National German Liberation Movement

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The National German Liberation Movement (NDBB) was founded in 1970 by Roland Tabbert as part of the Resistance Action in Hanau and saw itself as the forerunner of a new NSDAP . Their goal was to restore a Germany within the borders of 1914.

The group fought the Ostpolitik of the Federal Government of Chancellor Willy Brandt ( SPD ). In West Berlin , supporters attacked left-wing bars. To mark the 10th anniversary of the construction of the Wall on August 13, 1971, attacks on SEW facilities , the Soviet travel agency Intourist , shots at NVA members and a hand grenade attack on a watchtower were planned.

One day before the attack, on August 12, 1971, the group was evacuated by the police because they had been infiltrated by the undercover agent J. Neumann. Various weapons and ammunition were found during house searches . Nevertheless, the group continued to exist, but apparently disbanded itself in 1978. According to a later statement by Tabbert in 1990, the PLO was the model for the founding of the NDBB.

literature

  • Rainer Fromm : The "Wehrsportgruppe Hoffmann". Presentation, analysis and classification. A contribution to the history of German and European right-wing extremism , Frankfurt a. M. 1998, p. 101ff.
  • Burkhard Schröder : Real guys. Skinheads, Faschos, Hooligans , Reinbek bei Hamburg 1992, pp. 129-136.