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Operation Paperclip

Operation Paperclip was a secret United States intelligence program in which more than 1,600 German scientists, engineers, and technicians were taken from the former Nazi Germany to the U.S. for government employment after the end of World War II in Europe, between 1945 and 1959. Conducted by the Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency (JIOA), it was largely carried out by special agents of the U.S. Army's Counterintelligence Corps (CIC). Many of these Germans were former members and some were former leaders of the Nazi Party.[1][2]

Kurt H. Debus, a former V-2 rocket scientist who became a NASA director, sitting between U.S. President John F. Kennedy and U.S. Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1962 at a briefing at Blockhouse 34, Cape Canaveral Missile Test Annex

Background and Operation Overcast edit

In February 1945, Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) set up T-Force, or Special Sections Subdivision, which grew to over 2,000 personnel by June. T-Force examined 5,000 German targets, seeking expertise in synthetic rubber and oil catalysts, new designs in armored equipment, V-2 (rocket) weapons, jet and rocket propelled aircraft, naval equipment, field radios, secret writing chemicals, aero medicine research, gliders, and "scientific and industrial personalities".[3]

When large numbers of German scientists began to be discovered by the advancing Allied forces in late April 1945, Special Sections Subdivision set up the Enemy Personnel Exploitation Section to manage and interrogate them. The Enemy Personnel Exploitation Section established a detention center, Camp Dustbin, first near Paris and later in Kransberg Castle outside Frankfurt. The U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) established the first secret recruitment program, called Operation Overcast, on July 20, 1945, initially "to assist in shortening the Japanese war and to aid our postwar military research".[4] The term "Overcast" was the name first given by the German scientists' family members for the housing camp where they were held in Bavaria.[5] In late summer 1945, the JCS established the JIOA, a subcommittee of the Joint Intelligence Community, to directly oversee Operation Overcast and later Operation Paperclip.[6] The JIOA representatives included the army's director of intelligence, the chief of naval intelligence, the assistant chief of Air Staff-2 (air force intelligence), and a representative from the State Department.[7] In November 1945, Operation Overcast was renamed Operation Paperclip by Ordnance Corps officers, who would attach a paperclip to the folders of those rocket experts whom they wished to employ in the United States.[5]

The project was not initially targeted against the Soviet Union; rather the concern was that German scientists might emigrate and continue their research in countries that remained neutral during the war.[8] Much U.S. effort was focused on Saxony and Thuringia, which on July 1, 1945, became part of the Soviet occupation zone. Many German research facilities and personnel had been evacuated to these states before the end of the war, particularly from the Berlin area. The USSR then relocated more than 2,200 Nazi specialists and their families—more than 6,000 people—with Operation Osoaviakhim during one night on October 22, 1946.[9]

In a secret directive circulated on September 3, 1946, President Truman officially approved Operation Paperclip and expanded it to include 1,000 German scientists under "temporary, limited military custody".[10][11][12] News media revealed the program as early as December 1946.[13]

On April 26, 1946, the Joint Chiefs of Staff issued directive JCS 1067/14 to General Eisenhower instructing that he "preserve from destruction and take under your control records, plans, books, documents, papers, files and scientific, industrial and other information and data belonging to ... German organizations engaged in military research";[14]: 185  and that, excepting war-criminals, German scientists be detained for intelligence purposes as required.[15]

Osenberg List edit

In the later part of World War II, Germany was at a logistical disadvantage, having failed to conquer the USSR with Operation Barbarossa (June–December 1941), and its drive for the Caucasus (June 1942 – February 1943). The failed conquest had depleted German resources, and its military–industrial complex was unprepared to defend the Greater Germanic Reich against the Red Army's westward counterattack. By early 1943, the German government began recalling from combat a number of scientists, engineers, and technicians to work in research and development to bolster German defense for a protracted war with the USSR. The recall from frontline combat included 4,000 rocketeers returned to Peenemünde, in northeast coastal Germany.[16][17]

Overnight, Ph.D.s were liberated from KP duty, masters of science were recalled from orderly service, mathematicians were hauled out of bakeries, and precision mechanics ceased to be truck drivers.

— Dieter K. Huzel, Peenemünde to Canaveral

The Nazi government's recall of their now-useful intellectuals for scientific work first required identifying and locating the scientists, engineers, and technicians, then ascertaining their political and ideological reliability. Werner Osenberg [de], the engineer-scientist heading the Wehrforschungsgemeinschaft (Defense Research Association), recorded the names of the politically cleared men to the Osenberg List, thus reinstating them to scientific work.[18]

In March 1945, at Bonn University, a Polish laboratory technician found pieces of the Osenberg List stuffed in a toilet; the list subsequently reached MI6, who transmitted it to U.S. intelligence.[19][14] Then U.S. Army Major Robert B. Staver, Chief of the Jet Propulsion Section of the Research and Intelligence Branch of the United States Army Ordnance Corps, used the Osenberg List to compile his list of German scientists to be captured and interrogated; Wernher von Braun, Germany's best rocket scientist, headed Major Staver's list.[20]

Identification edit

 
V-2 rocket launching, Peenemünde, on the north-east Baltic German coast (1943)

In Operation Overcast, Major Staver's original intent was only to interview the scientists, but what he learned changed the operation's purpose. On May 22, 1945, he transmitted to the U.S. Department of War Colonel Joel Holmes' telegram urging the evacuation to America of 100 of the 400 German scientists in his custody, as most "important for [the] Pacific war" effort.[14] Most of the Osenberg List engineers worked at the Baltic coast German Army Research Center Peenemünde, developing the V-2 rocket. After capturing them, the Allies initially housed them and their families in Landshut, Bavaria, in southern Germany.[21]

Beginning on July 19, 1945, the U.S. Joint Chiefs managed the captured ARC rocketeers under Operation Overcast. However, when the "Camp Overcast" name of the scientists' quarters became locally known, the program was renamed Operation Paperclip in November 1945.[22] Despite these attempts at secrecy, the press interviewed several of the scientists later that year.[14][20][23]

Capture and detention edit

 
The Allied zones of occupation in post-war Germany, highlighting the Soviet zone (red), the inner German border (heavy black line), and the zone from which British and American troops withdrew in July 1945 (purple). The provincial boundaries are those of Nazi Germany, before the present Länder (federal states) were established.

Early on, the United States created the Combined Intelligence Objectives Subcommittee (CIOS). This provided the information on targets for the T-Forces that went in and targeted scientific, military, and industrial installations (and their employees) for their know-how. Initial priorities were advanced technology, such as infrared, that could be used in the war against Japan; finding out what technology had been passed on to Japan; and finally to halt research elsewhere.

Von Braun and more than a thousand of his colleagues decided to surrender to Americans in 1945. One of the engineers later recalled their options: "We despise the French, we are mortally afraid of the Soviets, we do not believe the British can afford us. So that leaves the Americans." On June 20, 1945, they moved from the east closer to the American forces, to avoid the advancing Soviet army.[24]

A project to halt the research was codenamed "Project Safehaven"; it was not initially targeted against the Soviet Union but addressed the concern that German scientists might emigrate and continue their research in countries that had remained neutral during the war.[8][25] To avoid the complications involved with the emigration of German scientists, the CIOS was responsible for scouting and kidnapping high-profile individuals to block technological advancements in nations hostile to the U.S.[26]

Much U.S. effort was focused on Saxony and Thuringia, which on July 1, 1945, would become part of the Soviet Occupation zone. Many German research facilities and personnel had been evacuated to these states, particularly from the Berlin area. Fearing that the Soviet takeover would limit U.S. ability to exploit German scientific and technical expertise, and not wanting the Soviet Union to benefit from it, the United States instigated an "evacuation operation" of scientific personnel from Saxony and Thuringia, issuing orders such as:

On orders of Military Government you are to report with your family and baggage as much as you can carry tomorrow noon at 1300 hours (Friday, 22 June 1945) at the town square in Bitterfeld. There is no need to bring winter clothing. Easily carried possessions, such as family documents, jewelry, and the like should be taken along. You will be transported by motor vehicle to the nearest railway station. From there you will travel on to the West. Please tell the bearer of this letter how large your family is.

