The Red Army Faction, a Documentary History, Volume 1 (3 page)

That said, we are confident that the documents in this book accurately represent the history and the ideology of the Red Army Faction and provide the reader with a resource unparalleled elsewhere in English.

Before closing one other issue cries out to be addressed. We refer to this work as the complete texts of the Red Army Faction. The meaning of that statement seems indisputable, but that is not the case, and so we must explain what we mean by “complete.” To the best of our knowledge, we have included every document issued by the RAF in its close to thirty-year history in either this volume (1968-1977) or the forthcoming second volume (1978-1998). By this, we mean every theoretical manifesto, every communiqué accompanying an action, and every letter sent by the organization to the media.

After some discussion we decided not to include
Über den bewaffneten Kampf in Westeuropa
(Regarding the Armed Struggle in West Europe) penned by Horst Mahler. This 1971 document, a sprawling theoretical text, was rejected by the other members of the RAF and played no small role in the decision to expel Mahler from the group—making him the only member ever publicly expelled. (The interested reader proficient in German will have no difficulty finding this document online, including in the aforementioned ID-Verlag book.)

We also did not include, with several exceptions, letters written by imprisoned RAF members. There are literally thousands of them, a significant selection of which have been published in German in a book
entitled
Das Info
, edited by former lawyer to RAF prisoners Pieter Bakker Schut. This book can be found in its entirety on the site maintained by Augustin, as can Bakker Schut’s invaluable historical analysis of the Stammheim trial, simply entitled
Stammheim
. Nor did we publish, with the exception of a handful, any of the hundreds of court statements, often of epic length, made by RAF defendants over the years. In the cases where we did choose to publish a letter or a court statement, it was because the document in question filled out some theoretical or historical aspect of the RAF’s history that we felt was not adequately addressed elsewhere. This is also true of the open letter from the RZ to the RAF that we publish in this volume—a number of similar documents from other German and European guerilla groups will appear in the second volume of this work.

PREFACE

The book you hold in your hands, along with its companion volume, constitute the most complete works and history of the Red Army Faction ever published in the English language.

The Red Army Faction was formed in 1970 when a small group of West German revolutionaries decided to go underground and carry out armed actions against U.S. imperialism. Within a few years, almost all of the original members were either dead or captured, yet the harsh treatment the latter received as prisoners garnered them a degree of sympathy, and their own unflagging resistance earned them the respect of many.

Indeed, it would not be an exaggeration to say that they captured the imagination of a generation of West German youth. Certainly, before they fell, they had already succeeded in inspiring others to pick up their banner.

In fact, the RAF was to remain a factor in German politics for almost thirty years as successive waves of radicals extended the struggle, carrying out increasingly sophisticated and daring campaigns of assassination and bombings against key members of the West German ruling class and American armed forces stationed in the Federal Republic. On more than one occasion, they shook their society to its core, baiting its ruling class into dictatorial reactions that shocked the consciences of even their own supporters. Eventually, the RAF became emblematic of the “euro-terrorism” of the 1970s and 80s, yet like so many things that are emblematic, it was never typical of that which it represented.

In its halcyon days, many people considered the guerilla a legitimate political force, and one can read reports of soccer fans wearing RAF insignia and of young people secretly keeping photos clipped from wanted posters in their wallets. As this naïve and romantic honeymoon period faded, the group became the object of mass hatred and hysteria, the most egregious example of things going “too far,” of people “losing their moral compass.”

As with any powerful symbol, for much of its history what seemed most important about the RAF was what people thought about it. For many, fascination with the group grew out of a fascination with its founding members. In the 1960s, Ulrike Meinhof was already a well known journalist who seemed able to combine radical politics with an increasingly successful career. At the same time, Andreas Baader had a
reputation for being the charming rogue of the Berlin hipster scene, his panache enhanced as he and a group of his friends were brought to trial for firebombing a Frankfurt department store.

People may not have agreed with what they did next, or with why they did it, but if nothing else, the misnamed “Baader-Meinhof Gang” had style, and as the media played up every detail and the old fogies in power got more and more freaked out, they were briefly loved for simply being the most hardcore urban guerillas around.

Much could be written about this bizarre fascination, this production of
guerilla cachet
, but to do so would be to write a cultural history, and we intend something else altogether.

