Baader-Meinhof terror gang myths are being challenged
April 27 (EIRNS) More doubts have been cast on the official myth of the German terrorism of the RAF Baader-Meinhof Gang as an alleged "genuine resistance movement," and it is ever more urgent
to carry out a thorough investigation into the real history of the terrorist movement. Numerous hints and leaks that appear in recent German media, especially television talk shows, pose the question of what is known about the terrorism of the 1970s. For example, hints that two of the three men that were charged with the assassination of Federal Prosecutor Siegfried Buback in April 1977, did not even take part in that operation. The reopened
investigation by the present Federal Prosecutor will have to clarify this matter, which may take some time.
A useful hint was given by Michael Buback, the son of the murdered Buback, who said in a television talk show (Maybritt Illner Show, ZDF) last night that the lawyers that had access to the imprisoned terrorists, also were the ones to work as go-betweens for conveying secret "messages" in and out, including the lie that Siegfried Buback was to blame for the allegedly inhuman conditions of imprisonment. This made Buback a target of retaliation terrorism. This puts the issue of the pro-terrorist lawyers and their network across Europe, who were the "news channel" between the prisoners and the support underground outside, back on the agenda.