dijous, 30 de novembre del 2017

Desaparició del submari "San Juan"



L'últim missatge difós pel submarí argentí que va desaparèixer el 15 de novembre. Indica un problema de la bateria que causa un brot d'incendi.L'últim missatge de l'ARA del San Juan va ser enviat pel comandant del submarí al comandant de la instrucció, Claudio Javier Villamide, el 15 de novembre a les 8:52. Això es va revelar el dilluns, el canal de televisió argentí A24, que emetia el missatge. La desaparició del submarí va desencadenar una investigació intensiva fa dotze dies, que va incloure a catorze països.En l'enregistrament s'entén que el comandant de l'ARA del San Juan declara: "L'entrada de l'aigua de mar per part del sistema de ventilació al dipòsit n º 3 va causar un curtcircuit i el començament d'un foc. Les bateries de reserva no estan disponibles. Estem navegant pel moment en immersió. Et mantinc informat ". El portaveu de la Marina argentina, Enrique Balbi, va confirmar l'autenticitat del missatge. "L'aigua va passar pel sistema de ventilació a la safata de la bateria, provocant un curtcircuit que no va provocar un incendi i es va dominar ràpidament. Les bateries fallides es van aïllar i el submarí va continuar navegant ", va explicar Enrique Balbi


Àrea de cerca reduïda
En aquesta última transmissió, rebuda per radiofreqüència a la base marina, el capità de l'avió va informar, a més del curtcircuit i el començament del foc a les bateries, un subministrament d'aigua a través de la tuba que serveix per renovar oxigen a la cabina. L'incident sembla haver passat quan l'aigua de mar va entrar al vaixell a través del "schnorkel", un tub que permet que els submarins equipats amb motors dièsel, com el de San Juan, operin aquests motors mentre estan en funcionament. immersió, evacuació d'escapament i succió en aire fresc.


"Malauradament, encara no hem localitzat o detectat el submarí", va continuar el portaveu de la Marina argentina. Després d'haver comunicat aquest últim missatge, l'ARA San Juan va desaparèixer sense deixar rastre a bord dels 44 membres de la tripulació. Aquesta última comunicació va tenir lloc quatre dies després de la seva sortida, el diumenge 11 de novembre, d'Ushuaia, a l'extrem sud de l'Argentina, per tornar a Mar de Plata, el seu port d'origen. En el moment d'aquesta última transmissió, el submarí es va veure a 450 quilòmetres de la costa argentina en el golf de San Jorge. La Marina va anunciar el 23 de novembre que l'anàlisi de la "anomalia hidro-acústica" detectat a la zona on el submarí argentí era el 15 de novembre, data de la seva desaparició, tenia les característiques d'un " explosió ". Un informe afirma "un esdeveniment anormal, curt, violent, sense origen nuclear, que correspon a una explosió". Les operacions des de llavors es van concentrar en una àrea més petita de 36 quilòmetres al voltant de l'última posició del San Juan, mentre que l'àrea de recerca fa una setmana era de 600.000 quilòmetres.



Tot l'atenció es centra actualment en on els sensors van registrar l'explosió. Una nau de rescat no tripulada va ser enviada pels Estats Units, capaç de baixar fins als 600 metres de profunditat. Fins i tot si les possibilitats de trobar supervivents són gairebé nul·les, el portaveu de la Marina argentina va dir que no tenia una idea clara del volum d'oxigen disponible dins del vaixell, així com del grau de resistència del seu casc sotmès a una explosió i la pressió de les grans profunditats. Enrique Balbi s'ha centrat en canvi en els mitjans utilitzats per localitzar el submarí: cinc naus amb un sonar recorren el fons de la mar, mentre que els avions de l'Argentina, el Brasil i els Estats Units a la recerca de pistes a la superfície.

"No hi ha cap indicació d'un atac extern"La incertesa ha alimentat tota mena de versions de xarxes socials sobre les causes de la desaparició de San Juan. El portaveu de l'Armada Argentina, Enrique Balbi, va haver de respondre a un rumor que indica que el vaixell va ser atacat per una força militar estrangera o una altra referència a una explosió registrada per una agència de l'ONU, que va ser a causa d'una mina abandonada de la guerra de Malvines en 1982. "No tenim indicis que hi hagi un atac extern. I no tenim proves de mines. A més, si hi hagués, una mina a aquesta profunditat no podria explotar ", va dir.

