Allies would lost Second World War had Hitler used deadly nerve gas: Expert

New York, May 15 (ANI): As the D-Day anniversary approaches, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry at Canisius College in Buffalo, New York, Frank J. Dinan, has revealed what could have happened if Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler had used the deadly nerve gas Tabun.

According to Professor Dinan, had Hitler used Tabun, the Allies could have been forced back into the sea with enormous casualties.

He further goes on to say that the political repercussions of a D-Day defeat for U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and commander-in-chief Dwight Eisenhower, the three men most responsible for the Normandy landings would have been devastating.

He also believed the war would have been prolonged and could have resulted in the Allies using their still developing atomic bombs against Germany rather than Japan.

Seeing Tabun’s effectiveness as a weapon and the lack of an Allied response, Hitler certainly would have used it against the Russians.

The Tabun story began on December 23, 1936, when a single drop of that newly-made chemical fell to the floor of a laboratory in Germany.

The two men working there immediately suffered diminished vision, labored breathing and a loss of muscle control.

Ironically, Tabun was made to be an insecticide that was toxic to insects but harmless to humans.

The Nazis government required that all discoveries of potential military value be passed along to them.

The men’s employer, the giant I.G. Farben Corporation, complied, and its representatives were soon called to Berlin to discuss Tabun with the military.

Demonstrations of Tabun’s lethal effects at extraordinarily low concentrations made its potential as a devastating weapon obvious. Everything about Tabun was immediately classified as top secret and few were aware of its existence.

A weapon oriented Tabun research program began and construction of a plant designed for its production soon started. By mid 1943 thousands of tons of Tabun had been produced, loaded into artillery shells and bombs that were moved to storage sites throughout Germany.

The secrecy that surrounded Tabun was so effective that the Allies had no hint of its existence and had no comparable weapons to retaliate with if the Nazis used it.

Nerve agents such as Tabun, are among the deadliest chemicals ever devised and are now classified as weapons of mass destruction by the United Nations. (ANI)

Allies would lost Second World War had Hitler used deadly nerve gas: Expert

New York, May 15 (ANI): As the D-Day anniversary approaches, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry at Canisius College in Buffalo, New York, Frank J. Dinan, has revealed what could have happened if Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler had used the deadly nerve gas Tabun.

According to Professor Dinan, had Hitler used Tabun, the Allies could have been forced back into the sea with enormous casualties.

He further goes on to say that the political repercussions of a D-Day defeat for U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and commander-in-chief Dwight Eisenhower, the three men most responsible for the Normandy landings would have been devastating.

He also believed the war would have been prolonged and could have resulted in the Allies using their still developing atomic bombs against Germany rather than Japan.

Seeing Tabun’s effectiveness as a weapon and the lack of an Allied response, Hitler certainly would have used it against the Russians.

The Tabun story began on December 23, 1936, when a single drop of that newly-made chemical fell to the floor of a laboratory in Germany.

The two men working there immediately suffered diminished vision, labored breathing and a loss of muscle control.

Ironically, Tabun was made to be an insecticide that was toxic to insects but harmless to humans.

The Nazis government required that all discoveries of potential military value be passed along to them.

The men’s employer, the giant I.G. Farben Corporation, complied, and its representatives were soon called to Berlin to discuss Tabun with the military.

Demonstrations of Tabun’s lethal effects at extraordinarily low concentrations made its potential as a devastating weapon obvious. Everything about Tabun was immediately classified as top secret and few were aware of its existence.

A weapon oriented Tabun research program began and construction of a plant designed for its production soon started. By mid 1943 thousands of tons of Tabun had been produced, loaded into artillery shells and bombs that were moved to storage sites throughout Germany.

The secrecy that surrounded Tabun was so effective that the Allies had no hint of its existence and had no comparable weapons to retaliate with if the Nazis used it.

Nerve agents such as Tabun, are among the deadliest chemicals ever devised and are now classified as weapons of mass destruction by the United Nations. (ANI)

UK health service left shocked after survey participants rate Hitler as `cool’

London, May 11 (ANI): “Cool” is not a word usually associated with Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, whose genocidal purges cost tens of millions of lives between the mid-1930s and 1945.

But that was the response of ambulance employees taking part in a National Health Service (NHS) survey when asked to rate Hitler in comparison to their own chief executive.

The survey, entitled Making Leadership Cool, is part of a 10,000-pound project that will help the NHS West Midlands Strategic Health Authority to devise a new leadership strategy.