By 1947, this evacuation operation had netted an estimated 1,800 technicians and scientists and 3,700 family members.[27] Those with special skills or knowledge were taken to detention and interrogation centers, such as one code-named "Dustbin" (located first at Chesnay, near Versailles and then moved to Kransberg Castle outside Frankfurt) to be held and interrogated, in some cases for months.[28]

A few of the scientists were gathered as a part of Operation Overcast, but most were transported to villages in the countryside where there were neither research facilities nor work; they were provided with stipends, and required to report twice weekly to police headquarters to prevent them from leaving. The Joint Chiefs of Staff directive on research and teaching stated that technicians and scientists should be released "only after all interested agencies were satisfied that all desired intelligence information had been obtained from them".[citation needed]

On November 5, 1947, the Office of Military Government, United States (OMGUS), which had jurisdiction over the western part of occupied Germany, held a conference to consider the status of the evacuees, the monetary claims that the evacuees had filed against the United States, and the "possible violation by the U.S. of laws of war or Rules of Land Warfare". The OMGUS director of Intelligence Robert L. Walsh initiated a program to resettle the evacuees in the Third World, which the Germans referred to as General Walsh's Urwald-Programm ("jungle program"); but the program was not carried out. In 1948, the evacuees received settlements of 69.5 million Reichsmarks from the U.S., a settlement that soon became severely devalued during the currency reform that introduced the Deutsche Mark as the official currency of western Germany.[29]

John Gimbel concludes that the United States held some of Germany's best minds for three years, therefore depriving the German recovery of their expertise.[30]

Arrivals edit

 
A group of 104 rocket scientists at Fort Bliss, Texas

In May 1945, the U.S. Navy "received in custody" Herbert A. Wagner, the inventor of the Hs 293 missile; for two years, he first worked at the Special Devices Center, at Castle Gould and at Hempstead House, Long Island, New York; in 1947, he moved to the Naval Air Station Point Mugu.[31]

In August 1945, Colonel Holger Toftoy, head of the Rocket Branch of the Research and Development Division of the U.S. Army's Ordnance Corps, offered initial one-year contracts to the rocket scientists; 127 of them accepted. In September 1945, the first group of seven rocket scientists (aerospace engineers) arrived at Fort Strong on Long Island in Boston harbor: Wernher von Braun, Erich W. Neubert, Theodor A. Poppel, William August Schulze, Eberhard Rees, Wilhelm Jungert, and Walter Schwidetzky.[14]

Beginning in late 1945, three rocket-scientist groups arrived in the United States for duty at Fort Bliss, Texas, and at White Sands Proving Grounds, New Mexico, as "War Department Special Employees".[16]: 27 [22]

In 1946, the United States Bureau of Mines employed seven German synthetic fuel scientists at a Fischer–Tropsch chemical plant in Louisiana, Missouri.[32]

On June 1, 1949, the Chief of Ordnance of the United States Army designated Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, as the Ordnance Rocket Center, its facility for rocket research and development. On April 1, 1950, the Fort Bliss missile development operation, including von Braun and his team of over 130 Paperclip members, was transferred to Redstone Arsenal.

In early 1950, legal U.S. residency for some of the Project Paperclip specialists was effected through the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico; thus, German scientists legally entered the United States from Latin America.[16]: 226 [20]

Between 1945 and 1952, the United States Air Force sponsored the largest number of Paperclip scientists, importing 260 men, of whom 36 returned to Germany, and one, Walter Schreiber, emigrated to Argentina.[33]

The United States Army Signal Corps employed 24 specialists—including the physicists Georg Goubau, Gunter Guttwein, Georg Hass, Horst Kedesdy, and Kurt Lehovec; the physical chemists Rudolf Brill, Ernst Baars [de], and Eberhard Both; the geophysicist Helmut Weickmann; the optician Gerhard Schwesinger; and the engineers Eduard Gerber, Richard Guenther, and Hans Ziegler.[34]

In 1959, 94 Operation Paperclip men went to the United States, including Friedwardt Winterberg and Friedrich Wigand.[31]

Overall, through its operations to 1990, Operation Paperclip imported 1,600 men as part of the intellectual reparations owed to the US and the UK, valued at US$10 billion in patents and industrial processes.[31][35]

Major awards (in the United States) edit

 
Hermann Oberth (forefront) with officials of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency at Huntsville, Alabama in 1956. Left to right around Oberth: Ernst Stuhlinger (seated), Major General Holger Toftoy, Commanding Officer responsible for "Project Paperclip", Wernher von Braun, Director, Development Operations Division, Robert Lusser, a Project Paperclip engineer.

The NASA Distinguished Service Medal is the highest award which may be bestowed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). After more than two decades of service and leadership in NASA, four Nazi members from Operation Paperclip were awarded the NASA Distinguished Service Medal in 1969: Kurt Debus, Eberhard Rees, Arthur Rudolph, and Wernher von Braun. Ernst Geissler was awarded the medal in 1973.

The Department of Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award is the highest civilian award given by the United States Department of Defense. After two decades of service, Nazi member from Operation Paperclip Siegfried Knemeyer was awarded the Department of Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award in 1966.

The Goddard Astronautics Award is the highest honor bestowed for notable achievements in the field of astronautics by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA).[36] For their service, three Operation Paperclip members were awarded the Goddard Astronautics Award: Wernher von Braun (1961), Hans von Ohain (1966), and Krafft Arnold Ehricke (1984).

The U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, owns and operates the U.S. Space Camp. Several Operation Paperclip members are members of the Space Camp Hall of Fame (which began in 2007): Wernher von Braun (2007), Georg von Tiesenhausen (2007), and Oscar Holderer (2008).

The New Mexico Museum of Space History includes the International Space Hall of Fame. Two Operation Paperclip members are members of the International Space Hall of Fame: Wernher von Braun (1976)[37] and Ernst Steinhoff (1979).[38] Hubertus Strughold was inducted in 1978 but removed as a member in 2006. Other closely related members include Willy Ley (1976),[39] a German-American science writer, and Hermann Oberth (1976),[40] a German scientist who advised von Braun's rocket team in the U.S. from 1955 to 1958; neither Ley, nor Oberth moved to the US via the Operation Paperclip.

Two lunar craters are named after Paperclip scientists: Debus after Kurt Debus, the first director of NASA's Kennedy Space Center, and von Braun.

Advancements in aeronautics edit

Significant migrants edit

Adolf Busemann edit

Dr. Adolf Busemann was born in Lubeck, Germany, in 1902. He graduated from the Carolo Wilhelmina Technical University in Braunschweig and received a Ph.D. in engineering in 1924. In 1925, the Max-Planck Institute invited him to become an official aeronautical research scientist, and in 1930, he became a professor at Georgia Augusta University in Goettingen.[41]

Busemann spent many years working for the German government, most notably directing research at the Braunschweig Laboratory. He gave a speech in 1935 at the Volta Congress, an international meeting on the problems of high-speed aeronautics. At this conference, he presented his first theory of how the angle of sweep of a plane wing reduces drag at supersonic speed.[42] After the war, he traveled to the United States to assist them with the war tensions with Russia, where he continued his work on his theory of wing sweep.

Wernher von Braun edit

Wernher von Braun is known for developing rocket and space-flight technology, including the V-2 missile. In late 1932, he worked for the German army to develop new liquid propulsion-based missiles.[43] He received a doctorate in physics in 1934 from the Friedrich-Wilhelms University of Berlin. He and his team then surrendered to the Allies at the end of World War II, shortly after Hitler's suicide in 1945. They were brought to America through Operation Paperclip and assimilated into NASA's space program, where they worked on missile technology at Fort Bliss before transferring to Huntsville, Alabama.[44] He became the director of the Marshall Space Flight Center in 1960.[43]

Von Braun is also a controversial figure for his involvement with the Nazi party and the slave labor involved in developing the V-2 rocket in Germany before it began to be developed in the United States. He became a member of the Nazi party in 1937 and was made a junior SS officer in 1940.[43]

Marshall Space Flight Center edit

 
Wernher von Braun in 1961 with members of his management team. Pictured from left to right are, Werner Kuers, Director of the Manufacturing Engineering Division; Dr. Walter Häussermann, Director of the Astrionics Division; Dr. William Mrazek, Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Division; Dr. von Braun; Dieter Grau, Director of the Quality Assurance Division; Dr. Oswald Lange, Director of the Saturn Systems Office; and Erich W. Neubert, Associate Deputy Director for Research and Development.

