The Prince, the Plot and a Long-Lost Reich
Prince Heinrich XIII was arrested this week as the
suspected ringleader of a plan to overthrow the German government. Nostalgic
for an imperial past, he embraced far-right conspiracy theories.
Erika
SolomonKatrin Bennhold
By Erika
Solomon and Katrin Bennhold
Erika Solomon traveled to Bad Lobenstein, a spa town
about three hours south of Berlin, to report this story. Katrin Bennhold, who
has written extensively on the far right in Germany, reported from Berlin.
Dec. 11,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/11/world/europe/germany-prince-heinrich-xiii.html
The
crenelated hunting lodge of Prince Heinrich XIII of Reuss sits atop a steep
hill, looking out over homes laced with snow and Christmas lights in Bad
Lobenstein. Popular with the local mayor and many nearby villagers, the prince
spent his weekends in the spa town, giving an aristocratic flair to this sleepy
corner of rural eastern Germany.
But there
was a darker side to his idyll.
Heinrich
XIII, prosecutors and intelligence officials say, also used his lodge to host
meetings where he and a band of co-conspirators plotted to overthrow of the
German government and execute the chancellor. In the basement, the group stored
weapons and explosives. In the forest that sloped beneath the lodge, they
sometimes held target practice.
This week
the Waidmannsheil lodge, a three-hour drive south of Berlin in the state of
Thuringia, was one of 150 targets raided by security forces in one of postwar
Germany’s biggest counterterrorist operations. By Friday, 23 members of the
cell had been detained across 11 German states and another 31 placed under
investigation. The police discovered troves of arms and military equipment as
well as a list of 18 politicians and journalists deemed to be enemies.
Prince
Heinrich XIII, 71, a well-off descendant of a 700-year-old noble family, may
seem an unlikely ringleader of such a terrorist plot. But, prosecutors say, he
was designated by his co-conspirators to become head of state in a post-coup
regime.
Nostalgic
for the pre-1918 German empire, when his ancestors reigned over a state in
eastern Germany, he had openly embraced a conspiracy theory that has gained
momentum in far-right circles: that Germany’s postwar republic is not a
sovereign country but a corporation set up by the Allies after World War II.
Followers
of this conspiracy theory call themselves Reichsbürger, or Citizens of the Reich.
And there are a lot of them in southeastern Thuringia, the state where the
Nazis first won power locally more than 90 years ago, before going on to
establish the Third Reich.
Today the
state’s biggest political force is the far-right Alternative for Germany party,
or AfD — one of whose former lawmakers was arrested as part of the prince’s
alleged plot this week.
“The AfD is
increasingly becoming the parliamentary arm of militant far-right extremists,”
said Stephen Kramer, the head of domestic intelligence in the state of
Thuringia.
But it is
the Reichsbürger who have brought Bad Lobenstein the most notoriety, to the
chagrin of local hoteliers and vintners seeking to attract tourists to the
area, where stone buildings and medieval church spires dot rolling landscapes
of pine forests and lakes.
“They keep
us pretty busy,” said Andree Burkhardt, a local councilman. “But I could never
have imagined we had a scene here that was that militant.”
Whenever
Mr. Burkhardt and his fellow council members set up a booth at the local market
to hear locals’ concerns, they end up facing a stream of verbal abuse from
people insisting he is working for a country that does not exist.
“They yell
at us and say: ‘We are not Germans. We are not in a real German state! We are
just a branch of a GmBH!’” he said, referring to the German acronym for a
limited liability company.
But the
Reichsbürger seemed like only a local nuisance until Heinrich XIII appeared on
the scene.
The prince
pursued his goal of restoring Germany’s imperial Reich on multiple fronts, and
in a way that almost seemed like he believed his fantasy realm already existed.
The editor
of Bad Lobenstein’s local newspaper, Peter Hagen, first learned that the
village had a prince in April 2021, when residents started telling him about
strange campaign posters plastered on the streets beneath the Waidmannsheil
lodge, urging residents to run for elections with the “Reuss election
commission.”
Mr. Hagen
grew more suspicious this past summer after he followed Heinrich XIII and
another local Reichsbürger figure to a municipal office, which the mayor at the
time had allowed them to use for a lecture called “An information event on the
BRD GmbH” — an acronym for the Federal Republic of Germany, Incorporated.
The title
clearly implied a connection to Reichsbürger beliefs. But when Mr. Hagen
arrived, the organizers refused to begin their meeting, and he was not able to
listen to the lecture.
A sense of
unease in Bad Lobenstein began to grow in July, when a letter arrived in
people’s mailboxes. It was punctuated with exclamation points and capital
letters, urging them to use a website to register for citizenship under the
House of Reuss. (Noble titles were abolished after World War I, but many
erstwhile royal families avidly track their lineage.)
“Do you
also have the feeling that something in this country isn’t right?” the letter
read. “Did you know that you actually are not in possession of any citizenship,
that you are actually stateless and possess no rights?”
