# taz.de -- taz-Recherche auf Englisch: Hannibal's Shadow Army | |
> He is a head of a right-wing German nationwide underground network with | |
> direct connections to State Authorities. | |
Bild: What happened at the dark spots of German Federal Armed Forces? | |
This text was published in German language on November 16th, 2018. Due to | |
many requests, we hereby provide an english translation of the article. The | |
translation was done by [1][Daniel Zylbersztajn]. The original text can be | |
found [2][here]. | |
Der Original-Text auf Deutsch findet sich [3][hier]. | |
It is the 13th of September, 2017, a Wednesday, when an agent of the Secret | |
Service Unit of the German Federal Armed Forces (Bundeswehr) is paying | |
Andre S. a visit in the South Western German town of Sindelfingen, near | |
Stuttgart. It is not the first time they meet. S. is serving in the | |
Commando Unit of the German Special Forces Command (Kommando Spezialkräfte | |
– KSK) in Baden-Württemberg. He is amongst the best-trained soldiers of the | |
German Bundeswehr, an elite fighter. His extraordinary visitor today is a | |
lieutenant colonel of the German Military Counterintelligence Unit | |
(Militärischer Abschirmdienst, also known as MAD). He has questions | |
concerning right-wing extremism tendencies amongst members of Andre S.’s | |
unit. | |
Visits of that nature are nothing unusual for S. He has been meeting with | |
MAD for quite some time now. The agency itself is tasked to discover and | |
prevent extremism inside the German army. S. is a MAD informant. On that | |
day in September, S. was allegedly receiving something in return: the MAD’s | |
officer is supposed to have talked with him about investigations by the | |
Prosecutor General into a secret network of men. Those men supposedly had | |
planned to kill political opponents, politicians, activists. It is | |
understood by the Federal Prosecutor’s Office to have been in preparation | |
of a severe act of violence threatening the interest of the state – in | |
other words, preparations for acts of terrorism. | |
André S., at his point, is already aware of police raids that have occurred | |
in Northern Germany not very long before that. On September 13th he could | |
have been told that further searches and interrogations would be imminent. | |
The source of this allegation is an indictment of the Cologne District | |
Court, which is currently sitting over the case of the MAD employee in | |
question. He is accused of having breached his official secrecy clause. | |
More concretely, André S. is said to have been warned. | |
S. is head of a nationwide network at the centre of far-reaching | |
investigations. His code name is Hannibal. | |
## Preppers and Pickled Vegetables | |
For over a year a team of taz reporters has been trying to find an answer | |
to the following questions: Is there a right-wing underground network in | |
Germany in which opponents of the government connect, radicalise, and | |
prepare themselves for armed struggle? Does this network have strong ties | |
to German state authorities, such as the German Federal Office for the | |
Protection of the Constitution – Germany's security agency that is tasked | |
amongst others to safeguard against threats to the national democratic | |
order? Or even to the highest ranks of the German Bundeswehr? | |
During these investigations, we met so called „preppers“. Preppers are | |
people who stock up on foods like preserved vegetables. We also looked at | |
the inquiry of the Federal Prosecutor’s office whose officers had believed | |
that they had discovered a right-wing terrorist group in Northern Germany. | |
We were able to go through secret telegram chats and were able to speak | |
with men who had been ordering books from far-right publishers – but who | |
nevertheless saw nothing wrong with their declared nationalist German | |
Völkish worldviews. | |
When we published our first larger text „[4][Kommando Heimatschutz“] back | |
in December 2017, we did not yet know the true identity of the person | |
behind the pseudonym Hannibal. We had learned that Hannibal was held to be | |
the administrator of a nationwide chat-network of so called preppers. At | |
that time, we had reasons to ask ourselves if there could be a possibility | |
that „Hannibal“ is an officer serving actively in the German Bundeswehr and | |
moreover, that he may have directly helped to build an underground network | |
from within the German Army. Today we know much more. | |
We are now aware of Hannibal’s true identity. | |
André S. was born in 1985 in the city of Halle (Saale), which, back then, | |
was still part of the communist GDR. He became a member of the KSK, in the | |
South West German town Calw. He is also founder and chairman of an | |
association in which elite German combatants meet. It has a postal address | |
in Dormagen, North Rhine-Westphalia. We also know his surname. Due to his | |
personal rights, we are withholding his full name here. | |
