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Myron Matvieyko
Myron Matvieyko had experience working in the German Abwehr as an intelligence agent during World War Two. During the war, when things started to turn against the Germans started working as a spy for the American, obtaining information and passing it on to the American. This led to Myron Matvieyko to develop a relationship with…
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The First Set of Projects
America originally tried doing something similar to an Azov movement, back in the late 1940’s but failed. It was code named Operation Belladonna and Operation Trident. CIA Documents: Belladona The first project was known as Operation Belladona. This operation was set to send Ukrainian refugees back into Soviet occupied Ukraine, in an effort to reestablish…
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The Deal with Ukrainians
By 1946, only a year after the end of World War Two, the American’s opinions on the Ukrainian partisan networks have change dramatically. They went from being viewed as unreliable and untrustworthy, to people they could be counted on to run spy operations. The Ukrainians were viewed as having a weird psychology, almost to that…
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America’s First Steps to War in Ukraine
It would be April 1946 when America launched their first intelligence operation to gather intelligence on whether Ukrainian Nationalist groups could be a viable source of manpower again Russia. They already had some information on where to look for support, thanks to Operation Belladona. It was just a matter of getting support. America was able…
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Ghost U-Boat
The Nazi would need a U-boat in order to escape the war, and not just any boat stealthy long-range U-boat. They had something long range, they just needed something stealthy. The Germans already had U-boats that could travel that far, the IXC/40. They just needed something stealth. U-boats were pretty stealthy, but they needed something…
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Operation Ruppert
In 1944-45 the Allies caught many POWs who were willing to surrender and work with the allies, for a better life. A secret mission was put together to explore what was driving all these foreigners to fight so hard inside Germany, and to also study how the Germans built up such a strong network of…
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Escaping the Soviets
As World War Two drug on, the red army advanced closer and closer to Berlin. Many people who help the Germans tried escaping to the west, and into the hands of the allies, where they though that they would be treated more fairly. Millions of refugees from Germany, Ukraine, Poland, Hungary, Romania, and the Baltic…
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Curiosity after D-day
Allied intelligences had suggested the German Nazis had built an extensive network of back collaborators across Europe. What they didn’t realize was how loyal they were to the Nazi cause. It wouldn’t be until days after the D-day landing that the allies learned how deep this alliance was. Many of the prisoners captured in those…
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Operation Long Jump
Breaking the enigma code had led to many discoveries of how the Germans were working, but the Germans did the same thing to the allies. They were able to break American Naval codes which led them to the discovery of a conference being held Tehran in mid-October 1943. At this conference Joseph Stalin, Winston Churchill,…
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Bunds Camp
Just like all other groups of immigrants in America, the Americans Germans liked to stay together in their own community. In 1937 enough German immigrants were able to pull their money together and buy themselves their own recreation area in Andover New Jersey. The Germans built a meeting hall, and that same year Camp Nordland…