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<text id=89TT3214>
<title>
Dec. 11, 1989: Target For The Red Army Faction
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Dec. 11, 1989 Building A New World
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 54
TERRORISM
Target for the Red Army Faction
</hdr><body>
<p>A moribund group roars back by killing "The Lord of Money"
</p>
<p> Bad Homburg, an elite spa north of Frankfurt, is home to
many of West Germany's top executives and bankers. Last Thursday
morning the most eminent of the lot, Alfred Herrhausen, 59,
chief executive of Deutsche Bank and personal economic adviser
to Chancellor Helmut Kohl, left his home at the usual time,
shortly after 8:30 a.m., and set out for Frankfurt's financial
district in his armored, chauffeur-driven Mercedes-Benz 500SE,
escorted by two other automobiles with four bodyguards. The car
had traveled 550 yds. along a tree-lined street when a
tremendous explosion hurled it into the air, reducing it to a
charred, smoking hulk. Herrhausen died instantly.
</p>
<p> As police poured into the area, a small wooden box
containing a detonator was found in a nearby park. The box
apparently had been connected by cable to a bomb attached to a
bicycle parked on the limousine's route. Police say the bomb
included a light-sensitive device that triggered the explosion
precisely as Herrhausen's limousine passed by. Under the box was
a piece of paper with the all too familiar star-shaped symbol
superimposed on a drawing of a Kalashnikov rifle: the trademark
of West Germany's ultra-leftist urban terrorists, the Red Army
Faction.
</p>
<p> Suddenly, three years after its last assassination, the
R.A.F. had roared back into life with the murder of West
Germany's most influential captain of finance. Herrhausen ran
the country's largest bank (assets: $165 billion), maintained
close ties with Soviet and East European officials and was an
outspoken advocate of German unification. Only last spring the
weekly Der Spiegel dubbed him "the Lord of Money."
</p>
<p> The federal prosecutor named as possible suspects Christoph
Seidler, 31, and Horst Meyer, 30, both believed to be R.A.F.
commandos. A third man, as yet unnamed, is also a suspect.
</p>
<p> Most puzzling to the police was why now, with most of its
hard-core members dead or serving long prison terms and its
extreme left-wing ideology on the wane, the group had chosen to
strike. There is still a commando group of about 15 members at
large in West Germany. Some security experts doubt that the
Herrhausen murder signals a new wave of R.A.F. terror. But,
declared Heinrich Boge, head of the Bundeskriminalamt, which
coordinates federal criminal investigations, "there was never
any indication that they were giving up."
</p>
<p> Since taking over as Deutsche Bank's sole chief executive
in May 1988, Herrhausen had aggressively begun to change the
bank, the world's 20th largest, from an insular institution to
a global financial power. Only last week he made a $1.4 billion
takeover bid for the British merchant bank Morgan Grenfell Group
PLC. Throughout his life, Herrhausen viewed himself as a man
driven by destiny to lead West Germany to new heights as a world
economic power. It was a mission that was brutally shattered on
a street in Bad Homburg last Thursday morning.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>