The Gehlen Memoirs offers a rare and riveting look inside the clandestine world of World War II and Cold War espionage, told by the man who lived it. General Reinhard Gehlen, the head of Nazi Germany’s military intelligence on the Eastern Front, didn’t vanish after 1945—he became one of the most critical assets in America’s postwar intelligence game.
Before fleeing Allied capture, Gehlen concealed a vast archive of intelligence documents deep in the Bavarian mountains. These secret files—recovered and revived under American guidance—laid the foundation for the Gehlen Organization, the shadowy intelligence agency that shaped NATO’s Cold War strategy.
In this explosive memoir, Gehlen reveals:
* The untold story of Germany’s Eastern Front espionage network
* The true motives behind Hitler’s wartime decisions
* Revelations on top Allied spies, including Martin Bormann and ‘Cicero’
* How U.S. intelligence quickly embraced Nazi operatives to fight Soviet power in the early Cold War
This eBook edition preserves the entire text of Gehlen’s memoir, digitally formatted for comfortable reading and enhanced with explanatory footnotes and a linked table of contents. It’s an essential source for anyone interested in World War II intelligence, Cold War spycraft or the origins of modern German security services.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.