Red Army Faction
The Red Army Faction (RAF), also known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang, was a far-left militant group in West Germany founded in 1970 by figures including Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof, which conducted a sustained campaign of urban terrorism until its disbandment in 1998.[1][2] Emerging from the radical fringes of the 1968 student movement, the RAF espoused Marxist-Leninist ideology and aimed to overthrow the West German state, which it portrayed as a continuation of fascism allied with American imperialism.[1][3] Over three decades, the group executed bombings, assassinations of industrialists and officials, kidnappings, and bank robberies, killing 34 people including prosecutors, executives, and police officers.[2][1] Its most notorious phase, the "German Autumn" of 1977, involved the kidnapping and murder of industrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer and the hijacking of a Lufthansa airliner, culminating in the suicides of imprisoned leaders Baader, Gudrun Ensslin, and Jan-Carl Raspe amid a national crisis.[2][3] The RAF's actions, which evolved across three generations of members, provoked intense state countermeasures and societal debate, leaving a legacy of over 27 dead militants and unresolved questions about prison deaths and state responses.[1]Name and Terminology
Origins of the Name
The name Rote Armee Fraktion (RAF), translated as Red Army Faction, was first publicly adopted by the group in its inaugural communiqué titled Aufbau der Roten Armee! ("Build the Red Army!"), distributed via the underground newspaper Agit 883 on June 5, 1970, shortly after Andreas Baader's prison escape on May 14, 1970. This document outlined the group's strategic vision for establishing an armed urban guerrilla force in West Germany to combat perceived imperialism and fascism, framing the RAF as the embryonic "red army" necessary for proletarian revolution.[4][5] The component "Rote Armee" drew symbolic inspiration from historical communist militaries, including the Soviet Red Army formed in 1918 and other international "red army" formations associated with anti-capitalist insurgencies, signifying the RAF's aspiration to embody a disciplined, ideologically pure fighting force against the West German state, which members viewed as a continuation of Nazi structures under capitalist guise. "Fraktion," in this context, connoted a specialized militant splinter or operational wing within the wider revolutionary left, echoing Leninist organizational terminology for factions as dynamic subunits advancing class struggle, rather than a mere parliamentary splinter group. This choice underscored the RAF's self-positioning as a vanguard faction detached from reformist elements, focused exclusively on clandestine armed action.[6][7] The nomenclature also reflected solidarity with global anti-imperialist networks; the RAF explicitly modeled itself after contemporaneous groups like the Japanese Red Army Faction (Sekigun-ha), which had emerged in 1969 from student radicals advocating similar guerrilla tactics against U.S.-aligned governments. This internationalist framing positioned the RAF not as an isolated entity but as a localized "faction" contributing to a worldwide red army offensive, with early communiqués invoking tactics from Latin American urban guerrillas like the Tupamaros. Adoption of the name thus served both propagandistic and operational purposes, signaling ideological continuity with Marxist-Leninist-Maoist traditions while justifying terrorism as defensive warfare against state repression.[8][7]Common Aliases and Public Perception
The Red Army Faction (RAF) was frequently referred to in West German media and public discourse as the Baader-Meinhof Gang or Baader-Meinhof Group, appellations derived from two of its most prominent early members, Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof, whose high-profile arrests and trial in 1972 amplified media focus on their names.[9] [10] The group itself disavowed these labels, adopting the self-designation Rote Armee Fraktion in its inaugural 1970 communiqué to project an image of disciplined urban guerrilla warfare akin to a revolutionary army, drawing symbolic parallels to anti-fascist resistance and international Marxist-Leninist struggles.[1] These aliases persisted due to their evocative association with Baader's criminal notoriety and Meinhof's prior role as a leftist journalist, overshadowing the RAF's preferred terminology in everyday usage. In West German society, the RAF was predominantly perceived as a ruthless terrorist organization whose campaign of targeted assassinations—such as the 1977 murders of industrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer and banker Jürgen Ponto—bombings, and kidnappings engendered profound public alarm and revulsion, contributing to over 30 fatalities and numerous injuries from 1970 to 1998.[11] [1] This view crystallized during events like the 1977 "German Autumn," when widespread solidarity with the state emerged against the RAF's hijackings and hostage crises, prompting mass demonstrations and demands for reinstating capital punishment among segments of the populace.[3] Although a fringe minority within radical student and leftist circles initially romanticized the group as anti-imperialist fighters against perceived continuities of Nazism in institutions, broader public opinion rejected such rationalizations, associating RAF actions with anarchic violence that threatened democratic stability rather than advancing social justice.[12] This consensus was reinforced by the RAF's isolation from mainstream left-wing organizations, which condemned the shift from protest to lethal tactics as counterproductive and morally bankrupt.Historical Context
Post-War Germany and Radicalization
