OSS Classified British Intercept Documents, 1943-1945 Entry A1-223 Location: 250/64/33/7

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

OSS Classified British Intercept Documents, 1943-1945 Entry A1-223 Location: 250/64/33/7 OSS Classified British Intercept Documents, 1943-1945 Entry A1-223 Location: 250/64/33/7 Box 1 Group II/13, Sofia to Berlin, July 1943 to February 1944 Group II/13, Sofia to Berlin, February to May 1944 Group II/13, Sofia to Berlin, April to May 1944 Group II/517, Belgrade to Sofia, April 1943 to February 1944 Group II/523, Vienna to Sofia, April to May 1944 Group II/543, Zagreb to Vienna and Vienna to Zagreb, April 1943 to January 1944 Group II/5162, Bucharest to Vienna, October 1943 to May 1944 Group II/5182, Sarajevo to Zagreb, February to August 1943 Box 2 Group II/5182, Zagreb to Sarajevo, August to October 1943 Group II/5184, Varna to Vienna, March to September 1943 Group II/5190, Sarajevo to Brod, April to September 1943 Group II/5191, Tuzla to Sarajevo, March to September 1943 Group II/5192, Sarajevo to Belgrade and Belgrade to Sarajevo, April to October 1943 Group II/5203, Sarajevo to Banja Luka, April to September 1943 Group II/5204, Zagreb to Bihac, April to June 1943 Group II/5216, Dubrovnic to Sarajevo, April to October 1943 Group II/5217, Dubrovnic to Zagreb, April 1943 to November 1944 Group II/5223, Sofia to Vienna, April 1943 to January 1944 Group II/5265, Sofia to Budapest, September 1943 to January 1944 Box 3 Group II/5326, Zagreb to Belgrade, April to June 1944 (Two Folders) Group II/5326, Belgrade to Zagreb, April 1944 Group II/5449, Tirana to Belgrade, February to March 1944 Group II/5456, Tirana to Vrbas, February to March 1944 Group II/5456, Tirana to Vrbas, March to May 1944 Group II/5457, Zagreb to Stn. 24, April 1944 Group II/5458, Kos Mitrovica to Vrbas, April 1944 Group II/5459, Banja Luka to Zagreb, April 1944 Group II/5460, Zagreb to Karlovac, February to April 1944 Group II/5462, Kos Mitrovica, to Belgrade, April to May 1944 Group II/5463, Kos Mitrovica to Stn. 27, January to May 1944 Group II/5464, Zagreb to Trieste, February to March 1944 Group II/5465, Zagreb to Tuzla, April 1944 Group II/5466, Bihac to Zagreb, February 1944 Group II/5468, Belgrade to Uzice, May 1943 to May 1944 Group II/5470, Stn. 18 to Belgrade, April 1944 Group II/5471, Belgrade to Mostar, February to May 1944 Group II/5472, Bihac to Belgrade, February to May 1944 Box 4 Group II/ 5492 Stn. 18 (Jugo) to Vrbas, April 1944 Group II/5661, Budapest to Belgrade, July to September 1944 Group II/5662 Vienna to Budapest, September to October 1944 [Group] V/48E, Unsorted, 1944 Group VII/2, Vienna to Bucharest, February to September 1943 Group VII/23, Sofia to Vienna, February to July 1943 Group VII/62, Ankara to Sofia, February 1943 to February 1944 Group XIII/16, Berlin to Budapest, April to October 1943, and August to December 1944 Group XIII/50 Pskov Area to Berlin, October to December 1943 Group XVII/218, Westerwald to Hasso, October 1944 to April 1945 Vrbas to Pola, April 1944 Unnumbered .
