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Newsgroups: talk.politics.guns
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From: aforum@moose.uvm.edu (autonome forum)
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Subject: a history of the Red Army Fraction (RAF)
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Message-ID: <1993Jan5.105236.4742@uvm.edu>
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Organization: University of Vermont -- Division of EMBA Computer Facility
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Date: Tue, 5 Jan 1993 10:52:36 GMT
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Lines: 250
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subject: a history of the Red Army Fraction (RAF)
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posted by: autonome forum
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--
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THE HISTORY OF THE RED ARMY FRACTION (RAF)
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The Red Army Fraction, Germany's oldest revolutionary armed
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clandestine organization has, for the past 22 years been, as they
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put it, "shaking the imperialist system". The most recent
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communique the RAF (10.4.92), in light of the changed world
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situation and the rise of the new world order, takes a
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retrospective and introspective look at its history and political
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theory and practice with the aim of fostering discussion and
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debate around armed resistance to imperialism and capitalism. In
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this communique, for the first time in a long while, the RAF
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takes itself to task; questioning and debating both its role in
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the fight against imperialism and the merits of its guerrilla
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actions as a means of attacking and overcoming imperialism, in
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order that a new political orientation may be found. Most
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importantly, the RAF has decided to stop its attacks while this
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debate and discussion goes on. What follows is a very brief
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overview of the history and politics of the RAF.
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The RAF emerged in 1970, out of the anti-Vietnam war student
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movement, and after a brief period of consolidating itself as an
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organization it began attacks in support of the Vietnamese
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people's liberation struggle, bombing targets associated with
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U.S. imperialism's and fascist West Germany's complicity in the
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Vietnam war. In May of 1972, the RAF attacked a whole series of
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targets - Army bases, police headquarters, the right-wing press,
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and more. In a communique accompanying the May 12, 1972 bombing
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of a police headquarters, the RAF summed up their duties as "the
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steady development of the revolutionary guerrilla movement, the
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long and protracted process of the struggle for liberation from
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fascism, capitalism, capitalist exploitation and suppression of
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the people." And in a document entitled "Concept of the Urban
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Guerrilla", the RAF stressed its link with liberation struggles
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in the three continents (Africa, Asia, and Latin America),
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putting forward the strategy of "fighting from the inside";
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waging the struggle from the metropoles, the homelands of
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imperialism, in support of these liberation struggles.
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By 1975, most of the RAF's founders were either in jail or
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dead. In spite of intense repression, the RAF continued to
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maintain its revolutionary offensive. A 1974 hungerstrike by RAF
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prisoners culminated in the murder by the state of Holger Meins,
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a RAF founder. Consequently, a commando from the June 2nd
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Movement, a more anarchist guerrilla grouping, shot and killed
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the president of the West Berlin Supreme Court, and the Holger
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Meins Commando of the RAF occupied the West Germanan embassy in
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Stockholm, Sweden, in an unsuccessful attempt to gain freedom for
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their imprisoned comrades, most of whom were standing trial at
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the Stammheim prison.
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From the start, there was criticism of the RAF and its
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actions. For example, the editors of the British periodical
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"Anarchy" took the RAF to task rightly, arguing that "the armed
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resistance of the RAF is both centralised and spectacular, and
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this has two very negative effects: their actions don't relate to
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people's everyday experience and the majority of people look at
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their struggle with the police as some kind of private feud in
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which they have no part." Further, they argued that the RAF, by
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refusing to combine legal and illegal work, and by carrying out
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actions which were supplementary rather than integral to the
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struggle, had effectively cut themselves off from comrades who
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were willing to help them. They had isolated themselves from the
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masses, preaching a political elitism and avant-guardism that
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seperated them "from the many types of direct action that are
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carried out at the grass-roots level."
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In 1976, Ulrike Meinhof, another founder of the RAF, was
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murdered by the state, leading to demonstrations throughout
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Europe, including the bombing of the West German consulate in
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Nice and the bombing of the U.S. Armed Forces Radio station in
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Frankfurt. Then, in September 1977, as the Stammheim trial
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continued, the RAF kidnapped the Daimler-Benz Chief Executive
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Martin Schleyer, a former S.S. officer. To make a long and
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complex story short, the RAF demanded the release of its
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imprisoned comrades in exchange for Schleyer; the state refused.