Following the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, West Germany experienced rapid economic reconstruction known as the Wirtschaftswunder, with GDP growth averaging 8% annually from 1950 to 1960 under Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's Christian Democratic Union government and the social market economy policies of Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard.[13] This prosperity, fueled by the Marshall Plan, currency reform, and labor from displaced persons and Gastarbeiter, masked underlying social fractures, including incomplete denazification that allowed thousands of former Nazi officials to retain positions in judiciary, police, and administration, fostering perceptions among younger generations of authoritarian continuity.[14] By the mid-1960s, university enrollment surged amid postwar baby boom demographics, but inadequate infrastructure and rigid curricula exacerbated youth alienation in a conformist society dominated by the "silent generation" that had accommodated Nazism.[15] The radicalization intensified through the Extraparliamentary Opposition (APO), a loose coalition of students, intellectuals, and pacifists opposing the Grand Coalition government of Kurt Georg Kiesinger (1966–1969), which included Social Democrats and was seen as stifling dissent via proposed emergency laws granting expansive executive powers.[16] Key catalysts included protests against the Vietnam War and U.S. imperialism, influenced by Third World liberation struggles and thinkers like Herbert Marcuse, who critiqued advanced industrial society's repressive tolerance.[17] A pivotal event occurred on June 2, 1967, during demonstrations against the Shah of Iran's visit to West Berlin, when plainclothes officer Karl-Heinz Kurras fatally shot unarmed student Benno Ohnesorg in the head, an act protesters interpreted as emblematic of state-sanctioned violence akin to Gestapo tactics, despite Kurras's later revealed communist ties.[18] [19] This incident galvanized the Socialist German Student League (SDS), leading to widespread campus occupations and clashes, amplified by animosity toward media mogul Axel Springer's tabloids, which held 80% of West Berlin's newspaper market and routinely vilified protesters as communist agitators.[20] The April 11, 1968, assassination attempt on SDS leader Rudi Dutschke by Josef Bachmann—a Springer reader incited by headlines labeling Dutschke an "enemy of the people"—sparked the "Easter Riots," with arson attacks on Springer facilities and demands for press reform, framing the state and capitalism as fascist restorations.[16] Generational revolt against parental complicity in Nazism, coupled with fears of nuclear escalation and U.S. bases in Germany, shifted APO rhetoric from reform to systemic critique, portraying West Germany as a U.S.-client "fascist" bulwark against socialism.[21] By late 1968, frustration with nonviolent protest's inefficacy—exemplified by the SDS's dissolution amid internal splits—pushed fringes toward Maoist-inspired urban guerrilla models, viewing armed struggle as necessary to expose and dismantle perceived proto-fascist structures, setting the stage for groups like the Red Army Faction.[22] This trajectory reflected not economic deprivation but ideological escalation amid affluence, where radicals rejected parliamentary democracy as illusory, prioritizing anti-imperialist solidarity over domestic consensus.[23]Student Movement and Perceived Threats
The West German student movement of the late 1960s, organized primarily through the Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund (SDS) and the Außerparlamentarische Opposition (APO), mobilized against perceived authoritarian tendencies in the Federal Republic, including the proposed Notstandsgesetze (emergency laws) that expanded state powers, which were passed on May 30, 1968.[24] Protests also targeted U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, the presence of American military bases, and rigid university structures dominated by professors with unresolved Nazi-era affiliations, reflecting broader grievances over the incomplete denazification of West German institutions.[25] Key events fueling radicalization included the fatal shooting of student Benno Ohnesorg by police during a June 2, 1967, demonstration against the Shah of Iran's visit to West Berlin, interpreted by activists as evidence of state-sanctioned violence, and the April 11, 1968, assassination attempt on APO leader Rudi Dutschke, which protesters attributed to inflammatory coverage by Axel Springer media outlets like Bild-Zeitung.[9] [26] Founders of the Red Army Faction (RAF), such as Andreas Baader and Gudrun Ensslin, emerged from this milieu as active participants in SDS-affiliated protests, viewing West German society as a latent fascist continuation of the Third Reich due to the integration of former Nazis into government, judiciary, and business elites.[9] [22] On April 4, 1968, Baader and Ensslin, protesting consumer capitalism's complicity in Vietnam, set fire to two Frankfurt department stores, causing minor damage but resulting in their arrests; they justified the acts as symbolic resistance against imperialism, marking an early shift from demonstrations to direct action.[27] Ulrike Meinhof, a journalist and longtime SDS sympathizer who edited the left-wing magazine konkret since 1957, amplified these views through columns decrying state repression and media bias, later aiding Baader's 1970 jailbreak, which catalyzed the RAF's formation. The movement's participants perceived existential threats in the capitalist state's alignment with U.S. imperialism, exemplified by NATO membership and Vietnam support, and in domestic mechanisms like the emergency laws, which they feared would enable a slide toward dictatorship akin to the Weimar Republic's collapse.[24] This analysis, influenced by Marxist-Leninist and anti-imperialist frameworks, portrayed the Springer press monopoly—controlling over 30% of daily newspapers by circulation—as a propaganda tool inciting violence against leftists, as seen in the post-Dutschke attacks on Springer offices in April-May 1968.[26] While the broader student protests emphasized democratic reforms and anti-fascist vigilance, a radical fringe, including RAF precursors, concluded that parliamentary avenues were illusory, necessitating urban guerrilla warfare to dismantle the "fascist" system, a position that alienated mainstream APO elements but drew initial sympathy from an estimated 25% of West German youth disillusioned with the establishment.[9] This perception of unrelenting threats from state and capital propelled the transition from protest to terrorism, though empirical evidence of systemic fascism remained contested, rooted more in generational trauma than institutional overhaul.[22]Ideology
Core Doctrines and Influences
