Neal Ascherson

Ascherson is a deeply unpleasant rogue; a supercilious Marxist patter merchant. The mug shot below shows enough about him. Being a protégé of Eric Hobsbawm, a Jew with an ugly name, an ugly face and an ugly mind confirms the point.

He had no compunction when it came to abusing men of the Parachute Regiment serving in Ireland - see  3 PARA but he has a much more relaxed view of his peculiar friends, the vicious thugs who were the Baader-Meinhof Group. Of course they were Marxists too. Ascherson omits to mention that they murdered Alfred Herrhausen, the boss of Deutsche Bank  on behalf of the Stasi, the East German successors to the Gestapo. Nor does he mention that he is a murderer in the view of the English law. For that see his admission at #Sergeant Blackman Gets Support From A Surprising Source

UPDATE 2022:-
Ascherson turned out to be a journalist, a foreign correspondent with The Guardian. It gave him a very sympathetic write up at Neal Ascherson at 90. It tells us that a lot of men there had intelligence backgrounds. He is still an arrogant arsehole.

Neal Ascherson ex Wiki

Background
Ascherson was born in Edinburgh on 5 October 1932.[1] He was educated at Eton and King's College, Cambridge, where he read history and graduated with a triple starred first degree. The historian Eric Hobsbawm was his tutor at Cambridge and described Ascherson as "perhaps the most brilliant student I ever had. I didn't really teach him much, I just let him get on with it."[1] He is a member of the semi-secretive Cambridge Apostles society, a debating club largely reserved for the brightest students.

Career
After graduating he declined offers to pursue an academic career.[1] Instead, he chose a career in journalism, first at The Manchester Guardian and then at The Scotsman (1959–1960), The Observer (1960–1990) and The Independent on Sunday (1990–1998). He contributed scripts for the documentary series The World at War (1973–74) and The Cold War (1998). He has also been a regular contributor to the London Review of Books.

Ascherson has lectured and written extensively about Polish and Eastern Europe affairs.[2][3]

As of 2016 Ascherson is a Visiting Professor at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London.[4] He has been editor of Public Archaeology, an academic journal associated with UCL devoted to CRM and public archaeology issues and developments, since its inception in 1999.[5]

In 1991 Ascherson was awarded an honorary degree from the Open University as Doctor of the University.[6]On St Andrew's Day 2011 at their Anniversary Meeting the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland elected Ascherson an Honorary Fellow.

Personal life
Neal Ascherson's first wife was Corinna Adam; the couple first met at Cambridge University and married in 1958. They had two daughters together before separating in 1974. The couple divorced in 1982.[7] Corinna Ascherson, also a journalist, died in March 2012.[7][8] In 1984, he married his second wife, the journalist Isabel Hilton.[1] The couple currently live in London and have two (now adult) children, Iona and Alexander. His aunt was the British actress Renée Ascherson.[9]

 

Cambridge Apostles ex Wiki
The Cambridge Apostles is an intellectual society at the University of Cambridge founded in 1820 by George Tomlinson, a Cambridge student who went on to become the first Bishop of Gibraltar.[1]

The origin of the Apostles' nickname dates from the number, twelve, of their founders. Membership consists largely of undergraduates, though there have been graduate student members, and members who already hold university and college posts. The society traditionally drew most of its members from Christ's, St John's, Jesus, Trinity and King's Colleges.

 

Neal Ascherson On 3 PARA In Ireland
‘This book is written in anger,’ the author begins. ‘Anger at previous attempts to portray the British soldier. Anger at the violence and the hatred that became part of a way of life. Anger at the misrepresentation of the facts ...’

And here, at the very outset, as it seems to me, the writer starts to lose his way among his own emotions. Northern Ireland offers an infinity of occasions for anger, as Clarke knows better than most of us: he was a subaltern in the Parachute Regiment on two particularly foul spells of duty, in Belfast (Shankill Road, Crumlin Road, the Ardoyne) during 1973, and at Crossmaglen in South Armagh in 1976. These are the subject of his book. But anger is not really its dominant emotion, which is rather a seething mixture of remorse, divided moral loyalties and sheer confusion. Clarke loved or grew to love his ‘toms’, the very young men of 3 Para whom he commanded and some of whom never returned from Ulster. But under the fearful stress of their task, they and he developed an ethic of considerable – not total – savagery and callousness which no ‘civilised’ society can accept. As he says, the Parachute Regiment in Northern Ireland was ‘both famous and infamous, praised and hated’. They did brave things, but also cruel things which this ‘civilised’ society still with a fair measure of success pretends did not happen and do not happen. It is that pretence, that stifling and complacent agreement not to bring out into the open and confront the moral price of the British presence in Northern Ireland, which renders ex-Lieutenant Clarke so desperate. Nobody wants to hear this sort of confession, which means that nobody will grant him and his men absolution.

