El escritor y periodista argentino Abel Basti afirma que Adolf Hitler no se suicidó en Alemania en 1945, sino que se trasladó a América Latina, donde mantuvo intensos vínculos con el ocultismo y murió tres décadas después en Paraguay.
De acuerdo con el libro 'Hitler, el hombre que venció a la muerte', basado en la investigación que realizó el mismo escritor, después de la derrota de Alemania en la Segunda Guerra Mundial el líder nazi se trasladó primero a España, desde donde viajó en submarino hasta Argentina junto con su esposa, Eva Braun. El traslado secreto se realizó bajo la protección del entonces presidente argentino, Edelmiro Farrel, y su ministro de Guerra, Juan Domingo Perón, informa el periódico 'Deutsche Welle' con referencia a la entrevista que el escritor concedió a la agencia EFE.
Basti sostiene que entre 1946 y 1955, durante los mandatos de Perón, Hitler posiblemente vivió en la ciudad de Bariloche, en el oeste de Argentina, bajo el nombre de Adolf Schütelmayor y que en 1955 tras su derrocamiento tuvo que trasladarse a Paraguay, donde lo acogió el dictador Alfredo Stroessner a petición del derrocado Perón. De acuerdo con la investigación del escritor argentino, Hitler murió en 1971 y sus restos fueron enterrados en un búnker que se encuentra bajo un edificio donde actualmente funciona un hotel.
Basti también subraya la relación de Hitler con el ocultismo y con diferentes grupos esotéricos, como la Sociedad Thule, fundada bajo pretexto de un círculo de estudios de los orígenes de la raza aria. El escritor también vincula la increíble supervivencia de Hitler con el aspecto mágico, "una suerte de pacto con el diablo" que inspiró el título de la novela, 'El hombre que venció a la muerte'.
Argentina Was Hitler’s Final Home According to FBI Files
The “official story” says that Adolf Hitler died by a self-inflicted gunshot to the head. For decades, rumors swirled throughout Argentina that Hitler had in fact survived the bunker and escaped to South America’s second largest country where he lived until 1962. Documents recently released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington DC are giving some credence to the rumors. While no concrete evidence exists to support either the death-by-suicide or life-in-Argentina theories, the weight of the evidence is shifting.
One of the up-and-coming military officers who was in a good position to help in Hitler’s move to Argentina was Juan Peron, husband of Eva, of “Evita” fame.
From 1939 until 1941, Peron was assigned by the War Ministry to go to the Italian Alps to study mountain warfare. While in Europe, he also served as a military observer in Italy, France, Germany, Hungary and Yugoslavia. Traveling throughout Europe and working with the various military, Peron had the opportunity to meet many men who would become leaders among the Axis Powers with the outbreak of World War II.
Peron had a long military history before becoming Argentina’s president in 1946. As a colonel in the Argentine Army, Peron participated in a coup against conservative President Ramon Castillo. Peron played a large part in the coup which was led by the GOU, United Officers Group, a secret society. Peron moved more into politics with his assignment as assistant to Secretary of War, General Edelmiro Farrell, and then as the head of the fledgling Department of Labor.
When he was elected President, Peron had the opportunity to repay many friends he had met while in Europe as a military observer. He also had the chance to enrich himself. Accepting bribes of gold, jewels and paintings from Nazi’s escaping the advancing allies, Peron swapped passports and travel documents for treasure stolen from the Jews. In her turn, Eva “Evita” Peron made several trips to Switzerland and during these trips she deposited much of the wealth the Perons made by selling access to Argentina living. Some of the treasure, not transported to Switzerland, is still on display in “Casa Rosada,” the Argentine version of The White House, today.
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