Fascists are the Tools of the State

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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Sun Jul 01, 2018 6:50 pm

Portland Holds It Down Against Fascists and Police : The Clashes of June 30, 2018

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The demonstration started off as usual. In Portland, the fascists rally on federal property (for their own protection, obviously) in the middle of downtown: Terry Schrunk Plaza. Anti-fascists assemble in the park adjacent to Terry Schrunk—it’s called Chapman Square. Since the police are quite aware of the dynamics involved with the demonstrators, they lined Madison Street, facing the anti-fascists in Chapman Square. As Portland has been on high alert because of the #OccupyICE protests for the past three weeks (and Terry Schrunk is federal), DHS (Department of Homeland Security) officers made their reappearance. They arrived wearing the federal government’s finest repression gear—caged helmets, masked faces, three-foot batons, pepper ball guns, and so on. A notable difference was that this time, the DHS police were organized into different teams, indicated by a stripe on the back of their helmets. The fascists also had their Halloween costumes on, ranging from a full-blown Pepe/Kek worshiper who looked like a wrestler to 3%ers (remember them helping police with arrests last summer?) wearing what looked like real combat gear. And they call anti-fascists LARPers?! Even Based Spartan made a re-emergence.

Anti-fascists taunted them with megaphones and chants, and the Unpresidented Brass Band provided a situationally-appropriate soundtrack, complete with “sad trombone” effects and a sousaphone every time one of the braver fash decided to “come talk” to the anti-fascists. Signs and banners were everywhere, and the bloc was a sprawling front line of roving fighters. The air was electric and numbers were clearly on our side, which always leads to one thing—state repression. One small group of anti-fascists were attacked by the fash, so the police responded by emptying what appeared to be pepper ball guns at the anti-fascists. This set the tone for the subsequent actions of the police.

Twenty minutes later, police announced an official state action and the code under which it fell, and described the potential consequences if anyone chose to violate them. Essentially, they were warning anti-fascist demonstrators what to expect. This is certainly uncommon. It must have taken place because of the presence of major news outlets, and perhaps because the local police were working so openly with DHS. This action was to set up a police line and clear the street adjacent to the fascist demonstrators.

The fascists formed a self-described phalanx, which took about twenty minutes to assemble. Then they immediately began marching towards Chapman Square at full speed. The initial clashes were mitigated by police presence and the speed of the marchers, but there were visible amounts of trash and sticks flying through the air. The fascists turned towards the river, then turned back towards their original direction. It initially looked like they were establishing a serpentine reach, but instead they stopped after several blocks. Anti-fascist demonstrators had kept up with them the entire time, but kept a city block between both parallel marches. Anti-fascists grabbed street signs, barricades, construction barriers, and large sheets of wood to create barricades every time the fash attempted a charge. Then, as the fascists stopped and turned several blocks later, both groups began marching towards each other. A small group of anti-fascists broke off and there was a scuffle, followed by the anti-fascist charge.

It’s important to note that the fascists charged through police lines with the express intention of attacking anti-fascist demonstrators. And the police allowed them to. Remember all that equipment? Nothing was deployed against the attackers.


https://crimethinc.com/2018/07/01/portl ... ne-30-2018
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Thu Jul 05, 2018 1:18 pm

Portland Police Saw Right-Wing Protesters as “Much More Mainstream” Than Leftist Ones

Deleted scenes from a protest review may bolster activist suspicions.

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A Portland police officer thought far-right activists, such as the protester above, seemed more reasonable than antifascists clad head-to-toe in black. (William Gagan)

By Katie Shepherd | Published June 27

Newly released draft reports from a city review of how Portland police handled dueling demonstrations last summer reveal cops admitting what activists have long suspected: They saw right-wing protesters as less of a threat than leftist ones.

"One lieutenant felt the right-wing protesters were 'much more mainstream' than the left-wing protesters," the draft report reads, "with a group that was diverse in their viewpoints and tactics."

The Portland Independent Police Review received numerous complaints from members of the public after a far-right group called Patriot Prayer held a rally across from City Hall last June.

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Patriot Prayer protesters. (William Gagan)
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Thu Jul 05, 2018 1:40 pm

He Is a Member of a Violent White Supremacist Group. So Why Is He Working for a Defense Contractor With a Security Clearance?

Michael Miselis took part in the violent Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. So far, it hasn’t damaged his standing at Northrop Grumman.

by A.C. Thompson and Ali Winston July 5, 5 a.m. EDT

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Michael Miselis, standing in the crowd with both arms raised, was front and center during the violence in Charlottesville last summer. Miselis holds a national security clearance for his work with defense contractor Northrop Grumman. (Edu Bayer, special to ProPublica)


There likely isn’t such a thing as a “typical” violent white extremist in America in 2018. Still, Michael Miselis — a University of California, Los Angeles doctoral student with a U.S. government security clearance to work on sensitive research for a prominent defense contractor — makes for a pretty unusual case.

For months, ProPublica and Frontline have been working to identify the white supremacists at the center of violent demonstrations across the country, including the infamous Unite the Right rally last August in Charlottesville, Virginia. The Rise Above Movement, a Southern California group that expresses contempt for Muslims, Jews, and immigrants, became a focus of that effort. ProPublica and Frontline were able to quickly identify a number of the group’s leaders, and find evidence that put them in the middle of violence in Charlottesville and Berkeley, California, among other places.

But one seeming member of RAM was harder to nail down. In video shot in Charlottesville, a bearded, husky man is seen in a red Make America Great Again hat with his hands wrapped in tape that came in handy for the brawling that occurred that day. During one encounter, the unidentified man in the red hat pushed an African-American protester to the ground and began pounding on him, video of the episode shows; moments later, a known RAM member choked and bloodied a pair of female counterprotesters. The possible RAM member also had turned up in video shot during hours of combat at a Trump rally in Berkeley, as well. Wearing protective goggles to ward off pepper spray, the man fought alongside RAM members, wrestling one protester to the ground and punching others.


https://www.propublica.org/article/mich ... op-grumman
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Sun Jul 08, 2018 7:13 am

Eric Striker Wants Young White Men To Wage ‘War’ For Their Interests At Home

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Kayla brought up U.S. soldiers in the Middle East which, she and Striker agreed, are only fighting for the interests of “ZOG” — or “Zionist Occupied Government.”

And she suggested that white nationalists “reach out” to young white men, especially veterans, in order to give them a renewed sense of purpose, which she claimed might reduce veteran suicide rates. And besides, she continued, “if we don’t do it, somebody else will.”

Striker agreed, and added that they should work to persuade “white, heterosexual, normal, non-Jewish men” to fight a “war” for white supremacy at home, instead of fighting for the government abroad:

So what is this system telling these guys? You’re not good for anything other than going to Iraq and having your legs blown off, or dying in some IED attack [while] invading someone else’s country for Jews. And so that is something that we have to work backwards from and tell ’em, ‘No, you actually do have value. You have value as part of something greater, and it’s not predicated on the whims of some yid like Bill Kristol or Paul Wolfowitz. You can have you’re own honor and respect. But you have to fight for [it]. And the war is not in the Middle East, it’s here in America.’ That’s what you have to tell these men.


And so far a disturbing number of high-profile white supremacists have heeded that call, from Identity Evropa founder Nathan Damigo, to Salting the Earth host Brian Brathovd, to Vanguard America’s Dillon Irizarry, to former War Room host Sacco Vandal.

Some, like hatecore performer Wade Michael Page, have brought the war home in a more literal sense by murdering racial and religious minorities.

And recently a violent protester who attended last year’s “Unite the Right” rally and bragged about “crack[ing] three skulls open with virtually no damage to myself” was outed as an 18-year-old Marine named Vasillios Pistolis.


https://angrywhitemen.org/2018/07/07/er ... s-at-home/
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Wed Jul 11, 2018 10:24 am

German neo-Nazi Beate Zschäpe sentenced to life for NSU murders

Victims’ relatives question intelligence services’ failure to stop group for 13 years

Philip Oltermann in Berlin

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The victims of Beate Zschäpe’s NSU activities were mostly immigrants.

The court had on Tuesday handed sentences to four other people connected to the group. Ralf Wohlleben, who was found to have supplied the group the gun with which the murders were carried out, was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

André Eminger, who turned up in court wearing a jumper with the logo of a far-right heavy metal band and was found to have assisted the cell in hiring apartments and vehicles, was sentenced to two and a half years in prison.

Many observers of the trial voiced surprise at the leniency of the sentences. “If you look at the sentences for Zschäpe’s co-conspirators, this is an unbelievably soft verdict,” said Dirk Laabs, the co-author of a book about the NSU. “It’s hard to image people accused of supplying weapons and logistics for terrorist activity would have got off so lightly if this had been a trial about an Islamist cell.”

Relatives, friends and supporters of the NSU’s victims also say the five-year trial, which involved questioning more than 600 witnesses, had failed to shed light on the extent to which Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, the Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz (BfV), was aware of the group’s murderous activities.

Police had for years ruled out a racist motives to the killings, assuming they were related to gang warfare among the country’s German-Turkish population.

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Co-defendant Ralf Wohlleben, who supplied the group with the murder weapon, was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Photograph: Joerg Koch/EPA

Yet over the course of the trial it emerged the terrorism cell had repeatedly crossed paths with the intelligence service’s paid informants within the neo-Nazi scene.

During the April 2006 murder of Halit Yozgat, 21, an intelligence agent employed by the central German state of Hesse had even been present inside the cafe where the murder took place, but neglected to report the incident.

When the judge read out his verdict on Wednesday, Yozgat’s father, Ismail, repeatedly cried out.

Lawyers representing the victims’ families have accused the domestic intelligence agencies of actively sabotaging the prosecution’s investigation in order to protect its informants. During the trial, one employee at the BfV’s headquarters admitted to destroying files on seven informants only days after the existence of the NSU cell came to light in 2011.

Parliamentary fact-finding commissions covering the failings of the intelligence agencies are taking place in five German states.

This week, activists in 20 German cities renamed about 200 streets to honour the victims of the NSU murders.

The Turkish foreign ministry in Ankara expressed its dissatisfaction with the outcome of the trial, noting that no light had been shed on the role of the “deep state”. It said: “In this respect we consider the verdict non-satisfying.”

The daughter of the NSU victim Mehmet Kubaşık, welcomed the verdict against Zschäpe but said it should only be the first step in a longer process. “My hope now is that all of the other helpers of the NSU can be found and sentenced,”, Gamze Kubaşık said.


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... su-murders





American Dream » Sat Nov 01, 2014 10:48 pm wrote:http://viewpointmag.com/2014/09/11/the-deep-state-germany-immigration-and-the-national-socialist-underground/

The Deep State: Germany, Immigration, and the National Socialist Underground

Wildcat September 11, 2014

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Nearly three years ago, in Novem­ber 2011, news of a dou­ble sui­cide after a failed bank rob­bery devel­oped into one of the biggest scan­dals in post­war Ger­man his­tory.1 Even now, it remains unre­solved. For thir­teen years the two dead men, Uwe Mund­los and Uwe Böhn­hardt, had lived under­ground, together with a woman, Beate Zschäpe. The three were part of the National-Sozialistischer Unter­grund (NSU), a fas­cist ter­ror orga­ni­za­tion which is sup­posed to have mur­dered nine migrant small entre­pre­neurs in var­i­ous Ger­man towns and a female police offi­cer, and to have been respon­si­ble for three bomb attacks and around fif­teen bank hold-ups. Although the NSU did not issue a pub­lic dec­la­ra­tion, the con­nec­tion between the nine mur­ders com­mit­ted between 2000 and 2006 as obvi­ous: the same weapon was used each time, a Ceska gun.