There are no grand atrocities in this book. Clarke was not present at ‘Bloody Sunday’ in Derry, for example, and beyond quoting some of the regiment’s own lurid myths can shed no light on what the Paras did or didn’t do that day. He is writing about ‘routine stuff’, about how the Paras behaved and talked on night patrols in the Ardoyne, on raids against Loyalist drinking-clubs, in rain-drenched hiding-places among the South Armagh hills, among hostile crowds when the flames were rising and the enemy snipers were beginning to find their targets. It is the brutality and ugliness of that routine, still being followed now as you read, that makes this book important. This is what nobody wants to know.

When an IRA gunman is wounded and captured, they let him bleed to death. When they pull in suspects, they beat them up, quickly and almost casually: the rougher things are done at a higher level by the people who come and take the suspects away for proper interrogation. When they are off duty, the ‘toms’ improve the hour by sticking pins and razor blades into ‘baton rounds’ and filing bullets down into expanding ‘dum-dums’ (something British soldiers have done ever since the invention of the rifle). When they are fired on from the territory of the Republic, on the South Armagh border, they fire back with vigour. A plastic bullet is aimed at the groin, if the aimer has time, and a woman caught in a street round-up on a dangerous night will not be handled or addressed with the decorum attributed to English gentlemen. And so on, and so forth. Clarke reconstructs his own thoughts: ‘I was really quite a nice guy before I came out here ... Build an outer casing round your emotions, enjoy the sense of power, revel in the excitement of the chase.’

This is what the military used to call ‘action in support of the civil power’. Men trained to fight and kill, in the full-blooded way that they fought and killed at Goose Green last year, are restrained by a pack of ‘yellow cards’ and ‘white cards’ prescribing how and when they may open fire or carry out arrests. Political considerations, not the simple question of how best to find and destroy the enemy, govern their deployment and their actions. They are supposed to co-operate with the Royal Ulster Constabulary, a force which 3 Para, at least, seems to have despised and mistrusted. The enemy moves almost freely about the ghettos, enjoying the initiative which these restrictions – in the view of the average ‘tom’ – confer on him. He is seldom encountered. Weeks of tension pass between the crazy, deafening seconds of catharsis which are a ‘contact’. This is the hardest kind of soldiering, in which frustration, hatred and fear build up intolerably. ‘The whole camp is praying for a contact. For an opportunity to shoot at anything on the street, pump lead into any living thing and watch the blood flow ... A few kills would be nice at this stage, good for morale ...’

There is a cycle in morale, when soldiers find themselves in situations like this. Brutality becomes more common at a late phase in the cycle, a sign of fraying nerves and – especially – of fear. If troops are not replaced and rotated in time, the final stage is a sort of paralysis: men become obsessed with their collective safety, as a group unwilling to run risks, and much more prone to ‘shoot first and ask questions afterwards’. Clarke’s book suggests, however, that the Paras suffered not only from this sort of process but from jealousy about their reputation as the hardest of ‘hard men’.

In a general way, the supremacy of the heroes in red berets was in decline across the world during the Seventies. Their original purpose of airborne landings long obsolete, parachutists had become in many countries the Praetorian Guard against internal unrest or colonial defiance. But as time passed, marine commando units became a more suitable and flexible strike force for international crises, while the growth of terrorism led in turn to the rise of a very different sort of repressive élite – the SAS, or the Latin American death squads – to deal with domestic subversion. The Paras, once so spectacular and so feared, faced the awful prospect of being counted as just one more line infantry regiment. There are traces of this sort of anxiety in Contact, when Clarke discharges his feelings about the SAS: ‘If that’s the élite, then what the fuck must the rest of us be like? Cowboys, the lot of them; there are some guys I’ve recognised who have failed our selection tests, so how did they get into the SAS? I wouldn’t give them the time of day ... they are a joke.’ Or the Marines: ‘Professionally inept and social dwarves’.

