How a famous former Nazi officer became a hitman for Israel (2024)

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Otto Skorzeny was one of the most outstanding military men of the 20thcentury. His specialty was daring, guerrilla-style, commando raids. He was an unrepentant Nazi, a senior SS officer, who remained involved in right-wing causes his whole life. And now it’s emerged that he was also an agent and hitman for Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service.

The extraordinary story of Skorzeny’s work for Israel is documented for the first time in the latest edition of the magazine, Forward. The piece was written by Dan Raviv, a correspondent with CBS Radio News, and Yossi Melman, an Israeli author. Together the two men have written five books on Israeli intelligence operations.

“He was Adolf Hitler’s favorite military officer,” says Raviv.

Skorzeny was an Austrian, from an old distinguished but impoverished family, proud of its long military tradition. The 6-foot-4Skorzeny was a noted duellist, and ‘fencing’ left him with a massive scar across his face.

He was an enthusiastic Nazi, joining the Austrian equivalent of the Nazi party in 1931. When World War IIbroke out in 1939, Skorzeny volunteered for the SS, joining a unit called Leibstandarte, which had been set up as Hitler’s bodyguard. Ostensibly a military unit, it left a trail of burnedvillages, massacred civilians and murdered PoWs.

Skorzeny distinguished himself for his resourcefulness, daring and deception, and soon began his commando career.

His most famous exploit was perhaps the rescue of Italy’s Fascist leader, Benito Mussolini, from rebels in 1943. Skorzeny brought troops in silently by glider, landing near a mountaintop fortress, and overwhelming its defenders.

Otto Skorzeny after freeing Mussolini (in black) – 12th September, 1943

Wiki Commons /Toni Schneiders

For that Hitler personally awarded Skorzeny the Iron Cross. His action helped keep Fascist Italy fighting as Germany’s ally for another two years. The Fuhrer met with Skorzeny often, and in turn he clearly admired the dictator.

In the Battle of the Bulge, it was Skorzeny who led the German effort to send commandos behind the lines in captured US uniforms to sow confusion and sabotage key targets. Fighting in enemy uniform is a war crime, punishable by death. But Skorzeny managed to get himself acquitted by an Allied military tribunal after the war, in 1947. A year later, he escaped custody,allegedly helped by former fellow SS officers — dressed in stolen American uniforms.

Skorzeny made his way to Spain, where Fascist dictator, Francisco Franco, sheltered Nazi refugees.

He became a businessman —he was an engineer by trade. But Skorzeny was not content with that. It’s alleged he helped other Nazis escape to safety in Spain or Latin America. He also became involved in Egypt’s efforts to beef up its armed forces to confront Israel. He’s believed to have provided commando training to Egyptians and Palestinian refugees. One of his graduates is said to have been none other than Yasser Arafat.

Other Germans —scientists —were helping Egypt build up a rocket and missile program to strike Israel. This was the late 1950s, into the 1960s.

It was a nightmare for Israel, saysRaviv, “thinking that German Nazi scientists were working on that … And so the Mossad did everything it could to stop it, to intimidate the Germans. (They) sent them all kind of threatening letters; phone calls in the middle of the night, both in Germany and in Egypt.”

Skorzeny was involved with the scientists.

“We learned,” says Raviv, “from really impeccable sources,” that after considering killing Skorzeny, Mossad decided to try to recruit him instead.

“And that’s what they did,” adds Raviv, “in 1962.”

Skorzeny agreed to help Israel in exchange for being taken off Israel’s hit-list. He even turned down offers of money.

Simon Wiesenthal refused to take Skorzeny off his list of Nazis who should face justice for their crimes. But Mossad forged a letter from Wiesenthal and gave it to Skorzeny to try to persuadehim to help.

He agreed.

“They flew him to Israel,” says Raviv. “They tried to work on him a little bit. They took him to Yad Vashem, the famous Holocaust memorial and museum.”

But he showed no sign of remorse or guilt. Israeli intelligence analysed him and decided he had no moral compass.

But Skorzeny became an enthusiastic and cooperative agent for the Jewish State. He obtained and provided key intelligence on the scientists working for Egypt, including personal information and addresses. He mailed at least one letter bomb.

“Not only that,” says Raviv. “we have found out that he willingly participated in at least one assassination. In fact it was Skorzeny who pulled the trigger and killed one of the German scientists.”

Modern Israeli analysts, who have seen the original files on Skorzeny, cannot explain why he was such an enthusiastic agent, really helping the Israelis.

“I guess he thought it was adventure,” says Raviv, “and that Mossad is the best in the business, and somehow he enjoyed being involved with them.”

Mossad did take Skorzeny off their hit-list. In later life he got involved again in right-wing causes, founding a "consulting group,"that acted as a front for recruiting and training mercenaries to fight for right-wing regimes and military juntas from South Africa to Greece and Chile.

Skorzeny died peacefully in Madrid in 1975. At funeral ceremonies there and in Vienna, the Nazi hero was given the Hitler salute by former SS comrades and others.

One man at the funeral was none other than his now retired Mossad handler, Yosef Raanan —a fellow Austrian who lost much of his family to the Holocaust. He flew at his own expense to pay his respects to his former agent, SS Colonel Otto Skorzeny.

