Records of the Office of Strategic Services 1940-1946
(Record Group 226)
(For earlier releases, see the Report to the IWG on Previously Classified OSS Records.)
Contents of RG 226:- Terms, Names, Organizational Abbreviations, and Code Words in OSS Records
- Sources & Methods Files ("Previously Withdrawn Material")
- Central Intelligence Agency Selected Documents, 1941-1947
Notice to Researchers in Records Released under the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act and the Japanese Imperial Government Records Act
The Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial Government Records Interagency Working Group (IWG), in implementing the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act and the Japanese Imperial Government Records Act, has taken the broadest view in identifying records that may be responsive to the Acts. Information relevant to the Acts is often found among files related to other subjects. In order to preserve the archival integrity of the files, the IWG and the National Archives and Records Administration, where possible, have released entire files together, not just those items related to Nazi or Japanese war criminals, crimes, persecution, and looted assets. These records may relate to persons who are war criminals, former Axis personnel who are not war criminals, victims of war crimes or persecution, or civilian or military personnel investigating Nazi activities; the records may also include mention of, or information about, persons having no connection to these activities.
Terms, Names, Organizational Abbreviations, and Code Words Frequently Found in Office of Strategic Services (OSS) Records
Term | Description |
ABDA | American-British-Dutch-Australian Command |
Abwehr | German military intelligence |
ACC | Allied Control Commission (of occupied territory) |
AFHQ | Allied Forces Headquarters for operations in the western Mediterranean |
AFO | Anti-Fascist Organizations, Burma |
AFPFL | Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League, Burma |
AKAK | A Trans-Pyrenees Chain of agents operated by OSS Spain |
ALFSEA | Allied Land Forces South East Asia |
ALIU | Art Looting Investigation Unit, OSS |
ALOT | American Liaison Officer Team; dealt with partisans in Italy |
AMZON | American Zone of Germany |
APC | Alien Property Custodian, US |
Azusa | Designation for atomic energy information |
BAAG | British Army Aid Group, China |
Baker Street | SOE headquarters in London |
BCRA | French Gaullist intelligence and operational services |
BIA | Burma Independence Army |
Birch | OSS agent that penetrated Germany through Scandinavia in 1945 |
BIS | Bank for International Settlements, Basel, Switzerland |
Black Series | Kappa Messages dealing with the Balkans (1944); also questionable reports coming from the Vatican |
Blue | Sweden in 1943 Kappa messages |
BEW | Board of Economic Warfare, US |
BNA | Burmese National Army |
Bonty | A Kappa indicator for Lisbon, Portugal |
Boston Series | Intelligence reports based on George Wood/Kappa information |
BPF | Burma Patriotic Front |
Breakers | German opposition groups |
Broadway | British Intelligence (MI6 Headquarters) |
Brown | A Kappa indicator for Spain |
BSC | British Security Coordination |
Buffalo | OSS Agent in Iraq |
Bunny | OSS Agent in Iraq |
Burns | Allen Dulles, OSS Chief in Bern (1942-1943) |
CAPS | An intelligence network in Geneva, Switzerland reporting to the OSS |
Carat | OSS Agent in Lebanon |
Carib | F. L. Mayer |
Cassia | Anti-Nazi underground group in Vienna, Austria |
Castle | Indicator for messages dealing with the German threat to Switzerland |
CBI | China-Burma-India Theater of Operations |
CCS | Combined Chiefs of Staff (US-UK) |
C&D | Censorship and Documents Branch, OSS |
CE | Counter Espionage |
Cereus Circle | Well-connected individuals in Istanbul, Turkey that provided information to the OSS |
CIB | SHAEF Counter-Intelligence Branch |
CIC | Counter-Intelligence Corps (G-2) |
Coachman | Ernst Kaltenbrunner |
COI | Coordinator of Information [predecessor of the OSS] |
Cousins | The British |
Critic | German SS General Karl Wolff |
Crossword | British designation for Operation Sunrise |
