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Martin Bormann replaced Hitler with a double. Adolf Hitler's personal secretary Martin Bormann is one of the few political figures in Nazi Germany whose name is associated with many rumors, secrets and mysteries. Since 1932, Bormann has been charged with the responsibility of preparing Hitler's doubles in case of possible assassination attempts and provocations. In 1933, he was appointed personal secretary to Deputy Fuhrer Rudolf Hess. It was probably during these years that he conceived the scam of the century, replacing the eccentric but indecisive Hitler with the best and most devoted double in his collection, Maximilian Bauer. But Bormann would have had a hard time handling such an operation alone. He needed a very influential assistant with great potential. This was the future chief of the German Secret State Police, Heinrich Müller. Now, two people, Martin Bormann (as the brains) and Heinrich Müller (as the executor), are engaged in preparing doubles. And the last person to be won over to their side was Hitler's personal driver and bodyguard - Emil Maurice. The real Hitler was killed in the fall of 1938 and replaced by the best and most loyal double in Bormann's collection, Maximilian Bauer. The plot was a success. Many historians and researchers have also noted that it was after 1938 that Germany's foreign policy changed dramatically. It became more aggressive. At the head of this year is the famous Munich Agreement of 1938. Since the fall of 1938, the Reich Chancellery has been ruled by a double of the Fuhrer, carefully prepared by Bormann and Müller. And Maurice continues to play the role of personal driver and bodyguard. And most importantly, since 1939, Martin Bormann, unexpectedly for everyone, becomes the Fuhrer's personal secretary, and Müller is appointed head of Department IV of the Main Directorate of Imperial Security, that is, the Gestapo. Soon the Second World War began. This is an alternative version of the Fate of the Fuhrer. Sources: 1. Bezymensky, L. Tracing Martin Bormann. Honolulu: University Press of the Pacific, 2001. 2. Farago, Ladislas. Aftermath: Martin Bormann and the Fourth Reich. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1974. 3. Manning, Paul. Martin Bormann: Nazi in Exile. Secaucus, NJ: Lyle Stuart, 1981. 4. Stevenson, William. The Bormann Brotherhood. London: Corgi, 1975. Thank you for your attention! Subscribe to my channel - Yuri Abarin's channel! Sincerely, Yuri Abarin!