| The
New Hampshire Gazette
Vol.
248, No. 3
November
7, 2003
“Bush
- Nazi Dealings Continued Until 1951” - Federal
Documents
By John Buchanan and Stacey
Michael

Prescott
Bush
After
the seizures in late 1942 of five U.S. enterprises he
managed on behalf of Nazi industrialist Fritz Thyssen,
Prescott Bush, the grandfather of President George W.
Bush, failed to divest himself of more than a dozen
"enemy national" relationships that
continued until as late as 1951, newly-discovered U.S.
government documents reveal.
Furthermore, the records show that Bush and his
colleagues routinely attempted to conceal their
activities from government investigators.
Bush's partners in the secret web of Thyssen-controlled
ventures included former New York Governor W. Averell
Harriman and his younger brother, E. Roland Harriman.
Their quarter-century of Nazi financial transactions,
from 1924-1951, were conducted by the New York private
banking firm, Brown Brothers Harriman.
The White House did not return phone calls seeking
comment.
Although the additional seizures under the Trading
with the Enemy Act did not take place until after the
war, documents from The National Archives and Library
of Congress confirm that Bush and his partners
continued their Nazi dealings unabated. These
activities included a financial relationship with the
German city of Hanover and several industrial
concerns. They went undetected by investigators until
after World War Two.
At the same time Bush and the Harrimans were profiting
from their Nazi partnerships, W. Averell Harriman was
serving as President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's
personal emissary to the United Kingdom during the
toughest years of the war. On October 28, 1942, the
same day two key Bush-Harriman-run businesses were
being seized by the U.S. government, Harriman was
meeting in London with Field Marshall Smuts to discuss
the war effort.
Denial and Deceit
While Harriman was concealing his Nazi relationships
from his government colleagues, Cornelius Livense, the
top executive of the interlocking German concerns held
under the corporate umbrella of Union Banking
Corporation (UBC), repeatedly tried to mislead
investigators, and was sometimes supported in his
subterfuge by Brown Brothers Harriman.
All of the assets of UBC and its related businesses
belonged to Thyssen-controlled enterprises, including
his Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart in Rotterdam, the
documents state.
Nevertheless, Livense, president of UBC, claimed to
have no knowledge of such a relationship.
"Strangely enough, (Livense) claims he does not
know the actual ownership of the company," states
a government report.
H.D Pennington, manager of Brown Brothers Harriman and
a director of UBC "for many years," also
lied to investigators about the secret and
well-concealed relationship with Thyssen's Dutch bank,
according to the documents.
Investigators later reported that the company was
"wholly owned" by Thyssen's Dutch bank.
Despite such ongoing subterfuge, U.S. investigators
were able to show that "a careful examination of
UBC's general ledger, cash books and journals from
1919 until the present date clearly establish that the
principal and practically only source of funds has
been Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart."
In yet another attempt to mislead investigators,
Livense said that $240,000 in banknotes in a safe
deposit box at Underwriters Trust Co. in New York had
been given to him by another UBC-Thyssen associate,
H.J. Kouwenhoven, managing director of Thyssen's Dutch
bank and a director of the August Thyssen Bank in
Berlin. August Thyssen was Fritz's father.
The government report shows that Livense first
neglected to report the $240,000, then claimed that it
had been given to him as a gift by Kouwenhoven.
However, by the time Livense filed a financial
disclosure with U.S. officials, he changed his story
again and reported the sum as a debt rather than a
cash holding.
In yet another attempt to deceive the governments of
both the U.S. and Canada, Livense and his partners
misreported the facts about the sale of a Canadian
Nazi front enterprise, La Cooperative Catholique des
Consommateurs de Combustible, which imported German
coal into Canada via the web of Thyssen-controlled
U.S. businesses.
"The Canadian authorities, however, were not
taken in by this maneuver," a U.S. government
report states. The coal company was later seized by
Canadian authorities.
After the war, a total of 18 additional Brown Brothers
Harriman and UBC-related client assets were seized
under The Trading with the Enemy Act, including
several that showed the continuation of a relationship
with the Thyssen family after the initial 1942
seizures.
The records also show that Bush and the Harrimans
conducted business after the war with related concerns
doing business in or moving assets into Switzerland,
Panama, Argentina and Brazil - all critical outposts
for the flight of Nazi capital after Germany's
surrender in 1945. Fritz Thyssen died in Argentina in
1951.
