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fiasco
It's a Festivus Miracle that you didn't cause some international incident in the DDR. Did you have your DOD dependent ID on you? That might've helped you getting from West Germany to Berlin, but anywhere else might have hurt your corn hole. Mind you, my one experience in East Germany was just before the Wall came down when my aunt (then a Major in the US Army) hauled us to Berlin and back through the DDR. Got to go through Checkpoint Charlie and check out East Berlin just before the Iron Curtain fell. With my worldly experience of "America, Fuck Yeah!", the Commies seemed pretty scary, but West Berlin seemed Hella Sweet.
I do remember the DDR coins feeling worthless in my hand...funny thing is, US coins are getting that same aluminum feel to them now...hmmmm.
Yeah, of course I had my ID in my wallet and when I pulled it out to pull out the driver's licence in a flash the Seargant sitting there with his little equivalent of an Uzi noticed it and said "So, you are military, Hmmmmmm?" (didn't help I was wearing a surplus US Army winter coat and a hat like this,
but with the bill turned up which looked remarkably like this:
And green cordorory pants---and hiking type boots...
Guy looks at the ID card for maybe 1 second, says "So, your father is a Captain in the Navy, hmmmmmMMM?
Chrikee, 1 second..
Well now it makes sense:
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Pass and Control Units
For most visitors to East Berlin and the GDR, including persons who utilized the land transit routes (road and rail) between West Germany and West Berlin, their exposure to the Grenztruppen der DDR consisted of dealing with the members of the "Pass and Control Units" (Paß- und Kontrolleinheiten - PKE) who processed travellers passing through the GDR's Grenzübergangsstellen (border crossing points). Although they wore Grenztruppen uniforms, the members of the PKE were in fact members of the 6th Main Department (Hauptabteilung VI) of the GDR Ministry of State Security (Ministerium für Staatssicherheit der DDR - "Stasi").
This guy and the guys that inspected---very thoroughly and pleasantly---my car weren't some conscript layabouts....They were young and they were cold and laughed when i made motions to "maybe swap hats"..."Brrrrrrrrrrrr---(they pointed) besser!" Damn right, I seriously had icicles hanging off the dash--useless English heaters.
17.....alone in der DDR....
John Vanlandingham
Sleezattle, WA, USA
Vive le Prole-le-ralliat
www.rallyrace.net/jvab
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