Recommended publications
  • World War II-Related Exhibitions at the National Gallery of Art
    National Gallery of Art: Research Resources Relating to World War II World War II-Related Exhibitions at the National Gallery of Art During the war years, the National Gallery of Art presented a series of exhibitions explicitly related to the war or presenting works of art for which the museum held custody during the hostilities. Descriptions of each of the exhibitions is available in the list of past exhibitions at the National Gallery of Art. Catalogs, brochures, press releases, news reports, and photographs also may be available for examination in the Gallery Archives for some of the exhibitions. The Great Fire of London, 1940 18 December 1941-28 January 1942 American Artists’ Record of War and Defense 7 February-8 March 1942 French Government Loan 2 March 1942-1945, periodically Soldiers of Production 17 March-15 April 1942 Three Triptychs by Contemporary Artists 8-15 April 1942 Paintings, Posters, Watercolors, and Prints, Showing the Activities of the American Red Cross 2-30 May 1942 Art Exhibition by Men of the Armed Forces 5 July-2 August 1942 War Posters 17 January-18 February 1943 Belgian Government Loan 7 February 1943-January 1946 War Art 20 June-1 August 1943 Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Drawings and Watercolors from French Museums and Private Collections 8 August-5 September 1943 (second showing) Art for Bonds 12 September-10 October 1943 1DWLRQDO*DOOHU\RI$UW:DVKLQJWRQ'&*DOOHU\$UFKLYHV ::,,5HODWHG([KLELWLRQVDW1*$ Marine Watercolors and Drawings 12 September-10 October 1943 Paintings of Naval Aviation by American Artists
    [Show full text]
  • TRACE Case Studies Agenda
    ESMAP KNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE FORUM WITH BILATERAL AGENCIES AFD, PARIS, NOVEMBER 27-28, 2012 IVAN JAQUES TRACE Case Studies Agenda WHERE HAS TRACE BEEN DEPLOYED? HOW IS TRACE HELPING IDENTIFY KEY SECTORS AND ACTIONS? WHAT ARE THE KEY ISSUES? WHAT HAVE WE LEARNT? TRACE AS PART OF A COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGY: - Europe and Central Asia: Sustainable Cities Initiative - East Asia and Pacific: Sustainable Energy and Emissions Planning (SUEEP) - Latin America and the Caribbean: Rio Low Carbon Development Program - Africa: Urban Energy Efficiency Development in Sub-Saharan Africa 2 TRACE DEPLOYMENT 3 TRACE deployment Completed In progress 4 5 HOW IS TRACE HELPING IDENTIFY KEY SECTORS AND ACTIONS? EXAMPLES IN ECA 6 Urban Transport Source: ECA Sustainable Cities Initiative Urban Transport Many cities in ECA are faced with widespread deterioration of existent public transport infrastructure and dramatic increase in number of private vehicles Trips in Public Transport in Macedonia Source: Statistical Yearbook of the Republic of Macedonia, 2011 …Tbilisi (Georgia) completely lost its tram network Source: ECA Sustainable Cities Initiative Urban Transport Often, existent public transport infrastructure is old and energy inefficient Public Transport Energy Consumption in Tbilisi Source: ECA Sustainable Cities. 2011. Improving Energy Efficiency in Tbilisi: TRACE Study Source: ECA Sustainable Cities Initiative Urban Transport City streets and sidewalks are increasingly chocked up with private cars Congestion in Tbilisi On-sidewalk Parking in Skopje Source:
    [Show full text]
  • Special Libraries, January 1944
    San Jose State University SJSU ScholarWorks Special Libraries, 1944 Special Libraries, 1940s 1-1-1944 Special Libraries, January 1944 Special Libraries Association Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1944 Part of the Cataloging and Metadata Commons, Collection Development and Management Commons, Information Literacy Commons, and the Scholarly Communication Commons Recommended Citation Special Libraries Association, "Special Libraries, January 1944" (1944). Special Libraries, 1944. 1. https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1944/1 This Magazine is brought to you for free and open access by the Special Libraries, 1940s at SJSU ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Special Libraries, 1944 by an authorized administrator of SJSU ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Special Libraries VOLUME35 .....Established 1910 ......NUMBER 1 CONTENTS FOR JANUARY 1944 The Library in a Research Organization ...... EARLK. FISCHER 3 Library Service to the Engineering Department of Scintilla Magneto Division, Bendix Aviation Corporation .....VERA MORGAN 7 A Preparatory Program for Science and Technology Librarians ..............FLOYD EMORY ORTON 11 New Guides and Aids to Public Documents, 1942-43 . JEROME K. WILCOX 16 The Preservation of Reference Material in a Financial Library .......... .....ALTA B. CLAFLIN 21 S. I,. A. Plans a Recruiting Program .....RUTH S. LEONARD23 Events and Publications ................... 24 Announcements ...................... 26 Indexed in Industrial Arts Index and Public Affairs Information Service THE STAFF ALMACLARVOE MITCHILL 80 Park Place, Newark 1. N. J. Editor JEANMACALISTER Associate Editors KATHLEENBROWN STEBBINS Advertising Manager The articles which appear in SPECIALLIBRARIES express the views of the authors. and do not necessarily represent the opinion or the policy of the editorial staff and publisher SPECIAL LIBRARIES published monthly September to April, with bi-monthly issues May to August, by The Special Libraries Association.
