12,000 Nazis lived in Argentina in 1930s with Swiss bank accounts

It is common knowledge in argentina , you never ask a woman her weight or her grand daddy's rank during the war lol
 
As Bajo Cero said in another post, the bulk of the elite officers of the Argentine air force after World War II were ex-Luftwaffe.
Ironically, the bulk of the elite officers of the Brazilian air force at the same time were pilots that shoot down their "Argentine" counterparts in Europe.
Haha
 
Peron was trying to help the Nazi to settle in Argentina.

It's mentioned that Argentinian Consuls after the war /1945 issued visas and passports for German citizens, with fake ID's $$ . In Genoa and other ports with vessels leaving for Argentina
 
On the 7th of February 1949. Argentina recognised it on the 14th of February 1949.

The USA knowingly and enthusiastically took in many thousands of Nazis after the war, far more than any other nation. Talking about Argentina is an American deflection tactic.


Brazil played a large role in the establishment of the State of Israel. Brazil held the Presidency office of the United Nations General Assembly in 1947. Ambassador Osvaldo Aranha, then head of the Brazilian delegation to the U.N., supported and heavily lobbied for the creation of the State of Israel. Today, streets in Israeli cities such as Beer-Sheva and Ramat-Gan, and a square in Jerusalem are named after Aranha. In 2007, a street in Tel Aviv was named in his honor at a ceremony attended by his relatives and Brazil's ambassador to Israel.

Yes, the US knowingly and enthusiastically took in many thousands of Nazis after the war, including the likes on Von Braun.
But Brazil is certainly not the United States or Argentina when dealing with Nazi criminals.
The Mossad never had to conduct clandestine operations in Brazil to apprehend escaped Nazi criminals, like they did in Argentina to capture Eichmann. Any Nazi hunters arriving in Brazil always had complete and total cooperation from the authorities in their search. That has always been a matter of national policy.
 
Interesting note in the Buenos Aires Times on the list of Nazis;
“Many of the names listed were related to pro-Nazi companies blacklisted by the US and UK during World War II,” added Ariel Gelblung, the organisation's director for Latin America.
Argentine pro-Nazi groups tried to erase the evidence of those activities by burning files in 1943. But Filipuzzi, a former employee of Telefonica, discovered by chance an original copy of the list of 12,000 names in an old warehouse in Buenos Aires and shared it with the Wiesenthal Center.

If you haven't started watching it yet, highly recommend the new 10 episode TV series "Hunters" featuring Al Pacino. Brings back the history the unimaginable horror.the Nzis remain dedicated to.
 
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