In July 1960, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) established the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in Huntsville, Alabama after taking control of the Development Operations Division from the Army's Redstone Arsenal. The Redstone Arsenal was led by the Army Ballistic Missile Agency.[44] Wernher von Braun became the first director of the MSFC. The MSFC's development team was formed by American engineers from the Redstone Arsenal and 118 German migrants who came from Peenemünde through Operation Paperclip.[45] Von Braun worked with Operation Paperclip to get scientists from his team to the United States. They began work at Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas in September 1945, and most of the team had arrived by 1946. Von Braun and his team worked as consultants for the military until 1950 when they began transferring to Huntsville.[44]

Originally, the center focused on weaponry and further development of the V-2 rocket line but later became one of NASA's main development centers for space flight project. The team also worked on missions that related to Moon landing missions, such as the Lunar Roving Vehicle. However, the main projects from the Marshall Space Flight Center were the V-2 rocket and the Apollo missions.[44]

V-2 rocket edit

 
US test launch of a Bumper V-2, the first rocket launch from Cape Canaveral.[46]

The V-2 rocket was developed in Germany at the Peenemünde military research center. Wernher von Braun was the director of Peenemünde and worked with a team of engineers, physicists, and chemists. The Nazis used the V-2 rocket during World War II to attack Paris and Great Britain. Roughly five thousand people died in these attacks. The location of V-2 production moved to Mittelwerk in Nordhausen after a British raid on Peenemünde on August 17, 1943. Mittelwerk was supplemented with slave labor from Dora, a nearby concentration camp.[44]

Production of the V-2 missile then moved to the United States after Wernher von Braun surrendered to the Allies (Hall 2022). In March 1946, a V-2 was test-fired in New Mexico, followed by the first launch of a captured V-2 in April of the same year. After months of adaptation, a V-2 missile was fired in White Sands Proving Ground, New Mexico that broke a record with an altitude of 116 miles (186.68 km). The V-2 rockets were used to test the effects of cosmic rays on fruit flies and seeds. They also took the first pictures of Earth from 100 miles (160.93 km) in the air and tested g-force on various monkeys.[45]

Apollo missions edit

 
Wernher von Braun and Kurt Debus, Director of the Kennedy Space Center, attending the Saturn 500F rollout from the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB), 1966

The Marshall Space Flight Center was one of three institutions at NASA involved in the Apollo program. The Center was equipped to become a part of Apollo because it had the facilities to study rocketry: Aero-Astrodynamics, Astrionics, Space Sciences, Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering, Computation, Manufacturing, Test, and Quality.[44] Each of these laboratories handled a different aspect of creating and testing rockets that suited the shift from military weapons to space travel. The weaponry from WWII, including rocket and missile in the United States, set the precedent for the kinds of technology used to create the Saturn rocket line. The Marshall engineers' experience in rocket development led to what Dieter Grau, head of the Quality lab, described as a "rigid inspection program" focused on craftsmanship. This meant to create prototypes that had a higher success rate instead of lesser prototypes that required more tests.[44]

The American and German Marshall engineers created the launch vehicles and designed some launching facilities at Cape Canaveral, Florida during the Apollo program. They also created the Saturn rocket line, which was the kind of rocket that sent American astronauts to the Moon.[43] The Saturn rocket line drew on previous military engineering, such as the liquid propulsion system developed from von Braun's V-2 rocket and navigation systems derived from the UA army's Redstone and Jupiter rockets.[44]

Controversy and investigations edit

Before his official approval of the program, President Truman was indecisive about it for sixteen months.[12] Years later in 1963, Truman recalled that he was not in the least reluctant to approve Paperclip; that because of relations with the Soviet Union "this had to be done and was done".[47] Several of the Paperclip scientists were later investigated because of their links with the Nazi Party during the war. Only one Paperclip scientist, Georg Rickhey, was formally tried for any crime, and no Paperclip scientist was found guilty of any crime, in the United States or Germany. Rickhey was returned to Germany in 1947 to stand at the Dora Trial, where he was acquitted.[48]

 
First page of a transcription of a protest telegram about Operation Paperclip sent to Harry S. Truman by the Council Against Intolerance In America, endorsed by several signatories, including Albert Einstein, on December 30, 1946.

In 1951, weeks after his U.S. arrival, Walter Schreiber was linked by the Boston Globe to human experiments conducted by Kurt Blome at Ravensbrück; he emigrated to Argentina with the aid of the U.S. military.[49]

In 1984, Arthur Rudolph, under perceived threat of prosecution relating to his connection – as operations director for V-2 missile production – to the use of forced labor from Mittelbau-Dora at the Mittelwerk, renounced his U.S. citizenship and moved to West Germany, which granted him citizenship.[50] Von Braun was investigated in 1961 for his involvement in the Nazi party as an SS member. The FBI concluded that he had joined the Nazi Party solely to advance his academic career and to avoid imprisonment.[51]

For 50 years, from 1963 to 2013, the Strughold Award – named after Hubertus Strughold, "the father of space medicine", for his central role in developing innovations like the space suit and space life support systems – was the most prestigious award from the Space Medicine Association, a member organization of the Aerospace Medical Association.[52] On October 1, 2013, in the aftermath of a Wall Street Journal article published on December 1, 2012, which highlighted his connection to human experiments during WWII, the Space Medicine Association's executive committee announced that the Space Medicine Association Strughold Award had been retired.[52][53]

Similar operations edit

  • Operation APPLEPIE: Project to capture and interrogate key Wehrmacht, RSHA AMT VI, and General Staff officers knowledgeable of the industry and economy of the USSR.[54]
  • Operation Bloodstone: Project to recruit and utilize personnel in Eastern Europe to foster anti-Communism.[54]
  • Camp Dustbin (counterpart of Camp Ashcan): An Anglo-American military interrogation camp for German scientists and industry specialists.
  • ECLIPSE (1944): An unimplemented Air Disarmament Wing plan for post-war operations in Europe for destroying V-1 and V-2 missiles.[55][56]: 44 
    • Safehaven: US project within ECLIPSE meant to prevent the escape of Nazi scientists from Allied-occupied Germany.[20]
  • Field Information Agency, Technical (FIAT): US Army agency for securing the "major, and perhaps only, material reward of victory, namely, the advancement of science and the improvement of production and standards of living in the United Nations, by proper exploitation of German methods in these fields"; FIAT ended in 1947, when Operation Paperclip began functioning.[55]: [1]
  • National Interest/Project 63: Job placement assistance for Nazi engineers at Lockheed, Martin Marietta, North American Aviation, and other aeroplane companies, whilst American aerospace engineers were being laid off work.[31]
  • Alsos Mission, Operation Big, Operation Epsilon, Russian Alsos: American, British and Soviet efforts to capture German nuclear secrets, equipment, and personnel.
  • Operation Backfire: A British effort at recovering rocket and aerospace technology, followed by assembling and testing rockets at Cuxhaven.
  • Fedden Mission: British mission to gain technical intelligence concerning advanced German aircraft and their propulsion systems.
  • Operation LUSTY (Luftwaffe Secret Technology): US efforts to capture Luftwaffe equipment, technology, and personnel.
  • Technical Air Intelligence Unit: joint Allied military intelligence units formed to recover Japanese aircraft
  • Operation Osoaviakhim (sometimes transliterated as "Operation Ossavakim"), a Soviet counterpart of Operation Paperclip, involving German technicians, managers, skilled workers and their respective families who were transferred to the USSR in October 1946.[57]
  • Operation Surgeon: British operation for denying German aeronautical expertise to the USSR, and for exploiting German scientists in furthering British research.[58]
  • Special Mission V-2: April–May 1945 US operation, by Maj. William Bromley, that recovered parts and equipment for 100 V-2 missiles from a Mittelwerk underground factory in Kohnstein within the Soviet zone. Major James P. Hamill co-ordinated the transport of the equipment on 341 railroad cars with the 144th Motor Vehicle Assembly Company, from Nordhausen to Erfurt, just before the Soviets arrived.[59] (See also Operation Blossom, Project Hermes, and Operation Sandy)
  • TICOM: US project to exploit German cryptographers.

See also edit

In fiction:

