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Far-right plot, abuse scandals rock military

The military intelligence service is investigating around 280 cases of suspected far-right sympathisers in the forces.

Germany's military has faced a number of scandals including sadistic initiation rituals and female soldiers being forced to pole-dance

It is a dangerous political battle for Ursula von der Leyen, the first woman in charge of the Bundeswehr, who is often mentioned as a potential successor to Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The mother-of-seven has sternly criticised military "attitude and leadership problems", highlighted by the case of the soldier and by recent sexual abuse and hazing scandals.

This in turn has made her a target of chastened rank-and-file soldiers who charge she is tarring them all while dodging personal responsibility after more than three years on the job.

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The escalating conflict started with the arrest last week of a soldier identified only as 28-year-old army lieutenant Franco A., stationed at a Franco-German base near Strasbourg.

He came to the notice of the authorities after Austrian police caught him with a loaded handgun at Vienna airport in February.

The subsequent investigation found that, amid Germany's 2015 mass influx of refugees, he had created a fake identity as a Damascus fruit seller called "David Benjamin".

Incredibly, the light-haired German who speaks no Arabic managed to gain political asylum, a spot in a refugee shelter, and monthly state payments for his fictitious alter ego.

'Dark places'

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Prosecutors charge that A. harboured far-right views and, with at least one co-conspirator, plotted an attack with the apparent aim of discrediting foreigners.

Media reports say he kept "death lists" with the names of top politicians, including former president Joachim Gauck, some cabinet ministers and left-leaning, anti-fascist MPs.

It has since emerged that the lieutenant had expressed right-wing extremist views back in a master's study he submitted in 2014, in which he theorised about the end of Western civilisation through immigration.

However, the offensive paper was buried, without disciplinary action -- something the minister blamed on a "misunderstood esprit de corps" and superior officers who "looked the other way".

On Wednesday, the minister -- who has cancelled a scheduled US trip to deal with the widening scandal -- was travelling to A.'s base, where an initial probe has found a rifle with a swastika carved into it.

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Von der Leyen has also pointed to other recent scandals -- about humiliating and sadistic initiation rituals, and female soldiers being forced to pole-dance.

Indicating she means business, the minister last month sacked the chief training officer, Major General Walter Spindler, for failing to deal with the problems quickly enough.

On Thursday she was set to hold a crisis meeting with 100 leading military personnel, after vowing to "shine a light in the dark places" and predicting that "it'll be difficult, it'll be painful, it won't be pretty".

There could indeed be more nasty surprises -- the military intelligence service is investigating around 280 cases of suspected far-right sympathisers in the forces.

'Danger zone'

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Von der Leyen has weathered several scandals in what is considered a tricky cabinet post, most centred on military equipment problems like ageing transport planes and assault rifles that don't shoot straight.

Spiegel Online said that, while earlier problems started before she took the post, she is now "facing criticism like she rarely has before".

Her comments offended many soldiers who already feel they get insufficient appreciation for missions from Afghanistan to Mali in a country which, with its guilt over the Nazi era, still shows little love for the military.

Having drawn heavy fire, the minister stressed that the vast majority of soldiers perform "impeccable, outstanding service".

Business daily Handelsblatt noted the seriousness of the affair by pointing out that "ministers usually only cancel foreign trips if they face the threat of a putsch at home".

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It said von der Leyen had entered "the danger zone", adding: "This doesn't bring her any closer to her big goal of one day succeeding Merkel."

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