Former SS officers and others give the Nazi salute at Skorzeny's funeral ceremony in Vienna, 1975

Wiki Commons

From PRI's The World ©2016 PRI

How a famous former Nazi officer became a hitman for Israel (2024)

FAQs

How a famous former Nazi officer became a hitman for Israel? ›

Skorzeny

Skorzeny
Otto Johann Anton Skorzeny (12 June 1908 – 5 July 1975) was an Austrian-born German SS-Obersturmbannführer (lieutenant colonel) in the Waffen-SS during World War II.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Otto_Skorzeny
agreed to help Israel in exchange for being taken off Israel's hit-list. He even turned down offers of money. Simon Wiesenthal refused to take Skorzeny off his list of Nazis who should face justice for their crimes.

What did Otto Skorzeny do? ›

Hitler called Skorzeny to his headquarters in October 1944 to give him his orders in person. Skorzeny had led secret missions for Hitler before, including the rescue of Benito Mussolini, but this would be his largest and most complex.

Who was the tall Nazi officer? ›

After the invasion of Poland, Otto Skorzeny tried to join the Luftwaffe, but he was told he was too tall (6'4”), and at 31 years in 1939, he was already too old. Instead, he ended up joining the Waffen-SS and trained with the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, which was the Führer's personal bodyguard regiment.

Who was the soldier who saved Mussolini? ›

Otto Skorzeny (born 1908, Vienna—died July 5, 1975, Madrid) was a Nazi SS officer, who gained fame in 1943 for his daring rescue of Benito Mussolini from confinement at Campo Imperatore in the Abruzzi mountains where he had been imprisoned by Marshal Pietro Badoglio.

Is there a movie about Otto Skorzeny? ›

How good was Otto Skorzeny? ›

Skorzeny distinguished himself for his resourcefulness, daring and deception, and soon began his commando career. His most famous exploit was perhaps the rescue of Italy's Fascist leader, Benito Mussolini, from rebels in 1943.

Who was the most respected Nazi general? ›

Field Marshal Erwin Rommel: The “Desert Fox”

No German general was as famed among the Allies as Erwin Rommel. He was so well respected that Field Marshal Montgomery had to remind his own troops to stop speaking about Rommel in such favorable terms.

Who was the most decorated Nazi officer? ›

HANS-ULRICH RUDEL (1916-1982). The most highly decorated German serviceman of World War II. He was awarded the Knight's Cross with Golden Oak Leaves, Swords, and Diamonds. Photograph by Heinrich Hoffmann, c1940.

How tall was the tallest Nazi? ›

Nacken was the tallest soldier in the German Army during World War II at a height of seven feet three inches (2.21 m). He was employed as a giant Santa Claus and appeared on American television as a figure of high stature and in freak shows as the World's Tallest Man.

Who was the father of fascism? ›

As dictator of Italy and principal founder of fascism, Mussolini inspired and supported the international spread of fascist movements during the inter-war period. Mussolini was originally a socialist politician and a journalist at the Avanti!

Why did Italy switch sides in WWII? ›

Italy wanted to gain the territory of Turkey and Africa but they didn't get what they wanted at end of WWI. Also, they were unhappy with the treaty of Versailles, they thought that injustice had been done to them. So it joined the side of Japan and Germany to get its territories back.

What was Mussolini's nickname? ›

What was Mussolini's nickname? - Quora. His nickname was “Il Duce,” which means “The Leader” in Italian.

How many Germans went missing in ww2? ›

After German reunification, the records kept in the former German Democratic Republic (East Germany) became available to the WASt. The German Red Cross reported in 2005 that the records of the WASt showed total Wehrmacht losses to have been 4.3 million men (3.1 million dead and 1.2 million missing) in World War II.

Did Otto Skorzeny speak English? ›

His surname is of Polish origin, and Skorzeny's distant ancestors came from Skorzęcin in the Greater Poland region, eventually immigrating to East Prussia. In addition to his native German, he spoke excellent French and was proficient in English.

Who was the most ruthless German general? ›

According to the historian Timothy Snyder, "in all the theaters of the Second World War, few could compete in cruelty with Oskar Dirlewanger." He has also been described as the "most evil man in the SS" and as "perhaps the most sad*stic of all commanders of World War II."

How did Skorzeny rescue Mussolini? ›

He led an assault which reached the hotel by crashlanding gliders against the mountainside. Skorzeny reported: “Duce, the Führer has sent me as a token of his loyal friendship.” They flew out together in a tiny plane which had to take off by dropping 1,000 feet over a precipice.

Who was Hitler's favorite soldier? ›

Otto Skorzeny, one of the Mossad's most valuable assets, was a former lieutenant colonel in Nazi Germany's Waffen-SS and one of Adolf Hitler's favorites.

Who was the German soldier who refused firing squad? ›

Josef Schulz (1909/1910 – 20 July 1941), also spelled Joseph Schultz, was a German soldier of the 714th Infantry Division stationed in German-occupied Serbia during World War II. He died in 1941, allegedly executed after refusing to take part in an execution of partisans.

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