Operation Grey Wolf: The Escape of Hitler to Argentina
Operation Grey Wolf: The Escape of Hitler to Argentina

We have been lied to about many things in history, but one of the most egregious and monumental lies that we've been told by our criminal, illegitimate federal government for almost 80 years now is that Adolph Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945 in the Führerbunker, in Berlin, Germany.

However, when you take a close look at the volumes of evidence that has surfaced ever since 1945 (a lot of which is contained in this film), what you discover is that Hitler, his wife Eva, and their daughter Uschi Hitler (yes, they had a daughter) escaped Germany long before the Soviet Army ever marched into Berlin.

Of course, he did.

Hitler had long known (since 1943, in fact) that Germany was destined to lose the war.

So, of course, he and many other top officials in the Nazi Party had made well-laid to fake their own deaths and flee Germany well before the Allies ever took [complete] control of Germany.

Of course, they had wisely made contingency plans to prepare for that eventuality.

After all, wouldn't you have done so, if you had been in Hitler's shoes?

After all, Hitler had plenty of looted gold, manpower, money, and a vast inventory of advanced military equipment at his disposal to make his getaway an easy thing to do.

He even had the Catholic Church at his disposal.

This well-made movie (an evidence-based docudrama, actually), which was made in 2008, will walk you through the last 17 years of Hitler's life after the end of WWII, all of which he spent hiding out in Argentina under the protection of the Juan Perón government.

Like Hitler, Juan Perón was a National Socialist (a Left-wing ideology, by the way).

So, he and Hitler blended nicely with one another.

What you'll really be astonished about when you learn the facts set out in this film is that the U.S. government knew about Hitler's presence in Argentina as early as 1945, when he first arrived there aboard a German U-boat.

In fact, the FBI was informed over and over again by eyewitnesses over the next ten years that Hitler was living [quite nicely] in Argentina, along with Martin Bormann as well as other Nazi war criminals.

However, for some reason, J.

Edgar Hoover ignored this information without ever investigating the reports (see https://vault.fbi.gov/adolf-hitler/adolf-hitler-part-01-of-04/view).

Hitler eventually died of natural causes (a heart attack) a full 17 years after the end of WWII at 3:00 PM on Feburary 13, 1962.

Two years prior to Hitler's death, his wife Eva and their daughter, Uschi, had fled Argentina after the Peron government had collapsed during a military coup.

Eva was seen alive as late as 2008, the year this film was made, still alive, but wheelchair bound, at the age of 96.

Another interesting thing that hardly anyone knows about Adolph Hitler is something I discovered doing some in-depth research of my own.

Hitler's father, Alois Hitler (born Alois Schicklgruber June 7, 1837 - Jan 7, 1903) was fathered illegitimately by the Baron Lionel Nathan de Rothschild, who lived November 22, 1808 until June 3, 1879.

That's right, folks, a Rothschild!

Hitler's grandmother, Maria Anna Schicklgruber, who was the half-niece of Hitler's father, and who was born April, 15 1795 and died January 6, 1847, actually worked in Baron Rothschild's Vienna, Austria home as a servant during 1836, which is the year Rothschild knocked her up (t'was a common practice for the elite to bang their house staff back then).

(see https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/first/k/kershaw-hitler.html) However, since Baron Rothschild never would publicly acknowledge his paternity of Alois, because he was an elite banking mogul and Maria was a lowly, unmarried, peasant wench Rothschild couldn't care less about, Hitler's father, Alois was forced to assume the name of a man who Maria later married, Johann Georg Hiedler.

However, when Alois went to have his name changed in order to gain paternal legitimacy, something that was important back then, the local authorities misspelled his new [intended] last name, which was "Heidler," as "Hitler." Crazy, right?

Well, instead of having that huge clerical mistake corrected, Alois continued to use the "Hitler" name for the rest of his life, even passing it on to all of his nine children, including to his now infamous son Adolph.

To me, this makes the Adolph [Freakin'] Hitler story one of the most deliciously ironic stories in all of human history.

For not only was Hitler's name not even "Hitler," the guy with the funny mustache who wasn't even a German; the guy who made all Germans prove that their ancestors were not Jews, was himself, in fact, a Jew.

That just makes me want to spit chocolate milk out my nose with laughter.