Difference between revisions of "Langemann Papers"
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===Le Cercle=== | ===Le Cercle=== | ||
The Langemann Papers exposed two meetings of [[Le Cercle]] and suggested that it was involved in the establishment of the [[Shield]] committee. | The Langemann Papers exposed two meetings of [[Le Cercle]] and suggested that it was involved in the establishment of the [[Shield]] committee. | ||
− | * [[Le Cercle/1979 ( | + | * [[Le Cercle/1979 (Washington)|December 1, 1979]] - Madison Hotel, [[Washington, DC]] |
* [[Le Cercle/1980 (Zurich)|January 5-6, 1980]] - Zurich, [[Switzerland]] | * [[Le Cercle/1980 (Zurich)|January 5-6, 1980]] - Zurich, [[Switzerland]] | ||
Revision as of 14:37, 2 July 2018
though be advised that the official narrative is particularly suspect.
Langemann Papers | |
---|---|
Type | collection of reports |
Publication date | 1982 |
Author(s) | |
Exposed by | Hans Langemann |
Subjects | Kurt Georg Kiesinger, BND, Oktoberfest Bombing |
Source | Le Cercle |
A famous leak of documents from Le Cercle by a respected senior BND officer. |
Contents
Revelations
Hans Langemann's revelations fit in the bigger picture of BND's internal opposition to the supranational rightwing intelligence network 'Le Cercle'. Strauß, a key figure of 'Le Cercle' is quoted by his son Max Strauß: "He hated Langemann". Langemann's papers and tapes countered many of the known goals of 'Le Cercle': it touched on Strauß' connection to the Vatican (Opus Dei), his weapons deals, machinations to destabilize left wing governments like Olaf Palme, Kreisky and Willy Brandt and mentioned support for right wing paramilitary groups.
Langemann's tapes recorded for the German magazine Konkret have never been fully disclosed.[citation needed] Some revelations include:[1][2]
Le Cercle
The Langemann Papers exposed two meetings of Le Cercle and suggested that it was involved in the establishment of the Shield committee.
- December 1, 1979 - Madison Hotel, Washington, DC
- January 5-6, 1980 - Zurich, Switzerland
BND and Vatican
- The German secret service BND (Bundesnachrichtendienst) spied on the Vatican (operation "EVA 102") and
- Vienna Archbishop Franz König ("Aktion Kardinal")
BND and USA
The BND spied on:-
- US president Richard Nixon ("Der Fall Monica II")
- German agents stole documents from US archives which indicted Bundeskanzler Kurt-Georg Kiesinger (1966-1969) for Nazi crimes
Spying on Willy Brandt
- Langemann was BND-Führer of agent Susanne Sievers, who told the story about her affair with Willy Brandt in an immediately prohibited book: Da war auch ein Mädchen. Brandt was a target for destabilisation because of his overture to 'the other Germany' through Ostpolitik. Susanne Sievers made a quick career in the BND and was paid off to the tune of 320,000 DeutscheMarks after quitting the job.
Oktoberfest Bombing 1980
- The papers also revealed details about secret police reports about rightwing organizations involved in the 1980 Oktoberfest Bombing in Munich (see also Operation Gladio).
German arms deals
- The BND supported German companies' arms deals, at a time when Germany wanted to hide these deals because of its Nazi past.
Publication
The Langemann papers are quoted extensively in:
- Issue 17, Lobster Magazine, 'Brian Crozier, the Pinay Circle and James Goldsmith'