The Red Army Faction (RAF) professed a Marxist-Leninist ideology that framed West Germany as an imperialist outpost subservient to U.S. hegemony, perpetuating fascist elements from the Nazi era through capitalist structures and state repression.[28] This worldview rejected parliamentary democracy and social reformism as illusions designed to sustain exploitation, insisting instead that systemic change required revolutionary violence to dismantle the "fascist" apparatus.[29] Central to their doctrine was the concept of the proletariat's armed self-defense against state terror, positioning the RAF as a vanguard faction sparking broader anti-imperialist resistance. The RAF's strategy emphasized urban guerrilla warfare, modeled as an offensive anti-imperialist struggle conducted in metropolitan centers rather than rural enclaves, to expose and erode the legitimacy of the bourgeois state through targeted actions like bombings and kidnappings.[30] In their 1971 manifesto The Urban Guerilla Concept, penned by Ulrike Meinhof, they argued that legality served power and that clandestine operations—drawing on proletarian internationalism—would mobilize the masses by demonstrating the state's vulnerability and moral bankruptcy.[31] This approach dismissed electoral politics and trade unionism as co-optive, prioritizing illegalist tactics to build a "combat communist party" capable of protracted confrontation.[32] Influences on RAF doctrines stemmed primarily from the late-1960s West German student movement (Außerparlamentarische Opposition), which radicalized against the Vietnam War, U.S. military presence, and perceived continuities of authoritarianism in the Adenauer era's establishment.[33] Internationally, they drew tactical inspiration from Latin American urban guerrillas, notably Uruguay's Tupamaros for their city-based hit-and-run operations, and Mao Zedong's protracted people's war adapted to European contexts.[34] Vietnamese resistance against U.S. imperialism served as a paradigmatic example of successful anti-colonial struggle, reinforcing the RAF's belief in global solidarity against "fascist internationalism."[35] These elements converged in Meinhof's journalism and RAF communiqués, which critiqued consumerism and media manipulation as tools of pacification.[36]Rationalizations for Violence
The Red Army Faction (RAF) framed its violent actions within the paradigm of urban guerrilla warfare, positing that armed struggle was an inevitable progression from ineffective protest against a repressive, fascist-continuum state in West Germany. Drawing from influences like Carlos Marighella's Minimanual of the Urban Guerrilla, RAF ideologues such as Ulrike Meinhof argued in documents like "The Urban Guerilla Concept" that non-violent resistance had been systematically crushed by state mechanisms, including emergency laws reminiscent of Nazi-era suppression, necessitating offensive violence to expose and dismantle the system.[37] This rationale was rooted in the belief that West Germany's integration into NATO and hosting of U.S. military bases rendered it complicit in global imperialism, particularly the Vietnam War, making targeted attacks on state representatives—judges, executives, and police—a legitimate anti-fascist response equivalent to Third World liberation struggles.[37] Meinhof's earlier essay "From Protest to Resistance," published in May 1968 amid student unrest following the killing of Benno Ohnesorg by police on June 2, 1967, and the attempted assassination of Rudi Dutschke on April 11, 1968, explicitly called for escalating beyond demonstrations to sabotage and confrontation, as the state's monopoly on violence invalidated passive opposition.[38] The RAF extended this to justify bombings and assassinations, such as the May 1972 attacks on U.S. military facilities, as calibrated strikes to provoke overreaction and reveal the regime's authoritarian core to the proletariat, whom they viewed as alienated by capitalism rather than inherent enemies.[37] Communiqués following operations, like those after the 1977 "German Autumn" events, reiterated that such actions fostered international solidarity with Palestinian fedayeen and other anti-imperialist groups, positioning RAF violence not as terrorism but as dialectical confrontation against structural oppression.[37] Critically, these rationalizations presupposed a conspiratorial view of power, attributing societal ills to an unbroken fascist lineage from the Third Reich—evident in attacks on figures like Hanns Martin Schleyer, kidnapped on September 5, 1977, as symbols of "fascist" capital—while dismissing electoral democracy as illusory.[37] However, the RAF's selective targeting often blurred lines, rationalizing civilian-adjacent casualties (e.g., the March 1985 bombing killing nine at a U.S. base) as collateral in class war, a logic that alienated potential sympathizers by prioritizing symbolic provocation over mass mobilization.[37] This insistence on violence's pedagogical role, as articulated by Gudrun Ensslin and others, reflected a Maoist emphasis on protracted people's war adapted to metropolitan conditions, yet empirically failed to ignite widespread revolution, underscoring the disconnect between ideological purity and causal efficacy.[37]Formation
Key Founders and Early Recruitment
The core founders of the Red Army Faction (RAF) were Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin, Ulrike Meinhof, and Horst Mahler, who coalesced amid West Germany's late-1960s radical left-wing milieu rooted in opposition to the Vietnam War and perceived continuities of fascism in state institutions. Baader (born February 6, 1943), a former petty criminal and drifter radicalized through street protests, and Ensslin (born August 15, 1940), his partner and a theology student turned activist, ignited the group's trajectory with arson attacks on two Frankfurt department stores on April 11, 1968, intended as symbolic protest against imperialism; both were convicted in October 1968 and imprisoned.[9][22] Mahler (born January 23, 1936), a lawyer who had defended student radicals like Rudi Dutschke, provided legal support to Baader and Ensslin, aligning ideologically with their anti-capitalist stance before formally joining the nascent group.[1] Meinhof (born October 7, 1934), a prominent leftist journalist for the magazine Konkret known for critiques of West German conservatism and U.S. policy, transitioned from intellectual sympathizer to active participant by orchestrating Baader's armed prison escape in 1970 during a supervised library outing in Berlin, an operation that wounded a guard and propelled the founders into full clandestinity. This jailbreak, following Baader's brief temporary release in March 1970 and subsequent re-arrest on April 4, 1970, crystallized the RAF's commitment to urban guerrilla warfare, as the group rejected legal avenues and embraced armed struggle against what they termed "fascist" structures.