Except in passing, these books will not deal with the private lives or personalities of the RAF combatants. How the guerillas got along with their parents, friends, or each other is not really our concern. We will not concentrate on the kind of cars they liked or their taste in music or what kind of childhood they had. We will not guess at who was “nice” and who was a “prick,” or go over who slept with whom, or catalog the names people called each other when they were arguing.

To have to provide such a disclaimer may seem absurd, for most political histories pass over such details as a matter of course. Yet, a brief survey of the few books available about the RAF will show that these questions have been the major preoccupation of almost anyone who has approached this subject. Nor are we unaware of the point that the RAF prisoners themselves would make on more than one occasion: that efforts to explain their actions in psychological terms were part of a conscious state strategy of pathologizing them and their politics, or at least shifting people’s attention onto trivial and often fabricated personal details. While there are things we consider mistaken in the RAF’s broader analysis, on this question they appear to have been 100% correct.

While the personal may be political, we believe that the RAF’s greatest significance is not to be found in the part it played in the individual lives of its members or supporters. Rather, to appreciate what it was and what it meant, and as a first step towards being able to evaluate its praxis, the RAF must be placed within the context of left-wing revolutionary struggle in the First World at a very particular point in time. As such, we are most interested in the group’s ideas, its line as established in its communiqués and other documents, how it put this line into practice through its actions and campaigns, and the relationship the group enjoyed with its supporters and other leftists.

Some may accuse us of being uncritical, or of even supporting the RAF’s politics and their practice. We would answer that in order to be critical one must first be in possession of the facts. While we consider questions of morality and means and ends to be very important, given that this is the first time most of this material has been made available to English-readers, we prefer not to muddy the waters by condemning or praising the guerilla every step of the way.

Certainly we will offer no blanket denunciation—nor will we indulge in cheap praise. What has been written so far is replete with judgment, and often contains very little factual content or political analysis. We hope with these books to do our small part in correcting this imbalance.

In order for the guerilla’s actions and statements to be at all comprehensible, they need to be placed in the context of their times and of the wider left-wing movement in West Germany. Even as these events were unfolding, this context was not well understood by many of us in North America; now, decades later, it is even harder to grasp. For that reason, we have provided two background chapters providing an overview of postwar West Germany, as well as a series of introductory texts to the different documents from the guerilla. These are overviews and as will be clear, they have been written from a particular perspective. It is here that our analysis most obviously departs from that of the RAF, our sympathy for many of its aims notwithstanding.

We offer these documents to the comrades of today—and to the comrades of tomorrow—both as a testament to those who struggled before and as an explanation as to how they saw the world, why they made the choices they made, and the price they were made to pay for having done so.

ACRONYM KEY

2JM

Bewegung 2. Juni
(2nd of June Movement); Berlinbased anarchist guerilla group formed in early 1972, its name comes from the date of the police shooting of protester Benno Ohnesorg in 1967.

APO

Außerparlemtarische Opposition
(Extra-Parliamentary Opposition); the name given to the broad-based militant opposition with its roots in the student movement that encompassed the left-wing anti-imperialist and social revolutionary movements of the late sixties and early seventies.

ARD

Arbeitsgemeinschaft der öffentlich-rechtlichen Rundfunkanstalten der Bundesrepublik Deutschland
(Syndicate for Publicly Regulated Radio Stations in the Federal Republic of Germany); state-funded radio.

BAW

Bundesanwaltschaft
(Federal Prosecutors Office); noted for its aggressive prosecution of cases against the guerilla and the left.

BGS

Bundesgrenzschutz
(Federal Border Patrol); border security police.

BKA

Bundeskriminalamt
(Federal Criminal Bureau); the German equivalent of the FBI, particularly active in police activities against the guerilla and the left.

BND

Bundesnachrichtendienst
(Federal Intelligence Service); the FRG’s foreign intelligence service.

CDU

Christlich Demokratisches Union Deutschlands
(Christian Democratic Union of Germany); Germany’s mainstream conservative party.

CSU

Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern
(Bavarian Christian-Social Union); Bavaria’s mainstream conservative party, the Bavarian partner to the CDU.

DGB

Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund
(German Union Federation); the largest union federation in the FRG.

DKP

Deutsche Kommunistische Partei
(German Communist Party); the pro-Soviet communist party founded in 1968, in effect the rebranding of the KPD (Communist Party of Germany), which was banned in 1956.

