Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Finis Germaniae

The other day I took part in a guided tour of the German military archive in Freiburg organized by my favorite local newspaper for their subscribers.


I had planned to write a blog about the visit but delayed it because of other activities. Today, February 29, I suddenly found my photo in the newspaper. This is the reason, together with the rare date, that I must publish today.


You see me in the back, bending forward over one of the showcases, taking a picture of a historical document. Those who know me remember that due to age and having talked during my whole life mostly to people shorter than me, I keep myself somewhat bent but not as much as in the photo. Is this because I am trying to get the document into frame and focus, or is it the document's content that makes me bow?

The document you find below is the record of the unconditional surrender of all German forces signed at Reims, France, on May 7, 1945. While the Germans had hoped for a separate agreement with the Western forces, General Eisenhower had insisted on an unconditional surrender but agreed that the document signed at 02.41 hours (a.m.) only became effective on May 8 at 23.01 hours, corresponding to May 9, 00.01 hours German daylight saving time. This left about 48 hours for the German ground troops to move to territories occupied by Western forces, thus escaping Russian capture and Gulags. You note the champagne city is handwritten Rheims in the document. Were the victors thinking of the Rhine River rather than the booze?



Colonel General Alfred Jodl, Chief of the Operations Staff of the German Armed Forces High Command for the German forces, signed the document. He was later tried at Nuremberg and hanged on October 16, 1946. Lieutenant General Walter "Beetle "Smith, Eisenhower's chief of staff, represented the Allied Expedition Forces. For the Soviet high command, Major General Iwan Susloparov placed his signature. French Major General François Sevez served as a witness.

At Reims, senior Allied commanders celebrate signing the document of unconditional German surrender with Ike showing some pens. His assistant Walter Bedell Smith, cap in his hand, is on his left. At the far left in front is Ivan Susloparov (Photo Wikipedia).
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Saturday, February 11, 2012

Nuclear Coincidence

Luckily enough, it was only a coincidence and not a nuclear incident. Yesterday I read in the local newspaper Badische Zeitung that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has approved the construction of two new power reactors in the States, while a few kilometers from Freiburg, just across the Rhine River, French and German anti-nuclear activists demanded the shutdown of the French nuclear power station at Fessenheim. Mind you, not all is black and white.

While Germany has decided to phase out nuclear power, the NRC approved the construction of two new light-water high-pressure atomic reactors of the Westinghouse A1000 type at the existing Vogtei site in Georgia.

Lucky cows grazing in the shadow of the cooling towers
of the existing Vogtei nuclear power station (Photo dpa)
The last approval of a reactor in the States dates back to 1978, just one year before the nuclear accident occurred at the Three Mile Island site near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Three Mile Island
According to Westinghouse, the A1000 features proven technology, innovative passive safety systems, and economic competitiveness by improved and more efficient operations. Besides, the innovative A1000 offers:

Is fewer also better? 
The NRC's vote was a 4 to 1 decision. Its chairman Gregory Jaczko raised considerable safety concerns, "I cannot support this approval as if Fukushima did not happen." In contrast, the Obama administration is looking forward to creating 25,000 new jobs focusing on the usual argument of reducing the US dependence on fossil energy.

Following the meltdowns at the Fukushima reactor plant and defying strong opposition within her Christian Democratic party, physicist and Chancellor Angela Merkel forced the immediate shutdown of eight of Germany's oldest nuclear power stations. The other nine will be phased out by 2022.

While Merkel and French President Sarkozy (also referred to as Merkozy) are walking and working hand in hand, suffocating the Greeks* by trying to keep them in the Eurozone, they have entirely different views on atomic energy.
*forcing the upgrade of a traditionally self-contained Greek economy that is living on olives and retsina and has a record 25% of the active population occupied in administration to central European standards

With the Siberian cold wave currently sweeping over Germany into France, 60 million freezing French suddenly use twice the electrical energy of 80 million Germans. The reason is that many houses in France have electrical heating and rely heavily on our neighbor's 58 power reactors producing nearly 80% of all electrical energy. Due to France's massive demand*, Germany exports electricity across the Rhine!
*Many homes in France are heated by electricity

This is why Sarkozy, when visiting one of the oldest nuclear sites in France, operating at Fessenheim since 1975, stated: The electricity you produce is indispensable for the people.

The President in the Control Room. Doesn't he look as if he had lost control?
In the meantime, German anti-atomic protesters tried to join their French colleagues on the other side of the Rhine River, but in vain. The French riot police blocked the bridge with the argument they must protect their president. So the gendarmes and not the president read black on yellow: Merkozy sortons ensemble du nucléaire.

German protesters facing French riot police carrying banners
and the photo of a deformed child from Chornobyl (photo BZ)
When the French activists were eventually allowed to articulate their arguments against nuclear power, they were told bluntly: There are rigorous safety rules. When these are observed, the power station is safe. Sarkozy stepped up the tone: Anyone who wants to close Fessenheim is committing a political swindle, he said to the applause of Fessensheim's workforce when mentioning the hundreds of jobs depending on their nuclear power station. Sarkozy concluded: France's atomic policy is our force; we will not change it.

Referring to the demand of 400 politicians in Alsace who had asked for the immediate shutdown of the Fessenheim reactor complex, Freiburg's mayor Dieter Salomon (Green) commented: The President is turning a blind eye on reality and ignoring the worries of the people. He asked Merkel to discuss the issue with Sarkozy in their next tête-à-tête.
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