"That resulted--I think everybody but you knows this, Gehlen--in the
"Boltitz confronted Major von Wachtstein and they reached a between-honorable-officers agreement: Major von Wachtstein would have a fatal accident in his Storch and Kapitan zur See Boltitz would not only not reveal his treason, but destroy what evidence he had collected.
"While Major von Wachtstein was perfectly willing to carry out his end of the agreement--doing so would keep General von Wachtstein from being hung from one of Himmler's butcher's hooks--he saw it as his duty to tell Ambassador von Lutzenberger, whom he knew to be a Valkyrie conspirator, what had happened.
"That forced the ambassador to make Boltitz privy to what was going on long before I wanted that to happen.
"While I was delighted, of course, that Major von Wachtstein did not have a fatal accident, I confess that I had--that I have--certain concerns
"The SS man in Buenos Aires, Obersturmbannfuhrer Karl Cranz, and his deputy, Sturmbannfuhrer Erich Raschner, are both very good at what they do. For reasons he did not choose to share with me, Bormann arranged for Cranz to be sent there, replacing von Deitzberg, while leaving Raschner, who has been von Deitzberg's deputy there.
"Having said that, I am at a loss to understand why Cranz sent Obersturmfuhrer Heitz and his men--whose mission in Argentina was to guard the special shipment until it could be used for Operation Phoenix--to try to rescue--more likely eliminate--the Froggers at Frade's farm.
"Nor do I understand why that mission was a complete failure. One possible scenario is that the chief of Argentina's BIS, a Colonel Martin, who is very competent, could have learned about the plan and warned Frade--that is, warned Frade's men, as Frade was in the U.S. at the time of the attack.
"This is not to suggest that Frade has turned Colonel Martin, or even that Martin is more sympathetic to the Allied cause than previously suspected. It is more likely that he is acting solely in what he perceives to be Argentina's best interests.
"Supporting this scenario, but not confirming it, are these facts: Nothing appeared in the Argentine press, nor was anything mentioned discreetly by Argentine authorities to the ambassador about either the attack on Frade's farm or the attempted assassination of Frade shortly after he returned to Argentina from the United States.
"It could be--purely conjecture--that whether or not Martin was actively involved in seeing that both attacks failed, his failure to take official notice of either gave the German Embassy--not only Cranz, but the ambassador as well--the message that any future efforts along these lines would not only similarly fail but would also greatly annoy the Argentine officer corps, which is to say the government.
"Much of the Argentine officer corps was greatly annoyed when Oberst Frade was assassinated. The assassination was arranged for--over the objections of Oberst Gruner, who knew how popular Frade was within the officer corps--by Standartenfuhrer Goltz acting at the orders of Himmler or, more likely, von Deitzberg.
"The idea, apparently, was to strike terror into the hearts of the Argentine officer corps: Anyone who posed a threat to the ambitions of the German Reich, even someone about to become president of Argentina, as Frade was, could be eliminated.
"To their surprise, the reaction of the officer corps to Oberst Frade's murder was not fear but outrage. The
"After the disaster at Samborombon Bay, von Deitzberg put on a major general's uniform and went to Argentina, where he assured Oberst Juan Domingo Peron that the German officer corps was as outraged over Frade's assassination as he was. He told Peron the assassination had been the late Oberst Gruner's idea.
"Von Deitzberg also carried with him a map of how South America will look after our Final Victory. Uruguay, Paraguay, and parts of Brazil will become part of Argentina. He also made it clear that Germany would help in any way it could to see that Peron became president. And showed him how profitable it would be for him to assist in the investment of Operation Phoenix funds.
"How much of this Oberst Peron swallowed whole is unknown.