After World War II, when a new German democracy was born in the western region of the vanquished Third Reich, tens of thousands of civil servants were hired to work for newly formed government agencies to get the new republic quickly on its feet. But there was an enormous flaw in the plan: no serious vetting system was put in place to keep war criminals out of government positions. Ex-Nazis-people who had been involved in mass murder, drafting antisemitic laws, and the persecution of Hitler’s opponents, as well as other depravities-resumed their careers without consequence in the newly created…mehr
After World War II, when a new German democracy was born in the western region of the vanquished Third Reich, tens of thousands of civil servants were hired to work for newly formed government agencies to get the new republic quickly on its feet. But there was an enormous flaw in the plan: no serious vetting system was put in place to keep war criminals out of government positions. Ex-Nazis-people who had been involved in mass murder, drafting antisemitic laws, and the persecution of Hitler’s opponents, as well as other depravities-resumed their careers without consequence in the newly created Federal Republic of Germany. Former Nazis who had established an early foothold in postwar government agencies helped each other get government work by writing letters of recommendation called Persilscheine. These “Persil Certificates,” named after a popular detergent, made an ex-Nazi’s recorded past just as clean as fresh laundry, and a whole generation of German government officials with Nazi pasts was never brought to account. Ex-Nazis were given preference for government jobs even over victims of Nazi policies and anti-Hitler resisters. They swapped Nazi uniforms for suits, Hitler salutes for handshakes. And with help from the highest levels of West German government and even the CIA, they swept their crimes under the carpet and resurrected their careers. Nazis at the Watercooler illuminates the network of ex–Third Reich loyalists and the U.S. government’s complicity that enabled this mass impunity.
Terrence C. Petty is a writer and retired journalist. He worked for the Associated Press for thirty-five years. Based in Bonn, Germany, from 1987 to 1997, he covered German and European affairs, the pro-democracy movement that toppled the Berlin Wall, the reunification of Germany, neo-Nazi violence, and the fiftieth-anniversary ceremonies at Dachau, Buchenwald, and other former concentration camps. From 1999 to 2017 he managed the AP’s news operation in Oregon. He is the author of Enemy of the People: The Munich Post and the Journalists Who Opposed Hitler.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Illustrations Preface Introduction Part 1. American Culpability 1. Beginnings 2. The Chameleon 3. Gold Watch for a War Criminal 4. Fickle Friends 5. Secret Agent 9610 6. A Talk on the Terrace Part 2. Second Guilt 7. Toppling the Wall of Silence 8. The Reckoning 9. Elusive Perpetrators 10. Killers Welcome 11. The Rosenburg File 12. A Burial in Chile 13. A Tainted Democracy? 14. Redemption 15. Squandered Opportunities Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index
List of Illustrations Preface Introduction Part 1. American Culpability 1. Beginnings 2. The Chameleon 3. Gold Watch for a War Criminal 4. Fickle Friends 5. Secret Agent 9610 6. A Talk on the Terrace Part 2. Second Guilt 7. Toppling the Wall of Silence 8. The Reckoning 9. Elusive Perpetrators 10. Killers Welcome 11. The Rosenburg File 12. A Burial in Chile 13. A Tainted Democracy? 14. Redemption 15. Squandered Opportunities Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index
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