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Introduction for schools and colleges

"Without IG Farben, WWII would not have been possible!"

Read the original report as prepared by Col. Bernstein or the official version as published in the Records of U.S. Congress.

Since the establishment of this online academy, we were faced with an overwhelming interest from political, corporate and academic institutions. Particularly interested in these documents were schools and universities from around the world. Apparently, these pages contain information about one of the most important chapters in world history, the Second World War, that cannot be found anywhere else in the history books.

In response to this growing interest from the younger generation and from future decision takers, we have added to this online academy a document that summarizes on about 150 pages the corporate interests behind World War II: The "Report on the Investigation of IG Farben Industry AG" prepared by the "Office of the Military Government U.S. (Germany)" under Colonel GSC Bernard Bernstein.

This report was prepared immediately after the end of World War II and published in November 1945 by the US Office of the Military Government in Germany. Bernstein and his team were the first officials who had access to the files of the IG Farben concern at its headquarters in Frankfurt, its Nazi-liaison office in Berlin and other locations.

The relevance of this report is particularly high, because Col. Bernstein and his team of military officers had unprecedented access to the offices and documents of IG Farben, proving without any doubt their decisive role behind World War II.

This 1945 report by the US Office of the Military Government predates the proceedings of the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal by two years. But these were decisive years. Under the growing influence of the Rockefeller and Rothschild groups on post-war world order and with the beginning of the "Cold War" much of the initially available evidence against the oil and drug cartel IG Farben disappeared, was destroyed, or was declared inadmissible in the 1947/1948 Nuremberg trial against the IG Farben cartel.

Thus, the 1945 "Report on the Investigation of IG Farbenindustrie A.G." by the US Office of the Military Government in Germany is the original report by the Allied powers establishing the direct responsibility of the IG Farben Cartel for WWII, the holocaust and ultimately for the death of over 60 million people.

This report is available in two forms:

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