Operation Bernhard - The Nazi plot to forge
Bank of England bank notes
Operation Bernhard was the name of a secret German plan
devised during the Second World War to destabilise the
British economy by flooding the country with forged Bank of
England �5, �10, �20, and �50 notes.
A fictitious version
of the Operation Bernhard story was the topic of a comedy
drama serial called Private Schulz (starring Michael
Elphick and Ian Richardson) produced by the BBC in 1980.
The real plan was directed by, and named after, SS Major
Bernhard Kr�ger, who set up a team of one hundred and
forty-two counterfeiters from among inmates at Sachsenhausen.
Beginning in 1942, the work of engraving the complex
printing plates, developing the appropriate rag-based paper
with the correct watermarks, and breaking the code to
generate valid serial numbers was extremely difficult, but
by the time Sachsenhausen was evacuated in April 1945 the
printing press there had produced 8,965,080 banknotes with a
total value of �134,610,810. The notes are considered among
the most perfect counterfeits ever produced, being extremely
difficult although not impossible to distinguish from the
real thing.
Although the initial plan was to destabilise the British
economy by dropping the notes from aircraft, on the
assumption that while some honest people would hand them in
most people would keep the notes, in practice this plan was
not put into effect. Instead, from late 1943 approximately
one million notes per month were transferred to a former
hotel near Meran-Merano in Trentino-South Tyrol, northern
Italy, from where it was laundered and used to pay for
strategic imports and to pay German agents. It has been
reported that counterfeit currency was used to finance the
rescue of the arrested former Italian dictator Benito
Mussolini in 1943.
The Bank of England detected the existence of the notes
during the war, when a clerk recording a bundle of returned
notes in the banks' ledgers (every banknote issued by the
Bank of England as late as the 1940s was recorded in large
leather-bound ledgers, as the notes were a liability of the
bank) noted that one of the notes had already been recorded
as having been paid off.
Following the evacuation of Sachsenhausen, the
counterfeiting team was transferred to Redl-Zipf in Austria,
a sub-camp of the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp. At
the beginning of May 1945 the team was ordered to be
transferred to the Ebensee sub-camp, where they were all to
be killed together; however their SS guards had only one
truck to convey their prisoners, so it was necessary for the
truck to make three trips. On the third trip the truck broke
down, and the last batch of prisoners had to be marched to
Ebensee, where they arrived on 4 May. By this time, the
guards of the first two batches of prisoners had fled
because of the approach of the American army, and the
prisoners had disappeared among the other sixteen thousand
prisoners in the camp. Thus, because of the order that the
prisoners all be killed together, none were actually killed.
They were liberated from Ebensee by US forces on 5 May 1945.
It is believed that most of the notes produced ended up at
the bottom of
Lake Toplitz, near Ebensee, from where they were
recovered by divers in 1959, but examples continued to turn
up in circulation in Britain for many years, which caused
the Bank of England to withdraw all notes larger than �5
from circulation, and not reintroduce the denominations
until the early 1960s (�10), 1970 (�20), or 1980 (�50).
The counterfeiting team also turned its attention to US
currency, producing its first 200 $100 bills on 22 February
1945 with full production scheduled to start the next day,
but the Reich Security Main Office ordered the work halted
and the press dismantled.
German spy Elyesa Bazna (codename 'Cicero') was paid with
counterfeit notes, and unsuccessfully sued the German
government after the war for outstanding pay.
After the war, Major Kr�ger was detained by the French
for three years, and spent the time forging documents for
the French Secret Service. In the 1950s he went before a De-Nazification
Court, where statements were produced from the
forger-inmates that he had been responsible for saving their
lives. He later worked for the company which had produced
the special paper for the Operation Bernhard forgeries. He
died in 1989.
Further Reading
- Delgado, Arturo R. 'Counterfeit Reich: Hitler's
Secret Swindle' (2006) ISBN 978-1424103898
- Malkin, Lawrence 'Krueger's Men: The Secret Nazi
Counterfeit Plot and the Prisoners of Block 19' (2006)
ISBN 0-316-05700-2 ISBN 978-0-316005700-4
- Malkin, Lawrence 'Hitlers Geldfaelscher' (2006) ISBN
978-3-7857-3349-7 (ab 1.2. 2007)
- Burke, Bryan 'Nazi Counterfeiting of British
Currency during World War II: Operation Andrew and
Operation Bernhard' (1987) ISBN 0-9618274-0-8 (Limited
edition of 1000)
External links
-
The Great Nazi Cash Swindle - web chat with
director/producer of a Channel 4 documentary on
Operation Bernhard. [Dead link, will replace if
possible]
-
How to tell the difference between a genuine and an
Operation Bernhard note [Dead link, will replace if
possible]
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