You can be sure that all record of what was actually said to the Nazis in 1940/41 has long since vanished up the chimneys of Whitehall. And as someone observed at the time, the British are one of the few nations that actually know how to keep their mouths shut.
do you think that we will ever hear the "true story" behind the Herman Hess "mission of peace"? I think that one would really throw conventional history on its ear, along with much of the true events of the second world war.
No, I don't think we ever will. But I don't think there is anything in that story that will "throw conventional history on its ear."
Did he go with Hitler's knowledge? Did he take off in one plane and land in another? What was said to convince him to go? Was the man in Spandau really Hess?
His wife and son said they believed he was, but one of his American doctors noticed that he did not have the scars that Hess' WWI records indicated, and the man in Spandau became highly agitated when he pointed this out to him during an examination.
But then who would play such a role for 50 years and why? What did Goering mean when he taunted Hess at Nuremburg to "tell us your secret"?
It's a strange case, but I don't think it's more than a footnote to the history of WWII.
Here's another interesting footnote: ht tp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Tandey
“The difference between fiction and reality? Fiction has to make sense.” Tom Clancy.
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