Crown Jewels | Germs deemed to be important for postwar purposes |
CSDIC | Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Center |
CT or CTO | China Theater of Operations |
The Cub | Hans Bernd Gisevius |
Culber | Hans Bernd Gisevius |
Deuxieme Bureau | French Intelligence Service |
DGER | Direction Generale des Etudes et Recherches, a French intelligence unit |
DIP | Division of Intelligence Procurement; unit of OSS London in charge of German penetration |
Division 19-SW | A NDRC unit created for the exclusive purpose of developing weapons and devices for the OSS |
Dogwood | Source in Turkey (Alfred Schwarz) and head of the Cereus Circle |
Drum | Presumably an OSS staff member at Bern, Switzerland and point of contact for "Drum" messages early in the war |
Drumbee, Harold | Cover name for an Italian opposition figure |
EAM | Greek resistance movement |
Ebert | OSS Agent in Mozambique |
ECONIC | Economic Intelligence |
EDES | Greek resistance |
ELAS | Greek resistance |
EOU | Enemy Objectives Unit of the Economic Warfare Division of the U.S. Embassy, London, England |
ERR | Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, Nazi art looting operation |
ESD 44 | Economic Survey Detachment/Group 44 |
ETO | European Theater of Operations |
ETOUSA | European Theater of Operations U.S. Army |
FAAA Units | OSS First Allied Airborne Army Detachment activated in August 1944 |
Fat Boy | German Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering |
FEA | Foreign Economic Administration, US |
FEB | Far Eastern Bureau, the British PWE mission in India |
FED | Foreign Exchange Division, OSS |
FETO | Far Eastern Theater of Operations |
FFI | Forces Francaises de l'Interieur (Free French Forces) |
FIDES | OSS field detachment headquarters in France, 1944-1945 |
Flash | Allen Dulles evening radiotelephone transmission |
Flute | Professor Paul Scherrer |
FN | Foreign Nationalities Branch, OSS |
FO | Foreign Office, British |
Force 136 | British SOE in the Far East |
Forking | Code name for a German Jew residing in Ascona, Switzerland that was a source for Allied intelligence |
Friends | British |
FTP | Communist-controlled French resistance groups |
G-2 | U.S. Army Intelligence |
G-5 | Civil Affairs, U.S. Army |
Garbo | War Refugee Board |
Gensis | Direct Rome-Bern communication system for Operation Sunrise |
Gerplan | General Donovan's plan for infiltration of Germany in 1944 |
Grand | German Foreign Ministry or German Government in Berlin (in Kappa Messages) |
Gray | A Kappa indicator signifying Finland |
Green | A Kappa indicator signifying Italy |
Gregory | OSS chief in Lisbon, Portugal |
Grimm | Germany |
Handel und Wandel | Weekly business publication produced by OSS in Sweden |
Harvard Plan | A German-language propaganda periodical produced in Washington and distributed by OSS Stockholm |
HIHI | A Trans-Pyrenees Chain of agents operated by OSS Spain |
HOHO | A Trans-Pyrenees Chain of agents operated by OSS Spain |
IAMM | Independent American Military Mission (to Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia) |
IB or IBT | India Burma Theater of Operations [beginning 1944] |
Iceland | A category of material transmitted between Bern and Italy in 1944 |
ICRC | International Committee of the Red Cross |
IDC | Interdepartmental Committee for Acquisition of Foreign Publications |
IIU | Insurance Intelligence Unit, OSS |
INA | Indian National Army |
ITF | International Federation of Transport Workers |
ISLD | Inter-Service Liaison Department, British (SIS/MI6 in the Middle East and the Far East) |
JA | Jewish Agency for Palestine |
Jack and Jill | A German opposition group associated with Breakers |
Jadwin Mission | An operation designed to achieve the withdrawal of Bulgaria from the war |
JCS | Joint Chiefs of Staff US |
J-E (Joan Eleanor) | Two-way communications device which enabled an agent on the ground to talk directly with an appropriately equipped OSS representative flying in a plane above him |
J-E Operations | OSS Missions beginning in November 1944 using J-E |
Jennings, Charles B. | Fictitious name for Washington recipient of Dulles' evening radiotelephone transmissions |
