Provocateurs 'R' us. (Insider Report).Two of the most notorious leaders of Germany's neo-Nazi movement have been unmasked as intelligence agents. After police arrested 27-year-old "Tilo S," leader of the White Aryan Rebels heavy metal band, "they found during questioning that he was a secret agent," reported the London Daily Telegraph on July 31st. Germany's BND BND In currencies, this is the abbreviation for the Brunei Dollar. Notes: The currency market, also known as the Foreign Exchange market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average volume of over US $1 trillion. intelligence agency "had recruited him for information about neo-fascist organizations," without advising local police agencies. Last year, White Aryan Rebels released a sickening song entitled en·ti·tle tr.v. en·ti·tled, en·ti·tling, en·ti·tles 1. To give a name or title to. 2. To furnish with a right or claim to something: "The Bullet is for You," which mentioned, by name, two young bi-racial children of German tennis star Boris Becker Boris Franz Becker (born November 22 1967) is a former World No. 1 professional tennis player from Germany. He is a six-time Grand Slam singles champion, an Olympic gold medalist, and the youngest-ever winner of the men's singles title at Wimbledon at the age of 17. . The August 13th edition of the London Guardian reported that Adolf von Thadden Adolf von Thadden (July 7 1921–July 16 1996 in Bad Oeynhausen) was a leading far right German politician. Born into a leading Pomeranian landowning family, he was the brother of Elisabeth von Thadden, a prominent critic of the Nazis. , leader of the neo-Nazi National Democratic Party, was "an intelligence agent working for the British ... throughout the four years he led the NPD NPD New Product Development NPD Nouveau Parti Démocratique (Canada) NPD Narcissistic Personality Disorder NPD Norwegian Petroleum Directorate NPD Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands , from 1967 to 1971." Dr. Hans Josef Horchem, who headed Germany's Verfassungsschutz (VfS) security service from 1969 to 1981, told the Guardian that he learned of Thadden's status from a British intelligence liaison officer in the late 1970s. This revelation followed the disclosure that several other neo-Nazis allied with the NPD were on the payroll of German intelligence, prompting "debate about the extent to which counter-intelligence officers were sustaining the far right in their efforts to monitor it," observed the Guardian. |
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