    [Show full text]
  • International Directory of Deposit Insurers
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation International Directory of Deposit Insurers September 2015 A listing of addresses of deposit insurers, central banks and other entities involved in deposit insurance functions. Division of Insurance and Research Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Washington, DC 20429 The FDIC wants to acknowledge the cooperation of all the countries listed, without which the directory’s compilation would not have been possible. Please direct any comments or corrections to: Donna Vogel Division of Insurance and Research, FDIC by phone +1 703 254 0937 or by e-mail [email protected] FDIC INTERNATIONAL DIRECTORY OF DEPOSIT INSURERS ■ SEPTEMBER 2015 2 Table of Contents AFGHANISTAN ......................................................................................................................................6 ALBANIA ...............................................................................................................................................6 ALGERIA ................................................................................................................................................6 ARGENTINA ..........................................................................................................................................6 ARMENIA ..............................................................................................................................................7 AUSTRALIA ............................................................................................................................................7
    [Show full text]
  • 2Nd INFANTRY REGIMENT
    2nd INFANTRY REGIMENT 1110 pages (approximate) Boxes 1243-1244 The 2nd Infantry Regiment was a component part of the 5th Infantry Division. This Division was activated in 1939 but did not enter combat until it landed on Utah Beach, Normandy, three days after D-Day. For the remainder of the war in Europe the Division participated in numerous operations and engagements of the Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace and Central Europe campaigns. The records of the 2nd Infantry Regiment consist mostly of after action reports and journals which provide detailed accounts of the operations of the Regiment from July 1944 to May 1945. The records also contain correspondence on the early history of the Regiment prior to World War II and to its training activities in the United States prior to entering combat. Of particular importance is a file on the work of the Regiment while serving on occupation duty in Iceland in 1942. CONTAINER LIST Box No. Folder Title 1243 2nd Infantry Regiment Unit Histories January 1943-June 1944 2nd Infantry Regiment Unit Histories, July-October 1944 2nd Infantry Regiment Histories, July 1944- December 1945 2nd Infantry Regiment After Action Reports, July-September 1944 2nd Infantry Regiment After Action Reports, October-December 1944 2nd Infantry Regiment After Action Reports, January-May 1945 2nd Infantry Regiment Casualty List, 1944-1945 2nd Infantry Regiment Unit Journal, 1945 2nd Infantry Regiment Narrative History, October 1944-May 1945 2nd Infantry Regiment History Correspondence, 1934-1936 2nd Infantry
    [Show full text]
  • Twelfth Meeting of Senior Government Officials of Countries in South-Eastern Europe Page 1
    South-eastern Europe Health Network Health Development Action for South-eastern Europe Twelfth Meeting of Senior Government Officials of Countries in South-eastern Europe Report on a Joint Council of Europe/WHO meeting Skopje, The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, 24–26 November 2005 Address requests about publications of the WHO Regional Office for Europe to: Publications WHO Regional Office for Europe Scherfigsvej 8 DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark Alternatively, complete an online request form for documentation, health information, or for permission to quote or translate, on the WHO/Europe web site at http://www.euro.who.int/pubrequest. © World Health Organization 2006 All rights reserved. The Regional Office for Europe of the World Health Organization welcomes requests for permission to reproduce or translate its publications, in part or in full. The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Where the designation “country or area” appears in the headings of tables, it covers countries, territories, cities, or areas. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement. The mention of specific companies or of certain manufacturers’ products does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by the World Health Organization in preference to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned. Errors and omissions excepted, the names of proprietary products are distinguished by initial capital letters.