These are, of course, reconstructed feelings: Clarke does not indicate that he kept a diary in Northern Ireland. It may be that the passage was retrieved from memory after the Special Air Service captured television at the Iranian Embassy and made themselves Mrs Thatcher’s own Household Cavalry. This sort of rivalry between corps and regiments, to say nothing of services, is less trivial than it may seem. History is occasionally decided by it. One would like to know how the balance of self-esteem stands between SAS, Marine commandos and Paras after the Falklands war.

Clarke describes in detail the nastiness and toil of the soldier’s lot in Northern Ireland. He may be lying up in some hidden observation post, excreting into plastic bags, eating cold food out of tins, with the only sound the whir of the video focused on some doorway across the street. He may be trudging at night through the blackthorn hedges of South Armagh, where the spikes tear denims and flesh and where the bushes are often threaded with trip-wires leading to booby-traps. He may deliberately place himself near a bomb, affecting not to know it is there so that the IRA will be tempted back to their own firing-point – and into the sights of British snipers. He may be crammed for days at a time into some fortlet of corrugated iron and sandbags, staring into the darkness through night-vision equipment or sleeping on a cement floor littered with his own comrades. He is overstretched: this book is full of the yearning for sleep, of sketches of a company commander who is so tired that he closes his eyes and falls out of his Land Rover several times a week.

This is Ulster seen through a blockhouse slit. Contact is not a political book. Clarke observes in his introduction that ‘Northern Ireland is a catalogue of religious mistakes, political mistakes and military mistakes,’ but he has no urge to suggest how these mistakes might be corrected or reduced. He is withering about any Irish policy involving persuasion or conciliation.

They’ve been bullshitting us again with crap about how we’re winning the war ... ‘Get to know your local community.’ Bullshit. Hearts and minds, comes the never-ending cry from the politicians. Get a fucking rifle in your hand and get out here, comes the never-ending reply from the toms on the streets.

Much of the book is written in this vein; this sort of language. ‘Hearts and minds. Be nice, encourage the talk, something might slip out. The tea served out of dirty, cracked mugs tastes like dishwater and there have been instances of ground glass being mixed with the sugar. What a place this is ...’

The tom’s view of Ireland, as ventriloquised here by Clarke, is of an inverted pyramid. The apex is the private soldier, squeezed down into the Irish mire by the weight of imbecile company commanders under pig-ignorant battalion commanders under four-letter-word Tactical Headquarters under cowardly, self-seeking politicians in Belfast and London. Horrible journalists pad around the scene, licking their lips over blood and snarling at the honest soldier doing his duty.

‘Mire’ is very much a euphemism for what the Paras think of the Irish, if Clarke is to be believed. They make, in the first place, almost no distinction whatever between ‘Loyalist’ and ‘Republican’: they are all treacherous, unwashed ghetto Irish who will drop a tom with a bullet if they get the chance. The very accent came to inflame Clarke’s nerves, whether heard on the Shankill Road or in the Ardoyne, in the mouth of UDA supporter as of IRA supporter. No discrimination between creeds or political beliefs here. Clarke and his soldiers loathed the lot of them, and their men of God in particular. The Belfast priest who tied tags of various colours to the churchyard railings to indicate the position of army patrols was not regarded as unusual. So strong, in fact, was this undifferentiated hatred that Clarke makes the most striking mistake one could commit in any account of the Belfast scene: he mixes up the two religions. We read a description of an interview with ‘the local priest’, a meeting which is ‘the most disliked chore in the base’, in which the churchman is addressed throughout in the dialogue as ‘Father’. This apparent Papist is made to drone on about how peace-loving and warm-hearted his flock are, but then to add: ‘Now with the Catholics, it’s different of course. They are born with a violent nature. They must be stopped, and the only way is for you to go in and shoot the ringleaders ...’ Clarke should be grateful that the readers at Secker and Warburg missed this contradiction. It tells a great deal.