After one year of investigations, our research leads us to a single | |
conclusion: In many parts of Germany, but also in Switzerland and Austria, | |
groups had been formed that tried to establish what could be seen as a | |
state within a state. Members of these groups are policemen and soldiers, | |
reservists, civil servants and members of intelligence services. | |
Once they receive a sign, once “Day X“ has arrived, they wanted to be ready | |
to take up arms. That “Day X“ was discussed frequently in their | |
chat-groups. Some of their plans are shockingly explicit. The German news | |
magazine Focus called it an “Underground Army“. | |
We see different groups that are interconnected like a web, and our | |
research revealed that the individual threads, again and again, led to one | |
single individual: Hannibal. | |
Who is this Hannibal? How could it be that nationwide extremist cells | |
appear to have been administrated from within the Graf-Zeppelin Barracks in | |
Calw? How is it possible that Hannibal appears to have been warned by the | |
MAD? | |
## Dubious Civil Servants | |
It is late August in 2017: Officers acting on behalf of the General German | |
Federal Prosecution search homes and offices in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, | |
East Germany. They also search those belonging to a police officer and an | |
attorney. The allegations: Individuals were suspected to have planned the | |
apprehension or „liquidation“ of politicians and other people associated | |
with the wider German political Left. The investigations are still ongoing | |
today. | |
There is something curious about these raids. Public prosecutors did not | |
entrust this job to civil servants of the North of Germany. There is no | |
state police involved. Not even the state-minister for Interior Affairs of | |
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern was notified until the very last moment, just before | |
the raids were about to be carried out. | |
The raided attorney and police-officer in question did not act alone. Other | |
men were supposed to have been part of this group, for example, a member of | |
the German Special Police (Spezialeinsatzkommando – SEK) as well as a | |
former soldier. In 2017 he still headed a company of the reserves preparing | |
for an assignment at the G20 Summit in Hamburg in July 2017. | |
These men are all part of a broader group from northern Germany that is | |
ready for national catastrophes such as blackouts, heavy storms, or severe | |
food shortages, any situation really, during which the German State could | |
no longer provide for the safety of its citizens. They usually got together | |
in different online chat-groups. One goes by the name of „Nordkreuz“ | |
(„North Cross“), another by „Nord.Com“. Their members discussed vaccine | |
shortages and troop movements in Eastern Europe. | |
A third group is merely called „Nord“ („North“). The man that supplies … | |
particular group with confidential information and internal reports from | |
the German Bundeswehr is Hannibal. His messages create a feeling of | |
belonging to an inner circle and of enjoying privileges due to the | |
provision of knowledge labelled as confidential and secret. | |
The fact that groups like these grew in autumn 2015 is certainly no | |
coincidence. It is the time when the migration policy of Germany became a | |
central national topic of debate, no lesser so inside these chatgroups. | |
Members started to discuss, how to fight the official German migration | |
policy. | |
## Shooting Competition as Birthday Party Fun | |
On an evening in early 2017, four men, amongst them two police-officers, | |
including one of the suspects mentioned above, met at a food-stand besides | |
a country road near Schwerin, East Germany. They discuss warehouses in | |
which they could hold political opponents on „Day X“. | |
Could the reservists’ company commander not possibly organise German | |
Bundeswehr trucks in case of an emergency? Could such trucks avoid | |
road-checks? Amidst the discussion, there is also the mentioning of | |
executions. References are being made to a term that was used by Adolf | |
Hitler in order to eliminate all Jews: the “Final Solution“. We learned all | |
of this through people familiar with the case. | |
Our sources confided even more. The attorney in question is said to have | |
organised shooting competitions for birthday parties behind his home in | |
Rostock. Winners are said to have received a special trophy named after | |
Mehmet Turgut. Turgut was shot in suspicious circumstances in 2004 in the | |
same town. Those behind his so far unsolved murder are assumed to have been | |
members of a militant far-right terror cell called National Socialist | |
Underground (NSU). NSU is held to be connected with the killing of at least | |
nine people. | |
According to investigative documents made available to taz, members of the | |
so-called Nord Group have already set up depots stocked with fuel, food, | |
and ammunition. For this purpose, each member is said to have paid about | |
