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The Red Army Faction (RAF or Rote Armee Fraktion in German), also known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang (or Baader-Meinhof-Bande) after two of its members, was a West German Maoist terrorist group, chiefly active in the 1970s, which performed a variety of robberies, bombings, and kidnappings. They were trained and ideologically influenced by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), and received some support from the East German secret police, the Stasi.
The original group was active from 1970-72. Its leaders were quickly captured by police; many died under suspicious circumstances in prison, officially deemed suicides. A second wave sprung up in the mid-1970s, and a third generation carried out more actions in the 1980s and 1990s. One prominent member, Horst Mahler, was an East German spy,[1] and subsequently became a neo-Nazi.[2] The RAF's ideology, like the Revolutionary Cells with whom they are sometimes confused, had an oddball combination of obsessions with both Nazis and Zionism. The RAF had received weapons training from the PFLP with referral from the East German Stasi, during which they were exposed to PFLP's ideology as well.
In early September 1977 the RAF kidnapped German industrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer as the culmination of a campaign of high profile assassinations and kidnappings. Schleyer was held hostage for the release of imprisoned RAF members; he was also a symbolic target because of his history with the Hitler Youth and the SS. On October 13, 1977 the External Operations faction of the PFLP, which conducted the hijacking of Air France Flight 139 in 1976, conducted the hijacking of Lufthansa Flight 181 to apply additional pressure to release the RAF members and demand USD $15 million. On October 18, a German special operations team stormed the hijacked aircraft, killing three of the four hijackers and releasing all the remaining hostages alive. The same day, three imprisoned RAF members died in their cells, one survived with four knife wounds in her chest, and Schleyer was killed; his body was recovered the following day. The prison deaths were officially reported as suicides. The survivor, Irmgard Moeller, claimed that the deaths were extrajudicial killings. The purported motive for extrajudicial killings, otherwise to be regarded as co-ordinated suicides under conditions of no communication and tight security against suicide weapons, was deterrence against further hostage-taking events on behalf of imprisoned RAF members. After the dramatic events of the German Autumn, the RAF committed random violence against prominent Germans during the 1980s and 1990s.
The group arose out of the New Left movement of the 1960s; in Germany in the late 1960s this inspired protests against the Vietnam War, against the 1967 visit of the Shah of Iran to Germany, and against the resulting police brutality (in particular the shooting of student Benno Ohnesorg by police during protests against the Shah). In addition there was widespread antipathy to capitalism and to the complicity of the previous generation in Nazism, and general 1960s dissatisfaction with life.
The RAF's activities started in 1968, with Gudrun Ensslin and Andreas Baader setting off incendiary devices in two Frankfurt department stores. They were arrested soon after, but released in a 1969 amnesty. The RAF proper was formed in 1970, and after training in Jordan by Palestinian guerrillas, they performed a number of bank raids and bombings, killing two policemen and four American soldiers before the first wave of leaders were arrested in 1972.
The group consisted largely of former university students[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18] still fresh from the student revolts in 1968 and in relatively many cases either came from middle-class families or had bourgeois upbringings.[3][4][6][9][10][11][12][13][14][15] Unlike their cohorts in Ireland however, the RAF has very little support among the West German population, due to West Germany's relative post-war political and economic stability and lack of ethnic and religious divisions.
The RAF had an unusual high ratio of women for a terrorist organization. During the 70s, the media tried to explain this phenomenon as a bunch of lesbians who tried to reject their femininity by picking up arms because true women were incapable of fanaticism and acting reasonably (in terms of carrying out terrorist actions, mind you) or that they were "mistresses" under the spell of their patriarchal boss Baader.[19]
Baader, Ensslin, Meinhof, Meins and others were captured by police in 1972. They were held at Stammheim Prison, Stuttgart in solitary confinement but soon worked out a method of communicating while they awaited trial. They carried out hunger strikes and were force-fed; Holger Meins died as a result in 1974. A second generation of terrorists sprung up in sympathy; the 2 June Movement kidnapped Peter Lorenz, a Christian Democrat politician, in February 1975, and he was released in exchange for other prisoners not including the core RAF members. RAF members took over the West German embassy in Stockholm in April 1975.
Ulrike Meinhof hanged herself in jail on 9 May 1976. Her death is widely viewed as suspicious, due in part to the way police mishandled it.[42] After Meinhof's death, the trials of the remaining members continued, as did terrorist attacks by sympathisers.
