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German Coup-d'etat & Assassination Plot! Angela Merkel & Cabinet were to be shot by own COMMANDOS! NAZI is back!

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https://www.rt.com/news/443662-german-army-secret-extermist-network/








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Day X: Germany's far-right commandos reportedly plotted to kill top politicians when order 'falls'
Published time: 11 Nov, 2018 09:23 Edited time: 11 Nov, 2018 09:24
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A far-right underground network made up of members of Germany's elite commando force and military veterans planned to kill top politicians upon the collapse of order in the country, a sensational media report claims.
German police have reportedly uncovered a clandestine far-right network which allegedly had "concrete plans" for what they called "Day X" – the moment when Germany's civil order would collapse, Focus magazine reported. The harrowing plan included bringing "unwanted" political figures to a remote place and killing them en masse.

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Bundeswehr breakdown: What’s gone wrong for Germany’s army?
The names of people on the group's "hit list" have yet to be established, but it is thought that Dietmar Bartsch, head of the Left Party's parliamentary group, was one of those to be taken out.
The far-right underground network is said to include members of the KSK, the German army's elite special operations unit, along with military and law enforcement veterans. Thoroughly preparing for "Day X," they had already created secret weapons and ammunition depots, as well as fuel stores.
Infiltrating the secretive group would have been impossible without one of its leaders who happened to be "the only trustworthy source of information" for MAD, the German military intelligence service, according to Focus.
Ironically, a senior officer within the very same service did his utmost to hamper the investigation. A 42-year-old lieutenant colonel from the military intelligence, whose name remains unknown, was charged with leaking sensitive information about the probe to some contacts within the German army, warning them about police searches in advance.
As the probe grew larger, investigators also stumbled on a loose association of people known as survivalists in Germany.
Usually dismissed as conspiracy theorists readying themselves for all sorts of apocalyptic crises, many survivalist groups do have links to far-right extremists and the so-called "Reich citizens" – nationalists who don't recognize modern democratic Germany and seek the restoration of the old German Reich.




Another KSK officer identified as Andre S. was named as an administrator of a number of online survivalist groups, which were frequented by some members of German neo-Nazi factions. The man denied being a neo-Nazi and the MAD ultimately concluded he was not an extremist, Die Welt reports.
German officials have been conspicuously tight-lipped about anything linked to the information about the alleged secret network. The military refused to comment on possible links between KSK officers and controversial survivalist groups.
Germany has been facing some unnerving developments within both its armed forces and society for quite some time. Last year, the Bundeswehr found itself in the crosshairs as numerous Wehrmacht memorabilia and Nazi-era artifacts were discovered inside several barracks.




These included posters glorifying Nazi soldiers, as well as distinctive German steel helmets and replicas of the Wehrmacht's standard-issue weapons. On the heels of that uncomfortable revelation, Defense Minister Ursula von der Leyen promised to scrutinize the army ranks "from recruits to generals, from instructors to the minister."
Meanwhile, extremists within the military are far from the only source of concern for Berlin. A January report by Focus magazine suggested that the number of the far-right 'Reich citizens' grew to almost 16,000 members and they apparently started preparing for their own "Day X" by creating an armed wing.
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https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/7705658/german-sas-neo-nazi-terror-plot-exposed/

DEATH SQUADS CONSPIRACY Secret army of 200 German SAS in neo-Nazi terror plot to slaughter politicians and immigrants
Authorities have smashed a plot by serving and former neo-Nazi members of the country’s special forces to wreak havoc on 'Day X'
Exclusive
By Neil Syson
10th November 2018, 12:01 am
Updated: 10th November 2018, 8:13 am
A SECRET army of 200 elite soldiers planned to slaughter politicians and immigrants in Germany, it is revealed today.
Authorities have smashed the plot by serving and former neo-Nazi members of the country’s special forces to wreak havoc on “Day X”.
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A secret army of German SAS soldiers was conspiring to carry out a neo-Nazi terror plot. Pictured, German special forces

