Unknown documents of the American CIA about Heinrich Müller, the head of Hitler's Nazi Gestapo, who is said to have been kidnapped by the Soviets after 1945 and sent to Moscow, where he served for years for Stalin's Russian KGB, show that he was sheltered in Tirana. According to the American secret services, in 1956, Müller came to Albania and for years was put in the service of the State Security, under the false name Abedin Beqiri, which is also confirmed by several former senior cadres of the State Security...?!
In 1945, immediately after the end of the Second World War, according to the agreement made by the three Great Powers: the USA, England and the Soviet Union, the secret services of these countries, in cooperation with those of the other countries that emerged victorious from it war, began the pursuit, discovery and arrest of all those persons who were accused of war crimes. In this context, the International War Crimes Court was established and functioned, which became known with the famous Nuremberg trial, where some of the high exponents of Adolf Hitler's Nazi dome were tried and convicted, who had done war crimes. But the dock of that trial also lacked many former senior officers of Hitler's Staff, who at the end of the war had been able to escape and then hide, escaping the trial. One of them was Heinrich Myler, head of the Nazi Gestapo, who is said to have been in the bunker of the Reisch Chancellery until the last moment when the Soviet soldiers entered. He lost his tracks there. It is said that at the moment when Russian soldiers were taking control of Hitler's last lair, Mueller was kidnapped by the Russian KGB and then sent to Stalin's Soviet Union, where for years he served the official Moscow and the Russian secret services led by Lavrentiy Beria. From 1945 onwards, dozens of versions, sometimes contradictory to each other, have been given and written about Myler's fate. From some testimony of the American CIA, it is known that in 1956, Myler also came to Albania, where for years he served the State Security of the communist regime of Enver Hoxha.

Who was Heinrich Müller?
Heinrich Müller was born on April 28, 1900. In World War I he served as chief of the Munich police, where he soon became known as an anti-communist. In 1923, Heinrich and Gering founded the Secret Police of the German state, known as GESTAPO for short. Then, Myler participated as an operative in the ranks of the RSHA (Reich Security Office), where he served as a leader in its governing bodies, until September 1939, when Germany invaded Poland. With the assassination of Heinrich in Czechoslovakia in 1942, Müller was appointed chief of the Gestapo and at that time he began the persecution of German communist elements, Jews and Russian prisoners who were executed in concentration camps. In October 1944, at Hitler's suggestion, Müller was awarded the Iron Cross as a reward for suppressing the anti-Hitler putsch that had taken place in July 1944. One of the most famous successes of Nazi Germany's secret services , at the time it was led by Myler, was the destruction of the "Red Orchestra" organization and the acquisition of information by Soviet espionage during the Second World War.

After the war ended, in 1945, Muller and his close friend, Walter Schellenberg, placed themselves at the disposal of Moscow's secret services and worked for Stalin's Soviet Union. From 1946 to 1963, Myler worked for the secret services of the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia and Argentina. On several occasions, Mueller provided information to the Russian KGB about American bases installed in West Germany. In 1963, Myler escaped to Cuba and then to Argentina, which at that time was headed by President Juan Peron. There is another version of Mueller's disappearance, given by the Czech communist leader, Rudolf Barak, which says that KGB agents kidnapped Mueller from Argentina and sent him to a prison in the Soviet Union with several other Germans. Another version about Muller is also given by Alois Brunner (commander of a concentration camp for Jews, located in France), who wrote that Muller took refuge in Syria and that he (that is, Muller) is not guilty of the "solution" the end of the Jewish problem. Other evidence about Muller is given by Marvin Hier, the founder of the "Simon Wiesenthal" Holocaust Center in Los Angeles, who testified: "Mueller was never tried for what he did during the war and we have no find out nothing". In 1946, the secret services of the American army announced that after the war Myler committed suicide together with his wife and three children. According to the CIA, Mueller and Eichman (his accomplice in war crimes) stayed in an underground tunnel in Berlin, from where they later went underground under false names. Eichman was arrested in 1960 by Israeli secret service agents (Mossadi) and killed by them in Jerusalem, while Muller fled to Russia and then to Latin America.

