US 'knew where Eichmann was hiding for years'

DOCUMENTS released this week from a Munich archive show that the intelligence services in both America and Germany knew where Adolf Eichmann was hiding almost a decade before he was kidnapped and brought to trial.

Critics believe the decision not to arrest the man acknowledged as the supreme logistical mastermind of the Nazi Holocaust of six million Jews was taken to protect both German officials and pro-Nazi clergy in the Vatican who had helped him to escape.

The German national newspaper Bild reported yesterday that journalists had gained access to files held by the government intelligence service the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND) showing officials knew where Eichmann was hiding under the alias of Ricardo Klement in Argentina as early as 1952.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It was not until 1960 that an Israeli commando squad kidnapped and flew him to Israel to stand trial for war crimes. The ultimate "desk murderer," Eichmann was hanged in the Jewish state in 1962.

"SS colonel EICHMANN is not to be found in Egypt but is residing in Argentina under the fake name CLEMENS. E's address is known to the editor of the German newspaper Der Weg in Argentina," says information on an index card dated 1952 and reproduced in Bild.

The BND also told America about Eichmann's whereabouts in 1958. The BND did not want to surrender the documents: Bild claimed it forced their release using legal pressure following a recent court case in which the BND was ordered to release some other information. But the paper also reports that much of what was in the files had already been destroyed.

Campaigners challenging the rule say the full disclosure of the Eichmann material may prove German and Vatican officials colluded in his escape and freedom.