The sensational conspiracy is uncovered in a seven-page report by Berlin news weekly Focus.
The breakaway group of the Bundeswehr’s KSK — the equivalent to the SAS — aimed to kill Green Party leader Claudia Roth, foreign minister Heiko Mass and former president Joachim Gauck.
Death squads planned to lure them and other left-wingers to remote locations and assassinate them.
Leaders of asylum seeker groups blamed for terrorism, rapes and social unrest were also in their sights.
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The breakaway group planned to lure politicians to remote locations and assassinate them
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The logo of Kommando Spezialkräfte KSK - Germany's special forces
Getty - Contributor
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Angela Merkel attends the commemoration ceremony of the victims of the 80th Anniversary of the Night of Broken Glass on 9 November
The group’s numbers had swelled as Chancellor Angela Merkel opened the door in 2015 to a million refugees.
The report says: “Numerous interrogations paint a picture of a conspiratorial force that is not supposed to shy away from the killing of political opponents.”
The warriors had planned Day X for when law and order collapsed - which they believed was “imminent”.
Focus reports police at first believed talk of the plot was a beer-fuelled fantasy.
But a former Air Force major broke under interrogation last year to reveal all.
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Training footage of the German Special forces- KSK Kommando Spezialkräfte

EPA
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The German Chancellor speaks during a commemoration event at the synagogue Rykestrasse in Berlin 80 years after the Kristallnacht
Getty Images - Getty
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People pulling suitcases arrive at the Central Registration Office for Asylum Seekers in Berlin in March 2015
PA:Press Association
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Former German President Joachim Gauck in May 2016
Getty - Contributor
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The German Green party's Claudia Roth chats with Chancellor Angela Merkel on February 1, 2018
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The authorities were searching for stockpiles of weapons, ammunition, food and petrol hidden at training camps on the borders with Austria and Switzerland.

The coup plotters belonged to an organisation named Uniter, founded in 1996 for the welfare of special forces soldiers following tours in Afghanistan and Africa.

It has denied any knowledge of the group.


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https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/10/...ry-far-right-extremists-terror-plot-nazi.html

Pro-Nazi Soldiers in German Army Raise Alarm
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Tank soldiers at a training area in Grafenwöhr, Germany. Starting in July, all applicants seeking to join the military will have to undergo a security check aimed at weeding out potential extremists.CreditCreditChristof Stache/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
By Melissa Eddy
  • May 10, 2017

BERLIN — It started with an investigation into a suspected terrorist plot by an army soldier aimed at top government officials. But it quickly uncovered a larger problem.
Military police searching through barracks turned up Nazi-era military memorabilia that revealed a much broader presence of far-right extremists in the German Army’s ranks, something commanders are now accused of having long ignored.
They are currently investigating 275 cases involving accusations of racism or far-right extremism stretching back six years, according to the Defense Ministry. The number represents a small minority in a force of nearly 180,000. But nearly 70 percent of cases have emerged in the last year and a half, pointing to an accelerating problem that German military authorities are only now scrambling to address.
“In the past, individual cases were always examined, but it wasn’t seen or understood that these cases are not isolated, but there are networks and connections, also to extremists on the outside of the armed forces,” said Christine Buchholz, a member of Parliament from the opposition Left party.
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“Now it is glaringly obvious to everyone that this problem has existed for a long time and poses an immediate threat to people,” she added.
The revelations, in the middle of an election year, have set off sniping between the civilian and military authorities bordering on scandal. They have also added a disturbing new dimension to Germany’s effort to address a surge of extremist activity since the country took in nearly one million refugees in 2015.

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With Europe facing a host of challenges — including populism and the propaganda machine of President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia — the investigation has revived questions about whether Germany can step beyond the shadow of its Nazi past and become a “normal” country, one that assumes a fuller leadership role on the Continent, including a military one.
In particular, the widening scandal has revived concerns about Germany’s shift to a volunteer force, which began in 2011. That step, some have warned, could narrow the ranks to youths susceptible to Nazi nostalgia, or to other extremists looking for free training and access to guns and ammunition in a country with strict weapons laws.
Starting in July, all applicants seeking to join the military will have to undergo a security check aimed at weeding out potential extremists. But that raises questions about how to handle those currently serving, at a time when the military is struggling to attract recruits.
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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/15/...ckId=signature-journalism-vi&imp_id=107435371
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Last week, the inspector general ordered a search of all military installations for displays of souvenirs or images glorifying the Nazi-era military, the Wehrmacht.
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So when is fucking SAF Commando doing this for Pee Sai? Stand up for Pee Sai pse!
 
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