References edit

  1. ^ Jacobsen 2014, p. Prologue, ix.
  2. ^ "Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency". U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved October 9, 2008.
  3. ^ "Chapter XVII: Zone and Sector". history.army.mil. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
  4. ^ Lasby 1975, p. 79.
  5. ^ a b Lasby 1975, p. 155.
  6. ^ Jacobsen 2014, p. 191.
  7. ^ Jacobsen 2014, p. 193.
  8. ^ a b . www.cia.gov. Archived from the original on June 13, 2007.
  9. ^ "Operation "Osoaviakhim"". Retrieved December 29, 2020.
  10. ^ The Paperclip Conspiracy: The Hunt for the Nazi Scientists, 1987, Tom Bower, et al. p. 178
  11. ^ Jacobsen 2014, p. 229.
  12. ^ a b Lasby 1975, p. 177.
  13. ^ . The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 1, 2014. Retrieved July 24, 2023.
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  17. ^ Braun, Wernher von; Ordway III; Frederick I (1985) [1975]. Space Travel: A History. & David Dooling Jr. New York: Harper & Row. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-06-181898-1.
  18. ^ Forman, Paul; Sánchez-Ron, José Manuel (1996). National Military Establishments and the Advancement of Science and Technology. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 308. ISBN 978-0-7923-3541-2.
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  26. ^ O'Reagan, Douglas M. (2021). Taking Nazi Technology: allied exploitation of german science after the second world war. [S.l.]: Johns Hopkins Univ Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-4214-3984-6.
  27. ^ Denny, Mark (2019). Rocket science: from fireworks to the photon drive. Cham, Switzerland. p. 37. ISBN 978-3-030-28080-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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  29. ^ Ten years of German unification: transfer, transformation, incorporation?. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, University Press. 2002. ISBN 978-1-902459-12-7.
  30. ^ "U.S. Policy and German Scientists: The Early Cold War", Political Science Quarterly, Volume 101, Number 3, (1986), pages 433–451
  31. ^ a b c d Hunt 1991, pp. 6, 21, 31, 172, 259.
  32. ^ . Fischer-Tropsch.org. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved December 22, 2011.
  33. ^ Lasby 1975, p. 257.
  34. ^ Fred Carl. . Campevans.org. Archived from the original on March 9, 2012. Retrieved December 22, 2011.
  35. ^ Naimark. 206 (Naimark cites Gimbel, John Science Technology and Reparations: Exploitation and Plunder in Postwar Germany) The $10 billion compare to the 1948 US GDP $258 billion, and to the total Marshall plan (1948–52) expenditure of $13 billion, of which Germany received $1.4 billion (partly as loans).
  36. ^ "Goddard Astronautics Award". AAIA: Shaping the Future of Aerospace. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  37. ^ "International Space Hall of Fame – Wernher von Braun". New Mexico Museum of Space History. New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  38. ^ "International Space Hall of Fame – Ernst A. Steinhoff". New Mexico Museum of Space History. New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  39. ^ "International Space Hall of Fame – Willy Ley". New Mexico Museum of Space History. New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  40. ^ "International Space Hall of Fame – Hermann J. Oberth". New Mexico Museum of Space History. New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  41. ^ Ap (November 5, 1986). "Adolf Busemann, 85, Dead; Designer of the Swept Wing". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved September 27, 2023.
  42. ^ Memorial Tributes: National Academy of Engineering, Volume 3. Washington, D.C.: National Academies Press. January 1, 1989. doi:10.17226/1384. ISBN 978-0-309-03939-0.
  43. ^ a b c d "Wernher von Braun - NASA". NASA. Retrieved December 28, 2023.
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  46. ^ "75 Years Ago: First Launch of a Two-Stage Rocket - NASA". May 12, 2023.
  47. ^ (Lasby 1975, p. 177), citing Personal Interview, President Harry S. Truman, Independence, Missouri, June 3, 1963.
  48. ^ Neufeld, Michael J. (2008). Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War. Random House, Inc. p. 235. ISBN 978-0-307-38937-4.
  49. ^ Jacobsen 2014.
  50. ^ Hunt, Linda (May 23, 1987). "NASA's Nazis". Literature of the Holocaust.
  51. ^ "federal bureau of investigation fbi memorandum emil julius klaus fuchs espionage r september 26 1949 top secret fbi foia". U.S. Intelligence on Europe, 1945-1995. doi:10.1163/9789004287648.useo_b02124. Retrieved October 24, 2023.
  52. ^ a b "Strughold Award". June 23, 2014.
  53. ^ Lagnado, Lucette (December 1, 2012). "A Scientist's Nazi-Era Past Haunts Prestigious Space Prize". Wall Street Journal.
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  56. ^ Cooksley, Peter G (1979). Flying Bomb. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 44.
  57. ^ Pennacchio, Charles F. (Fall 1995). "The East German Communists and the Origins of the Berlin Blockade Crisis" (DOC). East European Quarterly. 29 (3). Retrieved June 29, 2010. October 21, 1946, marked the initiation of "Operation Ossavakim", which forcibly transferred to Soviet soil thousands of German technicians, managers and skilled personnel, along with their family members and the industrial tools they would operate.
  58. ^ "UK 'fears' over German scientists", BBC News, March 31, 2006
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Further reading edit

  • Yves Beon, Planet Dora. Westview Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8133-3272-9.
  • Giuseppe Ciampaglia: "Come ebbe effettivo inizio a Roma l'Operazione Paperclip". Roma 2005. In: Strenna dei Romanisti 2005. Edit. Roma Amor
  • Henry Stevens, Hitler's Suppressed and Still-Secret Weapons, Science and Technology. Adventures Unlimited Press, 2007. ISBN 1-931882-73-8
  • John Gimbel, "Science Technology and Reparations: Exploitation and Plunder in Postwar Germany" Stanford University Press, 1990 ISBN 0-8047-1761-3
  • Linda Hunt, , Moment 4, 1987 (Yorkshire Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament)
  • Hunt, Linda (1991). Secret agenda : the United States government, Nazi scientists, and project paperclip, 1945 to 1990. New York : St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-05510-3.
  • Linda Hunt, U.S. Coverup of Nazi Scientists The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. April 1985.
  • Matthias Judt; Burghard Ciesla, Technology Transfer Out of Germany After 1945 Harwood Academic Publishers, 1996. ISBN 3-7186-5822-4
  • Michael C. Carroll, Lab 257: The Disturbing Story of the Government's Secret Germ Laboratory. Harper Paperbacks, 2005. ISBN 0-06-078184-X
  • John Gimbel "U.S. Policy and German Scientists: The Early Cold War", Political Science Quarterly, Volume 101, Number 3 (1986), pp. 433–451
  • Lasby, Clarence G. (1975). Project paperclip: German scientists and the Cold War. New York/N.Y: Atheneum (published 1971). ISBN 0-689-70524-7.
  • Wolfgang W. E. Samuel American Raiders: The Race to Capture the Luftwaffe's Secrets (University Press of Mississippi, 2004)
  • Koerner, Steven T. . Comparative Technology Transfer and Society, Volume 2, Number 1, April 2004, pp. 99–124
  • John Farquharson "Governed or Exploited? The British Acquisition of German Technology, 1945–48" Journal of Contemporary History, Volume 32, Number 1 (January 1997), pp. 23–42
  • UK National archives releases March 2006.
  • "Objective List of German and Austrian Scientists" (Microsoft Word). Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency. Retrieved April 10, 2007.
  • Jacobsen, Annie (2014). Operation Paperclip: The Secret Intelligence Program that Brought Nazi Scientists to America. Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-22105-4. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
  • Crim, Brian E. (2018). Our Germans: Project Paperclip and the National Security State. JHU Press. ISBN 978-1-4214-2439-2. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
  • Laney, Monique (2015). German Rocketeers in the Heart of Dixie: Making Sense of the Nazi Past during the Civil Rights Era. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-21345-4. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
  • Lichtblau, Eric (2014). The Nazis Next Door: How America Became a Safe Haven for Hitler's Men. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-547-66919-9. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
  • Simpson, Christopher (2014). Blowback: America's Recruitment of Nazis and Its Destructive Impact on Our Domestic and Foreign Policy. Open Road Media. ISBN 978-1-4976-2306-4. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
  • Lundquist, Charles A. (2015). Transplanted Rocket Pioneers (PDF). University of Alabama - Huntsville. ISBN 978-0-9861343-0-2. Retrieved December 22, 2023.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Operation Paperclip at Wikimedia Commons
  • In Cold War, U.S. Spy Agencies Used 1,000 Nazis. Eric Lichtblau for The New York Times. October 26, 2014.
  • The Nazis Next Door: Eric Lichtblau on how the CIA & FBI Secretly Sheltered Nazi War Criminals – video report by Democracy Now!, October 31, 2014
  • Operation Paperclip at Fort Bliss: 1945-1950