At one moment, the toms are crashing through thirty doors in a ghetto street. The filth and stink they find beyond the doors seems to enrage them even more than the abuse. At another time, it is a Loyalist drinking-club the Paras are raiding: heads are broken and the stock of booze smashed as the troops deliberately provoke a brawl. There might be a way of entering and searching which didn’t end in bloody faces, broken mirrors and men clubbed to the ground with batons. But the Paras do it the other way. They want a fight. They have plenty of accumulated hate and fear to unload. They make sure that the Irish swing a fist at them, so they can start hitting back. Doesn’t the ‘yellow card’ mean that ‘whatever happens,’ the enemy ‘always fire first’? The toms emerge a few hours later pleasantly tired and feeling better.

The Paras may have been harder than some units in Northern Ireland, less brutal than others. It is difficult to know. But Clarke’s book is probably a close enough description of what goes on and what soldiers feel, and there is nothing in it to offer any hope that matters in Northern Ireland will get better rather than worse. By implication, the book says a good deal about the determination of the Provisionals, and much more about the atmosphere of fear and resentment they need to move about in. To maintain that atmosphere, the IRA requires just about the level of British harshness registered in this book: not too much (that would lead to panic and betrayals), and not too little (that would undermine the community’s motivation). So Clarke is really describing a symbiosis between gunman and soldier, a complementary relationship which has proved very durable. If there is any professional ‘respect’ for one adversary from the other, Clarke certainly doesn’t record it. But it is not difficult to see common ground of a withered kind. Gunman and soldier know that, unless some new factor enters the sum, neither can defeat the other. They agree in their fashion that there should be no distinction between Irishmen. They have no respect for the Northern Ireland Office. They might even agree that British troops should get out.

Clarke sees that even an urban guerrilla war can become a stable institution, out of which all kinds of people draw a livelihood.

We are here to create the news for a hundred poised pens and ready cameras. To provide a nation with its quota of violence, to give people a chance to shake their heads, others to organise marches, pressure-groups and all the other paraphernalia of a well-organised growing industry. Northern Ireland is an industry, providing reporters with the opportunities to further their already stagnant careers, for social workers to martyr themselves on the unsympathetic conscience of an unimaginative nation. An entertainment without interlude. To hell with the lot of you.

What he does not see is that the troops themselves are part of this growth industry. The military, and the police too, have used the Northern Ireland industry to produce all kinds of lessons and experiments useful to themselves. Nobody, after reading this book, could suppose that British troops want to remain in Northern Ireland. But neither could a reader deny that, however much the ‘toms’ hate the place, their own behaviour often ensures that they will be kept there.

 

Baader-Meinhof Group
The Baader-Meinhof group, a left-wing terrorist collective born of the student revolutions of the Sixties, terrorised West Germany with a series of bombings, assassinations and hijackings in the Seventies. On the eve of a new film about the movement,  Neal Ascherson - who met key members of the group as The Observer's correspondent in Germany at the time - reflects on the legacy of those turbulent years and the strange hold they had - and still have - on the national psyche

When I first met Ulrike Meinhof, before she took up the gun, I thought her tender and vulnerable. As The Observer's correspondent in Germany, I had gone to interview her in Hamburg for a left-wing view of the poverty and exploitation hidden behind the shiny 'economic miracle'. I found her in a suburban house, a nervous, pretty woman of 30 with two blonde little girls rolling round her feet.

At that time - it was 1964 - she was editing the political journal konkret, and already making a name as one of Germany's most eloquent columnists. Politically, she was a pacifist and committed to the nuclear disarmament campaign, like her strong-minded, idealistic foster mother, Renate Riemeck, who had adopted Meinhof and her sister after the death of their parents.

After the interview, we talked a bit. She was having trouble, she confessed, with the Socialist Students' League (SDS), which was trying to cast her out for lack of Marxist vigour. They despised her pacifism. 'They call me a peace-loving egg-pancake,' she said sadly. Both of us agreed that some sort of revolt was brewing, especially in the universities.

But neither of us guessed that three years later the SDS would lead a revolutionary upsurge which would shake the state's foundations. Least of all did I - or she - imagine that this shy, self-critical person would become an international symbol of violence when that upsurge weakened and she found herself leading the most feared terrorist group in Germany, responsible for 47 deaths.

In 1968, she left her husband and her good job, and moved to Berlin. I was living there, and a message came from Riemeck asking me through a mutual friend to 'keep an eye on Ulrike, because she'll be lonely'. I never got round to looking her up. But she was meeting far more exciting company: Andreas Baader and Gudrun Ensslin, who had already been convicted for setting fire to a department store ('the Vietnam experience').