The questionnaire was circulated to all 3,300 workers at West Midlands Ambulance Service last month after two paramedics applied for a bursary to carry out the survey.

Staff was asked to rate Ian Cumming, chief executive of the NHS West Midlands Strategic Health Authority, on a scale of one to five. They were also asked if being gay, funny or black made a leader cool.

One ambulance employee, who did not want to be named, said: “I’ve never been asked to compare my boss with Adolf Hitler before. It’s the most bizarre work survey I’ve ever had to take. How can being cool have anything to do with managing an NHS trust?”

The West Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust defended the survey, saying that it “identified the key characteristics of good leadership”. (ANI)

Hitler ‘poisoned himself with cyanide’

London, May 8 (ANI): A top Russian KGB official has claimed that Adolf Hitler, the Nazi leader, didn’t commit suicide by shooting himself with a gun, but poisoned himself with cyanide.

Lieutenant-General Vasily Khristoforov, the top archivist for Russia”s FSB security service, said Soviet military medics at the time had determined that Hitler and his mistress Eva Braun had died after ingesting cyanide on April 30, 1945.

“The presence of the remains of crushed glass capsules in the mouth and the sharp odour of bitter almonds from the corpses, and the results of an internal post-mortem led the (Soviet) commission to conclude that it was death by cyanide poisoning.

“Thus the myth put about by those Nazis left in Berlin that ”the Fuhrer died like a soldier having shot himself in his bunker” was shattered,” The Telegraph quoted him as saying.

According to Soviet medics there weren’t any serious wounds on Hitler”s heavily burned body either, he added.

If accurate, the officer’s claim not only busts the widely held myth of Hitler’s ‘honourable death’, but also casts a shadow on the authenticity of a skull fragment kept in Russia”s state archive that purportedly belonged to Hitler.

The fragment has a bullet hole in it yet but American researchers claim that it belonged to a woman aged from 20 to 40 and could not be Hitler”s.

The Russians have defended the skull”s authenticity but haven’t been able to refute this claim. (ANI)

Hitler’s voting slip to be auctioned

London, May 6 (ANI): A voting slip with a cross by Adolf Hitler’s name is to be auctioned in the weeks after Britain goes to the polls. The slip is from the 1932 German election.

According to The Telegraph, the card also carries names of the Führer’s closest political aides, including Goring, Goebbels and Hess.

It states at the top of the card “Parliament for Freedom and Peace”, and states the constituency is Hessen Nassau.

Hitler, who started as a mere candidate, went on to become a democratically elected politician of the Nazi party – ‘Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei’ as well as a Chancellor within 12 months. (ANI)

Ex-Soviet general”s interview reveals that USSR was almost defeated by the Nazis

London, May 5 (ANI): In a frank revelation, a former general of the Soviet Army has revealed that the Soviet Union was very close to being defeated by Adolf Hitler’s Nazis during the Second World War.

Recorded in 1966, Marshal Georgy Zhukov said in the interview that the Soviet Union nearly lost the war in 1941 and suffered from poor planning.

General Zhukov, the most decorated general in the history of both Russia and the Soviet Union, admitted that Soviet generals were not confident that they could hold the German forces at the Mozhaisk defence line outside Moscow.

“Did the commanders have confidence we would hold that line of defence and be able to halt the enemy? I have to say frankly that we did not have complete certainty,” The Telegraph quotes him, as saying in the interview.

“It would have been possible to contain the initial units of the opponent, but if he quickly sent in his main group, he would have been difficult to stop,” General Zhukov told Soviet writer Konstantin Simonov.

Zhukov also revealed details of his exchanges with Joseph Stalin, the wartime leader, in the interview broadcast on state-run Channel One.

He recalled that a flu-struck Stalin summoned him to Moscow in October 1941 to salvage what until then had been a stuttering defence on the Western front outside Moscow.

After arriving at the front, Zhukov found that the defences in place were “absolutely insufficient”.

“It was an extremely dangerous situation. In essence, all the approaches to Moscow were open,” he said. “Our troops on the Mozhaisk defence line could not have stopped the enemy if he moved on Moscow.”

“I telephoned Stalin. I said the most urgent thing is to occupy the Mozhaisk defence line, as in parts of the Western front in essence there are no (Soviet) troops.

Shortly afterwards, Stalin phoned Zhukov back to inform him he had been made commander of the Western Front.