[9][22][1] Early recruitment leveraged personal networks from the fragmented 1968 student movement, particularly remnants of the Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund (SDS), which dissolved in March 1970 amid ideological splits, drawing in middle-class intellectuals disillusioned with parliamentary reform. The founders attracted committed radicals through shared anti-imperialist rhetoric and communal living experiments, incorporating figures like filmmaker Holger Meins and mechanic Jan-Carl Raspe, who joined post-escape for bank robberies and weapons procurement. In summer 1970, a core cadre—including Baader, Ensslin, Meinhof, and early recruits—traveled to Jordan for military training with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), honing tactics in small-arms use and ideological solidarity against "global fascism." This phase emphasized secrecy and vetting via proven militancy, yielding a first-generation cell of about a dozen operatives by late 1970, sustained by sympathizers in the Hash-Rebellen subculture and underground presses despite limited mass appeal.[9][1]Initial Criminal Acts
The initial criminal acts attributed to the core members who later formed the Red Army Faction occurred on the night of April 2–3, 1968, when Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin, Thorwald Proll, and Horst Söhnlein ignited incendiary devices in two Frankfurt department stores: Kaufhaus Schneider and a Neckermann mail-order warehouse. The fires caused an estimated 200,000 Deutsche Marks (approximately $50,000 at contemporary exchange rates) in property damage but resulted in no injuries or fatalities, as the buildings were evacuated in time. The perpetrators framed the attacks as symbolic protests against consumerism and the alienation fostered by capitalist society, drawing inspiration from global revolutionary tactics.[39][40] Following the incidents, the four individuals were arrested within days. In October 1968, a Frankfurt court convicted them of joint aggravated arson, sentencing each to three years' imprisonment under West German law, which treated the acts as politically motivated but criminally prosecutable felonies. The relatively lenient sentences reflected judicial considerations of their youth and ideological claims, though the court rejected arguments that the fires constituted legitimate political resistance. Baader, Ensslin, and Proll served only nine months before release pending appeal in late 1969, while Söhnlein remained incarcerated longer; this early parole fueled perceptions of leniency toward left-wing radicals, contributing to public backlash and the group's escalating defiance of state authority.[22][39] These arson attacks marked the transition from ideological agitation to direct violent action for the nascent group, establishing a pattern of targeting symbols of economic power while evading severe consequences initially. No prior coordinated violent operations by this circle are documented, though individual petty crimes by Baader predated the events. The acts drew limited sympathy from student radicals but alienated broader society, setting the RAF's trajectory toward underground operations and intensified confrontation with authorities.[40]Escalation of Violence
First-Generation Operations (1970-1972)
The first-generation operations of the Red Army Faction (RAF) commenced with the armed liberation of Andreas Baader on 14 May 1970 from the Educational Center in Berlin-Tegel, where he was held on charges related to prior arson attacks. Ulrike Meinhof, disguised as a journalist, participated in the raid alongside accomplices including Gudrun Ensslin and members of the Tupamaros West-Berlin group; gunfire erupted during the escape, but no fatalities occurred, enabling Baader's flight into clandestinity.[39][41] This event, often regarded as the RAF's foundational act of urban guerrilla warfare, shifted the group from ideological agitation to direct violent confrontation with state authorities.[9] Following the liberation, RAF members sought military training to enhance their operational capabilities. On 8 June 1970, initial cadres departed for a six-week program in Jordan under the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), focusing on weapons handling, including Kalashnikov rifles, and guerrilla tactics.[39][9] Upon returning to West Germany, the group prioritized funding through armed robberies, executing simultaneous heists at three banks in West Berlin on 29 September 1970 to procure resources for sustained underground activities without reported casualties.[39] These operations underscored the RAF's strategy of financial self-sufficiency via expropriation, while early arrests, such as those of Ingrid Schubert, Brigitte Asdonk, and Horst Mahler on 8 October 1970, began eroding peripheral support networks.[39] Escalation marked 1971, with the RAF distributing its inaugural manifesto, The Urban Guerilla Concept, on 1 May during labor demonstrations, articulating justifications for armed struggle against perceived imperialism.[39] Violent clashes intensified; on 22 October 1971, in Hamburg-Poppenbüttel, RAF members killed police officer Norbert Schmid during a shootout, with Margrit Schiller subsequently arrested at the scene.[39][41] Such incidents reflected the group's readiness to engage security forces lethally, though police countermeasures, including the death of RAF sympathizer Petra Schelm on 15 July 1971 in Hamburg, highlighted mounting risks.[39] The period culminated in a May 1972 bombing campaign targeting symbols of state and foreign military presence. On 11 May, the Petra Schelm Commando detonated a car bomb at the U.S. Army's V Corps headquarters in Frankfurt am Main, killing one U.S. officer and injuring 13 others.[39][42] Subsequent attacks included bombs at police headquarters in Augsburg and Munich on 12 May (five policemen injured), Federal Judge Wolfgang Buddenberg's car in Karlsruhe on 15 May (his wife injured), Springer publishing facilities in Hamburg on 19 May (17 employees injured), and U.S. Army headquarters in Heidelberg on 24 May (three U.S. soldiers killed, five injured).[39][41] These coordinated strikes, claimed via communiqués, aimed to disrupt institutional power but prompted intensified law enforcement, culminating in the arrests of Baader, Jan-Carl Raspe, and Holger Meins on 1 June in Frankfurt after a shootout, followed by Ensslin, Meinhof, and others by mid-June.[39][9] The first generation's operations, blending robbery, assassination, and explosives, inflicted 5 deaths and numerous injuries but ended with the core leadership's capture, fracturing the group's structure.[39]Assassinations and Bombings
