Götz Eberle

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Flotilla Admiral Götz Eberle (1995)

Götz Eberle (* 28. November 1941 in Magdeburg ) is a former German Rear Admiral of the Navy , among others, between 1995 and 1996 commander of the Naval Academy Mürwik of and most recently from 1997 to 2001, deputy bureau chief military office was.

Life

After graduating from high school, Eberle joined the German Navy on April 1, 1963 as a member of Crew IV / 1963 and initially completed his basic training in the 3rd Marine Training Battalion in Glückstadt between April 1 and June 30, 1963 and then on July 1 until September 30, 1963 his practical on-board training on the sailing training ship Gorch Fock . He then completed an apprenticeship in marine, engine and electrical engineering at the Technical Naval School II in Bremerhaven between October 1 and December 31, 1963, and from January to June 30, 1964 was one of the participants in the 27th international training trip of the school frigate Hipper which led to Italy , Egypt , Eritrea , India , Thailand , Yemen and Malta . From July 1, 1964 to June 30, 1965, he continued his training as a naval officer at the Mürwik Naval School . The later flotilla admiral Thomas Kempf was one of his classmates .

After various uses, Eberle was transferred to the frigate Emden on October 1, 1971 , where he was initially an electrical engineering officer (EO) and then a marine engineering officer (STO) between October 1, 1972 and March 31, 1975 . From mid-May to the end of June 1972, the ship was at FOST (Flag Officer Sea Training) in Portland (Great Britain). On January 6, 1973, the GDR fishing trawler in Berlin had an accident , the ailing Emden first went to Rönne (Bornholm, Denmark) to be overhauled and then to Kiel for final repairs . Participation in STANAVFORLANT began at the beginning of March 1973. She led the ship from Flensburg via Portland (Great Britain), Madeira (Portugal), the Bermuda Islands , Norfolk (Virginia, USA), Newport (Rhode Island, USA), Baltimore (Maryland, USA), again to the Bermuda Islands, Halifax (Nova Scotia) ), Quebec (Canada), Charlottetown ( Prince Edward Island in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada), then march back via Newport (USA), Ponta Delgada (Azores, Portugal) back to Flensburg, where at the beginning of June after 95 Days and 17,903 nautical miles. On April 1, 1974, the Emden retired from the subordinate relationship of the fleet service squadron and returned to the 2nd escort squadron with home port Wilhelmshaven . In the following years he found numerous other uses as an officer and staff officer, for example as chief inspector officer training at the Technical Naval School I in Kiel and was one of the graduates of the 19th application course for the General Staff from October 1, 1977 to June 30, 1979 / Admiralty staff service at the command academy of the Bundeswehr (FüAkBw) in Hamburg .

On December 19, 1992, captain at sea Eberle succeeded captain at sea, Gerhard Krancke, as head of the core service of the Navy (SDM) and remained in this post until 25 August 1995, after which captain at sea Michael Kämpf took over. He then took over as Flotilla Admiral on August 29, 1995 from Flotilla Admiral Frank Ropers as commander of the Mürwik Naval School. He held this position until December 19, 1996 and was then replaced by Flotilla Admiral Uwe Siegfried Kahre . After Brigadier General Winfried Vogel had retired, he became Deputy Chief of the Armed Forces on January 1, 1997, as his successor . From October 1999 he was a sub-department head in the BMVg PSZ III. On December 31, 2001, he retired.

Background literature

  • Dermot Bradley, Heinz-Peter Würzenthal, Hansgeorg Model: The generals and admirals of the Bundeswehr 1955–1999: the military careers. Germany's generals and admirals , Biblio Verlag, 1998, ISBN 3-7648-1700-3

Web links

Commons : Götz Eberle  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Hansgeorg Model, Jens Prause: General Staff in Transition: New Paths in General Staff Training in the Bundeswehr , p. 241, Bernard & Graefe publishing house, 1982, ISBN 3-7637-5241-2
  2. ^ Main office of the Navy ( Federal Archives-Military Archives )
  3. Naval School Mürwik (Federal Archives-Military Archives)
  4. ^ Defense technology , p. 3, volume 29, German Society for Defense Technology eV, Bernard & Graefe publishing house, 1997