 J1043.958
Sourcei
in Ramo and .
On 17 July 195g4 Ingnbord VIMARD, a piTaiotherupist now
that,
about
the oar4
y
and or his /cite, tad Scurv
a friond of c
uas
e
brothmr
in
Rao.
He
I
J1217 19s, Sho eau Johann OSUM
Pert
I a brother,
hada-ass
man.
Although
WIEGARD
know
GrilluES
of
auttlAZ owErr
uhoos first . wan in riot known,' in OvninArip and tbfry appal"ont1,7 wtro .ca
the vas someldbot
speaking torus, =LEH those not to r000v .bar and
anobbed. Thio vas tho
roPutillad and poomihly A Little hurt at
fire. timo oho had seat tam in Italy.
of
ao
Lydia ilOLMJNOCI. a. Gormanmm
2. tutor, WIEGAND isarmd fraa hor friend,
Jutzu
to
had
*
that
'She
7INtri5,
lobo . ba61oenct living in Ramo for zulr
CON= tho rognestle$ tint nhe not 16..-ust him Or X`40037.6 him in public.
414470areng to VIEGAND, GMLEN is vorr alato to his faunas brother, %Tobacco:,
3.
of oocinoer,
atri inner a: 16* iist of variamm ainnen, wbon th are is , somathiUg vary.
y er inimPscoOtor, it is preaccool!, of
as suporvinbe
either
i/Tott.crit .-aroOto
GOT= IS
activithea
Diatributiccu
Wastle*3
rrantrfart-2
Film-3
SOURCESMETHOOSEXEMNION 3B2E
NAZI WAR CR IME SDISCLOSURE Ad1
DATE 2005
how
Eamk-36781
27 Augufrt 1958
Chief
INFO 3 cos,
Germany
IIPSWING/Operatione .
Secretary to Dr. Hein-Guenter ANGER
ZE
SE
a 6 -4
1ieE. be
..
3.. For C_
Wo believe the DIXFFENBACE . 1t. ho eacclapanied ANGER is the
one hired -by . DrSifING,in . Raine rather than the One reported in Ref.. A.
APPROVED t
col
DD3TRIBUTIONs
, a; C.
2-- 003, C2,- as, (isrmizzr
c-tr.
2
.22;1
ie,g6:\Vt 4-144.034
(1
40 5E-IT)
CS C
An WA C g INESOISCLOSURE AC1
LAIE V605
ST V !LADLE
A
DISPATCH
TO
CLASSIFICATION
DI S
S'ECRET
EGMA -37500
INFO
..:11
26 September
DA TE
UPSWING
UTILITY'S Bonn Residence
1958
ACTION REQUIRED
REFERENCE(S)
3.. The apartment itself is rather plain and obviously lacks the woman's touch, which is probably a good thing since Mrs. UTILITY seldom,
if ever, visits Bonn. A few handsome items, however, are a table lighter
another, .a table
furnished as a gift on one occasion by r,
lighter (UTILITY has a desk and a table in the living room); and a transistorized desk clock furnished as gifts by 4: 0;1. UTILITY drew attention
to these items and stated the clock has been functioning continuously and
without adjustment since Christmas 1956. He called it a fine example of
American workmanship that he was proud to have in his apartment.
4. UTILITY was kind enough to look up the location and phone number
. 3. and while he did so . it afforded
of the Park Hotel, Bad Godesberg for , L
the opportunity to note a* number jotted Aiivin on the outside of a-private
telephone listing book, viz. "8-68713" followed :1), " 4udes 13 IIS." Does
this mean anything to Bonn Base? Possibly it has some operational significance if it can be figured out. On the other hand, it may refer only to
his tailor or candlestick maker.
APPROVED:
DECL ASS IF fj.0,41.0
R EL ,EASED
CENTR1L
ArithrtY
SOILICESME
TRODSEXENPIION
3025
lZ1 WAR CR
IMES DI
SCLOSURE ACI
IE 2005
DistribUtiOn:.
Bonn--2
,
cos--2
vtE--2
%.!
"1
41:
P.
USE.PREVIOUS EDITION.
REPLACES FORMS
51.25. 5I48A'AND 51.29
WHICH ARE OBSOLETE.'
CLASSIFICATION
SECRET
eitgt;--;
'
'
1:1
PAGE NO.
CONTINU
DECLASSIF
'
''
ED
NI:tttfttlettel---
'RELEASED DY___
AND
SdURCES.METMOSEXEM.PON3B2E
'
N fit AL. 1
IS
Cn1U
RE A Cl
AATE 2005
RAFT/GWItewuri./17 Oct 58
,;
With your indulgence; I shall not restrict myself to the relatively few provisions
in the National Security Act of
1947
1949
';:A
Lkt
0:1
..
'
'
federal agency,'
' . great support to the work that he had to do. The special provisions
been drawn up tor
CI
A
have
' haie.been:placed
..
.*
which
in
.thiti.goiyei*meht
. :
-'
.agency. The first is the power of discretion, that is the paver to exerciseI'Lfeee
decis on, indiv dual:Judgment or fre choice unhamper d by admin stratiVe':&k: "
working
f :,
.,:i...,. ,.: .
..
...
we have,
.
the
.. ".
---
77.z-vf4c64:77.-.7.7
.
"
:717
certain reaponsibilities
which
which
him.
"
and,
which
devoive on
.
"
the
.waddevised iii such way as to insure that 'one branch of the government would..
not .wrest away a disproportionate share of power. from the other branches In ..
..
'
'
order to prevent the President from using his -power : t6 'Make appointments . to
.
'
.'
...
all high executive personnel: Fla: all other personnel. in the 'executive- brandh
.
.
.
'
. :.
)
key employees
to hire into these positions members of their own party. It was believed that
government operations were of such &Simple nature that any man who could read
.and write could. fulfill the duties
.
of
healthy
effect of keeping
from
American citizen of the early nineteenth century took pride in his system of .
free democracy and regarded the governments in Petersburg, Vienna, Berlin and
its petrified
bureautsacied.
After the Civil War and in recognition of .
'London
.
.
.""gte_ ;17 li
'Arc
<: C
41."(
'
powers which it had generously granted to department and agency heads.' In 1883 ",
: .
,
.
.Congress paicied the Civil Service Act. Under this act the President wusempowered
were
A.
'.
.
examinations
"
of applicants *-
for vacant positionL in the departments which the President decided should
placdunder the Civil Service Act. The Federal courts
had
be
since the appAntingpower was located with the department heads, no outside
" groUp_such aa'the Civil Service Commission could dictate the particular
,
.
.
. .
rr ..... ' individualvho would. be appointed in a department. "However,. it was considered
. ..
. .
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.,
. ..
appropriate-todefine'limitations
on ho V the appointing power is exercised,
.,
, .
.
.
$ 1::: 1. r: ,...
: : ,, . thUsy
. ,..,_
..
. e.
.lt wis determined, .that a body such as the Civil SerVice Commission :could'
.
position."
e
' '
- .
..' H
;-
771
.
(m1)
In 1912 Congress irposed the first restrictions that were ever imposed
;
7.1
.2.
.e4.444C...f;
grading of veterans.
Finally, Congress dictates the pay that will be given to every federal.
.
J2.4m.mhp.e
^^1% t'44
employee from the President down This is done in two general yaks. From
,.
time to time the Congress passes an Executive Pay . ACt which, establishes salaries..
of all senior executives in the Government including the President. it also
:.1
that
%. . Congress
pays to itself'. Congress does not dare to . increase the : '
. .
.
..*.
/cr. .
4't
Goafgressmen
above
. a level that would be generally
.
s'.
.
/ . ' .
.
.
this knowledge in the backs Of their minds, Congress
. .
..
.
-)
.---
.
:,. :
and"with
.
the
.
.
' ... .
..
s.v
,..
.1
..
.
iv
of, the
then Sets
. .
.
.
.
. .
.
and. other
officers of the government are relatedto these various
.pijr.Systems.
,;.-.4
-
.1
./.*:`^M`.
'
"4
.
We have briefly reviewed the powers that the Director enjOye as the
S',4
:1
touched
passed over the 1aot,80 years and which has the effect of limiting these
powers. Noy, very briefly, let me describe the authorities which we use
'dozens of. others pertaining to the cost of housing', the tranaportation of.
to say that, although there have been written into CIA lay,
....
. . , .
','-'..:'...!..
:...
'.
-.
this i
is
'intO'lairin
i
..
This
.
and
'
I.1
....:A.r.,
:: s'ill..
:,-
LI
does
candidates from Civil Service rosters and the Civil Service Commission
does
not know the names Of the persons he hires. He is, thus, free to exercise
discretion in the assembling of his staff.
Secondly, the Director can remove any employee from the Agency without
reference to any other authority in the government. His authority to do this
1947.
7.
"Notwithstanding. the
prOvisions
of section
the Act of
Of
'-)
.,;3
...5
Of
... '
......
or -
advisable in the interests of the United. State s' , but such term!nation shall not affect
the rightof
. .
. .
.-.
.
.
*4
;:.
,%1
-1.
officer. or eMployee:
such
..,
.. ...
...
..
%2'
.
governing the
of Central Inte
..
' :
.. to
be necessary in
. --
in such
-
rEil
..
'
' '
.:=..................mr.:r.wartM...
s:;:.:E11:1"a'j :
' .
'::-.:
.: ,.. . ..
.
4.,.
...,.........,,,.....,....6..,.~..v.itowww4".....:
. ,.:.:: ; -'!' 1
the Director may establish the rate of .pay for anipositioninthe'
. .
. .
. .
.
he ,
(which
in a
are inclUded:in.,-
CAssification,iCt. of .1949.
..
.N7
44T.,:el
'
I.
regard. ciA makes use of the principlcs of job classification as 'net forth.
./
in the Classification'Ae; of
.
.i
. 1
1949
Commission in establishing the pay for all positions which are ertOly0,144.,ce
comparable with positions that exist elsewhere in govcrnment: Secretaries, .
1 .4
IA.4'
'
...,..4:
:.
4 2
Furthermore,
ta
V:.1
statisticians, foreign service officers and the like. CIA Uses the General
t ,..4
1 ; ,4
Ii ..,s
14;
L
N .'
,
.. ;.
,..
;
voluntarily.
..
'4.
pay
Schedule rates of
PI
;
'4
..
, 1
CIA is
-J.1!
- ..
subject
to
review :-.!
.:'1f '
"
. s,,. 1
- .4';
,7
r. s.:?-- ..
i-4. , '
.-
funds .
are spent in the way that Congress intended when it appropriated
ell
..
the
th
funds. Those functions of CIA which are considered common to all federal
- %'.'
..-'. . ,
.agencies fall under the cognizance of the Comptroller General. For example, ..
,
...
..
expenditures
:-:`:.1.,
'
the Agency pays salaries and expends money On personnel services overseas.,
:.
..
' . the. only review that is made is by the Agency's own Audit Staff.
'...;that
I ,
..
1;.;.yei
...
.
41
M
...c,
'...1)
The BUreaU , of the Budget, which . undertakes its reviews_on behalf ;.,1' the
..
..:12^0
.:. .
....'ivi
.,Tresidenti concerns itself with numbers Of full Staff employees. and average
.1
.
i
. /
grade.. Although it subjects the Agency to very, stern inquiry, it does not
.
.
. .
..g.4,..:,..z.Ar
the
Director's
authority
to
pay
salaried
as
he,,gees,.0ti,P.
...:A.n . :anrway s linit .
1
4
v
c.4
f..
,
, ,. .....
....
. ,r
ot.
:, .1
..d
4
,4
4.
1.
;;,:..
.)
17
4
...
:1
.
tk....
el tri
..1.:,?;; q
.
.
..
ci,, vezo
X: rx-1.1 4,1
141
.
,.
1.^.i. b P
..
t!,
in VI 0
..
"
1"-
....,
.4
. '
...
. .. -.
- .. . ., ..
.f
14.
Fio All y, there is, one type of legislation which we do not have and which
we seek. That is early retirement legislation. We are at present authorized
to separate people who do not meet Agency standards. There are, however, man
5'
and women on duty in CIA who began their work in intelligence during the:
Second World War or shortly thereafter and who sometime in the next ten years
;
'
for one reason or other will have become excess to our needs. At that time .
they will'be.in their fifties. CIA has, no way of providing for a retirement.,
ft):11 :
,.y . ....
i' -14;
..
ri ..
rlt
. .":
;
.: f
'
.-
71 i
- '
...:k,.1.
an employee with 20 years or more service can retire at age 62.- ' I have a
Iii .... . . i .
,...: .
7 ,
chart here which shows the rate of his entire retirement income. . If the ..
0.tr
i.
.ftl
... :
...Ai
: .
1: -1c
...:
,. - ) -.5.;*
. . ..:..,-0,.
'
'
(I
. Y::
.;..:.....,'....
:
,...
for cause by the Agency. Seventy is the age of mandatory retirement "in
- this government. We want legislation Which will permit
118
to retire our ,
.
people at age 50 with 20 yearn of government service, 10 year 's of which have
k::
years of serVice. Thus, for example, a man who has been paid,. let
.$10,000a year for hiehighTive yearoand who has worked for thirty years .
. .
when he is retired will receive $6,000 per year anuuity. Thiele not easy
: to
that Man over a period of 12 years 'in addition to the annuity, that he will
Of years
. .
.
. .'.. .
;:4
- ''
,.
."
,
.
..
:,:.;;
'
.
, .
f
:.'....... .-1;':.4,$
: '':
'.. .....':. .."' 'il.i; ", ).;,1'
. .' -.::'... ..... ' , . %...,C.:;
CLASSIFICATION
D I S PAT C H
TO
% ., . .,
EGO!1$186-
SECRET
1
mro
- ....
-Oa, a
24 November 1958
Chief:iifi6Se Do n'
,UPSW/NG..,.
3 '
dence
JMILITY
.1 6 Bonn R
_.-. ..-
ACTION REQUIRI ,
None
REFERENCE(S)
_.....
DATE
FROM..
suBJEci
r____
- -.
NO INDEXING REQUIRED
INDEXING CAN BE JUDGED
BY QUALIFIED HQ. DESK ONLY
_ _
des SAARLANDES
,
. Bonner VertretUng.
.
.
.
.
2. The names whtch appear at the entranCe-way of apartment
#31 which apparently belong to apartment #29 are as follows:
....