In 1977, further attempts were made to free the prisoners. Dresdner Bank boss Jürgen Ponto was killed in what appeared to be an attempt to kidnap him; industrialist and former Nazi Hanns Martin Schleyer was successfully kidnapped, and sympathetic PFLP terrorists hijacked Lufthansa Flight 181 from Palma de Mallorca to Frankfurt. German police stormed the plane and killed the hijackers on 18 October 1977. That night (in the official version) Baader shot himself dead, Ensslin hanged herself, Jan-Carl Raspe shot himself and died the following day, and Irmgard Möller stabbed herself four times in the chest but survived. The following day, the kidnappers announced that Schleyer had been killed.
The official inquiries found that the group had conspired to commit suicide on the same night. However, just as Meinhof's death is regarded as suspicious by many, conspiracy theorists wonder how Baader and Raspe got the guns. Ballistics evidence for Baader's gunshot suicide was odd; he shot himself in the back of the head from a distance of 30-40 cm, and the lack of gunpowder residue suggests a silencer was used, though one was not found. No gunpowder traces were found on Raspe's hands either, and there were no fingerprints on the guns or Möller's knife. Möller's attempted suicide by stabbing herself four times in the chest shows extraordinary strength of will, to say the least. She later claimed she did not attempt suicide and the others were murdered to prevent any further rescue attempts.
After the terrorists' collective suicide, the German government had the brains of Baader, Meinhof, Ensslin and Jan-Carl Raspe removed without the families' permission for study at the Neurological Research Institute at the University of Tübingen, all of which have disappeared without a trace. Apparently the authorities had a morbid fascination with the killers, even going as far as making an unauthorised mask of Baader.[43] Before the brains were lost, only Meinhof's brain had the unpleasant fortune to be studied on. The research came to the conclusion that Meinhof had an unsuccessful surgery to remove a benign tumor and that it was possibly one of the factors in abandoning an aspiring journalistic career for becoming a terrorist.[44][45]
Even after the deaths of the founders and arrest of the second generation, further actions were carried out in the 1980s and 1990s. These included the killings of engineering boss Ernst Zimmermann, Deutsche Bank chairman Alfred Herrhausen, and civil servant Detlev Karsten Rohwedder who was involved in privatizations in the former East Germany. In 2024, one member was arrested in connection with the earlier actions, and two others are still wanted by the police.[46]
After the reunification of Germany and the opening of Stasi files, it was confirmed that the group had received support from the East German government, which sheltered group members in the late 1970s and early 1980s.[47] According to East German records, Horst Mahler was an agent of the Stasi before he joined the RAF. The police officer Karl-Heinz Kurras, whose shooting of student protestor Benno Ohnesorg inspired Baader and Ensslin, was also a Stasi agent.[1] The Stasi had a complex relationship with the RAF, but it included spying on them, giving them shelter, enabling their travel to the Middle East, and giving them weapons training.[48][49]
The group has inspired a number of films, including The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum (Volker Schlöndorff; 1975), Die bleierne Zeit (Margarethe von Trotta; 1981), and The Baader Meinhof Complex (Uli Edel; 2008). Leading German artist Gerhard Richter produced a series of paintings depicting the gang in vague shadowy monochrome images, emphasising the shady ambiguous nature of German politics. Professional miserabilist and musician Luke Haines formed a band called Baader Meinhof who released a self-titled disco album, because even terrorists like to party. The 1988 action movie Die Hard featured a group of twelve German terrorists committing a mass hostage taking and $650 million robbery in a corporate headquarters in Los Angeles, a caper resembling a Baader-Meinhof operation on steroids.
There was a less successful British version, the Angry Brigade, which planted a few small bombs in the early 1970s. The Italian Red Brigades (Brigate Rosse) also had similar aims, though interestingly some of the attacks that were initially thought to be their doing were later proven to have been committed by members of Gladio, a NATO "stay behind" organisation and similar right wing groups. The Japanese Red Army (日本赤軍) conducted a number of attacks around the world in the 1970s and 1980s.
The RAF was influenced by PFLP ideology and and rhetoric, which associated them with PFLP's attacks on Jewish targets. That disgusted fellow leftists who might have otherwise been sympathetic towards the RAF. Joschka Fischer (then a violent leftist) started to become disillusioned with political violence because of the treatment of Jewish hostages during the hijacking of Air France Flight 139.[50][51] RAF is sometimes incorrectly reported as participating the Air France hijacking in which two members of the Revolutionary Cells participated. A former East German Stasi handler of the RAF, Horst Mahler, later became a neo-Nazi. RAF's terror targets were prominent non-Jewish Germans and much of their rhetoric was focused on purported remaining Nazi influences in Germany.