The relationship between the two men would end in acrimony when Stalin became suspicious of Zhukov”s popularity after the war, giving him obscure posts in Odessa and the Urals.

Zhukov had been given the honour of leading the Red Army victory parade in 1945, riding into Red Square on a white stallion, and some historians believe Stalin feared being upstaged by the charismatic general.

After Stalin”s death, Zhukov served as defence minister but remained a controversial figure and the Soviet authorities ordered the tape of his interview with Simonov to be destroyed. However one archive copy survived.

The broadcast of the banned interview comes ahead of a huge parade on May 9 to mark the 65th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany and as Russia appears to be cautiously eroding several taboos surrounding its war victory. (ANI)

Hitler’s Berlin bunker: unseen pictures revealed

London, May 5 (ANI): After more than six decades since the end of Adolf Hitler’s regime in a Berlin bunker, many unpublished photographs of the underground lair have been revealed to the public.

These pictures, published by mirror.co.uk, capture the incredible drama of the Second World War’s final act, when Russian shells bombed the city to rubble.

While one picture shows the command centre after it had been burned by retreating German troops and then looted by Russians, another is that of American journalists examining the bloodstained sofa where Hitler shot himself after Braun took poison.

Life magazine’s William Vandivert took these photographs. (ANI)

‘Dear Uncle Adolf’: documentary details fan letters sent to Hitler

London, Apr.26 (ANI): A new documentary has detailed tens of thousands of surviving letters fans sent to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler during the Second World War.

‘Dear Uncle Adolf’ is said to be the first documentary detailing these letters that lay undiscovered in Russian archives till 2007.

On discovery, they formed the basis of a German book called ‘Letters to Hitler’.

Last night, according to The Telegraph, Austrian-born Hitler’s grip over Germany was unveiled as actors read out the letters.

They were letters that often accompanied gifts, in the case of Margarethe Wagner, a pair of socks sent in 1938 after Hitler occupied the Czech Sudetenland border region.

“I knitted these for you as you freed us,” she wrote.

Frau Troeltzsch of Berlin was another fan. She sent Hitler three silk handkerchiefs with pictures of Hitler sewn into them which Hitler deputy Rudolf Hess sent back saying “you do not have permission to send handkerchiefs with pictures of Herr Hitler!”

Such women were later put under Gestapo monitoring as Hitler feared that his cult of personality could lead to a destabilisation of home life in the Reich.

As he climbed further up the ladder of power, so the tempo of the letters increased.

So large was Hitler’s fan following that a special department was created in the postal services in both Munich and Berlin to deal with the tsunami of paper wending its way to him every day. (ANI)

”Dear Uncle Adolf”: documentary details fan letters sent to Hitler

London, Apr.26 (ANI): A new documentary has detailed tens of thousands of surviving letters fans sent to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler during the Second World War.

”Dear Uncle Adolf” is said to be the first documentary detailing these letters that lay undiscovered in Russian archives till 2007.

On discovery, they formed the basis of a German book called ”Letters to Hitler”.

Last night, according to The Telegraph, Austrian-born Hitler”s grip over Germany was unveiled as actors read out the letters.

They were letters that often accompanied gifts, in the case of Margarethe Wagner, a pair of socks sent in 1938 after Hitler occupied the Czech Sudetenland border region.

“I knitted these for you as you freed us,” she wrote.

Frau Troeltzsch of Berlin was another fan. She sent Hitler three silk handkerchiefs with pictures of Hitler sewn into them which Hitler deputy Rudolf Hess sent back saying “you do not have permission to send handkerchiefs with pictures of Herr Hitler!”

Such women were later put under Gestapo monitoring as Hitler feared that his cult of personality could lead to a destabilisation of home life in the Reich.

As he climbed further up the ladder of power, so the tempo of the letters increased.

So large was Hitler”s fan following that a special department was created in the postal services in both Munich and Berlin to deal with the tsunami of paper wending its way to him every day. (ANI)

Hitler ‘wanted to steal’ Turin Shroud

Rome, Apr.7 (ANI): The Turin Shroud, said to be the cloth used to bury Christ, was secretly hidden in a Benedictine abbey during the Second World War because the Vatican feared that Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler wanted to steal it.

The shroud was transferred for its safety to the Benedictine sanctuary of Montevergine in Avellino, in the southern Campania region of Italy in 1939 and was only transferred to Turin in 1946.

It is due to go on display for six weeks after Easter at the Turin Cathedral, where it has been kept for over 500 years.