Mentrestant, els membres de la família de 44 membres de la tripulació van experimentar moments de intensa tensió el dilluns. Es reuneixen regularment a la base naval de Mar del Plata, per recolzar-se amb l'esperança de tornar a veure els desapareguts. Itatí Leguizamón, l'esposa d'un capità a bord, va ser atacat per familiars d'altres mariners després de parlar per televisió. Ella va dir que no hi havia esperança de trobar amb vida la tripulació de Sant Joan.


dimecres, 29 de novembre del 2017

British island may hold terrible WWII chemical warfare secret

Adolf Hitler delivering a speech to the German people during the Party Congress of the NSDAP in Nuremberg, 1935, Weimar Republic.


On an island cut off from the world, a tyrannical dictator hides a terrible weapon: a secret missile program, aimed at the defenders of democracy.
This dictator believes he is genetically superior, that he is born to rule the world. What’s worse, he’s completely insane.
This is not 2017 and the dictator is not Kim Jong-Un. Itʼs December 1940, and that island – Alderney, located in the English channel – is occupied by Hitler’s forces.
Where today itʼs a peaceful patch of British soil with a population of 2000, during World War II it was transformed by the Germans and covered in Nazi bunkers and labour camps.
It was during this period that Alderney earned the nickname “Fortress Island”.
“The Nazis arrived in Alderney after they defeated the Allied forces in France,”
Colonel Richard Kemp said.
“They were able to do this all very freely because the British evacuated.”

German railroad low loaders with new tanks on the way to the Eastern Front in 1943.


Col Kemp is a former commander of British troops in Afghanistan. A fascination with the presence of the SS – the Schutzstaffel, Hitlerʼs notorious special branch – on Alderney, recently prompted him to conduct extensive research into Alderney’s wartime history.
Alderney was the only channel island where a SS regiment was deployed. It is an accepted fact that the organisation ran the “Lager Sylt” concentration camp on the island – “the only concentration camp on British soil”.
“Not many people know about it,” Col Kemp said.
A recent discovery in the German archives raises further questions about the SS mission on Alderney.
That discovery is a letter from Heinrich Himmler – the head of the SS and the third most senior figure in Nazi command – to the SS Captain on Alderney.
“It wouldnʼt be normal for Himmler to write a direct letter to mere captain, but he did that, emphasising the importance of his work,” Col Kemp said.
That important work? A series of tunnels beneath Alderney.
Col Kemp and his team have photographed the area and taken measurements which match the size and scale of German V1 missile sites on the western coast of France.
Col Kemp believes that Alderney was to be the base for a bombing campaign on Britain, and yet the V1 missile sites in France would have had enough range to reach Britain already.

Hitler legitimates the military aggression against Poland in his speech at the Kroll Opera House in 1939.

A standard bombing campaign could not in itself be worthy of a letter from Himmler. Col Kempʼs research has suggested another purpose altogether.
“I strongly believe (Himmler’s special reason for writing) was the presence of Sarin gas,” Col Kemp said.
“This was intended to be dumped on the Allied forces building up on the south coast of England, ready to invade Europe.”
According to Col Kemp, the tunnels on Alderney have unique side chambers running off the main corridor. He believes this would be the perfect place to store chemical warheads.
“Eyewitnesses during the war have said that yellow-painted containers were seen being unloaded from a supply ship in the Alderney harbour,” Col Kemp said.
“Yellow was, and still is, a colour coding for chemical weapons.”
The chemical weapon theory has its critics, like Trevor Davenport, who lives on Alderney and has published his own research into the islandʼs history. He calls the idea “absolutely tosh”.

Free City of Danzig, a semi-autonomous city-state which was in existence between 1920 and 1939, as seen on Aug. 29, 1939.
Mr Davenport’s work is based on the findings of Captain Theodore Pantcheff, sent by British intelligence to investigate Alderney after the war. During his investigations, Cpt Pantcheff found no evidence of chemical weapons.
He eventually settled on Alderney and met with Davenport on a number of occasions.
“I think he never lied at all, and if he said he didnʼt know, he didnʼt know,” Mr Davenport said.
“There were no missile sites on Alderney. There never were.”
To add to the mystery, Alderney was the last Nazi garrison to surrender at the end WWII, German forces holding on until May 16, 1945 – nine days after the official end of the war.
What evidence could have been destroyed in that time? What SS activities hidden before the British arrived?
A German watch column in Paris, France, circa 1940.
If Col Kempʼs chemical weapon theory is correct, it would prove hugely significant.
“It could have changed the course of the war and the world we live in today could be a very different world (as a consequence),” Col Kemp said.
After all, at the time these missile sites are thought to have been constructed, the Allied forces were preparing for the D-Day landings – an offensive that would turn the war in favour of the Allies and put the Nazis on the back foot.
There is much about the Nazis that still remains a dark secret, but what we do know for certain is that Hitler was defeated and died a coward.