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Consequently, Palestinian comrades hijacked a Boeing 737 and
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reiterated the demands of the RAF. The elite anti-terrorist
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German GSG 9 squad stormed the plane freeing the passengers and
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killing some of the hijackers. The German state then murdered
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three RAF members in their cells at Stammheim. Martin Schleyer
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was later found, executed by the RAF.
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Between 1977 and 1979, the RAF was somewhat less active.
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Their base of support fell away, and in the eyes of many the RAF
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had become essentially a 'free the guerrilla organization' - all
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of its actions seemed to be aimed only at liberating its
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prisoners and it appeared to be engaged primarily in a private
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war with the state. Further, the main original political
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motivation of the RAF - the Vietnam war - was over.
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By 1979, the RAF emerged with a new orientation - U.S.
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imperialism's and NATO's plans to turn Europe, and Germany in
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particular, into one huge NATO installation complete with nuclear
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weapons. A new base of support was sought among the growing anti-
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nuclear and militant peace movements in Germany in order to build
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an anti-imperialist movement that could effectively combat NATO's
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plans to use Germany as the 'take-off' point for its wars against
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the Third World, all under the slogan: "War on Imperialist War".
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Also in 1980, the June 2 Movement announced that it was
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disbanding and joining the RAF, stating that its notion of
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"spontaneous proletarian politics" had produced division among
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the guerrilla movement. In a communique they argued that "It can
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never be the job of the guerrilla to please the population and to
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get their applause, but the job of the guerrilla is to become the
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frontline."
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The RAF's new offensive started with their unsuccessful
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attempt on Alexander Haig, at that time a NATO General, and
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continued through into 1981 with a failed rocket grenade attack
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on NATO Commander U.S. General Kroesen, and a bomb attack on the
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U.S. Air Force/NATO headquarters at Ramstein. In a communique
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accompanying the Ramstein action, the RAF stated that they
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targeted it because it was the base for nuclear war in Europe,
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and the starting base for war in the Third World.
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In 1981, the Revolutionary Cells (an autonomous guerrilla
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structure, in existence since 1973) issued a long paper in which
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they castigated the RAF; taking the RAF to task for their
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abstractness. The RZ put forward their ideas of a 'popular'
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guerrilla, arguing for a guerrilla force "of which the activities
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are understood, which enjoys the sympathy of the people, and with
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a perspective on broad support." Importantly, the RZ criticized
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the RAF for not acknowledging that in addition to the class
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struggle between proletarians and capitalists, there are also
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other contradictions which must be solved; for example "the
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women's movement and over-exploitation and sexist suppression of
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women, the ecological movement and the destruction of
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environmental conditions by industrial technology." These are all
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criticisms which the RAF appears to be, since 1989, addressing
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more seriously, as the April '92 communique points out.
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The year 1982 saw the RAF author an important document
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entitled 'Guerrilla, Resistance and the Anti-Imperialist Front'
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which called for a united anti-imperialist front against NATO
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imperialism, and in which the RAF essentially recognized and
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realized that they had made serious tactical and political
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mistakes in 1977. Essentially, the RAF criticized its earlier
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vanguardist ideas, and called for anti-imperialist struggle
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alongside others, rather than the RAF being at the forefront of
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the struggle. While in 1982 and 1983 the RAF was operationally
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quiet, in 1984 the RAF came alive.
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On December 4, 1984, RAF prisoners began a collective
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hungerstrike which called for the unity of all political
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prisoners and which again called for a united front against
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imperialism. This hungerstrike mobilized, and was accompanied by,
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a large number of attacks and actions by anti-imperialist groups,
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including Belgium's Communist Fighting Cells (CCC), the
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Revolutionary Cells (RZ), and France's anti-imperialist Action
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Directe (AD). These actions were not just carried out in
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solidarity with the hungerstrike, but as part of the over-all
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offensive against NATO and imperialism.
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On January 15, 1985, in a joint communique, the RAF and
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Action Directe, announced the formation of what they termed "the
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international organization of proletarian struggle in the
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metropoles, with its politico-military core: the West European
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guerrilla." Ten days later Action Directe executed french General
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Audran, stating in a communique that he had "been central to the
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strategic imperialist project of homogenizing the European states
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under NATO's control." Then on February 1, 1985, the RAF executed
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Audran's German counterpart, Ernst Zimmerman.