JIC | Joint Intelligence Committee |
JICA | Joint Intelligence Collection Agency |
Johnston, Bertram L | Cover name used to place Allen Dulles evening radiotelephone calls |
Jones series | Concerns military deception |
Jonny | A left-wing resistance movement in Vienna, Austria |
K-28 | Austrian source that provided information to OSS Bern, Switzerland |
Kappa | Indicator for messages containing information and documents obtained from the German Foreign Ministry by Fritz Kolbe (code named George Wood) |
KMT | Koumintang, Chinese nationalist party |
KRIPO | German Criminal Police |
Latte | A Kappa indicator for Budapest, Hungary |
Lavender | A Kappa indicator for China |
Luber | Hans Bern Gisevius |
MA | Military Attache |
MacGregor Mission | An OSS operation in Italy |
Manet | Great Britain |
MPAJA | Malayan People's Anti-Japanese Army |
Marie | A series of Allen Dulles reports on France, beginning in December 1943 |
MEDTO | Mediterranean Theater of Operations |
METO | Middle East Theater of Operations |
Medusa | Large OSS intelligence-gathering operation targeting France from Spain |
MEW | Ministry of Economic Warfare, British |
MID | Military Intelligence Division, U.S. Army |
MILORG | Norwegian resistance |
MI5 | British Counter Intelligence |
MIS | US Military Intelligence Service (G-2 War Department General Staff) |
MO | Morale Operations (OSS Psychological Warfare Unit) |
Motto | OSS Morale Operations in London |
MRL | Maryland Research Laboratory; Established to conduct laboratory research for the OSS |
MU | Maritime Unit (OSS Maritime Unit) |
NATO | North African Theater of Operations |
NATOUSA | North African Theater of Operations, U.S. Army |
Nabors | The Germans ("neighbors" to the Swiss) |
NDRC | National Defense Research Committee, US |
NEI | Netherlands East Indies |
NKVD | Soviet Intelligence |
Nicholson | General Lyman Lemnitzer during Operation Sunrise |
OELR | Office of European Labor Research, New York City; worked with OSS |
OG | OSS Operational Groups (commando units) |
OI | Oral Intelligence Branch, OSS |
OKW | High Command of the Armed Forces, Germany |
ONI | Office of Naval Intelligence, U.S. Navy |
Operations Sunrise | Negotiations for the German surrender in Italy |
Orange | A Kappa indicator signifying Bulgaria |
ORI | Italian resistance |
ORION Project | US Cold War intelligence effort to create a space craft powered by hydrogen bombs |
Orion | Ion Antonescu, Romanian leader 1940-1944 |
OSO | Office of Special Operations |
OSS | Office of Strategic Services, US |
Ostrich Operation | OSS operational plans for a reconnaissance trip to Manchuria |
OVRA | Italian secret police |
OWI | Office of War Information, US |
Oysters | Leader of an Austrian resistance movement coordinating committee |
Paradise | Name for certain Kappa cables involving the penetration of Germany |
Mrs. Pestalozzi | Mary Bancroft, Ascona, Switzerland, Allen Dulles’ secretary |
Phillips, Carr | Cover name for an Italian opposition figure |
Pink | A Kappa indicator signifying Tangiers |
PLOPS | Planning and Operations Committee, OSS |
Porto | Signifies German diplomatic post in Kappa cables |
Prado | Signifies Madrid in Kappa cables |
Proust Project | An auxiliary operation to the Sussex Mission to build up a reserve pool of agents for any unforeseen exigencies of the post D-Day period and eventually became operational |
Pupin | Brig. Gen. Barnwell Legge, U.S. Military Attache in Switzerland |
PWB | US Psychological Warfare Board |
PWD | OSS Psychological Warfare Division |
PWE | Political Warfare Executive, British |
PWIS | Prisoner of War Information Service |
R&A | Research and Analysis Division, OSS |
R&D | Research and Development Division, OSS |
Ralph | Erwin Respondek, German agent |
Raz | Code name for a Swiss source in Basel |
Red | Eric Ericson; agent for the OSS in Stockholm, Sweden |
Redbird | An OSS plan to establish contact with the Austrian resistance |
Remus | Morris "Mo" Berg |
Rocky | A person involved with Breakers |
Roberts Commission | The American Commission for the Protection and Salvage of Artistic and Historical Monuments in War Areas |