600 Euros (equivalent to 680 USD or 530 GBP) into a common fund. Besides | |
that, other people also provided support. One is owner of a shooting range | |
near the town of Rostock, North East Germany. Although he left the chat | |
room, he continued to sell arms to its members. Another supporter is said | |
to be a German Bundeswehr instructor of an air base in Laage, not far from | |
Rostock, a basis of Eurofighter fighter planes. He is supposed to have | |
invited his friends into the secure zone of the military base after work, | |
where they were able to fly Eurofighters in a flight simulator, after work. | |
## The Southern Group | |
Following the raids of August 2017 there, the response by the Interior | |
Minister responsible, Lorenz Caffier of the German CDU-Party, can be best | |
described as contained. While on the one hand he ordered a so-called | |
Prepper Commission, on the other hand, its findings so far indicated that | |
there is apparently no problem. Even one year into the existence of this | |
commission no report has yet been published. | |
This all relates to the network's Northern Group. But there are also an | |
Eastern, Western, and Southern group – all neatly organised and following | |
general German geographical military divisions. There even exist an | |
Austrian and a Swiss group. In the largest and most active of these groups, | |
the Southern group, it was Hannibal who happened to be also its | |
administrator. | |
The Southern Group was also the group that the Bundeswehr soldier Franco A. | |
happened to be a member of. The revelation of the activities of Franco A. | |
grew to become one of the largest German Military scandals in recent | |
history. It demonstrated the existence of a soldier accused of having | |
planned extrem right-wing terrorist attacks, which nobody, none of his | |
superiors, nor the MAD, seem to have noticed. | |
Far from being a passive member of the Southern Group, Franco A. visited | |
Hannibal at his home once. Another time both attended a meeting inside a | |
shooting club in the town of Albstadt, in Baden-Würtemberg, South Germany. | |
In order not to be surveilled, they had left their phones inside the cars. | |
## The Federal Prosecutor Investigates | |
Franco A. also recruited new members for the Southern Group. One of them | |
was a weapons dealer, from whom A. had previously purchased accessories. | |
These purchases were paid for in cash, to avoid the appearance of his name | |
on the bill. A. told the dealer that the Southern Group was a special unit | |
within the German Bundeswehr. | |
As soon as Hannibal learned about the allegations against Franco A., he | |
immediately ordered the deletion of all chats: North, South, West, East. | |
When questioned about this later, his excuse for this order was the | |
safequarding of the reputation of judges, soldiers, and civil servants, | |
principally those members with a good public reputation, so that their | |
names would not be tarnished through any association with Franco A. The | |
exposure of Franco A. caused the federal prosecutor to initiate | |
investigations. This caused the network to come under pressure. | |
## A Seizure of the Barracks | |
As in the north, group members in the south of Germany set up safe meeting | |
places and accommodation for “Day X “. During Hannibal’s interrogation, t… | |
investigators were trying to find out how many of these “safe-houses“ | |
actually existed in Germany and where these were. His answer was: | |
everywhere. Amongst the locations he suggested in the chat-room he even | |
cited the car dealership of his own parents. | |
It still remains unclear, what precisely the definition of a safe-house in | |
accordance to these groups is, and it remains a delicate problem for the | |
investigative team of the federal prosecutor. | |
So far they became aware that safe-houses exist in Nuremberg and Ulm, in | |
Lenggries and Bad Tölz, and even the Graf-Zeppelin Barracks in Calw, where | |
the KSK has its headquarters, was defined as such a place – assuming that | |
in an emergency, as the members refer to it, the barracks would have been | |
successfully seized by them. | |
The arrest of Franco A. led to a nationwide search inside Bundeswehr | |
barracks. Officers were on the general lookout for Nazi memorabilia, whilst | |
the political outlook of all soldiers is being checked. The Ministry for | |
Defence wants to catch soldiers like Franco A. in the future. Soldiers with | |
associations to extreme right movements are expelled. But Hannibal remains | |
unaffected by any of these measures. | |
The pseudonym Hannibal and the real name of André S. eventually became | |
currency amongst security policymakers inside the German Parliament, last | |
year. MAD was forced to admit that it was familiar with the case of | |
Hannibal for quite some time, as an open and willing informer. Even though | |
it is now an open secret that there are groups beyond the Northern Group, | |
