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The Baader-Meinhof Complex by Stefan Aust
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The Baader-Meinhof Complex (edition 2008)

by Stefan Aust

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5891240,244 (4.13)4
Germany 1967: murderous bomb attacks, the threat of terrorism, and the fear of the enemy inside are rocking the very foundations of the still-fragile German democracy. The radicalized children of the Nazi generation, led by Andreas Baader, Ulrike Meinhof, and Gudrun Ensslin, are fighting a violent war against what they perceive as the new face of fascism. The man who understands them is also their hunter, the head of the German police force, Horst Herold.… (more)
Member:wiredearp
Title:The Baader-Meinhof Complex
Authors:Stefan Aust
Info:Bodley Head (2008), Paperback, 480 pages
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The Baader-Meinhof Complex by Stefan AUST (Author)

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English (6)  German (5)  Italian (1)  All languages (12)
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
The German avant-garde group Einstürzende Neubauten's name means "collapsing new buildings" in English; it points to a couple of relevant things as far as the RAF is concerned:

1. They were young, they collapsed.
2. The name can refer to the state of Germany - and/or its youths - to youths growing up just after the Second World War.

The RAF - also referred to as the Baader-Meinhof group - seems to me a desperate yet affectionate bunch of terrorists. They had strong political beliefs, wanted to topple the imperialist establishment with their theological basis lifted from hard-core leftist/anarchist believers who thought theory was of little use; "the gun speaks" is one of their axioms.

In short, a very charismatic leader - Andreas Baader - met Gudrun Ensslin - a preacher's daughter - and gelled together politically and as lovers. They adopted the feel of the changing times and extreme frustration over the fact that a lot of people talked but did nothing. They started fires in German department stores and conspired further.

I think the very moment they recruited Ulrike Meinhof, at the time a respected and well-known political reporter and documentary film-maker, as she helped to spring Baader from custody and in the process killing a security guard, is the breaking-point where all was let loose for the RAF. Everything must go. The gun spake.

From there, they went underground. And they went abroad, making sure that Baader-Ensslin could rule the band and that very little that was critique against them could escape unhurt - and that went both for people on the inside and the outside.

The RAF assassinated, kidnapped, robbed and created propaganda and terror all throughout their maintenance; against popular belief, the group existed even after the suicides/murders in the Stannheim prison in 1978, when the founding members and additional members were found dead - except for one survivor.

The author does a splendid job at remaining fairly objective while binding facts to the RAF's belief-system, thus creating a bird's-eye view of the entire matter. The book is mostly chronologically written, but starts off with the Stannheim deaths in a very strong way.

Did the German government wire-tap the prisoners' cells during the night of their deaths? Did they in fact allow the guns that killed some of the prisoners to be imported? Did they know of a suicide pact and totally failed to prevent it? Were the prisoners in fact murdered or did they commit suicide? We'll probably never know.

Aust has also been involved with the screenwriting for the film with the same name as this book, which I think is very good too. The book, however, delves a lot deeper and especially exposes Baader as a more two-faced and hypocritical person than I think the film did.

The RAF did do something, which was their forté; the fact that they killed people at all is despicable, but didn't the government do the same in the process?

All in all, this is a thoroughly interesting book which could be considered great company with Olivier Assayas' great three-piece documentary on Carlos Sanchez, titelled "Carlos". ( )
  pivic | Mar 20, 2020 |
Baader-Meinhoff: The Inside Story of the R.A.F., Stefan Aust's book about the Red Army Faction a terrorist group active in West Germany during the 1970's, offers an interesting counterpoint to John Berger's From A to X reviewed here yesterday. While Mr. Berger's novel asks readers to sympathize with a romantic vision of his characters, Mr. Aust's non-fiction account of an actual terrorist organization makes sympathy for those involved nearly impossible.

Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhoff, the two 'leaders' of the Red Army Faction, were not romatically linked but they did form the nexus of a group of young radicals determined to undermine the political/social system of West Germany in the late 1960's. As was the case with the movements that became Al-Qaeda, the Red Army Faction was radicalized by government corruption and violence-- Al-Qaeda by the torture their early leaders experienced in Egyptian prisons as covered in The Looming Tower by Lawrence Wright, the Red Army Faction by the violent attack on a peaceful anti-Shah demonstration that ended with one demostrator shot to death by the police and by the attempted assasination of fellow radical Rudi Dutschke. However, soon the means become the end as far as the RAF was concerned. They did not seem to have a coherant political philosophy they were trying to advance; blowing up buildings and robbing banks appears to be the RAF's sole purpose. Whatever deeper goal they may have had is not discussed in Mr. Aust's book.