Counselling girl delinquents, Ulrike became convinced that they were victims of the system who should be trained to fight and smash it, not to adapt to it. Soon afterwards, when Baader was re-arrested in 1970, Meinhof planned and took part in a daring shoot-out to rescue him and herself went underground.

Ensslin urged her to get rid of the children, both then still aged under 10. After first refusing, she gave in. They were spirited out of Germany and dumped in a hippy commune in Sicily. She did not see them again until they visited her in prison two years later.

Last weekend, the audience trickling out of Cologne's biggest cinema looked shattered. Earlier, as they waited to see the premiere of The Baader-Meinhof Complex, they had been in high spirits: the city's young, sparky, arthouse mob laughing and sipping white wine.

In the cinema, their happy mood drained away. Two-and-a-half hours later, as the credits began to roll, there was at first silence and then only quiet, stunned applause.

The film itself is powerful, showing the foul reality of urban guerrilla struggle and what it does to its victims and its perpetrators. But the myth of the Baader-Meinhof group is powerful too, still haunting German imaginations more than a generation later. The young people who see the film now were not born when it all happened. And yet the German past now intrigues them, in contrast to the deliberate deafness of their parents to their own recent history. Other films with a historical basis - Downfall and The Lives of Others - have pulled big attendances.

That Cologne audience, utterly opposed to terrorist violence, nonetheless felt a pang of sympathy with the protagonists. Thirty years ago, would they have turned away those terrorist boys and girls if they had come begging for shelter? Would they have called the police?

This film provides no easy answers. Many Germans seem to find it admirable, including - surprisingly - the children of some of the gang's victims. Others are outraged, seeing it as a glamorisation of terror. One right-wing critic said bitterly: 'It doesn't clear away the myth... It gives it a new foundation'.

The roots of the Baader-Meinhof group (the 'Red Army Faction' or RAF) were in the revolutionary student movement which swept West Berlin and West Germany between 1967 and 1969. While the movement acted mainly through mass demonstrations, permitting only 'symbolic counter-violence against objects', its rage against the American war in Vietnam ('genocide') was incandescent.

So was its hatred of the West German state, an economic triumph which had preserved suffocatingly authoritarian structures in the universities and not least in the police, trained to regard all protest as Communist subversion.

In West Berlin, I soon began to meet angry young militants who thought that the student movement should stop waving posters at the state and attack it physically. Events soon gave them force. I was there on 2 June 1967, at a demonstration against the Shah of Persia, when the police ran wild and shot dead the student Benno Ohnesorg. And I remember the tears of impotent fury and grief all around me when Rudi Dutschke, the Danton of the SDS, was gunned down by a hyped-up boy screaming 'Communist swine!'

So it seemed that there was already a war on. To take up arms against the imperialist killers, to act and fight, seemed to some like an ethical response.

One of these radicals was Andreas Baader, an unstable tearaway with devastating charisma and a taste for violence. Born in 1943, he had lost his father in the war and grew up a spoiled child bullying a household of women. As a teenager, he stole motorbikes, wrecked cars and enjoyed pub brawls. In 1963 he moved to West Berlin to avoid military service, became involved in the 'bohemian' political scene and acquired a taste for natty dressing unusual in that milieu. Here he met his true love, the extraordinary Gudrun Ensslin.

Daughter of a deeply serious and compassionate Lutheran minister in Swabia, herself highly intelligent and socially conscious, she spent a year at a Methodist college in America, where she was shocked into radical socialist politics.

Back in West Berlin, she became totally disillusioned with the ruling Social Democrats and with all conventional morality. In 1968 she met Baader, went fire-bombing stores with him and landed in jail. It was in prison that she met Ulrike Meinhof, who had come to interview her.

The culmination of that friendship was the 1970 springing of Andreas Baader. Afterwards the gang, now growing in numbers, went to Lebanon for military training with Palestinian guerrillas. Back in Germany, the shooting war began with a series of spectacular bank raids and clashes with the police, In May 1972 came lethal bomb attacks on American army bases, once accepted as West Germany's defence against Soviet invasion but now seen as integral to the hated Vietnam war. German prosecutors and right-wing newspaper offices were also targets.