Rote Kapelle | Red Orchestra, a Soviet spy network |
RSHA | Das Reichssicherheitshauptamt, Reich Main Security Office |
SA | German Stormtroopers |
SAARF | Special Allied Airborne Reconnaissance Force, activated by SHAEF on March 29, 1945, to send team to various POW camps in enemy territory |
SACMED | Supreme Allied Commander Mediterranean |
SACO | Sino-American Cooperative Organization |
SAFEHAVEN | Project to trace the movement of German funds and physical wealth to hideouts in European countries and to other continents |
Saint | OSS indicator for messages containing security and counter-intelligence |
SBS | Special Bari Section (OSS Balkan Operations) |
SCI | Special Counter Intelligence (joint operation of MI5 and X-2) |
SCI/A | Special Counter Intelligence, Austria |
SD | Intelligence Section of the SS |
SEAC | Southeast Asia Command |
SEATIC | South East Asia Translation and Interrogation Center, SEAC |
SEPALS | OSS Base camps in Scandinavia |
SF | Special Funds, OSS organization that provided finances for maintenance of agent cover |
SF Detachments | SFHQ units attached to each of the army groups and armies operating out of the European Theater of Operations |
SFHQ | Special Forces Headquarters (SO/SOE combined activities) |
SHAEF | Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force |
SI | Strategic Intelligence Branch, OSS |
SIFE | Security Intelligence Far East (British MI5/SIS) |
SIM | Servizio Informazioni Militare, Italian Military Intelligence Service |
SIME | Security Intelligence Middle East, British |
Simpson | Code name for an unofficial representative of the Czech Government |
SIPO | German Security Police |
SIS | Secret Intelligence Service, British MI6 |
SOA | Special Operations Australia |
SO | Special Operations Branch, OSS |
SOE | Special Operations Executive (British) |
Sorel | Slovakia |
SOU | Ship Observer Unit, OSS |
"The Spider" | Man of Moorish extraction who passed mail to Lisbon, Portugal for OSS Bern, Switzerland |
Spinster | Code name for an important source on France in Geneva, Switzerland |
Spirit | Geneva, Switzerland |
SPOC | G-3 Special Project Operations Center; a joint British-American organization in Algiers established to conduct operations in France |
SR | The intelligence section of the French professional secret service, the Deuieme Bureau; separate from the Gaullist BCRA |
SS | Sicherheitsdienst, Reich Security Service |
SSI | Romanian Special Service of Information |
SSS | Security Services Section, OSS SI tactical intelligence teams attached to the 7th Army's Force 163 and under the direct supervision and control of the Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2, Force 163 |
SSU | Strategic Services Unit, predecessor of the CIA |
S&T | Schools and Training, OSS |
Stallion | OSS Agent in Lebanon and Syria |
Stork | Gerhard Van Arkel |
Squirrel | OSS Agent in Syria |
Sussex Mission | Combined OSS-MI6-French operations in France |
SWPA | South West Pacific Area |
Ted | Eduard Schulte |
Teton | OSS Agent in the Belgian Congo |
T-Forces | Target-Forces developed under SHAEF G-2 for the exploitation of enemy material and documents |
Toledo | Indicator for messages dealing with chemical and biological warfare intelligence |
Tompus | Baron Anthony Radvanssky |
Top | Zurich, Switzerland |
UHVR | Ukrainian Supreme Liberation Council |
Uncolored | Signifies Denmark in Kappa messages |
UNRRA | United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency |
USFETO | United States Forces European Theater of Operations |
USTRAVIC | Indicator for and recipient of many OSS messages in London |
Varlin Mission | London SI/Labor Desk mission to France in 1944 |
Vessel | Indicator for a series of reports from a source (now regarded as probably spurious) in the Vatican |
Waldo | Signifies a German consul in Kappa messages |
Wally | Vaclav Hradecky, Czech radio operator who assisted the OSS in Operation Sunrise |
WD | War Department, US |
Werewolves | Nazi organization trained to wage guerilla warfare after the defeat of German military forces |
Wood, George | Fritz Kolbe |
Wood Traffic | Material received from George Wood and messages generated by it |