At the time they were called “doner mur­ders” (as in doner kebab) and the police called their spe­cial inves­ti­ga­tion team “Bospho­rus.”2 Nearly all the police depart­ments work­ing on the mur­ders focused mainly on the vic­tims and their alleged involve­ment in “orga­nized crime,” the drug trade, etc. Not only was it even­tu­ally revealed that the mur­der­ers were orga­nized Nazis, but that the killers had been sup­ported by some branches of the state appa­ra­tus and the search for the mur­der­ers had been sys­tem­at­i­cally obstructed. As one famous pub­lic tele­vi­sion news pre­sen­ter said: “One fact is estab­lished: the per­pe­tra­tors could have been stopped and the mur­ders could have been pre­vented.” She also voiced “the out­ra­geous sus­pi­cion that per­haps they were not sup­posed to be stopped.” The final report of the par­lia­men­tary inves­ti­ga­tion com­mit­tee of the Thuringia state par­lia­ment, pub­lished in August 2014, stated a “sus­pi­cion of tar­geted sab­o­tage or con­scious obstruc­tion” of the police search. The Ver­fas­sungss­chutz (VS, the Ger­man domes­tic secret ser­vice) had “at least in an indi­rect fash­ion pro­tected the cul­prits from being arrested.”

Since the sup­posed dou­ble sui­cide on the Novem­ber 4, 2011, the intel­li­gence ser­vices, the inte­rior min­istries of the fed­eral and cen­tral state, and the BKA col­lab­o­rated to cover tracks, just as they had col­lab­o­rated before to keep the exis­tence of the NSU from becom­ing pub­licly known. One day before the con­nec­tion between the NSU and the last bank rob­bery was pub­licly announced, a con­sul­ta­tion in the chan­cellery took place. Since then, the inves­ti­ga­tion has been sys­tem­at­i­cally obstructed by the destruc­tion of files, lies, and the refusal to sur­ren­der evi­dence. In the cur­rent crim­i­nal case against the alleged sole sur­vivor of the NSU (Beate Zschäpe) and five sup­port­ers at the higher regional court in Munich, the pub­lic pros­e­cu­tor wants it to be believed that the series of ter­ror acts were the work of three peo­ple (“the Trio”) and a small cir­cle of sym­pa­thiz­ers. “The inves­ti­ga­tions have found no indi­ca­tion of the par­tic­i­pa­tion of local third par­ties in the attacks or any of orga­ni­za­tional inte­gra­tion with other groups.” But it is clear that the NSU was much larger and had a net­work all over Ger­many. And it is highly unlikely that the two dead men were the only perpetrators.

Research on the NSU has shown that the VS had the orga­nized fas­cists under sur­veil­lance the whole time, with­out pass­ing its infor­ma­tion on to the police. It had many Con­fi­den­tial Infor­mants (CIs)3 in lead­ing posi­tions in the fas­cist struc­tures – or rather, the CIs even built up large parts of these struc­tures. It is very unlikely that the secret ser­vices acted with­out con­sul­ta­tion with the gov­ern­ment – but it is cer­tain that we will never find any writ­ten order. Some­times pub­lic pros­e­cu­tors and lead­ing police offi­cials were included in the cover-up. For exam­ple, the cur­rent Pres­i­dent – at the time Vice-President – of the Lan­deskrim­i­nalamt (LKA) or Crim­i­nal Police Offices of Thuringia ordered his police in 2003 to “go out there, but don’t find any­thing!” after receiv­ing a tip about Böhnhardt’s whereabouts.

Obvi­ously the Ger­man state appa­ra­tus has erected a (new?) par­al­lel struc­ture that oper­ates in accor­dance with gov­ern­ment poli­cies and out of the reach of par­lia­men­tary or legal con­trol. The National-Sozialistischer Unter­grund was a flag­ship project of this “deep state,” sup­port­ing the new pol­icy towards migrants that started in 1998 at the insti­ga­tion of Otto Schily, then Inte­rior Min­is­ter. Since the NSU became known to the pub­lic, this appa­ra­tus has even been finan­cially and oper­a­tionally strengthened.

The NSU com­plex gives us a glimpse of the way the Ger­man state func­tions, and can there­fore sharpen our crit­i­cism of the cap­i­tal­ist state. This is of inter­na­tional rel­e­vance for two rea­sons. First, many coun­tries, such as Hun­gary, the Czech Repub­lic, Morocco, and Rus­sia, have recently seen mobi­liza­tion, pogroms, and vio­lence against migrants. In a weaker form this has also hap­pened in Ger­many, and as usual one can see a pat­tern: the gov­ern­ment stirs up hatred, fas­cists take action (there have been at least five arson attacks in the first half of 2014). Sec­ond, many states are prepar­ing mil­i­tar­ily for mass strikes and social unrest. In accor­dance with an oper­a­tional scheme that has shaped inte­rior poli­cies in many West­ern coun­tries since the Sec­ond World War, state insti­tu­tions make use of para­mil­i­tary fas­cist struc­tures. A recent exam­ple is the rela­tion between the Greek secu­rity appa­ra­tus and the fas­cist Golden Dawn.4

The Back­ground: The State Lays the Ground for Racism

In Octo­ber 1982 the new Ger­man Chan­cel­lor Hel­mut Kohl told Mar­garet Thatcher in a con­fi­den­tial con­ver­sa­tion that he wanted to reduce the num­ber of Turks in Ger­many by half within four years. They were “impos­si­ble to assim­i­late in their present num­ber.” A few months before this con­ver­sa­tion his pre­de­ces­sor Schmidt blared: “I won’t let any more Turks cross the bor­der.” In Octo­ber 1983, the gov­ern­ment passed a repa­tri­a­tion grant. In the fol­low­ing years, the Chris­t­ian Democ­rats (CDU) began a debate about the alleged ram­pant abuse of the asy­lum law. Although hate was stirred against “gyp­sies,” “negroes,” and oth­ers, in its core this racism was always aimed against “the Turks,” the largest group of immi­grants. Kohl made this clear in his con­ver­sa­tion with Thatcher: “Ger­many does not have a prob­lem with the Por­tuguese, the Ital­ians, not even the South­east Asians, because all these com­mu­ni­ties are well inte­grated. But the Turks, they come from a very dif­fer­ent cul­ture.”5

Already in the sec­ond half of the 1980s, this gov­ern­ment pol­icy was accom­pa­nied by Nazi attacks on for­eign­ers. After Ger­man reuni­fi­ca­tion this process cul­mi­nated in the racist pogroms of Rostock-Lichtenhagen in August 1992.6 Less than four months later, the SPD (Social Demo­c­ra­tic Party of Ger­many) and the CDU (Chris­t­ian Demo­c­ra­tic Union of Ger­many) agreed to abol­ish the right of asy­lum almost completely.

The state racism was bloody, but it was not quan­ti­ta­tively suc­cess­ful in deport­ing large num­bers or dis­cour­ag­ing immi­gra­tion. At the begin­ning of Kohl’s Chan­cellery there were 4.6 mil­lion for­eign­ers in Ger­many; when it ended in 1998 there were 7.3 mil­lion. Con­se­quently, inte­rior pol­icy focused on “police pen­e­tra­tion” of “par­al­lel soci­eties” after the Ros­tock pogroms and espe­cially under the Schröder gov­ern­ment. Inte­rior min­is­ter Kan­ther and his suc­ces­sor Schily imposed the def­i­n­i­tion of immi­gra­tion as “crim­i­nally orga­nized” through­out Europe. This pol­icy, too, was pri­mar­ily directed not against “new­com­ers” but against the “Turks” who already live here. Small busi­nesses owned by migrants are gen­er­ally sus­pected of involve­ment in orga­nized crime. Even before 9/11, the finan­cial trans­ac­tions and phone calls of whole com­mu­ni­ties were screened and ana­lyzed on sus­pi­cion of orga­nized crime and traf­fick­ing. In par­tic­u­lar, the inves­ti­ga­tions tar­geted small busi­nesses fre­quented by large num­bers of peo­ple: cof­fee shops, inter­net cafes, kiosks, and so forth. From these places migrants can trans­fer money to another coun­try with­out the involve­ment of banks, using the Hawala sys­tem.7 “Police pen­e­tra­tion” reached its cli­max with the search for the Ceska killers: the “BOA Bospho­rus” orga­nized the largest drag­net among migrant com­mu­ni­ties in the his­tory of Ger­many: mas­sive sur­veil­lance of phone calls, mobile phones, money trans­fers, hotel book­ings, rental car use, etc.

The Nazis

Although the global eco­nomic cri­sis of the early 1990s reached Ger­many a bit later than else­where because of the “reuni­fi­ca­tion boom,” it was rel­a­tively more severe. Unem­ploy­ment dou­bled, “flood­gates opened wide” in the fac­to­ries. The unions sup­ported the cri­sis pol­icy of employ­ers with new col­lec­tive agree­ments to ensure “job secu­rity” and com­pany agree­ments imple­ment­ing “work­ing time accounts” over a full year. The work­ers were left alone in their defen­sive strug­gles, even though some were quite mil­i­tant and cre­ative. The (rad­i­cal) Left was pre­oc­cu­pied with the strug­gle against fas­cism and racism. They no longer analysed racism as a gov­ern­men­tal pol­icy, but as a “pop­u­lar pas­sion.” Any­one who tries to fight against eth­nic racism in all its shades but omits the dimen­sion of social racism remains tooth­less at best: in the worst case s/he becomes an agent of state racism.8 Jacques Ran­cière described it this way: “The racism we have today is a cold racism, an intel­lec­tual con­struc­tion. It is pri­mar­ily a cre­ation of the state… [It is] a logic of the state and not a pop­u­lar pas­sion. And this state logic is pri­mar­ily sup­ported not by, who knows what, back­ward social groups, but by a sub­stan­tial part of the intel­lec­tual elite.” Ran­cière con­cludes that the “‘Left­ist’ cri­tique” has adopted the “same con­ceit” as the right wing (“racism is a pop­u­lar pas­sion” which the state has to fight with increas­ingly tougher laws). They “build the legit­i­macy of a new form of racism: state racism and ‘Left­ist’ intel­lec­tual racism.”9 After that shift, there was a strong ten­dency for antifas­cist activ­i­ties to focus on the socially deprived and their prim­i­tive racism, and the state became increas­ingly attrac­tive as an ally. From the mid-90s onward, it funded most of these anti-racist ini­tia­tives. All these changes were com­pleted by the self-disarming of most of the rad­i­cal Left, which started adopt­ing the aim of “strength­en­ing civil soci­ety” at the same time as it removed all ref­er­ences to class struggle.

The most impor­tant NSU mem­bers were born in the mid-1970s in East Ger­many and were polit­i­cally social­ized in the “asy­lum debate” in the early 90s. It was a phase of mas­sive de-industrialization and high unem­ploy­ment in the East of Ger­many. The young Nazis learned that they could use vio­lence against migrants and left­ist youth with­out being pros­e­cuted by the state. They real­ized that they could change soci­ety through mil­i­tant action.

