Robert Wolfe

Robert Wolfe (born March 2, 1921) is a former World War II U.S. Army officer who fought in both the Pacific and European Theaters of Operation. He commanded a recon team and also an anti-landmine platoon. He is a retired senior archivist of the US National Archives and an expert on captured Nazi war documents. Wolfe worked for 34 years at the Archives, functioning as its senior specialist for captured German and related records.

Military career
He received head wounds in both theaters. While recovering from his first wound he served in a training cadre in Ohio. After receiving his second head wound in France he was assigned to the Office of Military Censorship in Paris, France.

After the end of the European war he joined the Office of Military Government in Heidelberg, Germany. At first his duties were with the prosecutors' office for the Nurnberg War Crimes trials. After the trials ended he worked with U.S. efforts to rebuild the German civilian government.

The office manager in 1947 was Ingeborg Edith Kirch. She and Wolfe were married in 1948 before leaving Germany for the U.S. They returned to Manhattan, New York City, where Robert completed his education at Columbia University. While working on his doctorate he taught history and political science at Brooklyn College.

NARA career
He joined the National Archives in 1961, upon concluding service as a member of the American Historical Association team microfilming captured German records at the World War II Records Center in Alexandria, Virginia.

Berlin Document Center
Wolfe also served as archival consultant to the Department of State for the Berlin Document Center (BDC) and as Special Adviser to Eli Wiesel for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. His publications include: Captured German and Related Records: a National Archives Conference (1974) and Americans as Proconsuls: U.S. Military Government in Germany and Japan, 1944-52 (1984).

As archival consultant to the Department of State for the BDC from 1968 to 1994, Wolfe was the chief American negotiator for the return to the West German government of original captured Nazi Party personnel records assembled by the victors at the BDC. During that time, he wrote official reports and presented and published papers concerning the history of those records, specifically including reference to the discovery and capture of the Nazi Party records found at the paper mill in Schwabing-Freimann, Germany. One such publication was a "A Short History of the Berlin Document Center", written as a Preface to "The Holdings of the Berlin Document Center: A Guide to the Collections" (BDC, Berlin, 1994).

In 2001, Wolfe wrote a monograph describing the discovery of the Nazi Party's worldwide membership card file by U.S. Army Counter Intelligence Corps Agent Michel Thomas in early May 1945.

Interagency Working Group
Wolfe was one of eight independent historians employed by the Interagency Working Group (IWG) to assist in implementing the declassification and disclosures under the provisions of the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act (NWCDA). The IWG had been established to oversee the review of Federal agency records under consideration for declassification. These historians served as ex officio members of the IWG and were involved in all aspects of the IWG's work with German and Japanese Imperial war records in order to comply with the "largest congressionally mandated declassification project in U.S. history".

The eight million pages of material declassified by the IWG under the NWCDA added significantly to the publicly available information about Nazi war crimes, collaborators, and the lives of selected criminals following the war. Wolfe was one of the authors of a 2004 report entitled U.S. Intelligence and the Nazis which was revised and released the following year, 2005, by Cambridge University Press as a book.

Among the senior Nazis intensely sought by the Allies was Heinrich Müller (Gestapo), who was head of the Gestapo. No arrest was reported; no body was identified. Both the Soviets and the West wanted to interrogate him about many aspects of the war. Wolfe and three other historians analyzed what evidence was available. Their conclusion, “The Mystery of Heinrich Müller: New Materials from the CIA,” Holocaust and Genocide Studies published in 2001, was that Müller had been killed in Berlin as the war drew to a close.

The expertise of the historians in the searching process and their resulting analysis of the records was a major contribution to public understanding of WW II war crimes and the involvement of U.S. agencies relating to those charged or suspected of war crimes.