A newly declassified CIA document reveals
that the intelligence agency investigated the possibility that Adolf
Hitler was alive in South America as late as 1955 — nearly a decade
after World War II ended.
The document, which appears on the
CIA's website, highlights a former SS soldier who told spies he had
regularly met with Hilter in Colombia. "CITROEN [a CIA source] claimed
to have contacted HITLER about once a month in Colombia on his trip from
Maracaibo to that country as/an employee of the KNSM (Royal Dutch)
Shipping Co. in Maracaibo," the document reads.
It goes on to say that the CIA source indicated to CI MELODY-3’s [CIA
informant] he had taken a picture with Hitler, but "did not show the
photograph."
The document, three pages in length, suggests that Hitler may have
worked as a shipping company employee, prior to potentially fleeing to
Argentina. On the second page is a picture of the informant, Phillip
Citroen, with a person he claims is Hitler in the mid-1950s.
“CIMELODY-3’s friend states that during the later part of September
1955, a Phillip Citroen, former German SS trooper, stated to him
confidentially that Adolph Hitler (sic) is still alive," the documents
state.
Hitler committed suicide by taking a
cyanide capsule and shooting himself. His wife Eva Braun killed herself
by swallowing a cyanide pill. His body was later discovered by Soviet
soldiers and buried in an unmarked spot. A German court declared Hitler
dead, but not until 1956, more than a decade after the war ended.
Despite the findings of the German court, rumors have abounded for years
that Hitler survived and fled to South America. The discovery of
Holocaust planner Adolf Eichmann and Josef Mengele — the doctor who
carried out sick experiments on Auschwitz inmates — in Argentina and
Brazil respectively has only added fuel to the rumors, according to a
report in news.com.au, which is part of 21st Century Fox.
Eichmann was eventually captured and hanged by Israel for his crimes in
1961, but Mengele managed to avoid capture. He ultimately died, having
drowned while swimming off the coast of Brazil in 1979.
The file was put together by CIA Caracas bureau chief David Brixnor and
wired to Washington in 1955, alongside the aforementioned picture of
Citroen and the person who was allegedly Hitler.
Follow Chris Ciaccia on Twitter @Chris_Ciaccia
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