Schiessl's dissertation
Alleged Nazi Collaborators is based on Schiessl's 2009 doctoral dissertation:
Besides his advisor, John J. Bukowczyk, the other members of Schiessl's dissertation committee were Melvin Small, Brad Roth, and Andrew Port. None list the Holocaust as a field of study.
Cues
Bukowczyk, Schiessl's advisor, focused on American immigration and ethnic history, primarily Polish. The issue of war criminals coming to the U.S., particularly in light of their alleged concentration among a narrow group of nationalities: Estonians, Latvians, Lithuanians, Ukrainians, would generally fall within his area of study. What would be dissertation's focus of analysis?
While historical facts are objective, historical accounts are written from a point of view. Several passages in the summary stand out as potential red flags.
Schiessl cites Alan A. Ryan, Jr.'s Quiet Neighbors for the 10,000:
[Ryan] based the number of 10,000 on the assumption that of the nearly 400,000 immigrants under the DP Acts about 2.5 percent had taken part in persecution during the Nazi era.1
Math, "2.5% of 400,000," obscures Ryan's true estimate — 40,000 — and its implications. Ryan halved his estimate, then halved it again to avoid "being hysterical on this subject."2
If a quarter of those 400,000 were adult males, then Ryan actually believed that 40% of male immigrants under the Acts were war criminals, whereas even the OSI's own review notes Ryan's 10,000 "seems high" but "has enduring significance, however, because it has been widely reported"3 — as here.
Schiessl does touch on the list which Wiesenthal handed to U.S. authorities in 1973.4 In the case of Latvians, this was an amalgam of names of former Latvian officers in the Displaced Persons (DP) camps who had "escaped to Germany," per «-1«glob0|en/accusers/level-1949-wiesenthal-list.ssi»-1»
">Wiesenthal's list published in 1949 in Aufbau, and names appearing in the KGB propaganda booklet Daugavas Vanagi — Who are They?, published in Latvian in 1962, published in English and German in 1963 and circulated in the West. Daugavas Vanagi — Who are They? was designed to discredit American Latvian émigré leadership by its naming of names, eventually verified to be propaganda by its author, Paulis Ducmanis. The Soviets similarly attacked the Canadian Ukrainian community with its The SS Werewolves (1982).
Daugavas Vanagi — Who are They? became the "Latvian Nazi"-hunter's bible, even introduced into evidence with other manufactured Soviet materials at deportation trials of accused collaborators. Infusion of propaganda into the hunt for Nazis turned the U.S. Department of Justice into a fifth column operating against the Baltic and Ukrainian ethnic communities — whose staunchly anti-Communist leadership the Kremlin sought to smear and discredit.
Indeed, U.S. authorities were unaware or ignored that Khrushchev ordered the Latvian KGB to set up a dedicated counter-intelligence unit, Пятое управление КГБ СССР, Fifth Directorate of the KGB of the USSR, to target the émigré community, partnering with the Liaison Committee for the Cultural Relations with Countrymen Abroad (LCCR) to disseminate anti-Latvian propaganda to the West.5
Those such as Hāzners were vetted while still abroad. Schiessl's allegation of willful ignorance lends credence to Nazis-among-us conspiracy theorists.
At the start of the hunt for Nazis, the CIA, for example, was alleged to have taken on 100's of Nazi collaborators to serve the Cold War anti-Soviet cause. A GAO investigation turned up some potential 20 individuals, such as Hāzners, alleged to be collaborators. The number of collaborators ultimately identified upon completion of investigation? One.
Volksdeutsche were ethnic Germans who had lived in central and eastern Europe for generations if not centuries before the war (in Königsberg and in Germany annexed to post-war Poland, in the Czechoslovak republic,...). They were innocent civilians fleeing or forcibly expelled from their homes. There is no impetus to label them Nazi collaborators other than post-war Eastern Bloc puppet governments assigning collective guilt: just being ethnic German meant you were a Nazi who supported Hitler.
At the time of the Vilis Hāzners deportation trial, Elizabeth Holtzman was heard to declare, "All Latvians are Nazis." Hāzners, who was a leader in the Latvian émigré community and a former Latvian Legion (Waffen-SS) officer, was the first Latvian the U.S. Justice Department attempted to deport for the alleged murder of Jews.
It is important to note that a deportation trial is an administrative, not court, proceeding, making hearsay admissible as evidence.
Hearsay evidence may be relied on, even if contradicted by direct evidence. Calhoun v. Bailar, 626 F.2d 145 (9th Cir. 1980).6
With warning signs apparent in the summary, we next examined what Schiessl wrote regarding the Holocaust in Nazi-occupied eastern Europe.
| 1 | Schiessl, book, p. 63. |
| 2 | Feigin, Judith. The Office of Special Investigations: Striving for Accountability in the Aftermath of the Holocaust. 2008, at «-1«wbr|www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/criminal/legacy/2011/03/14/12-2008osu-accountability.pdf»-1» " HREF="https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/criminal/legacy/2011/03/14/12-2008osu-accountability.pdf">www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/criminal/legacy/2011/03/14/12-2008osu-accountability.pdf. |
| 3 | Feigin (2008). |
| 4 | Schiessl, book, p. 118. |
| 5 | Ieva Zake. "Soviet Campaigns against 'Capitalist Ideological Subversives' during the Cold War: The Latvian Experience." Journal of Cold War Studies 2010; 12 (3): 91–114. p. 94-95. |
| 6 | «-1«wbr|www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/eoir/legacy/2014/08/15/hearsay.pdf»-1»" HREF="https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/eoir/legacy/2014/08/15/hearsay.pdf">Hearsay evidence, at U.S. Department of Justice, retrieved January 12, 2023. |
