(1 December 1999). Devlin Barrett, "Holocaust Assets," in
New York Post
(2 December 1999).
Stewart Ain, "Religious Strife Erupts In Swiss Money Fight," in
Jewish Week
(14 January 2000)
("angle»). Adam Dickter, "Discord in the court," in
Jewish Week
(21 January 2000). Swiss Fund for
Needy victims of the Holocaust/Shoa, "Overview on Finances, Payments and Pending Applications"
(30 November 1999). Holocaust survivors in Israel never received any of the Special Fund monies
earmarked for them; see Yair Sheleg, ''surviving Israeli Bureaucracy," in
Haaretz
(6 February 2000).
39
Burt Neuborne, "Totaling the sum of Swiss Guilt," in
New York Times
(24 June 1998). Hearings
before the committee on Banking and Financial services, House of Representatives, 11 December
1996. "Holocaust-Konferenz in Stockholm," in
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
(26 January 2000)
(Bronfman).
40
Independent commission of Experts, Switzerland - Second World war,
Switzerland and Gold
Transactions in the Second World War, Interim Report
(Bern: 1998).
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41
Hearings before the committee on Banking and Financial services, House of Representatives, 11
December 1996. Called as an expert witness, university of North Carolina historian Gerhard L.
Weinberg sanctimoniously testified that the "position of the Swiss Government at the time and m the
immediate postwar years was always that looting
is
legal," and that "priority number one'' of the Swiss
banks was "making as much money as possible . . . and to do so regardless of the legalities, morality
and decency or anything else." (Hearings before the committee on Banking and Financial services,
House of Representatives, 25 June 1997)
42
Raymond W. Baker, "The Biggest Loophole in the Free-Market system," in
Washington Quarterly
(Autumn 1999). Although not sanctioned by US law, much of the $500 billion-$1 trillion annually
"laundered" from the drug trade is also "safely deposited into US banks." (ibid.)
43
Ziegler,
The Swiss,
xii; cf. 19, 26s.
44
Switzerland and Gold Transactions in the Second World War,
IV, 48.
45
Independent Committee of Eminent Persons,
Report on Dormant Accounts of Victims of Nazi
Persecution in Swiss Banks
(Bern 1999). (hereafter
Report)
46
The "external cost" of the audit was put at $200 million.
(Report, p.
4, paragraph 17) The cost to
the Swiss banks was put at another $300 million. (Swiss Federal Banking commission, press release, 6
December 1999)
47
Report,
Annex s, p. 81, paragraph 1 (cf. Part I, pp. 1 3 - 1 5, paragraphs 41-9).
48
Report:
Part I, p. 6, paragraph 22 ("no evidence"); Part I, p. 6, paragraph 23 (banking laws and
percentage); Annex 4, p. s8, paragraph s ("truly extraordinary") and Annex s, p. 81, paragraph 3
("truly remarkable") (cf. Part I, p. 15, paragraph 47, Part I, p. 17, paragraph s8, Annex 7, p. 107,
paragraphs 3, 9)
49
"The Deceptions of Swiss Banks," in
New York Times
(7 December 1999).
50
Report,
Annex s, p. 81, paragraph 2.
Report,
Annex s, pp. 87 - 8, paragraph 27 "There are a variety
of explanations for the substantial under-reporting in the early surveys, but some of the main causes
can be attributed to the Swiss banks' use of narrow definitions of 'dormant' accounts; their exclusion of
certain types of accounts from their searches or inadequate research; their failure to investigate
accounts under certain minimum balances; or their failure to consider account holders to be victims of
Nazi violence or persecution umless relatives made such claims at the bank."
51
Repon, p.
10, paragraph 30 ("possible or probable"); p. 20, paragraphs 73-5(significant probability
for 25,000 accounts).
Repon,
Annex 4, pp. 65-7, paragraphs 20-6, and p. 72, paragraphs 40-3 (current
values). In accordance with the
Repon
recommendation, the Swiss Federal Banking Commission
agreed in March 2000 to publish the 25,000 account names. ("Swiss Federal Banking Commission
Follows Voleker Recommendations," press release, 30 March 2000)
52
Hearings before the Committee on Banking and Financial Services, House of Representatives, 9
February 2000 (quoted from Voleker's prepared testimony). Compare the caveats entered by the Swiss
Federal Banking Commission that "all indications on possible current values of accounts identified are
essentially based on assumptions and projections," and that "only in the case of about 1,200 accounts .
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. . has actual evidence be [sicl found, supported by contemporary in-house banking sources, that the
account owners were actually victims of the Holocaust." (press release, 6 December 1999)
53
Repon, p.
2, paragraph 8 (cf. p. 23, paragraph 92).
Report,
Appendix S. p. A134; for a more precise
breakdown, cf. pp. A-135ff.
54
Hearings before the Committee on Banking and Financial services, House of Representatives, 25
June 1997 (quoted from Rubin's prepared testimony). i For background, see Seymour J. Rubin and
Abba P. Schwartz, "Refugees and Reparations," in
Law and Contemporary Problems
[Duke
University School of Law 1951], 286 - 9)
55
Hearings before the committee on Banking and Financial Services, House of Representatives, 25
June 1997.
