ZGram - 3/19/2003 - "The Infiltration Business"

irimland@zundelsite.org irimland@zundelsite.org
Wed, 19 Mar 2003 18:02:33 -0800


ZGram - Where Truth is Destiny:  Now more than ever!

March 19, 2003

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:

If you have heard this before, bear with me.

Once upon a time - actually, not all that long ago - CSIS, the 
nefarious Canadian civilian spy agency that likes to go bump in the 
dark, infiltrated a rather dishevelled Right Wing group called the 
Heritage Front, located in Toronto.  Their agent provocateur was a 
fellow named Grant Bristow, long since disappeared into a new 
identity, courtesy of the Canadian taxpayers. 

Bristow busied himself with getting white kids to say nasty things to 
the multicult crowd and otherwise behave as one might expect 
low-brow, disaffected White kids to behave, if you believe your 
television set.  Eventually, the story blew, thanks to a Toronto 
Reporter,  Bill Dunphy.  There was a meek governmental attempt to get 
to the bottom of it, but a government watchdog agency did the 
obligatory whitewash - and the story fizzled out. 

This was just about the time when I first met Ernst Zundel and other 
revisionists of note, and I remember listening to one of  Ernst's 
tapes where he voiced his suspicions about the Heritage Front not 
being what it claimed to be - that it was a fly trap for angry young 
Whites, with somebody egging them on.  It is ironic that, 
periodically, Ernst Zundel now gets smeared with his "association" 
with the Heritage Front - by none other than CSIS, of course. 

So I asked one of his former attorneys a couple of days ago just how 
Ernst was connected to the Heritage front and this story.

The attorney said:  "Well, Ernst gave a couple of speeches to the 
kids, as did others." 

Almost a decade ago!  As he has given speeches to many other groups, 
before and since that time!

I am quite sure Ernst was never a member, much less a leader, of the 
Heritage Front.  Not that that stops CSIS from reeling him in with 
delight and keeping him locked up in prison - with the "Heritage 
=46ront connection"  being one of their main "national security risk" 
trumps up their deceitful sleeves.

Just so you know how things are done in Marxist-run "democracies"!

Now here comes Germany - and as I was reading this story, I thought 
to myself:  "Well, NOW we get a glimmer of why suddenly the 
deportation of Ernst Zundel to the fatherland gets shelved!" 

Or so, at least, it seems.  I haven't heard anything lately - after 
all those Talmudic gyrations and  foaming at the mouth to deliver 
Ernst over to German "justice" - run, not too incidentally, by the 
same kinds of Marxist creatures that run CSIS. 

A particularly nasty character in Germany is a censorious fellow 
named Otto Schilly - and it is  Otto  who has been lusting for Ingrid 
Zundel's website for some time.  In fact, somebody told me it was 
Otto Schilly - and not Joschka Fischer, as I at first reported - who 
visited America in early February, and Bingo!  Ernst Zundel gets 
arrested!    A classic political hit right out of Stalin's book!

Coincidence?  You tell me. 

Now watch how Germany shakes off one of its monkeys on its back - a 
ripple and a shudder at a time!  Ignore the sneering tone and read 
between the lines:

[START]

>
>THE GERMAN government's concerted bid to rid itself of a neo-Nazi
>party accused of promoting race attacks and tarnishing the country's
>international image collapsed in farce yesterday.
>
>Germany's highest court threw out an effort to ban the party in a
>process that has taken nearly two years and cost millions of pounds in
>legal fees.
>
>It reached the ruling because the National Democratic Party (NPD) was
>full of paid informers for Germany's domestic intelligence services.
>
>Top-ranking figures, including the publisher of the party's newspaper,
>were secretly on the government's payroll for decades.
>
>Germany's federal constitution court threw out the government's case
>to outlaw the NPD, a far-Right party that was accused of whipping up
>racist violence and spreading neo-Nazi propaganda.
>
>The ruling delivered an embarrassing defeat to the chancellor Gerhard
>Schr=F6der's government, which invested considerable political capital
>in the drive to outlaw the party following a wave of hate crimes in
>2000.
>
>There is speculation that it may cost the interior minister, Otto
>Schilly, his job.
>
>This was a banana skin episode of the highest order German
>intelligence source.
>
>The case has been stalled for more than a year after it emerged that
>the government's case rested, at least partly, on a network of
>informants in the National Democratic Party. This raised the question
>of whether any acted as provocateurs.
>
>German media began reporting in February that judges mulling the bid
>to ban on the NPD had concluded the government's case was "hopelessly
>compromised" because at least nine, possibly as many as 30, leading
>party figures were also paid agents and informers for the BND,
>Germany's domestic intelligence agency.
>
>Mr Schilly's ministry helped rally individual German states to join
>the government in pursuing the NPD ban. Sources within the government
>say he knew early on about the informants but didn't submit that fact
>to the court for almost a year.
>
>When the court suspended its hearings as a result, rival politicians
>heaped scorn on Mr Schilly.
>
>Germany took action against the party, largely composed of neo-Nazi
>worshippers, immigrant hating skinheads, disaffected, jobless east
>Germans and ultra-nationalists, early in 2001 after a rise in attacks
>on foreigners and Jewish property that resulted in several deaths.
>
>Horst Mahler, a former member of the left-wing Red Army Faction
>terrorist group, is the NPD's lead lawyer. He said informers
>"distorted" information and said the party was targeted "merely
>because it stood up for national values".
>
>Although the NPD has no parliamentary seats the government now fears
>the wrong message has been sent. It is unclear if or when there will
>be another attempt to ban it.
>
>German officials acknowledge many NPD officials acted as paid
>informants from 1997-2002. They have refused to identify them in court
>unless the public and NPD representatives are excluded.
>
>The BND had two types of spy within the party ranks - government
>agents posing as recruits and disaffected party members who were eager
>to report back for money. One of the informants was alleged to have
>been on the party' s leadership committee.
>
>The intelligence operation against it, however, ended in at least one
>instance of informers telling on fellow informers. Only when
>controllers compared their notes did they discover where things had
>gone badly wrong.
>
>For Mr Mahler and party chiefs, the discovery of clumsy spies
>clambering over each other to expose far-Right plots was manna from
>heaven. Mr Mahler said the spies were "steering" party members to
>excessive behaviour.
>
>Wolfgang Frenz, 66, the vice-leader of the NPD's vital North
>Rhine-Westphalia region, was paid up to =A3260 a month by the
>intelligence services between 1962 and 1995.
>
>Mr Frenz, a co-founder of the party, had a relationship with the
>intelligence services he described as "particularly intensive" in the
>1970s and 1980s. Udo Holtmann, 64, Mr Frenz's superior and the editor
>and publisher of the party's newspaper, was paid by the government for
>24 years and is said to have told his party colleagues about his
>informer status, acting as a double agent.
>
>"This was a banana skin episode of the highest order," said a source
>within the BND. "The government created a legal loophole wide enough
>for the NPD to drive a tank through," he added.

(Source:  http://www.thescotsman.co.uk/international.cfm?id=3D330602003 )