they are being labelled as harmless, as with people who are just hoarding | |
food in tins. On the other hand, the MAD is keen to establish one question: | |
What does Hannibal know about a farewell party that directly led to a | |
trial? | |
## Heroes of the Extreme Right | |
In spring 2017 a KSK company commander was celebrating his farewell at a | |
shooting range near Stuttgart. As part of the celebration, his soldiers | |
allegedly prepared a parkour course for him, in which he was supposed to | |
shoot with bow and arrow, to throw heads of pigs. They even invited a woman | |
to have sex with him as a reward. She later testified, that it came to no | |
sexual intercourse, because the commander was too drunk. And she also | |
remembered how songs by the extreme right band „Sturmwehr“ were being | |
played that night and how the company commander and others had given Nazi | |
salutes concurrently. | |
When taz wanted to know from MAD, if Hannibal was one of the people present | |
that evening, we received no answer. MAD has an interest to protect | |
Hannibal because MAD has almost no informants inside KSK, which makes | |
Hannibal valuable. The Commando Unit operates independently by design. In | |
2004, the now infamous KSK-Commander Reinhard Günzel was expelled without | |
any honours, because of his defence of an anti-Semitic speech by Martin | |
Hohmann. Today, Hohmann is a member of the German parliament for the | |
right-wing Party „Alternative für Deutschland“ (AfD). Günzel, however, | |
became a new hero of the far right. | |
## E-Mail Contact | |
In September, we asked the German Ministry for Defence about an | |
organisation by the name of Uniter. The organisation was founded by | |
Hannibal many years ago. It connects both former and active members of the | |
German Special Forces. A spokesperson of the Ministry responded: The | |
Ministry has no knowledge of Uniter beyond those facts which are „publicly | |
accessible“. That was remarkable. At the time of the information request, | |
Hannibal had already been an informant for the MAD. MAD is directly | |
subordinated to the Ministry of Defence. | |
It is, of course, a given fact, that the Federal Government stands under no | |
obligation to provide the press with access to information that was | |
obtained through its intelligence agencies. However, we believe it is | |
neither necessary to lie. | |
We also asked the Ministry for Defence, weather Uniter uses Bundeswehr | |
properties, for example for training purposes? In its response, the | |
Ministry wrote: „There is no information available on this subject.“ We | |
asked: Does the Ministry know that KSK-Soldiers are training as preppers? | |
„No information.“ | |
Back in April 2018, when we finally learned of Hannibal’s true identity, we | |
contacted André S. by E-mail. He replied only 23 minutes later. | |
S. wrote to us: „As a general rule, we do not write to, nor communicate | |
with the press, as the majority of our members are obliged to upkeep full | |
confidentiality. Any links that members may have could affect their lives | |
or that of their families.“ Moreover, he warned: „Should we receive further | |
questions from you, what we understand to be an attempt of harassment, we | |
will have no other option but to inform the MAD etc. of this.“ | |
Uniter is an organisation, whose founder fed confidential information to a | |
nationwide underground chat-network, that being the same network, that had | |
Franco A. listed amongst its members, a Soldier, who was under the | |
suspicion of having planned acts of terrorism. It is also the same network, | |
in which members discussed the use of German Bundeswehr trucks to lock up | |
political opponents on “Day X“. We learn: This organisation, Uniter, run by | |
André S., has no hesitation to contact the MAD when it is confronted with | |
questions by the german press. | |
## Connecting the Elite of the Bundeswehr | |
On the grounds of this information, there can be no doubt, that we should, | |
therefore, be rather curious what Uniter is all about. The Latin word | |
uniter translates as “united as one“. The organisation aims in that sense | |
to connect different elites from inside the German Bundeswehr. There are | |
good reasons for this: KSK-Soldiers frequently leave the service at the age | |
of 35. When they leave, their foreign deployments also stop – alongside, | |
soldiers’ special hazard and deployment pay also ceases. | |
This means that such soldiers have suddenly far less money at their | |
disposal. Uniter could be a source of help in these situations. The network | |
gives current and former soldiers the ability to support each other. As a | |
result, many of them have founded security firms or martial arts schools, | |
others are still at the military. Uniter's online shop sells ties, | |
cufflinks, and signet rings bearing the Uniter emblem, a sword and a shield | |
surrounded by an oak leaf wreath. | |
On its Facebook page, Uniter organises events like, recently, a march to a | |