The Red Army Faction escalated its campaign through a series of bombings in May 1972, known as the "May Offensive," targeting symbols of American imperialism and West German capitalism. On May 11, an explosive device detonated at the U.S. Army's V Corps headquarters in Frankfurt, injuring 13 American soldiers. Three days later, on May 14, bombs exploded at the headquarters of the Springer publishing empire in Hamburg and a police station in Augsburg, causing property damage but no deaths. The attacks culminated on May 24 with car bombs at Campbell Barracks in Heidelberg—home to the U.S. Army's Europe command—and the U.S. air base in Ramstein, killing three U.S. soldiers and injuring five others. The RAF claimed responsibility for these actions in communiqués, framing them as retaliation against U.S. involvement in Vietnam and NATO presence in Europe.[9][43] The group's second generation, operating after the imprisonment of first-generation leaders, adopted targeted assassinations against high-profile figures perceived as pillars of the state and economy. On April 7, 1977, Siegfried Buback, the chief federal prosecutor leading investigations into RAF activities, was ambushed and shot dead by gunmen on a motorcycle in Karlsruhe, along with his driver and a bodyguard; the attackers fired over 20 rounds before fleeing. The RAF publicly justified the killing as vengeance for Buback's role in prosecuting left-wing militants. Less than four months later, on July 30, 1977, Jürgen Ponto, chairman of Dresdner Bank, was fatally shot during a botched kidnapping attempt at his home in Oberursel; the assailants, including Brigitte Mohnhaupt and Christian Klar, had intended to abduct him for ransom or leverage but killed him after he resisted. These precision strikes marked a tactical shift toward eliminating individuals rather than indiscriminate bombings, aiming to destabilize the Federal Republic's institutions.[9][44]The German Autumn
Kidnappings and Hijackings
On September 5, 1977, four commandos from the Red Army Faction ambushed Hanns Martin Schleyer's convoy in Cologne, West Germany, kidnapping the president of the Confederation of German Employers' Associations and killing his driver Heinz Marcisz, as well as three bodyguards: Volker Specht, Heinz-Herbert Hümmer and Manfred Schreiner.[45][46] The attackers used submachine guns and pistols in the assault, which occurred during evening rush hour, and issued demands for the release of RAF prisoners including Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin, and Jan-Carl Raspe, along with a ransom of 10 million Deutsche Marks and a safe passage for the kidnappers out of the country.[45] Schleyer was held captive for 43 days, during which the RAF released photographs of him to prove he was alive and to publicize their anti-capitalist grievances against West German industrial leaders.[45] To intensify pressure on the West German government, the RAF coordinated with allies in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) for further action. On October 13, 1977, four PFLP militants—Zohair Youssif Akache, Suhaila Andrawes, Wabil Harb, and Hind Alameh—hijacked Lufthansa Flight 181, a Boeing 737 en route from Palma de Mallorca to Frankfurt with 86 passengers and five crew members aboard.[47][48] The hijackers, armed with guns and grenades, diverted the plane to Rome for refueling, then to Cyprus, Bahrain, Dubai, Aden, and finally Mogadishu, Somalia, demanding the release of 11 prisoners (including the RAF's imprisoned leadership) and a 15 million Deutsche Marks ransom.[47][48] During the ordeal, the hijackers murdered Captain Jürgen Schumann after he attempted to negotiate with them, shooting him twice in the head and dumping his body on the tarmac in Dubai.[47] On October 18, 1977, West Germany's GSG 9 counter-terrorism unit stormed the aircraft in Mogadishu under cover of darkness, using stun grenades and submachine guns to kill three hijackers and capture the fourth, freeing all remaining hostages without further casualties.[47][48] Hours later, upon learning of the failed hijacking, RAF members executed Schleyer with a pistol shot to the head in an apartment in Mulhouse, France, abandoning his body in the trunk of a car with a note claiming responsibility and denouncing the "fascist" state.[45] These operations marked the RAF's most audacious bid to dismantle West Germany's post-war order through high-profile hostage-taking, though they ultimately failed to secure prisoner releases and accelerated the group's isolation.[49]Stammheim Siege and Outcomes
As the hijacking of Lufthansa Flight 181 by four Palestinian militants allied with the Red Army Faction (RAF) unfolded from October 13 to 17, 1977, West German authorities heightened security around Stammheim Prison in Stuttgart, where RAF leaders Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin, and Jan-Carl Raspe were held in isolation. Fearing coordinated escape attempts or retaliatory actions by RAF sympathizers, police and special forces encircled the facility, imposing a de facto siege with armed patrols, surveillance, and restricted access to prevent any breach during the crisis.[49][50] On October 18, 1977, hours after the West German GSG 9 counter-terrorism unit stormed the aircraft at Mogadishu Airport in Somalia, killing three hijackers and freeing all 86 passengers and crew, guards discovered the bodies of Baader, Ensslin, and Raspe in their cells. Baader and Raspe had sustained fatal gunshot wounds to the head, ruled self-inflicted using smuggled pistols, while Ensslin died by hanging from an electrical cord attached to the cell window bars. Official autopsies and investigations, including forensic analysis, concluded the deaths were coordinated suicides, timed to coincide with the anticipated failure of the hijacking operation and the RAF's demand for their release.[51][52][47] The suicides occurred amid the prisoners' prolonged hunger strike protesting trial conditions and solitary confinement, which had weakened their physical state but did not preclude deliberate acts. Upon receiving confirmation of the deaths via radio, Hanns Martin Schleyer's kidnappers executed him—the RAF's other key demand unmet—before abandoning his body in Mulhouse, France, marking the culmination of the "German Autumn" terror campaign. Multiple probes, including a 1978 parliamentary inquiry, upheld the suicide determination despite RAF communiqués denouncing it as murder and citing alleged inconsistencies like bullet trajectories and absent gunshot residue on hands.[53][49] These events effectively decapitated the RAF's first generation, leading to a temporary lull in major operations as surviving members went underground, though the group persisted through subsequent generations. The deaths fueled enduring conspiracy theories among left-wing circles alleging state execution to silence the prisoners, but lacked substantiating evidence beyond supporter claims, with forensic and ballistic reviews consistently supporting suicide amid the group's history of martyrdom rhetoric.[50][22]Legal Proceedings and Imprisonment