312'21
.. .-JazuE.Grirc:
71comiGy
f=i)
..EUETTENHAIN:
':11rONSHAUSEN . ilid
and WENDLAND'....._
,
a. The Bonn - Address Book published'in 1956 containsgAsti
the following information about three of these individuals: am;a4.
--K0ENIgAlf.thl, Dipl.-Landwirt, Koblenzerstr. 31,
- -.. telephone
tv.r.cgol,c,d3
. .
_
.
, -
_ ... _ ,. 2 42 16
a
TTENTIA/NErich , - . Dr
-_-: Koblenzerstr.'3 1, telephone w2''
002:1
5
27
21
'
ISWZ
. . . .
l
. WENDLAND . r,Horat l Koblenzers .br. 31, telephone 5.27 08 rifratirg0
.
.
..ferilD11
b. In the section of the Address Book which lie-tel. 1212:1
611lr'ima
^
residents according to street number, we find the following listpla =m-A
ing for number 29 Koblenzerstr. (in this section there is no
listing for #31):
. ,..,
Vici.t r. .6
.1i0EMGHOFFle,lImlitk,_Aussenhandelsbeauftragter
.111TETTENHAINiEDr. '
KOENIOAIfred:, Dipl-Landw.
,.SPRATTElkjr.;:(Textilhaus Cronenberg) .
Angest.
.
,17ENDLAN.D-1116
.
'
, YENDIA.104 gOi`stfm. -
" 536
;,.
'Con
P -
'
:
4 .,,
'
4. 'a.
CLASSIFICATION
HQ COPY
_D
C____
( -. .
PACE NO.
CENTRAL
tS
ItLIGENCE
AG
NC1r
SOURCESMETHOOSEXEMPTION3B21
NAZ I WAR Ciphs
t ATE 2005
te:50400 RE AO
'.
CLASSIFICATION
CONTINUATION OF
DISPATCH
DISPAICh
EGNA16186:
SECRET
Koblenzerstr. 31. 5 27 08 .
-YrENDIAND
Distribution:
2 -MOB
OS.
-BE
'
1,
..*
.
V :.
*.
" .)
..1.'
tl'i
'
'
. 'PAGE .NO.
CLASS IFICATIO N
CONTINUED
SECRET
4,411 '24
SUBJECT or DOCUMENT .
.
RI FILE NO.
7.
DISPATCH
7. 5ouRcr.
S.
6.
ANALYST
DATE PROCESSED
10.
OR
SOURCE
CRTRTONTAI
DISSEMINATED
DOC.
ST4170L NO.
DATE
OF
INFO.
11.
DATE
6.
IN
9.
DATE
EVALUATION
DOCUMENT DISPOSITION
12.
CROSS
REFERRED
TO
THIS
FILE
13.
TRANSFERRED
RI FILE NO.
TO
,,,
PERTINENT
INFORMATION
44.
Reference Document
Filed Here
LtN,
324-002313/914
REINHARD (GENq
..
.008 03.APR 02
ERFURT , . GERMANY
cu
T
WEST
%. .....16
___---
DEC
e5T227
1:
Here
GERMANY' :
ADOLF
SUPPORT FROM WS .CLOSFRIEND
-* ..,--.'
1
'OILERS / .C.
......, -.., .
,
-,
-
DECLASSIFIED AND
-
CENTRAL
RELEASED RI'
INTELLIGENCE ASENC1
SOURCESMETHOOSEXEMP1ION.381E
NAZ I WAR CR IMES ill SCLOSU RE AC1
DATE 2005
:t
01;
V
1
1..:44;\ w.
... 0
A
ki .., NI '1:::0-'
10. 7:3 V, iif
-
lt,,,;',4; \.;-,
IS.
FILE THIS
FORM
6.
867
OP 03
FORM
IN FILE NO.
SECRET
(7446)
CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
ORIG :
OWC risb
/((
UNIT :
EXT
DATE
'
18 December 1958
TO : FRAN
FROM : MUNI
INFO
ROUTINE
PRECEDENCE
CABLE NOTE
FOR YOUR INFORMATION UTILITY HAS A CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR YOU. ETCHED
MAP OLD GERMANY. IF YOU WISH RECIPROCATE SUGGEST SOMETHING FOR HOUSEHOLD OR BOX CIGARS.
. END OF MESSAGE
4`9.ti
tC.?,.1.!/r1;TN.
t`.k
4 ,5 A/,At n/ha
"Ve5 55 r
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DATE:
3288.
23 DECEKBER 1958
TO
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END OF MESSAGE
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Copy No:
RIG:
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DATE :
TO
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288
233* DECEMBER
DEFERRED
MUNICH, FRANKFURT
EE
1958
j_ -7
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MUNI
1
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CITE DIR
.05795
FECtei
3
PLEASE PASS uTiLlry MESSAGE FROM ME ALONG FOLLCWING LIMES'
THIS CHRISTMAS SEASON MARKS END OF DECADE CUR PERSONAL ASSOCIATION
4
WITHIN FRAMEWORK KUBARK AND UPSWING. LOOKING BACK ON 10 YEARS OF VAST
ECONOMIC; TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE AND corivrAwr POLITICALTURMOILRESULTING
KM . UNABATED COMMUNIST ATTACK ON FREE WORLD, FEEL SENSE SATISFACTION
OUR COMMON EFFORTS SIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTION IN GERMAN AND ODYOKE UNDER-
PROMISES TO
ON
BERLIN FRaalEM. DE
CLASSIF I ED AND
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END OF MESSAGE
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COORDINATING OFFICERS
ItElEAS * 11,05
OFFICER
AUTHENTICATING OFFICER
copy No.
ROUTINE
24 IBA:EMBER 1958
DR. SCHNEIDER
Bol
mr
YOUR FAMILY, AS WELL AS YOUR STAFF FOR A MOST HAPPY CHRISTMAS AND A THOROUGHLY
SIrCESSFUL AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR. IN THIS WISE YOUR MANY FRIENDS HERE ON MY
STAFF JOIN ME AND LOOK FORWARD TO CONTINUA= OF OUR MUTUAL COOPERATION, WHICH
HAS BECOME TO ME A MOST SIGNIFICANT AND SUCCSSFUL ARRANGEMENT.
2. MESSAGES ALSO WERE RECEIVED FROM MR. MARSHALL AND HERR BENLEHR,
BOTH OF WHOM WISHED TEAT THEIR HEARTLEST GREETINGS TO YOU AND YOUR FAMILY AND STAFF
SHOULD BE EXTENDED. MR. MARSHALL'S MESSAGE IS AS FOLLOWS:
THIS CHRISTMAS SEASON MARKS THE END OF A DECADE OF OUR PERSONAL ASSOCIATION
WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF ECG AND GAMMA.. LOOKING BACK ON TEN YEARS OF VAST ECONOMIC
AND TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE AND CONSTANT POLITICAL TURMOIL RESULTI4R0qTHE
Lc
PAGE 2
UNABATED cOMMUNIST . ATTACISON FREE
WORLD, I FEEL A
I ALSO WISH TO
En=
MY
NW
WARES Als BERLIN USD ADS HAMBURG ARE KR. HARVEY AND
ma.
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801
MR.
biCha.
FILE NO.
658 ER/JC1/49-/.:a
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CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
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DATE 10 FD3RDARY 19.59
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Urri AND RIB STAFF ASCHAg
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AND EDBARK APPRECIATION FOR CCUI TINDED CLOSE COOPERATIO
cis
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Chief; EE..
INFO .
Chief, WE; Chief of Station; C:...7 Chief of:
Ste.tion,E.....
,...._. 7 Chief of Station, Germany
FROM '
Chief, Munich Base
SUBJECT
.
,
..
WESWING/Operational
Otift'ti visit to Athens and Rome
TO
ACTION REQUIRED
Unknown
.
DATE
15 October 1959
RE: "434" -- (CHECK "X" ONE)
NO INDEXING REQUIRED
For Information
REFERENCE(S)
I'
...,
ity.f..9.i.,g11.14.
.
.
.
Prior to Clark's departure we had made arrangements to keep posted
3.
on the progrese of , this flight through Flight Service., at peubiberg Airfield,
This turned out to be most unsatisfactory AinCe word of the arrival of the
plane usually was 10-12 hours late.
,
*
Approved
Attachment:h/w
.Report on Flight
'
DECLASS
Distribution:
.2-3s- Ex w 2 eye. att.
2 - WE w 1 cy. att.
2 - lieig . w icy. att.
2 - Atheng,w 1 cy. att.
2 - COS/G w 1 cy. att.
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REFLACES FORMS
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NO.
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:'
120ctober
--I
1959
October
1959
October
1959
i departed the hotel at 0800 to prepare the necessary flight clearances and
refueling for the flight to Athens, METZ and 42HPLUal remained behind, .to meet
UTILITY, Nib() was arriving at 1010 by train from Bern. .The three arrived at the
airport at 1100 and we departed at 1200 for Athens. The flight was uneventful,
With one exception, and that was that UTILITY flew the airplane from the copilot's seat for about an hour and apparently. was,
pleased to have the oplOr-.
tunity. We were met by a'small delegation in .Athens, including Giovanni, UTILITY's
brother,. and several members of the GreekIntelligence Service vbio:essisted,in,
expediting the customs controls. UTILITY and METZ vent with the receiving party
.and were quartered at the Grande .Britaeia Betel..61114043,and I stayed at the
Hotel. Nationale:
, Tuesday i
October
1959
1959
6BEN1060.and I were again on Our Own. I called Wiesbaden from the U. S. Alori.
Attache office to inform the'DW/Intelligence that UTILITY bad agreed to postpone
. his plannedAravel during the first week of November to.receive General Smith,
CinCi.USAFE,. and party during that period. I was contacted in the afternoon by
an English-speaking Greek who sal. that UTILITY woUld like, if possible, to leave
at 1000' the following day.
Thursdai;,..8-October-1959
.
At
Greek
.Page 2
iere .met at the Rome airport by DTILITY's niece,. the daughter of
drove the four of us into the. city. 'During this ride UTILITY
e'.ed that he had obtained the Use of his brother's' home in Rome and intended
to make his visit with the Chief of the Italian Intelligence Service partially
social and expected to entertain him on Saturday. afternoon. He also did not know
when he expected..to depart Rome for Munich and therefore urged me to return the
following day, stating that he bid Used an old trick of making several sleeper
reservations for this trip by rail. He said that he then could cancel the un..
needed ones when be learned when he would be departing.
; 4 wanni: who
This evening METZ, ORE** and I had dinner together and later spent some
time in a night club. During this time, METZ said that be vas very impressed
with the briefings received in Greece. He was especially impresied with the
charts and target . folderd shown to them by the Greek armed forces representatives.
He also stated that UTILITY vas provided a 24-hour body guard and had made numerous sight-seeing trips accompanied by
these guards.
Friday, 9 0ctobar.1959
_
METZ, omili441, and I departed Rome. at 1200 1. for our return flight to Munich.
During ihisflight METZ discussed: in part: Ids work in Bonn: stating that .
nearly 164.of their requests from the Bonn government: were for either political'
or economic information,
SECREI
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CHIEF OF STATION, GERMANY _CH1EFNE.
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HEADQUARTERS FILE NO.
Chief, EE
INFO
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FROM
Chief
15 April 1960
of Station, Germany
SuARCT
ACTION REQUIRED
A I. s birthday
col:anent:
"I t m sure you must be very sorry to have heard. the news of
Jim Critohfield i s assignment to another area this summer. But
I notice that the old German hands keep coming back, as C.
and I have done already and as Gordon Stewart will be doing shortly,
so -I doubt that Jim will be lost to us indefinitely. Meanwhile it
will be good to have your and my old friend Gordon with us."
Attachment:
Letter dated
April
Distribution:
DECLASSIFIED AND
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CENTRAL 1NTELL I6ENCE ASENCI
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i .. :..,...*4;.,'.:,.f:;:..,
.PECT82M -AKEOCCA .8IONAL TRIPS OFFICE AND BONN.
WE DID NOT ':ATTEN-0'..T?:::.:':::Z":;:cfV.
,.
..
.
TILITy - ..L.IILI.::;;BE
;i::11.:;;,;,..
..... 1
.,
L.'..... . ;1
...
'
. ,
.--- -
'
- .v.
'.
END OF
: ,
OiS
, : ,COMMENT: .**ERENCE
.
.
MESSAGE
.:
--.
'
I.
.:t
. ,..
.)
..
. .
REPRODUCTION . BY OTHER . THAN . THE ISSUING , .OFFICE IS PROHIBITED.
I
.
I
I-
Ccipy.
!,
.
"- 22 June 1960
TO
fROM x
ISRM-977.
December
't")0
ComuLiax.
DECLA
SSIFIED AND RE
LCASED NY
CENTRAL INTELL !CENCI
A GENCY
SOURCES METHODS EXEMPT I
() N3
NAZ1 WAR CRIMESDISCLOOMAti
DATE 2001
2005
EST
WAAL:
The University
me
sfith beat greetings and wishes for the :Icy Year, I remain,
Respectfully,
js/ Gehlen
DECLASSIFIED
AND RE
LEASEO NY
CENTRAL INTELLI
GINCI AN ENCY
SOURCESMETHODS
EXIM PTIONn
NAZI 144R
cRIME8010
DATE 2001
2001
401011A
ST AVMLAE COPY
basis.
Allen W. Dulles
Direeter
Signature Recommended:
DoW4rtdrector
(Plans)
DD?/E/0: C
Distribution:
Orig -Addressee
2 DCI
1 - Doci
1 - DDP
1 - COPS1
1 - CAS
1 - CACR/0
'SEGO
19 April 3.961
MiCEMECDOM TO: Chief, Counter Intelligence Staff
=Qum
ci/ok
suuscrs
is
1. In accordance vith cm No. 50-7, 29 July 1960, permission
Intelligence
three
meMbera
of
the
West
German
hereby requested to it
ge April 1941 for
Oarvice to Agency pTIMileS during the veek of 2hconferences andametings.
The -indiyidnals cancer:164 are:
Inteligence
24
Monday April 24 -
Xr.
E C L-AS. S -IT LE 0
A. 0 H. R . Et E
El)
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE
ENC)
SOURCESMET
HODSEXEMPT ION 382E
NAZI WAR CR IMES DI S
CLOSURE AC
ELIE 2005
C.
2
Wettoeseau. April. 26 A.M.
i, Chief Div * D.
A.M. Merin& MIN
X 34g., Contemerao to= or
Kr. Amees maim.
