View text source at Wikipedia
1991 United States embassy sniper attack in Bonn | |
---|---|
![]() The former embassy in Bonn, pictured in 1990 | |
Location | Bonn, Germany |
Date | 13 February 1991 (UTC+01:00) |
Weapon | G1 |
Deaths | 0 |
Injured | 0 |
Perpetrator | Red Army Faction |
On 13 February 1991, three members of the Red Army Faction (RAF) fired about 250 rounds using a military rifle at the United States embassy in Bonn, Germany.[1]
The suspects fired at the embassy from a distance of about 500 metres[2] from Villa Von-Weiß-Straße 8, located across the Rhine river in Königswinter. The incident was linked to the ongoing Gulf War. In a note left at the scene, the RAF said the attack was done to combat American imperialism and to get it out of Iraq.[3] The attackers escaped their positions in a stolen Volkswagen Passat car and were never caught. The embassy received some bullet holes and broken windows, but no major damage was caused.[4]
The same G1 rifle was used by the RAF in the killing of Detlev Karsten Rohwedder afterwards.[5]
In October 2001, new DNA tests of a hair left in the passenger seat of the Passat revealed that Daniela Klette may have been one of the suspects.[6] Klette is an RAF member who was already suspected in other attacks, such as the prison bombing in Weiterstadt in 1993.[7] Klette remained at large until her arrest in 2024 [8] and nobody else has ever been convicted for the attack.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)