Arrests and Security Measures
The arrests of the Red Army Faction's core first-generation members took place in June 1972 after a period of intense manhunt by West German authorities. Andreas Baader, Jan-Carl Raspe, and Holger Meins were captured on June 1 in Frankfurt amid an exchange of gunfire with police.[39] Gudrun Ensslin was detained on June 7 in a Hamburg boutique, and Ulrike Meinhof was apprehended on June 15 near Hanover.[54] These operations involved coordinated police actions, including raids and surveillance, reflecting heightened security responses to the group's escalating violence.[55] In response to the captured militants' potential for continued coordination or escape attempts, the West German government implemented stringent security protocols, including transfer to a purpose-built high-security wing at Stammheim Prison in Stuttgart. This facility incorporated solitary confinement cells equipped with armored glass windows, remote-controlled doors, and continuous video monitoring to isolate prisoners and prevent internal communication.[56] Authorities justified these measures as essential to neutralize the RAF's operational threat, given prior prison breaks and external support networks, while restricting visits and legal consultations to vetted personnel under armed guard.[54] Subsequent arrests of second-generation RAF members, such as those following the 1977 German Autumn events, involved similar intensified tactics, including federal police raids and international cooperation, leading to captures like that of Brigitte Mohnhaupt in 1982.[9] Security for imprisoned members evolved with reinforced isolation and electronic surveillance across facilities, aimed at disrupting command structures amid ongoing attacks to secure releases.[55] These protocols, while effective in containing immediate risks, drew accusations from RAF sympathizers of constituting systematic sensory deprivation, though official inquiries upheld their necessity based on intelligence of persistent external threats.[57]Stammheim Trial
![Justizvollzugsanstalt Stammheim][float-right] The Stammheim Trial, formally known as the proceedings against the core members of the Red Army Faction's first generation, began in May 1975 in a purpose-built, high-security courtroom complex within Stammheim Prison near Stuttgart, West Germany.[22] The defendants included Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin, Jan-Carl Raspe, and initially Ulrike Meinhof, charged with forming a criminal terrorist association, multiple murders, attempted murders, and bombings that resulted in the deaths of at least four people, including U.S. military personnel in Frankfurt in 1972.[58] The trial's location inside the prison was a direct response to the RAF's history of violent escapes, external support networks, and threats to judicial personnel, with the facility featuring bulletproof enclosures for defendants and extensive surveillance to prevent communication or disruption.[54] Presided over by Judge Rainer Wickel, the proceedings lasted nearly two years, marked by frequent interruptions from the defendants, who rejected the court's legitimacy, labeling it a tool of "fascist" imperialism and refusing to participate substantively.[59] Defense lawyers, some accused of RAF sympathies, engaged in filibustering tactics, leading to the removal of several and restrictions on visits to curb coded messages to supporters outside.[60] Ulrike Meinhof died by suicide via hanging on May 9, 1976, during the trial, an event that fueled conspiracy theories among RAF sympathizers but was officially ruled self-inflicted amid her documented mental health decline and isolation complaints.[22] Hunger strikes by defendants, including one in late 1974 that contributed to Holger Meins' death prior to the trial's start, continued sporadically, protesting conditions they described as sensory deprivation, though forensic and medical evidence supported the necessity of strict isolation to neutralize ongoing RAF operational threats.[61] External pressures intensified during the trial; on April 7, 1977, RAF members assassinated Federal Prosecutor Siegfried Buback and his escorts, an act claimed as retaliation against the proceedings.[22] Despite such violence, the court convicted Baader, Ensslin, and Raspe on April 28, 1977, sentencing each to life imprisonment for their roles in the charged offenses, based on extensive evidence including confessions under interrogation, witness testimonies, and forensic links to RAF weaponry.[22] Critics from leftist circles decried the trial as politically motivated and the security measures as violations of due process, yet these measures were justified by the state's imperative to protect the judicial process from subversion, as evidenced by prior RAF attacks on legal figures and infrastructure.[62] The verdicts affirmed the RAF's culpability in urban guerrilla warfare against the West German state, underscoring the group's ideological commitment to anti-imperialist violence over legal defense.[54]Deaths in Custody
Holger Meins, a key early member of the Red Army Faction, died on November 9, 1974, while imprisoned in Wittlich, West Germany, as a result of complications from a prolonged hunger strike protesting prison conditions.[39] Standing over six feet tall, Meins weighed less than 100 pounds at the time of his death, which sparked widespread protests and was cited by RAF supporters as evidence of state neglect.[63] His death preceded retaliatory actions, including the naming of a subsequent RAF commando after him. Ulrike Meinhof, a founding figure and ideologue of the RAF, was found dead in her cell at Stammheim Prison on May 9, 1976, during the ongoing trial of RAF leaders. The official cause of death was suicide by hanging using a towel attached to the cell bars, as determined by autopsy and prison authorities.[51] Meinhof's death, occurring amid deteriorating health and isolation, fueled immediate accusations from RAF sympathizers of murder or induced suicide due to sensory deprivation and trial pressures, though forensic evidence supported self-infliction with no signs of external violence.