The Telegraph quoted the current director of the library at the abbey, Father Andrea Cardin, as saying the reason behind the move was because Hitler was “obsessed” with the sacred relic.

Both the Vatican and the Italian royal family, the Savoys, who were the guardians and owners of the shroud, feared that the German leader, who had an interest in the esoteric, might try to steal the linen cloth.

In an interview with an Italian magazine, Diva e Donna, Father Cardin said: “The Holy Shroud was moved in secret to the sanctuary in the Campania region on the precise orders of the House of Savoy and the Vatican. Officially, this was to protect it from possible bombing (in Turin). In reality, it was moved to hide it from Hitler who was apparently obsessed by it.”

The shroud, which is supposed to have wrapped Christ’s body after he was crucified, was returned to Turin in 1946 on the orders of Italy’s last king, Umberto II.

The monarchy was abolished in 1946 when Italy voted in a referendum to become a republic, and ownership of the shroud eventually passed to the Holy See.

While millions of people believe the shroud to be authentic, sceptics believe it is a medieval fake.

Tests conducted 20 years ago dated the fabric of the relic to between 1260 and 1390, although the results have been vigorously disputed.

The linen cloth, which measures 14.4ft by 3.6ft, is imprinted with the image of a man bearing all the signs of crucifixion, including bloodstains. It will go on display in Turin Cathedral from this weekend. (ANI)

FACTBOX – Twists and turns in Polish-Russian relations

REUTERS – Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his Polish counterpart Donald Tusk attended a memorial service on Wednesday for 20,000 Polish officers killed by Soviet forces in 1940 and vowed to work towards better bilateral ties.

Below are key developments in Polish-Russian relations over the last 20 years:

* 1989 – Poland became the first Soviet satellite to overthrow communism, triggering the collapse of the Soviet Bloc and the communist regime in Russia itself.

* 1992 – Russian President Boris Yeltsin released secret clauses of the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union that showed they agreed to carved up Poland at the outbreak of World War Two. Two weeks after Adolf Hitler launched his ‘Blitzkrieg’ against Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, and Britain and France declared war on Germany, Soviet forces invaded eastern Poland.

– Yeltsin also gave Poland documents showing Soviet dictator Josef Stalin ordered the execution of thousands of Polish POWs at the Katyn forest in the western Soviet Union.

* 1993 – Yeltsin visited Poland and was feted by the hero of the Polish anti-communist struggle, President Lech Walesa. Walesa obtained Yeltsin’s declaration that Russia would not object to Polish NATO entry — which caused an outcry in Moscow. The Kremlin backtracked and launched a drive to warn the alliance against accepting its former satellites.

– Last Russian soldiers stationed on Polish soil since World War Two left.

* 1999 – Despite vehement Russian protests, NATO admitted Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic.

* 2004 – Poland joined the European Union. President Aleksander Kwasniewski met Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin. Ties strained over Polish reluctance to allow Russian energy companies buy Polish peers.

– Kwasniewski infuriated Putin by leading the EU mediation in Ukraine following the rigged presidential election there in December 2004. A re-run resulted in victory for pro-Western candidate, Viktor Yushchenko.

* 2005 – Conservative Law and Justice led by brothers Lech and Jaroslaw Kaczynski won power in Poland, taking a sharply anti-Russian course. Moscow imposed a ban on Polish farm imports, including meat.

– In December, Russian gas monopoly Gazprom and its German partners agreed to build an undersea gas pipeline bypassing Poland. Radoslaw Sikorski, then defence minister, now foreign minister, compared the agreement to the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.

* 2007 – Poland declared it was ready to host a U.S. missile defence system on its soil, sparking a violent reaction from Putin.

– In May, Poland blocked talks on a new EU-Russia strategic partnership over the meat ban.

– In October, centre-right Civic Platform party won a parliamentary election, with its leader and future prime minister Donald Tusk promising to improve ties with Russia.

– In November, Poland lifted a veto on Russia’s talks to join the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. Russia reciprocated by lifting ban on Polish meat imports.

* 2008 – Foreign Minister Sikorski met Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov in January, who said Moscow would not put pressure on Warsaw over its readiness to host the U.S. missile shield.

* 2009 – Poland said it was unlikely to sign a gas deal with Russia during Putin’s visit to Warsaw. Attempts at a deal had failed in late July but talks continued.