In West Ger­many a new youth cul­ture grew in the ’80s as well: right-wing skin­heads. The skin­head scene in the East and in the West was held together by alco­hol, exces­sive vio­lence, con­certs, and the dis­tri­b­u­tion of ille­gal videos and CDs. This music busi­ness allowed them to set up their own financ­ing. Still, a large part of their money was orga­nized through petty crime. From the begin­ning, many Nazis were involved in pros­ti­tu­tion, and arms and drug traf­fick­ing. Later they became heav­ily involved with biker gangs and secu­rity firms, which are boom­ing due to the the pri­va­ti­za­tion of state functions.

In the mid-90s var­i­ous mil­i­tant groups and other groups from the rightwing music scene united under the ban­ner of the Blood & Hon­our net­work (B&H).10 Soon after the Ger­man Nazi scene orga­nized inter­na­tion­ally, mak­ing con­tacts world­wide and build­ing an infra­struc­ture that stretched from CD pro­duc­tion to arms deal­ing and shoot­ing ranges. At that time the police could no longer coun­te­nance Nazi vio­lence, and the Nazis had to hide their actions. In that con­text, the B&H/Com­bat 18 con­cept of clan­des­tine strug­gle and small, inde­pen­dent ter­ror­ist groups (“lead­er­less resis­tance”) helped them reorganize.

In the for­mer East Ger­man state of Thuringia, the Nazi scene was built up by “Freie Kam­er­ad­schaften,”11 the Thüringer Heimatschutz (THS),12 Blood & Hon­our, and the Ku Klux Klan. This is the envi­ron­ment that gave birth to the National-Sozialistischer Unter­grund. The “Kam­er­ad­schaft Jena” con­sisted of Ralf Wohlleben, Hol­ger Ger­lach, André Kapke, Böhn­hardt, Mund­los, and Zschäpe. From 1995 onwards they were filed as “rightwing extrem­ists” in the VS Infor­ma­tion Sys­tem. Orga­nized in the THS, they prac­tised the use of explo­sives and firearms, and com­mit­ted their first attacks. The other mem­bers of the “Kam­er­ad­schaft Jena” remained active in the scene after the Trio went under­ground in 1998. And they sup­ported their com­rades: Hol­ger Ger­lach gave them his driver’s licence, pass­port, and birth cer­tifi­cate, and he rented motorhomes for them. Kapke and Wohlleben orga­nized weapons and pass­ports. Those two orga­nized the largest right-wing rock fes­ti­val in Ger­many and main­tained inter­na­tional con­tacts. In 1998 Wohlleben became a mem­ber of the NPD, the largest neo-Nazi party at the time. Over time he became its deputy chair­man in Thuringia. With the help of this net­work, Böhn­hart, Mund­los and Zschäpe could move under­ground and com­mit their attacks, prob­a­bly with local support.

The Infor­mants System

The Ger­man State is directly involved in orga­nized fas­cist struc­tures. But the direct and exten­sive involve­ment in the Thüringer Heimatschutz and the National-Sozialistischer Unter­grund stands out. In and around these groups the VS posi­tioned more than two dozen Con­fi­den­tial Infor­mants, or CIs. These CIs were not used to catch vio­lent Nazis like the Trio, instead they orga­nized the mil­i­tant Nazi scene in Ger­many, devel­op­ing it ide­o­log­i­cally and mil­i­tar­ily. The VS recruited mostly very young fas­cists and made them into lead­ers of the scene. In an inter­nal doc­u­ment of 1997, the Bun­deskrim­i­nalamt (Fed­eral Crim­i­nal Police Office, or the BKA) called these CIs “incen­di­aries” in the Nazi scene.13 It saw “the dan­ger that the CIs egged each other on to big­ger actions” and found it ques­tion­able “whether some actions would have hap­pened with­out the inno­v­a­tive activ­i­ties of the CIs.” There are many state­ments by for­mer CIs descriv­ing how they dis­cussed their polit­i­cal actions with their han­dlers. In some of those cases the han­dlers pre­vented their CIs from leav­ing the scene or told them to appear more aggres­sive. For the Ger­man intel­li­gence agen­cies, main­tain­ing CIs is more impor­tant than law enforce­ment. They pro­tected them from the police in mul­ti­ple cases so that they could oper­ate undis­turbed. In the mid-90s there was a brief debate about this prob­lem, because it became known that CIs of the Ger­man intel­li­gence agen­cies fought and killed as mer­ce­nar­ies in the Yugosla­vian civil war.

In 1996 the Fed­eral Inte­rior Min­istry began Oper­a­tion Rennsteig: the Bun­de­samt für Ver­fas­sungschutz (BfV, fed­eral domes­tic secret ser­vice), Mil­itärischer Abschir­m­di­enst (MAD, Ger­man mil­i­tary intel­li­gence agency), and local VS agen­cies of Thuringia and Bavaria coor­di­nated their intel­li­gence activ­i­ties relat­ing to the THS and the NSU, at least until 2003. They dis­cussed the recruit­ment of infor­mants but also how they could achieve dis­cur­sive hege­mony within “civil soci­ety.” Oper­a­tion Rennsteig marks a turn­ing point in Ger­man inte­rior pol­icy, which really took hold when Otto Schily, a for­mer ’60s stu­dent rad­i­cal and defense lawyer of the Red Army Fac­tion, became inte­rior min­is­ter in 1998. There was an unseen exten­sion of the secu­rity appa­ra­tus and an adjust­ment of the focus of the intel­li­gence agen­cies. To adapt them­selves to the new inter­na­tional con­stel­la­tion (Yugosla­vian wars, the first attack on the World Trade Cen­ter in 1993), they cen­tral­ized the Ger­man intel­li­gence struc­ture and uni­fied the han­dling of the Nazi scene. In this process they also expanded intel­li­gence activ­i­ties within the Nazi scene. All this hap­pened at the same time as the shift in “for­eign­ers pol­icy” from the attempt at “reduc­tion” under Kohl to the “fight against par­al­lel soci­eties in our midst” under Schily.

Every­one involved in Oper­a­tion Rennsteig knew that it was an explo­sive and not entirely legal oper­a­tion. Most of the files con­cern­ing recruit­ment and han­dling were incom­plete, some CIs were not even reg­is­tered. Between Novem­ber 12, 2011 and the sum­mer of 2012, 310 case files were destroyed in the BfV alone. They tried to destroy every­thing con­nected with Oper­a­tion Rennsteig, CI “Tarif,” and other impor­tant CIs around the NSU. Again, the com­mands were com­ing from the top of the hier­ar­chy. A few days after the first destruc­tion of files, the Fed­eral Inte­rior Min­istry gave the order to con­tinue the destruc­tion. Not only did they destroy phys­i­cal files, they also manip­u­lated com­puter files and deleted the phone data of CIs in con­tact with the NSU.

Who Was in Control?

When more and more high-level CIs in the NSU’s imme­di­ate envi­ron­ment were exposed, they began to tell the fairy tale of “CIs out of con­trol.” This was just the secret service’s next smoke­screen, after such cover sto­ries as “we didn’t know any­thing” and “we were badly coor­di­nated” col­lapsed when Oper­a­tion Rennsteig became pub­licly known. It is a lie, but many on the Left believe it because it fits into their pic­ture that “the Nazis can do what they want with the state.” It is there­fore worth tak­ing a closer look at this point.

Who are CIs? The ser­vices usu­ally try to recruit peo­ple with prob­lems: prison, debts, and per­sonal crises. These peo­ple then receive an allowance that can amount to a nor­mal monthly income for impor­tant CIs. CIs get sup­port for their polit­i­cal actions and warn­ings before a house search. On the other hand, there is a lot of con­trol: sur­veil­lance of all tele­phones, track­ing of move­ments, some­times direct shad­ow­ing. In order to cross­check the reports, the VS runs more CIs than it would oth­er­wise need. Time and again there are meet­ings of Nazi cadres with four or five CIs sit­ting around the table. There were sev­eral CIs within the NSU struc­ture who did not know about each other. The great major­ity of them did what the VS wanted them to do — pass­ing on infor­ma­tion, betray­ing every­thing and every­one, while also directly sup­port­ing armed strug­gle by pro­vid­ing pass­ports, logis­tics, pro­pa­ganda and weapons.

Some exam­ples of CIs in the NSU structure:

Tino Brandt, the chief of the THS, was the best paid CI of the Thuringia VS from 1994 to 2001; he helped the Trio go under­ground, and after­ward pro­vided pass­ports and money.

Thomas Starke (LKA CI in Berlin from 2000 to 2011) orga­nized weapons and the Trio’s first hide­out, and he deliv­ered explo­sives before they went under­ground. He gave clues as to where they could be found in 2002, but these were “not investigated.”

Thomas Richter was CI “Corelli” for the BfV from 1994 to 2012; after this became pub­lic he was kept hid­den by the agency and was found dead in April 2014. He had “imme­di­ate con­tact” with Mund­los as early as 1995, and was the link between the NSU and the KKK and co-founder of the anti-antifa.

Andreas Rach­hausen – “GP Alex” – brought back the get­away car the three had used for going under­ground in Jan­u­ary 1998, when Rach­hausen was already a CI.

Ralf Marschner was CI “Primus” for the BfV from 1992 until about 2001. He rented motorhomes through his build­ing com­pany at exactly the time when two of the mur­ders occurred.

Carsten Szczepan­ski tried to build up a Ger­man branch of the KKK in the early 1990s, while mon­i­tored by the VS. Between 1993 and 2000, he was impris­oned for a bru­tal attempted mur­der. In prison he co-edited the Nazi mag­a­zine “Weißer Wolf” (White Wolf), which prop­a­gated the con­cept of lead­er­less resis­tance and sent greet­ings “to the NSU” even then. He became a CI in prison. For his work he received many prison priv­i­leges (besides lots of money). He sup­plied much infor­ma­tion, for exam­ple that Jan Werner had orga­nized the Trio’s weapons. Imme­di­ately after his release he tried to set up a ter­ror cell like Com­bat 18. When his cover blew in 2000, the VS got him a new iden­tity and sent him abroad.

Michael von Dolsperg, (for­merly See), a mem­ber of Com­bat 18, close to the THS. From 1995 to 2001 he was a BfV CI with the code name “Tarif.” He was rewarded with at least 66,000 D-Mark. After 1994 he was edi­tor of the mag­a­zine “Son­neban­ner,” which pro­posed “going under­ground” and “form­ing inde­pen­dent cells.” We know that some of its arti­cles were dis­cussed by Mund­los, Böhn­hardt, Zschäpe and their close con­tacts. Dolsperg pro­duced a total of 19 issues. In an inter­view he claimed that “the BfV got all issues in advance.”14 This is not the only case where the VS partly financed and “fine-tuned” the con­tents of a Nazi mag­a­zine. In Thuringia, the VS was con­sulted for anti-antifascist leaflets and did the proof­read­ing.15 In 1998 Kapke asked Dolsperg if he could pro­vide hous­ing for the Trio in hid­ing. Dolps­berg refused after his han­dler advised him to do so.