Thantaimr - Alga
.carimy
A-
M
/!3o
3:60
1S6
Ez/d/t.
Bit. 4976
M. (7
tr
t-
tvrt kur,
k
0..
SECRET
SECRET
lg(i1
70:
Director.
Invantlgation
redsral Burson
Attention: Itr. S. J. Pich
MOH:
CC in
n born L
b. L
Germany, lito is a deputy to Gootrel.
1933, Berlin,
c.
-a 4
born
L"'
1922, Koeslin,
this
ASelaa7.
CpCl 3/765,070
DIEJEFIG/L:,
Dietributioo:
Orig 8,3 1 - A.ddressee
1 - CI
CIAMIt
2 - 11E/0/1.
1-
1 - RI
DECLASSIFIED AND RELEASED BY
CENTRAL I NTELL IGENCE AGPf.:ZPIACT
SOURCES METHODS EXEMPT ION 3171`
NAZI WAR CRIMES DISCLOSURE AC1
DATE 2005
CE ft./
GI G
H 11. LF;
r.)/0
.
of.
*:---->/g/
PPP
SUBJECT:
2005
k. 1;
Berlin:
r
e.
Eichmann trial:
Counterintelligence:
SFr
DET
GORDON M. STEWART
Chief, Eastern European Division
cc: DDCI
Attachment:
Agenda for General Gehlen
the period 21 to . 79
Apra 1961
RECEIVED
Returned.:
PHI8ICAi7SECURITY DIVISION . OS
PATE
AC]
1 juae 1961
As you know our service while airing to develop epecific area epecialists, intends wherever posetble to provide the opportunit y for officers
veky
and activities.
In this
to breach vat oaoseicnally Into other fields enerienoes
of
other
personit is felt that horizons min be bz)adened end.
nel end staffs in both sinilar.end different :situations sampled. with
long-pange beneficial results.
So it is that I en 'lent out' ec to elocak by ZS to Tit for atoperiod
it) tmd
of tine. NvantesellY:Xchell return to = (I . rill 3.00k forwerd.
the
Germ=
end
sany
once store to the bucinets ot our eitnetion . in' pene
be/ire then) InAiing: co I koPe shall be
problem: (if it is not
ea today
.
Sada:ore
Ins('releddeablAi:Peison than X what
i
a wieer, more.:::entaeriencedi
I
and as ouch *the* capable : of contributing in a -speCiel im:(Y to
two
nerviees.
trust id1.1 Still be a fruitful cooixtratice2 between. our
In closing please allow ise to eacprees sy gratitude for 3,our past
(end continnine) friendship, understandin g and 4mcourega1e1t. 15.3.1
!met again.
Sincerely,
SOURCESMETHOOSEXEMPTION3B2E
DATE 2005
IA
ils%A. V41
tv.
11--,
0'
..,
: V.5:-'it,u31:z..4:- .
,IttiO0AN,-,4 '
/ -
SECRET
Chief, Munich Liaison Base
Chief of Station, Germany
Chief, EE
Transmittal of Letter
Attaclunent:
Letter u/s/c
Distributinen
2-htL21 yr/ sit
Z-COS w/att
DECLASS IF I ED AND RELEASED BY.
CENTRAL INTELL !HUE AS ENC`i
CCURC ES METHODSEXEMPT 101.1.332E
N.421 WAR CRIMES DI SCL,OSBRE AC1
:'.TE
2005
EC/45-3023
SXCR.3CT
C/EE
1-1qs Distribution:
I-C/EE
1-EE/G/L
D/EE/G/CA 17 July
C/E E
Gordon
. Stewart
. M.
.
.3288
913:3^7c
NC
7 July 1961
My
dear
Cane ml
Geblen:
r.pfgqv
.
A .3
4j4:01
.
,
:
:
Cr9
lkirj
r.A
.!
;don M. Stewart
By SEFTON DELMER
Remember 1918
'Consciously or subconsciousl y Reinhard Gehlen must have had at the back
of his 'mind in those desperate last weeks
Of the war the memory of how the German
generals of 1918 successfully played. on
Western fears of Bolshevik expansion to
'preserve their army and their power as a
caste. He must have remembered it-all
the better as he himself took Part as- a
. young -officer in the army's clandestine
come-back at- that time. For Gchlen. the
son of a . Prussian officer turned publisher,
had in 1920 at the age of 18 entered the
new Reichswehr as an ensign.
. Gehlen's 1945 plan for German military
resurgence also relied on his being able to
exacerbate and exploit the coming breach
between Stalin's Russia and the Western
allies'. Not that he was alone with this
idea. -Many German leaders were thinking
and even talking on these lines, from the
leaders Of the Conservative Resistance to
men like Himmler and Security Chief
Walter' Schellenbcrg.
What Was original about' Gehlen's concept'svas that he planned to use the knowhow of his anti-Soviet intelligence 'unit
as his stake in the game. He planned to
offer his services to the victorious Americans. For his own work had shown him
that O.S.S. had not even.begun to function
in the Soviet Union. He reckoned that
Washington would jump at the chance of
obtaining the help of an expert agency
like his. And he was right.
As early as January 19.45 he took the
first steps to put his plan into effect.
Shortly after having been received -by the
Ftihrer for what was to be his last personal reportthe date was January 9.1945
--Gehlen summoned the key members of
his staff to a conference: They met in- his
room in the underground steel and concrete shelter Of-the Army High Command's
" Maybach " H.Q. at Zossen,. near Berlin.
DECLASSIFIED
AND IfilAtiln DY
INTELLIDENCI AOINCY
SIVREESIIETRODS EUNFIION1111
CENTRAL
Hitler had *designated as the " impregterritories. How should they evaluate
nable redoubt " where his armies
this bit of information, what should they
would make their last stand. Here
do about that?
Gehlen ordered the three groups to
was' not long before Gehlen and his
separate.
experts were removed from the dreary
"The Americans will be here any
interrogation centre and transferred to the
time now," he said to his men in fareheavily guarded .U.S. Army, intelligence
well. "Do as I have Ordered and all
. compound . in Frankfurt-am-Main. There
will be well. I will keep in touch'with you they were assigned offices of. their. own. to
by secret courier."
iwork in. That made them virtually free
Whcn the other two parties 'bid' left ,men. They were able to see their wives and
for their : prearranged .. hide-Outi,. :Gehlen 4o out into the town when they wished.
and his team went off on foot to ..theirs. 'That was important for them, both as
They climbed .a mountain above tbe private individuals, and as members of a
Schliersee, the alpine lake into ',whose nation'which' at that time was jobless *id
volcanic depths other fleeing 'Secret hungry. But more important Was the
Service groups had already sunk cases' of significance of this development in history.
secret documents; including several loaded -For . Gehlen, and his staff officers now went
with forged Bank of England notea...)...
into,iction..again.against the Russians..
.Under the direction of General PatterGehlen . began to establish contact
once more with some of the army of
'agents he had left behind as Hitler's
Gehlen climbed and climbed,:untll'h. c arrnies.retreated from the Russians. 'The
reached the Elendsalm, where: . he 4 had Aniericaris` provided the necessaty . funds
secretly, prepared a chalet for his .. part Y-'and sOon the Gehlen machinery was tickAnd on the Elendsalm and the mountain,Oncagainlike the heart of a man who has
top above it he now awaited thevliming ;'.died: -for a few minutes and is then masof the Americans.
...,..!,..*...:.sageillaack to life by a skilful surgeon.
He did not have , to waitlong.;Thienigh:. .. ',The information procured by the Gehlen
their binoculars Gehlen and his .:,officers' Organisation, especially' from occupied
were two days later able to make out' the .Germany, which the Russians by now had
first American armoured spearheakis racing 'closed to the Western allies, was so'
through . the alpine valleys. below 'in the impressive in comparison with the Amendash that
that was to take 'them to the .gates cans' own meagre information, and
Gehlen's analyses were so shrewd and
, .
" It will be a few days Yet before the imaginative that Patterson's chiefs in
Amis leave their jeeps and come to have a Washington began to be interested. Patlook around up here." said Gehlen. "And terson was ordered -to fly Gehlen to the
. when they do come it will be by day. United States so that the Pentagon could
They'll be too' spooked to . come .up by look him over.
night. So we shall be quite safe sleeping
And it was in Washington that Gchlen
ir, the chalet. No need to camp .out."
;made his all-important . dealthe deal
In this predictionhis last as an which was the dream of Himmlcr and
Intelligence Chief of Hitler's Wehrmacht Schellenberg, the deal which enabled him
Gehlen was to be proved correct. It was to. revive a section of Hitler's General
almost a week before one sunny morning Staff and lay the foundation of German
a burst of automatic fire against the walls rearmament at a time when such rearmaof the chalet was followed by . the arrival mint was still anathema not only to the
of a platoon of G.I.s. The general decided Allied Governments but to the German
the time had come for him to climb down public.
from his mountain and give himself up.
Gchlen agreed to form a German
Unlike other high officers. Gehlen made
no attempt to 'disguise his identity or his
importance. On the contrary. from the
very first.. Gehlen presented himself to
his captors as the chief of Hitler's antiSoviet Intelligenee. He produced his paybook and his papers to prove it.
" Lieut.-General Reinhard Gehlen," be
How to Surrender
A Scoop
IntelligenCe Service which would get information from behind the Iron Curtain for
the Americans. As Gehlen himself tells
the story nowadays he made three
demands to the Americans before accepting
I. The staff of his unit should be exclusively under his orders. They should,
work as a purely German organisation
on a fixed dollar budget financed by the
Americans.
2. No member of his unit should be made
to Work against German national
interests. .
3. Until Germany regained her sovereignty and formed a government of
her own, he, Gehlen, should be regarded
by the Americans as a trustee of German
interests in matters of intelligence. Ile
should be free to pass his organisation'
over to the German Government after
Germany had regained sovereignty.
The Americans accepted Gehlen's
terms,, granted him a fixed budget of 3}
million dollars a . year (they increased it
soon after) and provided for him, his staff.
and their families a special compound of
their own at Pullach, near Munich, where
they. could live and Work in secret.
Ironically the compound which was allo-
cated to Hitler's former spy chief was the
Rudolf Hess settlement, a housing estate
consisting of a . score of one- and twofamily houses, which had originally been
built to house Nazi Party functionaries
with large families.' It had been used as a
secret staff headquarters by Hitler auring
the , war and a number of prefabricated
huts had been added which came in most
useful now.
Secret Work
Here now behind a high barbed-wire
fence and with 'a battalion of German
auxiliaries under U.S. command guarding
them the Gehlen team set to work in conditions: of secrecy, .amounting almost to
iselaticin. Even the children of the Gehlen
men were not allowed to leave the camp
for fear that they might give away what
was going. on. They were sent to a
special school in the early and with them
went Gehlen's awn four youngsters.
But Gehlen, whose Flemish family
motto Laet vaeren nytt (" Never give up ")
now hung once more on the wall of his
private sanctum, had' got where he wanted.
For not only was he able to turn his unit
into a shadow ,German General Staff but
more important still he was now in a
position to supply. the Americans with the
kind of intelligence which would make
them feel that it was. essential to re-create
theGerman Army to help in the defence
of Europe against the Russians.
And he was doing so at exactly the
same time as the German Communist
spy'. -corps sent into the West from the
Sdviet zone of Germany, in order to
demonstrate their indispensability to the
Kremlin were reporting to their Russian
masters the . allegedly nefarious Allied plotting against Moscow in the Western
zones of Germany.
Among * the staff 'officers whom
he recruited for his organisation was
his old chief at the High Command,
Lieut.-Gen. Adolf Heusinger, later
to become the first Inspector-General
of the new West German army.
Heusinger is today chairman of
N.A.T.O.'s standing Military comMittee, a position which, like his previous command of the Bundeswchr, he
owes very 'largely to the good words
put in for him with the Americans
by the influential Gehlen.
Not that Heusinger did intelligence work for Gehlen while he was
in Pulach. As Hcusinger tells the
story Gehlen 'called on him early in
1948. 'just after he had been
released from internment'. and sug
gested he should join Gehlen's unit to keep
himself up to date on the Red Army.
" It might be a good thing," said
Gehlen, according to Heusinger, "if you
inform yourself about the military situation
in the Fast. You can .do that if you join
my shop."
The Academy
Other old staff officer comrades likewise took 'jobs with Gehlen. And soon
there was almost as much planning being
done In Pullach for the new German Army
which Gehlen felt sure the Americans
would require before long as for the job
of providing the Americans with intelli gence reports. Quite a number of top
officers of. the new Bundeswehr graduated
from the
" Doctor's" academy.
But while Gehlen was taking former
generals and staff-officers on to his pay-roll
in the higher echelons of his new intelligence unit (and even today most of the
officials who represent him in his snore
important . liaison functions with government and industry are old staff officersof
" sound" conservative background) his
- operatives were also recruiting at a lower
and more secret lev .c1 many former members of Himmier's S.D. and Gestapo.
We had to do this " is the usual
explanation given by Gehlen men. "The
Soviet authorities were using so many S.D.
and Gestapo men in their service that this
was a good way of penetrating the Red
espionage and counter-espionage outfits."
One result of this engagement of S.D.
men by both the Gehlen service and the
espionage services of his Soviet-German
rivals was that the battle between Gehlen
and the Communist spy chiefs .Wollweber
and Zaisser and their present successor
Erich Mielcke became a war between rival
gangs of S.D. men, with many of them
working for both sides or rapidly changing
from one to the other. Every week this
astonishing war between the two rival
armies of ex-T-Iimmler thugs takes its fresh
toll of arrests, murders and kidnappings.
Of these I will tell in my next article.
Sefton Delmer 1961.
tt
!!!
for Russian
prisortersofwar.
gerrnanu's
Secret
Phoenix
,
BV SEFTON DELIVER
handles.
there
is
a dearththe
of
Alas for this vier Prussian. Now that .But although
he has become the head of Chancellor Gehlen photogra p hs there is no lack
of h
Adenauer's Secret Service the 59-year-old other detaila to make up the.pieture
ex-General Gehlen has not. been able to influential
man who and
is. not
only one
of the active
most
powerful
Germans
keep out of the limelight:
in of
, Mind you, I have little doubt that today' but also, in the
General Gehlen himself would prefer the Washington, the West s most successful
ahonymity of his British opposite number: operator in collecting . and evaluating
He takes Garbo-like precautions to remain intelligence from the Soviet
.
world.
hidden. In his own organisation the name Take only the amazing story of how
Gehlen is never allowed to be mentioned. Gehlen at the end of. the war not merely
His 6,000 subordinates call him "Number escaped the trials' and internment which
Thirty " or more simply " the Doctor." were' the fate of Hitler's other generals.