operation, paperclip, project, paperclip, redirects, here, holocaust, project, paper, clips, project, other, uses, paper, clip, disambiguation, confused, with, operation, paper, 1951, operation, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, point. Project Paperclip redirects here For the Holocaust project see Paper Clips Project For other uses see Paper clip disambiguation Not to be confused with Operation Paper a 1951 52 CIA operation This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article January 2024 Operation Paperclip was a secret United States intelligence program in which more than 1 600 German scientists engineers and technicians were taken from the former Nazi Germany to the U S for government employment after the end of World War II in Europe between 1945 and 1959 Conducted by the Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency JIOA it was largely carried out by special agents of the U S Army s Counterintelligence Corps CIC Many of these Germans were former members and some were former leaders of the Nazi Party 1 2 Kurt H Debus a former V 2 rocket scientist who became a NASA director sitting between U S President John F Kennedy and U S Vice President Lyndon B Johnson in 1962 at a briefing at Blockhouse 34 Cape Canaveral Missile Test Annex Contents 1 Background and Operation Overcast 2 Osenberg List 3 Identification 4 Capture and detention 5 Arrivals 6 Major awards in the United States 7 Advancements in aeronautics 7 1 Significant migrants 7 1 1 Adolf Busemann 7 1 2 Wernher von Braun 7 2 Marshall Space Flight Center 7 2 1 V 2 rocket 7 2 2 Apollo missions 8 Controversy and investigations 9 Similar operations 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksBackground and Operation Overcast editIn February 1945 Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force SHAEF set up T Force or Special Sections Subdivision which grew to over 2 000 personnel by June T Force examined 5 000 German targets seeking expertise in synthetic rubber and oil catalysts new designs in armored equipment V 2 rocket weapons jet and rocket propelled aircraft naval equipment field radios secret writing chemicals aero medicine research gliders and scientific and industrial personalities 3 When large numbers of German scientists began to be discovered by the advancing Allied forces in late April 1945 Special Sections Subdivision set up the Enemy Personnel Exploitation Section to manage and interrogate them The Enemy Personnel Exploitation Section established a detention center Camp Dustbin first near Paris and later in Kransberg Castle outside Frankfurt The U S Joint Chiefs of Staff JCS established the first secret recruitment program called Operation Overcast on July 20 1945 initially to assist in shortening the Japanese war and to aid our postwar military research 4 The term Overcast was the name first given by the German scientists family members for the housing camp where they were held in Bavaria 5 In late summer 1945 the JCS established the JIOA a subcommittee of the Joint Intelligence Community to directly oversee Operation Overcast and later Operation Paperclip 6 The JIOA representatives included the army s director of intelligence the chief of naval intelligence the assistant chief of Air Staff 2 air force intelligence and a representative from the State Department 7 In November 1945 Operation Overcast was renamed Operation Paperclip by Ordnance Corps officers who would attach a paperclip to the folders of those rocket experts whom they wished to employ in the United States 5 The project was not initially targeted against the Soviet Union rather the concern was that German scientists might emigrate and continue their research in countries that remained neutral during the war 8 Much U S effort was focused on Saxony and Thuringia which on July 1 1945 became part of the Soviet occupation zone Many German research facilities and personnel had been evacuated to these states before the end of the war particularly from the Berlin area The USSR then relocated more than 2 200 Nazi specialists and their families more than 6 000 people with Operation Osoaviakhim during one night on October 22 1946 9 In a secret directive circulated on September 3 1946 President Truman officially approved Operation Paperclip and expanded it to include 1 000 German scientists under temporary limited military custody 10 11 12 News media revealed the program as early as December 1946 13 On April 26 1946 the Joint Chiefs of Staff issued directive JCS 1067 14 to General Eisenhower instructing that he preserve from destruction and take under your control records plans books documents papers files and scientific industrial and other information and data belonging to German organizations engaged in military research 14 185 and that excepting war criminals German scientists be detained for intelligence purposes as required 15 Osenberg List editIn the later part of World War II Germany was at a logistical disadvantage having failed to conquer the USSR with Operation Barbarossa June December 1941 and its drive for the Caucasus June 1942 February 1943 The failed conquest had depleted German resources and its military industrial complex was unprepared to defend the Greater Germanic Reich against the Red Army s westward counterattack By early 1943 the German government began recalling from combat a number of scientists engineers and technicians to work in research and development to bolster German defense for a protracted war with the USSR The recall from frontline combat included 4 000 rocketeers returned to Peenemunde in northeast coastal Germany 16 17 Overnight Ph D s were liberated from KP duty masters of science were recalled from orderly service mathematicians were hauled out of bakeries and precision mechanics ceased to be truck drivers Dieter K Huzel Peenemunde to Canaveral The Nazi government s recall of their now useful intellectuals for scientific work first required identifying and locating the scientists engineers and technicians then ascertaining their political and ideological reliability Werner Osenberg de the engineer scientist heading the Wehrforschungsgemeinschaft Defense Research Association recorded the names of the politically cleared men to the Osenberg List thus reinstating them to scientific work 18 In March 1945 at Bonn University a Polish laboratory technician found pieces of the Osenberg List stuffed in a toilet the list subsequently reached MI6 who transmitted it to U S intelligence 19 14 Then U S Army Major Robert B Staver Chief of the Jet Propulsion Section of the Research and Intelligence Branch of the United States Army Ordnance Corps used the Osenberg List to compile his list of German scientists to be captured and interrogated Wernher von Braun Germany s best rocket scientist headed Major Staver s list 20 Identification edit nbsp V 2 rocket launching Peenemunde on the north east Baltic German coast 1943 In Operation Overcast Major Staver s original intent was only to interview the scientists but what he learned changed the operation s purpose On May 22 1945 he transmitted to the U S Department of War Colonel Joel Holmes telegram urging the evacuation to America of 100 of the 400 German scientists in his custody as most important for the Pacific war effort 14 Most of the Osenberg List engineers worked at the Baltic coast German Army Research Center Peenemunde developing the V 2 rocket After capturing them the Allies initially housed them and their families in Landshut Bavaria in southern Germany 21 Beginning on July 19 1945 the U S Joint Chiefs managed the captured ARC rocketeers under Operation Overcast However when the Camp Overcast name of the scientists quarters became locally known the program was renamed Operation Paperclip in November 1945 22 Despite these attempts at secrecy the press interviewed several of the scientists later that year 14 20 23 Capture and detention edit nbsp The Allied zones of occupation in post war Germany highlighting the Soviet zone red the inner German border heavy black line and the zone from which British and American troops withdrew in July 1945 purple The provincial boundaries are those of Nazi Germany before the present Lander federal states were established Early on the United States created the Combined Intelligence Objectives Subcommittee CIOS This provided the information on targets for the T Forces that went in and targeted scientific military and industrial installations and their employees for their know how Initial priorities were advanced technology such as infrared that could be used in the war against Japan finding out what technology had been passed on to Japan and finally to halt research elsewhere Von Braun and more than a thousand of his colleagues decided to surrender to Americans in 1945 One of the engineers later recalled their options We despise the French we are mortally afraid of the Soviets we do not believe the British can afford us So that leaves the Americans On June 20 1945 they moved from the east closer to the American forces to avoid the advancing Soviet army 24 A project to halt the research was codenamed Project Safehaven it was not initially targeted against the Soviet Union but addressed the concern that German scientists might emigrate and continue their research in countries that had remained neutral during the war 8 25 To avoid the complications involved with the emigration of German scientists the CIOS was responsible for scouting and kidnapping high profile individuals to block technological advancements in nations hostile to the U S 26 Much U S effort was focused on Saxony and Thuringia which on July 1 1945 would become part of the Soviet Occupation zone Many German research facilities and personnel had been evacuated to these states particularly from the Berlin area Fearing that the Soviet takeover would limit U S ability to exploit German scientific and technical expertise and not wanting the Soviet Union to benefit from it the United States instigated an evacuation operation of scientific personnel from Saxony and Thuringia issuing orders such as On orders of Military Government you are to report with your family and baggage as much as you can carry tomorrow noon at 1300 hours Friday 22 June 1945 at the town square in Bitterfeld There is no need to bring winter clothing Easily carried possessions such as family documents jewelry and the like should be taken along You will be transported by motor vehicle to the nearest railway station From there you will travel on to the West Please tell the bearer of this letter how large