Par­al­lel to the story about “CIs out of con­trol,” the intel­li­gence agen­cies cre­ated another one: “too much chaos in the intel­li­gence appa­ra­tus.” To sup­port this leg­end they put on dis­play all the inter­nal con­flicts between the var­i­ous law enforce­ment and intel­li­gence agen­cies, cases of “con­flict­ing author­i­ties” and the com­pe­ti­tion between dif­fer­ent agen­cies. One high­point was the scan­dal around Roewer, the for­mer Pres­i­dent of the local VS agency in Thuringia.16 All this show of con­fu­sion was used to make the NSU a pre­text for the enhance­ment of the secu­rity apparatus.

1998: The So-called Dis­ap­pear­ance of the Underground

In Jan­u­ary 1998, the LKA found pipe bombs and explo­sives in a garage rented by Zschäpe in Jena. The VS had known about these explo­sives all along. Nonethe­less, Böhn­hardt was able to leave undis­turbed in his car dur­ing the raid. It took days until the police issued a war­rant for the Trio because all those respon­si­ble were on sick leave, on vaca­tion, or oth­er­wise unavail­able. Obvi­ously they wanted the Trio to go under­ground. Already in Novem­ber 2011, the famous Ger­man feuil­leton­ist Nils Minkmar described the nature of the “under­ground” as fol­lows: “They didn’t have to hide very deep, it was more like snor­kel­ing in a bath­tub: They used to have a social life in Zwickau, kept in con­tact with a wide cir­cle of sup­port­ers and attended demon­stra­tions, con­certs and other events. Many did know where the three were hid­ing. And if the right wing scene in Ger­many has a prob­lem, it is cer­tainly not that it is extremely sealed off, but that it is heav­ily inter­spersed with CIs.” In fact, today we know that the three oper­ated in an envi­ron­ment that was struc­tured and mon­i­tored by the VS; most of their main sup­port­ers were CIs. After search­ing the garage, the police even found two address lists belong­ing to Mund­los con­tain­ing 50 names, includ­ing at least five CIs.17 The lists dis­played the national net­work of the NSU, with con­tacts in Chem­nitz, Jena, Halle, Ros­tock, Nurem­berg, Straub­ing, Regens­burg, Lud­wigs­burg. Offi­cially, the police never ana­lyzed the lists or used them for inves­ti­ga­tion purposes!

2000: The Extrem­ism Doc­trine and the Begin­ning of the Murders

Two and a half years later, on Sep­tem­ber 9, 2000, the Ceska mur­ders began with the death of Enver Sim­sek. In early sum­mer the BfV had informed the inte­rior min­istry that “a few groups” were try­ing to get the “struc­ture and the equip­ment” to “attack cer­tain tar­gets.” These groups were espe­cially active in the states of Berlin and Bran­den­burg, Sax­ony, Saxony-Anhalt and Lower Sax­ony. The BfV also kept an eye on the Trio — after they went under­ground they were closely watched by the unit for right-wing ter­ror­ism (!). Nev­er­the­less the BfV claimed that these small Nazi groups had “no polit­i­cal con­cept for armed strug­gle,” although they actively prop­a­gated such con­cepts by sup­port­ing news­pa­pers such as the “Son­nen­ban­ner.” Fed­eral Inte­rior Min­is­ter Schily used this infor­ma­tion to make a press state­ment in which he warned of the “dan­ger of Antifa actions rad­i­cal­iz­ing indi­vid­ual right-wing extrem­ists. These mil­i­tant right-wing extrem­ists or small groups could decide to retaliate.”

The strat­egy was to build up fas­cist struc­tures and to blame the rad­i­cal left for their exis­tence in the pub­lic dis­course, employ­ing the extrem­ism doc­trine.18 The film Youth Extrem­ism in the Heart of Ger­many, made by the Thuringian VS in May 2000, is a clear exam­ple. At the begin­ning it states that fas­cist and antifas­cist “scenes need each other, they can­not live with­out each other” and that “vio­lence as a means to an end is accepted in the left-wing scene.” It describes the fas­cists with the usual clichés: unem­ployed, une­d­u­cated, dis­or­ga­nized, com­mit­ting crimes when drunk. Roewer, the pres­i­dent of the VS, explains the high num­ber of right offenses “solely with the fact that scrawl­ing swastikas, roar­ing Sieg Heil … are offenses in Ger­many … because of that the sta­tis­tics appear very high with over 1,000 crimes per year, but nearly all are pro­pa­ganda offences.” The THS is men­tioned pos­i­tively, Kapke and Tino Brandt are allowed to speak: “the Anti-Antifa Ost­thürin­gen was formed in response to vio­lence from the left, to bring those per­pe­tra­tors to light,” and “We are rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the National Demo­c­ra­tic Party of Ger­many in Jena … We are fun­da­men­tally opposed to violence.”

2003-2005: The Man­hunt is Dis­con­tin­ued; Bomb Attack in Cologne

In 2003 four immi­grants from Turkey had already been killed. Evi­dence piled up that the mur­ders could have a right-wing extrem­ist back­ground. In March 2003 the Ital­ian secret ser­vice gave the VS evi­dence of a net­work of Euro­pean Nazis that pre­pared mur­ders of immi­grants. The FBI had analysed the mur­ders and regarded “hatred of Turks” as a motive for the mur­ders. In Baden-Württemberg CI “Erbse” revealed that there was a Nazi group called NSU and one mem­ber was called “Mund­los:” the han­dler was advised to destroy this infor­ma­tion. It was decided to let the Trio disappear.

In June 2004, a nail bomb exploded in the Keup­straße in Cologne. The attack resem­bled other right-wing attacks, for exam­ple the Lon­don nail bomb­ings by the Nazi David Copeland five years ear­lier. But the Fed­eral Inte­rior Min­is­ter Schily announced two days later: “The find­ings of our law enforce­ment agen­cies do not indi­cate a ter­ror­ist back­ground, but a crim­i­nal one.” He def­i­nitely knew better!

The shops and restau­rants in the Keup­straße are almost exclu­sively run by immi­grants. Many of these shops are very suc­cess­ful; some busi­ness­peo­ple even joined in an ini­tia­tive to become active in local pol­i­tics with their own demands. The attack ended these attempts. The uncer­tainty as to who was behind the attack and the crack­down by the police on the vic­tims directly after cre­ated great dis­trust in the Keup­straße, which is still felt to this day.

The Keup­straße bomb­ing and its after­math exem­plify the struc­tural inter­ac­tion of state insti­tu­tions with the fas­cist ter­ror: first the attack ter­ror­izes the immi­grants, then they are harassed by the police and the media. This harass­ment makes the inten­tions of the NSU a real­ity: “for­eign prof­i­teers” and “for­eign mafias” were marked and cut off from the Ger­man “Volk­skör­per” (“Ger­man people’s body”).

2006-2007: Mur­ders of Migrants Stop, Police Offi­cer Kiesewet­ter is Murdered

In April 2006 two peo­ple were killed within three days: kiosk owner Mehmet Kubasik in Dort­mund and Halit Yoz­gat in his inter­net café in Kas­sel. The body count of the Ceska mur­ders went up to nine. The vic­tims’ rel­a­tives orga­nized joint demon­stra­tions in Kas­sel and Dort­mund, shout­ing the slo­gan “No tenth vic­tim!” After the demon­stra­tions the series of mur­ders stopped.

The mur­der in Kas­sel showed clearly that the VS wanted to sab­o­tage all inves­ti­ga­tions – and that this was a deci­sion from the top of the hier­ar­chy: at the time of the mur­der the Hes­s­ian VS offi­cer Andreas Temme was present in Yozgat’s inter­net café. Temme was known as a gun fanatic and col­lected fas­cist lit­er­a­ture. He was the only per­son present at the mur­der scene and did not come for­ward to the police. At that time he was the han­dler of a fas­cist CI with whom he had a long phone call an hour before the mur­der. The police saw Temme as a sus­pect for the entire Ceska series. Nev­er­the­less, the Hes­s­ian VS refused to give the police any infor­ma­tion; oth­er­wise some­one “would just have to put a dead body near a CIs or a han­dler” to “par­a­lyze the whole VS.” The dis­pute between the police and the VS was taken up to the Hes­s­ian inte­rior min­is­ter Bouffier, who stopped the inves­ti­ga­tions after con­sul­ta­tion with the BfV.

Just over a year later, on April 25, 2007, the police offi­cer Michèle Kiesewet­ter was shot in her police car. Her col­league Mar­tin Arnold, sit­ting next to her, sur­vived a head­shot. After four and a half years the inves­ti­ga­tions still had not got­ten any­where. After the NSU became pub­licly known, politi­cians and the pub­lic pros­e­cu­tor insisted obsti­nately that Kiesewet­ter had been mur­dered by chance and that Böhn­hardt and Mund­los had been the sole per­pe­tra­tors. But that story does not add up!19 In the case of Kiesewet­ter, the poor per­for­mance of the inves­ti­ga­tion teams can­not be explained by “racism.” The mur­der vic­tim was part of the police. Why the need for a cover-up?

After the mur­der in Heil­bronn, it became quiet around the NSU. Four and a half years later, sud­denly there were two bank rob­beries that were attrib­uted to the NSU. After the sec­ond of these failed, Böhn­hard and Mund­los allegedly com­mit­ted sui­cide and the NSU became a mat­ter of pub­lic knowledge.

Germany’s “Secu­rity Struc­ture” and the Nazis

One has to make use of the far right, no mat­ter how reac­tionary they are… After­wards it is always pos­si­ble to get rid of them ele­gantly… One must not be squea­mish with aux­il­iary forces.
Franz Joseph Strauß 20

Since at least the dis­clo­sures start­ing in Italy in the sec­ond half of 1990, it has been known that NATO keeps armed fas­cist troops as a reserve inter­ven­tion force. Only states with such a “stay-behind” struc­ture could become NATO mem­bers after the Sec­ond World War. In case of a Soviet occu­pa­tion this reserve was sup­posed to fight as a guer­rilla force behind the front (hence the name stay-behind). But it also had to pre­vent Com­mu­nist Party elec­tion vic­to­ries and other forms of rad­i­cal social change. In West Ger­many the stay-behind troops were called Tech­nis­cher Dienst (tech­ni­cal ser­vices) and were built up by Nazi war crim­i­nals such as Klaus Bar­bie under US lead­er­ship. This became pub­licly known for the first time in 1952.21

Accord­ing to a Ger­man gov­ern­ment report of Decem­ber 1990, in which the exis­tence of stay-behind struc­tures was admit­ted, “prepa­ra­tions for the defence of the state” were made in coop­er­a­tion with the Bun­desnachrich­t­en­di­enst (BND, Ger­man for­eign intel­li­gence agency) from 1956 onwards. Heinz Lem­bke was part of these struc­tures. He deliv­ered weapons to the Wehrsport­gruppe Hoff­mann22 in the ’70s. Lembke’s huge arse­nal was dis­cov­ered inci­den­tally by forestry work­ers in 1981. The night after Lem­bke agreed to dis­close who had pulled the strings, he was found hanged in his cell.