* 2010 – President Lech Kaczynski criticised the centre-right government in January for prolonging gas negotiations with Russia and deepening Poland’s already-heavy reliance on Russian gas.

– In February, Poland approved a long-delayed gas deal with Russia ensuring higher deliveries until 2037, with the settlement still awaiting a final rubber stamp.

– Warsaw faced an annual shortfall of 2.5 billion cubic metres of gas as of 2010. The new accord with Russia’s Gazprom has been delayed repeatedly due to lengthy negotiations and a spat between the Russian gas giant and Poland’s gas monopoly, PGNiG.

– Poland imports about 65-70 percent of the 14 billion cubic metres of its annual gas consumption from Russia.

Now, ‘Hitler’ Jesse James’ Nazi photo emerges

New York, Apr 1 (ANI): A photo of Sandra Bullock”s love rat hubby Jesse James, posing as Adolf Hitler with a German army cap on his head, raising his arm in the “sieg heil” salute and mimicking the dictator”s mustache with two fingers, has surfaced.

The controversial pic, featured in the new edition of Us Weekly magazine, surfaces amid new report that he took part in a four-way with a guy and two women in a San Diego tattoo parlor in June, according to the new issue of Life & Style.

“[Sandra] should definitely get tested for HIV and STDs — I would,” said Eric McDougall, the tattoo-shop owner and other man in the foursome.

Earlier this month, the Blind Side actress’ apparently perfect five-year marriage was shattered when tattooed stripper Michelle “Bombshell” McGee revealed that she and James had been having a torrid affair, reports The New York Post.

James has now checked himself into a rehab clinic “to deal with personal issues,” his rep told People Magazine. (ANI)

Obama identified with Hitler, Stalin

Washington, Sep.19 (ANI): Even as thousands of people packed the streets of Washington on Friday to protest against government spending, some of the agitators likened President Barack Obama to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.

According to a CBS report, most of those would have called themselves “patriots” arguing that their government was betraying traditional principles.

Steve Butler, a physician from Indiana was handing out copies of the Constitution. “If you read the quotes of Thomas Jefferson, these guys were conservatives and they said that the control should be with the people and not with the big government.”

There were plenty of signs identifying Obama with Hitler, or Stalin, that questions his citizenship, that seems to celebrate the death of a famous liberal.

But perhaps what most united these protesters was a broader discontent: a sense that they are not being heard, that their interests, and the national interests, are in the hands of a few. (ANI)

100-year-old picture of Hitler, Lenin playing chess emerges

London, Sept 4 (ANI): A 100-year-old picture supposedly showing a young Adolf Hitler playing chess against Vladimir Lenin has emerged.

The extraordinary etching is said to have been created in Vienna by Hitler’s art teacher, Emma Lowenstramm.

It is apparently signed on the reverse by the two dictators.

In 1909, Hitler was a jobbing artist in the city and Lenin was in exile and the house where they allegedly played the game belonged to a prominent Jewish family, reports The Telegraph.

In the run-up to the Second World War the Jewish family fled.

And they gave the image and chess set to their housekeeper, whose great-great grandson could now net 40,000 pounds for each item at an auction in Shropshire next month.

The unnamed vendor is confident the items are genuine after his father spent a lifetime attempting to prove their authenticity.

It is titled “A Chess Game: Lenin with Hitler – Vienna 1909″.

Richard Westwood-Brookes, who is selling the items, said: “This just sounds too good to be true, but the vendor’s father spent a lifetime proving it.

“He compiled a 300 page document and spent a great deal of money engaging experts to examine the etching. The signatures in pencil on the reverse are said to have an 80 per cent chance of being genuine, and there is proof that Emma Lowenstramm did exist.

“The circumstantial evidence is very good on top of the paper having been tested. Hitler was a painter in 1909 and his Jewish teacher Emma Lowenstramm was the person who made the etching.

“There is some suggestion that when he came to power Hitler protected her and she died from natural causes in 1941. At the time, Vienna was a hotbed of political intrigue and the house where this game took place belonged to a prominent Jewish family.

“Lenin at the time was moving around Europe in exile and writing “Materialism and Empirio-criticism.”

Westwood-Brookes added: “His movements are hazy and it is known that he did play chess and later he certainly wore wigs as a disguise. It is also known that Lenin was a German agent and the house was where people went to exchange political views.

“The chess set is clearly the same chess set as that in the etching. It is a box chess set that folds out and the pieces are identifiable – particularly the kings and bishops. To my knowledge there are five etchings of this image, but this has the signatures of both men and the artist.

