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Heuer Bundeswehr 3H
Heuer

Heuer Bundeswehr 3H

$5,500
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On September 14, 1961, Luftwaffe pilots Peter Pfefferkorn and Hans Eberle of the West German 32nd Flight Bomber Wing jumped into the cockpits of their F-84 bombers and unknowingly sparked an international incident. For years, the Soviets had been pushing for Western powers to withdraw from Berlin. Meetings between Khrushchev and Kennedy did nothing to alleviate matters. While Kennedy swore in a televised broadcast that “we seek peace,” he requested that the Army increase its numbers to over 1 million troops. Khrushchev, on vacation in the resort town of Sochi, told a visiting American adviser that he had no choice but to take Kennedy’s request as a threat. The world turned uneasy eyes to Berlin. In Berlin, in an international press conference, East German politician Walter Ulbricht declared: “Nobody has any intention of building a wall.” But East Germany had already begun stockpiling enough barbed wire to divide East Berlin from West, and drive Western forces out of East Berlin forever. On Saturday, August 12, leaders of East Germany met at a garden party at a house in the woods north of East Berlin. There, Ulbricht himself signed the order to erect the Wall. Under cover of night, the East German Volkspolizei and detachments from the Nationale Volksarmee (under the watchful eye of the Soviet Army) tore up streets and installed barbed wire fences along the 43 mile stretch between East and West Berlin. In response, NATO military leaders launched “Exercise Checkmate.” In this show of military might, the air forces of Belgium, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, and West Germany participated in a mass training exercise. The 32nd Flight Bomber Wing of the West German Luftwaffe were to fly in a triangular pattern from their base in Bavaria, West Germany, to France, and then back to base again. However, during the exercise, the magnetic compass of Pffeferkorn’s F-84 malfunctioned, causing him to misread his bearings from between 40 to 60 degrees. That, coupled with a strong westerly wind, blew his aircraft off course; Eberle, behind him in formation, had no choice but to follow, and the two pilots unknowingly flew over the East German border. As the two pilots tried to pinpoint their exact location, they missed frantic calls from a West German base, warning them of the danger of their position. It wasn’t until they were well into East German airspace that the pilots issued a Mayday call. An aircraft controller in the French section of West Berlin answered their call and issued them permission to land at Tegel airport. As the pilots rerouted their course, American air traffic controllers at Tempelhof airport—in the American sector of West Berlin—noted that the two wayward pilots were being pursued by a squadron of Soviet fighters. The Allies were faced with a decision. Either the two pilots would turn around and face the approaching Soviet squadron, or they should continue on their course and avoid conflict. The American controller advised caution, and the pilots continued to Tegel, taking cover in a cloud bank. Once they safely landed, the West German Defense Minister issued an apology to Soviet representatives in Bonn, the capital of West Germany. In reply, the Soviets called the incident “provocation” and threatened to shoot down any aircraft that strayed into East German airspace. Pfefferkorn and Eberle were grounded, and their commanding officer was relieved of his position. And what of the two F-84 bombers that these two unlucky pilots flew in this incident? Rumor had it that they were smuggled out of West Berlin, stripped of Luftwaffe insignia, and repainted in US Air Force colors. It wasn’t until the late 1970s that the truth was uncovered, literally—they had been buried on the grounds of Tegel Airport, and weren’t recovered until the airport was being expanded nearly a decade later. This watch, a Heuer Bundeswehr, was General Issue for the pilots of the West German Luftwaffe. From the 1960s to the 1970s, the "Bund"
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