ruined castle in Baden-Württemberg to honour veterans. Another time, Uniter | |
members met in Bundeswehr barracks near Berlin. On that occasion, the | |
organisation showed itself openly to interested parties. One group even | |
invited the taz. | |
On a Saturday morning in September 2018 in a martial arts school in | |
Berlin-Köpenick, its Russian instructor explained that knife-fighting | |
required significant practice, even years, as it would be one of the most | |
dangerous disciplines. The men he is teaching, an airport security worker, | |
a bodyguard, and a police instructor, follow the movements they are shown. | |
They want to be prepared. | |
Using plastic knives, they practice what it would be like to cut somebody’s | |
throat. „To kill someone with a knife, you have to hit this person in the | |
thigh, then in the belly, then in the throat“, explains the instructor in | |
Russian. One of the men has to translate these words. He shortens the | |
instruction to much simpler words. „Cut, cut, cut.“ | |
## Just a Game? | |
Just like the chat groups, Uniter is also divided into Northern, Southern, | |
Eastern and Western districts, and Swiss and Austrian offshoots. Most | |
members do not know each other beyond their own regional areas. In the | |
Eastern District, one of the leaders is a police instructor. However, | |
Uniter also engaged in collections for the homeless; the organisation aims | |
to be part of a knightly order. Several of its members are Freemasons. | |
Without being asked, the police instructor at the training explained in a | |
conversation with taz, that every new member is examined. He assured that | |
extremism was not tolerated. The same claim can be found in the statutes of | |
the organisation. | |
Franco A. recommended Uniter to his arms dealer. The organisation denies | |
that A. had formally been one of its members. | |
At a certain point, MAD becomes interested in Uniter. MAD is keen for | |
Hannibal to explain what he does inside the organisation. His own political | |
outlook seems not to be subject of any deeper investigations, however. | |
When investigators of the Federal Criminal Police (Bundeskriminalamt – BKA) | |
asked André S. last year what exactly those preppers are preparing for, he | |
replied: These chats were just playful exercises. He added that everybody | |
in the state’s service would have made healthy preparations these days. | |
Is it really just a game? | |
Hannibal wrote in the Southern chat group that his parent’s car dealership | |
would be a suitable site for a safe-house. During a search there, | |
investigators found practice grenades, they were property of the German | |
Bundeswehr, as well as detonators. At the time, in September of 2017, they | |
asked him if he had anything to say about these items. They also reminded | |
him that he did not have to incriminate himself. Hannibal chose not to | |
incriminate himself. | |
In October 2017 one of Hannibal’s contacts, MAD Lieutenant Colonel Peter W. | |
was questioned by the German military’s disciplinary office. They accused | |
him of having disclosed secret internal affairs. | |
Peter W. is the agency’s contact to the Federal Prosecutor General and to | |
the Federal Criminal Police. It is the Prosecutor’s Office in Cologne that | |
has now brought charges against him. | |
The Prosecutor General, however, did not list Hannibal as an accused. | |
Hannibal has since left the KSK. | |
When in November of this year, a few days before this article was | |
published, the head of the MAD, Christof Gramm, was questioned by the | |
German Parliament, he wanted to sound reassuring: „We were not able to find | |
any violent right-wing extremists“. He added: „Therefore we believe that a | |
network connecting violent extremists within the German Bundeswehr does not | |
exist.“ | |
After this text was published in German language on November 16th, 2018, | |
the Defence Committee and the Comitee for Homeland Security in German | |
Parliament demanded reports by Federal Prosecutors and by Representatives | |
of MAD, BfV and BND, the three Federal German Intelligence Agencies. The | |
Parliamentarian Comittee to control the work of Germany's Secret Services | |
started its own Investigations. | |
If you have relevant information on that topic or on other relevant topics | |
that you want to share with us, please [5][get in touch with us]. | |
13 Dec 2018 | |
## LINKS | |
[1] /!a150/ | |
[2] /Rechtes-Netzwerk-in-der-Bundeswehr/!5548926 | |
[3] /Rechtes-Netzwerk-in-der-Bundeswehr/!5548926 | |
[4] /Terror-Ermittlungen-in-Norddeutschland/!5468003 | |
[5] /[email protected] | |
## AUTOREN | |
Martin Kaul | |
Christina Schmidt | |
Daniel Schulz | |
## TAGS | |
taz in English | |
Schwerpunkt Hannibals Schattennetzwerk | |
Right Wing Extremism | |
Underground Network | |
Intelligence | |
Preppers | |
Militär | |
MAD | |
taz in English | |
Bundeswehr | |
Rechtstextreme | |
Bundeswehr | |
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern | |
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