[64] The most prominent deaths occurred on October 18, 1977, hours after West German special forces resolved the Lufthansa Flight 181 hijacking, effectively ending the RAF's "German Autumn" offensive. Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin, and Jan-Carl Raspe were discovered deceased in their adjacent high-security cells at Stammheim Prison: Baader and Raspe from self-inflicted gunshot wounds to the head, and Ensslin from hanging using an electrical cord.[51] Irmgard Möller, the fourth defendant in the Stammheim trial, was found alive but gravely wounded from multiple self-inflicted stab wounds to the chest with a table knife; she survived after surgery and initially described her injuries as a suicide attempt paralleling her comrades.[51] A state commission appointed by Baden-Württemberg authorities conducted an immediate investigation, reviewing forensic autopsies, ballistics, and prison logs, and concluded on October 26, 1977, that all three deaths were suicides, with weapons smuggled into the facility via unknown means and no evidence of third-party involvement.[65] Pathological examinations confirmed the gunshot wounds as contact shots consistent with suicide, and Ensslin's ligature marks aligned with self-asphyxiation. Despite this, controversies persisted, including delays in guard response to reported gunshots around 3-5 a.m., the unexplained presence of a .38 pistol in Baader's cell despite stringent searches, and Möller later recanting her suicide claim in favor of murder theories propagated by RAF remnants.[66] Subsequent inquiries, including a 2013 review by federal prosecutors, upheld the suicide verdicts, finding no new empirical evidence to warrant reopening the case amid persistent but unsubstantiated allegations from left-wing activists of state orchestration to avert acquittals or escapes.[67] These deaths, occurring under fortified isolation protocols designed to prevent communication, underscored the RAF's internal resolve amid mounting defeats, with empirical data from official reports prioritizing self-inflicted causes over speculative conspiracies lacking forensic corroboration.[68]Later Phases
Second and Third Generations
The second generation of the Red Army Faction (RAF) coalesced in the mid-1970s amid the imprisonment of first-generation leaders, comprising militants including Brigitte Mohnhaupt and Christian Klar who assumed operational control.[10][69] This cohort, active primarily from 1974 to 1982, escalated attacks against perceived imperialist and capitalist targets, including the assassination of Federal Prosecutor Siegfried Buback on April 7, 1977, in Karlsruhe via a motorcycle-borne gunman.[22] They also orchestrated the murder of Dresdner Bank CEO Jürgen Ponto on July 30, 1977, in Oberursel, though the initial kidnapping attempt failed, leading to his shooting during resistance.[22] Post-German Autumn, following the October 18, 1977, deaths of imprisoned first-generation members Andreas Baader and Gudrun Ensslin, the second generation persisted with international operations, such as the June 25, 1979, car bomb attempt on NATO Supreme Allied Commander Alexander Haig in Brussels, which detonated prematurely without injuring him.[39] Domestic actions intensified, culminating in the August 31, 1981, car bomb explosion outside a U.S. Army officers' club near Ramstein Air Base, killing three American soldiers and injuring 23 others.[70] Key figures faced arrests, including Mohnhaupt and Klar on November 11, 1982, near Frankfurt, after which they received multiple life sentences in 1985 for orchestrating murders and kidnappings.[39][71] The third generation, emerging around 1982 after second-generation captures, operated more clandestinely with up to 20 core members and broader sympathizer networks, shifting toward anonymous sabotage against economic and military symbols of Western imperialism from 1982 to 1998.[10][72] Notable actions included the November 30, 1989, assassination of Deutsche Bank chairman Alfred Herrhausen in Bad Homburg via a sophisticated roadside bomb triggered by a wire across the road, severing his carotid artery.[39] This was followed by the April 1, 1991, car bomb killing of Treuhand head Detlev Karsten Rohwedder in Düsseldorf, aimed at disrupting post-reunification privatization.[22] The generation's final claimed operation involved the 1993 arrest of Birgit Hogefeld during a weapons purchase, after which surviving members issued a dissolution statement in 1998, citing strategic futility amid heightened security.[10][22]1980s and 1990s Actions
The third generation of the Red Army Faction (RAF), operating primarily in the 1980s, focused on targeted assassinations of industrial executives and bombings of U.S. military installations in West Germany, framing these as strikes against imperialism and capitalism. On August 31, 1981, RAF members detonated a bomb at the U.S. Air Forces Europe headquarters at Ramstein Air Base, causing structural damage and injuring personnel, though no fatalities were reported.[73] [74] This attack followed an attempted rocket assassination of U.S. Army Europe Commander General Frederick Kroesen in Heidelberg earlier that year.[73] In 1985, the RAF escalated with the assassination of Ernst Zimmermann, chief executive of the arms manufacturer MTU Aero Engines, who was shot in his Gauting home on February 1 and died hours later; the group claimed responsibility, citing his role in military production.[75] [76] Later that year, on August 8, a car bomb at Rhein-Main Air Base near Frankfurt killed two U.S. servicemen and injured over 20 others, with the RAF taking credit for the strike against NATO infrastructure.[9] In 1986, Siemens manager Karl-Heinz Beckurts and his driver were killed in a car bomb explosion near Stuttgart, another action attributed to the RAF's anti-corporate campaign.[9] The RAF's activities extended into the late 1980s with the November 30, 1989, assassination of Deutsche Bank chairman Alfred Herrhausen via a sophisticated roadside bomb in Bad Homburg, which the group linked to opposition against economic globalization.[77] Entering the 1990s, amid German reunification, the RAF assassinated Detlev Karsten Rohwedder, head of the Treuhand agency overseeing East German privatization, on April 1, 1991, by shooting him through his home window in Düsseldorf; three bullets struck him, and the RAF claimed the act as resistance to capitalist exploitation of the East.[73] Earlier that year, in February, the group fired approximately 250 rounds at the U.S. Embassy in Bonn, causing minor damage but no casualties.[73] By the mid-1990s, RAF operations diminished, with no major attacks after 1993, reflecting the end of Cold War dynamics and internal exhaustion. On April 20, 1998, the group issued a final communiqué declaring its dissolution, stating "the revolution says: I was, I am, I will be," marking the effective end of its armed struggle after nearly three decades of violence.[9]Dissolution and Final Statements