    [Show full text]
  • Third Division World War II Vol One.Pdf
    THIRD INFANTRY DIVISION THE VICTORY PATH THROUGH FRANCE AND GERMANY VOLUME ONE 'IVG. WILLIAM MOHR THE VICTORY PATH THROUGH FRANCE AND GERMANY THIRD INFANTRY DIVISION - WORLD WAR II VOLUME ONE A PICTORIAL ACCOUNT BY G. WILLIAM MOHR ABOUT THE COVER There is nothing in front of the Infantry in battle except the enemy. The Infantry leads the way to attack and bears the brunt of the enemy's attack. The primary purpose of the Infan­ try is to close with the enemy in hand-to-hand fighting. On the side of a house, tommy gunners of this Infantry patrol, 1st Special Service Froce Patrol, one of the many patrols that made possible the present offensive in Italy by feeling out the enemy and discovering his defensive strength, fire from the window of an adjoining building to blast Nazis out. The scene is 400 yards from the enemy lines in the Anzio area, Italy. Fifth Army, 14 April, 1944. The 3rd Infantry Division suffered 27,450 casualties and 4,922 were killed in action. 2 - Yellow Beach, Southern France, August, 1944 3 - Marseilles, France, August, 1944 4 - Montelimar, France, August, 1944 5 - Cavailair, France, August, 1944 6 - Avignon, France, August, 1944 7 - Lacroix, France, August, 1944 8 - Brignolles, France, August, 1944 9 -Aix-En-Provence, France, August, 1944 12 - St. Loup, France, August, 1944 13 - La Coucounde, France, August, 1944 14 - Les Loges Neut, France, August, 1944 15 - Besancon, France, September, 1944 18 - Loue River, Ornans, France, September, 1944 19 - Avonne, France, Septem&er, 1944 20 - Lons Le Sounier, France, September, 1944 21 - Les Belles-Baroques, France, September, 1944 22 - St.
    [Show full text]
  • The Causes of Ukrainian-Polish Ethnic Cleansing 1943 Author(S): Timothy Snyder Source: Past & Present, No
    The Past and Present Society The Causes of Ukrainian-Polish Ethnic Cleansing 1943 Author(s): Timothy Snyder Source: Past & Present, No. 179 (May, 2003), pp. 197-234 Published by: Oxford University Press on behalf of The Past and Present Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3600827 . Accessed: 05/01/2014 17:29 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Oxford University Press and The Past and Present Society are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Past &Present. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 137.110.33.183 on Sun, 5 Jan 2014 17:29:27 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions THE CAUSES OF UKRAINIAN-POLISH ETHNIC CLEANSING 1943* Ethniccleansing hides in the shadow of the Holocaust. Even as horrorof Hitler'sFinal Solution motivates the study of other massatrocities, the totality of its exterminatory intention limits thevalue of the comparisons it elicits.Other policies of mass nationalviolence - the Turkish'massacre' of Armenians beginningin 1915, the Greco-Turkish'exchanges' of 1923, Stalin'sdeportation of nine Soviet nations beginning in 1935, Hitler'sexpulsion of Poles and Jewsfrom his enlargedReich after1939, and the forcedflight of Germans fromeastern Europein 1945 - havebeen retrievedfrom the margins of mili- tary and diplomatichistory.
    [Show full text]
  • October 1943 Engineers News
    ... { ( ; , "\ j } ~\ -r ' / ~ . ·JPUJRK:.ili.§lilEIDY JRY (())JeEillA1FJING lENGRNJEIEJR§ 9 JLOCAJL lUN]O.N·. N(E}).o 3 Loc'al 3. .ma:11 er leaves for Boston 1meeting· Victor Swanson, general manager of Local 3, left immedi­ ately after the local convention of the Union Labor Party for the annual national meeting of the American Federation of Labor being held this year in Boston: Swanson is the only delegate from Local 3 at the big meet- -,t A.FL. unions ·and shipyard ing. Prior to the AFL session he was to confer with General .J managements on the West President· William C. Maloney of the I. U. of o·. E. on craft , f Coast put··up an unusual pro- jur:.isdictional matters. He is expected to return to San .Francisco posal to the National War La- on October 1-5 . ·,·.:.: bor Board. Harry Metz is acting manager during Swanson's absence. Tl · · . k d th b . d fo I Metz il)S t completed an assignment in the Westwood-Suisun- . ' ·' appr6~r a a;la; of jot re~~~sifica- ville. sector whe.re Loc_al _Na.. 3 _have won several N. L. R. B. rtion and pay increases for 33,000 elections govermng 1unsd1ction m the wooas.1 , i f hipouilding workers, which will ! . ~efore he le_ft ~or the_ ~ast ~wanson mged all me.mbers liv­ ·1-r/save Uncle· Sam eight times as , mg m . San Francisco to vote m the mumc1pal elections to be . 'much as the wage · outlay. held November 2. living costs go milHon ·,o ··•;;. joint committee of the unions and the employers appeared at a '* * WLB hearing on behalf of the pay up-Up-UP.
