BERLIN
(JTA) -- The notorious Nazi Adolf Eichmann could have been
caught sooner if Germany's intelligence agency had assisted,
new information has revealed.
The German Information Agency knew as early as 1952 that Eichmann, a chief organizer
of the Nazi genocide against the Jews, was hiding in Argentina
under a false name, the German tabloid Bild reported. The
information was revealed after the newspaper sued the agency
to force the release of all remaining documents on Eichmann,
who was captured by Israeli agents in 1960.
After a trial in Israel, he was executed
in 1962 -- the only person ever executed by the Jewish state.
"The revelations are very
troubling because they clearly show the Germans never had
any interest in bringing people like that to justice," Efraim Zuroff, head of the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Israel office, told JTA
Monday. "Today they are making the effort, but with criminals who played a far lesser
role than Eichmann."
According to the documents viewed
by Bild reporters, the German secret service received information
in 1952 that Eichmann "is not in Egypt but is living under the name CLEMENS in Argentina. The editor
in chief of the German newspaper 'Der Weg' in Argentina knows
E.'s address."
In fact, Eichmann's fake name was
Klement. Not until 1958 did the German secret service inform
the CIA about Eichmann having fled to Argentina. The newspaper
reported that virtually all of several thousand microfilmed
pages about Eichmann were destroyed. Bild sued for the right
to see all the remaining documents.
Historian Bettina Stangneth, whose
book about Eichmann is due to be published in April, told
Bild that she considered the file card "sensational. No one knew until today that the West German secret service knew
of Eichmann's whereabouts eight years before his arrest."
Zuroff said he planned to appeal to
the German government to release all the secret service documents
that may contain information about accused war criminals
who have escaped justice.
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