Napalm From The Alps: How The Swiss Developed A Lethal Incen…

Written by on January 29, 2023

(MENAFN- Swissinfo)
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napalm aus den alpen (original)

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    ‘أوبالم’.. هذا السلاح القاتل الذي طوّرته سويسرا!

    At the end of the 1970s the Indonesian Air Force made a propaganda film which showed soldiers attaching bombs to the wings of an American OV-10F Bronco fighter jet. The bombs bore the logo“BOM-OPALM” and were intended to be dropped on East Timor, which had been fighting for independence since 1975.

    The incendiary agent Opalm was considered the Soviet version of the American napalm, but recently discovered documents show that it was actually a Swiss product. It was developed in Domat/Ems in eastern Switzerland, tested by the Swiss Air Force and produced in Germany on behalf of a Swiss company.


    A still taken from an Indonesian propaganda film in 1977. Swiss Opalm was used by Indonesia against the people of East Timor. Youtube

    The story begins in the early 1950s when the US Air Force dropped 32,000 tonnes of napalm on the Korean peninsula. Military experts were excited because napalm could cause a lot of destruction for little money. The Swiss press reported how“a napalm bomb covers almost 2,000 square metres with its scorching flames and destroys every living being within range”.

    The Swiss army also wanted to get its hands on the new weapon. It was spoilt for choice: in 1950 a US company sent a napalm sample to Switzerland, while a little later the French offered“Octogel” and the Dutch“Metavon”. In 1952 another deadly agent surfaced: the Swiss company Holzverzuckerungs AG (HOVAG) was offering an“improved napalm” called Opalm.

    Opalm was the brainchild of Werner Oswald, the founder of HOVAG. He had run a government-subsidised plant producing substitute fuel in Domat/Ems since 1941. But when petrol imports resumed after the end of the Second World War, his fuel was no longer in demand. He needed new business ideas, and napalm, a mixture of gasoline and thickening agents, was one of them.

    Oswald developed Opalm and patented it. When he offered to sell it to the Swiss army, he argued that in the event of war HOVAG could guarantee production independent of foreign countries. Although the government, which was in charge of the purchase, was convinced that Opalm was“at least as good as” foreign products, it decided against buying it as it was four times as expensive as napalm from the US.

    Circumventing the law

    This did not faze Oswald as he had already found another customer abroad. The government of Burma, a country plagued by internal conflicts since its independence in 1948, ordered Opalm for thousands of bombs including shells and detonators which were to be produced by HOVAG’s Swiss partner companies. When the Swiss government in 1954 refused to issue an export licence, Oswald simply moved production to Germany.


    Filling up drums with Opalm granulate (1952) Bundesarchiv

    In the mid-Fifties there was no law in Germany regulating the export of incendiary agents, so the production plant was dismantled in Domat/Ems and rebuilt in the German city of Karlsruhe. The Swiss chemist who had developed Opalm travelled specifically to Karlsruhe to show Oswald’s new business partner, the German arms dealer Walter Heck, how to make the“secret recipe”.

    It was a classic workaround: sales were conducted in Switzerland, while the incendiary agent was produced in Germany from where it was delivered to buyers. Even though it wasn’t in line with the spirit of the Swiss arms law, such a procedure was made legal in 1951 provided the finished weapons never touched Swiss soil.

    At the same time, Oswald transferred all business dealings with Opalm to PATVAG, a company he owned with his brothers. This meant the profits didn’t end up with government-subsidised HOVAG, which had financed the development of Opalm, but went straight into the pockets of the Oswald family.

    Having recently rejected the export of Opalm, the Swiss government now approved the delivery to Burma of thousands of bombshells produced in Basel. As for the detonators, PATVAG director Erwin Widmer did what many arms dealers were doing: he declared them to be“plastic containers” when he wanted to send them to Pakistan, where one of his employees was preparing an Opalm presentation for the army.

    The scam was uncovered by a suspicious Swiss customs official, but Widmer used his good connections to the government and applied for a second – correct – export licence, which he was immediately granted. However, when an outraged HOVAG employee told a newspaper editor about the“plastic containers” and false declarations, the authorities kept quiet and referred to professional secrecy. The PATVAG director received only a tiny fine for the falsely declared detonators.

    While the scientists in Domat/Ems continued to improve Opalm and find additives that would make the burning effect even more devastating, HOVAG was looking for new customers. In the summer of 1955 the company sent samples to NATO and several European and Arab countries. Jordan, Syria and Egypt purchased an undisclosed amount of Opalm. The Egyptian Air Force used it to bomb defenceless civilians during the Yemeni Civil War between 1962 and 1967. Police files and letters connected to PATVAG even indicate that the company had sold a licence to the Egyptian army and was involved in the construction of an Opalm production plant near Cairo.

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