- CIA activities in Germany
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Main article: CIA activities in Russia and Europe
Contents
Germany 1945
Clandestine intelligence collection
The former head of German intelligence for the Eastern Front, Reinhard Gehlen, approached US intelligence, in which the CIA did not yet exist. Gehlen offered to continue his operations against the Soviet Union. Gehlen, who had played a minor part in the 20 July Plot to kill Hitler, was not considered a political Nazi. In 1945-6, he went to work with US and allied organizations, forming the Gehlen Organisation to penetrate the Iron Curtain. In this way, KGB agents that had penetrated the German spy services entered into US service. Gehlen also informed the US of certain Office of Strategic Services personnel who worked for the USSR. The CIA recruited Nazi scientists, many of whom were war criminals to work on the US Army /CIA MKULTRA Operation based at Fort Detrick, Maryland. .[1] [2]
Germany 1953
See Operation Gold.
Germany 1956
Clandestine intelligence collection
The Organisation moved to German control, as the core Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND or Federal Intelligence Service).
Germany 1990
Clandestine intelligence collection and counterintelligence
CIA acquired the Rosenholz files, containing the list of foreign spies of the Stasi, in the former German Democratic Republic.[1]
References
- ^ Bernd Schafer (2007-03-13). "Stasi Files and GDR espionage Against the West" (PDF). Norwegian Institute for Defense Studies. http://se2.isn.ch/serviceengine/FileContent?serviceID=12&fileid=612CAF70-74AC-5C75-C8BF-5A19D04ADEFB&lng=de. Retrieved 2007-04-15.[dead link]
CIA activities in Russia and Europe Belgium · France · Germany · Greece · Italy · the Netherlands · the United Kingdom · Albania · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Croatia · Hungary · the Soviet Union · Russia · PolandCentral Intelligence Agency of the United States Geographic activities Transnational activities Divisions
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