One of the final seizures, in October 1950, concerned
the U.S. assets of a Nazi baroness named Theresia
Maria Ida Beneditka Huberta Stanislava Martina von
Schwarzenberg, who also used two shorter aliases.
Brown Brothers Harriman, where Prescott Bush and the
Harrimans were partners, attempted to convince
government investigators that the baroness had been a
victim of Nazi persecution and therefore should be
allowed to maintain her assets.
"It appears, rather, that the subject was a
member of the Nazi party," government
investigators concluded.
At the same time the last Brown Brothers Harriman
client assets were seized, Prescott Bush announced his
Senate campaign that led to his election in 1952.
Investigation Investigated?
In 1943, six months after the seizure of UBC and its
related companies, a government investigator noted in
a Treasury Department memo dated April 8, 1943 that
the FBI had inquired about the status of any
investigation into Bush and the Harrimans.
"I gave 'a memorandum' which did not say anything
about the American officers of subject," the
investigator wrote. "(Another investigator)
wanted to know whether any specific action had been
taken by us with respect to them."
No further action beyond the initial seizures was ever
taken, and the newly-confirmed records went unseen by
the American people for six decades.
What Does It All Mean?
So why are the documents relevant today?
"The story of Prescott Bush and Brown Brothers
Harriman is an introduction to the real history of our
country," says L.A. art book publisher and
historian Edward Boswell. "It exposes the
money-making motives behind our foreign policies,
dating back a full century. The ability of Prescott
Bush and the Harrimans to bury their checkered pasts
also reveals a collusion between Wall Street and the
media that exists to this day."
Sheldon Drobny, a Chicago entrepreneur and
philanthropist who will soon launch a liberal talk
radio network, says the importance of the new
documents is that they prove a long pattern of Bush
family war profiteering that continues today via
George H.W. Bush's intimate relationship with the
Saudi royal family and the bin Ladens, conducted via
the super-secret Carlyle Group, whose senior advisers
include former U.S. Secretary of State James A. Baker
III.
In the post-9/11 world, Drobny finds the Bush-Saudi
connection deeply troubling. "Trading with the
enemy is trading with the enemy," he says.
"That's the relevance of the documents and what
they show."
Lawrence Lader, an abortion rights activist and the
author of more than 40 books, says "the relevance
lies with the fact that the sitting President of the
United States would lead the nation to war based on
lies and against the wishes of the rest of the
world." Lader and others draw comparisons between
President Bush's invasion of Iraq and Hitler's
occupation of Poland in 1939 - the event that sparked
World War Two.
However, others see an even larger significance.
"The discovery of the Bush-Nazi documents raises
new questions about the role of Prescott Bush and his
influential business partners in the secret emigration
of Nazi war criminals, which allowed them to escape
justice in Germany," says Bob Fertik, co-founder
of Democrats.com and an amateur 'Nazi hunter.'
"It also raises questions about the importance of
Nazi recruits to the CIA in its early years, in what
was called Operation Paperclip, and Prescott Bush's
role in that dark operation."
Fertik and others, including former Justice Department
Nazi war crimes prosecutor John Loftus, a
Constitutional attorney in Miami, and a former
Veterans Administration official, believe Prescott
Bush and the Harrimans should have been tried for
treason.
What Next?
Now, say Fertik and Loftus, there should be a
Congressional investigation into the Bush family's
Nazi past and its concealment from the American people
for 60 years.
"The American people have a right to know, in
detail, about this hidden chapter of our
history," says Loftus, author of The Secret War
Against the Jews. "That's the only way we can
understand it and deal with it."
For his part, Fertik is pessimistic that even a
Congressional investigation can thwart the war
profiteering of the present Bush White House.
"It's impossible to stop it," he says,
"when the worst war profiteers are George W. Bush
and Dick Cheney, who operate in secrecy behind the
vast powers of the White House."
---
John Buchanan is a journalist and magazine writer
based in Miami Beach. He can be reached by e-mail at
jtwg@bellsouth.net.
Stacey Michael is a New Orleans-based journalist and
the author of Religious Conceit. His most recent book
is Weapons of Mass Dysfunction: The Art of
"Faith-Based" Politics, due in early 2004.
He can be reached by email at staceymichael@religiousconceit.com.
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