your family is By 1947 this evacuation operation had netted an estimated 1 800 technicians and scientists and 3 700 family members 27 Those with special skills or knowledge were taken to detention and interrogation centers such as one code named Dustbin located first at Chesnay near Versailles and then moved to Kransberg Castle outside Frankfurt to be held and interrogated in some cases for months 28 A few of the scientists were gathered as a part of Operation Overcast but most were transported to villages in the countryside where there were neither research facilities nor work they were provided with stipends and required to report twice weekly to police headquarters to prevent them from leaving The Joint Chiefs of Staff directive on research and teaching stated that technicians and scientists should be released only after all interested agencies were satisfied that all desired intelligence information had been obtained from them citation needed On November 5 1947 the Office of Military Government United States OMGUS which had jurisdiction over the western part of occupied Germany held a conference to consider the status of the evacuees the monetary claims that the evacuees had filed against the United States and the possible violation by the U S of laws of war or Rules of Land Warfare The OMGUS director of Intelligence Robert L Walsh initiated a program to resettle the evacuees in the Third World which the Germans referred to as General Walsh s Urwald Programm jungle program but the program was not carried out In 1948 the evacuees received settlements of 69 5 million Reichsmarks from the U S a settlement that soon became severely devalued during the currency reform that introduced the Deutsche Mark as the official currency of western Germany 29 John Gimbel concludes that the United States held some of Germany s best minds for three years therefore depriving the German recovery of their expertise 30 Arrivals edit nbsp A group of 104 rocket scientists at Fort Bliss TexasIn May 1945 the U S Navy received in custody Herbert A Wagner the inventor of the Hs 293 missile for two years he first worked at the Special Devices Center at Castle Gould and at Hempstead House Long Island New York in 1947 he moved to the Naval Air Station Point Mugu 31 In August 1945 Colonel Holger Toftoy head of the Rocket Branch of the Research and Development Division of the U S Army s Ordnance Corps offered initial one year contracts to the rocket scientists 127 of them accepted In September 1945 the first group of seven rocket scientists aerospace engineers arrived at Fort Strong on Long Island in Boston harbor Wernher von Braun Erich W Neubert Theodor A Poppel William August Schulze Eberhard Rees Wilhelm Jungert and Walter Schwidetzky 14 Beginning in late 1945 three rocket scientist groups arrived in the United States for duty at Fort Bliss Texas and at White Sands Proving Grounds New Mexico as War Department Special Employees 16 27 22 In 1946 the United States Bureau of Mines employed seven German synthetic fuel scientists at a Fischer Tropsch chemical plant in Louisiana Missouri 32 On June 1 1949 the Chief of Ordnance of the United States Army designated Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville Alabama as the Ordnance Rocket Center its facility for rocket research and development On April 1 1950 the Fort Bliss missile development operation including von Braun and his team of over 130 Paperclip members was transferred to Redstone Arsenal In early 1950 legal U S residency for some of the Project Paperclip specialists was effected through the U S consulate in Ciudad Juarez Chihuahua Mexico thus German scientists legally entered the United States from Latin America 16 226 20 Between 1945 and 1952 the United States Air Force sponsored the largest number of Paperclip scientists importing 260 men of whom 36 returned to Germany and one Walter Schreiber emigrated to Argentina 33 The United States Army Signal Corps employed 24 specialists including the physicists Georg Goubau Gunter Guttwein Georg Hass Horst Kedesdy and Kurt Lehovec the physical chemists Rudolf Brill Ernst Baars de and Eberhard Both the geophysicist Helmut Weickmann the optician Gerhard Schwesinger and the engineers Eduard Gerber Richard Guenther and Hans Ziegler 34 In 1959 94 Operation Paperclip men went to the United States including Friedwardt Winterberg and Friedrich Wigand 31 Overall through its operations to 1990 Operation Paperclip imported 1 600 men as part of the intellectual reparations owed to the US and the UK valued at US 10 billion in patents and industrial processes 31 35 Major awards in the United States edit nbsp Hermann Oberth forefront with officials of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency at Huntsville Alabama in 1956 Left to right around Oberth Ernst Stuhlinger seated Major General Holger Toftoy Commanding Officer responsible for Project Paperclip Wernher von Braun Director Development Operations Division Robert Lusser a Project Paperclip engineer The NASA Distinguished Service Medal is the highest award which may be bestowed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA After more than two decades of service and leadership in NASA four Nazi members from Operation Paperclip were awarded the NASA Distinguished Service Medal in 1969 Kurt Debus Eberhard Rees Arthur Rudolph and Wernher von Braun Ernst Geissler was awarded the medal in 1973 The Department of Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award is the highest civilian award given by the United States Department of Defense After two decades of service Nazi member from Operation Paperclip Siegfried Knemeyer was awarded the Department of Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award in 1966 The Goddard Astronautics Award is the highest honor bestowed for notable achievements in the field of astronautics by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics AIAA 36 For their service three Operation Paperclip members were awarded the Goddard Astronautics Award Wernher von Braun 1961 Hans von Ohain 1966 and Krafft Arnold Ehricke 1984 The U S Space amp Rocket Center in Huntsville Alabama owns and operates the U S Space Camp Several Operation Paperclip members are members of the Space Camp Hall of Fame which began in 2007 Wernher von Braun 2007 Georg von Tiesenhausen 2007 and Oscar Holderer 2008 The New Mexico Museum of Space History includes the International Space Hall of Fame Two Operation Paperclip members are members of the International Space Hall of Fame Wernher von Braun 1976 37 and Ernst Steinhoff 1979 38 Hubertus Strughold was inducted in 1978 but removed as a member in 2006 Other closely related members include Willy Ley 1976 39 a German American science writer and Hermann Oberth 1976 40 a German scientist who advised von Braun s rocket team in the U S from 1955 to 1958 neither Ley nor Oberth moved to the US via the Operation Paperclip Two lunar craters are named after Paperclip scientists Debus after Kurt Debus the first director of NASA s Kennedy Space Center and von Braun Advancements in aeronautics editSignificant migrants edit Main article List of Germans relocated to the US via the Operation Paperclip Adolf Busemann edit Dr Adolf Busemann was born in Lubeck Germany in 1902 He graduated from the Carolo Wilhelmina Technical University in Braunschweig and received a Ph D in engineering in 1924 In 1925 the Max Planck Institute invited him to become an official aeronautical research scientist and in 1930 he became a professor at Georgia Augusta University in Goettingen 41 Busemann spent many years working for the German government most notably directing research at the Braunschweig Laboratory He gave a speech in 1935 at the Volta Congress an international meeting on the problems of high speed aeronautics At this conference he presented his first theory of how the angle of sweep of a plane wing reduces drag at supersonic speed 42 After the war he traveled to the United States to assist them with the war tensions with Russia where he continued his work on his theory of wing sweep Wernher von Braun edit Wernher von Braun is known for developing rocket and space flight technology including the V 2 missile In late 1932 he worked for the German army to develop new liquid propulsion based missiles 43 He received a doctorate in physics in 1934 from the Friedrich Wilhelms University of Berlin He and his team then surrendered to the Allies at the end of World War II shortly after Hitler s suicide in 1945 They were brought to America through Operation Paperclip and assimilated into NASA s space program where they worked on missile technology at Fort Bliss before transferring to Huntsville Alabama 44 He became the director of the Marshall Space Flight Center in 1960 43 Von Braun is also a controversial figure for his involvement with the Nazi party and the slave labor involved in developing the V 2 rocket in Germany before it began to be developed in the United States He became a member of the Nazi party in 1937 and was made a junior SS officer in 1940 43 Marshall Space Flight Center edit nbsp Wernher von Braun in 1961 with members of his management team Pictured from left to right are Werner Kuers Director of the Manufacturing Engineering Division Dr Walter Haussermann Director of the Astrionics Division Dr William Mrazek Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Division Dr von Braun Dieter Grau Director of the Quality Assurance Division Dr Oswald Lange Director of the Saturn Systems Office and Erich W Neubert Associate Deputy Director for Research and Development In July 1960 the National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA established the Marshall Space Flight Center MSFC in Huntsville Alabama after taking control of the Development Operations Division from the Army s Redstone Arsenal The Redstone Arsenal was led by the Army Ballistic Missile Agency 44 Wernher von Braun became the first director of the MSFC The MSFC s development team was formed by American engineers from the Redstone Arsenal and 118 German migrants who came from Peenemunde through Operation Paperclip 45 Von Braun worked with Operation Paperclip to get scientists from his team to the United States They began work at Fort Bliss in El Paso Texas in September 1945 and most of the team had arrived by 1946 Von Braun and his team worked as consultants for the military until 1950 when they began transferring to Huntsville 44 Originally the center focused on weaponry and further development of the V 2 rocket line but later became one of NASA s main