François Genoud (26 October 1915 – 30 May 1996) was a noted Swiss financier and a principal benefactor of the Nazidiaspora through the ODESSA escape network and supporter of Middle Eastern militant groups during the post-World War II 20th century.
In 1992, Genoud told a London newspaper "My views have not changed since I was a young man. Hitler was a great leader, and if he had won the war, the world would be a better place today."[1]
Genoud travelled to Berlin frequently during the war "to see his friend the Grand Mufti," and visited him afterward many times in Beirut. The Grand Mufti allegedly "entrusted Genoud with the management of his enormous financial affairs".[3]
In 1940, together with a Lebanese national, he set up the Oasis nightclub in Lausanne to serve as a covert operation for the Abwehr. In 1941, Abwehr agent Paul Dickopf sent Genoud into Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Belgium. Genoud befriended several top Nazis, including Karl Wolff, "supreme SS and police leader" in Italy. At the end of the war, Genoud represented the Swiss Red Cross in Brussels.[3]
Post-war
Genoud is notable for having been the executor of last will and testament of Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels, and for reportedly making a fortune from publishing Goebbels' diaries, which he held the posthumous rights for along with Hitler and Bormann's works.[4] This enterprise suffered a setback in 1960 when Paula Hitler died without his securing the full rights to the literary works of Adolf Hitler.[5]
Nazi hunters such as Serge Klarsfeld and Simon Wiesenthal, journalist David Lee Preston, and others have asserted that his role as a benefactor for surviving National Socialist interests goes much deeper, offering evidence that Genoud was no less than the principal financial manager of the hidden Swiss assets of the Third Reich after World War II.[3]
Friendship with Paul Dickopf
That Paul Dickopf became Interpol Head is connected with his friendship with Francois Genoud, because Genoud lobbied Arab governments to help him achieve the role. The implications are understood to include that when the Munich massacre occurred in 1972, Interpol limited its investigation into it, with a spokesman from Interpol stating that, "Interpol was an agency designed to handle criminal, not political matters."[2]
Arab liberation
Genoud became a passionate supporter of Arab liberation causes, funding many nationalist and right-wing organisations.[4]
Algerian Liberation Front
While in Egypt in the 1950s, through contacts in Gamal Abdel Nasser's government,[6] he was introduced to the leaders of the Algerian Liberation Front, which he would eventually finance by 1954 after originally supplying weapons.[4] In 1958, he founded the Arab Commercial Bank in Geneva, which would be active in lending to Arab nationalist groups and as the chief repository for the Algerian National Liberation Front.[7]
Palestine
In the 1960s, Genoud began supplying arms for Palestinian causes. The Lausanne-based New European Order organisation,[4] met in Barcelona in April 1969, where Palestinian groups received financial support and Genoud placed them in contact with former Nazis who would assist their military training, including pledged support designated for the Palestine Liberation Organisation.[4] He was a close associate of Dr. George Habash and Jacques Vergès, and in September 1969, he contributed finances for the legal expenses of three Palestinians from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine following their attack on an El Al flight in Zurich, where he personally sat at their defense table.[4]
Among the people with whom he came into contact was the Sephardic Italian-Egyptian Communist Henri Curiel. It is unclear whether there was any financial relationship between them, although they shared an interest in the Algerian cause.[2]
Throughout the 1970s, Genoud financed many left-wing groups with the goal of armed Arab liberation.[4] It is alleged that he delivered the ransom demand after the Lufthansa Flight 649hijacking in 1972.[3]
Along with Noam Chomsky, Simone de Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre, and other intellectuals, Genoud was a member of a committee which mounted a humanitarian campaign in the 1970s, which resulted in the pardon in 1977 of Bruno Bréguet, a Swiss militant who was the first European to be tried and sentenced in Israel for pro-Palestinian activities; Bréguet had served seven years of his 15-year sentence.[11]
Legal troubles
Genoud found himself in legal troubles from time to time, such as in 1983, when he was represented by Baudoin Dunant, a leading Geneva-based lawyer who sits on the board of over 20 companies, including the Saudi Investment Company, the overseas arm of the Saudi Binladin Group.[12]
In 1993, a bomb exploded outside his home and by 1996 Swiss authorities were still investigating him for his financial activities during the Third Reich.[1]
Death
Genoud committed suicide, with, according to his family, the help of the Swiss pro-euthanasia group Exit, at age 80 on 30 May 1996.[13]
In popular culture
In the miniseries Carlos, Genoud is mentioned by Ilich Ramírez Sánchez's character portrayed by Édgar Ramírez. The production has been criticized for downplaying the historical role of Genoud with Sánchez.[10]
^ abcCoogan, Kevin (1999). Dreamer of the day: Francis Parker Yockey and the Postwar Fascist International. Brooklyn, New York: Autonomedia. p. 585-586. ISBN1-57027-039-2.
^Laske, Karl and Hoffmann-Dartevelle, Maria (1996) Ein Leben zwischen Hitler und Carlos: François Genoud Limmat. p.234. ISBN3-85791-276-6, ISBN978-3-85791-276-4