War Crimes of the Deutsche Bank and the Dresdner Bank - Office of Military Government (US) Reports (Hardcover, Illustrated Ed)


In this book, Christopher Simpson reveals the behind-the-scenes story of the report. Simpson has carefully edited the report and provided notes and explanatory material, making it accessible to a wide range of readers. He brings readers the full story of the banking studies, reproduces hundreds of pages gleaned from declassified reports, and analyses their significance in light of today's bitter debates over German corporation, the Holocaust, and how historical memory is to be defined. In November 1946, U.S. Government financial experts inside former Nazi Germany concluded that Germany's most powerful banks must be liquidated if lasting peace was to be achieved. The giant Deutsche and Dredener Banks had completely intertwined themselves with the Nazi regime and were directly responsible for the systematic theft of Jewish property, slave labour, and financing the construction of SS concentration camps. As the Americans in the Finance Division of the Office of Military Government [U.S.] (OMGUS) saw things at the time, the bank leaders should be tried as war criminals and barred from ever holding any positions of importance in German political or economic life. However, these recommendations were never implemented. In fact, many of the officials of the Deutsche Bank went on to be some of the most important figures in German economic development-and by extension, European economic development-in the post war period. The Deutsche Bank secretly retained almost a ton of gold taken from the dead at concentration camps; the Dresdener Bank re-emerged as a multinational financial giant. Meanwhile, the U.S. Government buried the 500+ page report of its financial experts in classified files, where they gathered dust for decades. Today, the Deutsche Bank is the largest financial institution in the world and the Dresdener Bank is not far behind.

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Product Description

In this book, Christopher Simpson reveals the behind-the-scenes story of the report. Simpson has carefully edited the report and provided notes and explanatory material, making it accessible to a wide range of readers. He brings readers the full story of the banking studies, reproduces hundreds of pages gleaned from declassified reports, and analyses their significance in light of today's bitter debates over German corporation, the Holocaust, and how historical memory is to be defined. In November 1946, U.S. Government financial experts inside former Nazi Germany concluded that Germany's most powerful banks must be liquidated if lasting peace was to be achieved. The giant Deutsche and Dredener Banks had completely intertwined themselves with the Nazi regime and were directly responsible for the systematic theft of Jewish property, slave labour, and financing the construction of SS concentration camps. As the Americans in the Finance Division of the Office of Military Government [U.S.] (OMGUS) saw things at the time, the bank leaders should be tried as war criminals and barred from ever holding any positions of importance in German political or economic life. However, these recommendations were never implemented. In fact, many of the officials of the Deutsche Bank went on to be some of the most important figures in German economic development-and by extension, European economic development-in the post war period. The Deutsche Bank secretly retained almost a ton of gold taken from the dead at concentration camps; the Dresdener Bank re-emerged as a multinational financial giant. Meanwhile, the U.S. Government buried the 500+ page report of its financial experts in classified files, where they gathered dust for decades. Today, the Deutsche Bank is the largest financial institution in the world and the Dresdener Bank is not far behind.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Holmes & Meier Publishers Inc

Country of origin

United States

Release date

2001

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

2001

Authors

Dimensions

261 x 188 x 27mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

417

Edition

Illustrated Ed

ISBN-13

978-0-8419-1407-0

Barcode

9780841914070

Categories

LSN

0-8419-1407-9



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