Take note, Kim Jong-Un.

German submarine in the polar sea in 1942.


dilluns, 27 de novembre del 2017

Diputats que pleguen

Anna Simó

Després d’onze anys com a diputada, ja havia decidit que aquesta seria la seva última legislatura. Va començar la seva carrera política com a regidora a l’Hospitalet i va ser consellera de Benestar i Família amb Pasqual Maragall, però Simó ha sigut, sobretot, una figura clau al Parlament, on ha exercit de portaveu d’ERC, de vicepresidenta i, en l’última legislatura, de secretària de la cambra. Les querelles contra la mesa per desobediència i rebel·lió li havien fet valorar la possibilitat de continuar a les llistes, sobretot després que l’hi demanés l’executiva d’ERC, però finalment ha acabat renunciant-hi. En la interlocutòria, el jutge del Tribunal Suprem Pablo Llarena deixava clar que els investigats havien renunciat “a desenvolupar cap activitat política en el futur” o, en cas que en fessin, la farien “dins del marc constitucional”. Encara que seguirà a l’executiva d’ERC, Simó començarà una nova etapa professional. Llicenciada en filologia catalana per la UB, espera recuperar la seva plaça al Consorci per a la Normalització Lingüística.
Lluís Corominas

Diputat des del 2003, va compaginar els primers anys al Parlament amb l’alcaldia de Castellar del Vallès. De seguida es va convertir en un home clau en el dia a dia parlamentari, com a vicepresident al costat d’Ernest Benach, Núria de Gispert i Carme Forcadell. Assegura que ha gaudit negociant lleis feixugues, com la d’organització territorial, la de transparència i la de l’Oficina Antifrau. Agraeix que el PDECat li hagi ofert anar a les llistes, sobretot després de les querelles contra els membres de la mesa, però assegura que la decisió de plegar la va prendre fa dos anys. Encara no sap què farà, però té clar que estarà allunyat de la primera línia política.
David Bonvehí

Diputat des del 2010, abandona la cambra després que la llista del president Carles Puigdemont inclogui pocs noms del PDECat. Ara es dedicarà en exclusiva a ser coordinador organitzatiu del partit, al costat de Marta Pascal, que també deixa el Parlament. Ha sigut el primer diputat català en cadira de rodes, a causa d’un accident de trànsit el 2007, quan era alcalde de Fonollosa.
Anna Gabriel

Amb el complicat repte de substituir David Fernàndez, Anna Gabriel ha exercit aquests dos anys de portaveu cupaire al Parlament. Cara visible del sector més dur de la CUP, serà sempre la màxima exponent del no a Artur Mas. De veu suau però to contundent, ha pressionat el Govern per clarificar els passos cap a la independència i ha exigit més compromís social en els pressupostos, que la CUP va acabar aprovant. Tot i que els estatuts interns només permeten ser diputat una legislatura, es fa difícil pensar que s’allunyi de la política, en què està implicada des dels 16 anys. De la CUP també plega Benet Salellas, que va negociar directament amb JxSí els pressupostos i les lleis de desconnexió.
Lluís Llach

Va ser cap de llista per Girona amb JxSí i ha tingut un paper important com a president de la comissió del procés constituent. La desintegració de la llista unitària d’ERC i CDC ha fet saltar els independents de JxSí que s’estrenaven al Parlament, com ell o Germà Bel. L’expresident de Súmate Eduardo Reyes també ho té difícil per entrar: de número 6 de JxSí passa a ser 31 d’ERC.
Germà Gordó

Sempre a les bambolines del poder, Germà Gordó podria quedar relegat de la primera línia política el 21-D. Va passar a ser diputat no adscrit a mitja legislatura, en deixar el PDECat i el grup de JxSí. El seu partit li va demanar que abandonés l’escó quan el Tribunal Superior de Justícia de Catalunya va obrir diligències contra ell per la seva presumpta vinculació al cas 3%, que investiga el finançament il·legal de CDC. La seva plataforma, Nova Convergència, es presenta amb el nom de Convergents. Té poques opcions de tenir representació.
Joan Coscubiela

Ha estat només dos anys al Parlament, però el nom de Joan Coscubiela és dels que més han ressonat a la cambra. Ha actuat com el líder de Catalunya Sí que es Pot, malgrat que era el número tres a les llistes i que el seu lideratge s’ha vist entelat per la profunda divisió a les files del grup, sobretot a mesura que el debat independentista ha anat pujant de to. Molt bel·ligerant contra l’estratègia de Junts pel Sí i la CUP, el seu discurs en què els acusava d’impulsar una “actuació antidemocràtica sense precedents” el dia que s’aprovaven les lleis del referèndum i de transitorietat va ser aplaudit per les bancades del PP, Ciutadans i el PSC. Ara vol tornar a les aules com a professor de dret. Amb la creació de Catalunya en Comú, també plega Lluís Rabell, cap de llista de CSQP.
Albano Dante Fachin