(Is it evidence of a subconscious hankering but even managed to salvage his espionage
after academic distinction' that this stud- organisation from the wreck and get.it
bus intelligence chief invariably affixes a working again within a few months of the
" Dr.". to the aliases he assumes on his collapse. Only a genius of diplomacy
psychology could have brought oh'
travels? Two examples knowd - t 'me:- and
miracle. No story could be more
" Dr. Schneider " and "Dr. Fritz Wend- that
revealing
of the character of this soldier
landt.")
whom Adenauer affectionately calls
And never, but absolutely never, has his " lieber General"his dear general
" the Doctor " in all the years that have because of his services in restoring Gergone by since the collapse of Hitler wit- many to military power and importance.
tingly permitted a photograph to be taken
of himself. Such pictures as exist of him
today all date back to the old days under
Hitler. Pictures .showing him addressing
his men on the Fiihrer's birthday., sitting in
a group with his staff, or receiving the
report of a Russian officer fighting for
Hitler..
and
in
Remember 1918
'Consciously or subconsciousl y Reinhard Gehlen must have had at the back
of his mind in those desperate last weeks
Of the war the memory of how the German
generals of 1918 successfully played. on
Western, fears of Bolshevik expansion to
preSery e their army and their power as a
caste. He must have remembered itall
the better as he himself took part as a
young -officer in the army's clandestine
come-back at that time. For Gehlen. the
of a Prussian officer turned publisher,
had in 1920 at the age of 18 entered the
new Reichswehr as an ensign.
Gehlen's 1945 plan for German military
resurgence also relied on his being able to
exacerbate and exploit the coming breach
between S:alin's Russia and the Western
allies. Not that he was alone with this
idea. Many German leaders were thinking
and even talking on these lines, from the
leaders Of the Conservative Resistance to
men like Himmler and Security Chief
Walter' Schellenberg.
What Was original about' Gehlen's conceptwas that he planned to use the knowhow of his anti-Soviet intelligence -unit
as his stake in the game. He planned to
offer his services to the victorious Americans. For his own work had shown him
that O.S.S. had not even begun to function
in the Soviet Union. He reckoned that
Washington would jump at the chance of
son
DECLASSIFIED AND
RELtAittn
vti
Cilliii5MCIAMg
IDAVE
IRION
How to Surrender
A scoop
Intelligence Service which would get information from behind the Iron Curtain for
' the Americans. As Gehlen himself tells
the story nowadays he made three
demands to the Americans before accepting
1. The staff of his unit should be' exclusively under his orders. They should,
work as a purely German organisation
on a fixed dollar budget financed by the
Americans.
2. No member of his unit should be made
to Work against German national
interests. .
3. Until' Germany regained her sovereignty and formed a government of
her own, he, Gehlen, should be regarded
by the Americans as a trustee of German
interests in matters of intelligence, lie
should be free to pass his organisation*
over to the German Government after
Germany had regained .sovereignty.
The Americans accepted Gchlen's
terms, granted him a fixed budget of 3}
million dollars a year (they increased it
soon after) and provided for him, his staff,
and' their families a special compound of
their own at Pullach, near Munich, where
they could live and work in secret.
Ironically the compound which was allocated to Hitler's former spy chief was the
Rudolf Hess settlement, a housing estate
consisting of a score of one- and twofamily.houses, which had originally been
built to house Nazi Party functionaries
with large families. It had been used as a
secret staff headquarters by Hitler (luring
the war and a number of prefabricated
huts had been' added which came in most
useful now;
Secret Work
Here now behind a high barbed-wire
fence and with .a battalion of German
auxiliaries under U.S. command guarding
them the Gehlen team set to work in conditions-' of secrecy, Amountin g almost to
isolation. Even the children of the Gehlen
men were not allowed to leave the camp
for fear that they might give away what
was going on. They were sent to a
special school in the camp and with them
went Gehlen's Own four youngsters.
But Gehlen, whose Flemish family
motto Laet vaeren nytt ("Never give up ")
now hung once more on the wall of his
private sanctum, had' got where he wanted.
For not only was he able to turn his unit
into a shadow German General Staff but
more important still he was now in a
position to supply the Americans With the
kind of intelligence which would make
them feel that it was essential to re-create
the German Army to help in the defence
of Europe against the Russians.
And he was doing so at exactly the
time as the German Communist
spy Corps sent into the West from the
Soviet zone of Germany, in order to
demonstrate their indispensability to the
Kremlin were reporting to their Russian
masters the allegedly nefarious Allied plot, ting against Moscow in the Western
zones of Germany.
Among the staff officers whom
he rccruitcd for his organisation was
his old ,chief at the High Command,
Lieut.-Gen. Adolf Heusinger, later
to become the first Inspector-General
of the new West German army.
of
Heusinger is today N.A.T.O.'s standing mlitary comniittee, a position which, like his previous command of the Bundeswehr, he
owes very largely, to the good words
put in for him with the Americans
by the influential Gehlen.
Not that Heusinger did intelligence work . for Gehlen while he was
in Pulach. As Heusin ocr tells the
story Gehlen called on 'shim early in
1948, just after he had been
released from internment and suggested he should join Gehlen's unit to keep
himself up to date on the Red Army.
"It might be a good thing." said
Gehlen, according to Heusinger, ' if you
inform yourself about the military situation
in the East. You can do that if you join
my shop."
same
The Academy
Other old staff officer comrades likewise took 'jobs with Gehlen. And soon
there was almost as much planning being
done in Pullach for the new German Army
which Gehlen felt sure the Americans
would require before long as for the job
of providing the Americans with intelli
gence reports. Quite a number of top
officers of the new Bundcswehr graduated
from "the Doctor's" academy.
But while Gehlen was taking former
generals and staff-officers on to his pay-roll
in the higher echelons of his new intelligence unit (and even today most of the
officials who represent him in his more
important . liaison functions with government and industry arc old staff officersof
" sound" conservative background) his
operatives were also recruiting at a lower
and More secret level many former mem.
bers of HimmIcr's S.D. and' Gestapo.
"We' had to do this is the usual
explanation given by Gehlen men. " The
Soviet authorities were using so many S.D.
and Gestapo men in their service that this
was a good way of penetrating the Red
espionage and counter-espionage outfits."
One result Of this engagement of S.D.
men by both the Gehlen service and the
espionage services of his Soviet-German
rivals was that, the battle between Geblen
and the Communist spy chiefs Wollweber
and Zaisser and their present successor
Erich Mielcke became a war between rival
gangs of S.D. men, with many of them
working for both sides or rapidly changing
from one to the other. Every week this
astonishing war between the two rival
armies of ex-Himmler thugs takes its fresh
toll of arrests, murders and kidnappings.
Of these I will tell in my next article.
Sefton Delmer 1961,
Co
prisoners-of
appearancetoday
day is little changed except.
Wartiine picture of Gehlen.* :
that hi has a moustache.
.1111r.
roun
l'\
tjSryice
is
tirghtEid of
iwindow
.ats
Oylet won't'
Plfri-ASSOFIEI
Itl EA
ffOTNAL
terrutsiviu StO BP
H UM'S
Altt
METHODS
NAZ
liAR
EXEMPT IDIOM
pa l 2081
HOS
CRHIESDISO
MMAtet
Famous Speech
nEKLIN
Reinhard Gehlen.
. And as I write the West German newspapers are full of the trial for treason of
a 'certain Commander Walter' Krenz.of the
West German Navy. Krenz is a former
officer of Hitler's.Navy who became .a spy
for 'the Russians after the wit-. Under
instructions ,from; his 'Soviet masters he
joined the new German. Navy in 1957 as a
radar specialist..'fot four years he passed
them ill the N.A.T.O. secrets that came his
way:
.
.Earlier in the year a dep. uty.of the West
Getman Parliament named Frenzel was
sentenced to a long term of imprisonment
for espionage. Gehlen men had caught
too passing N.A.T33. secretshe had
obtained them by virtue othis'membership
of the Buhdestag's.top secret defence committeeto' contact men Of Prague's Cornmunist.government. And 'sia it goes On.
Many.Change ,Sides .
The fact is that cases like that of
-George' Blake and the former R.N. petty
officer Harry:. Houghton, sensational . - in
'Britain because of their rarity, are by cont.:
parison .commonplace in Germany. There
the political upheavals; the defeats-suffered
by such super-patriots and super-chauvinists as the Kaiser and Hitler; the to-ing and
fro-ing. between militarism and authoritarianism and anti-militarism.and anti-authori-;
tarianism. coupled 'with the post-war
division of the country, have produced
among trwty Germans an opportunism in
their loyalties unparalleled in Britain slice
the Jacobites and the Vicar of. Bray.....'
)17,
1..3L2
cLALsoicA LioN
DISPATCH
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:Unknown
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DATE
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DECLASSIFI . EVAND
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CLA5SliICATION
fOPJA
1047
53
WHICH ART
S EC R E T
CS Mel
PAGE NO
I:2
CONTINUED
in a meeting held at his hem*, met with General Oehler:. The meetieg
bad been requested by General Gehlen, who made a special trip to the
United States for the purpoao, !apparently at the instruction of Chancellor
U.S. trip by Dr. Glebke, wile was tranamitting the Chancellor's views -
and desire.. The Chantellcr had been concerned over remarks reportedly
recently made by Mr. islcCloy in talks} with certain Gerrnan industrialists,
eepecially Dr. Fritz Berg. In ezvence, the McCloy remarks, as re/eyed
to General Geblen, urged that Weet Germany should itself take the
initiative in opining %Li, dealings with the Germaz enocratic Republic
(GDR) on-variotte matters including the Oder-lids-so line. Reportedly,
Mr. McCloy stated that the Presideut was of the eamo opinion. Apparently,
General .Gehlen had been'commissioned to find -out whether it was true
that the U.S. Government wished West Germany to take the initiative
Ite 'awn with the GDR.. For Ms part, the Chancellor, according to
delden, felt that this Initiative would mean giving Kitrue-hchev what be
wanted befere real negotiations between the West and the Soviets actually
i licaey were reportedly made in San
began,. The rezr.arke of Jr.
Fr taco after previous attempts of Mc Cloy to elicit ea. invitation to visit
Germany from Mr. .Pferdamenges had failed. General Gehien also made
reference to statements attributed by the press to General Clay indicating
that soma major accoratmodatiens . .between Germano vould soon have to
be znedit but Gehl= pointed out this particular incident had ocearred
.1 since he had received kie trip frialtriletiMIS from Dr. Glebire.
S011f?CES1E1 HODSEXENPI
ION 3B2E
CLOSURE
AI
Ms opinion. expressed to the D-CI. that the West veva/4 probably have to
realm aortic sort of an aceommedation with the Soviets on Berlin because
a really bard poeition wae impossible, attire ii.ft.TO Is not combat ready.)
aefereace war made to the fact that a two-thirds majority of the Parliarneat
the law, end that should a
wou/d. he raqtared to pass certaia provisions
tall emergency be invoked under the present draft law, the Chancellor
would be required to form an all-party government.
e. The DC.1 expressed the view to Gehlea that the END had
been harmed to a certain =tent toy the reporting they had been diesemisating
In el:wane-tail-a with the Berlin crisis. The DCI stressed the need for adequate
background -- the backing of hard intelligeneo.
L The tr.TDROWST ce.se Was briefly discussed, and the PCI.
reluctance to provide Illegal' entry ascii:Mace. For hi. part
Gehlan said the BID had bet= advised against illegal eatrir by the Federal
Attorney t s cMce, and that pl.aas had therefere-heen abaft:felted.
EST AVAILABLE PY
FOREIGN VISITOR
ASS RECEIPT
the period
for
13.;5/
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43 diujetr.ag
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1961
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26 September 1961
e. "For not only was he able to turn his unit into a shadow
of German Ge'neral Staff but more important still he was now in a
position to supply the Americans with the kind of intelligence which
would make them feel that it was essential to recreate the German
Army to help in the defence of Europe against the Russians." The
sane twist is evident here. Some of Gehlen t s key people were and
are officers; others were not. The model on which the organization
was fashioned was, naturally, the FHO (Fremde Heere Ost) of the
OKW, not the General Staff itself. And Gehlen i s product was not
diabolically altered to pit us against the Soviets or to lay the
gromndwork for the remilitarization of Germany. Here and elsewhere, Delmer portrays the Americans as the naive dupes of the
subtle, scheming Gehlen.
f. Delmer also charges that Gehlen l s organization recruited
many former SD and Gestapo members. This is an old Communist
canard. Most of Gehlen i s people were straight G-2 types, a few were
Abwehr, but very few were SD or Gestapo, precisely because Gehlen
knew he could not afford them politically - and also because these
types were looked upon with distaste by the professional officer class.
g. The second article starts, "Berlin remains the main
battlefield in the war between. the two rival gangs of Hitler i s former
Secret Service men." The main lie here is_the assumption of
morrd - or. immoral - equality between East and West. This lie
is basic to Communist propaganda. Another lie is the "Hitler's
Secret Service men." - i.e., SD and Gesta .po, as noted above. As
a matter of fact, some of Gehlen I s key people were part of the
military plot against Hitler.
2. The two articles are, in effect, mischievous. Their net
effect is to render a service to the East, not the West.
Cl/R&A
2 - Acldr
DP
(7.2
SUBJECT:
Zetiettl.
attention the
may
also
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uneasiness of German officialdom. and this
E:fpiity
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gerrAt.iy.
r OrtiOa
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mit alio znaintititts nirelationship, the :details of -ehiCh are not precisely
kourata 40 it*, nrith Ceneral Cielaien. -Ire do not know whotister the .Doitrn
i-neat
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BEST AVAILBLE:COPY
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PIE 2005
clear tho &tit betwoca the loader at *pinto* Lo Germany td Chore ta.
the thdted Stator, tad. of covers'. he/two= the two sorernmente.
wasted someone of the stators of Mr. U (cCLor to go to Oormary
and tocteroln Itaitahmes and th" Ruhr. be fact it was his intontion later
La lb" aftersooa *CZ clobber to catead an Invitatieva to 314r. Measly
to visit arnabers for that Impose. Ths broltatioa wee to he Leaned ea
bchalfal Mr. Pferderaeages, also 'vacationed la both Tabs A and IL
GORDOid M. STEWART
CLEW, Eastern European Dflotclea
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4,-37;v
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Re: Unknown Subject also known as
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Soviet Delefr-%ion to the
United Naftalis, November 2, 1961
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CONFIDENTIAL
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
WASHINGTON
25, D. C.