The stay-behind struc­tures obvi­ously changed their char­ac­ter in the 70s and 80s (in Italy they were called Gladio and took part in some­thing they must have under­stood as a civil war from 1969 to 1989.) In the 1990s they changed their direc­tion again: now Islamism was the main enemy – it was per­haps at this point that new per­son­nel were recruited. The thread con­nect­ing them: fas­cist groups as reserve inter­ven­tion forces.

Chris­t­ian Menhorn’s tes­ti­mony at the penul­ti­mate ses­sion of the BUA23 is typ­i­cal of the secret ser­vices’ self-confidence. Men­horn was respon­si­ble for the THS at the time. He appeared as the best-informed VS ana­lyst. He gave the BUA mem­bers the impres­sion that he knew a lot more about the Nazi scene than they did and rep­ri­manded them repeat­edly. The ques­tions put to him cen­tered on why the VS pre­vented any men­tion of the Trio in a joint inter­nal paper by the VS and BKA. Men­horn said that the VS, in oppo­si­tion to the BKA, knew that the Trio was “irrel­e­vant.” That was after the first mur­ders had already hap­pened. When he was asked for the rea­sons for this fatal denial, his imme­di­ate reply was very brief but still revealed what the VS did at that time: “We adjusted our infor­ma­tion.”24

Men­horn, Richard Kaldrack (alias; Marschner’s han­dler), Thomas Richter, Mirko Hesse, Mar­tin Thein (Dolsperg’s han­dler) and Gor­dian Meyer-Plath, Scepanski’s han­dler and head of the Sax­ony VS, are all part of a new gen­er­a­tion, born in 1966 or later, who came straight from school or uni­ver­sity and started work­ing for the VS. They all stand for the extrem­ism doc­trine; some of them have used it for an aca­d­e­mic career. Thein for exam­ple has pub­lished books on Ultras and “fan cul­ture” with left­wing pub­lish­ers. It is very unlikely that those agents/handlers, who were very young at the time, could have taken impor­tant deci­sions (not stop­ping the Trio, giv­ing them arms, keep­ing infor­ma­tion from the police … ) with­out con­sul­ta­tion with the hier­ar­chy. They were instructed by old hands like Nor­bert Wießner, Peter Nocken and Lothar Lin­gen (alias), who won their wings fight­ing the Red Army Fac­tion. Lin­gen set up a depart­ment in the BfV exclu­sively for “right ter­ror” at the begin­ning of the 90s. He could be called the highest-ranking agent/handler: it was he who coor­di­nated the destruc­tion of files after the exis­tence of the NSU became pub­lic knowledge.

Behind them there was a strate­gic level of a very few high offi­cials whose careers swung between the inte­rior min­istry, the chan­cellery and the top lev­els of the ser­vices (e.g. Han­ning and Fritsche).

Intel­li­gence, Nazis, and the War

Since the mid-90s Ger­many has almost always been at war. The biggest mis­sions were those in Yugoslavia since 1995 and in Afghanistan since 2002. The role of intel­li­gence became far more impor­tant, play­ing a greater role in secur­ing Ger­man ter­ri­tory, hold­ing down the domes­tic oppo­si­tion to the war, and mon­i­tor­ing the Bun­deswehr (Ger­man army) sol­diers. To these ends it uses intel­li­gence oper­a­tions against oppo­nents of the war, it infil­trates Islamist groups, and it coop­er­ates with neo-fascist sol­diers and mercenaries.

Many Ger­man and Aus­trian Nazis fought in the Yugosla­vian civil wars, espe­cially on the Croa­t­ian side. This involve­ment was orga­nized by con­tacts in the “Freien Kam­er­ad­schaften” and was known to the Ger­man gov­ern­ment all along. At the same time, the Ger­man gov­ern­ment ignored the embargo and sent mil­i­tary instruc­tors to Croa­tia. August Han­ning (see below) told the BUA that they were fight­ing against the Islamists since the mid-90s – and could not be both­ered with the Nazis. They were focused on the “pres­ence of al-Qaeda ter­ror­ist groups” and not on the extreme right-wing ter­ror­ists in Bosnia. What this state­ment obscures, of course, is that they had pre­vi­ously had strongly sup­ported the Islamist mili­tias, when these were not yet called “al-Qaeda.”

These wars were quite lucra­tive for some Nazis. Nor­mally they got no pay but they were allowed to loot. They took part in “eth­nic cleans­ing.” The reg­u­lar Croa­t­ian army and the pro­fes­sional mer­ce­nar­ies25 con­quered a town and marked the houses of “Serbs.” Then the Nazis were allowed to ‎plun­der and mur­der. After their return to Ger­many some Nazis could build up com­pa­nies (and get lead­ing posi­tions in the NPD and other organizations).

The Bun­deswehr has been called an “expe­di­tionary force” since 2006. It became an all-volunteer mil­i­tary in July 2011 and can also be used inside Ger­many. So far, Ger­many has had lit­tle direct expe­ri­ence of the “pri­va­ti­za­tion of war­fare,” but the Bun­deswehr is actively try­ing to elim­i­nate this “short­com­ing,” seek­ing to cre­ate its own pri­vate shadow armies with the sup­port of the Fed­eral Employ­ment Agency. (This agency finances the train­ing and “cer­ti­fi­ca­tion of safety per­son­nel for inter­na­tional assignments”).

Oper­a­tional Cores and Con­trol from Above

You can see that the struc­ture that led the NSU is still intact by look­ing at the sys­tem­atic action to destroy impor­tant files. The heads of the agen­cies were imme­di­ately oper­a­tionally active. On a strate­gic level they set the course for the fur­ther upgrade of the law enforce­ment agen­cies with tar­geted pub­lic rela­tions work. In total five pres­i­dents of VS agen­cies were forced to resign. These res­ig­na­tions were intended “to pro­vide breath­ing space for the Min­is­ter of the Inte­rior,” as one of these direc­tors put it. But above all the res­ig­na­tions were sup­posed to allow the the oper­a­tional work to con­tinue undis­turbed. The “deep state” – this dense web of intel­li­gence agen­cies, mil­i­tary, and police that sup­ports gov­ern­ment actions and imple­ments its reg­u­la­tions with extra-legal means, “free­lance” employ­ees and “aux­il­iary forces” – must not become visible.

August Han­ning is cer­tainly one of the strate­gic coor­di­na­tors of this struc­ture. From 1986 to 1990 he was Secu­rity Offi­cer in the embassy in East Berlin, among other things respon­si­ble for pris­oner ran­som. In 1990 he moved to the Ger­man chan­cellery and in 1998 he became pres­i­dent of the BND. Under his lead­er­ship the BND assisted in abduc­tions and tor­ture by the CIA. Among other things, Han­ning argued against the return of Guan­tanamo pris­oner Murat Kur­naz, although he knew of his inno­cence.26 He became sec­re­tary of state in the inte­rior min­istry late in 2005. Dur­ing his exam­i­na­tion before the BUA he said in rela­tion to the NSU com­plex that “the secu­rity struc­ture of Ger­many has proved itself.”

Another impor­tant fig­ure is Klaus-Dieter Fritsche (CSU). Since the begin­ning of this year he has been fed­eral gov­ern­ment com­mis­sioner for the fed­eral intel­li­gence ser­vices, a newly cre­ated post. He is at the height of his career now. In 2009 he suc­ceeded Han­ning as Inte­rior Min­istry Sec­re­tary of State: in this capac­ity he was known as “Germany’s most pow­er­ful offi­cial” and “the secret inte­rior min­is­ter.” Pre­vi­ously he was intel­li­gence coor­di­na­tor at the fed­eral chan­cellery and before that, from 1996 to 2005, he was vice-president of the BfV with respon­si­bil­ity for the man­age­ment of CIs like Corelli, Tarif and Primus. At the BUA he expressed the self-image of the “deep state” clearly: “secrets that could affect the government’s abil­ity to act if revealed, must not be revealed… the inter­ests of the state are more impor­tant than a par­lia­men­tary investigation.”

This “deep state” has a long tra­di­tion in Ger­many: it sur­vived both 1933 and 1945. In 1933 the Nazis could smash the (Com­mu­nist) oppo­si­tion quickly, because the polit­i­cal police had pre­vi­ously cre­ated files about them which they imme­di­ately made avail­able to the Nazi gov­ern­ment. After 1945 the secret ser­vices, police agen­cies, and the admin­is­tra­tive appa­ra­tus con­tin­ued with essen­tially the same per­son­nel. The BND, the VS and the stay-behind struc­tures were made up of old Nazis. But today this com­plex runs across party lines. In the case of the NSU, both CDU and SPD Inte­rior Min­is­ters of the states played a role. BKA chief Zier­cke is mem­ber of the SPD, while the pub­lic pros­e­cu­tor is from the FDP [Free Demo­c­ra­tic Party, a lib­eral party]. In Thuringia, inte­rior min­is­ters openly fought antifas­cist activ­i­ties in coop­er­a­tion with the VS whether they were from the SPD or the CDU, and so on.

The VS was an impor­tant tool in the domes­tic pol­icy of all pre­vi­ous gov­ern­ments. In the mid-50s it helped to ban the Com­mu­nist Party; in the 60s it worked with intel­li­gence oper­a­tions and agent-provocateurs against the youth move­ment. At the begin­ning of the 70s it helped the Brandt gov­ern­ment to imple­ment “pro­fes­sional bans”: 3.5 mil­lion appli­cants for civil ser­vice were audited, 11,000 appli­cants were banned from work as civil ser­vants. There were unof­fi­cial dis­ci­pli­nary pro­ce­dures and dis­missals, too.

These struc­tures sur­vived the col­lapse of the East­ern Bloc: the secu­rity ser­vices were even able to use them to expand their sphere of influ­ence. This was rein­forced by 9/11: Dur­ing the war on ter­ror intel­li­gence agen­cies world­wide had a mas­sive boost, sim­i­lar to that of the Cold War. The United States enhanced its secu­rity appa­ra­tus with the Patriot Acts to ensure “home­land secu­rity.” In Ger­many, the Joint Counter-Terrorism Cen­tre was founded in 2004 to coor­di­nate BKA, BND, VS and the LKAs. The BKA Act of 2009 pro­vides the BKA with means “to respond to threats of inter­na­tional ter­ror­ism,” which were pre­vi­ously only avail­able to the police author­i­ties of the states (com­puter and net­work sur­veil­lance, drag­nets, use of under­cover inves­ti­ga­tors, audio and video sur­veil­lance of hous­ing and telecom­mu­ni­ca­tions). In addi­tion, the BKA can now inves­ti­gate with­out con­crete sus­pi­cion on its own ini­tia­tive, with­out the approval of an prosecutor.