By now, the 'Baader-Meinhof Gang' was obsessing West German politicians and dominating the media. There were deaths - American soldiers, German policemen and the first Red Army Faction victim: Petra Schelm. She was only one of many young women fighting in the group and leading its 'commandos'.

Around the group, there was soon a wide 'sympathiser' network of people who shared the RAF aims, even though they rejected their terrorist methods. Opinion polls showed that one in four West Germans under 30 felt 'a certain sympathy'. In liberal northern Germany, one in 10 was prepared to shelter a RAF fugitive.

Soon after the bombings, in June 1972, the police's luck changed. They cornered Andreas Baader and two of his comrades in a Hamburg garage; Baader was wounded and captured. A week later, Ensslin was caught in a Hamburg boutique. The ruthless Brigitte Mohnhaupt was arrested in Berlin and Meinhof was betrayed by her host in a Hanover flat.

Baader, Ensslin and Meinhof, with several other RAF fighters, ended up in a specially constructed super-prison at Stammheim, near Stuttgart. But meanwhile the 'second wave' RAF went into action. In April 1975, they stormed the West German embassy in Stockholm, took hostages and demanded the release of the Stammheim prisoners.

The siege ended in carnage and failure. The following month, the trial of the Stammheim three, plus Jan-Carl Raspe, began its chaotic and often farcical three-year course. But Meinhof did not see the end of it. Tormented by a sense of failure, and bullied for weakness by Baader and Ensslin, she hanged herself in May 1976.

Outside, the 'second wave' was preparing a new campaign, after a group had undergone training in South Yemen. And in 1977 they launched the crescendo of horror and tragedy which is now remembered as 'the German Autumn' - although it began in spring.

In April, the chief federal prosecutor, Siegfried Buback, and his bodyguard were killed by motorcycle gunmen (or possibly women) as their car waited at traffic lights. On 30 July, the banker Jürgen Ponto was fatally wounded by Brigitte Mohnhaupt and Christian Klar in a bungled kidnap attempt, meant to spring the Stammheim survivors. On 5 September, the gang successfully abducted Hanns-Martin Schleyer, chairman of the employers' federation, after killing his driver and escorts.

Again, they demanded the release of the prisoners and a plane to fly them to the Middle East. The government stalled. Mohnhaupt persuaded Palestinian militants to hijack a Lufthansa jet. It was done, but no country in the region would accept the plane, which eventually landed at Mogadishu in Somalia. There, on 17 October, it was stormed by German special forces and the passengers released.

Next morning, Baader, Ensslin and Raspe were found dead in their cells. The two men had apparently shot themselves with smuggled pistols; Ensslin had hanged herself. A fourth prisoner, Irmgard Möller, had stab wounds but survived.

Two days later, Schleyer was taken to a wood on the Dutch/German border and executed. Baader, Ensslin and Raspe were buried in Stuttgart among emotional crowds raising clenched fists. For years, the orthodoxy of the German far left insisted that they and Meinhof had been murdered in their cells. Some still believe it.

That is where the film ends. But the book by Stefan Aust on which it is based, a revised edition with the same title as the film, takes the story further. The Stammheim deaths were not quite the end of the RAF. Some of them took refuge in East Germany, where they were protected and given new identities by the Stasi. In the 1980s, another string of murders began, targeting mostly industrialists and bankers.

It was not until 1998 that the authorities received a bulletin announcing that the urban guerrilla movement was over. The communiqué ended with the words: 'The Revolution says: I was, I am, I will be'....

So why are they remembered so acutely, these intelligent young men and women who turned to terrorism? Why did that Cologne audience creep out into the autumn night looking as if they had been mugged? In Britain, such people would be regarded as mere criminals, their gun-slinging career not without glamour but their political ideas of no possible interest. In Germany, even 40 years on, it is different.

There is a whole shelf of older movies about Baader-Meinhof, most of them elegiac and to some degree defensive. The Baader-Meinhof Complex sets out neither to condemn or excuse. The method adopted by producer Bernd Eichinger (Oscar-nominated for his work on Downfall) is to throw at the viewer one astonishing scene after another without stringing them together into some psychological narrative. He calls this technique Fetzendramaturgie - the drama of fragments. You and I can put the fragments together into any pattern we please.

