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Klaus Henkes (29 July 1929, in Görlitz – 7 March 2003) was a German air force officer, civil transportation official, and airline executive. Die Generale und Admirale der NVA. Militärgeschichte der DDR Ein biographisches Handbuch, page 109. Hrsg. v. Militärgeschichtlichen Forschungsamt von Klaus Froh

He was a general in the Air Force and a deputy transport minister in the government from 1975 till 1990. Between 1978 and 1982 he was in charge of , the national airline of East Germany.


Biography

Early years
Henkes was born into a working-class family in Görlitz, where, after leaving school relatively young, he studied for a career as a chemical laboratory assistant. At the end of World War II he was captured by the and was, according to one source, a prisoner of war between 1946 and 1949. He trained as a miner of at (near ) and, in 1948, became a member of East Germany's ruling Socialist Unity Party. By 1949 he had already reached the leading rank of with SAG Wismut, an important mining company.

A period of further education followed when he studied at the Freiberg Mining Academy from 1949 till 1950, after which he returned to Wismut, where he worked till 1952.


Military training
In its early years, East Germany did not formally have a military; instead, it had quasi-military Barracked Peoples' Police (KVP/ Kasernierte Volkspolizei), which included an air wing. Henkes volunteered on 23 May 1952, and was assigned to the secret programme which trained approximately 220 East Germans at in the Soviet Union to be military pilots for East Germany's future air force., page 6

After completing his training in 1953 he was appointed a pilot at the KVP flying school at the , which later became the . Between 1954 and 1955 he was sent on assignment as of the forerunner organisation for East Germany's Air Force Command. In 1956, East Germany founded and openly proclaimed its long-planned National People's Army, which included all , including the , the Air Force, and so on. Henkes was then sent for a lengthy period of training, which lasted till 1959, at the Gagarin Air Force Academy near Moscow.


Military career
From 1959 till 1961 Henkes served as a senior pilot with Air Force Command. Then, from 1961 till 1975, he was Deputy Chief of Staff for Flight Safety, Command Posts and Automation, still with Air Force Command, now based at at . During this time he was also, in 1967, awarded a doctorate in from Friedrich Engels Military Academy in .

On 1 March 1975 he was promoted to the rank of major general. This was also the year in which he was succeeded as Deputy Chief of Staff by and appointed a member of the government as Deputy Minister of Transport and Head of the Civil Aviation department in succession to Paul Wilpert.

In 1978 Henkes succeeded in the top job at , East Germany's "" airline. vom 31. März 1978 The appointment of an air force general to this position highlighted the close links between Interflug and the East German military. He remained at Interflug till 1982. On 2 October 1982 he was promoted again, now to the rank of lieutenant general.


Retirement
In 1989 he was awarded the National Prize of East Germany, and retired on 30 April 1990. He was also granted an invalidity pension.


See also

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