Czech Communist intelligence used ex-Nazi officials
A number of German Nazi officials worked for the Czechoslovak communist secret services after World War Two, in exchange for not being punished for their crimes, the daily Mlada fronta Dnes (MfD) reported Wednesday.
A number of Nazis who took part in the search and torture of Czechoslovak paratroopers who killed wartime Nazi Reichsprotector Reinhard Heydrich in Prague in 1942 went unpunished because they promised to cooperate with the communist secret services after the war, the paper writes.
Willi Leimer, officer of the Prague Gestapo anti-trooper section, was handed over to the Soviet Union shortly after the war, historian Jaroslav Cvancara, the third part of whose study "Death for someone, but life for someone else" (Nekomu zivot, nekomu smrt), is to be issued in the weeks ahead, told the paper.
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A number of Nazis who took part in the search and torture of Czechoslovak paratroopers who killed wartime Nazi Reichsprotector Reinhard Heydrich in Prague in 1942 went unpunished because they promised to cooperate with the communist secret services after the war, the paper writes.
Willi Leimer, officer of the Prague Gestapo anti-trooper section, was handed over to the Soviet Union shortly after the war, historian Jaroslav Cvancara, the third part of whose study "Death for someone, but life for someone else" (Nekomu zivot, nekomu smrt), is to be issued in the weeks ahead, told the paper.