The main characters - Baader, Ensslin and Meinhof - are allowed to say what they actually did say , especially at the outset of their campaign. And what they said is now repeated with all the professional skill and force of some of Germany's best actors. And the result - an unnerving one - is that the arguments begin to convince.

Here sit these nice Cologners from a liberal, reunited, 21st-century Germany, safe inside the eurozone. And yet as they listen to Martina Gedeck as Ulrike Meinhof or Johanna Wokalek as Gudrun Ensslin, they find themselves tempted to agree that they had no alternative but to take up arms.

And then the logic leads down into darkness, into places where arguments are no longer about noble ends but about whether you can harden yourself to use terrible means. Meinhof relied much on words by Bertolt Brecht: 'If you could change the world at last/ What would be beneath you? .../ Sink in the dirt,/ Embrace the slaughterer./ But change the world; the world needs it.'

They certainly embraced the slaughterers. After those first seven years of urban guerrilla war, 47 people were dead, including most of the group's original members. They sank in the dirt: the murders, especially those in the final 'autumn', had a quality of forced viciousness about them, a revelry in blood, which is truly evil.

As for changing the world, they failed. All they achieved was to make West Germany a less tolerant, more paranoid society than it had been before. Laws passed in panic banned all 'radicals' (whatever that meant) from public service. Worst of all, the RAF terror campaign weakened the whole democratic left in Germany. The 'Wanted' posters, with faces crossed out in red as each was caught or killed, blazed on the walls of every police station, railway station, airport or frontier post. The 1968 visions of a new world of freedom, peace and fraternity were themselves driven underground.

In notes made in Stammheim, Meinhof tried to explain the RAF's mission. 'Nauseated by the... system, the total commercialisation and absolute mendacity... deeply disappointed by the actions of the student movement... they thought it essential to spread the idea of armed struggle.' They were not so blind, she went on, as to think that they would bring about revolution in Germany, or that they would not be killed and imprisoned. The point was to 'salvage historically the whole state of understanding attained by the movement of 1967/68; it was a case of not letting the struggle fall apart again.'

These are words with long echoes in the German past. Not really in the Nazi past, although many foreigners assume that the Baader-Meinhof gang were simply rebelling against the Nazi generation of their parents. Neither Stefan Aust's book nor Bernd Eichinger's film suggests that, and they are right not to. These echoes are from other places in German history: from the tradition of doomed struggle, fighting to the end in order to leave a message for the future.

This is about the poet Georg Büchner's failed revolution in the 1830s ('Peace to the cottages! War on the palaces!'). It is about Eugen Leviné, who led a Munich revolution in 1919 which he knew was hopeless and was shot for it ('We are all dead men on leave'). It is about the plotters against Hitler, who hoped not to survive but to atone ('For the sake of 10 righteous men, may the city be spared').

Those were all better causes than the RAF's. But the idea - the revolution as a message in a bottle, cast into the ocean from a drowning ship - still floats down into the present.

The book and the film have the same title. But they are very different artifacts. The book was originally published in 1985 by Stefan Aust, a Spiegel journalist who had known some of the gang before they went underground. He himself arranged the benevolent kidnap of Ulrike Meinhof's small daughters, when he discovered that the RAF had decided to dump them in a Palestinian orphanage.

Aust wrote a minutely detailed and closely researched account, which has now been brought up to date to take in new information from the Stasi files and elsewhere. It's especially good on the years at Stammheim, where the authorities committed every possible error, above all by keeping the prisoners in collective isolation as a group.

The film, directed by Uli Edel, is also minutely detailed. It's brilliant, it's fearsomely convincing. But then, because this is a film about the perpetrators and not the victims, the sheer power of the telling has upset some citizens. They ask: 'Whose side are you on?' The film-makers would retort that they are on no side, just telling it as it was.

Another criticism is that the RAF actors are so good-looking. Were they really so gorgeous? A few certainly were. Meinhof was more attractive than she seems here, while Ensslin - gauntly elegant - was less disco-sexy than Johanna Wokalek makes her. But the point about looks is political. One critic in Welt am Sonntag complained that the screen Baader and Ensslin were like Germany's answer to Bonnie and Clyde - a slander on both movies. But he went on to say that The Baader-Meinhof Complex 'brings to light a repressed truth about the allure of the RAF. Girls with guns are the ultimate desire and fear fantasy of a patriarchal, inhibited society.'