FAZ

Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung;
a high-quality, national, moderate conservative, German daily newspaper.

FDP

Freie Demokratische Partei
(Free Democratic Party); Germany’s mainstream liberal party.

GIM

Groupe Internationale Marxisten
(International Marxist Group); West German section of the Trotskyist Fourth International active in the FRG in the seventies and eighties, fused with the KPD/ML to form the VSP in 1986.

GSG-9

Grenzschutzgruppe 9
(Border Patrol Group 9); officially part of the BGS, in practice Germany’s antiterrorist special operations unit.

KB

Kommunistischer Bund
(Communist League); a small Maoist group active in the seventies.

KBW

Kommunistischer Bund Westdeutschland
(West German Communist League); founded in Bremen in 1973. A Maoist organization originally associated with China, subsequently shifted their support to Albania and Pol Pot’s Cambodian regime. Dissolved in 1985.

KPD

Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands
(Communist Party of Germany); pro-Soviet communist party founded in 1919, banned under Hitler in 1933 and under Adenauer in 1956, rebranded as DKP (German Communist Party) in 1968. Also a Maoist party founded by the KPD/AO in 1971 and dissolved in 1980.

KPD/AO

Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands/Aufbauorganisation
(Communist Party of Germany/Pre-Party Formation); a Maoist organization founded in 1970, became the KPD in 1971.

KPD/ML

Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands/Marxisten-Leninisten
(Communist Party of Germany/Marxist-Leninist); a Maoist party founded on December 31, 1968. It fused with the Trotskyist GIM in 1986 to form the VSP.

KSV

Kommunistische Studentverband
(Communist Student Association); student wing of the KPD/AO and later the KPD, founded in 1971 and dissolved in 1980.

ID

Informationsdienst;
a left-wing news service published weekly from 1973 until 1981. In 1988, its archives were used to launch the left-wing publisher, Verlag Edition ID-Archiv, specializing in books about the German far left.

LG

Landesgericht
(
Land
Court); each of the
Länder
had it’s own court system.

LKA

Landeskriminalamt
(
Land
Criminal Bureau); the equivalent of the BKA functioning at the level of a state or province.

LWA

Landesanwaltschaft
(
Land
Prosecutors Office); the equivalent of a state or provincial prosecutors office.

NPD

Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands
(National Democratic Party); far-right political party, supported by many neo-nazis.

OLG

Oberlandesgericht
(
Land
Court of Appeal); each of the
Länder
had it’s own Court of Appeal.

ÖTV

Gewerkschaft öffentliche Dienste, Transport und Verkehr
(The Public Service, Transport, and Communication Union).

PFLP

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine; founded in 1953, secular nationalist and Marxist, the second largest tendency within the PLO after Fatah.

PFLP (EO)

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (External Operations); originally a section of the PFLP, expelled in the early seventies for conducting controversial actions outside of Israel, effectively dissolved in 1978 after the death of its leader Waddi Haddad, who had been poisoned by the Mossad.

RAF

Rote Armee Fraktion
(Red Army Faction).

RH

Rote Hilfe
(Red Aid); an important prisoner support network which came out of the APO.

RH
E.V
.

Rote Hilfe e.v.
(Red Aid registered association); a Red Aid network set up by the KPD/AO in 1970.

RZ

Revolutionäre Zellen
(Revolutionary Cells); founded in 1973, most groups within its structure ceased activity in 1991, with the final action occurring in 1994.

SDS

Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund
(Socialist German Students Federation); founded by the SDS in 1946. By the late sixties it was an independent left-wing student federation and the most significant organization in the APO. It dissolved in 1970.

SHB

Sozialdemokratischer Hochschulbund
(Social Democratic Student Federation); founded in 1960 by the SPD, dissolved in 1992.

SPD

Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
(Social Democratic Party of Germany); Germany’s mainstream social democratic party.

SPK

Socialistiches Patientenkollektiv
(Socialist Patients’ Collective); founded in 1970, part of the antipsychiatry movement. It dissolved under extreme state pressure in 1971, many of its core members later joining the RAF.

VSP

Vereingte Sozialistische Partei
(United Socialist Party); formed in 1986 through the fusion of the KPD/ML and the GIM, splintered into various groups in 1993.

ZDF

Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen
(Second German Television); German publicly regulated television, Europe’s largest broadcasting corporation.

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