56
Switzerland's population stood at 4 million for the Relevant Period of 1933 - 45 as compared to the
US population of over 130 million. Every Swiss bank accoumt opened, closed or dormant during these
years was audited by the Volcker committee.
57
Levin,
Last Deposit,
23. Bower,
Nazi Gold,
256. Bower deems this
Swiss
demand "unanswerable
rhetoric." Unanswerable no doubt, but
why
rhetoric?
58
Rickman,
Swiss Banks,
194 - 5.
59
Bower,
Nazi Gold,
350-1. Akiva Eldar, "UK: Israel Didn't Hand Over Compensation to
Survivors," in
Haaretz (21
February 2000). Judy Dempsey, "Jews Find It Hard to Reclaim wartime
Property In Israel," in
Financial Times
(1 April 2000). Jack Katzenell, "Israel Has WWII Assets," in
Associated Press
(13 April 2000). Joel Greenberg, "Hunt for Holocaust victims' Property Turns in
New Direction: Toward Israel," in
New York Times (15
April 2000). Akiva Eldar, People and
Politics," in
Haaretz
(27 April 2000).
60
For information on the Commission, see
www.pcha.gov
(Bronfman quoted from a 21 November
1999 commission press release).
61
Hearings before the Committee on Banking and Financial services, House of Representatives, 9
February 2000.
62
Levin,
Last Deposit,
223, 204. "Swiss Defensive About WWII Role," in
Associated Press (15
March 2000).
Time
(24 February 1997) (Bronfman).
63
Levin,
Last Deposit,
224.
64
Hearings before the Committee on Banking and Financial services, House of Representatives, 14
September 1999.
65
Yair
Sheleg, "Not Even Minimum
Wage,"
in
Haaretz
(6 October 1999). William Drozdiak,
"Germans Up Offer to Nazis' Slave Laborers," in
Washington Post
(18 November 1999). Burt
Herman, "Nazi Labor Talks End Without Pact," in
Forward
(20 November 1999). "Bayer's
Biggest
Headache," in
New York Times (5
October
1999).
Jan Cienski, "Wartime Slave-Labour Survivors' Ads
Hit Back," in
National Post (7
October 1999). Edmund L. Andrews, "Germans To Set Up $5.1 Billion
Fund For Nazis' Slaves," in
New York Times
(15 December 1999). Edmund L. Andrews, "Germany
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Accepts $5.1 billion Accord to End Claims of Nazi Slave Workers," in
New York Times
(18 December
1999). Allan Hall, "Slave Labour List Names 255 German Companies," in
The Times
(London) (9
December 1999). Hearings before the Committee on Banking and Financial Services, House of
Representatives, 9 February 2000 (quoted from Eizenstat's prepared testimony).
66
Sagi,
German Reparations,
161. Probably a quarter of the Jewish slave laborers received such a
pension, my late father (an Auschwitz inmate) among them. In fact, the Claims Conference's figure in
the current negotiations for Jewish slave laborers still alive is based on those already receiving
pensions and compensation from Germany! (German Parliament, 92nd session, 15 March 2000)
67
Zweig,
German Reparations and the Jewish World,
98; cf. 25.
68
Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, "Position Paper — Slave Labor.
Proposed Remembrance and Responsibility Fund" ( 15 June 1999). Netty C. Gross, "$5.1-Billion
Slave Labor Deal Could Yield Little Cash For Jewish Claimants," in
Jerusalem Report
(31 January
2000). zvi Lavi, "KIeiner (Herut) Germany Claims Conference Has Become Judenrat, Carrying on
Nazi ways,', in
Globes
(24 February 2000). Yair Sheleg, "MK Kleiner The Claims Conference Does
Not Transfer Indemnifications to Shoah survivors," in
Haaretz
(24 February 2000).
69
Hearings before the committee on Banking and Financial Services, House of Representatives, 9
February 2000. Yair Sheleg, "Staking a Claim to Jewish Claims," in Haarerz (31 March 2000).
70
Henry Friedlander, "Darkness and Dawn in 1945 The Nazis, the Allies, and the Survivors," in us
Holocaust Memorial Museum, 1945 — The Year of Liberation
(Washington: 1995), 11-35.
Dinnerstein,
America and the Surnvors of the Holocaust,
28. Israeli historian Shlomo Shafir reports
«the estimate of Jewish survivors at the end of the war in Europe vary from 50,000 to 70,000"
(Ambiguous Relations,
384nl). Friedlander's total figure for surviving slave laborers, Jewish and
non-Jewish, is standard; see Benjamin Ferencz,
Less Than Slaves
(Cambridge: 1979) —
"approximately half a million persons were found more or less alive in the camps that were liberated
by the Allied armies" (xvii; cf. 240n5).
71
Stuart Eizenstat, Undersecretary of State for Economic, Business and Agricultural Affairs, Chief
US Envoy in German Slave-Labor Negotiations, State Department Briefing, 12 May 1999.
72
See Eizenstat's "remarks" at the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany and
Austria Annual Meeting (New York: 14 July 1999).
73
Toby Axelrod, "$5.2 Billion Slave-Labor Deal Only the Start," in
Jewish Bulletin
(12 December