Meinhof would have agreed with that. So might Ensslin. A wonderful scene in the film shows her strutting naked in the Lebanese sun, jeering at shocked Palestinian recruits. 'What's the matter? Fucking and shooting; it's the same thing!'

In Europe's endless quest for true liberation, the RAF perished on the dirtiest and darkest of short cuts. They deserved to. But it was the same search.

· The Baader Meinhof Complex is released on 14 November

· A revised edition of The Baader-Meinhof Complex by Stefan Aust is published in paperback by Random House on 6 Nov

Red Army Faction: The main players

Andreas Baader

Elegantly dressed, charismatic and violent, Baader was one of the founder members of the Red Army Faction who developed a taste for radical politics after moving to west Berlin in 1963. He is played by Moritz Bleibtreu, who starred in the 1998 German film Run Lola Run and appeared in Steven Spielberg's 2005 film Munich

Ulrike Meinhof

The brilliant young political journalist who turned her back on pacifism to help found the RAF and embark on a campaign of bank robbery and arson. She is played by Martina Gedeck, best known for playing the female lead in the Oscar-winning Stasi film The Lives of Others. She also appeared in the Robert De Niro-directed historical drama The Good Shepherd

Gudrun Ensslin

The socially engaged daughter of a Lutheran minister, Ensslin became disillusioned with conventional politics and embraced the violent activism of her boyfriend, Andreas Baader, and the RAF, which she helped establish. She is played by Johanna Wokalek who won Best Actress at the Munich Film Festival for her role in the 2003 family drama Hierankl

Brigitte Mohnhaupt

Originally a member of the leftist Socialist Patients' Collective, Mohnhaupt became a leader of the second-generation RAF after the original leadership were imprisoned. She is played by Nadja Uhl, who was nominated for a German Film Award for her starring role in the 2005 tragicomedy Summer in Berlin

Petra Schelm

A committed RAF member who became a martyr for the group in 1971 when she was killed (according to some accounts, executed) following a shootout with police. She is played by Alexandra Maria Lara, who appeared as Hitler's secretary in the 2004 historical drama Downfall and last year played Joy Division singer Ian Curtis's mistress in Control

Rudi Dutschke

A left-wing student campaigner who split from the RAF founders before its inception. He survived an assassination attempt by a right-wing extremist in 1968. He is played by Sebastian Blomberg, who will appear in Wim Wenders's forthcoming film Palermo Shooting

 

Sergeant Blackman Gets Support From A Surprising Source [ 26 January 2016 ]
QUOTE
When the sudden, savage hurricane of firing had stopped, several bodies lay in the 'kill zone' on the forest floor. On closer inspection, the ambush party from 42 Commando Royal Marines found two of the enemy casualties alive but hideously wounded. The officer in charge was still a teenager.

 An Old Etonian and first-class scholar, he should have been at university but instead found himself 6,500 miles away on National Service in the Malayan jungle fighting a communist insurgency. 

By that day in 1952, frontline action in the tropics had already taught Second Lieutenant Neal Ascherson much about life. But this particular incident towards the end of his tour of duty was to provide him with one of the very hardest lessons of war. And it would leave a memory that haunts him to this day. 

'I went forward and found two men hideously wounded, unconscious but still just moving,' Ascherson writes in today's Times newspaper.

'One had his brains flowing out of his skull. The rib-cage of the other had been blown away so that his heart and lung were hanging out. I don't remember a moment's hesitation or doubt about what to do: I pointed my carbine and put them both out of their misery.........

Acting Colour Sergeant Alexander Blackman, a veteran of five tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, and a man described as a 'superb soldier' by his superiors, killed the wounded Taliban fighter with a bullet to the chest.

The incident was captured on video by one of Blackman's men. The video subsequently fell into the hands of the British police and Blackman was arrested........

In December 2016, the CCRC decided that there were no fewer than three grounds upon which the Blackman case was potentially unsafe and should be referred back to the Court of Appeal.........

He is also the author of a number of books, mainly on Eastern Europe, and still lectures on archaeology. He is as far from being a Right-wing reactionary as it is possible to be. No, Ascherson is an archetypal British liberal intellectual.
UNQUOTE
Neal Ascherson is an arrogant Marxist rogue who got this one right. Having been there makes a difference.

 

 

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Updated on 15/12/2022 21:03