The FBI tracked Hitler because Stalin insisted he escaped to Argentina, and the agency sought to confirm his death or capture him.
In 2009, DNA tests on a skull fragment believed to be Hitler's revealed it belonged to a woman under 40, casting doubt on the official narrative of his death.
Hitler and Eva Braun reportedly escaped via a secret tunnel to the Berlin subway, boarded a Junkers JU-52 plane, and flew to Denmark, then Spain, before boarding a submarine to Argentina.
Argentina, under President Juan Perón, issued fake passports, ignored suspicious shipments, and provided safe havens for Nazis, including a secret Nazi enclave in Patagonia.
Martin Bormann was Hitler's closest advisor. Operation Eagle Flight was a plan to move Nazi wealth and assets out of Germany through front companies and Swiss banks, ensuring the survival of the Nazi regime even after defeat.
In 2022, researchers found a modified German submarine off Argentina's coast, corroborating eyewitness accounts and naval records of Nazi U-boats operating there after the war.
The Vatican, through Bishop Alois Hudal, provided documentation and safe passage for high-ranking Nazis. The Red Cross also facilitated escapes through its networks across Europe.
The CIA and FBI recruited thousands of Nazi war criminals, destroyed evidence, and created new identities for them, allowing them to live in the U.S. under protection during the Cold War.
Operation Paperclip brought over 1,600 Nazi scientists, including Wernher von Braun, to the U.S. to work on rocket technology and space exploration, despite their war crimes.
The CIA, led by Allen Dulles, actively recruited Nazis as Cold War spies, helping them evade justice and providing them with new identities and protection in the U.S.
For decades, a piece of his skull sat in a Russian archive - our most decisive proof that the most evil man of the 20th century died in 1945. When scientists finally tested the bone in 2009, they discovered it belonged to a woman under 40. The evidence we trusted for over 60 years was fake.
Stalin insisted the dictator escaped to Argentina. The FBI conducted their longest manhunt ever looking for him. Recently, researchers found a military submarine deliberately hidden off Argentina's coast. When asked to investigate, authorities said no. They're still saying no.
The truth remains buried in sealed files across three continents. But the bigger question isn't whether he escaped - it's who helped him. Because if history's greatest monster survived, he didn't do it alone. He was protected by a network that reached from Berlin to the Vatican to Argentina -- to Washington D.C.