BY LIAISON
Date:
November 9, 1961
To:
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Attention: Deputy Director, Plans
John Edgar Hoover, Director
Subject:
as
attention.
.:CONFIDENTIAL
18 November 1961
-.7( ( (./ .
3 were not
through to targets. However Mr. Critchfield and L.
positive this the actual figure he used with the Chancellor.
4. Gehlen stated that the Chancellor was
g into accomt
the Chancellor
Polaris and other nuclear capabilities and that
La very much a layman on militarY;affairs. Geh/en tha recornmended
that during the Chancellor's visit to Wsehington an effort be rnade . tO
convince him of U. S. nuclear siperiority and other matters pertinent to
western military strength. .Finally, Gehlen =iced that the ChanceIlOr
should under no circurnitances get the impressiOn that Gehlen informed
us of above or that he had made such suggestion. \
FOR THE DEPUTY DIRECTOR (PLANS):
GORDON M. STEWART
6
SEMI
6^.
)C
ir
rr.
4. Commenting that the Chancellor has not taken into account the
Polaris and other nuclear capabilities. Geklsra observed that the Chancellor
is after all very .much of a layman on military matters. Then Golden
recommended that asi effort be made to convince the Chateceller of the
nuclear superiority of the United States and to brief him on other matters
pertinent to western military strength during his visit to Washington.
Finally. Gehlen urged that the Chancellor should under no cixcumetances
become aware of the fact that Gehlen had informed CIA of the atiove, or
that he had suggested a special military briefing for the Chancellor.
GORDON M. STEWART
Chief. Eastern European Division
cc: DDC/
DDp/Evac
Distribution:
Orig 8x 1 - Addressee
1 - DDCI
1 - DDP
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CONFIDENTIAL
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CONFIDENTIAL
Re: Irving David Toner also known as
David Toner
Toner advised that he was in a hospital in
New Guinea in 1944 for psychoneurosis. He was
hospitalized over an argument which resulted in Toner's
attempting to shoot another soldier over a grudge of
long standing.
*During the examination, he stated that he was
a scout attached to a patrol for- spotting artillery fire.
He said that he knew many Japanese in Hawaii before the
start of the war and thought highly of them. It was his
opinion that the Japanese were generally misunderstood
in the United States.
Toner stated that he waszladto
discharged since he hated guardt
hen prisoners
of war. He stat_0..ttozt aQ,Ier iti:s Army service, he
needed
a raaS:
Cri March 12, 1946, Toner was given 10%,
disability
ased onl his nervous condition which,was
'deemed to bt service connected; As of September 1; 1946
he'was receiving 4138 a month.
- 2 -
ONFIDENTIAL
CONFIDENTIAL
Re: Irving David Toner also known as
David Toner
In an undated handwritten letter
received by the government agency at its Washington,
D. C. office and referred to its New York City office
on November 2, 1960, Mrs. Fred Toner, 2510 Ocean
Avenue, Bellmore, New York, mother of Irving David
Toner, inquired as to the new Public Law 663, which
would increase compensation for her son, Irving David
Toner.
C ONFIDENTIA L
!V411%
CONFIDENTIAL
Re: Irving David Toner also known as
David Toner
In an undated BMV form, Toner desired to
amend his operator's license to drop his first name.
BMV also reflected that Toner holds
a current chauffeur's license issued October 11, 1960
and a current operator's license issued September 30,
1961. His.address is shown as 2510 Ocean Avenue,
Belz.more, New York.
On December 8, 1961, a review of the
records of. the Credit Bureau of Greater New York
reflected in a credit report, dated September 30,
1961, that Irving D. Toner, wife Marietta, resided
at 2510 Ocean Avenue, Bellmore, New York. Toner was
shown to be self-employed as a dental mechanic
at his home address. His wife is employed as a
packer with the Custom Made Paper Bag Company, 3302
CONFIDENTIAL
UPTnENTIAL
Re: Irving David Toner
On Deember 21, 1961, Irving David Toner was .
interviewed by Special Agents (SAS) of the Federal BUreau
of Investigation (FBI). At the beginning of the interview
he was questioned as to any knowledge he had of criminal
activities in the New York City area. Following this SAS
expressed an interest in any information Toner may have .
regarding the Soviets. It was pointed out to him that he
recently wrote to the PBX in New York City, stating that he
had a-friend in the Russian EMbassy, Wathington, D.C. .
- Toner stated that the person he referred to in
this letter is a Russian by the name of Boris, last name
unknown, whom he first met in about 1948, when Boris worked
in
a Communist Party (CP) HeadquarfeFi-In Long Island City,
)
New York. About September, 1961, Toner was in a.restaurant
in New York City in the vicinity of 58th Street on either.
First or Second Avenues when a .person approached him:
During conversation with this person ,this person identified
himself as MirascV or Morozov, a Soviet. while Toner_wab.
speaking. with Mirasov, Boris . appeared and .rolrie-CITC.6cOnvereatYn- .- -Toner described Boris as being about 5 , 7"- in
height, wearing glasses and having thin . light-brown hair,.
He was unable to estimate his age. Boris spoke excellent
English. Toner could not give a description of Mirasov.
At this point in the interview Toner interrupted
and asked if SAS knew of Reinhard Gehlen, . SAS indicated
to Toner that Gehlen may be connected with the West German
Government. Toner asked if Gehlen . was connected with the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and he was advised that
this was not known . to the interviewing agents.
. .
C I 1"IDENTIAL
Re: Irving David Toner
Toner was questioned as to 'where he obtained
his information concerning Gehlen and stated he got this
from Mirasov in about September - 196I. MirasoV told him
there was a 'Price of half a million dollars on Gehlen's
head. Toner stated that he became interested in Gehlen
since he wanted to "make a bundle" and Gehlen might be
the means by whiCh h67Taila- Make a large amount of money.
SAS told Toner that in his recent letters to the
New York City,.he mentioned that the Communists'
desireihim to obtain information about a nuclear submarine.
Toner stated that Boris had asked him in September, 1961
to obtain' information about the . submarine Tullibee, which
.
had been constructed in Groton; Connecticut. This
proposition interested .him since he saw this as an
opportunity to iiake -Mbney by getting - SuCh infrMation and
s
elling' it s:
tO.the-Soviet
E.TI in
6 -
C.ONF_IDENTIAL
16:64a
Cr."
I;
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CONFIDENTIAL
frP.Aok
CONFI_DENTIAL
Re: Irving David Toner
Regarding his personal life Toner stated he is
self employed as a dental technician working out of his
residence under the name Dunton Laboratory. He received
dental technician training during military service, but
he does very little work. along this line. With regard to
his income he stated he works as a private detoGtive.doing
commercial investigations, but would not elaborate on this.
He also indicated in a general way that he was engaged in
criminal activities. He has an automobile and mentioned
driving to New Jersey on several occasions.
He is a disabled veteran and receives only about
$60 a month from the United States Government.A few
years ago he was receiving $100 per month.
He is married and has no children. He has a mother
and father but declined to identify his parents or where they
reside.
Regarding his associates, Toner stated that he and
his wife remain to themselves at their residence in Bellmore,
Long Island, New York. He has some friends, but declined
to' name them.. It was pointed out to him Bellmore has.a
high percentage of residents of German descent but he
stated this.was not . known . to him.
Regarding trips abroad he has made he said he
was in Australia while in military service.l.n 1946 or 1947
he Went to Morocco and also visited Munich, Frankfurt and
. Hamburg in Germany and visited in England and. France. He
indicated that. his trip abroad at this time was in
connection with looking into the criminal field, but he
would not elaborate on this; In1952 or 1953 he visited
Cuba for, a two month period for purposesof pleasure. He has
not made any trips abroad for the past 8 or 9 years. However,
he plans taking a trip to Italy on March 20, 1962.
Throughout the interview Toner expressed interest
in making A large 'sum of money and repeatedly indicated
he desired to make a big bundle". He said that he has no'
scruples about doing .intelligence work for the Russians
pay
against the .United States if the Russians are 'willing.
him enough money.
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they required such an organization. General GERM( worked during this
period to achieve the legalization of his organization which was accomplished
in March 1946 end'In:recognition s pf_previoUs American.cooperationi'CIA was
accorded a Most-favored,p9SitiOnasa'aidison partner:
4. Geraral GEHLEN has always enjoyed a personal relationship with
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1962), tr.Lis.LAux h w
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'40225,
Chief, EE
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INTO
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Chief of Station,.Germany
.FROM
Act
. . . ing Chief, Munich
43PFTELL:. Oper4t4.(41a1- .
!"/Letter from General Gehlen for General Maxwell
.
' Taylor
.
W.:.:ECT
DAM
17.0ctober 1962.
RE. "413" (CHECK "X" 'ONE)
. MARKED FOR INDEXING
NO INDEXING REQUIRED
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ItemaNam
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Attachment: HEREWITH
Letter .
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Gen
E. Murphy
Chief
Eastern Europe Division
David
Attachment: Letter
SECRET
Ga elIf I
l Extlaith 1112 atee2T
doverntlel toe
dec::::Illmlias
General T
Ton will recall that you attended W. Allen W.
Dulles , dinner for General Gehl= on his last
visit to the United Statee in the spring of
1961.
If you desire to reply * we will be glad to
serve as channel to General Geblen.
Att.-Env. addressed to
General. Wazarell Taylor
I 1,
1,
I ,1
40R
ELL D. T YL
Chairman
Joint Chiefs of Staff
EXEMPTIONMS
NAZI WAR CR IMESDI
SCLOGURE ACt
DATE 2001
2005
COORDINAT WITH
26 October 1962
MAXWELL D. TAYLOR
Chairman
Joint Chiefs of Staff
)A04
--------(71-77r141thi N01100000
.D1SPATCH
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we have continued to enjoy generally even after the legalization of the Drganization Gehlen in February 1956 and which
provides a window to the Federal German Government and its
activities as well as a channel for exorcising influence.
4. We therefore feel that an invitation to General
Gehion to visit the United States in the late spring or
early fall of 1963 is in the interest of CIA and our liaison
objectives. Such a visit with its customary and unchanged
VIP treatment and the opportunity to meet with the DCI and
DDCI and other senior. CIA officers should go a long way to
reassure General Gehlen that CIA's basis attitude toward
him and his organization as such have not changed although
we would leave no doubt as to the pressing need for the
continuation of the vigorous pursuit of tightening BND personnel security. General Gehlen has mot the DCI on one
previous occasion in Frankfurt/Ulu in the company of Mr.
Dulles in November 1961, but he has never net the DDCI.
"
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David. N. Murphy
Chief
Eastern Europe Division
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'
ABSTRACT
Bo
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SUBJECT ....
Problems of Su cession
Av.,
'
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'
Alias-V 1E1kb was i i Bonn the weekend of 16 March for the confirmation
His
. Of . hia-adn, and re had 1 nch together at the American Club 18 March.
most -Tinteresting contrib tion was the opinion that fHTIL3.4rs SUCC6B8Or would
be alias VOTT. He didnt t' seem to be .enormously enthusiastic about it,
. although he obviously re peotCRENITI a managerial talents. He said nothing
about his ,own prospects, but he did say that he thought the successor should
About the iiming.he said4TitITY had once told him that'he
- 40
retire at 2. Thiswas around the time of his 60th birthday','
that .sUch. ,thing roUld be easier to say at 60 than at 61.' 1
and we
'consider
aNDIlimselt as the likeliest prospect, possibly
MPT; as deputy.
3.
,
Dititributions,
2CdS,' Germany
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,
@Jaw again cOmplained about the treatment he's been receiving, and
felt that after his long service he should have been given the -job of chief
of 83. AlthoUgh;PTILItr no longer confides in him, tITILITY has spoken with
other Will:CIVers who in turn have spoken with -OEURZ. They state that
UTILIT! is looking into the question of retiring. . '432CORZ feels that GLOBKE
may leave when;ADENAUER retires, and. thattATTLTZTY won't stay once: GLOBES
leaveis.* eL11-censider retiring this year (at 60) and has looked into
the estiOn l johow much money he will receive but he intends to wait and.
sde . What:hapPene this fall since he thinks there's a chance that2.1YrILITT will
step . out:
oft
; SIFIEb
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54321
Siarc,i
MUN I
61.4.135.1
From DIRECTOR
coNI
INFO .
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I iii" 17 APRIL 1963
CONVERSATION WITH ALIAS HARTW
0P.ERA ,./DNAL
FOR INFORMATION
.
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.
i T I ON . TO. 'T.HE. C., . --D . * CASE i' l... WARTialt. COMMENTED;;;OK...-THE ,
-takAIP ASS I 6/ANENT '..TO REPLACE .KOEHIIV FOR ONE : MONTH. TM I S .: SUMMER AND
SAID THERE...WAS REALLY; NOTHING BENINO :,I T......NICUEHNE .-. HAD [FtEC ()WENDED
)
THAT :SOMEONE.-BE . SENT. .10 ,WASHINGTON ;FOR - TO I $ . PURPO SE . AND...T.OKAOIAS
.. CHOSEN': 'IsikirWrqt.w.1 SHES .HE '.. HAD BEEN. :,..11(AR.TWM.SAID THAT .401(40. HAD .
TOLD .HIM' ALSO THAT - HE : ::HOPED . ...THERE WOULD NOT : BE , TOO MUCH. WORK.: I N
.. WASHINGTON SO THAT HE CAN DEVOTE HIMSELF TO LEARNING THE COUNTRY:
2:
ASKED ABOUT:eat :1TM PLANS, HAKrxmi EXPRESSED CERTAINTY
THAT AITILM WI LL NOT STAY IN HIS PRESENT POS I T I ON UNTIL RETIREMENT
AGE 69 . WH I CH WOULD BE REACHED IN 1967.
HE SAID THAT UT.' CRT::SPEAKS
FREQUENTLY ABOUT RET I RING AND HE ACKNOWLEDGED THAT A CHANGE IN
CHANCELLORS COULD VERY WELL MEAN A CHANGE IN THE PRESIDENCY OF
OF COURSE, IF THE NEW CHANCELLOR ASKS . UT IL 11Y: TO STAY ON,
'UPfULL:,os
HE WOULD DO SO.
.
