Eichmann (left, in 1933) and Himmler
"Eichmann said at that time six million people
have been killed, four million in concentration
camps and similar set-ups, and two million by
shooting, Einsatzkommandos. And he told me at that
time, it was fantastic really, 'I had thought a lot
of people had been killed, but six million!' And he
said 'Just imagine, that was still too few for
Himmler. Himmler said to me, 'There
must be more than that.' And he set up his own
statistics unit (today we would say 'computer
people') who were to check up on this.'"
- Wilhelm Höttl (quoting Eichmann quoting Himmler)
Found on Episode 20 Genocide of The
World at War (1973/4) here
SS Sturmbannführer Wilhelm Höttl, is described in a
1949 US intelligence reports as
"a man of such low character and poor political
record that his use for intelligence activities,
regardless of how profitable they may be, is a
short-sighted policy by the US."
Wilhelm Höttl began to work for the US Office
of Strategic Services (the forerunner
to the
Central Intelligence Agency) after his captured. And
it was after he started working for
them,
that he signed an affidavit stating Adolf Eichmann
told him the Nazis had killed 6,000,000 Jews.
Holocaustians
lie and credit the 6,000,000 figure, which appeared seven
times in the main
Nuremberg
trial transcript and submitted
evidence, to that affidavit by Wilhelm
Höttl. But as is easily proved
again, again and again,
this figure was established long before Höttl
was captured in May 1945.
At Adolf Eichmann's trial, Eichmann
straight out denied giving Höttl the
6,000,000 figure:
"If Hoettl is here using figures, I must
comment that no one received such figures
from me, because I myself had
none. In this connection it is odd that
everyone claims to have received
figures from me - one person says it was
five million, the other six million"
After being kidnapped from Argentina, drugged and flown
to Israel. During his interrogation,
the lights were never switched-off
in his cell even at night, a guard was always present in
his cell,
day and night. Under obvious
duress, Eichmann admitted to Israeli police captain
Avner Less:
"My estimation? If he (Wilhelm Höttl) asked me, I
may have given him an estimated figure--yes, I may
have."
and later
"I must have told him (Wilhelm Höttl) the contents
of the statistician's report. I must have told him
that. I think the comprehensive report ended with a
total of five million. That's what I seem to
remember."