Va entrar al Parlament el 2015, quan encara no era secretari general de Podem a Catalunya, i se’n va havent dimitit i estripant el carnet del partit. Fachin ha ocupat molts titulars pels seus enfrontaments amb Pablo Iglesias i amb la resta d’actors dels comuns, i també per la seva defensa del referèndum, tot i les directrius contràries de la direcció estatal. De fet, amb l’aval de la militància, Fachin va desvincular-se del nou partit dels comuns, però, per a Iglesias, el seu interlocutor a Catalunya ha sigut sempre Xavier Domènech. Una situació insostenible que ha acabat amb la dimissió de Fachin i amb Podem integrant-se a Catalunya en Comú. Encara que ERC li va oferir formar part de la seva candidatura, Fachin, que ha creat la plataforma Som Alternativa, ha declinat concórrer a les eleccions del 21-D.

diumenge, 26 de novembre del 2017

Secret SAS suicide mission to destroy Hitler's nuclear programme revealed after 75 years

 Seventy-five years ago today a team of 36 hand-picked commandos boarded a flight of Horsa gliders, to assault a mystery target deep in enemy held territory.
So secretive was their mission they didn’t even know what country they were flying into.
All they had been told was that their actions might change the course of the war.
Their mission – codenamed FRESHMAN – was launched on the orders of Winston Churchill who, together with US president Roosevelt, feared that Nazi Germany was two years ahead in the race to build the atom bomb.
In June 1942 Churchill had risked flying across the Atlantic in a giant Boeing flying-boat, to meet with Roosevelt. The Allies’ fortunes in the war were at their very nadir, but it wasn’t that which most worried the two world leaders.
Foremost on their minds was the terrifying prospect that Nazi Germany might win the race to build the bomb.
The Germans had stolen a march on the Allies in the nuclear field. In 1938, German scientists were the first to split the uranium atom; that same year Nazi Germany had annexed much of Czechoslovakia, seizing Europe’s only uranium mine, in the mountainous Joachimsthal region.
Having invaded Norway in May 1940, Nazi Germany seized the world’s only supply of ‘heavy water’- deuterium oxide – the moderator, or matrix, within which uranium breeds the material for a bomb, in a nuclear reactor.
The following month Hitler had struck a further blow, as his blitzkrieg forces overran the headquarters of the Belgium company that mined the world’s richest source of uranium, in the Belgium Congo.
Some 2,000 tonnes of high-purity uranium ore had been shipped by rail to the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, in Berlin, where the uranverein – Nazi Germany’s uranium club - were busy building an experimental reactor, the uranmaschine .
Faced with the terrifying proposition of Hitler winning the nuclear race, Churchill and Roosevelt decided on two key priorities: first, they would pool scientific and technical resources in the Manhattan Project, to build an Allied bomb; second, they had to sabotage Hitler’s nuclear programme.
At only one place did it appear remotely vulnerable: the heavy water plant, situated at Vemork, on the remote and snowbound Hardanger plateau, in central Norway.
Weeks before the Special Operations Executive (SOE) – Churchill’s Ministry for Ungentlemanly Warfare – had parachuted a four-man team, codenamed GROUSE, into the region, to keep watch on the massive plant.
Upon Churchill’s return to Britain, he ordered it be destroyed. There was no time to lose.
Britain’s nuclear experts – working under the cover name of Tube Alloys - had warned of the seemingly impossible. Britain should prepare for an attack by Nazi Germany using “fission products”; the by-products of a working nuclear reactor engineered into a crude radiation bomb.
“Precautions should be taken to avoid a surprise attack. This could be done by the regular operation of suitable methods of detection … routine tests should be carried out in large towns … Special precautions to preserve secrecy have to be taken.”
In short, Britain was preparing for the unthinkable - a nuclear attack on its cities. The SOE and Combined Operations had to act.
Mountbatten, Chief of Combined Operations, wrote to Churchill, laying out his plans for Freshman. “Thirty-six all ranks of the Airborne Division will be flown in two gliders to destroy the Power Station, electrical plant and stocks of “heavy water” … When they [the Nazis] have 5 tons they will be able to start production of a new form of explosive a thousand times more potent than any in use today ...”
Churchill replied: “Approved … W.S.C.” 