development centers for space flight project The team also worked on missions that related to Moon landing missions such as the Lunar Roving Vehicle However the main projects from the Marshall Space Flight Center were the V 2 rocket and the Apollo missions 44 V 2 rocket edit Main article V 2 sounding rocket nbsp US test launch of a Bumper V 2 the first rocket launch from Cape Canaveral 46 The V 2 rocket was developed in Germany at the Peenemunde military research center Wernher von Braun was the director of Peenemunde and worked with a team of engineers physicists and chemists The Nazis used the V 2 rocket during World War II to attack Paris and Great Britain Roughly five thousand people died in these attacks The location of V 2 production moved to Mittelwerk in Nordhausen after a British raid on Peenemunde on August 17 1943 Mittelwerk was supplemented with slave labor from Dora a nearby concentration camp 44 Production of the V 2 missile then moved to the United States after Wernher von Braun surrendered to the Allies Hall 2022 In March 1946 a V 2 was test fired in New Mexico followed by the first launch of a captured V 2 in April of the same year After months of adaptation a V 2 missile was fired in White Sands Proving Ground New Mexico that broke a record with an altitude of 116 miles 186 68 km The V 2 rockets were used to test the effects of cosmic rays on fruit flies and seeds They also took the first pictures of Earth from 100 miles 160 93 km in the air and tested g force on various monkeys 45 Apollo missions edit nbsp Wernher von Braun and Kurt Debus Director of the Kennedy Space Center attending the Saturn 500F rollout from the Vehicle Assembly Building VAB 1966The Marshall Space Flight Center was one of three institutions at NASA involved in the Apollo program The Center was equipped to become a part of Apollo because it had the facilities to study rocketry Aero Astrodynamics Astrionics Space Sciences Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Computation Manufacturing Test and Quality 44 Each of these laboratories handled a different aspect of creating and testing rockets that suited the shift from military weapons to space travel The weaponry from WWII including rocket and missile in the United States set the precedent for the kinds of technology used to create the Saturn rocket line The Marshall engineers experience in rocket development led to what Dieter Grau head of the Quality lab described as a rigid inspection program focused on craftsmanship This meant to create prototypes that had a higher success rate instead of lesser prototypes that required more tests 44 The American and German Marshall engineers created the launch vehicles and designed some launching facilities at Cape Canaveral Florida during the Apollo program They also created the Saturn rocket line which was the kind of rocket that sent American astronauts to the Moon 43 The Saturn rocket line drew on previous military engineering such as the liquid propulsion system developed from von Braun s V 2 rocket and navigation systems derived from the UA army s Redstone and Jupiter rockets 44 Controversy and investigations editBefore his official approval of the program President Truman was indecisive about it for sixteen months 12 Years later in 1963 Truman recalled that he was not in the least reluctant to approve Paperclip that because of relations with the Soviet Union this had to be done and was done 47 Several of the Paperclip scientists were later investigated because of their links with the Nazi Party during the war Only one Paperclip scientist Georg Rickhey was formally tried for any crime and no Paperclip scientist was found guilty of any crime in the United States or Germany Rickhey was returned to Germany in 1947 to stand at the Dora Trial where he was acquitted 48 nbsp First page of a transcription of a protest telegram about Operation Paperclip sent to Harry S Truman by the Council Against Intolerance In America endorsed by several signatories including Albert Einstein on December 30 1946 In 1951 weeks after his U S arrival Walter Schreiber was linked by the Boston Globe to human experiments conducted by Kurt Blome at Ravensbruck he emigrated to Argentina with the aid of the U S military 49 In 1984 Arthur Rudolph under perceived threat of prosecution relating to his connection as operations director for V 2 missile production to the use of forced labor from Mittelbau Dora at the Mittelwerk renounced his U S citizenship and moved to West Germany which granted him citizenship 50 Von Braun was investigated in 1961 for his involvement in the Nazi party as an SS member The FBI concluded that he had joined the Nazi Party solely to advance his academic career and to avoid imprisonment 51 For 50 years from 1963 to 2013 the Strughold Award named after Hubertus Strughold the father of space medicine for his central role in developing innovations like the space suit and space life support systems was the most prestigious award from the Space Medicine Association a member organization of the Aerospace Medical Association 52 On October 1 2013 in the aftermath of a Wall Street Journal article published on December 1 2012 which highlighted his connection to human experiments during WWII the Space Medicine Association s executive committee announced that the Space Medicine Association Strughold Award had been retired 52 53 Similar operations editOperation APPLEPIE Project to capture and interrogate key Wehrmacht RSHA AMT VI and General Staff officers knowledgeable of the industry and economy of the USSR 54 Operation Bloodstone Project to recruit and utilize personnel in Eastern Europe to foster anti Communism 54 Camp Dustbin counterpart of Camp Ashcan An Anglo American military interrogation camp for German scientists and industry specialists ECLIPSE 1944 An unimplemented Air Disarmament Wing plan for post war operations in Europe for destroying V 1 and V 2 missiles 55 56 44 Safehaven US project within ECLIPSE meant to prevent the escape of Nazi scientists from Allied occupied Germany 20 Field Information Agency Technical FIAT US Army agency for securing the major and perhaps only material reward of victory namely the advancement of science and the improvement of production and standards of living in the United Nations by proper exploitation of German methods in these fields FIAT ended in 1947 when Operation Paperclip began functioning 55 1 National Interest Project 63 Job placement assistance for Nazi engineers at Lockheed Martin Marietta North American Aviation and other aeroplane companies whilst American aerospace engineers were being laid off work 31 Alsos Mission Operation Big Operation Epsilon Russian Alsos American British and Soviet efforts to capture German nuclear secrets equipment and personnel Operation Backfire A British effort at recovering rocket and aerospace technology followed by assembling and testing rockets at Cuxhaven Fedden Mission British mission to gain technical intelligence concerning advanced German aircraft and their propulsion systems Operation LUSTY Luftwaffe Secret Technology US efforts to capture Luftwaffe equipment technology and personnel Technical Air Intelligence Unit joint Allied military intelligence units formed to recover Japanese aircraft Operation Osoaviakhim sometimes transliterated as Operation Ossavakim a Soviet counterpart of Operation Paperclip involving German technicians managers skilled workers and their respective families who were transferred to the USSR in October 1946 57 List of Germans transported to the USSR via the Operation Osoaviakhim Operation Surgeon British operation for denying German aeronautical expertise to the USSR and for exploiting German scientists in furthering British research 58 Special Mission V 2 April May 1945 US operation by Maj William Bromley that recovered parts and equipment for 100 V 2 missiles from a Mittelwerk underground factory in Kohnstein within the Soviet zone Major James P Hamill co ordinated the transport of the equipment on 341 railroad cars with the 144th Motor Vehicle Assembly Company from Nordhausen to Erfurt just before the Soviets arrived 59 See also Operation Blossom Project Hermes and Operation Sandy TICOM US project to exploit German cryptographers See also edit nbsp Spaceflight portal nbsp Germany portal nbsp Science portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Nuclear technology portalAmerican cover up of Japanese war crimes Brain drain Carmel Offie List of Axis personnel indicted for war crimes Project MKNAOMI Ratlines World War II Unit 731 Japanese human experimenters who were recruited for their biological weapons technology Upper Atmosphere Research PanelIn fiction Dr Strangelove a 1964 film where the title character was said to have been brought to the USA via Operation Paperclip Captain America The Winter Soldier a 2014 film in which Arnim Zola was said to have been brought to the USA via Operation Paperclip where he secretly reformed Hydra within S H I E L D Moonglow a 2016 novel which features a subplot which is based on Operation Paperclip A History of What Comes Next a 2021 alternate history novel that features Operation Paperclip and its Soviet counterpart Operation Osoaviakhim Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny a 2023 film in which the main antagonist is a Nazi scientist working for the Apollo program in 1969 The title character is uneasy about Operation Paperclip thanks to his past clashes with the Nazis 60 Hunters a 2020 Amazon Prime TV show depicting a fictionalized version of Operation Paperclip and after in the late 1970s driving the plot of the show 61 Paper Clip an episode of The X Files featuring a Nazi scientist from the Operation References edit Jacobsen 2014 p Prologue ix Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency U S National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved October 9 2008 Chapter XVII Zone and Sector history army mil Retrieved May 2 2021 Lasby 1975 p 79 a b Lasby 1975 p 155 Jacobsen 2014 p 191 Jacobsen 2014 p 193 a b The OSS and Project SAFEHAVEN Central Intelligence Agency www cia gov Archived from the original on June 13 2007 Operation Osoaviakhim Retrieved December 29 2020 The Paperclip Conspiracy The Hunt for the Nazi Scientists 1987 Tom Bower et al p 178 Jacobsen 2014 p 229 a b Lasby 1975 p 177 Willkommen Operation Paperclip by Annie Jacobsen The New York Times Archived from the original on March 1 2014 Retrieved July 24 2023 a b c d e McGovern James 1964 Crossbow and Overcast New York W Morrow pp 100 104 173 207 210 242 Beyerchen Alan 1982 