    [Show full text]
  • Shaef-Sgs-Records.Pdf
    363.6 DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER LIBRARY ABILENE, KANSAS SUPREME HEADQUARTERS, ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE, OFFICE OF SECRETARY, GENERAL STAFF: Records, 1943-45 [microfilm] Accession 71-14 Processed by: DJH Date completed: June 1991 The microfilm of the records of the Secretary of the General Staff, Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force, was sent to the Eisenhower Library by the Modern Military Records Division of the National Archives in September 1969. Linear feet of shelf space occupied: 4 Number of reels of microfilm: 62 Literary rights in the SHAEF records are in the public domain. These records were processed in accordance with the general restrictions on access to government records as set forth by the National Archives. SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE The Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) was a joint U.S. - British military organization created in England in February 1944 to carry out the invasion of Western Europe. Dwight D. Eisenhower, an officer of the United States Army, was appointed Supreme Allied Commander. Eisenhower organized his staff along U.S. military lines with separate staff sections devoted to personnel (G-1), intelligence (G-2), operations (G-3), logistics (G-4) and civilian affairs (G-5). The most significant files at SHAEF were kept in the Office of the Secretary of the General Staff (SGS). The SGS office served as a type of central file for SHAEF. The highest-level documents that received the personal attention of the Supreme Allied Commander and the Chief of Staff usually ended up in the SGS files. Many of the staff sections and administrative offices at SHAEF retired material to the SGS files.
    [Show full text]
  • Allied Relations and Negotiations with Spain A
    Allied Relations and Negotiations With Spain A. From Spanish "Non-Belligerency" to Spanish Neutrality1 Shortly after the outbreak of the War in September 1939, Spanish dictator General Francisco Franco released an official decree of neutrality in the conflict, despite his open ideological affinity with the Axis leaders who had provided him with critical support in the Spanish Civil War. Nevertheless, he hovered on the brink of intervention on the side of the Axis through much of 1940 and 1941, and even contributed a force of Spanish volunteers estimated to be as many as 40,000, known as the Blue Division, which served as the German 250th Division on the Russian Front from mid-1941 until October 1943. The possibility of Spanish belligerency was premised on an early German victory over Britain and on German agreement to Spanish territorial expansion in Africa into French Morocco and perhaps even in Europe at the expense its neighbors, Vichy France and neutral Portugal. The United States and Britain joined in a continuing effort to keep Franco's Spain out of the War by providing essential exports like gasoline and grain to prop up the Spanish economy, which had been in a state of collapse since the end of the Spanish Civil War. The close ideological and political ties between the Franco dictatorship and those of Germany and Italy were never misapprehended by the United States and Britain. After 1941 Spain drifted gradually from imminent belligerency toward a demonstratively pro-Axis neutrality. Spain cooperated with the Allies in humanitarian efforts, allowing safe passage through Spain of downed Allied fliers, escaped Allied prisoners, and civilian refugees, including Jews.2 The nature of Spain's neutrality in World War II turned in significant measure on Allied and Spanish perceptions of the danger of German invasion.
    [Show full text]
  • Bruyeres Liberation
    I I 00 WHEREAS, during World War II, France was occupied by the German Army in June of 1940; and WHEREAS, in the fall of 1944, U.S. military forces, along with the Allies, advanced toward the Vosges Mountains of northeastern France for a final push into Germany; and WHEREAS, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team (RCT) 100th Infantry Battalion—consisting entirely of Japanese American GIs—arrived in France in October 1944; and WHEREAS, two-thirds of the 442nd RCT 100th Infantry Battalion were Nisei (second-generation Japanese Americans) from Hawai’i; and WHEREAS, the 442nd RCT 100th Infantry Battalion was instrumental in helping to liberate several towns in France, including Bruyères (liberated onl8 October 1944) and Biffontaine (liberated on 23 October 1944); and WHEREAS, in one of the most epic struggles in American military history, the 442nd RCT 100th Battalion continued forward and fought in the dense, hilly terrain of the Vosges Mountains under harsh wintery conditions to rescue the Lost Battalion, soldiers of the 141st Regiment, 36th Infantry Division who were trapped behind enemy lines; and WHEREAS, the 442nd RCT 100th Infantry Battalion suffered over 800 casualties; and WHEREAS, the Epinal American Cemetery and Memorial at the foothills of the Vosges Mountains is the final resting place for 5,255 Americans who were killed in France and Germany during World War II, including men of the 442nd RCT 100th Infantry Battalion; and WHEREAS, 2019 marks the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Bruyères and Biffontaine, and the international friendship between Hawai’i and France will continue to be celebrated and nurtured; THEREFORE I, DAVID Y.
    [Show full text]