Audio from Truth Juice Bristol http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kprZtnQOb_8
Anticipating the defeat of the Third Reich, Reichsleiter Martin Bormann set up 750 corporations in neutral countries, primed as vehicles to receive the liquid wealth of Germany in addition to patents and other proprietary industrial information. An organizational genius and the real power behind Hitler, Bormann, known as the "Brown Eminence", successfully fled Europe for South America and administered a "Reich in Exile" in the years following the war. With remnants of the SS as an enforcement arm, former Gestapo chief General Heinrich Mueller as security director, the 750 corporations as a base of economic power and the willing silence and cooperation of the Western Allies, Bormann guided his organization to a position of consummate power. One banker quoted by Manning termed the Bormann Organization, the "worlds most important accumulation of money power under one control in history". Controlling Germanys major corporations, the Federal Republic itself and much of Latin America, the Bormann Organization also maintained a formidable circle of influence in the United States. Paul Manning has written the definitive text on the Bormann Organization. http://spitfirelist.com/books/martin-bormann-nazi-in-exile/ Having plundered, pooled and secreted away the liquid wealth of Europe, the network was in excellent position to realize the von Clausewitz gambit of the post-war, explained below. Beyond that, the Bormann capital network is more than just the fruit of World War II plunder. The organizationâs vast wealth derives from corpoÂrate power and the business and political brokers that administer that influence. Heavily invested in major corporations (especially American âblue chipâ corporations) the group can exert great presÂsure with little effort. Of course, when that doesnât work, the Underground Reich will not hesitate to use deadly force. The end of battle in 1945 had signalled the start of a new kind of war  a post-war. Germanyâs classical military theorist, von Clausewitz, is famous for having declared that âwar is the continuation of diplomacy by other means.â In dealing with a Germany which had gone to school with von Clausewitz for generations, we knew that, conversely, a post-war is the continuation of war by other means. Since Bismarck, wars and post-wars have formed a continuous series, changing the quality of the events only slightly from year to year, with no such thing as a clear distinction between heat of battle and calm of peace. This post-war of the German occupation was different from the âcold warâ between the United States and Russia, which broke out at about the same time. The latter complicated the diagnosis, like a man getÂting typhoid fever and pneumonia at the same time. . . .