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JOB OF TRYING
TO FIND. PE
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30 April
would be. leaving shortly after Adenauer 414. 1 noted that we had the
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..BACCreaid this definitely woe
not it:is:ease :and ibit albeit most' probably would be sieweeded by either
COUXITEC21..
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dP9MummoilppLE MACIAM
CLASSIFICATION
SECRET
321725/4 :
-
UPHILL
.:
SECRET
-Ctiet, Mbuich Liaison Base
Chief of Station, Germ*
Chief, XX
Letter from UTILITY for Robert
A. Ancham
.9.ECL4SSIFI En ASO
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DISTIMEMION:
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David E. Murphy
INDEX
Chief, EE
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mai
PERSONNEL
sEcuRrry MATTERS ARE BEING PURSUED SINCE THE FELFE ARREST SHOULD
C.
31 JULY 1961.
FEDREP CONTROL AS THE OFFICIAL GERMAN. SERVICE UTILITY WAS Tai MAN IN
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CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
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DIRECTOR
FROM :
BONN
ACTION: -EE 6
INFO
C I /OPS ,
SECRE . T 19144IZ
!DIR INFO FRAN MUNI CITE BONN 49O3
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i 9 Jig_ 63
.UPH:ILL...00DROWSY.:.
REF DIR
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55115
ARTICLE BY SPD
PiSSEDIENST.
BUNDESTAG MEMBER
LATTER, PRESUMABLY
t.
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BONN
'AND :HA s: No: c .HANNEL FOR: OBTAINING MATERIAL . ON WHICH ARTICLE BASED.
SECRET
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....BASED.
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'V.15W
iATE 260b
GROUP 1
BY
EUMEDAFVERIiVIEAM
,
Copy No.
4
i
CLASSIFIED MESSAGE
Eta
F:0 UTIN
5
6
,2
TO
FROM
DI RECTOR
FRANKFURT
ACTION: EE
SECRET 1917391
,JuL 63
u 83.2 GO
UPHILL U,P.-{ANDOM
REF MUNI 6844
(/ /t) 8a8917_9
IMMEDIATE HANDLING
1.
ON LEAVE UNTIL
UPHILL
BEFOREHAND BUT
{ 1 1 1.
:-
MEETING WITH
3 IRO
SE CR ET
CiS C
JULY.
M': *UPH I LL WANTS DEE3R I EF BIRCHEN ON HIS RELATIONS SPECK 0N23 CR 24.
R ELEASED RY
CENTR IL INT E L
LIGENCE A.GENn
SINIRCESMET HODSEXERPT
ION 3132E
tZ I WAR CR IMES
01 SCLOSIJRE AC1
LATE 2005
/.t
G_
.GROUP 1
AUTOMAT
FRAVDNEDA FROM E CA S" I EA
REPRODUCTION BY OTHER THAN THE ISSUING OFFICE IS PROHIBITED.
MI.
Copy No.
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.
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1341;17,4 Altitlin,:
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souRctsmEtribLUERpr 1 oN 3ez!F
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CATE 2005
!FROM
Chief of Llase, Bonn
...:
.1
Z..
Ae710..Low:,co
0.35
._1
:...w..:
19 Ju l y 196:3
SUOJECT
Operational/UP:LILL/LIAISON
'Remarks by General ST=Y: :: Concerning UP:-.1LL
-n
RE: 3 . r HCHECK
XX
"X- ON
El
HQ. DESK
kErCItCCC151
P
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CLAZ::::.ZA7ION*
T:ON OF
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SECRET
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22.:;A-26D44
4. It
rI
1
1i theory was rigid but in practice lax, and on the ridiculous practice of
in cover names within the orEainization which fostered the idea that the
individual staffer should knoW a minimum about his colleagues and should not
concern himself with their Affairs, personal or otherwise. It was precisely'
' this practice which, in the opinion of
facilitatedDROYSYl s success
T%
in escaping exposure for so many years.
SL
')7.,
0:-
In
l'Utut
4
Z1
plans
of Brig'. Gen.
resaonse
to
our
query
concerning
the
. 5.
Gerhard WESSEL EL
:-.3-37:":1 said that.WESSR17. was scheduled to join
Gen. HEUSINGgii r S 'Staff in 1.:az,il.i.r.aT.on this autLmr...,to /replace Gem. STEINHOF
(Phonetic). krit.S.SaL t s current troop assignment Wa. intended to be only of one
year t s duration and the year will be up in the autumn.
commented that
It UTThrfle is, in fact, relieved in the near future 1 ESSEL's plans for the
Washington assignment may 'be affected. He acknowledged that WESSEL is the only
person he has heard mentioned as a possible successor for UTILITY. When we
stated this
inquired as to the po ssibility of :2::AGIT sucCeeding UT.TraTY,
was absolutely out of the quest i on and if it were to take placz. ..;:./zle. result In
an utter catastrophe. he cxpresSed the opinion that ' UTILITY T s successor, whoever he may be, is not to be envied.
plans. The ID/33E0 and 031 1 4 aison officers have also heard that
confirmed to them by
is'to be retired in the spring, but this has no t
SEI.:.11, or announced officially. Apparently EI=A ..:7: Is not happy with the
lia'son officers, Sal:A la is
prospect. AccordinE to thct
Sc replaced by C0::. Wi ll i ::AC-W.K2aCHT
tznt for military 77.nt7.c-n to
von
1 (possibly born 22 January 1912)
nnen
iptt
Di
stribution:
Eza
C:C3
VC=
2-00/3
2
ommonWil
mwsmamm
MC=
rwza
4:40Z0
Lana
Mein Vorteag schilderte die leindlidn. Glit.or cinigen Jahrcn nahro ich
cincr Dieiur Abwebr"-*
dcrungs- und Starkeverhltnisse ... Die Arbeit
V kussion tcil. Es war cm n kleincr Krcis von Lieber nicht
Professoren, die irgendcinItulturpolitischcs Pro- Mag es in Zufall gcwcscn sein, dater Soldat- meiner Ableilung ,Fremde Ilcere Os:' war
blcm bchancicIten: Man war cio wcnig vorn' wurdc, so schcint cs zunichst fast cm n Irrtum dcs mustergaltil und absnlut zuverhissig.. lch kannte
Thcma abgcirrt und in die aktuelle Politik gc- Schicksals, dal; cr cincs Tages Cr War damals ihren.Chet, den General Gchlrn, lange .genug,
ratcn: totalitirc Herrschaftsformen und Mensch- schon 20 Jahre lang Offizier zur Abwchr kom--. um ihn unil scineMitarbriter.. seine MethOden
lithe Verhaltenswcisc, Ost-West;Troblcmc, kal- mandicrt wurcle. : Irb hatte mid, davor gedriiekt, und Ergebnisse beurtellot 7. II keirmen. Die .Vor
fiewahrheitet.bas-ausgenGchlbti
Yet Krieg. Schlie glich ging cc urn ganz konkretc moderneSprachen zu lernca, ,veil ich auf leeinen Fall in dcn Nathrichtendienst wolltt, sagte it eine . gesthithtliche Tatsacbc. Hitlersah.:d;e
Sachfragen.
Dinge anders. Er erairtc die Attgaben der'Ab.Das weil
wahrschcinlich nut- Gehlen' er einmal.. Und cm n andermal bcantwortete er
n
die .Fragc, was cr wohl untcrnommcn hitt; teilu g ,Fremde Hecre Ost' . . .',Das
wandte ich cm, ale dic Spckulationen : allzu toe?:
. wenn Sich nicht bald nach . 1945 die Gcicgenheit 1st der griiflte Mull ccii. Dschingis. Khan', rid
kulatiy wurden.
ergcben .Wattc, clic Organisation Gchlen". auf- craus: ,Wer hat diesen Ill5dsintt ausgegrabenr
Zu jcncr Zeit bane rehlea prliziscs Gehirni
oJ a , wcia den dcr .ctwas darilher?" fragte, zubaucn: id) &inc. sitherlich- studiert .JUra
crstatint der anwescndc Gcrmanist und Cr filgtc orier'Medi;:in.. . J.r filgte him: ,Von Medizin cincm unbestechlichen 1 :.lektroncnrcchner gleich.
hinzu: Dcnken Sic an scin Wcrk 'Die Serie vcistehe ith wirklith was." Also 'kcin Hang its lngst die Zuktinfc prOgrarnmicrt": Deutschiyn tcchnischen Zeitalter?"
Spionagc, Agentennun, Gefahr tind C;chcitnnis lands ZUsammenbrinli st cur der Tilt. ; die
Jahrc
auf
dcr
be'; lost, hat crwas Weltminnischcs an sich nicht
im Sinnc agilcr Gcwancichcir, sondcrn ins rUhmten Kavallerie-Scholc in Hannovcr, Gene- is
i Sinn'c souvcrIincr -Gclassenheic, Unauff:illigkcit ralstab, Operationsabtedung bet General Man-...
i und 13csclicicienheit. Er madn kcin . Aufhebens stein, Adjutant beim Chcf dcs Gcncralstabs Hal- .
7 von sich, und diescr Eigcnschafc mag , es auchi der, imPolenfeldzug chicr der drci aktivcn Of, zu dankcn scin, daB cc dcm Chef des Gehcim- fizierc bci eincr.Landwehrdivision - zWanzig
I dienstes der Bundesrepublik in *dieser film-'und I Jahrc wcchselnder - Atisbildung. Und dann,
I
. s photofrcundlichcn Zcic . iminc t wieder gelingr, I eines Tages im Jahrc 1942, wurdc die .entschei-;
1 dcn 13ildreportern zu cingchcn. Das Photo, dai ' derideWcithe. nines Lcbens gestcllt: Er bekam
emde
scit Jahrcn liberall . erscheint, stammt von 1944. die Leitung der Generalstabsabtedung Fr
Seidler ist -offenhar Mt noel's cm n cinzigcs gc- Hecre Oat".
macht wOrden.
Damals tolmc mitten im hcifIcri Kricg .der
Dabci kann, man skit kaum scmandcn vorstcl- lake Kricg zwischen Wchrinacht sited Partei,
len, dcr wenigcr gcheimnisumwittert crschiene zwisc:hcrt dcm OKW-Anst, der Auslands-Abj als dicscr. Mann. Ohglcich . er stets unter wchr des Admiral Canaris und HimmIcrs Rcidls.
andcrcm Namen, rein, immer wicdcr : seine sicherheitshauptamt (RSHA). Als.Clicf der Ab,f Autos und , cicrcn Nurnmern wcchsclt, nie 'ohne tcilung FrerrolcHicre Ost" muflic der damalige
I, Revolver in dcr Tasche gchi, fiihrt - cr doch-sonsc Oberst Galen dic.Fcindlagcheriehteauswcrtcn;
cm n normalcs Lcbcn. Er f:ihrt mit Wohnwigen also die Gefangcnenaussagcn mind die Ergcbnisse
5 und Scgclboot in die Feiien, ..er vcrschidtt der Erkundungsoper:itinncit, Doren licsdiaflung oblag iltin nicht, abcr ins Zciehcn jcncr
Gliic'nanschkarten.zu Neojahr, und seine
antcr dem Stichwort
vattdr.7ssc in Starnhcrg kann man in jcdem bi Ri valitigclang
,Prontaufklarung"
auch sic an sich
graphisr .. n. n Dicnst
.
ziehcn. Und ale Canaris cdsliclflidi ini Mai
Landcdo:rfa!in chcr cm n siiddeut- 1944 -abgcsetzt und -die Spitzc dcs militirischcn
Von semen Lagcbctirceilungen hid; cc, sic 1945 aus dam Gcfangcnenlager, tind cs kam cinc
scicn von so hohcr Qualit:it mid Zuvcrlissig- Art ;Gentlemen's Agreement zustandc. Geblen
keit gewcscn, wic man Nlinliches his dahin im wurdc die Aufgabc iibcrrragcm,. fiir dic AmcriZweiten WcItkrieg auf ricutscher Scitc nicht ge- kancr cinc rein deutsche. ziVilc Organisation mit
kannt hattc. Sac zum Zorn Hiders habcn Gels- militirisdtcn und wirtschaftlicbcn Spczialilens Beriduc immcr vor der St.irkc der russi- sten aufzuhaucn. Dam war die sogenanntc
ichcn Armeen gcwarnt. Der letztc General:tabs, Organisation Gehlrm dic dann 1955 von den
chef des 'Hccres. Heinz Gutfcrian, sdtildert in Amcrikancrn an die Buntlesresiublik ahgegcbcn
semen ,,Erinncrungcn eines Soldaten", vie Hit- undals Bundesnachrichtentlienst (BND) dcr
)cr Ober amen solcinn Lagcbcricht ant Hciligert dirck.ten Aufsidn dci BunticskanzIcramtcs untcrAbcnd 1944 In Ziegenberg; Hessen, in Tobsucht stellt
gcrict:
Die. Aufgabc dcS Bundegnachrichtcndicnstes
ist in scincn Statutcn so definiert: Bcschaffung
.von Informationcn militHrischen, WirtschaftDEC LASSIFIED AND RELEASED
BY lichen und riistungstcchnischen sowie politischcn
Inhalts mit nichriduendicnstlichen Mittcln aux
CENTRAL INT ELLIGENCE
AGENCY dem Atisland." Dicsc Aufgabe entledigt sich der
beteicinlichcM.Gcschick.. Es hat, er
SOURCES METHODS EXEMPT ;0N3929
sei der erfolgreichste Spionagea0parat der NATO
NAZI WAR
CRINESDISCLOIIIREACT
//tZ DATE 2001 2005
...
keinciwegs
iibrigens
lassen,
so
braucht
cc
our
die
Listen
'ma
den.
zeibeamte, vor allem des Kriminaldtenstes, von
; Li t g ges cscn.
anntc kcinc
.Namen . der ciort in der .Gegcnd . wohnenden &nen manche nur in Rangangleichung" eincn
gclscimnisse, die cr
vcrratcn knncn, und
durdszugehen und lids . eincn Ak- SS-Dienstgrad crhalten hatter.. Sic ark sind 1955
cr tcuertc aueh 'seinen Spionagcring in ,,.dcr .Kommunisten.
tivist-n .hcrauszosuchcn. wcnn Cr kcincn aui- bci dcr Obernahme des BundesnachrichtcndicnDDR, desscn Mitgliedcr cr Waue auslidcrn
gcbildetcn ..Agenscii schidten will. Das Ostberlien cr liatrc isidst nsit der DDR, sondern liner Ministcrium Staatssicherheitsdicnst ices in deutsche Vcrfiigungsgewalt vom Bundcsausschlicalich mit den Swjcrs zu tun. Seine Auf- verfilgt, so se.hatzt man, iibcr 25 op() haupiamt- personalausschuS gcnau durchleuduct wordcn;
calk war cs, zu vcrisindcrn, da1 dcr soivjetische iliche Mitarbciter . (ohne Agenten und V-Mart- shre politischc Vergangcnhcit wurde nach den
Unterlagen des Document Centre in Berlin ilberGcheimdienst clic ll'undesrcpuhlik infiltricre.
