Among those arrested in the raid was Birgit Malsack-Winkemann, a judge and former lawmaker with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. AfD leaders denied any knowledge of the plot and called for “a swift and comprehensive investigation.” In March 2020, Germany’s domestic intelligence agency (BfV) labeled a faction within the AfD, Flügel (Wing), as an extremist organization and a threat to Germany’s democratic order. The AfD responded by dissolving Flügel in April 2020.
German intelligence reported in June 2022 that Reichsbürger had approximately 21,000 followers across Germany, approximately 10 percent of which it considers violent, and that it regards the group as a growing security threat whose ranks include neo-Nazis, conspiracy theorists, gun enthusiasts, and former soldiers united by a “deep rejection” of German state institutions. Reichsbürger is also linked to an alleged April 2022 plot to kidnap German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach and cause a nationwide power outage by destroying power facilities.
However, as Dr. Schindler told the CBC’s “Canada Tonight,” “this is not the only violent cell that has been discovered from the broader violent right-wing extremist spectrum in Germany over the last couple of years. Since 2019, the Federal Ministry of Interior has consistently judged that violent right-wing extremism is the largest domestic threat against security and this [operation] really brought home that point again.”
Watch & Listen To Additional Analysis:
To read CEP’s resource, Germany: Extremism and Terrorism, please click here.
###