Apologies for low quality sound
EXCLUSIVE:
Death of former
MI6 agent
John Ainsworth-Davis, author, under the pen name
Christopher Creighton, of the book 'Op JB' about the secret
1945 British rescue of
Hitler's deputy
Martin Bormann at the end of
WWII.
Interview with Laurence de
Mello, journalist from
Buenos Aires in
Argentina. She discusses '
JAD' - John Ainsworth-Davis - aka. Christopher Creighton, author, who died this week aged 89. He wrote 'OP JB', a book claiming the top
Nazi, Martin Bormann, survived the
Second World War, and was helped over to
South America by western secret services, in exchange for letting them know where the
Nazi loot was.
Forensic explanation of the hard evidence for the survival of
Bormann and his life in South America in the late
1940s and
1950s building a financial 4th
Reich. Its not a ''conspiracy theory'' that Martin Bormann survived post 1945 but there is documentary evidence that the remains found in
Berlin of Martin Bormann in
1972 bore the following scientific conclusions; 1) The teeth as confirmed by Forensic dental
Surgeon Prof Sognnaes (involved in the 1972 forensic investigation of the remains) had dentistry that was early
1950's (dead men do not go to the dentist); 2) The position of the teeth proved they were of a much older man than 45. (Bormann was
Born in
1900); 3) The skeletal composition showed ''ageing'' of a man in his 60's it is claimed he died when he was 44; 4) The skull was encased in a red clay exotic to
Europe but local to the very place Laurence De Mello's and others' investigations place Bormann at the time of his death:
Paraguay.
Martin Bormann: Nazi in
Exile [Hardcover] by
Paul Manning (
1981)
ISBN: 0818403098
http://spitfirelist.com/books/martin-bormann-nazi-in-exile/
FREE pdf DOWNLOAD -- http://spitfirelist.com/books/manning
.pdf
http://tinyurl.com/lm8mhac
Op JB [Hardcover] by Christopher Creighton -- aka
John Ainsworth-Davies (
1996)
ISBN: 0684817861
http://tinyurl.com/lafx55o
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0684817861/
John Ainsworth Davis claims from adolescence to have been befriended by Von
Ribbentrop,
Lord Mountbatten (a college friend of his father),
Major Desmond Morton,
Churchill's friend and head of the
Industrial Intelligence Centre, and by Churchill himself, when he and his mother rented a cottage on the
Chartwell estate.
Morton recruited our hero, age 16, via
Dartmouth into his ultra-secret "M-section", in March
1940. He was sent almost immediately to destroy a
German submarine base in
Ireland where he killed four men, three with his bare hands. In
1942, posing as a disaffected ex-Mosleyite pilot officer he betrayed the disastrous
Dieppe operation to the
Germans to establish his bona fides with them.
Back in Britain, he was used by Morton to persuade Hitler that the
Allied invasion of Europe would focus on the
Pas de Calais rather than
Normandy. Morton betrayed his identity as a British agent to the SS so that under torture he would confirm the story, which he thought to be true. Rescued by his colleagues in the M-section, he returned to Britain, where he fell in love.
His inamorata was dropped into the
Austrian Tyrol by
SOE where
Austrian resistance members gave her the name of the
Swiss bank where Nazi war loot had been deposited. She was caught by the SS, tortured and executed.
Hearing this, our hero tried to shoot Morton. Thereafter,
Ian Fleming recruited him to the mission which is the main theme of the book: the recovery of the cash, gold, jewellery and works of art that the Nazis had stashed outside
Germany. The mission involved him re-establishing contact with Ribbentrop, entering Germany via
Switzerland, meeting both Ribbentrop and Martin Bormann, and for a hefty bribe, agreeing to arrange their escape from Germany.
Eisenhower became aware of these plans and attached his own agent, a gung-ho female officer, whose ability to play the
Soviet Commissar enabled the British to bluff their way past various
Soviet forces they encountered. A double for Bormann was discovered in
Canada and taken on the mission, to be sacrificed so that his body would be taken for Bormann's. Ribbentrop pulled out of the adventure, Bormann was rescued and taken to Britain where he later died.
Bormann was the adminstrator of
Operation Regentroepfchen, the evacuation of Reich gold, money and treasure to Argentina, and the size of this fortune evidenced by the few documents released from
Argentine official archives is mind boggling. If Bormann survived and escaped, it was to Argentina that he came.
Postwar Nazi money laundering through bogus land deals was administered from
San Carlos de Bariloche in
Neuquen province. In the early
1960s there were reports in the local and foreign
Press of a grave in the cemetery at
Bariloche, allegedly that of Martin Bormann, having been visited by officials of the
German Embassy, after which it vanished. http://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic
.php?f=45&t;=40911&start;=15
- published: 01 Dec 2013
- views: 3602