:ner). Die ins Gelicimdicnst dcr Sowjctunion priift. Obrigens svcrden die Bcamrcn und An
anulida
.
beschaftigfen
schatzt
Cookridgc
in
sciSeine Tatigkeit in der TIND-Zentralc bot
gestelltcn des Gchlen-Dienstes vom Bundeskanz. Fcllc abcr Gelegenheit, 15 000 Mikrofilmauf- . ncm Buds Soviet Spy Net auf 250 000.
leramt eingcstclit und abberufcn, nidst vom Chef
' nahrocis und. rund
20
mit
Inforniaticinen
.
Die Belastung dcr Mitarbeiter ins Nadsrich- der Organisation sag.
c
an tic. usscn zu tcnchensc ist natiirlich groa. In CII1C111 Jahr solP d
licfcrn. MarCrial,. das den Sowicrs ofTcnbar.'so;
beim 11ND mehr als ein Dutzencl Lcutc mit
wichrig war, dal sic Hun ilsccrscits chic' Menge. lcis
Herzinfarkt zusammcngcbrochcn scin. AUch die Das eine Prozent
Gchcimmatcrial zustcckicn, mit dent 'cr . skis' bei , Mitarbeiter. die nicht Geheimnistrager sind, SteDer Staatssckrcdit ins Bundeskanzleramt hat
Gehlen lieb K ind.madscn ltonnte. Es "wait, lie: :hen* clods daucrnd Unrcr cincni gewissen Dc. offizieu
etit,..tt,
la
wcnigcr au s cin Prozent 'andscicn dabci bis ium Verrst von Staatsg.cheim-. Jcder . mu g Umschrcibungen fiir seine Arbeits.1/cdiensteten
des BND butte cincn SS/SD-Dicnstnisscis gcgangen allerdings nicht ilircr
;stclic
und
seine
Tatigkcit
erfinden,
kcin
Frcund
grad
gchabt.
Wenn
die Zahl stimmt, die Internen, sodcrn vorwicgcnd 'soldier der DDR,
; kann seine Freundin abcnck dart . abholen.
'schesiten sids auch nicht, eincn kcineswegs un- tAuf dcm Gelandein Pulladt On es ein Krankcn- prcss nanntc. wenn cs also crwa 4000 solcher.13cIsckannter Westdeutscben . ,ersc als Agcnrcn an- ;hails, in dem . allcinstehende Mitarbeiter linter-dienstctcn gibt,.clann viaren unser ihnen 40 chcmalice Kruninalkommissare und Polizeilicamte.
zuwerben und 11111 dant). durch Felfe , , hods - :! kunft findcn kOnntn, die sonst in Krankheits- mit
gel- " zis lasscn. So konntc dicier sich cinc'
SS;Itang. Man vela' nicht,' oh man dariibcr
vcrwundcrt und crschrodcen scsn soli, oder db
ex,
-crier an den Hut steckcn und dem-BND
man
viellcidu sogar feststclIcn rni6ce, daS der
Neil.
Uncntbchrlichkcit nods dcutlicher vor
Augen misren.
.Prozentsatz chcmaligcr Nazis in anderen Bchkirden nods schr-viel halm. ist.
Es cruise:kr ins Cruncht nicht der Komik: da
..scr
rifle kiloinctcciange Mauer die Zentrale
Neben dem Bundcikanzleraint, das die vorde .,u n desi t achrichtendiCostcs hermctiich von
-, setzte Ilcharde dcs /3undesnachrichtendiensics
der A :W e,; ab, da pa trouillicress Aufschcr
;Isr, untcrstcht dicier nods zwci wcitcrcn Kontroll'nit Spreeltr:it und Polizcillunden auf dem
i instanzcn: dens BundesrechnungsRof, der jedes
Gclancie, tins iecien, dens es cicnnoch gelingen
!Jahr wabrend mehrer IvIonate 'die Ausgabcn
mute, (I:1S kompliziertc AusWcissystem und die
und ferncr zwci parlamcntarischeri AusEintcilum: in Sichcrheitskreise zu iilserwindca,
r schUsscn nHmlich dcm Haushaltsausschu g und
!
'
sogleich ;',:st?.unehmen, cla wercic alle crdenkErk. enr;ungszcichen
einem kleinen AusschuS, in den die Fraktioncn
lichen Sieile
..iingsma g nahMen gegen dic Fcindc
ihre besondcrcn Vertrcter entscndcn. Sic wcrdcn
von atil3en ,..;etroffcn :slur due, eigenen.. zum fallen 'der' Pflege von zufallif;en Mitbcwohncrn bci der.Einstcllung von hiihercis Beamtcn bcfragt
Feind gew"rdenen Fretintic isis Inncren IcOnnen ausgesetzt waren. Auch thus
bcdacht scin. und auch iibcr die Auswertung und . Lagcbcurtetoffenbar zicrnlich smgcsriirt sammeln, photo. lung dcs BND unterrichtct.
kopicrcn tind ihr Unw.cum treibcn. Gcgcn sic
scheint 'Kehl Kraut gewaduen. ;such wcnn cs
vielerlei
Oberwachung gibt.
-- - -
machte in Gricchenland
wad im Ausland die
*
Filialen unterstehen, die zum Zsveck der
Bestrebungen zur Befreiung : des gricchisthen Vol.
richtenheschaffung gegriindet und als
keskoordinieren.
lithe Firmcn getarnt wurden.
Papandreou mOdue den Eindruck des leichrReinhard Gehlen, der 1945 in. anscrikanischej
ferc:i7en Optimisten oder gar des geschwitzigen
Gefangenschaft geriet, haste vorausichauend das
Illusir:rtisten vermeiden. Dcshalb bemiiht or sich,
gesamte Archiv seiner . Abteilung . -Freinde Heere
bei der Abwigung von NViinschbarem, DcnkOst" mit alien Unterlagen iiber die sowjetisthen
harem und Erreichbarern urn die Sachlichkeit
Stritkriftc photoltopieren und in den bayedeines Strateg en, dcr die Krifteverteilung bci
Aufnahrrio ' : Archiv, g lius Barieth
schen Alpcn auslaccrn lassen. Mir diesels) Kapital
Freu nd undteind realistiseh einzuschitzen weiG.
' Von fiinfzig Srahlkoffcrn war cc fr die .ArneNach dam 2. Woltkrieg ein nsal von
xWorin schen Sic den Haupt/rind des griro rsi. rikaner cm n hOchst begebrensweiter Mitarbeiter.
Photoreportern erwischt: 1957 in Hannover
schen Volkcs?"
Gehlen: vcrkaufte sich nicht billig. Er stellte
.In der Sehnellebigkeir der: Zeit und in der
die Bedingung, mit einem festen Jahresciat und
Vergeglichkeit der Menschen."
einem -ausschlieGlich unter icincr Leitung stchen- Normalbiirgcr? Ich habc vor Jahrcn einmal
Und t.worin schen Sic den H.-wptfeind 1/jeer
den Team fur dte.Amerikaner zu arbetten, wobel seinige Berichtc des Gehlenschen Geheimdienstes Sather
die ausdriickhche Zusichcrung verlangte, heirs aus dem Jahrc 1961 . zu Gcsidst bekernnien und
es_In der Bercitsthafc vicicr NIenschen, manchcr
AngeflOriger des . Stabes diirfe gegen deutsche; kann nue,sagen; ich wundere mich tiber das offi- Vetlker und einiger Einrichtungen, zur Isolierung .
Interessen cingcsetzt werdcn, and er als! zielle Bonn, das am 13. August aus alien Wolken der Junta beizutrngen."
Treuhinder der entspredsenden Interessen eines
fie]. Das wire wirklich nicht non ig gewesen, wenn ,;,11solicrung das ist das SchliisselwOrt, das
spiteren deutschen Staates angesehen werden.i es jene Beridne gelesen Mine. Allerdings scheint fri -der Erliuterung seiner Pline. Unmet. -ifiedir
i:;." Seinen Schatz holte cc crst aus dcm Vcrsteck,
es oft gar nicht so sehr &Iran zu liegen, da g die kehrt.- ISolicrung im Politischt-W,
mit den Amerikanern das von ihm vorgeschligenel Politiker nicht; lesen, sondern rnehr daran, daa :OkonomiSsisen und Moraliscls .en werde die Mach:Gentlemen's Agreement abge'sdllossen War.
sic das, was sic lescn, nicht wahrhaben w011en. !sober in Ashen aunt Riickzug zwing.en. Das
So entstand 1946 die -Organisation-GA/en% Hitler, densGehlens lageberidne nicht paten, Regime, das sids als stark aufspiele, sci In Wick- :.
die dann 1955 vom I3und Ulacrnommen und alt nannte ihn 1944 cincn Idioms, den man in die 1ichkei t sthwads. Wenn die Weir., der es ernst sei
BND dens13undeskanzleramt 'urger:Stant wurde. Itrcnanstalt sperms sollte. Solche Reaktioncn mit der Freiheit, die Diktatoren in Athen weder
nods wirtschaftlich unterstUtze, keinnte
Au g r derti Kanilcramt . untersteht (ler IIND' freilich waren ihm vortschalten. Aber tuck an- militirisch
e
noch a yesweiteren KontrollinStanzen: dem Bun- dercsind gincigt, dam, was sic nicht hiiren wollen, in kurzer Z-it das Endc Jcr Zwangtherrschaft
herbeigefiihrt werden.
desrechnungshof, der jcdcs Jahr eingebend die- fur Falstismeldungen zu halten.
Ausgaben kontrolliert, sandferner zwei pantDamals, iris Jahr 1961, meldete der BND vom Was die ,Resluzicrtmg militarist:her und wirementarischen Ausscistissen, nimlich- dem Haus Januar an, da geine Isolicrung Westberlins be- schaftlicher Hilfeleistungen angcht, so haben
lt
- vorstehe wad sids offenbar eine Zernicrung "or- itingste anscrikanisehe VersprctIsungen und Bonhasausschu
g und einem laciness, interfraktionelbereite. Ins Juli wurden die Warnungen dring- ner Beschllisse ihn ermutip. Die moralische Dislen Grcmium.
, die Sperrung der Sektoren_ position zur Bcfrciung seines Landes lei bei den
Und so kam es auds, da g anfangs eine vet,: licher es hie g
Viilkens der freicn Welt oltnelnr. gr5 gcr alt
hohe Anzals1 von alten Nazis in der gr enze stUnde bevor. Am I. August wurdc genseloiler Fiihigkeit nonelter Politiker,
Organisation mitarbeitete Leute; die wegen det, es milsse nut Unterbrechung des S-Bahn- und Bereitschaft
ridnigen Erkenranissen die richtigen Entihrer Ncnntnisse und Verbindungcn zunlichst un- des U-13ahn-Verkehrs gercehnet. werden. Dennods aUS c
abzuleiten.
entbehilich waren (was von aliens . fiir die ehe- fiel das offizielle Bonn . am 13. August ausallen schliissdiesem
Zusammenhang sprsdn der ExilWolken. Obrigcrts hei g t cs in W ashington, da g .
d-die
nur
langmaligen
Kriminalbeamten
gait)
wad-die
t
vordem IsraeI Kneg Hellene iiber die NATO teils mit Bitternis, teils
tam -= oft mcintc man. and
wad die Anfkli rung OctBND
langsam
urn Nahers Osten besser war alt Slue eigene sand , mit Zuversieht: Sic habe das. was sich in seinem
nur unter crhcblithem. Druck der Offentlichkeit
ganz uncntbehrlich govesen sdi.
Lande vor eincm Jahr erei gnet habc, nicht verausgesiebt wurdcn oder hernusalter- rThisn
wolleis; &en Verseidiunter den westliihen Cc- . hinciern 1:5nnen ojer
ten. tin Umstand, water dcm Gehlen selbst I
aiser ka ..tnt 11:: ..:::%zsrt Partner
wahrschcinlich am rneisten gditten hat, dcrin iheimdieiscchcfs derjenige, der bci weitem am gungsbiintinis
gedient, der seine Inen
n OftHerc zu Tat:sende rs
Atticgewesen
Arr
in. Er hat alt
sicktlas
seine politic-se Gesinnung . War immer alisolut lingsten
sen habe t nJ s kit aif die Lo
d e tuntadelic.
glinzender.Organisator und un-cwOhnlich begab- en
I
!ter Analytiker ausgewiesen. .FUr. die rnotterne Strestkrafte nicht verfassen ku nne.
Die wirts.;.,aftliehe Iselier:mg,
Sic sic!,
:Entwicklung. ma; ihn sein Interessc
Technik
Gricelienland
sand
ts
etse
de tVofk.
Waffcn
besonders
Pridestiniert
haben.
, wiirlic den
wienschc"
Eric) 1,7c und Parmen
:Sicherlich
Rescwni
hersse bringen.`
vor ails-n,
W ihn /ust,
m
eines 5/seer-Juin:
ar
be u:s ser Volk ninmst vorub ergehend e :
da g cm Man , dcssen Metier es mit sick brachte;
n-s - .s ,
..."11)
wi: cr. E7rO)g7"
..
" sla g cr .test Jahrzchnten den Os-en als den ISchwicrigkeiten gern in Kauf als Preis fill- die
n Dolt tor', vie cc tinter s cinen Mitarbeitern non:nth:e
skis so Riltitkehr zur Freiheit."
Hn dewier hetradsten
gcnannt wird.
. 0 .1nmantiss be stu d
Unterstatzung . .
.freigehalten- hat von antikintimuninisilsen Komrzu glci ch brings I bsen: La..:dc der Tourismus.
