Canada history: Aug 31,1993: Canada’s military bids farewell to Germany - a podcast by RCI | English

from 2020-08-31T19:36:42

:: ::

Canadian Forces Europe (CFE) ends
On this date the last of Canada's military forces said goodbye to their home away home in southern Germany. CFB Baden-Soellingen, and CFB Lahr had been the site of Canada's NATO forces for some four decades.
Perhaps 350,000  Canadian soldiers occasionally with families saw service in Germany starting in the 1950's with the establishment of commitments to NATO.


Raising the Canadian Flag, at the Caserne as part of takeover of the base Sept 1967 ( via CMPA)The Canadian presence began in France and Germany in the 1950's with airforce wings, but when France withdrew from NATO the two wings there were moved into the two existing German locations with the contingent at CFB Baden (originally Canadian Forces Station Baden) seeing an influx of new personnel in 1963 and 66, eventually becoming the RCAF's main fighter location equipped with CF 104 interceptors. CFS Baden had begun in 1953 with Canadians flying Canadair F 86 Sabres.


One of the Secure Ammunition Storage (SAS) bunkers used to store nuclear weapons for CF-104 aircraft during the short period that 1 Wing Lahr aircraft had a nuclear strike role (1969-70). (Unknown source CMPAAs France subsequently withdrew all its forces from Germany,  the Canadians also moved into CFB Lahr which originally had been a German airship base in the First World War. France later occupied the base before leaving in 1966.


The main gate to the Lahr airfield -undated ( Lynn Marie- Pinterest)Canadians then began to move both air and land units to the huge site with an airfield outside Lahr and a large'caserne'in the town.  While the airfield became the centre for mechanised units and others , the caserne later became the site of military offices, schools, store, and recreation centre.


Canadian MPs (in pre-unification RCAF Police uniforms) take over from French security forces at the Lahr airbase, 6 September 1967 (Photo: DND)Lahr was home to 4 Canadian Mechanised Brigade group of armour, artillery, engineers, service battalion, field ambulance, tactical helicopters, and so on. At any given time there at least 1,100 Canadian troops in Germany.
The Canadians had a long and warm relationships with the German people and many a young German woman found themselves a new Canadian husband.Not all Germans loved the Canadians, such as the peace demonstrators outside the airfield gate in 1981 (via CMPA)However, with the fall of the Berlin Wall, the need for an established military presence in West Germany allegedly came to an end and with it the end of a permanent Canadian presence. The closure of the bases was announced in the 1990 budget as a cost cutting measure.


155-mm M109 SP Howitzer, Ex Regensprung, Lahr, Germany, 9 Sep 1975.. Germans often didn't love the huge military vehicle movements through town, but usually understood why and were generally appreciative of the Canadian presence ( LAC Mikan 4748867)
CFB Baden airfield was closed in March 1993 with units leaving over the summer and only a handful of personnel remaining until the permanent closure on December 31.Video image of some of the last flights of Canadian fighters at CFB Baden in 1993 ( what you havent'seen- Youtube)
The last unit to leave CFB Lahr was 4CMBG on this date in 1993, and the base permanently closed and handed back to the city on this same date exactly one year later.additional information- sources


MacLean's: Phillips/Fulton: Jul 19/93: Auf Wiedersehen, Goodbye
Canadian Press (CTV): Jul 2/11: Canada paid $6M to clean cold war bases in GermanyCanadian Military History: B Forsyth
A Schnitzel and a glass of wine: Former Canadian military base in Lahr (Pt 1)Canadian Military Police Assoc: The Lahe Military Police Section
Military History books: Harold Skaarup: 4CMBG-Canadian Forces Europe 189570-1993

Further episodes of RCI | English : Reports

Further podcasts by RCI | English

Website of RCI | English