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The Soon Coming Judgment Of God Upon America and How To Escape It                274
in Berlin reported to Washington DC that they had serious questions on who was financing this
vast private army. Flick and Thyssen were the primary sources of financing for Hitler's private
army. Flick was in partnership with The American owned Harriman Fifteen Holding Company
and Thyssen was fronting for Rockefeller interests.
The Embassy further reported that the German government was coming under attack for
its crackdowns on Hitler's army. The attacks were coming from Hamburg-Amerika Line who in
support of Hitler “was purchasing and distributing propaganda attacks against the German
government” because of it's crackdown efforts. Hamburg-Amerika Line was owned by Harriman
Fifteen Holding Company.
Hitler's S.S. and S.A. were primarily armed with American made firearms. The most
common of these were revolvers and Thompson submachine guns. The US government
investigated Remington as the source of these arms because they had entered into a cartel
arrangement regarding explosives with the pro Nazi I.G. Farben.
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The Remington cartel arrangement with I.G. Farben was negotiated by Walter S.
Carpenter, Jr., chairman of the finance committee of the Du Pont Corporation. Du Pont had
purchased Remington from the Rockefellers in 1933. The cartel was essentially a partnership
between Du Pont and I.G. Farben for the manufacture of explosives. The US government broke
up the cartel during the war Dupont later played an important role in the development of the
atomic bomb.
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America and I.G. Farben
Wall Street began their investment in Germany as Hitler was being freed from prison.
Americans began the process, which transformed German industry into a war making machine.
This was accomplished through foreign loans, international partnerships, technology transfers
and US direct investment in Germany. Beginning in 1924 American Banker Charles Dawes
arranged a series of foreign loans totaling $800 million to German companies in order to
consolidate gigantic chemical and steel combinations into cartels. The most important of these
giant cartels to Germany’s war efforts was I.G. Farben.
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Other cartels included international
dye trust and Agfa Ansco Film Trust. These were all organized by Americans Paul Warburg
(Federal Reserve Board member) and Walter Teagle President of Standard Oil.
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I.G. Farben is short for Interessen Gemeinschaft Farbenindustrie Aktien
gesellschaft or “the Cartel” and was formed in 1925. Its origins date back to 1904 when
negotiations began for the creation of a cartel out of the merger of six giant German chemical
companies, Badische Anilin, Bayer, Agfa, Hoechst, Welierter-Meer, and Griesheim-Elektron.
After the formation of I.G. Farben, Max Warburg (Paul Warburg's brother) was appointed
director of I.G. Farben, Germany, and I.G. Chemie, Switzerland. Historian Eustice Mullins
writes: “I.G. Farben soon had a net worth of six billion marks, controlling some five hundred
firms. Its first president was Professor Carl Bosch. During the period of the Weimar Republic,
I.G. officials, seeing the handwriting on the wall, began a close association with Adolf Hitler,
supplying much needed funds and political influence. The success of the I.G. Farben cartel had
aroused the interest of other industrialists. Henry Ford was favorably impressed and set up a
German branch of Ford Motor Company. Forty per cent of the stock was purchased by I.G.
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