Freshman involved a pair of wooden-hulled Horsa gliders being town by Halifax bombers the 700-odd miles to their target. On the ground the four men of team Grouse would guide the commandos in, using signal lights and Rebecca-Eureka radio homing beacons.
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The chosen landing ground was the frozen Skoland Marshes on the shores of Lak Mos, eight miles from the Vemork plant. The gliders would carry folding bicycles. Upon landing the raiders would mount up and peddle hell-for-leather, their packs stuffed with enough explosives to decimate the massive, eight story concrete structure, having first fought their way through its fearsome defences.
Being a glider pilot was one of the most dangerous roles in the entire British military, but this mission was truly off the scale. Combined Operations ran the Freshman plan past Major John ‘Skinner’ Wilson, the outspoken former scoutmaster who ran the SOE’s Scandinavian Section.
Wilson had sent the Grouse team into Norway, and typically his response to Freshman didn’t pull any punches.
“Of all countries, Norway is the least suitable for glider operations,” he wrote. “Its landing grounds are few; its mountains thickly clustered, precipitous and angry … The plateau is noted for sudden up-and-down air currents powerful enough to make a bucking bronco of a Horsa glider.”
“The landing-site would be difficult to identify if clouds obscured the moon … The night landing of a fragile craft in an area known for its fissures and ridges, huge boulders and outcrops of rock would be extremely hazardous.”
The fact that Operation Freshman got the green light regardless, reflected how desperate the Allies were to strike back at the Nazi’s nuclear programme. Vemork had to be destroyed at all costs.


