Otto K. Lind Explained

Otto K. Lind
Honorific Suffix:S.K.
Birth Name:Otto Katharus Lind
Birth Date:28 November 1920
Birth Place:Copenhagen
Death Place:Viborg, Denmark
Placeofburial:Almind Kirkegård, Viborg[1]
Allegiance: Denmark
Branch: Royal Danish Army
Serviceyears:1943-1985
Rank:General
Commands:

Otto K. Lind (28 November 1920 – 8 September 2000) was a Danish resistance fighter and later general, who served as Chief of Defence.

Lind completed his training at the Royal Danish Military Academy in 1943, at the rank of First Lieutenant shortly before the dissolution of armed forces. He then started working for the resistance movement and collecting intelligence. In 1944, he was arrested in Nørre Nissum, where he was gathering intelligence on the German fortifications. He was taken by the Gestapo to Århus, where he was subjugated to extreme torture.[2] He was later sent to Frøslev Prison Camp, where he spent the remainder of the war.[3]

After the war, he served as lieutenant colonel at Dronningens Livregiment. In 1974, he became major general and chief for the Defence's Operation Staff before becoming chief of BALTAP, in 1980. When Knud Jørgensen retired as Chief of Defence in 1984, Lind was selected as the new Chief, and served a year before Lind had to retire in 1985.

He died in 2000.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Otto K. Lind. gravsted.dk. 7 February 2016. Danish.
  2. Web site: Otto Katharus Lind. denstoredanske.dk/. 7 February 2016. Danish.
  3. Web site: Ritzau. Former defence chief Otto K. Lind is dead. b.dk. 7 February 2016. Danish.