The Norwegian saboteurs skied across the Telemark pine forest in winter whites, phantom apparitions gliding over moonlit snow. They halted at a steep river gorge and gazed down at a humming hydroelectric power plant where Nazi scientists had developed a mysterious, top-secret project.
Lt. Joachim Ronneberg, the 23-year-old resistance fighter in command, and his eight comrades — all carrying cyanide capsules to swallow if captured — had been told by British intelligence only that the plant was distilling something called heavy water, and that it was vital to Hitler’s war effort.
Hours later, in one of the most celebrated commando raids of World War II, Lieutenant Ronneberg and his demolition team sneaked past guards and a barracks full of German troops, stole into the plant, set explosive charges and blew up Hitler’s hopes for a critical ingredient to create the first atomic bomb.
Mr. Ronneberg, the last surviving member of the 1943 raid and one of the most decorated war heroes of a nation renowned for valorous resistance to the 1940-45 German Occupation, died on Sunday in Alesund, Norway, his daughter, Birte Ronneberg, said. He was 99.
Read More: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/22/obituaries/joachim-ronneberg-dead.html
Διαβάστε για την
Επιχείρηση GUNNER SIDE: η μάχη για το «βαρύ ύδωρ», 27 Φεβ 1943
εδώ: https://filpap.blogspot.com/2016/12/gunner-side-27-1943.htmlκαι εδώ: http://flamehistory.blogspot.com/2009/01/gunner-side.html
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