On April 18, 1992, the Red Army Faction issued a communiqué announcing the end of its armed campaign after more than two decades of violence, citing a strategic shift amid mounting pressures from law enforcement and the evolving geopolitical landscape following German reunification.[78] This declaration followed the group's 1991 assassination of Detlev Karsten Rohwedder, head of the Treuhand agency overseeing East German privatization, and preceded a period of dormancy with no major attacks recorded thereafter, though a failed bombing attempt on Weiterstadt prison occurred in 1993.[79] The 1992 statement marked a de facto cessation of operations, as surviving members faced intensified international cooperation in tracking fugitives and eroding public sympathy amid the collapse of Soviet-style communism, which undermined the RAF's anti-imperialist rationale rooted in Maoist and anti-capitalist ideology.[29] Analysts interpret this as an implicit acknowledgment of tactical exhaustion, with arrests of key figures like Birgit Hogefeld in 1993 further depleting ranks.[79] Formal dissolution came on April 20, 1998, via a final communiqué faxed to Reuters news agency in Cologne, declaring: "The urban guerrilla in the form of the RAF is now past history."[80] [3] The document reflected on the group's founding on May 14, 1970, as a "campaign of liberation" against perceived fascism and imperialism, but concluded: "Almost 28 years ago... Today we end this project," attributing the decision to the obsolescence of their guerrilla model after the Eastern bloc's dissolution and shifts in global power dynamics, while insisting imperialism persisted in new forms.[81] [82] This endpoint aligned with the release of remaining prisoners, such as Helmut Pohl on May 19, 1998, and symbolized the RAF's inability to adapt to post-Cold War realities, where ideological isolation and operational failures—evidenced by zero successful actions post-1991—rendered continuation untenable.[39] The statements' self-justificatory tone, emphasizing historical context over remorse for 34 murders and numerous injuries, has been critiqued as evasive, failing to address the human cost or ideological bankruptcy exposed by communism's global retreat.[83]Casualties and Human Cost
Victims and Fatalities
The Red Army Faction (RAF) was responsible for 34 murders between 1970 and the group's dissolution in 1998, primarily through targeted assassinations, bombings, and abductions aimed at representatives of what the group termed "imperialist" institutions, including business executives, judges, police officers, and U.S. military personnel.[84] These fatalities occurred across multiple generations of RAF activity, with the highest concentration during the "German Autumn" of 1977, when the group sought to force the release of imprisoned leaders by escalating violence. Victims were often selected for their symbolic roles in capitalism, the state, or NATO alliances, reflecting the RAF's Marxist-Leninist ideology that justified lethal force against perceived oppressors.[9] Early actions in the 1970s included bombings of U.S. military installations in May 1972, which killed four American servicemen: Lieutenant Colonel Paul A. Bloomquist at the Fifth U.S. Army Corps headquarters in Frankfurt on May 11; two enlisted men at the U.S. Army School of Logistics in Oberammergau on May 19; and Captain Clyde R. Lassen at the McGraw Kaserne in Frankfurt on May 24.[59] In April 1975, RAF members seized the West German embassy in Stockholm, executing two hostages—Andreas von Mirbach and Heinz Joachim Hellwig—before the siege ended in a failed bomb detonation that killed four terrorists instead.[9] During the October 1977 hijacking of Lufthansa Flight 181 to Mogadishu, the Palestinian hijackers—acting in coordination with the RAF—shot and killed Captain Jürgen Schumann.[9] The 1977 assassinations targeted high-profile figures: on April 7, federal prosecutor Siegfried Buback, his driver Wolfgang Göbel, and bodyguard Karl-Heinz Bosowski were killed by gunfire from a motorcycle in Karlsruhe; on July 30, Dresdner Bank CEO Jürgen Ponto was shot during a botched kidnapping at his home in Oberursel, with his wife and daughter wounded; and on September 5, industrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer—president of the Confederation of German Employers' Associations—was abducted in Cologne after his driver Heinz Malitz and two bodyguards, Klaus Ries and Heinz Hartwig, were killed in the attack, with Schleyer himself executed on October 18 following the failure of the hijacking operation.[9][59] Later phases saw continued targeted killings, such as the 1985 car bomb murder of arms executive Ernst Zimmermann in Munich and the 1986 roadside bombing that killed Siemens manager Karl-Heinz Beckurts and his driver Manfred Rössner near Stuttgart.[9] A 1985 bombing at the U.S. Rhein-Main Air Base near Frankfurt claimed the lives of Airman First Class Frank H. Scarton and Becky Jo Bristol, a civilian contractor.[9]| Date | Incident | Victims Killed |
|---|---|---|
| May 11, 1972 | Bombing at Fifth U.S. Army Corps, Frankfurt | Paul A. Bloomquist (1 U.S. officer)[59] |
| May 19, 1972 | Bombing at U.S. Army School of Logistics, Oberammergau | 2 U.S. enlisted men[59] |
| May 24, 1972 | Bombing at McGraw Kaserne, Frankfurt | Clyde R. Lassen (1 U.S. captain)[59] |
| April 24, 1975 | West German embassy siege, Stockholm | Andreas von Mirbach, Heinz Joachim Hellwig (2 hostages)[9] |
| April 7, 1977 | Assassination in Karlsruhe | Siegfried Buback, Wolfgang Göbel, Karl-Heinz Bosowski (3)[9][59] |
| July 30, 1977 | Attack on Jürgen Ponto, Oberursel | Jürgen Ponto (1)[9][59] |
| September 5, 1977 | Abduction of Hanns Martin Schleyer, Cologne | Heinz Malitz, Klaus Ries, Heinz Hartwig (3 bodyguards); Schleyer executed October 18[9][59] |
| October 13, 1977 | Lufthansa Flight 181 hijacking | Jürgen Schumann (1 pilot)[9] |
| August 8, 1985 | Rhein-Main Air Base bombing | Frank H. Scarton, Becky Jo Bristol (2)[9] |
| February 1985 | Car bomb on Ernst Zimmermann | Ernst Zimmermann (1)[9] |
| July 9, 1986 | Car bomb near Stuttgart | Karl-Heinz Beckurts, Manfred Rössner (2)[9] |