Ghostnuts Podcast

#54 – Operation Paperclip (The U.S. Recruitment of NAZI Scientists)


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Operation Paperclip



https://www.conspiracyarchive.com/NWO/project_paperclip.htm



Quick recap on the events of WW2:



Starting in 1939, the Allied forces – mainly Britain, Russia, and the USA – sought to stop Nazi Germany in its conquest for European domination. By 1945, Western Europe had been rampaged, an entire race of people had come close to eradication



Having been appointed to Chancellor of Germany in 1933, Adolf Hitler led the Nazi party with an ideology of racial superiority, nationalism, and destruction of all who opposed them. The aftermath of WW1 – specifically, the Treaty of Versailles – meant that Germany was limited in what it could do on a diplomatic stage, and during the 1930s, the Nazis broke a series of rules that had been laid down in 1919. This caused the Allied countries to become concerned, and when the Nazis invaded Poland in September 1939, France and Britain declared war on Germany.



What followed was six years of turmoil. One of Hitler’s key aims as Fuhrer of Germany was the destruction of the Jewish race, and even before the war began the Nazis had implemented a number of laws which discriminated against the Jews. Things became gradually worse, with the Nazis establishing Jewish ghettos in Poland in 1940, and the concentration camps 1942.



Shit turned south for Hitler, D-Day resulted in the liberation of Paris, and allowed the Allied forces to close in around Germany. By 1944, the Nazi attack on the Soviet Union was proving unsuccessful, and the Soviets were bringing the Eastern front closer to Germany. By May 1945, Hitler had committed suicide, and the Nazi regime had collapsed. Japan surrendered in August 1945, and the Allied forces had achieved victory. All territory that had been claimed by Germany was split between the Western and Eastern Allied countries, and Germany itself was divided likewise. Approximately 73 million people are thought to have died during the conflict, and the economic repercussions were felt across the participating countries for decades after peace was declared.



Aftermath:



The Second World War came to an end in 1945, and shortly after the catastrophic war,  the allied intelligence agencies launched a concerted treasure hunt for German military and scientific inventions, including rocket and jet-engine technology, the plan involved the recruitment of Nazi scientists in the U.S. Intelligence Services under “operation paperclip”. 



The technical achievement of Germany was worth praising and it astounded the Allied scientific intelligence experts.



The inventions in Nazi laboratories, workshops and factories included the  Supersonic rockets, nerve gas, jet aircraft, guided missiles, stealth technology and hardened armour. The U.S. War Department’s Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency (JIOA) in particular scored a victory with a hidden operation that was known as Project Paperclip, headed by then U.S. President Harry Truman in September 1945.



President Truman had publicly forbidden the recruitment of anyone who was a member of the Nazi party or was more than a nominal participant in its activities, thus rendering many of the scientists ineligible. To circumvent this restriction, the files of such recruits were altered by the government, and the only evidence of their Nazi past was in the form of the paperclip that had attached their original files to those being whitewashed.



Most of the Nazi’s entered USA via Argentina as there was a truce between Spain, Italy, Germany and Argentina as the leader at the time, Juan Domingo Perod wanted to help the Nazis as t...
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