THIS MONTH OF MAY
60 YEARS AGO
On May 11, 1960, Nazi war
criminal Adolf Eichmann was nabbed by a team of Israeli spies after years on
the run in Argentina, ending a long manhunt. Ten days later, drugged and
dressed as a crew member of Israeli flag carrier El Al Airline, he was smuggled
to Israel by Mossad agents and put on trial.
The architect of the Nazis’
“Final Solution,” under which six million European Jews were exterminated
during World War II, Eichmann was tried and hanged in 1962, aged 56.
Here is an account, based on
AFP coverage from the time and since, of the top-secret operation, details of
which filtered out over the years.
‘War criminal arrested’
“The security services found
one of the great Nazi war criminals, Adolf Eichmann,” Prime Minister David
Ben-Gurion announced on May 23, adding that he was under arrest in Israel and
would face trial, in a masterstroke hailed by the Israeli press.
Eichmann’s name and his role as
architect of the Nazi killing machine had surfaced during the Nuremberg war
crimes trials which took place from 1945-1946.
He had been charged with
organizing and coordinating the deportation of Jews to death camps in Eastern
Europe.
The former chief of Section IV
B.4 of the Gestapo, responsible for the so-called “Jewish question,” had
vanished after the “Third Reich” collapsed in May 1945.
Before fleeing he had destroyed
documentary evidence of his activities and photos that could identify him.
The Argentinian lead
A manhunt was launched in 1945,
led by prominent figures in the Jewish community, including famous Nazi hunter
Simon Wiesenthal, who himself had escaped a concentration camp. The
breakthrough came in 1957 when the prosecutor of the German state of Hesse,
Fritz Bauer, tipped off the Israeli secret service that Eichmann was in hiding
in Argentina, under the false name of Ricardo Klement. It took the Mossad more
than two years to locate him, living in a home without running water and
electricity in the neighborhood of San Fernando on the outskirts of Buenos
Aires. During a March 1960 mission Mossad agents, using photos, formally
established that Ricardo Klement was the former lieutenant-colonel Eichmann.
Mossad spy Tzvi Aharoni, who
shadowed him and sat behind him on a bus said: “The temptation to lean forward
and strangle him was almost irresistible.
“But I knew he had to be put on
trial and not be assassinated for those he had killed,” he told AFP.
A thriller unfolds-
With Ben-Gurion’s green light,
the abduction was planned meticulously under the leadership of the Israeli
secret service chief, Isser Harel. The mission was given to Mossad operative
Rafi Eitan, who later recalled: “When I was given this mission, I knew that if
we succeeded, we would enter Israel’s history and the history of humanity.”
The abduction was set for May
11. A foreman at a Mercedes-Benz factory, Eichmann returned every evening to
his home on Garibaldi Street, taking the same bus at the same time.
Shortly after 8:05 pm he was
nabbed as he got off the bus. He put up some resistance, and called for help
before being dragged into a car and hidden under a blanket.
Eichmann shouted in German to
his abductors: “I have already accepted my fate.”
He was taken to a safe house
rented for the mission, where he was chained to a bed and blindfolded. In an
interview with AFP, Eitan later said: “I blindfolded him and checked his scars.
When I was sure it was him, I shook my colleague’s hand and told him: ‘We’ve
accomplished our mission.'”
On May 20, the Mossad squad
took him on a false Israeli passport on a special plane used by the Israeli
delegation which had come to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Argentina’s
independence.
‘The banality of evil’
On April 11, 1961 the captured
Eichmann, facing 15 charges, appeared for the first time in public in a glass
booth in a Jerusalem court, which would question some 111 witnesses.
“Wearing a black suit, a dark
tie over a white shirt and large horn-rimmed glasses, the accused, ashen, clean
shaven and tight-lipped, entered at 9:00 a.m. in the glass box reserved for
him,” AFP wrote.
Writer Haim Gouri said: “The
trial gave the survivors of the genocide, for the first time, the possibility
of being heard.”
Some 450 foreign journalists,
100 observers and diplomats attended the different hearings.
Among them was author and
concentration camp survivor Elie Wiesel and American Jewish philosopher Hannah
Arendt, who published in 1963 a major book on the subject, “Eichmann in
Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil”.
Eichmann was sentenced to death
on December 15 after being convicted on all counts, including crimes against
the Jewish people, crimes against humanity and war crimes.
On May 29, 1962, his appeal was
rejected by the Supreme Court.
He was hanged on May 31 at
midnight and his ashes were scattered at sea.
Via: The Times of Israel
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