Klaus Riedel (2 August 1907 – 4 August 1944) was a German rocket pioneer. He was involved in many early liquid-fuelled rocket experiments, and eventually worked on the V-2 missile programme at Peenemünde Army Research Center. A Lunar craters is named after him in recognition of his contributions to rocket research.
In May 1932, Riedel became a founding member of the Panterra society for international projects of large-scale peaceful research, as initiated by Albert Einstein and headed by Friedrich Simon Archenhold. He was also a member of the German League for Human Rights until it was banned by the Nazi Party in 1933.
After the VfR disbanded in 1933, Riedel refused to join Wernher von Braun in the army's rocket programme and worked for Siemens. He accepted von Braun's offer only in August 1937 after the army paid compensation for a 1931 rocketry patent "Thrust Engine for Liquid Propellants" owned by him and Rudolf Nebel. Riedel was called "Riedel II", and his initial position in Peenemünde was "Head of the Test Laboratory". From 1941, he was mostly concerned with developing the mobile support equipment for the V-2 and became "Head of Ground Equipment" .
Riedel had been under SD surveillance since the beginning of Nazi Germany in 1933. A Gestapo report of March 1944 stated that he, Wernher von Braun, and his colleague Helmut Gröttrup were said to have expressed regret at an engineer's house one evening that they were not working on a spaceship and that they felt the war was not going well; this was considered a "defeatist" attitude. A young female dentist who was an SS spy reported their comments. Combined with Himmler's false charges that they were communist sympathizers and had attempted to sabotage the V-2 program, the Gestapo detained them on 21 March 1944, and took them to a Gestapo cell in Szczecin (now Szczecin, Poland), where they were held for two weeks without knowing the charges against them. Major-General Walter Dornberger, military head of Peenemünde, and major Hans Georg Klamroth, representative for counterintelligence at Peenemünde, obtained their conditional release so that the V-2 program could continue.
Klaus Riedel was killed in a mysterious car accident on a straight road near Zinnowitz two days after his thirty-seventh birthday when travelling home from work. He left behind his wife Irmgard Kutwin and an 18 month old daughter.
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