I.r.nn Lc!: nicht s yrchrn:avonur
N
tin Plexelt
ISolos
l
Rarscr dcr Was Ibr Land irn
einz:ger in der BundesrePtibli It tecia d. Was jemsnd, der bit 7.1.1 SCIlIC111 SC11 k Ulld5CCh Augenblick 1,0 ;:cben. :i"
_
von einem be4 in Fruhling we in Gnechenland
fnd
rruete n
: . " And-- jeder Tourist dazu . bestragen, die Lcbensdauer , .!
e nst -cin Tole cram:
m .
_4 Papandreou, auf de- -re:raise' co:.:s Godv7i:c incs tyrannischen Regimes zu verlingern, unter 1
a heren.
grttt
hst ten unit in l ielie nods
l nst
be r....,:r Hotels . sitzend. den Drachenle:: al: rhci - airtschaftlichen und wirer psychologisehen Aspek
id efunden.'"
g
variant,. der Akr,,,0.i.
ten. Als. ich im .vorigen Sommcr, durch einen
;.
Has nun etc en:n:11
Ini
Dienst
freilich bersuizt er einen
,
Ganz anders verhalt es sich mit seinem Vor,
. , Mercedes, auszeichneten. Fachleute sagen, daa die
.
.
i
wieder die ,Numernschilder
wechm
ginger, der am 30. April In den Rubestand trim der mmer
General Gehlen isc unbescritten . der Mann mic selc, und 'dor kugelsicheres Glas hat was Gefi Akkuratesse der Gehlenschcn Aufklarung im
dem hOchsten Gcheimniskoeffizienten in.dtrlenAibrigens 1953 . das Leben retteteT als ,ein . Zweiten Welckrieg ganz ungewiihnlich gewescn
Bundesrepublik. Nor ein paar Duczend Lente des Gescholl, das Aim gait, an der Scheibe..abprallte.. sci. Hider hat er nur zwel- oder dreirnal geOffentlichen Lebcns kennen ant persOnlidti Nit Andere Attentate?" . sehenil .als Heusinger ibis zu dicsen Lagebesprehat er erlaulat, dafi Photoi von ihm geit
. Ja einmal ist ell% Herr... abcr nein,. den thungen* m ltnahm.
. .
tern, 'der irn'gleichen Ott wohnt, cle'nselbefe . jail-. MerkWiirdig, so can Leben, das . ganz I:ad.:gar Brennpunkt gclicigcn wird. so haben sich such bei
j ':rim. der,..Sache willen", wit'as in Preulled'inea, sans die Zslittel lotliosien stark ver:indert.
gen' Mann am Ortsausgang stehen Wirt-hi/tin 'flan
. mit its die.Stadt.. ;;Unterw,egs...erzahlie . .elireitit . ieltlitiinicle. MerkwUrdig mindescens heut4'wo Heute brattcht man cinen grolicn wisse/milaft sei ,Mediiifii tud6ii,,d'iiiaiehiiiei tgeWidailioeci doch,- die erstcn Fragen fur due meisten latiten: lichen. Aprarat, um clas besehaftte Material ausii:60.tigeti':-fui. elie nI tis triiite;,..:. ja i . ilytibee Wsts ltab'e ids davon? Wieviel bringt mir das ufwerten." ;41. : ., (ziadc:.n.vii.,,,iiedat die.liti t& Riciii. iiig
'' ein. ? LOhnt sich das? Macht man sich ' da nicht
nids; ass Ohne Computer kann man
"clie;:. let'itM4,4it jiitteteLfraitiOinItler:_Gehei.M-' kiiiuti?-':
Ito:Innen?'
I dienstler.. Antwort: . .,;Die letztc,-die Tist idiief=' Fili Gehlen iit das - Leben immer so g . esen.
Nein, man nnift sic babes. Man mu g den
.gegangen. .Ich. so 4 te . !GibleiC- plYotOitiPitl&:ett> Mat tWatizig Jahren hatte .cier Sohn des .Verlags Weg in dic Tcchnik said mit 'der Technik spehen
abei..das . isvnicht get/Ulm, obglesdilds eine; . gi
. it
..ie direktOrs im 'Ferdinand-Hirt-Verlag' sidf : entNada neben .seinemHaisi; auf . 'derri s. Biurn;geSeri, Schltissen;,die Offizicrslaufbahri einzuschlagen. Er a :1)er man muf; es bovtiGt tun und sich klar darOber scin, wo die Greivecn liegen. Un 'cl man darf
sen 'babe.'
ging 'thirds die harte Schule.des Hunderttiulend- auch nicht den Yor,tellung verfallen, man rniissc
Selbst von den bei ihm Besdsftigtcn.se minn--Heeres: Eiserncr Dienst, winig Anfitiegs. unbcdingt aIlc wissen. Wenn man nut al/zu
nor die' wenigsten Gehleit persOnlich.
cluneen und kein bifichen Wohlstand. ,Danit %icier% inforinationcn aberschwemmt wird, dant%
Tages", so erzahli-er, scieg ids. in W'iiribiiii4m Genera/Stab, Operationsabteilung . .bei Maristein, kann min ski) 5[111 iCAlith 7.0 nichts mei-1r catcinen D-Zug. In. dem Abseil 'Saaertdrei Veuce,: Adjutant beim Chef des Generalstabs Halder schlicBcn und linings Ube:II:tont keine EntseheiEin ;einzelner mar in der Ecke gegendber,
urid schlidlich 1942 .die entscheidende. Wende: dung mehr zustande."
derc'andcren offcnbar JourhaliSteri
deidarrialige Oberst .Gchlen ilbernimmt dic Leiam Fenster und . uncerhielcen sich dariaker, thil.:es sung.. der Generalstabsabtellung Fremde Hare
doch eigentlich miriglich .sein miissi, dens Gehlen Oat. Damit oblag ihmzunichst die Auswerturig
mad irgendwo zu begegnen, sdslieillich wercie.ji der Feindlageberichte sand schlicillich au& &rim Ztilidi ()der SvAem
wohl auch er . gelegenclich . mit de ts Bahnodei, Beschaffling, Zwei Jahre sparer war cr Abwelirdem Flugzeug reisen. Daraufhin . zog ich es....Vor, 'thef .Cles1.3stlichin Kriegsschauplatzes.
Was fiir . cinc Rolle spirit eigentlisil der Zufall
auf der nachsten Station in ein anderei ...Abie4 'StOlverfialt . denGeneral, wenn er vom Hun- beim Gehriindienst?"
unizusiedeln. Zwei Tap spite!' ' landete, derttausendmann-Heer speicht: Er glaubt, eshabe
2inc.s.:hr geringe.f.c 1..ontint <Joon im Crum.ic
kuiiosititshaiber, auf meinem Schreibtisclicine isle mehr sand es werde wahrscheinlich auch nit duds auf systematische Arbcit an: Man mat::
Meldung, die alit Einzelheiten jener KOri'ver- wieder else so .glanzcnd ausgebildete Truppe Sch CITI1 11): it' , bilden und vcr,utitcm d: ii vcrsation schilderte." Der . dritte Mitreisende War geben. Damals sci die Operanonsabteilung 'mitt
nimlich cm n Herr des BND. gewesen, der iciness nur :Senn Offizicren ausgekommen. Freund'Und schiedenen 'Mine) cler AufklNrung
in Einklang zu . brinwn. Unti dann irs, wie gcsa.;:,
Chef nicht von Angesicht kanntc.
- .Fein. d bitten im Krieg immer wieder darilber 'die 'isu'ra'ahifslichc Atiswiirtung ants
_............
. Schutz? Der beste Schutz ist Tarnung , Mad Vest:tune, da g ins deutsdsen..Heer jederDiviiiOns
. - dender TiNieu.:ung."
die besie Tarnung ist Unauffalligkeit." In . der tiihrung . nur 4 rei . Generalstibler zugeordnet
die .Spitzt- 'miner cin Central se:n?
i
Tat, man kann sich kaum jcmand Unanffiilligeren waren
wiihrend ins allgemeihen andervarti .
dcnken alt Reinhard Galen, in dem man alles die doPpeltc Anzahl tiblich gewcsen.sci. Uad als .h:Onnte man sich nicht aush eMen Wissenwhaftler,
andere cher vermuten wiirde au s einen General: Zeidsen der aullergewOhnlichen 'efficiency fiihrt cane Art Hermann 1:alm, als Chef
.Icii.bin.Uberzeugt, CIA an der Bushaltestclle Oder cr an,.' dafl der. Fcidiug gcgen Jugoslawien in Eincrtkr lat7; dcn, entwviler tier
auch am Briefschalter in der Post sich jeder . ,an ;Mei. einzigcn Nacht ausgearbcitct Worden 1St.
mur,
tirischer Fachmans
.und tic:
'dem besdnidenen . Minn Vorbeidrangeln kannie,. Reinhard Gehlen .hat drci Chefs dc s General- Zi y ilc muf; minticsicni elm jabre
ohne ciall dieser sich *bcschwcron oder :such Mir stabs gedicni: HaIder, Zeisslcr . iind Gudertan. haben."
cin tastes 'Wort %nen wilrdc. Fast schiichtern Seine Aufgabc als.Chef von Preinde Hcere On"
'
Die 7. :den, tl:r
wiritt
Cr, abet' gar nicht verkrampft, .sorielint war es, jeden Abend eine Lagebeurteilung eine
vollst:indig geldst und vor allern nadtdenklicli, halbe bis . eine Seite , vorzille en undalle vier
such diplomatisch, dabci von caner nisranzierting, "Wochen &nisei% . zusam men fassen en, lingered- Be- 5033 Nt:t.n1-: . ;te7 1,n,i
die viellcidir sogar gelegentlich in Isolicrung'um- richt iiber die militirische Entwicklung den Etat. Von den SCOO Mitarbotern
etwa
P.kam:e
zuschlagen vcrmag. Sicherlich it c.rempfindlich; Heuunger dams an hachster Smile vortrug.
scat ii I'rocent
abcr auch cmpfiridsam.
irs Dica g e. , iiid
7
Scin ik LI C C reS : Kurz gcsdiorencr, blonder
TC:. : I.cutc
Schnurrbart, grauc'Schlrifen. hohc Stint, die . in
cane Glatzc ithergcht. Nods immcr ist'er sthlank,
nur wcitig VOM Alter gezeichnet. Man kiinnte
ihn sich gut in einem Labor vorstellen oder-1m
wcifien Kittcl tines Chirurgen.
CLABBIFISt5 MESSAaE
DIRECTOR
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INFO : .D I
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S,...SUBJECT . AMR. THEN REVIEWED WITH '..11-?T
::':,Ilf;
Ig : :: : : - !- .........;;;:... .:. : : :.: .
....t:E.Ci1F ITV ' PROBLEMS FACING ALL WESTERN INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES,
)INCLUDING .7. 0UirOW N t CITED CERTAIN WELL PUBLICIZED CAa 9 AND SA ID
..4.:::::..:...::::,T"-....... -,:..:1
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THAT AMERICANS, WHILE FULLY AWARE OF SERIOUSNESS FELFE CASE,
.
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;.4tp..i.*:SA. T;ISFI:IEDI UTILITY WAS A COMPETENT AND PROFESSIONAL . 1.1;P.Ll.::..
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SAID
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UNDERSTOOD
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WITH REGARD TO FELFE CASE,
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.
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::: .;.0::SPE b IF ICALLY . ME NT IONED.
NEM
GROUP 1
EXCLUDED FROM A LITCKAT I C DCMN-.
GRAD1NG AND DECLASS IF I CAT ION.
Copy No.
02040 . PAGE
CLASS IF I ED . MESSAGE
. 2 .
qgt z
ENTERTAINED CERTA I
teiiRifY
HiCH SEEMED BORNE OUT BY FELFE CASE. HE SAID HE WAS FULLY AWARE
AT OUTSET MOST GETMAN. AGENCIES HAD BEEN FORCED BY CIRCUMSTANCES
4LL UPON FORMER NAZIS TO GET STARTED, AND THAT THIS HAD BEEN
. ::,.
CNE,....1.4 ITH.CifS' APPROVAL. IT HAD BEEN . HIS POLICY-, HOWEVER, AND
.
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.
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THAT
SUCH INDIVIDUALS
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00N kr.::.:,-
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liii:Idi . :: . 6. }{ikR. ACPER .. HAD BEEN KEPT ON FOR TEN ' YEARS AND BEEN GIVEN
-. : - ' : - - .
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- ' giGHT . ,iNTO,.MATTERS .. OUT.SIDE HIS .PROPER COMPETENCE. HENCE
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HISTORY
Y.; ;I.'
;"' . UPHILL, EMPHASIZING ITS MILITARY 'NUCLEUS AND . ...72:
.1; .....ST.Orsr..OF
:
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' . .:44.04E:ApINT:: ON :30 . 1 HE :SEVERE PERSONNEL LOSSES SUSTAINED' . BY UTILITY
4
-,.
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,,
1!%1NI.P,:''':.:'.:'!' ' -...,.."':- - . '
j: 4.1EN'. :HE . SURRENDERED SOME HUNDRED ODD OF HIS SENIOR STAFF TO
:HE'...StiNDESEHR:IN . 1955 AND 1956, RENDERING HIM MORE THAN EVER
;.
3 .
.
..
.E..sP;AND. ENT. UPON :SENIOR PROFESSIONAL CIVILIAN PERSONNEL.
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DIRECTOR
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GROUP' 1
EXCLUDED FRCP-I AUTOMAT I C DCWN-.1.
GRADING AND DECLASSIFICATION..
Copy No.
SECRET
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
Memorandum of Conversation
DATE: 20 August 1963
11:45 - 12:00
SUBJECT
SECRET
FORM NO.
1
I FEB 57
132
GIMP
1:nIuttel IrvA 2u15m111(
Carr,r411; and
etC12:3111::.1.1v%
t11-21-36)
SECRET
3. The final two points raised by Mr, Hughes concerned
Defense iviinistei von liasseVs position vis-a-vis the BND and the
reerriergence of former Defense Minister Straus. I replied that
we had no:reading at this time on von Hassel's attitude toward
Gehlen .and the BND. In regards tc Strauss I stated that in my
view Strauss is simply pushing his return to a position of policy
influence. Being the man he is, he is little if at all bothered by
criticism of his previous and current actions and activities, and
feels that he knows better than anybody else what is good for
Germany.
4. At the end of the meeting Mr. Hughes requested to be
kept informed of any further developments regarding the BND,
particularly those with political overtones and possible consequences for the Embassy. He also stated that he would inform
Mr. Richard Davis of the substance of our discussion and he
thought that no further action in the Department was necessary.
3
Chief, EE/Germany
SECRET
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BY UPHILL.
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