“The provenance is that it has come through the family of the housekeeper who was given it when the Jewish family fled in the late 1930s. The family is based in Hanover and it is the great great grandson of the housekeeper who is selling it.

“On all sorts of levels it is an extremely valuable artefact. Even as just an allegorical picture it shows the men playing chess possibly for the world.”

Historian Helen Rappaport, who has just written a book called “Conspirator: Lenin in Exile”, said the etching was probably a “glorious piece of fantasy”.

She said: “In 1909 Lenin was in France and there is no evidence that he was in Vienna. In October he went to Liege in Belgium and in November he went to Brussels. He would have visited Vienna before and after that year.

“He liked the place and went there because he travelled around Europe on trains, but he wouldn’t have been there long enough to meet a young Hitler. He was also as bald as a bat by 1894 with just hair on the sides of his head.

“And when in exile he was not known as Lenin and instead used a number of aliases. The person believed to be Lenin in the etching may well have been one of his revolutionary or Bolshevik associates who was misidentified. It may even have been an Austrian socialist with whom he associated in the Second International.

“The Germans did fund the Bolsheviks and gave them millions of marks for the revolutionary effort, but Lenin was not a German sympathiser. Although this is totally spurious it is wonderful to bring these two great megalomaniacs together.

“It makes sense retrospectively and the history of art is full of retrospective meetings between people.”

The items are to be sold at Mullock’s auction house in Ludlow, Shropshire, on October 1. (ANI)

MI5 spent over 10 yrs in fruitless hunt for Nazi Martin Bormann

London, Sept 1 (ANI): British agents spent more than 10 years in the fruitless hunt for Adolf Hitler’s trusted private secretary, Martin Bormann, following false reports that he survived the war, secret intelligence files have revealed.

Bormann’s whereabouts was one of the biggest mysteries after the Second World War, reports Times Online.

MI5 believed that he died trying to escape the Reich Chancellery in Berlin after Hitler committed suicide in April 1945.

However, no remains were found until 1972 and rumours persisted for years that Fuhrer’s private secretary was still alive.

The senior Nazi, who was also head of the Party Chancellery, was sentenced to death in absentia at the Nuremberg trials in 1946.

The files show how intelligence chiefs were bombarded with alleged sightings of Bormann for years afterwards.

Among the places where he was allegedly spotted were various towns in Switzerland, a Franciscan monastery in Italy and even a mountainside in Brazil.

One man who approached the British Embassy in Paris in 1947 even claimed that Hitler was alive and living with monks in Tibet.

Documents and memos from the security services, released by The National Archives, trace the Bormann trail until 1958, with members of MI5 pouring scorn on increasingly unlikely sightings and press reports.

Possible hideouts also included the Middle East and Russia, where he was said to have defected.

Bormann’s remains were, however, cremated in 1999, a year after DNA tests finally convinced doubters that he had died more than five decades earlier. (ANI)

Pitt denies tagging Cruise’s ‘Valkyrie’ a ‘ridiculous movie’

Washington, August 25 (ANI): Brad Pitt’s manager has said that actor never tagged Tom Cruise’s ‘Valkyrie’ a “ridiculous movie”.

German magazine Stern recently reported that Pitt had slammed the historical thriller set in Nazi Germany during World War II.

But Pitt’s manager denied the story, dubbing it far off from the truth.

“Brad has never seen VALKYRIE so this is NOT accurate,” Us magazine quoted the manager as saying.

The film depicts the July 20, 1944 plot by German army officers of the German Resistance to assassinate Adolf Hitler, and to use the Operation Valkyrie national emergency plan to take control of the country. (ANI)

Churchill statue in Paris desecrated

Paris, Aug.20 (ANI): French anti-war campaigners have desecrated a statue of former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill on the anniversary of Paris’s liberation from Nazi rule.
The red paint attack on the bronze hands of the 250, 000 pound statue took place at night, The Telegraph reports.

The initials RH were also daubed on the statue, perhaps a reference to Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler’s deputy, who flew to Britain at the height of the Second World War to allegedly try and make peace.

Instead, Churchill had him thrown in prison in 1941, and the war continued for a further four years.

Some in France view Churchill as a war criminal himself because of his decision to scuttle the Vichy French fleet in Tunisia rather than let it fall into the hands of Third Reich forces.