The devel­op­ment of the scan­dals sur­round­ing the NSU and the sur­veil­lance of the NSA and its west­ern part­ners (which include the Ger­man agen­cies) has made clear that the power of the ‘deep state’ in Ger­many is stronger than was expected. It was never touched and has sur­vived all scan­dals. Across party lines, par­lia­men­tary inves­ti­ga­tion is con­ducted with spe­cial con­sid­er­a­tion for rai­son d’état. This ensures that the deep state is not affected and that police and intel­li­gence agen­cies con­tinue to be empow­ered, pro­vided with addi­tional rights and encour­aged to coop­er­ate more closely. Because of this, the Bun­destag inves­ti­ga­tion com­mit­tee arrived at the non-factual con­clu­sions that there is “no evi­dence to show that any author­ity was involved in the crimes (of the NSU) in any man­ner, or sup­ported or approved them” and that there was no evi­dence “that before Novem­ber 4, 2011 any author­ity had knowl­edge” of the NSU or its deeds or “helped it to escape the grasp of the inves­ti­gat­ing author­i­ties.”27

This rai­son d’état also includes the PdL (Partei die Linke – Left Party), which par­tic­i­pated “con­struc­tively” in the BUA and sup­ported its final report. The PdL is the left-wing oppo­si­tion party in Ger­many. It was formed in 2007 through a merger of the suc­ces­sor of the SED (state party of for­mer East Ger­many) and the Left oppo­si­tion in the SPD. It is increas­ingly sup­ported by sec­tions of the rad­i­cal left. So far, the VS had spied on the PdL. As part of the final dec­la­ra­tion of the BUA the PdL has been assured that it will be no longer mon­i­tored by the secret services.

The Nazi scene is hardly affected: the unmask­ing of the NSU has not weak­ened it, instead many are encour­aged to pur­sue their goals at gun­point. They are arm­ing them­selves. In 2012, there were 350 cases of gun use reg­is­tered. That was a peak, but in 2013, the use of firearms by Nazis increased fur­ther. Refugee shel­ters are attacked much more fre­quently again.

There is no rea­son to believe that we could take action against the brown plague via the state. At the trial in Munich, the pub­lic pros­e­cu­tor is doing a polit­i­cal job, try­ing to deal with the case accord­ing to the rul­ing doctrine.

A weak­ness of large parts of the “left” oppo­si­tion and the rad­i­cal Left becomes appar­ent: after the pogroms of the early ’90s many aban­doned the work­ing class as a rev­o­lu­tion­ary force. They could there­fore only turn to “civil soci­ety” and thus ulti­mately the state as an ally against the Nazis. This ally sup­ported fas­cist struc­tures and helped to estab­lish them, while at the same time it gave the left-wing oppo­si­tion the oppor­tu­nity to turn itself into a force sup­port­ive of the state. This fact paral­y­ses many Antifa and other left­wing groups. Instead of nam­ing the state’s role in the NSU com­plex, they focus on the inves­ti­ga­tion com­mit­tees and the trial, they lose them­selves in the details which are pro­duced there. There were no sig­nif­i­cant move­ments on the streets when the NSU became pub­lic. All this allows the state appa­ra­tus to min­i­mize the NSU – but many peo­ple still feel the horror.



NSU time­line:

1993/1994 Foun­da­tion of the “Kam­er­ad­schaft Jena”

1996 Foun­da­tion of the Thüringer Heimatschutz (THS)

1996-1998 Small actions with dummy bombs and deac­ti­vated bombs

1/26/1998 Raid on the garage of Zschäpe; the Trio (Zschäpe, Mund­los, Böhn­hardt) goes underground

1998-2011 Numer­ous bank robberies

07/27/2000 Bomb attack on east­ern Euro­pean, mostly Jew­ish migrants in Düsseldorf

09/09/2000 Mur­der of Enver Şimşek in Nürnberg

01/19/2001 Bomb attack in the Prob­steigasse in Cologne

6/13/2001 Mur­der of Abdur­rahim Özü­doğru in Nürnberg

6/27/2001 Mur­der of Süley­man Taşköprü in Hamburg

8/29/2001 Mur­der of Habil Kılıç in Munich

2/25/2004 Mur­der of Mehmet Turgut in Rostock

06/09/2004 Bomb attack on the Keup­straße in Cologne

06/09/2005 Mur­der of İsmail Yaşar in Nürnberg

6/15/2005 Mur­der of Theodoros Boul­gar­ides in Munich

04/04/2006 Mur­der of Mehmet Kubaşık in Dortmund

04/06/2006 Mur­der of Halit Yoz­gat in Kassel

4/25/2007 Mur­der of the police offi­cer Michèle Kiesewetter

11/04/2011 The NSU becomes pub­licly known



List of Abbreviations

VS = Ger­man domes­tic secret service

BfV = Fed­eral office of the domes­tic secret service

MAD = Ger­man mil­i­tary intel­li­gence agency

BND = Ger­man for­eign intel­li­gence agency

BUA = Par­lia­men­tary inves­ti­ga­tion committee

NSU = National Social­ist Underground

B&H = Blood & Honour

Trio = Böhn­hardt, Mund­los, Zschäpe

BAW = Ger­man pub­lic prosecutor

BOA = Spe­cial inves­ti­ga­tion team

LKA = The “Crim­i­nal Police Offices” of Germany’s 16 fed­eral states (Län­der). Each incor­po­rates a ‘state secu­rity’ division.

BKA = Fed­eral equiv­a­lent of the LKA, with repon­si­bil­ity for “national secu­rity,” “counter-terrorism,” etc.

THS = Thüringer Heimatschutz (Thuringia Home­land Pro­tec­tion): coor­di­nat­ing net­work of the neo-Nazi Freie Kam­er­ad­schaften groups in Thuringia, east­ern Ger­many. See also foot­notes 9 and 10.


What fol­lows is based on four arti­cles pre­vi­ously pub­lished in Wild­cat. These in turn were based on the research of antifas­cist groups, on news­pa­per arti­cles, on the reports from par­lia­men­tary inves­ti­ga­tion com­mit­tees and on books. We use a lot of names of Ger­man Nazis, Ger­man towns, Ger­man cops and politi­cians. Most do not have any mean­ing out­side of Ger­many. But we hope that in the “Age of Google” they can help you if you want to check the facts or go deeper. ↩

We will refer to some of the Ger­man secu­rity agen­cies. There are three intel­li­gence agen­cies in Ger­many. The Bun­desnachrich­t­en­di­enst (BND; Fed­eral Intel­li­gence Ser­vice) is the for­eign intel­li­gence agency of Ger­many, directly sub­or­di­nated to the Chancellor’s Office. The Mil­itärischer Abschir­m­di­enst (Mil­i­tary Coun­ter­in­tel­li­gence Ser­vice, MAD) is a fed­eral intel­li­gence agency and is respon­si­ble for mil­i­tary coun­ter­in­tel­li­gence. The third agency, Germany’s domes­tic intel­li­gence ser­vice, is called “Ver­fas­sungss­chutz” and has a fed­er­ated struc­ture. Aside from the fed­eral “Bun­de­samt für Verfassungsschutz”(BfV; Fed­eral Office for the Pro­tec­tion of the Con­sti­tu­tion) there are also 16 so called Lan­desämter für Ver­fas­sungss­chutz (LfV; State Author­i­ties for the Pro­tec­tion of the Con­sti­tu­tion) – one for each state – which are inde­pen­dent of the BfV. They are tasked with intelligence-gathering on threats against the state order and with counter-intelligence. ↩

In the lan­guage of the Ger­man police and intel­li­gence, con­fi­den­tial infor­mants are called “V-Leute” or “V-Männer.” The V stands for Ver­trauen, which means con­fi­dence. ↩

Wild­cat has pub­lished an arti­cle about the Golden Dawn in Greece, “Fas­cists in Greece: From the streets into par­lia­ment and back.” ↩

Claus Heck­ing, “Britis­che Geheim­pro­tokolle: Kohl wollte offen­bar jeden zweiten Türken loswer­den,” Spiegel Online, August 1, 2013. ↩

There were many racist pogroms in Ger­many at the begin­ning of the 90s. The first peak was in Sep­tem­ber 1991 in Hoy­er­swerda, a town in north­east­ern Sax­ony. On four nights there were attacks against a hos­tel mainly used by Mozam­bi­can con­tract work­ers. The sec­ond peak was the pogroms in Rostock-Lichtenhagen in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern: Between August 22 and 24, 1992, vio­lent xeno­pho­bic riots took place; these were the worst mob attacks against migrants in post­war Ger­many. There were also arson attacks against Turk­ish houses in which eight peo­ple died.There are two Wild­cat arti­cles in Eng­lish about these pogroms and their con­se­quences, “Ros­tock, or: How the New Ger­many is being gov­erned,” from Wild­cat 60, 1992; and “Cri­tique of autonomous anti-fascism,” from Wild­cat 57, 1991. ↩

The Hawala sys­tem is an infor­mal value-transfer sys­tem based on a huge net­work of money bro­kers. This net­work makes it pos­si­ble to send money to an acquain­tance in a cheap and con­fi­den­tial way. There are no promis­sory instru­ments exchanged between the hawala bro­kers: the sys­tem is solely based on trust between the bro­kers. ↩

By social racism we mean racism against peo­ple from lower social strata, peo­ple who don’t inte­grate well in soci­ety, peo­ple liv­ing from ben­e­fits, etc. Éti­enne Bal­ibar uses a sim­i­lar con­cept in Éti­enne Bal­ibar and Immanuel Waller­stein, Race, Nation, Class: Ambigu­ous Iden­ti­ties (Lon­don: Verso, 1991). ↩

All quotes from a lec­ture by Jacques Ran­cière in 2010, printed in Ger­man trans­la­tion in ak 555, Novem­ber 19, 2010. The Eng­lish trans­la­tion is avail­able at: http://wrongarithmetic.wordpress.com/20 ... re-racism/

Blood & Hon­our is a neo-Nazi music pro­mo­tion net­work and polit­i­cal group founded in the United King­dom in 1987. Com­bat 18 was founded in 1992 as its mil­i­tant arm. ↩

In the early 90s the mil­i­tant neo-Nazi scene began to orga­nize in groups called Freie Kam­er­ad­schaften (free asso­ci­a­tions, free cama­raderie). These have no for­mal mem­ber­ship and no cen­tral­ized national struc­ture, but keep in close con­tact. Over 150 such Kam­er­ad­schaften exist in Ger­many. ↩

The Thüringer Heimatschutz (THS) was a coor­di­nat­ing net­work of the Freie Kam­er­ad­schaften in Thuringia with up to 170 mem­bers. Its head Tino Brandt was a paid CI for VS in Thuringia. ↩

Von Baumgärt­ner, Maik; Röbel, Sven; Stark, Hol­ger, “Innere Sicher­heit: Der Brandstifter-Effekt,” Der Spiegel 45, Novem­ber 5, 2012; “Der »Brandstifter-Effekt« des Ver­fas­sungss­chutzes,” Antifaschis­tis­ches Infoblatt, March 8, 2014. ↩

Der Spiegel, Sep­tem­ber 2014. ↩

“Der Thüringer NSU-Untersuchungsausschuss,” Antifaschis­tis­ches Infoblatt 101 / 4.2013, 28.01.2014. ↩

From 1994 to 2000 Hel­mut Roewer was pres­i­dent of the Thuringia Ver­fas­sungss­chutz. He is famous for his exces­sive lead­er­ship of the VS, involv­ing pros­ti­tutes and spiked hel­mets. In sum­mer 2000 he had to resign because it came to light that he financed impor­tant mil­i­tant Nazis not only with help of the ‘nor­mal’ VS struc­tures but also with a sys­tem of front com­pa­nies. Exactly who got the money remains unclear. Roewer him­self said some time ago that the Thuringia Ver­fas­sungss­chutz funded the neo-Nazi scene with 1.5 mil­lion DM. Today Roewer pub­lishes with the right wing Ares-Verlag. ↩

