H. Keith Thompson
Harold Keith Thompson | |
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Born | New Jersey, US | September 17, 1922
Died | March 3, 2002 | (aged 79)
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Harold Keith Thompson (September 17, 1922 – March 3, 2002) was a New York City-based corporate executive, a Nazi agent, and a figure within American far-right and fascist circles.[1][2]
Biography
Thompson was born in New Jersey in 1922.[1]: 85
Nazi activism
Thompson began his political activism in his teenage years, joining the
Postwar
Thompson graduated from
Alongside his political activities, Thompson found work in public relations and owned a PR firm by the 1950s.[3][1]: 85
The writer Stephen E. Atkins describes Thompson as "the intermediary between American prewar Nazism and the postwar neo-Nazism".[3] Thompson befriended the German Nazi Otto Skorzeny, who had been Hitler's commando leader, and worked with him to set up ODESSA.[1]: 86–87 [7] Thompson also became a close ally of Otto Ernst Remer, a Nazi general who had defended Hitler against a 1944 coup plot,[8] and in 1951, Thompson registered with the United States Department of Justice as the American representative for the German neo-Nazi Socialist Reich Party co-founded by Remer, a position Thompson held until the group was banned in 1952. Around the same time, he became involved with the National Renaissance Party, the American neo-Nazi party founded by James Madole.[9][8][3] Thompson campaigned with Francis Parker Yockey for Remer's release from prison during the 1950s. Thompson and Yockey remained close allies until the latter's suicide in federal custody in 1960.[1]: 103–106 Thompson also ran a campaign to release Karl Dönitz, Hitler's successor.[2] Thompson worked with neo-Nazi presses in South America to distribute literature covertly in Germany.[7]
Among the stranger aspects of Thompson´s life he was friends with the Jewish Communist publisher,
In his article "I Am an American Fascist" for the obscure Exposé magazine in 1954, Thompson praised the
Thompson visited
Republican Party and later work
Along with a number of right wing activists Thompson was also involved on the fringes of the Republican Party. Independently wealthy, he contributed to the campaigns of such right wing figures in the GOP as Jesse Helms, Oliver North and Pat Buchanan. His monetary contributions to the party were such that he was awarded membership of its Presidential Legion of Merit as a result.[1]: 387
In his later years, Thompson largely disappeared from public view. In the wake of the Oklahoma City bombing he re-emerged, initially welcoming the attack; afterward, however, he later revised his position and denounced it as a government act designed to destroy the reputation of the far right.[1]: 354
He would also speak positively about the Russian nationalist politician
Thompson died in 2002.
Writing
In the early post-war years, Thompson worked as a publisher and literary agent (his clients included Fulgencio Batista, Carol II of Romania and Hans-Ulrich Rudel).[1]: 114 Thompson was offered a position on the board of policy of the Liberty Lobby, although he turned it down, stating that he only wanted to take one loyalty oath in his life (to Hitler when he joined the SD).[1]: 225
References
- ^ ISBN 9780316519595.
- ^ ISBN 9780252074639. Archived from the originalon 2007-05-03. Retrieved 2007-08-15.
- ^ OCLC 763156200.
- )
- ^ a b THOMPSON, Harold Keith, HQ 100-370871 and HQ 105-18598.
- ^ "H. Keith Thompson, was with Operation "High Jump" in Antarctica". www.sharkhunters.com. Archived from the original on 2017-11-16. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
- ^ OCLC 47665567.
- ^ a b "Pan-Aryanism Binds Hate Groups in America and Europe". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2022-05-02.
- ^ 'The Ties that Bind' Archived 2009-10-19 at the Wayback Machine from the Southern Poverty Law Center site
- ISBN 1-57027-039-2.
- ^ "From Hitler to the "Arab Reich"".
- ^ Lee, Martin A. (Spring 2002). "National Alliance, Holocaust Deniers React to 9/11 Attacks". Intelligence Report. Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
External links
- FBI files on H. Keith Thompson, obtained under the FOIA and hosted at the Internet Archive: