Wolfgang Ohl

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Wolfgang Ohl is a German major general in the air force of the Bundeswehr and chief of staff at the air force command .

Military career

Training and first uses

Ohl joined the German Armed Forces and trained as an officer . From 1998 to 2000 he was trained as an officer in the general staff service (i. G.) at the command academy of the Bundeswehr in Hamburg . His fellow course colleague was, among other things, his current immediate superior Ingo Gerhartz , the inspector of the Air Force . Ohl graduated from the course, at the time with the rank of major , as the best in his year, which is why he was honored with the General Heusinger Prize .

Service as a staff officer

In 2006 Ohl was head of the III. Battalion / Air Force  Training Regiment 3 Training center Basic training for the Air Force in Germersheim . At the same time he was the site elder . On April 1, 2008 he handed over the battalion to his successor, Lieutenant Colonel Hans Peter Dorfmüller.

Service as a general

Ohl was Head of Politics II in the Federal Ministry of Defense with the rank of Colonel i. G., before he was appointed Brigadier General in this post . In October 2019, Ohl moved to the Luftwaffe Command as Chief of Staff and was promoted to Major General.

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Are the soldiers sufficiently trained? In: tagesschau.de archive. October 27, 2006, accessed May 5, 2020 .
  2. News from the Air Force: New Year's reception in the General Sponeck barracks. January 22, 2008, accessed May 5, 2020 .
  3. Germersheimer Luitpold-Linde inaugurated again. In: German Society for Historical Uniform Studies. March 15, 2008, accessed May 5, 2020 .
  4. ^ Sponsorships: 10th Air Force Training Regiment Company 3rd In: Duttweiler . April 1, 2008, accessed May 5, 2020 .
  5. More arms control is urgently needed. In: BMVg. February 2, 2018, accessed May 5, 2020 .
  6. Personnel changes in top military positions in the Air Force. In: Bundeswehr. October 31, 2019, accessed May 5, 2020 .
  7. ^ Diploma for 104 officers. In: Hamburger Abendblatt . September 21, 2000, accessed May 5, 2020 .