[Images
and captions added by this website]

Heinrich
Himmler inspects Peenemünde: In June
1943 the SS chief visited the German
experimental station's Launch Pad VII (in the
background) and witnessed the successful
launching of a V2 rocket. To his left is Colonel
Leo Zanssen, commandant of the Army station.
From David Irving, The Mare's Nest
(London,1965)
[source]
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Town
criticized for honoring V2 scientist
By Dave Graham
BERLIN (Reuters) - A German
town has been accused of encouraging neo-Nazism
after naming a school after a scientist who
helped build the V-2 rockets launched against
Allied targets during World War Two.
Bernstadt auf dem Eigen has renamed a
secondary school in honor of Klaus
Riedel, who played a central role in the
Nazis' development of the V-2 rocket program, to
mark the centenary of his birth.
The
Nazis used thousands of slave laborers to build
the V-2 which were fired at Antwerp and London
near the end of the war, killing thousands.
Image
right : V2 rocket engines at the Mittelwerk
underground assembly plant near Nordhausen in
the Harz mountains
Astrid Guenther-Schmidt, a Green party
member of Saxony's state parliament in eastern
Germany, said naming the school after Riedel was
completely inappropriate and an open invitation
to the far-right National Democratic Party
(NPD).
"If the NPD find out that there's a monument
to one of the people behind the V-2 rocket, then
I'd be extremely worried they're going to hold
rallies all the time there," she said.
The NPD, which has been compared to the Nazi
party, enjoys significant support in Bernstadt's
state of Saxony and won more than 9 percent of
votes in the last regional election.
A slideshow on the school's website -- which
has been changed following complaints --
mentions V-2 rockets were fired on Britain
"killing many innocent people."
"They
should make clear forced laborers made the V-2
under the most inhuman conditions, that there
were mass executions there every week...and
publicly attest to knowing this -- then explain
why they chose the name," said
Guenther-Schmidt.
Historians estimate up
to 20,000 slave laborers died due to
their work on the V-2, which killed around 7,000
military and civilian personnel before the Third
Reich collapsed.
Local mayor Gunter Lange told Reuters
he stood by the school decision. He insisted
Riedel was not a Nazi and deserved recognition
for his contributions to rocket science.
"The name Klaus Riedel has been a fixture in
the town for many years. There's been a monument
to him here since the 1990s. There's a crater on
the moon named after him. And nobody has ever
been bothered by it until now."
Johannes Weyer, an
expert on sociological
technology studies at Dortmund's
Technical University, said Riedel, who developed
the V-2's mobile launch pads, had been well
aware of what the Nazis were planning.
"These people bear a heavy burden of guilt,"
he said. "You can't develop rockets for the
Nazis and simultaneously be against them. Naming
a school after someone who had a leading
function on this rocket project raises serious
moral issues."
Mayor Lange conceded the choice of Riedel,
who died in an automobile accident in 1944, was
"problematic" and he would discuss it at the
next meeting of the town council.
"Then they'll have to decide if we say:
'Right, let's leave it,' or whether we go back
on it a bit after all'," he said.
(editing by Robert Woodward)

Tuesday, February 5,
2008
Town names
school after Nazi rocket expert
By Harry de Quetteville in Berlin
A GERMAN town has sparked an
outcry after naming its school after a Nazi
scientist who helped to develop the V2 rockets
that terrorised London during the Second World
War.
Bernstadt auf dem Eigen, on the eastern
border with Poland, has dedicated a school to
Klaus Riedel, who was instrumental in
developing the mobile launch pads for Hitler's
wonder weapon that killed some 2,700 civilians
in England and injured an estimated 6,500
people.
The honour to Riedel is considered
particularly sensitive as the school is in the
state of Saxony, where Germany's far-right NPD
party has scored well in recent elections.
"If the NPD finds out that there's a monument
to one of the people behind the V2 rocket, then
I'd be extremely worried they're going to hold
rallies all the time there," said Astrid
Guenther-Schmidt, from Saxony's Green
party.
Riedel was invited to join the rocket team by
Wernher von Braun, who designed the V2
and was later crucial to the US space
programme.
"The name Klaus Riedel has been a fixture in
the town for many years. There's been a monument
to him here since the 1990s," said Gunter
Lange, the town's mayor.
"There's a crater on the moon named after
him. And nobody has ever been bothered by it
until now." 