Von Maik Baumgärt­ner, Hubert Gude und Sven Röbel, “Ermit­tlungspanne: Fah­n­der werteten NSU-“Garagenliste” nicht richtig aus,” Spiegel Online, Feb­ru­ary 14, 2014; Wolf Wet­zel, “Die Gara­gen­liste – die Gold Card des Nation­al­sozial­is­tis­chen Untergrundes/NSU,” Eyes Wide Shut, Novem­ber 16, 2011. ↩

The “extrem­ism doc­trine” is the state doc­trine in the Fed­eral Repub­lic of Ger­many, which says that the democ­racy of the Weimar repub­lic (1918-1933) was destroyed by the vio­lent extrem­ism of the right and the left. The term was coined in the 1970s by the VS. Before the 1970s it was called “rad­i­cal­ism,” but had to be changed because in the 60s “rad­i­cal” became a pos­i­tive term. ↩

Why would Böhn­hardt and Mund­los go all the way to Heil­bronn to kill at ran­dom a police offi­cer who was also from Thuringia? A police offi­cer whose imme­di­ate supe­rior was a mem­ber of the KKK? Kiesewetter’s uncle is a police offi­cer involved in fas­cist struc­tures him­self; he said to the police in 2007 that the mur­der of his niece was con­nected to the Ceska mur­ders. The police offi­cers inves­ti­gat­ing Heil­bronn con­cluded from eye­wit­ness accounts that there were six per­pe­tra­tors and made com­pos­ite sketches, but those were not used in the inves­ti­ga­tion, etc. ↩

Franz Josef Strauß was a Ger­man politi­cian. He was the chair­man of the CSU (inde­pen­dent party in Bavaria, but in an elec­toral union with the CDU), a mem­ber of the fed­eral cab­i­net in var­i­ous posi­tions and for a long time minister-president of Bavaria. Dur­ing his polit­i­cal career Strauss was a con­tro­ver­sial fig­ure, a law-and-order politi­cian, well con­nected to the intel­li­gence agen­cies and often lean­ing to the far right. He was involve­ment in sev­eral large-scale scan­dals. ↩

See Daniele Ganser, Nato’s Secret Armies: Oper­a­tion Gladio and Ter­ror­ism in West­ern Europe (Cass: New York, 2004). ↩

The Wehrsport­gruppe Hoff­mann was one of the largest para­mil­i­tary groups in Ger­many. It was founded by Karl-Heinz Hoff­mann in 1973 and pro­hib­ited in 1980. Part of the group sub­se­quently went to Lebanon to receive mil­i­tary train­ing. In Sep­tem­ber 1980 a bomb exploded at the Okto­ber­fest in Munich, killing 13 peo­ple. The alleged indi­vid­ual per­pe­tra­tor Gun­dolf Köh­ler, who died in the explo­sion, was a mem­ber of the Wehrsport­gruppe Hoff­mann. ↩

Before that, the BUA had not paid atten­tion to the BfV. The del­e­gates had not even known about its depart­ment for right-wing ter­ror­ism. ↩

Hajo Funke, Abbruch der Unter­suchung auf hal­ber Strecke. Das vorzeit­ige Ende der öffentlichen Ermit­tlung des NSU Unter­suchungsauss­chusses des Bun­destags. ↩

U.S. com­pa­nies heav­ily involved in the con­quest of Kra­jna. ↩

Murat Kur­naz is a Turk­ish cit­i­zen and res­i­dent of Ger­many. He was arrested was arrested in Pak­istan late in 2001 then impris­oned at Guan­tanamo Bay for five years. From 2002 onwards the USA was ready to return Kur­naz to Ger­many, but the Ger­man gov­ern­ment declined that offer. Accord­ing to the Ger­man gov­ern­ment Kur­naz had lost his res­i­dency per­mit because he had left Ger­many for more than 6 months with­out notice. Kur­naz couldn’t return to Ger­many until a court ruled that he still had his res­i­dency per­mit because in Guan­tanamo he was unable to apply for an exten­sion of his “leave to remain.” ↩

From the final report of the par­lia­men­tary inves­ti­ga­tion com­mit­tee. Avail­able at: http://dipbt.bundestag.de/dip21/btd/17/146/1714600.pdf. ↩


Wildcatreports on class struggles all over the world, focusing on the experiences and discussions of the workers themselves. Originally founded as Karlsruher Stadtzeitung in the late 1970s, Wildcat is not a party organization; it is a group of people from different cities mostly in Germany that aims to engage in, support, and advance everyday struggles in factories, offices, hospitals, and neighborhoods. Some of their work has been translated into English, and can be accessed on their website.
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Thu Jul 26, 2018 6:01 am

The United States is Being Radicalized—And It Isn’t By Us

From Dr. Bones

Image

We, as Leftists, should expect the State to constantly see right-leaning forces as friends and ourselves as loathsome reptiles fit only for the firing squad.

The reason why might have recently changed.

The traditional Leftist understanding posits that the forces of the State see the Left as an eternal enemy because we seek to destroy the conditions they uphold. The clear misunderstanding is mistaking the Left, up until a few years ago, as a “threat” to the State.

From the 90’s on most police officers and government officials lumped leftists in with Democrats who always seemed to cause trouble whenever the Empire did something notable. Annoying, but certainly nowhere near the danger of terrorists “pouring in” from the middle east. A few agents and informants may be cultivated but I can assure you there was no “Left Wing Division” of the FBI working double shifts to monitor our every move.

That is quickly changing.

The capitalist press reported this interesting gem:

“Dale Yeager, a forensic profiler and CEO of Seraph Inc., a private consulting firm for law enforcement, has been warning American law enforcement about left-wing extremism since the 1970s. On Tuesday, Yeager will headline the conference with his keynote, ‘Radical Left-Wing Gangs in America,’ focused on ‘anti-fascist, or antifa, groups and their violent actions against civilians and police agencies in the U.S. and Canada.’

In his mind, the growth of right-wing extremism is a form of fake news; it’s the left, he says, that’s the bigger danger to America. ‘The United States is in a Second Civil War,’ Yeager told VICE News. ‘We are. The one thing I disagree with is that it’s a cold civil war. There’s violence. And it’s not going to get better.’…

The FBI Academy Associates is a nonprofit based in Quantico, Virginia, and claims nearly 20,000 members, a cross-section of federal, state, and local law enforcement from around the world. It aims to coordinate and share materials about current public safety issues, but it also reflects the priorities of the Bureau, and certainly the attitudes of agents in the field.

This year’s conference will take place in Quebec City in Canada, and its agenda makes no mention of far-right extremists…

‘There is no uptick in white supremacy violence,’ Yeager told VICE News. ‘That’s a statistical inaccuracy.'”


Yeager himself admits this is a new trend in law enforcement. “I talked about this in the early 2000s,” he said, “and the response I got originally on a federal level was, ‘They’re tree-huggers; they won’t hurt anyone’,”

It doesn’t matter if Yeager is a willfully ignorant liar whose very brain appears eaten away by mosquito larvae. Yeager is being called in because the people at that conference already feel like he’s right.

This means two very important things.

For one we can expect a large increase in State violence and subversive activity. The left is being taken as a serious threat, and a quick glance through the history of COINTELPRO ought to tell you what that means. Leftists will be risking jail, and possibly even death, for many types of organizing/resistance they once took for granted. The game is getting serious now and the days of blind optimism are over.

But that’s just half the story.


How Fascism Grows

Image

When we talk about Fascism what do we mean? For many Fascism is simply the last attempts of a crumbling Capitalist State to preserve the status quo. Desperate to cling to power they awaken reactionary forces and unleash them on revolutionaries.

This analysis of fascism is extremely limited. I prefer the work of Max Weber:

“…against Karl Marx’s analysis of class and class conflict, [Weber] emphasized the importance of social status, the relative rank in society in terms of esteem and prestige that groups of people hold. As modern societies constantly undergo changes in these rank orders of status, people are subject to feelings of status anxiety and status loss. They collectively develop responses that tend to be more emotional, more in the nature of gut feeling than of rational analysis. Those are the moments when Enlightenment humanism and rationalism can no longer adequately explain the world we are living in. Max Weber, as he observed Germany’s hectic industrialization and the social turmoil it brought, already speculated that individuals, unmoored by these developments, cut loose from communal settings as these had harbored them before, could become vulnerable to a despotic leader.” –Rob Kroes


Fascism is less of a reaction to the Left and more of a reaction to the loss of status within a society. This explains the uncomfortable reality of many “workers” voting fascists into power, or the proletariat gleefully going along with whatever wholesale slaughter happens to make them feel powerful. When people feel slighted, when the old ways no longer function, people go looking for answers. When those answers make them FEEL a certain way they begin to change ideas and the perception of reality around them.

This seems to jive with the opinion of The United States Army Special Command who wrote in Human Factors Considerations of Undergrounds and Insurgencies:

Image


https://godsandradicals.org/2018/07/26/ ... snt-by-us/
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Fri Jul 27, 2018 5:42 am

Image

Cops & Klan Go Hand in Hand – But So what?

You’re a fucking drain on the system, Ahmed.

I perked up when I heard this echoing through the holding cells, wondering if a piece-of-shit proud boy was my neighbour in the bowels of 52 division. Maybe that’s why it took police an hour to get us out of a prisoner van so overheated the steel walls dripped with condensation; they had to get his ass processed before any of us could see him. They had to protect him.

It turned out my cellie neighbour was just a regular everyday racist piece of shit – not one that centres his life around memorizing cereals and the highs of stealing someone’s eyeglasses. I was annoyed, but not surprised. Time and time again police have protected those vile wads as they spew their racist hate bullshit, so of course they only arrest anti-racists. White supremacy is maintained at institutional levels – that means cops but also schools and social services and courts and jails. We shouldn’t be surprised that the police pick sides. When it’s societally enforced, who does it serve to feign surprise and cry foul? To demand more fairness and equality of arrests? I don’t want police doing more. Fuck the police. I want the police gone. I want all the harmful institutions gone; all their semblance of authority demeaned and destroyed. I want action and decisions without fear, repression and oppression; autonomy.


https://itsgoingdown.org/toronto-report ... st-pegida/
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Mon Jul 30, 2018 6:50 am

How evil happens

Why some people choose to do evil remains a puzzle, but are we starting to understand how this behaviour is triggered?

In 1941, en route from a ghetto to a concentration camp in Ukraine, a Nazi soldier beat my grandfather to death. My father witnessed this murder. His is just one of millions of similar stories, of course, and I grew up aware of how death hovered on the other side of life, and brutality on the underside of humanity. The ‘sapiens’ in Homo sapiens does not fully describe our species: we are as violent as we are smart. This might be why we are the only Homo genus left over in the first place, and why we have been so destructively successful at dominating our planet. But still the question nags away: how are ordinary people capable of such obscene acts of violence?

This duality is also a puzzle to ourselves, at the heart of cosmologies, theologies and tragedies, the motor of moral codes and the tension at the heart of socio-political systems. We know light and we know dark. We are capable of doing terrible things, but also of asking ourselves contemplatively and creatively how that is. The self-consciousness that characterises the human mind is nowhere more baffling than in this problem of evil, which philosophers have been discussing since Plato. An obvious place to look for explanations of evil is in the patterns of behaviour that those who commit atrocities display.