Overall command of Freshman fell to Lieutenant Colonel Henneker, of the Royal Engineers Airborne Division. In recruiting a team for the forthcoming raid he faced a seemingly impossible task. He had to ask for volunteers for a mission no details of which he could reveal, not even the target country.
Henneker - his craggy face hardened by his experiences fighting the Germans, in France - told the men that while they were all ‘keen as mustard’ to see some action, the forthcoming mission was extremely dangerous.
Its outcome might determine the fortunes of the war. If they failed, the Germans might seize victory within six months. In short, the stakes could not be higher.
It says much for the calibre of his men that all stepped forward. The oldest at thirty-one was Ernest Bailey, just back from leave in his native Hampshire. The youngest was Gerland Williams, of Doncaster, who’d just celebrated his eighteenth birthday. Then there was Bill Bray, a former truck driver whose wife was due to give birth in three months.
Wallis Jackson was a well-built twenty-one-year old, with three sisters back in his native Leeds. A natural at handling explosives, Jackson had a surprisingly soft side to his character. He was in the habit of penning letters to his mother, full of affection and hope for the fortunes of the war.
There was nothing that Jackson could write home about the forthcoming mission. All were forbidden from breathing a word, and in any case he - like his brother warriors - knew nothing.
An agreed cover story had to be provided, to explain why they would disappear for weeks of punishing commando training. They were to say they were taking part in ‘The Washington Competition’, an endurance contest held against their American sister unit.
The plan for Freshman gave a sense of the scale of the task. Of the Vemork plant, it stated: ‘This, the world’s largest, is housed in an eight-story building … The building is of ferro concrete, 45 metres high and strengthened internally with ferro concrete beams and supporting pillars.”
The raiders had to be capable of fighting their way into the plant, and setting the explosives to tear it to ruins. After which they were somehow supposed to escape across 200 miles of snowbound wilderness, to neutral Sweden.
The specialists at MI9 - the secret wartime escape and evasion agency - didn’t rate their chances. Major de Bruyne, one of MI9’s escape experts, pointed out that fighting a running battle over such an extent of hostile terrain was basically a non-starter.
He feared none would make it.
Even so, key Norwegian phrases were taught to the Freshman volunteers, including: ‘Jeg har vert u tog Kopt lit proviant til Mor’ - I’ve just been out buying stores for mother; and ‘Unskyld men jeg ma hurtigst til tannlegern’ - Sorry, but I must get to the dentist as quickly as possible.
MI9 advised that second phrase was, “to be spoken with stone or cork in mouth”.
Wilson wasn’t convinced. How were the raiders supposed to cross hundreds of miles of wilderness in the midst of winter, hounded by the enemy? They were sending in a “suicide squad”, he objected, with little prospect of any getting out alive.
To make matters worse the weather in Norway was proving atrocious that winter. The gliders might take off in perfect conditions in Britain, only to fly into a hellish storm over the target.
But Freshman went ahead, regardless.
Dawn on 19 November 1942 proved grey, drizzly and drear at RAF Skitten, in the far north of Scotland. Team Grouse had radioed in a relatively up-beat weather report, so Freshman was ruled a go.
Shortly before zero hour Colonel Henneker gathered his men for a final briefing. They were commanded by lieutenants Alexander Allen and David Mehtven. Each officer knew that should the other party not make it, he was to lead his own to execute the attack.
‘Whatever happens,’ Henneker stressed, ‘someone must arrive at the objective to do the job. Detection is no excuse for halting.’
His briefing done Henneker wished his men good luck.
They gathered their kit and weaponry - each carried a Sten - and stepped out into the dusk. They’d been issued with silk ‘escape maps’, which were in fact a ruse. They showed a false route dotted in blue; they were to be scattered around the scene of the attack, in the hope of throwing off their pursuers.
Two lines of men - fresh-faced; most in their late teens and early twenties - boarded the Horsas. The ground-crew closed the hinged tail-entries of the gliders, and the raiders were boxed into their wooden coffins.
At 6.45pm the Halifax bombers clawed into the dark and soggy overcast, each with its four radial engines straining to drag the 7,045-kilo deadweight of the glider, on its 360-foot tow-line.
RAF Skitten’s radio room sent a short message to both SOE and Combined Operations headquarters: Freshman was in the air. Now, the wait.
The lead Halifax – A for Apple - laboured ever higher, eventually breaking free of the cloud. Tug and glider turned toward the northeast and set a course for Norway.
Some three hours later A for Apple’s navigator had by skilful dead reckoning brought them to the exact point at which they had planned to cross the Norwegian coast - no small feat of navigation, after traversing hundreds of miles of the North Sea.
All eyes scoured the ground. It was a truly beautiful night. The moon was bright, the clouds light and fluffy, visibility very good. In fact, these were near-perfect conditions for such a mission.
Having cleared the first mountain range, A for Apple set a course for Vemork, following a distinctive chain of lakes which should lead directly to the release point. But as the Halifax thundered onwards the mood in the cockpit darkened.
Smoke fingered up from a spool of electrical wiring. Second later it burned out: their Rebecca homing device had just gone kaput. With only their maps to guide them now the crew of the lead tug - with glider in tow - zigzagged across the hostile skies.
Below them the dark valleys were mercifully clear of fog. But still the frozen silhouette of Lake Mos - like a squiggly ‘Y’ lying on its side - eluded them. They kept searching, twisting this way and that through the dark heavens.
To their rear, B for Baker was faring little better: their Eureka had also malfunctioned.
Finally, A for Apple’s crew got a fix on their position: they were within twenty miles of the landing zone. Seven sets of eyes scoured the Hardanger plateau. But where was the welcome that the ground party had promised?
In the darkness below not a twinkle of light was to be seen.
In truth, team Grouse had set the markers exactly as agreed: a set of lights, arranged in an ‘L’ - L-for-London – with their team leader at the apex, flashing a torch into the night sky.
Team Grouse heard the lead Halifax droning in the heavens. It approached, but passed overhead, apparently having missed them. Their long wait in the snowbound wilderness - and tonight’s labour on the Skoland Marshes – would go unrewarded.
No gliders came.
High above them A for Apple had detected no telltale lights. Thin cloud had blown in. Maybe that had obscured them. Either way, the Halifax was forced to turn for home.
Low on fuel, the pilot steered the most direct course for Scotland. They should be able to tow the glider to within 30 miles of the Scottish coast, at which point they’d ditch in the sea.
A dense bank of cloud loomed ahead, rising to 12,000 feet. Towing such a heavy load, the Halifax had to go to full take-off revs to climb, which burned up the fuel.
Gradually, A for Apple - and the Horsa behind her - gained altitude. She topped 10,000 feet. At 11,000 she hit the first clouds. By the time she lumbered out of the cloud-tops at 12,000 she’d been airborne for over four hours.
In climbing the aircraft had collected ice. It was glistening on the propellers, and spinning off in the moonlight like shards of broken glass.
More worryingly, the glider - plus its towrope - felt like a dead-weight. The Horsa was icing up too. The tug and its tow were fighting a losing battle. A for Apple went to full throttle, but with a sickening sense of inevitability she started to drift back into the freezing mass.
Below them lurked jagged-edged peaks, some rearing as high as 6,000 feet. The pair of iced-up aircraft sunk into the clouds. All lights were switched on, as those in the Halifax strained their eyes for any obstructions looming out of the murk.
At 7,000 feet A for Apple drifted into the thickest cloud. The Halifax hit heavy turbulence and seemed to shudder end-to-end. She careered into a second air-pocket. As she hit a third, bucking like a wild pony, the ice-encrusted rope linking tow to glider snapped in two.
The Horsa had broken loose and was spinning into the dark storm.
The heavy glider was thrown about like a toy in a giant’s hands. The grooves in the Horsa’s corrugated metal floor were there to prevent vomit from making it slippery underfoot. But as the Horsa bucked and twisted, so the ashen-faced raiders turned sick with fear.
In the cockpit, the glider’s pilots, seated side by side, wrestled with all their strength at the controls. To their rear the raiders gripped their fold-down seats for the hellish bare-knuckle ride.
From all sides the mountain winds cried out in shrieks and howls. The thin wooden fuselage answered, creaking and groaning horribly as it threatened to tear itself to pieces.
The raiders might be strapped in, but not all their equipment was. It tumbled about, cannoning off the plywood ribs of the hold, and beating out a terrible funeral rhythm.
As the cloud thickened, so the pilots tried to steer blind for where the ground had to be. At 2,000 feet they tore out of the base of the cloud, and got a glimpse of their surroundings. Snow, rock and ice flashed past the cockpit at a dizzying speed.
‘DITCHING STATIONS!’ they cried.

