General Discussions
This is the place to discuss general issues related to the U-boat war or the war at sea in WWII.
Re: Ultramar Sur - Bildeberg & the New World Order
Posted by:
Carlos De Napoli
()
Date: November 10, 2007 07:40PM
Hi Paul
Argentine law permitted the use of Nazi submarines ports without problems, always sailing on the surface. This issue led to the British reaction, which was not taken into account.
You can see this in a document N° 84 of the Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores (República Argentina), 1939-sent Sir Esmond Ovey.
Anyway, were not usual until the war was ending in 1944.
By then, the Abwehr local (Secret Service of Kriegsmarine) (Niebuhr, Delfino etc.) began using small ports in Patagonia who controlled via Hamburg Süd since the late nineteenth century.
Families Delfino, Niebuhr, Ronewald, etc., responsible for organizing the arrival of Nazi submarines, still live quietly in Argentina. Did you know this?
I recommend reading ‘Roosevelt and Hopkins’ (an intimate history of Robert E. Sherwood) or ‘Speaking Frankly’ (James Byrnes) or The Secret Surrender (Allen Dulles). You can see the extensive knowledge that your "establishment" had the escape of Nazi submarine into Argentina.
As for the sinking of Bahia, I have received a letter from the admiral Lucio Torres Dias, survivor of the sinking, endorsing my studies.
Sorry for my English.
Atte.
Carlos De Napoli.
Argentine law permitted the use of Nazi submarines ports without problems, always sailing on the surface. This issue led to the British reaction, which was not taken into account.
You can see this in a document N° 84 of the Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores (República Argentina), 1939-sent Sir Esmond Ovey.
Anyway, were not usual until the war was ending in 1944.
By then, the Abwehr local (Secret Service of Kriegsmarine) (Niebuhr, Delfino etc.) began using small ports in Patagonia who controlled via Hamburg Süd since the late nineteenth century.
Families Delfino, Niebuhr, Ronewald, etc., responsible for organizing the arrival of Nazi submarines, still live quietly in Argentina. Did you know this?
I recommend reading ‘Roosevelt and Hopkins’ (an intimate history of Robert E. Sherwood) or ‘Speaking Frankly’ (James Byrnes) or The Secret Surrender (Allen Dulles). You can see the extensive knowledge that your "establishment" had the escape of Nazi submarine into Argentina.
As for the sinking of Bahia, I have received a letter from the admiral Lucio Torres Dias, survivor of the sinking, endorsing my studies.
Sorry for my English.
Atte.
Carlos De Napoli.
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