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In August, the George Jackson Commando of the RAF/AD
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attacked the Rhein-Mein Air Base due to its role as "a centre for
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war against the Third World." In order to gain access to the
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airbase, the RAF executed an American G.I. and used his I.D. card
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to get them in. This caused fierce debate among the German left,
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and further served to alienate the RAF from some of its base of
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support. As one autonomist put it: "Any military line of action
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is wrong when it proceeds in isolation from what is being fought
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against. If I fight against something, then I must also have a
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line to those who are the victims of what I am fighting against.
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This is not at all the case with the RAF. With the Revolutionary
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Cells it is different; they make sure that their actions convey a
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message."
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In July of 1986, the RAF assassinated the German
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industrialist Karl-Heinz Bekurts who was involved with SDI
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research, and in October of 1986, high-ranking Foreign Officer
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Gerald von Braunmuhl was executed, "one of the central figures in
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the formation of the West European policy in the overall system
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of imperialism."
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The year 1988 saw the RAF issue a joint communique with a
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fraction of Italy's now-defunct Red Brigades - the BR-PCC (Red
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Brigades-Fighting Communist Party) - in which the unity of the
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revolutionary movement was called for, in the face of unification
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in Europe, and in which it was argued that "the attack of the
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West European front against the strategic projects for the
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political, economic, and military formation of West Europe aims
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at weakening the imperialist system and causing a thorough
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political crisis." In September of 1988, the RAF carried out an
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unsuccessful attack on the German Secretary of State for the
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Minister of Finance, Hans Tietmeyer, and in November of 1989 they
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were succesful in executing one of the world's most powerful
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financiers, Alfred Herrhausen. In 1989, the RAF carried out yet
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another unsuccessful hungerstrike which called for an end to
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isolation toruture and the regroupment of political prisoners.
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July of 1990 saw Hans Neusel, state secretary in the
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Interior Ministry and the government's leading 'terrorism'
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expert, survive a RAF attack. In the accompanying communique, the
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RAF appeared to have taken some of the criticisms directed at it
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to heart; it acknowledged the need for resistance to come from
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within grassroot movements, and called for the building up of a
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"counter-power from below" which would be made up of a diversity
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of struggles, including, for example, the squatters movement.
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During the Gulf War, the RAF machine-gunned the American
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embassy in Bonn in response to the devastation in Iraq being
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waged by US/UN forces. The accompanying communique called for,
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among other things, solidarity with the struggle of the political
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prisoners in the isolation units in the U.S. In 1991, the RAF
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asassinated the head of the company responsible for the
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reconstructing of East Germany along capitalist lines, Detlev
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Rohwedder, "one of the architects of the new Germany". In the
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communique around this action, the RAF argued for the necessity
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of pushing through "the preconditions for a self-determined life
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with human dignity in the struggle against the reactionary great
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German and West European plans to exploit people here and in the
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Three Continents."
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Since then, the RAF has again been operationally quiet,
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although they have been releasing communiques around issues such
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as political prisoners, and attempts by the police to criminalize
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the legal resistance movements by stating that parts of it carry
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out logistical support for the RAF. [NOTE: another communique
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around the G-7 summit was released on 29.6.92 -ed.]
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With this most recent communique, the RAF appears to be
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taking the criticism levelled at it throughout its history ever
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more seriously. A reading of the communique makes clear that the
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RAF is shedding its vanguardist ideas, and is taking into account
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other struggles and other contradictions, i.e. racism and sexism.
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They now see various struggles such as the squatting and anti-
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fascist movements, the struggle by refugees and immigrants
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against racist asylum policies, and the fight by social prisoners
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against isolation as all being integral to the building of a
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counter-power from below.
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It is unclear what role the RAF will play within this
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"counter-power". Whether or not the RAF continues to carry out
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actions on a lower-level as a "popular guerrilla", as the
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Revolutionary Cells mentioned above, or whether they will cease
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to exist entirely, remains to be seen. This decision by the RAF
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to break with its past history and practice has precipitated
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massive discussion and debate within the German autonomous left.
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Many are discussing the role of the armed resistance - how and in
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what context. The building of a revolutionary movement requires
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that these questions be discussed, not only in Germany and in
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other parts of the world, but also here in North America.
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For the full text of this communique, or of any of the
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communiques mentioned, and for information about armed struggle,
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political prisoners, and militant resistance in Germany, North
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America, and the rest of the world, write to Arm The Spirit, or
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contact Autonome Forum via e-mail: aforum@moose.uvm.edu
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autonome forum: aforum@moose.uvm.edu
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"solidarity is a weapon!"
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