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Albert Speer may ultimately be best remembered as the only high German wartime official to be “rehabilitated” during his lifetime and even profit handsomely from his once-powerful position.
Il giorno successivo, Albert Einstein scrive una lettera indignata a Shepard Rifkin, un rappresentante del gruppo Lehi di base a New York che di recente lo aveva contattato nella speranza di raccogliere la sua approvazione e il suo supporto verso le azioni del gruppo.
In 1999 Albert Einstein was named Time Magazine’s person of the 20th century.[1] This article will discuss whether Einstein deserved this award.
come una fontana») e decisa copiona delle «confessioni» della «SS di Dio» Kurt Gerstein, ad avallare la favola della «terra tremante» riportandoci le pennellate di Albert Hartl, ex dirigente «pentito» del RSHA Reichssicherheitshauptamt
Ciò è dimostrato dal dialogo, che segue, intercorso fra il procuratore americano Jackson e Albert Speer, architetto personale del Cancelliere Adolf Hitler e dal 1942 Reichsminister für Bewaffnung und Munition (ministro degli armamenti), durante l'
Hitler is seen with his party comrades, friends and staff, including Himmler, Goebbels, Heydrich, Bormann, his Doctor Theo Morell, and Albert Speer.
They got far enough to realize that the separation of uranium isotopes would require an enormous industrial effort, and they concluded that such a major industrial effort was not practicable in wartime Germany.[17]
On June 4, 1942, senior German physicists met with Albert Speer, the minister of supply
The International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg is disposed of very summarily by the author, who relies almost entirely on IMT documents and the statements of Albert Speer. Virtually everything written or said by Speer is, to put it mildly, open to question.
Avoids the guilt-ridden apologetics, responsibility-shiftings, and recriminations characteristic of Albert Speer’s memoirs; frankly pro-Hitler.
Hitler’s Personal Securityby Peter Hoffman. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1979. 321pp. $15.00.
Albert Speer commented on the raid in his book, Inside the Third Reich, “the disruption of temporarily having to shift 7,000 construction workers to the Moehne and Eder repairs was offset by the failure of the Allies to follow up with additional (conventional) raids during the dams’ reconstruction