The fifteen raiders and their officer just had time to link arms, before the glider ploughed into the mountainside. The glass nosecone crumpled like tinfoil, the pilots being killed instantly.
As the Horsa careered onwards, gouging itself to pieces on rocks and boulders, so the wings were torn asunder. When the wreck of the aircraft finally came to a halt, the fuselage had been ripped open in several places, a trail of equipment and weaponry being vomited across the frozen mountainside.
The miracle was that some of the raiders had even survived.
If anything, B for Baker suffered a blacker fate. Likewise, tug and glider had been forced to turn for home, and into the same freezing cloud mass as had claimed the first glider. In terrible visibility and icing-up, B for Baker had been forced to descend.
Just as B for Baker had crossed the Norwegian coastline, she had clipped the peak of a hidden obstruction - the 1,700 foot Haestad Mountain. The Halifax smashed herself to fiery ruin on the far side. None of the aircrew survived.
To their rear the Horsa broke free and swooped across a thickly-wooded valley, before the topmost boughs smashed into the cockpit, killing both pilots instantly.
The Horsa came to rest with its nose sheared off and its fuselage badly mangled, but the brave actions of the pilots had at least saved the lives of many in the rear. There had been terrible injuries, but most had survived.


As the wind shook the wreckage, and thick flurries of snow blasted through the Horsa’s shattered entrails, their commander, Lieutenant Allen, wondered where on earth they had come to rest, and what in the name of God he was supposed to do.
It was the occupiers of Norway who would answer Allen’s question, and that of his fellow officer, at the other crash site. First on the scene were German soldiers, who’d heard reports of crash-landings.
But under his recently-issued ‘Commando Order’, Hitler had decreed: ‘Henceforth all enemy troops encountered by German troops during so-called commando operations … are to be exterminated to the last man … If such men appear to be about to surrender, no quarter should be given to them ...’
Unbeknown to them, the Freshman survivors could expect little mercy. All who had survived the crash-landings were captured. Within forty-eight hours they had been subjected to terrible torture – in an effort to force them to talk – after which they were executed to the last man.
Including aircrew, 41 had died. They had set out with pure hearts and with the bravest of intentions - volunteers all. Through no fault of their own they had been deprived of even the barest chance of hitting their target.

In short, Freshman had been a gallant and brave – but suicidal - undertaking.
In London, Major Wilson heard the terrible news and contemplated the worst: the Germans now had to know for sure that the Allies were aware of Vemork’s crucial role in the race for nuclear supremacy, and were determined to destroy it.
The raiders had even carried maps with the target circled in blue pencil. Defences at Vemork would be tripled, Wilson feared, the enemy’s vigilance redoubled.
It would take two subsequent SOE operations - codenamed Swallow and Gunnerside, and masterminded by Wilson – to deal a knockout blow to the heavy water plant.
By February 1943 Nazi Germany’s ability to produce and utilize heavy water was all but at an end, and by war’s end the Allies had thankfully won the race for nuclear supremacy.

dissabte, 25 de novembre del 2017

Els segells mes cars

Després de l'emissió del primer segell del món (el Penny Black el 1840), els segells s'han convertit en un dels col·leccionables més buscats del món. Els segells no només es recopilen pel seu valor històric i cultural, sinó també perquè enriqueixen el propietari afortunat. Alguns són valuosos per errors d'impressió, altres per la seva raresa.


