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  2. Reinhard Gehlen (3 April 1902 – 8 June 1979) was a German career intelligence officer who served the Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany, the U.S. intelligence community, and the NATO-affiliated Federal Republic of Germany during the Cold War.

  3. The first full edition of the Memoirs of General Reinhard Gehlen 1942-1971, wartime Chief of German Intelligence Operations in Russia and the Balkans, who in 1944, after secreting staff and archives in the mountains of Bavaria delivered his organisation as a going concern to the Americans.

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    • Reinhard Gehlen
  4. Whatever was thought of Gehlen — and he had many enemies — he was by this time quite well known throughout the world, so it is not surprising that his retirement has occasioned no less than four books. The first to appear, in May 1969, was the East German effort Nicht Laenger Geheim.

  5. Eleven years after Reinhard Gehlen, the head of Adolf Hitler’s Eastern Front military intelligence unit, emerged from hiding to hand himself over to US forces, he had, with the help of the American CIA, created a legend for himself as founder and first president of the West German Secret Service.

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  6. Commenting on the release of the Gehlen report, author Christopher Simpson, who wrote a book called Blowback: America’s Recruitment of Nazi’s and Its Effects on the Cold War, was told the following by an unnamed CIA source: “The Agency loved Gehlen because he fed us what we wanted to hear. We used his stuff constantly, and we fed it to ...

    • How many books did Gehlen write?1
    • How many books did Gehlen write?2
    • How many books did Gehlen write?3
    • How many books did Gehlen write?4
    • How many books did Gehlen write?5
  7. Nov 9, 2020 · In 1945, Reinhard Gehlen cut a deal with the CIA to head the Gehlen Organization, a group of ex-Nazi spies that infiltrated the Soviets for the U.S. After getting away with secretly plotting to assassinate Hitler in 1944, he remained the Führer's most-trusted spy until just before Germany's defeat.

  8. Jan 1, 1972 · Germany’s Master Spy traces his early days as Heinz Guderian’s chief of Intelligence on the Eastern Front through his successful organization of a military spy system in the Soviet Union, to his post-war years with the CIA and the founding of West Germany’s own intelligence system.

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