WRB | War Refugee Board |
X-2 | Counter Intelligence Division, OSS |
Zigzag | US source, former member of Abwehr IIIF in Berlin, identified former Nazis for US |
Zulu | The British |
105 | Col. David K. E. Bruce |
106 | Col. G. Edward Buxton |
109 | William J. Donovan |
110 | Allen W. Dulles |
154 | Whitney H. Separdson |
284 | Max Shoop |
300 | Col. Ellery Hungtington |
304 | George Pratt |
305 | Arthur Goldberg |
334 | William A. Eddy |
399 | Gerhard Van Arkel |
452 | Robert D. Murphy |
476 | Gero von Schulze Gaevernitz |
488 | Dr. Carl Jung |
511 | Swiss Intelligence Service |
512 | Hans Bernd Gisevius |
518 | Marcel Pilet-Golaz |
520 | Brig. Gen. Bernwell Legge |
521 | British intelligence in Switzerland |
523 | Henry Hyde |
621 | Head of British SIS in Switzerland |
643 | Eduard Schulte |
644 | Thomas H. McKittrick |
645 | British SOE in Switzerland |
659 | Admiral Wilhelm Canaris |
660 | Adriano Olivetti |
674 | Fritz Kolbe (George Wood), also assigned number 805 |
678 | Gerald Mayer |
760 | Col. Edward J. F. Glavin |
805 | Fritz Kolbe (George Wood); also assigned number 674 |
827 | Professor Paul Scherrer |
6th AG Detachment | OSS unit attached to the 6th Army Group |
Detachment 101 | OSS unit in Burma |
SF Detachment 10 | Attached to the 1st Army |
SF Detachment 11 | Attached to the 3rd Army |
SF Detachment 12 | Attached to the 12th Army Group |
SF Detachment 13 | Attached to the 9th Army |
31st SCI Unit | Served in France beginning with the Normandy landings |
69th SCI Unit | Served in France beginning with the Normandy landings |
2677 Regiment | OSS Mediterranean Command |
2677 Regiment | Company A, OG Operations |
2677 Regiment | Company B, French Operations |
2677 Regiment | Company C, Balkan Operations |
2677 Regiment | Company D, Italian Operations |
Central Intelligence Agency Selected Documents, 1941-1947
This artificially created series of "withdrawn-withdrawn" material was created by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) consists of approximately 6,100 pages of records created or received by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), primarily during the 1942-1945 period. These documents had been withdrawn from the OSS records when major bodies of OSS records were transferred to NARA in the 1970s and 1980s. The security-classified withdrawn records were transferred by the CIA to NARA in 1997 and 400,000 pages of these withdrawn records were declassified and released in late June 2000.
These 6,100 pages are a part of a collection of documents that had been previously withdrawn from the withdrawn OSS records; thus their title "withdrawn-withdrawn" materials. A high proportion of the records consists of British intelligence records given to OSS. The records contain a small set of British decodes (in translation) of SD messages sent in code by wireless telegraphy from Rome to Berlin (and vice versa) during the late summer and fall of 1943. They provide information on the transfer of Italian Jews to Auschwitz and the transportation of 50 kilograms of gold that the Nazis had extracted from the Jewish community in Rome. Another set of British records consists of excerpts of secretly tape-recorded conversations among German POWs. Still other British records contain summaries of interrogations of captured SS and police officers that had served in Nazi-occupied countries. The records also contain many debriefings of individuals who escaped Germany or German-occupied territories.
Also included in among the records are numerous Safehaven Program reports dealing with looted and other assets. Copies of most, if not all, of these Safehaven reports were declassified in 1975 and form part of the Formerly Security Classified Reports ("XL" Series, Entry 19 of RG 226). The records are arranged by a document number and a complete document listing is included in the front of each box. This document list provides the box number and entry (series) number from whence the document had been originally withdrawn. Boxes 1-8. Two sets of these boxes are held in the records hold area of the textual research room (Room 2000). A partial listing of the documents is provided below.
