2011/05/14
Henry Maow Ph D: Both Hitler and Borman Were German Traitors
Martin Borman, the man who signed Hitler's paycheck, was actually a Soviet Spy. General Reinhard Gehlen, chief of German intelligence gathering for the fight against Russia, says in his memoirs, that he and Admiral Canaris, head of German Intelligence, suspected that there was a traitor in the German Supreme Command. Both had noticed that the Soviets were receiving "rapid and detailed information on top level decision-making. Both suspected Martin Borman, the Deputy Fuehrer, and head of the NAZI party. Their suspicions were confirmed, when they found out that Borman and his group were operating an unsupervised radio transmitter network, and using it to send coded messages to Moscow. When OKW monitors reported this, Canaris demanded an investigation, but word came back that Hitler himself had emphatically forbidden any intervention: He had been informed in advance of these "Funkspiele", meaning "fake radio messages", and he had approved them. Despite the fact that vital information continued to leak, Gehlen and Canaris left it at that. Neither of us was in a position to denounce Bohrmann with any process of success. In his book: "Hitler's Traitor", Louis Kilzer estimated that Borman was worth fifty divisions to the Soviets! After the war, Gehlen, who headed the "West German Intelligence Agency", was able to confirm Bormann's treason! (This sounds a lot like our failure to interrogate the head of Silverstein Properties, Inc., one of the most "respected real estate development and investment development firms nationwide". Yeah, right!!!!) One word of advice: Easy is the descent into hell, sed vocare gradium, et evadere et auras, hoc opus, sed labor est!
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