Sign in to follow this  
Deeq A.

Ulrich Wegener, German ‘hero of Mogadishu,’ dies aged 88

Recommended Posts

Deeq A.   

Wegener was the mastermind behind the creation of Germany’s elite anti-terror unit GSG-9. He became a household name in West Germany after his leadership during a celebrated 1977 rescue operation.

42018358_303.jpg

 

Ulrich Wegener, the architect of Germany’s elite anti-terror unit, the GSG-9, and widely known as the “hero of Mogadishu,” has died aged 88.

Wegener died December 28, German daily Bild said Wednesday. Germany’s interior ministry later confirmed the report.

The former brigadier general of West Germany’s border police was “an outstanding police offer who accomplished so much for Germany’s security,” Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière said. “We will retain honorable memories of him.”

 Events of ‘German Autumn’ remembered 40 years on
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fun4dL601T0

Saving lives in Somalia

Wegener became a household name after he led a successful GSG-9 mission to free over 90 hostages from the hijacked Lufthansa airplane “Landshut” in the Somali capital of Mogadishu in October 1977.

Four Palestinians had hijacked the aircraft and demanded the release of 11 imprisoned members of the Red Army Faction (RAF), a notorious left-wing German terrorist group, in exchange for the hostages.

GSG-9 officers stormed the plane, killing three of the hijackers and freeing all 91 passengers without injury.

Three RAF prisoners — Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin und Jan-Carl Raspe — commited suicide after the hostages were freed.

For his leadership, Wegener quickly became known as the “hero of Mogadishu.”

 

Ulrich Wegener was widely celebrated for his leadership in the 1977 Mogadishu operation (imago/Sven Simon)

Learning from the past

The Mogadishu operation was the culmination of Wegener’s efforts to create Germany’s first elite anti-terror troop.

Wegener had received the order to create the unit following the deaths of nine Israeli Olympic athletes during the 1972 Munich Olympics.

Palestinian terrorists had taken the athletes hostage and transported them to a nearby military airport in Fürstenfeldbruck. During the police rescue operation, all nine hostages and a German police officer were killed.

The fiasco convinced German authorities of the need to establish an elite group of police officers trained and equipped to combat terrorists and prevent future tragedies.

 

Landshut in Fortaleza

LANDSHUT RETURNS TO GERMANY 40 YEARS AFTER HIJACKING A long-awaited return to Germany The years haven’t been kind to the Landshut, perhaps the most famous Boeing 737-200 in Germany’s history. It is currently rusting away at a “cemetery” for airplanes at the Fortaleza International Airport in Brazil. But now officials want to take the plane apart, transport the pieces to Germany and restore it at the Dornier Museum, close to Lake Constance.

Landshut in Dubai

LANDSHUT RETURNS TO GERMANY 40 YEARS AFTER HIJACKING The RAF and the German Autumn The Landshut became famous in 1977’s German Autumn: the weeks during which the country was shaken by several terrorist acts committed by the Red Army Faction and allied groups. Four militants from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine hijacked the Lufthansa plane to blackmail the German government into releasing prominent RAF members from prison.

Landshut in Rome
Landshut in Dubai
Landshut
Landshut
Landshut, 1977

‘We did the work together’

Wegener remained with German police until 1988 when he left to help train Saudi Arabia’s “Special Security Forces.”

In a recent interview, the former policeman said “he was happy that we [the GSG-9] were able to show what we could do” during the 1977 Mogadishu operation. “We had trained for such an operation for years at German airports.”

Wegener however never warmed to his popular title, according to German news outlet Die Welt/N24, saying recently: “we did the work together.”

amp/rc (AFP, dpa)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Sign in to follow this