He is also remembered for ordering the Allied bombing of occupied France, which led to thousands of French deaths.

But today there was nothing but widespread anger at the attack on the statue, which is situated next to the Champs Elysee.

“There are French people who are not great fans of Churchill, but the vast majority honour and respect him and will be disgusted by this cowardly attack,” said a spokesman for Paris city hall.

The statue was unveiled in 1998 by Queen Elizabeth. The 10 foot high statue by French sculptor Jean Cardot is made of bronze and weighs two-and-a-half tons.

Its plinth bears the words: “We shall never surrender.” (ANI)

Hollywood legend Errol Flynn worked as Nazi spy, met Hitler, claims biography

London, July 11 (ANI): Australian born Hollywood star Errol Flynn worked as an undercover agent for the Germans and met Adolf Hitler shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War.

Flynn, who was known for his anti-Semitic views, worked undercover for the Germans during the Spanish Civil War, according to a controversial biography.

Charles Higham alleges that Flynn was employed to gather information on German socialists who fought against General Franco, helping contribute to the death of hundreds of volunteers and their families, The Telegraph reports.

He also claims that in 1938 Flynn met Hitler, who was an admirer of his films, at his Bavarian retreat

Higham, whose claims are partly based on analysis of declassified CIA files but have been challenged by other historians, said that the commemorations were inappropriate given the actor’s political activities.

“There is no doubt whatsoever that Flynn had Nazi sympathies and worked as a Nazi operative if not an actual agent. He was first noticed for his violently anti-British and pro-Nazi views as early as 1934 and there is little doubt his work for the Nazis resulted in people being killed,” the Daily Mail quoted Higham, as saying.

According to the biography, Flynn fell under the influence of a Hermann Erben, an Austrian doctor and Nazi party member, in the 1930s. They both travelled to Spain in 1937 where they fed information to the Gestapo, it is alleged.

The following year Flynn may even have attended a secret meeting with the Fuhrer at his Bavarian mountain retreat, according to Higham. (ANI)

‘I was an idiot for Hitler comments’, says Bernie Ecclestone

London, July 9 (ANI): Formula One head Bernie Ecclestone has for his support of Adolf Hitler’s style of functioning saying he was an “idiot” to discuss Hitler or Saddam Hussein.

Ecclestone apologised through a German tabloid saying: “I’m sorry. I apologise honestly and sincerely, not just superficially.”

“I would never support such people. I should never have been so foolish as to have been drawn into discussing these people but the fault was entirely mine, which I deeply regret,” he added.

Ecclestone had made the remark in an interview published in The Times, in which he also criticised the removal of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, The Telegraph reports.

In another article in The Times, Ecclestone had attempted to clarify his Hitler statement, saying that: “During the 1930s, Germany was facing an economic crisis but Hitler was able to rebuild the economy, building the autobahns and German industry.”

“That was all I meant when I referred to him getting things done. I’m an admirer of good leadership, of politicians who stand by their convictions and tell the voters the truth. I’m not an admirer of dictators, who rule by terror,” he added. (ANI)

Military historian uncovers ‘Band of Brothers’ falsehood

Washington, July 5 (ANI): A military historian has denied that Easy Company of the 101st Airborne Division was the first to enter Adolf Hitler’s Berchtesgaden mountain retreat near the end of World War II.

Dr. John C. McManus insists that in 1992 book “Band of Brothers”, Stephen E. Ambrose incorrectly attributed Berchtesgaden’s capture to another Army unit: Easy Company of the 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne Division.

He said that it was actually 7th Infantry Regiment that first took Berchtesgaden.

“Ambrose just made the mistake of taking the Easy Company guys at face value and not corroborating their stories with actual unit records,” writes McManus in his new book “American Courage, American Carnage: 7th Infantry Chronicles: The 7th Infantry Regiment’s Combat Experience, 1812 Through World War II.”

McManus said that his intent was not to impugn Ambrose’s reputation as a historian.

“I have great respect for Stephen Ambrose’s work and was definitely influenced by him,” he said.

“We all make mistakes, and I just wanted to help set the record straight,” he added.

The 7th Infantry has been involved in some of the America’s most pivotal and memorable battles.

McManus’s new book is a prequel to the first instalment in the 7th Infantry Chronicles series, published in June 2008 under the title “The 7th Infantry Regiment: Combat in an Age of Terror, the Korean War through the Present.”

It covered the regiment’s involvement in battles from the Korean War through Iraq. (ANI)