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 Credit Suisse In The Limelight Of Former Nazi Ties In Argentina
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) For expats and foreigners intrigued by Latin America's enigmatic past, Argentina's role as a post-World War II haven for Nazi fugitives offers a gripping tale of intrigue, hidden fortunes, and enduring justice.
This story, unfolding anew in 2025, reveals how Swiss banks like Credit Suisse allegedly shielded looted wealth that fueled escapes, while recent probes expose long-buried truths.
Picture the chaos of 1945: As Allied forces closed in, thousands of Nazi officials and collaborators fled Europe via "ratlines"-secret routes involving forged papers, bribes, and sympathetic networks.
Argentina, under President Juan Domingo Perón, welcomed many, including Adolf Eichmann and Josef Mengele. Perón, a military leader with European ties, saw value in their expertise for national industry.
Key players included Austrian arms tycoon Fritz Mandl, who escaped to Buenos Aires after deals with Nazis and Mussolini. He funded Perón's 1946 campaign and built an arms empire there.
Similarly, German-Argentine businessman Ludwig Freude, a Nazi Party member, managed secret funds through his ventures, his home a hub for Axis agents.
Credit Suisse in the Limelight of Former Nazi Ties in Argentina
Freude's assets flowed into Credit Suisse's predecessor bank, account 4063 among others tied to 12,000 affiliates.
Behind this: Holocaust-looted gold and valuables were laundered through Swiss banks, evading restitution.
Credit Suisse held nearly 100 such accounts, some active until 2020, hidden under an "American blacklist" to dodge scrutiny, per U.S. Senate findings in January 2025.
The turning point came in 2020 when the Simon Wiesenthal Center, probing ratline financing, flagged these ties.
Credit Suisse hired ex-U.S. prosecutor Neil Barofsky, but fired him amid obstruction claims-later reinstated post-UBS acquisition in 2023.
By mid-2025, Argentina's President Javier Milei, prioritizing transparency, declassified 1,850 documents and shared archives, including $4.8 million (now $60 million equivalent) spent on "foreign technical personnel" from 1945-1950-likely Nazi hires.
A May 2025 Supreme Court discovery of 6,000 Nazi artifacts, hidden since 1941, added layers.
UBS continues investigations, with fresh Argentine records potentially unveiling more. This saga highlights how financial secrecy prolonged impunity, urging vigilance against hidden histories that echo today.
 This story, unfolding anew in 2025, reveals how Swiss banks like Credit Suisse allegedly shielded looted wealth that fueled escapes, while recent probes expose long-buried truths.
Picture the chaos of 1945: As Allied forces closed in, thousands of Nazi officials and collaborators fled Europe via "ratlines"-secret routes involving forged papers, bribes, and sympathetic networks.
Argentina, under President Juan Domingo Perón, welcomed many, including Adolf Eichmann and Josef Mengele. Perón, a military leader with European ties, saw value in their expertise for national industry.
Key players included Austrian arms tycoon Fritz Mandl, who escaped to Buenos Aires after deals with Nazis and Mussolini. He funded Perón's 1946 campaign and built an arms empire there.
Similarly, German-Argentine businessman Ludwig Freude, a Nazi Party member, managed secret funds through his ventures, his home a hub for Axis agents.
Credit Suisse in the Limelight of Former Nazi Ties in Argentina
Freude's assets flowed into Credit Suisse's predecessor bank, account 4063 among others tied to 12,000 affiliates.
Behind this: Holocaust-looted gold and valuables were laundered through Swiss banks, evading restitution.
Credit Suisse held nearly 100 such accounts, some active until 2020, hidden under an "American blacklist" to dodge scrutiny, per U.S. Senate findings in January 2025.
The turning point came in 2020 when the Simon Wiesenthal Center, probing ratline financing, flagged these ties.
Credit Suisse hired ex-U.S. prosecutor Neil Barofsky, but fired him amid obstruction claims-later reinstated post-UBS acquisition in 2023.
By mid-2025, Argentina's President Javier Milei, prioritizing transparency, declassified 1,850 documents and shared archives, including $4.8 million (now $60 million equivalent) spent on "foreign technical personnel" from 1945-1950-likely Nazi hires.
A May 2025 Supreme Court discovery of 6,000 Nazi artifacts, hidden since 1941, added layers.
UBS continues investigations, with fresh Argentine records potentially unveiling more. This saga highlights how financial secrecy prolonged impunity, urging vigilance against hidden histories that echo today.
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