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Conflitos => Conflitos do Passado e História Militar => Tópico iniciado por: Marauder em Julho 30, 2006, 03:38:53 pm
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Divers find Hitler's aircraft carrier
The location of the wreck of the Graf Zeppelin had been a mystery for more than half a century
POLISH divers have discovered the rusting wreckage of Nazi Germany's only aircraft carrier, the Graf Zeppelin, solving one of the most enduring maritime riddles of the Second World War.
For more than half a century the location of the huge vessel was kept secret by the Soviet authorities. Even the opening of the Moscow archives in the 1990s failed to produce a precise bearing. The once-proud ship was simply one of dozens of wrecks that littered the bed of the Baltic Sea near the Bay of Gdansk.
"We were carrying out soundings for possible oil exploration," Krzysztof Grabowski, of the Petrobaltic exploration group, said. "Then we stumbled across a vessel that was over 260 metres (850ft) long at a depth of 250 metres."
Divers confirmed this week that it was the German ship, though who owns her and what — if anything — will happen to her remains unclear.
When the Graf Zeppelin was launched in 1938, Adolf Hitler raised his right arm in salute to a warship that was supposed to help Germany to become master of the northern seas. But, when fleeing German troops scuttled her in April 1945, she had never seen service — a casualty of infighting within the Nazi elite and the changing tide of war.
The Graf Zeppelin was scuttled in shallow water near Szczecin and it proved easy for the Red Army to recover her after marching into the Polish port. According to an agreement with the Allies, German and Japanese warships should have been sunk in deep water or destroyed. The Russians repaired the ship, then used her to carry looted factory equipment back to the Soviet Union. In August 1947 Allied spies observed her being towed back to the Polish Baltic coast and then used for target practice at Leba by Soviet dive bombers. It appeared that the Russians were preparing for possible action against US aircraft carriers.
The Graf Zeppelin sank a second time, and remained undetected until now.
Lukasz Orlicki, a Polish maritime historian, said: "It is difficult to say why the Russians have always been so stubbornly reluctant to talk about the location of the wreck. Perhaps it was the usual obsession with secrecy, or perhaps there was some kind of suspect cargo."
At 262 metres, the Graf Zeppelin was comparable to the biggest of the US carriers that played such a significant role in the Pacific. She had a range of 8,000 nautical miles, meaning that she could easily have reached the North Sea.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0, ... 04,00.html (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,13509-2287104,00.html)
Será que existe alguma carga secreta dentro do porta-aviões?
Prisioneiros políticos polacos?
Nunca se sabe..
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Mais umas imagens acerca do dito cujo
http://service.spiegel.de/cache/interna ... 19,00.html (http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0,1518,429119,00.html)
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Analistas da Marinha polonesa em julho de 2006, identificaram um navio achado no fundo do mar Báltico como o Graf Zeppelin, o único porta-aviões da Alemanha de Adolf Hitler, que naufragou em 1947. Segundo a Marinha polonesa, não resta a menor dúvida de que o casco encontrado ao norte do porto de Wladyslawowo pertenceu ao porta-aviões alemão.
As pesquisas para analisar a descoberta foram realizadas pelo navio polonês ORP Arctowski depois que o porta-aviões foi detectado pelos trabalhadores de uma empresa que procura jazidas de gás no mar Báltico.
O Graf Zeppelin, uma embarcação gigante de quase 260 metros de comprimento, jaz a uma profundidade de 90 metros, mas não constitui um perigo para a navegação, porque seu ponto mais elevado está a 60 metros abaixo do nível da água.
O navio não chegou a ser concluído e nunca foi usado como porta-aviões, mas seus bombardeiros fizeram diversos ataques contra as cidades polonesas de Gdynia e Hel. Ao término da Segunda Guerra Mundial, o porta-aviões foi entregue ao Exército soviético, que o usou para transportar objetos depredados. Há várias versões sobre seu naufrágio. Enquanto alguns afirmam que o navio foi afundado pelo Exército soviético, outros asseguram que naufragou após bater em uma mina.
In Wikipédia (http://http)
Veja aqui (http://http) e aqui (http://http) mais umas fotos deste gigante Porta-Aviões!
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Nem sabia que alemanha tinha um durante WWII??!
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:shock: Nem sabia que alemanha tinha um durante WWII??!
Nunca foi acabado
Fazia parte do "Plano Z", que contava ter uma Kriegmarine capaz de enfrentar directamente a Royal Navy...em 1946!!!!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plan_Z (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plan_Z)
The Plan
The plan as it came about would have seen the completion of the two battleships under construction (Bismarck and Tirpitz) to an interim design, as well as three heavy cruisers (Admiral Hipper, Blücher and Prinz Eugen), plus a further two launched in 1939, before the major construction work began. The plan was then to have the majority finished by 1945:
* Four aircraft carriers
* Six H Class battleships
* Three "O Class" battlecruisers
* Twelve "Kreuzer P Class" Panzerschiffe
* Two Hipper Class heavy cruisers (Seydlitz, and Lützow)
* Four "M Class" light cruisers
* Two "Improved M Class" light cruisers
* Six " Spähkreuzer Class" large destroyers
The first work saw construction begin on the aircraft carrier Graf Zeppelin in 1936, with a second planned to begin in 1938. In mid 1939, following the launch of both Bismarck and Tirpitz, the keels of the first three improved battleships were laid, while orders were placed for the modified Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighters and Junkers Ju87 dive bombers for the aircraft carriers. However, with the outbreak of the Second World War, it was decided that the large and expensive construction projects required too much of the materials vital to keep the army and Luftwaffe up and running. As a consequence, work on the battleships was halted, and the materials were diverted to the construction of U-Boats.
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Pois, mais valia ter uma frota capaz de U-Boats, que conseguisse manter qualquer marinha do mundo nos seus portos