Number of suspects revised upwards to 52, 23 of whom
are currently in custody, and more police raids are planned
Philip
Oltermann in Berlin
@philipoltermann
Thu 8 Dec
2022 11.57 EST
Germany is
trying to get the measure of how imminent a threat to the state was posed by
the rightwing terror ring exposed on Wednesday, as police made further arrests
in connection with the coup plot.
In their
biggest ever raid targeting rightwing extremists, German authorities arrested
25 people suspected of plotting to overthrow the government, install a shadow
regime led by a 71-year-old aristocrat, and seek talks with Russia to
renegotiate its post-second world war settlement.
The head of
Germany’s federal criminal police, Holger Münch, on Thursday revised the number
of suspects upwards to 52, of whom 23 were currently in custody, adding that
further raids and arrests were expected in the coming days.
In the 24
hours since Wednesday’s dawn raids, more details have emerged of how the
group’s “council” wanted to run the federal republic as a “German principality”
after its violent coup. The minor aristocrat Heinrich XIII, Prince Reuß, was to
become head of state, with an obscure corporate lawyer from Hanover to become
foreign minister and a family doctor from a village in Lower Saxony to run the
health ministry.
Whether the
group really had the capacity to turn its power fantasies into reality,
however, has been hotly debated.
Heinrich
XIII’s tweedy appearance during his arrest has made it easy to make jokes about
old men with delusions of grandeur. The left-leaning newspaper taz, known for
its wry front pages, merely printed a picture of Heinrich XIII’s arrest, above
the headline: “[German president] Steinmeier still in office”.
In the
popular Maischberger talkshow on Wednesday night, the TV presenter Micky
Beisenherz jokingly speculated whether Heinrich XIII used the same stylist as
Alexander Gauland, the Anglophile former co-leader of the far-right Alternative
für Deutschland (AfD). Even when he tried to take the story seriously,
Beisenherz struggled: “If I read the news at the moment then I’m quite glad the
army doesn’t have any ammunition left,” he quipped.
Talking up
the farcical characteristics of the wannabe coup leaders was also in the
interest of the AfD, however, whose former member of parliament and active
judge Birgit Malsack-Winkemann the plotters had designated as Germany’s future
justice minister. “A coup with 50 pensioners?” tweeted far-right MP Petr
Bystron. “They’d struggle to take over the town hall of San Marino.”
The Left
party delegate Martina Renner, a specialist on far-right terror, criticised the
fact that police had apparently informed selected members of the press in
advance of Wednesday’s raids to ensure maximum coverage. “The infos had been
leaked so widely that it came across as a PR job,” Renner said.
The head of
Germany’s domestic intelligence, the federal office for the protection of the
constitution, said that while Wednesday’s raids had been preventative, the
group’s plans for a bloody coup attempt had been serious.
“Overall,
Germany’s security agencies were in control of the situation at all times,”
said Thomas Haldenwang. “But if it had been up to this group, then the threat
was already quite real.”
In a video
uploaded on 27 November, one of the plotters had spoken of an “epochal
upheaval” that would take place “in the coming weeks, hopefully before
Christmas”.
The group’s
plans had recently become more concrete and they had begun to acquire weapons,
Haldenwang added: “The affinity to weapons is very high. There are legal and
illegal weapons”. Münch said weapons had been seized in 50 out of 150
properties searched, but declined to specify what kind of arsenal his
investigators had discovered.
Amid the
smirking about cravatted aristocrats, some of the plotters’ links to the
military have raised genuine alarm bells. The man whom prosecutors described as
the head of the group’s “military arm”, Rüdiger von Pescatore, had once been a
commander at paratrooper battalion 251, the elite fighting force that was later
submerged into the Special Operations Forces Command (KSK).
One other
suspect arrested on Wednesday was at that point still a sergeant tasked with
logistics at the KSK, leading to a raid on his office at the special forces
barracks in the south-western town of Calw. A spokesperson for the defence
ministry on Wednesday did not clarify whether the man’s position in the
military unit allowed him access to munitions depots.
The KSK has
been the source of a steady stream of far-right scandals in recent years,
leading to calls for it to be disbanded. In 2020, a KSK company was dissolved
after police seized weapons and ammunition during a raid on the property of one
of its soldiers in the eastern state of Saxony.
In 2020,
Germany’s defence ministry confirmed reports that 60,000 rounds of ammunition
had gone missing from its stocks over the previous 10 years.
Even if the
group of plotters around Heinrich XIII would in all likelihood have failed to
pull off their fantasies of toppling Germany’s democratic order, the risk of
serious bloodshed was credible.
In the
former member of parliament Malsack-Winkemann, they allegedly had a
co-conspirator who would have been familiar with the security arrangements of
the Bundestag and retained an access pass for former MPs.
“A coup d’état
may be very unlikely,” said Miro Dittrich, an expert in rightwing extremism, in
an interview with newspaper die Zeit. “But since the network very likely had
access to guns, it is at least realistic to assume a serious threat to human
lives. There would certainly have been deaths.”
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