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  #77  
Old January 20th 04, 05:32 PM
Keith Willshaw
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"Denyav" wrote in message
...
He was never found , its hard to try a prisoner you dont have.


Nobody has ever made an attempt find him or launched an investigation to

find
out his whereabouts at the first place.
Dare to compare this with the efforts to catch very low key Nazi criminals

like
simple concentration camp guards.
Even his name appeared only once in allied documents.


Bull****

A quick google search will turn up dozens of references to him


His name appears no less than 6 times in the opening statements
of prosecuting counsel at the Nuremburg trial where it was made
clear that he was high on the list of criminals being sought for
prosection.

Walter Dornberger who loathed Kammler reported that Kammler had ordered
his adjutant to shoot him so as not to fall into Russian hands.
Its is known for certain that he was NOT anongst the group
that surrendered to the Americans.

As they did in all countries, Urenco a joint Dutch, German and UK firm
only perfected the technology in the 1960's

Prior to that everyone used a combination of diffusion and
cyclotron technologies


Almost all German centrifuge experts together with the most of intact

equipment
of Skoda,Degussa and Auer companies were transferred to soviet union,thats

the
reason why Soviet Union became suddenly world leader in centrifuge

technology
after WWII,while centrifuge development elsewhere stalled.


Crap !

The first Soviet enrichment plant (unit D-1) was a gaseous diffusion plant,
building began in 1946 and the plant went on line in 1948. Three newer and
larger gaseous diffusion plants - D-3, D-4 and D-5 - were brought into
operation by 1953

The first Soviet centrifuge plant was built at Sverdlovsk-44 in 3 stages
between
1962 and 1964 and the Gaseous Diffusion plants remained in production
well into the 70's

In western world serious centrifuge develepment started to accelerate only

in
mid mid to late fifties when Germans started to leave Soviet Union with

their
wealth of experience.


Which would make it 10 years before it happened in the USSR.

This is of course another of your fairy tales. The simple reality
is that serious post war development started in 1964 in West Germany
with the founding of a state owned company called
"Gesellschaft fuer Kernverfahrenstechnik" (GKT) at Juelich.


On March 1, 1970 the company was privatised. After several
changes in the 70's, Hoechst AG (25 %), RWE (37.5 %) and
PreussenElektra (Veba, 37.5 %) became shareholders of the
newly founded Uranit GmbH.

On March 4, 1970, Germany, The Netherlands and the United
Kingdom signed the "Treaty of Almelo" for the development
and industrial exploitation of centrifuge technology to enrich uranium.

In 1971, the three industrial partners: British Nuclear Fuels plc (BNFL),
Ultra-Centrifuge Nederland N.V. (UCN) and Uranit GmbH founded
the jointly-owned Urenco Ltd in Marlow to market their enrichment services.

It was Urenco that jointly developed centrifuge technology to industrial
maturity during the mid-1970's. The first uranium enrichment plants were
built at Almelo in the Netherlands and at Capenhurst in the United Kingdom.

The German uranium enrichment plant at Gronau went into operation in 1985.

Stop making stuff up Denyav.


Keith