Box # | Subjects of Documents |
1 | Alois Miedl, [looted art] 1945 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-Austria and Germany, 1943 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-Germany, 1943 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-The Netherlands, two documents, 1943 Reinhard Heydrich's death, two documents, 1943 [Heydrich was head of the Reich Security Service, Deputy Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia, and administrator of the concentration camps] Intelligence report regarding the Sicherheitsdienst [SS; Security Service], 1943 CSDIC [Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Center] interrogation reports regarding conversations among captured Germans, numerous separate documents/transcriptions, 1945 Interrogation reports regarding concentration camps, 1944 Mail intercept report regarding trading with the enemy, 1944 Office of Naval Intelligence report on Portugal, 1942 Reports on treatment of Jews, 1942 Rumania, 1944 Sabotage activities in occupied countries, 1943 Safehaven report, American Embassy, London, 1945 Safehaven report 57 (looted art), American Embassy, London, 1945 G-2 Intelligence reports, Italy, 1944? |
2 | Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-Austria, six documents, 1943 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-Czechoslovakia, two documents, 1943 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-France, two documents, 1943 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-Germany, 1943 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-Germany, Italy, Portugal, 1943 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-Poland, two documents, 1944 Survey of Foreign Experts Country File-Poland and Germany, 1944 German occupation in France, 1941 German occupation in Belgium, 1941 Hungarian suspects, 1944 Hungary, Rumania, 1942 Greek resistance, guerilla activities, and atrocities, 1943 U.S. Army intelligence report on Nazis in Munich, Germany, 1946 Intelligence report regarding Poland, 1942 State Department interrogation of Fritz Kolbe, 1945 Interrogation report (XL 11164) regarding Sachsenhausen [concentration camp], 1945 Interrogation report (XL 11169) regarding personalities, e.g., Hermann Goering, 1945 Italy-war criminals, 1944 Looted art, 1945 Nazi authorities confiscate total holdings of Belgian church, 1941 Partisan trial in Slovenia, 1942? Partisans in Serbia, 1944 Portugal-Economic, 1943 Portuguese firms, three documents, 1944 Intelligence report on occupation of Belgium, two documents- pp. 12-17 & 18-22; not dated; concerns General Alexander Freiherr von Falkenhausen [from 1940 to 1944 he was assigned the military command of Belgium and northern France], Heinrich Mueller [Chief of the Gestapo, Reinhard Heydrich, Ernst Kaltenbrunner [chief of the SD] Preparations for going underground, SD, 1944 Proposal for OSS Unit in Germany, 1944 Report of executions and deaths in Belgrade, Yugoslavia,1942 Report concerning Mauthhausen and Ebensee [concentration camps in Austria] Reports on Germany, Denmark, Norway, and the Netherlands, 1942 Reports from OSS Stockholm, Sweden, 1943 Safehaven reports, three reports, two from Bern, Switzerland, 1945, XL 14842, XL 13933 Safehaven reports 141 (XL 24341), 144 (XL 24342), American Embassy, Bern, Switzerland,1945 Safehaven reports 228 (XL 10464), 320 (XL 22043), 81 (XL 10472) American Embassy, London; 252 (XL 23130), 257 (XL 22808), American Embassy, Madrid, Spain Situation in Greece, 1943 Situation in Serbia, 1942 Situation in Yugoslavia, two documents, 1942, 1944 Slovenia and Italy, 1942 SS Medical experiment (XL 18751), 1945 SS, SD, and other personalities (XL 7897), 1945 War criminals to be repatriated from Spain to Germany, 1945 |
3 | Abwehr [German military intelligence] in Denmark, 1945 Alois Miedl, two documents, [looted art] 1945 Conditions at the Sultijelma mines, Norway, 1943 Germans in Spain, 1945 Interrogation report on Auschwitz, 1945 JICA intelligence report (XL 14991) regarding Italian war crimes, 1945 Report (XL 6651) regarding Jean Piere Radenac, looted art, 1945 List of reprisals and executions in Crete during August 1944, 1944 Report on Bulgaria and Rumania, 1944? Safehaven report XL6597, American Embassy, Lisbon, Portugal 1945 Safehaven reports 121, 130, 132-140 (XL#s 6796, 6598, 6606, 6604, 6594, 6486, 6605, 6602, 6488, 6595, 6658), American Embassy, London, 1945 Safehaven reports 142, 144, 147, 148, 285, 86 (XL#s 6655, 6616, 6797, 6798, 14436, 6659), American Embassy, London, 1945 Safehaven reports 230 (XL 12575), 263 (XL 12696), American Embassy, London, 1945 Safehaven report XL 6487, American Embassy, El Salvador, 1945 Seizure and confiscation of Jewish property, 1944 SS in Denmark, 1945 Weekly Reviews-Albania, Hungary, Greece, Crete, Bulgaria, Rumania, Yugoslavia, 1944 Who's Who in Germany (XL 13545), 1945 |