 Penny Black
Publicat al Regne Unit al maig de 1840, Penny Black va ser el primer segell adhesiu del món, per la qual cosa aquest segell es considera un segell valuós. Encara que no sigui l'element col·leccionista més rar o més valuós, sí dibuixa el futur dels segells postals britànics. El Penny Black porta una imatge de la Reina Victoria II i no mostra el país d'origen, com és habitual avui. Tot i que hi ha molts diners per a la venda de Penny Black, un d'aquests segells no utilitzats pot valer uns 3.000 €, el que fa que sigui un segell molt popular entre els col·leccionistes.

Inverted Swan
L' Inverted Swan  és un dels segells més famosos i exclusius del món, no per la seva bellesa, sinó perquè va tenir un dels primers errors invertits al món. El Cigne invertit va ser publicat a Perth, Austràlia, el 1855, quan es va seguir un complicat procés de producció d'aquests segells per litografia. No obstant això, contràriament a la creença popular, és en realitat el marc que s'inverteix més que el cigne. Aquest famós segell es va vendre per última vegada el 1983 per 35.500 €.

Red Mercury
El Red Mercury és extremadament valuós per la seva raresa. En lloc d'un segell de correus, el Mercuri vermell es va utilitzar per enviar periòdics. Aquests segells tenen una imatge del déu romà i estaven impresos en groc, vermell i blau en funció de la quantitat de periòdics de la pila. No obstant això, el Mercuri vermell va ser de curta durada i es va substituir ràpidament, per la qual cosa han sobreviscut tan poques còpies i per això tenen un valor de fins a 37.000 €.




Segells d'emissió de missions
Malgrat el paper blau barat en què es va imprimir el segell del programa missioner, aquests són els segells més rars i més valuosos de tots els temps, que ja han assolit un valor de 39.000 €. Els segells del programa missioner van ser els primers segells produïts a Hawaii i es van usar principalment en correspondència entre missioners, d'aquí el seu nom.


El Dendermonde
El Dendermonde, que presenta a l'ajuntament de Dendermonde al revés, és la contribució més gran de Bèlgica als errors d'impressió en el món dels segells. Encara que aquest error es va revelar a través de dos fulletons del primer número i una solapa del segon, només s' en coneixen 17. Es diu que dos d'aquests segells es van perdre quan un famós col·leccionista de segells va ser assassinat el 1942. Si aconsegueixes les teves mans sobre els pocs segells restants, et portaria uns 75.000 €.


La Jenny invertida
Un altre error d'impressió és el que va col·locar l'enorme preu de la Jenny invertida. Ara val la pena uns 750.000 €, aquest segell compta amb una imatge al revés de l'avió Curtiss JN-4 i es va emetre als Estats Units l'any 1918. Només es van imprimir 100 exemplars, per la qual cosa la Jenny invertit és de gran valor.

Baden 9 Kreuzer
No es tracta d'un error d'imatge que fa que el Baden 9 Kreuzer sigui un apoderador sinó més aviat un error de color. Un segell de 9-Kreuzer té el valor nominal d'un 9-Kreuzer i és de color rosa, mentre que els segells de 6-kreuzer eren verds. Tanmateix, un error d'impressió va fer que molts segells de 9-Kreuzer s'imprimiesin en verd en lloc de ser de color rosa. Només quatre existeixen avui, i un d'ells va ser venut el 2008 per més d'un milió d'euros.


Els dos primers d'Illa Maurci
Publicat el 1847 a les illes Maurici durant la colònia britànica, aquests segells es van modelar en segells britànics que representaven la imatge de la reina Victoria. Amb només 26 còpies conegudes encara existents, i sent els primers segells de l'Imperi Britànic produïts fora de Gran Bretanya, no és d'estranyar que els segells de Maurici arribin a més d'un milió de còpies. euros cadascun.

Tre skilling groc
El Tre skilling groc és considerat un dels segells de correus més cars del món, ja que hauria d'estar imprès en color verd blau amb impressió de vuit caps, però en realitat es va imprimir en groc. Aquest segell suec amb un error d'impressió i emès el 1855, se suposa que és l'única còpia que existeix actualment, per la qual cosa val més que 2,1 milions d'euros. El segell s'ha venut més d'una vegada, cada vegada amb un augment de valor, és millor començar a estalviar avui si vols ser el proper propietari.


El magenta de la Guaiana Britànica
Aquest segell és el més rar i més valuós del món, té un valor estimat de 9 milions d'euros. Un lliurament de segells des de Londres fins a Guaianà Britànica el 1856 s'havia endarrerit, de manera que 1c Magenta s'havia creat en nombre limitat per garantir la continuació del comerç i la comunicació a l'illa. El nom llatí simbòlic de la colònia i el fet que n'hi hagi només un  han fet que aquest segell sigui una veritable rareza.

L'atac nord-americà de Doolittle contra el Japó va canviar el corrent de la Segona Guerra Mundial

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