German Scientists and Research Institutions in Allied Occupation Policy History of Education Quarterly 22 3 289 299 doi 10 2307 367770 JSTOR 367770 S2CID 144397068 Much of the FIAT information was adapted commercially to the degree that the office of the Assistant Secretary of State for Occupied Areas requested that the peace treaty with Germany be redacted to protect US industry from lawsuits a b c Huzel Dieter K 1960 Peenemunde to Canaveral Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall pp 27 226 Braun Wernher von Ordway III Frederick I 1985 1975 Space Travel A History amp David Dooling Jr New York Harper amp Row p 218 ISBN 978 0 06 181898 1 Forman Paul Sanchez Ron Jose Manuel 1996 National Military Establishments and the Advancement of Science and Technology Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Kluwer Academic Publishers p 308 ISBN 978 0 7923 3541 2 MI6 Inside the Covert World of Her Majesty s Secret Intelligence Service 2000 by Steven Dorril p 138 a b c d Ordway Frederick I III Sharpe Mitchell R 1979 The Rocket Team Apogee Books Space Series 36 New York Thomas Y Crowell pp 310 313 314 316 325 330 406 ISBN 978 1 894959 00 1 Gilbrook Andrew September 7 2020 An Ordinary Guy Operation Saponify 1 Auflage ed Hamburg ISBN 978 3 347 09646 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Laney Monique 2015 German Rocketeers in the Heart of Dixie Making Sense of the Nazi Past During the Civil Rights Era New Haven and London Yale University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 300 19803 4 Boyne Walter J June 2007 Project Paperclip Air Force Air Force Association Archived from the original on January 26 2009 Retrieved October 17 2008 Zak Anatoly The Rest of the Rocket Scientists Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved December 21 2023 Slany William Z 1997 U S and allied efforts to recover and restore gold and other assets stolen or hidden by Germany During World War II PDF U S Govt Printing Office p 37 O Reagan Douglas M 2021 Taking Nazi Technology allied exploitation of german science after the second world war S l Johns Hopkins Univ Press p 82 ISBN 978 1 4214 3984 6 Denny Mark 2019 Rocket science from fireworks to the photon drive Cham Switzerland p 37 ISBN 978 3 030 28080 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Maddrell Paul 2006 Spying on Science Western Intelligence in Divided Germany 1945 1961 Oxford University Press p 17 21 ISBN 978 0 19 170840 4 Ten years of German unification transfer transformation incorporation Birmingham University of Birmingham University Press 2002 ISBN 978 1 902459 12 7 U S Policy and German Scientists The Early Cold War Political Science Quarterly Volume 101 Number 3 1986 pages 433 451 a b c d Hunt 1991 pp 6 21 31 172 259 Fischer Tropsch org Fischer Tropsch org Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved December 22 2011 Lasby 1975 p 257 Fred Carl Operation Paperclip and Camp Evans Campevans org Archived from the original on March 9 2012 Retrieved December 22 2011 Naimark 206 Naimark cites Gimbel John Science Technology and Reparations Exploitation and Plunder in Postwar Germany The 10 billion compare to the 1948 US GDP 258 billion and to the total Marshall plan 1948 52 expenditure of 13 billion of which Germany received 1 4 billion partly as loans Goddard Astronautics Award AAIA Shaping the Future of Aerospace American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Retrieved August 22 2017 International Space Hall of Fame Wernher von Braun New Mexico Museum of Space History New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs Retrieved August 22 2017 International Space Hall of Fame Ernst A Steinhoff New Mexico Museum of Space History New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs Retrieved August 22 2017 International Space Hall of Fame Willy Ley New Mexico Museum of Space History New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs Retrieved August 22 2017 International Space Hall of Fame Hermann J Oberth New Mexico Museum of Space History New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs Retrieved August 22 2017 Ap November 5 1986 Adolf Busemann 85 Dead Designer of the Swept Wing The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 27 2023 Memorial Tributes National Academy of Engineering Volume 3 Washington D C National Academies Press January 1 1989 doi 10 17226 1384 ISBN 978 0 309 03939 0 a b c d Wernher von Braun NASA NASA Retrieved December 28 2023 a b c d e f g h Dunar Andrew J Waring Stephen P 1999 Power to Explore A History of Marshall Space Flight Center 1960 1990 PDF NASA ISBN 978 1 4782 6646 4 a b V 2 Missile National Air and Space Museum airandspace si edu Retrieved October 13 2023 75 Years Ago First Launch of a Two Stage Rocket NASA May 12 2023 Lasby 1975 p 177 citing Personal Interview President Harry S Truman Independence Missouri June 3 1963 Neufeld Michael J 2008 Von Braun Dreamer of Space Engineer of War Random House Inc p 235 ISBN 978 0 307 38937 4 Jacobsen 2014 Hunt Linda May 23 1987 NASA s Nazis Literature of the Holocaust federal bureau of investigation fbi memorandum emil julius klaus fuchs espionage r september 26 1949 top secret fbi foia U S Intelligence on Europe 1945 1995 doi 10 1163 9789004287648 useo b02124 Retrieved October 24 2023 a b Strughold Award June 23 2014 Lagnado Lucette December 1 2012 A Scientist s Nazi Era Past Haunts Prestigious Space Prize Wall Street Journal a b List Of Terms Code Names Operations and Other Search Terminology To Assist Review and Identification Activities Required by the Act U S National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved December 19 2008 a b Ziemke Earl F 1990 1975 Chapter XI Getting Ready for The Day The U S Army in the Occupation of Germany 1944 1946 Washington DC United States Army Center of Military History p 163 CMH Pub 30 6 Cooksley Peter G 1979 Flying Bomb New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 44 Pennacchio Charles F Fall 1995 The East German Communists and the Origins of the Berlin Blockade Crisis DOC East European Quarterly 29 3 Retrieved June 29 2010 October 21 1946 marked the initiation of Operation Ossavakim which forcibly transferred to Soviet soil thousands of German technicians managers and skilled personnel along with their family members and the industrial tools they would operate UK fears over German scientists BBC News March 31 2006 Breuer William B 2000 Top Secret Tales of World War II Wiley pp 220 224 ISBN 978 0 471 35382 9 Travis Ben November 21 2022 Indiana Jones 5 Will Pit Indy Against Nazis Again In 1969 Empire The Nazi NASA Scientists on Hunters Are Based on the True Story of Operation Paperclip Esquire February 23 2020 Retrieved December 22 2023 Further reading editYves Beon Planet Dora Westview Press 1997 ISBN 0 8133 3272 9 Giuseppe Ciampaglia Come ebbe effettivo inizio a Roma l Operazione Paperclip Roma 2005 In Strenna dei Romanisti 2005 Edit Roma Amor Henry Stevens Hitler s Suppressed and Still Secret Weapons Science and Technology Adventures Unlimited Press 2007 ISBN 1 931882 73 8 John Gimbel Science Technology and Reparations Exploitation and Plunder in Postwar Germany Stanford University Press 1990 ISBN 0 8047 1761 3 Linda Hunt Arthur Rudolph of Dora and NASA Moment 4 1987 Yorkshire Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament Hunt Linda 1991 Secret agenda the United States government Nazi scientists and project paperclip 1945 to 1990 New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 05510 3 Linda Hunt U S Coverup of Nazi Scientists The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists April 1985 Matthias Judt Burghard Ciesla Technology Transfer Out of Germany After 1945 Harwood Academic Publishers 1996 ISBN 3 7186 5822 4 Michael C Carroll Lab 257 The Disturbing Story of the Government s Secret Germ Laboratory Harper Paperbacks 2005 ISBN 0 06 078184 X John Gimbel U S Policy and German Scientists The Early Cold War Political Science Quarterly Volume 101 Number 3 1986 pp 433 451 Lasby Clarence G 1975 Project paperclip German scientists and the Cold War New York N Y Atheneum published 1971 ISBN 0 689 70524 7 Wolfgang W E Samuel American Raiders The Race to Capture the Luftwaffe s Secrets University Press of Mississippi 2004 Koerner Steven T Technology Transfer from Germany to Canada after 1945 A Study in Failure Comparative Technology Transfer and Society Volume 2 Number 1 April 2004 pp 99 124 John Farquharson Governed or Exploited The British Acquisition of German Technology 1945 48 Journal of Contemporary History Volume 32 Number 1 January 1997 pp 23 42 1995 Human Radiation Experiments Memorandum Post World War II Reccruitment of German Scientists Project Paperclip Employment of German scientists and technicians denial policy UK National archives releases March 2006 Objective List of German and Austrian Scientists Microsoft Word Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency Retrieved April 10 2007 Jacobsen Annie 2014 Operation Paperclip The Secret Intelligence Program that Brought Nazi Scientists to America Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 22105 4 Retrieved December 22 2023 Crim Brian E 2018 Our Germans Project Paperclip and the National Security State JHU Press ISBN 978 1 4214 2439 2 Retrieved December 22 2023 Laney Monique 2015 German Rocketeers in the Heart of Dixie Making Sense of the Nazi Past during the Civil Rights Era Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 21345 4 Retrieved December 22 2023 Lichtblau Eric 2014 The Nazis Next Door How America Became a Safe Haven for Hitler s Men Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0 547 66919 9 Retrieved December 22 2023 Simpson Christopher 2014 Blowback America s Recruitment of Nazis and Its Destructive Impact on Our Domestic and Foreign Policy Open Road Media ISBN 978 1 4976 2306 4 Retrieved December 22 2023 Lundquist Charles A 2015 Transplanted Rocket Pioneers PDF University of Alabama Huntsville ISBN 978 0 9861343 0 2 Retrieved December 22 2023 External links edit nbsp Media related to Operation Paperclip at Wikimedia Commons In Cold War U S Spy Agencies Used 1 000 Nazis Eric Lichtblau for The New York Times October 26 2014 The Nazis Next Door Eric Lichtblau on how the CIA amp FBI Secretly Sheltered Nazi War Criminals video report by Democracy Now October 31 2014 Operation Paperclip at Fort Bliss 1945 1950 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Operation Paperclip amp oldid 1206928697, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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