That is the only fault I can find with it and it may be a fault with the RAF rather than with Mr. Aust's account. Mr. Aust covers the history of the Red Army Faction from it's early inception to it's heyday and it's eventual collapse. The story is as hard to put down as it is to believe. Today terrorism is thought of exclusively in terms of radical Islam, but in the 1970's it was embraced by western radical groups as well. The RAF was responsible for multiple bank robberies, several bombings, kidnappings, assasinations and eventually the hi-jacking of a Luftansa airline. They worked with the PLO and with the East German Stasi over the course of two decades going through three generations of members. That the RAF became celebrated as radical icons does not speak well for the left.

After arresting the first generation of R.A.F. members, the West German government built a special courthouse just to hold the trials of the leadership including Ulrike Meinhof and Andreas Baader. As the U.S. approaches moving terrorist suspects to U.S. prisons in order to put them on trial, we would all do well to consider what happened with the RAF leadership. Things did not go well during the three-year-long trial.

In the end, Baader-Meinhof: The Inside Story of the R.A.F. does not provide the answers I wanted, namely why did they all do it. In the final analysis, those involved were nothing more than common criminals, spoiled rich kids who used the war in Vietnam as an excuse to wreck havoc on their country. They would steal a car saying their actions protest a corrupt system, but the car they'd steal could easily be yours or mine and the act of stealing it did nothing to better the lives of anyone in Vietnam. In retrospect, the RAF members seem to be little more than dupes, easily manipulated into lives of crime by eachother, by Palestinain terrorists, by the East German Stasi. How anyone could conclude the capitalist system is corrupt and then embrace the government of East Germany as liberating is beyond me.

But it makes for very interesting reading. ( )
1 vote CBJames | Feb 21, 2010 |
This book gives a great view into post war Germany. For me the most amazing thing about RAF is that it's history is so near, and so recent; it's a story about one generation before me. ( )
  carst | Sep 2, 2009 |
This is an excellent history of the Red Army Faction, or the Baader-Meinhof Gang. Aust has taken a strictly chronological approach to the events leading up to the 'German Autumn', which does fracture the narrative, in one chapter the reader may reading about the inmates of Stammheim prison, the next chapter the reader is with the hostages on the hijacked Lufthansa plane. But this is not a criticism, Aust in not writing the book as 'a judgement, in either the legal or the historical sense.' and his approach captures this fractured, incomprehensible, egotistical bunch, who, apart from a desire to destroy 'the system' didn't seem to have a coherent or united motivation, other than the need to free Baader and the others from prison - 'Once they had stifled all doubts by asking: "Do you want the prisoner's freed or not?"' as they pursued their 'deranged crusade'. ( )
  riverwillow | Aug 21, 2009 |
Stefan Aust's Baader-Meinhof: The Inside Story of the R.A.F. is probably as good a narrative of these confusing events as we are ever going to get. Using a journalistic and chronological fact-driven approach, Aust delivers the core points of the narrative without dwelling on excessive historical analysis - that task is largely left to the reader (and quite correctly so).

In the end, the point of the story is illuminating, depressing, and still quite relevant to the contemporary world. In an age when violent solutions to global problems still have their share of romantic appeal, the story of Baader, Ensslin et al remains a potent warning against adopting the strategies of the enemy in seeking solutions to human problems. ( )
  dr_zirk | Jul 13, 2009 |
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» Add other authors (9 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
AUST, StefanAuthorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Rote Armee Fraktion,Associated Namemain authorall editionsconfirmed
Bell, AntheaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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'Thirty-eight minutes past midnight.'
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Originally published in the UK in 1987 as 'The Baader-Meinhof Group: The Inside Story of a Phenomenon', 2008 version has been revised and updated.
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Germany 1967: murderous bomb attacks, the threat of terrorism, and the fear of the enemy inside are rocking the very foundations of the still-fragile German democracy. The radicalized children of the Nazi generation, led by Andreas Baader, Ulrike Meinhof, and Gudrun Ensslin, are fighting a violent war against what they perceive as the new face of fascism. The man who understands them is also their hunter, the head of the German police force, Horst Herold.

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