Memory Hole: Red Cross in 1944: “We found no trace of installations for exterminating civilian prisoners in Auschwitz”
(media.greatawakening.win)
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I will add to this ...
In the beginning, as the camps were being liberated, there were claims that there were gas chambers in ALL the camps.
There were 22 camps in total. 16 were on the German side and 6 were on the Polish side (including Auschwitz).
Right away, the Americans and Brits realized that there were no gas chambers in any of the camps in Germany, since they were investigating those camps themselves.
So, the story changed to the claim that the gassings still happened, but they must have all been done in the camps in Poland (which Germany had occupied).
BUT, the Soviets were liberating those camps, and they refused to allow the Americans and Brits into those camps. They continued to refuse to allow this for the next 45 years. So, there were CLAIMS by the Soviets, but never any EVIDENCE.
Anne Frank's stepsister said, many years later, that there was something wrong with the photos of the Soviet liberation of Auschwitz. She had been a prisoner there (notice: she was not gassed to death -- she lived a long life after the captivity).
The liberation occured in January 1945. BUT ... there was no snow on the ground in any of the photos. She said there was a lot of snow, and it should have been piled high. But no snow.
Being Anne Frank's stepsister, she had connections in the Russian embassy. She asked about this, and they admitted that those liberation photos were faked.
Here she is explaining this:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/138EteRjYwQD/
This is why Ernst Zundel and Fred Leutcher are so important. Their timing was absolutely perfect. Leutcher was able to get into Auschwitz to investigate at a time when Poland and the Soviet bloc were falling apart, and nobody really cared about or knew anything about the Western false claims of the gas chambers.
Auschwitz was no longer under tight control to keep people from the West out, and yet the people in charge of the place didn't really understand what Leutcher was investigating, so they let him do what he wanted and go where he wanted. He was able to do things that nobody would be allowed to do today. His timing to investigate was perfect -- just a few years before the Berlin Wall fell, and during the time that the Soviet control was fading fast.