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After World War II, did a large number of Nazis flee to Argentina to take refuge?

According to relevant data, from 1945 to the early 1950s, at least 150 Nazis sneaked into Argentina, including the most heinous Nazi war criminals Eichmann, Kuczman, Schwarzenberg, Meng Le, and the second Nazi leader, Martin Poll Mann, whose identity has not yet been identified. For decades, some of these war criminals have been arrested, extradited to Europe and punished as they should. Some have died of natural causes, but there are also many hidden Nazis who have changed their names and surnames and are still at large. 1In May 1998, after the Nazi war criminals Ding Cosacchi and his wife, who had lived in seclusion in Argentina for more than 50 years, showed their true colors and fell into the law, the Argentine judicial department set up a special agency to investigate Nazi war criminals and neo-Nazi groups, and prepared to thoroughly clean up Argentina's disgraceful history, which was once called "Nazi war criminals' paradise".

During World War II, more than 6 million Jews were massacred, and more than 600,000 Jews were massacred in Nazi concentration camps in Poland and Hungary alone. A few months before the end of the war, German intelligence agencies began to plan the escape plan of Nazi war criminals known as the "mouse route" and sent some Nazis to Spain, Egypt, Lebanon and Argentina. At that time, Argentina was the only neutral country in South America. Because of its geographical separation from Europe and superior natural conditions, it is considered to be the ideal hiding place of the Nazis. At that time, the Argentine government sent hundreds of blank passports to Germany for use by Nazis who fled Europe.