Norman J.W. Goda

Norman J.W. Goda
PhD
Born 1959 (age 5758)
Residence United States
Occupation Historian, author, editor
Academic background
Alma mater University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Academic work
Era 20th century
Institutions University of Florida
Main interests Modern European history
History of international relations
Intelligence operations

Norman J. W. Goda is an American historian who specialises in the history of the Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. He is a professor of history at the University of Florida where he is the Norman and Irma Braman Professor of Holocaust Studies.[1]

Goda is the author of several book on the international policy of Nazi Germany, the Holocaust, and the Cold War. He also serves as a historical consultant for the Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial Government Records Interagency Working Group of the United States National Security Archive, tasked with reviewing the previously classified intelligence documents of the World War II period and its aftermath.[2]

Historian of Nazi Germany

Goda is the co-author of thebook U.S. Intelligence and the Nazis, published in 2005 by the Cambridge University Press, that is based on the materials declassified under the 1998 Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act. Reviewing the book in the journal History, historian Steven Casey calls the book "remarkable" and notes that book "sheds new light on three controversial aspects of the war and post-war period", namely, how much U.S. intelligence organisations knew about the Holocaust, the crimes of individual Nazi perpetrators and the "extent to which US intelligence knowingly collaborated with war criminals during the cold war". Casey notes:[3]

Breitman et al. have used these [declassified documents] to write a series of measured case studies, which, unsurprisingly, confirm that many post-war exculpatory accounts by leading Nazis were highly misleading. Indeed, whereas figures such as SD Intelligence Chief Walter Schellenberg sought to depict themselves as reluctant Nazis who had tried their best to save the lives of concentration camp victims or to bring the war to a swift conclusion, the new documents confirm that they were actually ruthless individuals who not only had plenty of blood on their hands but also remained wedded if not to the Nazi cause then at least to their Nazi comrades long after May 1945.

Works

References

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