4 | Condition of Jews in Europe, 1943 Conditions in German prisons, two documents, 1944 Italian Gold, 1943 Removal of Italian Jews to Germany, 1943 Action against Jews in Italy, 1943 Concentration camp at Oswiecim, 1942 Greek and German business transactions, 1944 Intelligence and interrogation reports on the Balkans, 1944 Intelligence reports on Hungarian personalities, 1944 Intelligence reports regarding German agents in Greece, 1944 Intelligence reports regarding German police and Hungarian intelligence, Hungary, 1944 CSDIC interrogation reports regarding conversations among captured Germans, numerous separate documents/transcriptions, 1945 Interrogation report giving names of SD members, 1944 Interrogation report giving names of Gestapo members, 1944 Interrogation report regarding SS members, 1945 Interrogation report regarding Natzweiler concentration camp, 1945 Interrogation report regarding the confiscation of Jewish property, 1945 Interrogation report regarding public health, euthanasia, 1945 Interrogation report regarding German wireless intercepts and SD activities, 1945 Interrogation reports regarding Dachau concentration camp, 1945 Nazi collaborators in Romania, 1944 Nazi war criminals and German Cultural Section, 1945 Nazification of Germany's medical profession, 1944 News stories from Poland and France, 1944 ORION Activities, two documents; looted art, German art personnel, memorandum from Paul Rosenberg, 1945 Conditions in Casablanca and Treatment of Jews in Tunis, 1943 Reports on Rudolf Knaus; includes information on SS General Johannes Bernhard and stolen funds, 1946 Safehaven reports #s 27, 41, American Embassy, London, 1943-1944 Safehaven developments in Tangier, American Embassy, Tangier, 1945 Safehaven report, 1945 Target addresses of German police in France, 1944 Target addresses of German police in Germany, numerous lists, 1945 War crimes material, 1945 Weekly Review regarding resistance activities, 1943 |
5 | Collaboration activities in the Netherlands, 1946 Intelligence report regarding the murder of Jews, 1944 Interrogation report regarding SS officer Hans Helmut Wolff, Werewolf, 1945 British interrogation report regarding Gestapo personnel, Denmark, 1945 Interrogation report regarding Yugoslavia, 1944 Interrogation report on Kurt Pomme, German police officer, 1946 SSU Report regarding Kaltenbrunner's claims he worked for peace through Allen Dulles [head of OSS operations in Switzerland], 1946 Letter concerning art stolen by Benito Mussolini and Hermann Goering, 1946(?) Letter/attached report on stolen art from Goering Collection, 1946 Library belonging to Mr. Nikolajevsky; looted art, 1947 Looted art, 1946 Mauthausen trial, three documents, 1946 Max Winkler and Dr. Wener Schuber and stolen assets, 1946 Nuremberg trial, 1946 ORION Files, 1947 ORION Project, looted art, 1947 Polish Collaborators, 1944 PWIS consolidated report on the Reichkommissariat for occupied Norway, 1946 Reports prepared by the OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit, 1946 Hjalmar Schacht [German minister without Portfolio, 1937-1944] plan to exchange Jews for foreign currency, 1946 Sentences for war criminals, 1946 SIPO and SD, 1945 Stolen art from Stersing by Benito Mussolini and Hermann Goering, 1946 Transfer of files of the OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit, 1947 Treatment of Danes by Germans and Danish resistance, 1944 War crimes, 1945 War criminal-Durcansy, 1945 War criminal film, 1945 |
6 | Coordination of information relative to German art looting, two documents, 1945 Correspondence relating to OSS relation with the Roberts Commission, four documents, 1943-1944 CSDIC interrogation report regarding Gruppe IV/E activities in Greece, 1946 CSDIC interrogation reports regarding conversations among captured Germans, numerous separate documents/transcriptions, 1945 CSDIC report on the organization and history of Amt III (SD), 1946 CSDIC report on the organization of Amt IV B (Gestapo), 1946 German atrocities against Jews, 1946 Subversive groups in post-war Germany, 1946 Intelligence summary regarding Werewolf movement, 1946 Interrogation report regarding Geheime Feldpolizei [Secret Field Police assigned to the Abwehr for security duty in the