The first quest for Gestapo Muller
After the entry of Anglo-American troops into Berlin, the secret British counter-espionage services in cooperation with those of the American counter-espionage, began to draw up a detailed plan for the arrest and trial of Nazi war criminals. In their plans and lists, the most important was Heinrich Myler, together with Schellenberg, Ohlendrof, Steimle and Sanderberger, who after the war had disappeared, or played a double game with the foreign agencies of the communist countries of the East, such as e.g., with the KGB of the Soviet Union, in the case of Mueller. On August 22, 1945, the American secret services believed that they had arrested Heinrich Müller, but it turned out that this was all a disinformation, since they had arrested Walter Huppenkothen, the persecutor of the "Red Orchestra" and not his boss (Müller). A later discovery made by George Blake, Harri Jungton and Heinz Felfe, shows that according to the testimony of Mikail Golinevski (chief of the Polish secret services until 1958), from 1948 to 1958, from information collected on criminals of the war, it turns out that Myler was staying in Moscow with the help of the KGB. The same information is given by Jakobs Loegles (former head of the Gestapo of Gdansk in Poland), who later served and worked for the BND (Secret Intelligence Service of the Federal Republic of Germany).
End of War and Myler
In the last year of the War, Heinrich Müller still believed in the victory of Nazism. At that time he cooperated with German counterintelligence officers and in December 1944, in the Ardennes forest they achieved a temporary success against the Americans. During this time, his agents played a double game with the Soviets. A significant number of Müller's agents returned to the Soviets after the war, which Walter Schellenberg (former head of RASH) testified when he said: "Müller had told the Russians on the radio that Stalin was a superior leader than Hitler". But according to a revelation by CIA agents and the testimony of Heinz Pannwitz (Secretary in the Gestapo), it is known that Müller absolutely never said such a thing, and that he had ordered the liquidation of the "Red Orchestra" ( Soviet spy agency).
Hypothesis about Mueller's death
After the war, German authorities hired three former Nazi majors to certify Müller's death. From the testimony of the first major named Fritz Leopold (former officer in the Berlin morgue), it is known that Müller's lifeless body was taken out of the morgue by some SS officers (effectives of the RSHA headquarters) on the street " Prince Albert" (2 km from the Reisch Chancellery) and is buried in the west of the city. But later this statement of theirs was refuted, because at that time and in that place, it turned out that another man, eight years younger than Myler, was buried. The second testimony comes from Heinz Pannwitz (RSHA employee), who stated that Müller surrendered to the Soviets and in 1957 he worked for the BVD). But he emphasized that during the end of the war Myler was trapped in the tunnel of the Chancellery and that only his head and identification documents were found. The third testimony comes from Valter Luders (Volkshturm recruit), who shows that during the last few days in the garden of the Reisch Chancellery, among dozens of ordinary corpses, a corpse could be distinguished on the clothing of which medals and ranks were clearly visible. a major SS officer. Afterwards, this corpse, which was thought to be Müller's, was moved to the "Old Jewish Square", in the Soviet sector, where it then disappeared under unclear circumstances. In 1955, the Information Office for the German Army claimed that ten years earlier, in Grasen-Hamburgerstrasse, Müller's body had been buried there. But the statements and information were not complete. They were never mentioned in the Allied dossier on Mueller. From some other CIA data, regarding Mueller's activity, it is known that after the war he took refuge in South Africa, Romania, Turkey, the Soviet Union, Argentina and later in Albania. In Albania he was taken under the protection of the communist employees of the official Tirana State Security, who kept him hidden under the false name: Abedin Beqir Nikoshir. But the KGB, where Myler himself is said to have worked, has also released its version. According to Moscow, Muller died in Berlin in May 1945.
In 1965, "Zëri I Popullit" denied that Müller was sheltering in Albania.
The different versions and testimonies about a possible shelter in communist Albania of Enver Hoxha for the former head of Nazi Gestapo Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Myler, are not completely unknown. Some former senior officials of the Albanian State Security, who before the 90s served in several representations and embassies of our country (mainly accredited in the West), camouflaging themselves under the cloak of diplomats, have testified confidential to Memorie.al that the "Myler case" is not unknown and new to them. According to them, from 1956, when Khrushchev was undertaking the de-Stalinization of the Soviet Union, fanatic circles of the KGB removed Myler from Moscow and brought him to Albania, seeing our country as safer and more closed to the world. According to them, it is said that Myler was kept for years under strict security measures in one of the rooms of the building of the Albanian Intelligence Directorate (inside the Palace of Brigades), which he served for years. Only Enver Hoxha, Mehmet Shehu, Hysni Kapo and Kadri Hazbiu knew about the true identity of Myler and his location in Tirana. This secret was kept until the beginning of the 60s, when Albania broke off relations with the Soviet Union. Since that time, from time to time several Western countries have asked official Tirana to hand over the former head of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Gestapo. According to the testimony of one of our former diplomats in the West, since 1965, almost every day near the Albanian embassy in Vienna (where at that time Mehmet Çaka served as ambassador), letters and protest notes were delivered asking the government of Tirana to hand over Myler. . Based on this, through the Albanian Telegraphic Agency (ATSH), official Tirana denied the news that Myler was taking refuge in Albania. At that time, the short rebuttal of the ATSH was published in a few lines by the newspaper "Zëri I Popullit", an organ of the Central Committee of the APS. But Myler's traces are not finally lost in Albania, as it is said that shortly before the break with the Chinese, he was taken by them and ended up in the People's Republic of China, where it is no longer known how his fate went...?! / Memory.al
