WARNEMUENDE HARBOR

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-00810A000200340007-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 14, 2001
Sequence Number: 
7
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 27, 1953
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP80-00810A000200340007-5.pdf104.01 KB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP80-0081OA000200340007-5 25X1 C (N Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP80-0081OA000200340007-5 Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP80-0081OA000200340007-5 FEB 1952 CD NO. COUNTRY East Germany SUBJECT Warnemuende Harbor DATE. OF INFO. PLACE ACQUIRED 25X1A 25X1A DATE DISTR. 13 March 1953 NO. OF PAGES NO. OF ENCLS. (LISTED BELOW) SUPPLEMENT TO 25X1X REPORT NO. 1. Source's ship together with a Swedish ferry, put into the Warnemuende harbor at 7:30 a.m. and docked alongside the warehouse. The Warnemuende harbor zone was fenced-in and could be entered or left only through a police warded gate. Ships arriving in port were searched by a customs and police commission composed of one VP officer, a Soviet NCO, several VP's and customs officials. The Germans and the Russians were identical uni- forms except for the black-red-yellow cockade on the caps of the Germans and the Soviet star on the caps of the Russians. While the ship was being examined, the entire ship's crew had to gather on deck under the supervision of a VP. The Soviet N 80 watched the VPs and the customs officials during this examination. West German newspapers and illustrated papers were sealed. by the customs officials. Permits authorizing the holders to go ashore only inside the Warnemuende restricted area until 11 p.m. were issued to the crew menbers upon completion of the searching of the ship and an examination if the passport. The captain of source's ship was not allowed to visit relatives in Rostock. The supervision of the crew was not very effective as several crew members managed to go to Rostock without a permit. They were not halted. 2. The Dutch motor coaster SARAGOSSA at the same time unloaded paper bales, steel cables, salted hides, pipes of various diameters, and sheet iron which, according to the German inscription on the wooden,boxes, was 1,600 x 1,800 mm large and 14 mm and 6mm thick. Part of this cargo was unloaded into the warehouse, and part of it was loaded on railroad cars. A VP sentry was on guard in front of the SARAGOSSA. 3. As the War nemuende shipyard waa surrounded by a wooden fence, the shipyard area. was blocked from view. Source noticed the hulls of the former Hapag ships HAMBURG and HANSA and the former North German Lloyd steamer Berlin. 1 The noise of pneumatic hammers indicted that work oh tiese ships was in progress day and night. A white painted Soviet passanger steamer named PETR VELIKI according to a Warnemuende resident was in the shipyard. She CLASS1ort wh lNe source's ship was still in Warnemuende. 2 SECRET Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP80-0081OA000200340007-5 INFORMATION REPORT REPORT NO. Approved For Release 2002ZB CM CIA-RDP80-00810A00020U M9 d-5 25X1A 25X1A 2. a ne Dri,lU,,LN were given the Soviet named YURI, DOLCORUKI, SOVETSKI SOYUZ and ASTIRAL NAKIUAOV. departure was set for 13 October 1952, the Activists' Day. Approved For Release 2002/01/10 : CIA-RDP80-00810A000200340007-5