armed forces. By 1942 its duties had been taken over by the SD], 1945 Interrogation report regarding German police and military government organization, 1945 British interrogation of Norwegians, 1945 Interrogation report regarding looted assets, 1945 Interrogation report regarding Joseph Goebbels factory in Switzerland British interrogation of fleeing Norwegians, 1945 Interrogation report of Wilhelm Pahl regarding German financial activities, 1946 Interrogation report on Ludwig Haarmann regarding SD personalities, Werevolves, 1945 Interrogation report on SS Officer Dollmann concerning Hitler, Himmler, Mueller, 1945 Lists of SD and SS personnel in France, 1946 Looted art, 2 documents, 1945 Michel Olian, looted assets, 1946 ORION Progress Report for August 1945 Prisoners of war in Galicia [Poland] and killing of Jews by Ukranian police, 1943 British report on recovered stolen art, 1945 Report from South American consular office in Prague on condition in Bohemia, 1942 Report in trip to Italy regarding ORION and looted art, 1945 SIPO and SD, 1945 SS Reinhard Heydrich, 1946 SS Sonderkommando [Special Detachment], Copenhagen, Denmark, 1946 |
7 | Exchange of Hungarian Jews for trucks, etc., 1944 CSDIC interrogation report regarding Posen, Germany SD organization and personalities, 1944 CSDIC interrogation report regarding anti-partisan activities, 1945 British intelligence report on North Norway, 1944 Interrogation report regarding German police personnel and organization in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, 1945 CSDIC interrogation reports regarding conversations among captured Germans, numerous separate documents/transcriptions, 1945 Interrogation report regarding Yugoslavia, two documents, 1944 Interrogation report regarding the execution of civilians, 1944 Interrogation report regarding actions taken against civilians, 1944 Interrogation report regarding atrocities, 1944 Interrogation report regarding the shooting of British prisoners, 1944 Interrogation report regarding Gestapo, war criminals, personalities list, 1945 Interrogation report regarding the Gestapo, 1945 Interrogation report regarding the executions of Belgians, 1945 Interrogation report regarding the interrogation and execution of French saboteurs, 1944 Interrogation report regarding the Abwehr, 1946 Interrogation report on two Jewish refugees, 1944 Interrogation report on Dragos Kostic and Bosko Ribar regarding Yugoslavia, 1944 Interview with Helmut Werner Naurer regarding German assets, 1946 Interview with someone from Mauthausen regarding Italy, atrocities, 1945 List of German intelligence personnel, 14 lists, 1945 Looted art, 6 documents, 1945 Report on the further interrogation of Siegfried Schroeder, atrocities, 1944 Safehaven investigation, 1945 Safehaven report, American Embassy, Bern, Switzerland, 1946 Safehaven report regarding illegal acquisition of German assets, 1946 Situation in France, Belgium, and the Netherlands; includes information on deportation of Jews from the Netherlands, 1943 Watch List, looted art, 1945 |
8 | X-2 Watch List, numerous documents, 1945 Auschwitz, Dachau, Buchenwald [concentration camps], 1945 Balkan commercial companies serving as covers for German espionage, 1945 British Middle East Censorship Intercepts, 1944 Buchenwald, two separate documents, 1945 Condition of Jews in Europe, 1944 Conditions in concentration camps, 1945 CSDIC interrogation report regarding the organization of German intelligence, 1945 German seizure of works of art, Province of Perugia, Italy, 1945 Interrogation report regarding Greek, German, and Italian personalities, 1944 Interrogation report regarding SD organization and personnel in Liege, Belgium, 1944 Jewish refugees-Immigration to Palestine, 1944 Middle East Diamond summery, two documents, 1944 Owner of German retail stores, 1944 Owner of German specialty stores, two documents, 1944 Palestine censorship intercepts; rescue of Jews, 1944 Palestine diamond trade, 1944 Palestine News, four documents; includes information on Jews in Hungary and the massacre of Jews there, 1944-1945 Palestine News Summary; includes information on relief and rescue of Jews, 1944 Palestine Political Summary, two documents, 1944 Palestine Trade, nine documents, 1944 PIC Political Gazetteer of Yugoslavia, two documents, 1943 Refugee and relief problems, Yugoslavia, 1944 Relief and rescue work for Jewish refugees, 1944 Report on atrocities in Greece, n.d. Rescue work for Jewish refugees, 1944 War crimes, 1945 Weekly Review of Foreign Press, numerous documents, 1945 |