This is what the neurosurgeon Itzhak Fried at the University of California, Los Angeles did with his article ‘Syndrome E’ (1997) in The Lancet. A syndrome is a group of biological symptoms that together constitute a clinical picture. And E stands for evil. With Syndrome E, Fried identified a cluster of 10 neuropsychological symptoms that are often present when evil acts are committed – when, as he puts it, ‘groups of previously nonviolent individuals’ turn ‘into repetitive killers of defenceless members of society’. The 10 neuropsychological symptoms are:

1. Repetition: the aggression is repeated compulsively.
2. Obsessive ideation: the perpetrators are obsessed with ideas that justify their aggression and underlie missions of ethnic cleansing, for instance that all Westerners, or all Muslims, or all Jews, or all Tutsis are evil.
3. Perseveration: circumstances have no impact on the perpetrator’s behaviour, who perseveres even if the action is self-destructive.
4. Diminished affective reactivity: the perpetrator has no emotional affect.
5. Hyperarousal: the elation experienced by the perpetrator is a high induced by repetition, and a function of the number of victims.
6. Intact language, memory and problem-solving skills: the syndrome has no impact on higher cognitive abilities.
7. Rapid habituation: the perpetrator becomes desensitised to the violence.
8. Compartmentalisation: the violence can take place in parallel to an ordinary, affectionate family life.
9. Environmental dependency: the context, especially identification with a group and obedience to an authority, determines what actions are possible.
10. Group contagion: belonging to the group enables the action, each member mapping his behaviour on the other. Fried’s assumption was that all these ways of behaving had underlying neurophysiological causes that were worth investigating.


Note that the syndrome applies to those previously normal individuals who become able to kill. It excludes the wartime, sanctioned killing by and of military recruits that leads many soldiers to return home (if they ever do) with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD); recognised psychopathologies such as sociopathic personality disorder that can lead someone to shoot schoolchildren; and crimes of passion or the sadistic pleasure in inflicting pain. When Hannah Arendt coined her expression ‘the banality of evil’ in Eichmann in Jerusalem (1963), she meant that the people responsible for actions that led to mass murder can be ordinary, obeying orders for banal reasons, such as not losing their jobs. The very notion of ordinariness was tested by social psychologists. In 1971, the prison experiment by the psychologist Philip Zimbardo at Stanford University played with this notion that ‘ordinary students’ could turn into abusive mock ‘prison guards’ – though it was largely unfounded, given evidence of flaws in the never-replicated experiment. Still, those afflicted with Syndrome E are indeed ordinary insofar as that they are not affected by any evident psychopathology. The historian Christopher Browning wrote of equally ‘ordinary men’ in the 1992 book of that name (referenced by Fried) who became Nazi soldiers. The soldier who killed my grandfather was very probably an ordinary man too.


More: https://aeon.co/essays/is-neuroscience- ... -behaviour
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Wed Aug 01, 2018 8:25 am

US marines in fresh controversy over sniper team photo with Nazi SS flag

Photo posted on blog of marines with SS flag as marine corps also investigate group recorded urinating on Taliban corpses

Image
Members of Charlie Company, 1st Reconnaissance Battalion in Camp Pendleton,
Afghanistan, in front of a flag with a logo resembling that of the Nazi SS.


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/ ... flag-photo
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Wed Aug 01, 2018 6:43 pm

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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby Elvis » Wed Aug 01, 2018 7:04 pm

I think the fascists we should really be worried about are wearing suits & ties. The ones those SWAT cops work for.

There must be a better descriptor than "the People"; it's a longstanding shorthand for "the masses," but cops and fascists might be people, too.


“The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” ― Joan Robinson
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Wed Aug 01, 2018 7:34 pm

There was text attached that I neglected to include:

August 4th. Portland. 11:00am. Waterfront Park. Shut it the fuck down. #AllOutPDX #ThreeWayFight
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby Elvis » Wed Aug 01, 2018 8:17 pm

American Dream wrote: Waterfront Park. Shut it the fuck down. #AllOutPDX #ThreeWayFight


I don't know, but I wonder if any good can come from brawling in the streets with those gutter fascists; there's not much to "win" and such clashes are bound to escalate—and into what? Other unforseen consequences loom, not least perceptions of a "Left gone wild" especially with the inevitable undercover provavateurs at work.

I much preferred the idea of shutting down Wall Street. Some of the same dangers attend, but the target was the right one. It seems that amid the swirl of sideshows, focus has been lost.

Also, is this counterprotest one that Russian bots supposedly encouraged and possibly initiated?—for the purpose of sowing division? Does it matter if they did?

:shrug:
“The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” ― Joan Robinson
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Wed Aug 01, 2018 9:01 pm

There are more possibilities than the simple choices you pose. Here's the call that Alexander Reid Ross and Shane Burley have put out:


A Popular Mobilization Is Forming in Portland to Stop the Growth of Hate Groups

Image
Anti-fascist demonstrators confront Trump supporters during a protest on June 4, 2017, in Portland, Oregon.

BY Shane Burley, Alexander Reid Ross, Truthout
PUBLISHED August 1, 2018


The far-right brawlers of “Patriot Prayer” and the “Proud Boys” are planning a demonstration on August 4, in Portland, Oregon. Their “freedom march” is likely to be light on political content, but is presumably a response to the recurring counter-protests that have prevented Patriot Prayer from accessing city streets. While Patriot Prayer leader Joey Gibson is running for Senate in Washington State and campaigns at these public events, the recent history of his public appearances has focused almost solely on fighting the left opposition that comes to greet him in Portland. Local groups, however, are coming together with a movement strategy to break the menace of far-right terror that has plagued the city in recent months.

Founded as a “white utopia” that banned people of color in its early years, Oregon contains a deep-seated tradition of reaction to progressive causes. Portland’s liberal politics often serve to mitigate, rather than transform, the root problems — often against the demands of local, left-wing social movements. This has been the case, for instance, with the increasing spread of gentrification in previously multi-ethnic Portland neighborhoods, forcing out the residents who have called them home for years as high-rise condos come in to serve transplants.

In the 1980s, neo-Nazi skinhead gangs ran working-class neighborhoods in the city, taking over entire music venues and bars and inspiring early anti-racist activists to push them, often physically, out of public spaces. This culminated in the 1988 murder of Ethiopian student Mulugeta Serawby members of the skinhead gang Eastside White Pride, which resulted in the successful lawsuit of the fascist organization White Aryan Resistance by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The far right has had moments of resurgence in the state since then, especially during the Obama administration, with militia groups occupying the Sugarpine Mine and the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. Since Trump’s rise to power, however, the regional far right has taken the fight to the cities, inciting violent clashes with the left in painfully public fora, from universities to public squares. Since early 2017, Patriot Prayer and its founder Gibson, have been holding Trump-inspired rallies meant to prop up a new kind of US civic nationalism and to draw left-wing activists into the spectacle of public confrontation.

While Gibson himself often sticks to the rhetoric of “Independent Trumpism,” he has made open allies with activists from far right and violent white nationalist groups such as Identity Evropa, the Traditionalist Worker Party and, most recently, the “Western chauvinist” Proud Boys. A Patriot Prayer attendee, Jeremy Christian, murdered two people in a racist rage on a Portland train last summer and since then, the vitriol at Patriot Prayer events has spilled over into mass melees with the opposition, set against Portland’s business district.

On June 30, another Gibson rally was held, with dozens of Proud Boys from multiple states, many suited up in body armor, using flagpoles as weapons and screaming epithets at the anti-fascist crowd of more than 100. A sweeping wave of violence ensued as the Proud Boys charged directly into the opposition, attacking protesters and beating many on the ground in a cruel, gang-style attack not unlike the kind of street violence the skinhead gangs were known for in the ’80s.

That same day, a local reporter published an overheard conversation between police officers, in which they allegedly said that they should “just let them fight.” Many counter-protesters were injured, possibly from police handling of the situation, including one sent to the hospital with a skull fracture.

With the experience of that mob violence in mind, a large coalition of community organizers formed to inspire mass counter-protest participation in Patriot Prayer’s upcoming August 4 follow-up event. Under the name “Pop Mob,” which stands for “popular mobilization,” the group is looking to bring out hundreds, if not thousands, of community residents to completely overwhelm Patriot Prayer on the day of their march.

While many anti-fascist organizations have continued to bring people out for direct confrontation with far-right assemblages, Pop Mob would attempt to fill the gap by creating a broad-based community swell that can support the anti-fascist organizers who do that work day in and day out. This would be a return to the large participatory model that emerged in response to the far-right “free speech” rallies that occurred in 2017 across the country.

The goal of a popular mobilization is to stop the use of public space for the far right to further organize brutality.


Continues: https://truthout.org/articles/popular-m ... te-groups/




Elvis » Wed Aug 01, 2018 7:17 pm wrote:
American Dream wrote: Waterfront Park. Shut it the fuck down. #AllOutPDX #ThreeWayFight


I don't know, but I wonder if any good can come from brawling in the streets with those gutter fascists; there's not much to "win" and such clashes are bound to escalate—and into what? Other unforseen consequences loom, not least perceptions of a "Left gone wild" especially with the inevitable undercover provavateurs at work.

I much preferred the idea of shutting down Wall Street. Some of the same dangers attend, but the target was the right one. It seems that amid the swirl of sideshows, focus has been lost.

Also, is this counterprotest one that Russian bots supposedly encouraged and possibly initiated?—for the purpose of sowing division? Does it matter if they did?

:shrug:
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Re: Fascists are the Tools of the State

Postby American Dream » Wed Aug 01, 2018 10:05 pm

Also here is some explanatory Theory:


About Three Way Fight

Three Way Fight is a blog that promotes revolutionary anti-fascist analysis, strategy, and activism. Unlike liberal anti-fascists, we believe that "defending democracy" is an illusion, as long as that "democracy" is based on a socio-economic order that exploits and oppresses human beings. Global capitalism and the related structures of patriarchy, heterosexism, racial and national oppression represent the main source of violence and human suffering in the world today. Far right supremacism and terrorism grow out of this system and cannot be eradicated as long as it remains in place.

At the same time, unlike many on the revolutionary left, we believe that fascists and other far rightists aren't simply tools of the ruling class. They can also form an autonomous political force that clashes with the established order in real ways, or even seeks to overthrow global capitalism and replace it with a radically different oppressive system. We believe the greatest threat from fascism in this period is its ability to exploit popular grievances and its potential to rally mass support away from any liberatory anti-capitalist vision.

Leftists need to confront both the established capitalist order and an insurgent or even revolutionary right, while recognizing that these opponents are also in conflict with each other. The phrase "three way fight" is short hand for this idea (although in concrete terms there are more than three contending forces). Our blog confronts complexities in the dynamics between these three poles that are often glossed over. We point out, for example, that repression isn't necessarily fascist -- anti-fascism itself can be a tool of ruling-class repression (as was the case during World War II, when anti-fascism was used to justify strike-breaking and the mass imprisonment of Japanese Americans, among other measures). And we warn against far right efforts to build alliances with leftists as well as fascistic tendencies within the left (as when leftists promote conspiracy theories rooted in anti-Jewish scapegoating).


http://threewayfight.blogspot.com/p/about.html
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