Bad
Lobenstein is home to 6,000 people, and some say it feels more like a village
than a town. Everyone knows each other, and the only cafe there sells out of
pastries and coffee by noon. Within hours of receiving the letter, Mr.
Burkhardt, the local councilman, realized he was not the only one who received
it — everyone had.
He spoke to
Mr. Hagen, and after trading what they had seen or heard, Mr. Burkhardt began
to feel uneasy. “I thought: Maybe we should have this looked into. So we
actually reported it to the domestic intelligence agency. They told us: ‘We’re
on the case.’ And I think honestly, they took it more seriously than I did.”
Intelligence
officials had been watching the prince since the fall of 2021, and what they
were discovering was far more sinister: The group of co-conspirators around
Heinrich XIII included current and former soldiers from the elite special
forces, police officers, army reservists, and others with links to the military
who had worked out concrete plans and even prospective dates for a coup,
officials said.
Already
twice this year the group appeared ready to act — once in mid-March and once in
September, putting security agencies on high alert, but each time they
postponed, intelligence officials said.
The prince
recruited support not only in far-right circles close to the military. He also
sought allies among fellow aristocrats, traveling to Austria and Switzerland to
court German-speaking nobility for donations to finance his plot, officials
familiar with his travels said. With the money he collected, his group bought
satellite phones to communicate off the grid during and after the planned coup.
The phones were later found at the lodge during the raid.
Heinrich
XIII also made contact with Russian diplomats, aided by a younger Russian
girlfriend, who has only been identified by prosecutors as Vitalia B. Several
times, she facilitated meetings, though prosecutors say they had no evidence of
a Russian response.
It is
unclear when and how Heinrich XIII was first radicalized, intelligence
officials say. He had been living in the wealthy Westend suburb of Frankfurt,
where he worked as a real estate broker and consultant.
By the time
he started spending regular weekends in Bad Lobenstein last year, he was
already deep inside the Reichsbürger movement. But his antisemitic tendencies
and interest in conspiracy theories are well documented.
In January
2019, he gave a lecture at the WorldWebForum in Zurich, Switzerland, entitled,
“Experience the rise and fall of the blue-blooded elite.” In the 15-minute
speech, he railed against the Rothschild family and claimed World War I was
forced on the German kaiser by international financial interests — both common
antisemitic dog whistles — insisting that modern democratic Germany was just an
illusion.
“Ever since
Germany surrendered on the 8th of May, Germany has never been sovereign again,”
Prince Heinrich XIII said in his speech, referring to the day of its defeat in
World War II. “It was made into an administrative structure of the allies in
the so-called united economy entity, Federal Republic of Germany — in other
words a commercial structure.”
It was
speeches like this that began to alienate him from relatives of the House of
Reuss. The head of the Reuss family, a distant cousin who, like all male heirs
to the Reuss throne, is also named Heinrich, called him “a confused old man”
and pointed out that even if his coup had been successful, he was only 17th in
line for the throne.
“That means
16 of us would have to die before it is his turn,” he said, adding that what
had propelled his distant cousin into his world of conspiracy were likely years
of embitterment with the German courts.
After
German reunification, Heinrich XIII spent years fighting legal battles to
regain ownership of family manors and lodges that had been nationalized in the
former Communist East Germany. “He never got any land restitutions,” the head
of the Reuss family said, though the prince did manage to get back some of his
family’s furniture and art.
Ultimately,
Heinrich XIII had to buy back the lodge, ornately decorated with its carved
stone boars and a gothic-looking tower.
Many in
this far-flung town of former Communist East Germany share his sense of
nostalgia — albeit for a very different kind of past.
Mr.
Burkhardt said he was disturbed by how many local sympathizers of Reichsbürger
beliefs expressed a longing for the days of Communist Germany and disdained the
current German government, which is discredited in their eyes.
One local
shopkeeper, who declined to provide her name, said she liked the prince — that
he seemed “noble.” She was unsure whether the Reichsbürger plot to use violence
was right or not. “But I think a lot of us here have this feeling,” she said.
“It’s that, well — something here has to happen.”
Such
sentiment has grown stronger since the pandemic, when conspiracy theories began
to mushroom. Now, facing an energy crisis and the crushing blow of inflation,
bitterness in Germany’s poorer eastern regions is growing, and the governing
elites can be an easy target.
Mr.
Burkhardt did not have any firm estimates for how many people in town were
active supporters of the Reichsbürger movement, but it was enough, he said, to
make the place restless.
This week’s
raid, he said, was like a reckoning.
“It was
about time,” Mr. Burkhardt said.
Christopher
F. Schuetze contributed reporting from Berlin.
Katrin
Bennhold is the Berlin bureau chief. A former Nieman fellow at Harvard
University, she previously reported from London and Paris, covering a range of
topics from the rise of populism to gender. @kbennhold • Facebook



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