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Note: This article currently refers to the perpetrators of the Munich Massacre as "terrorist". There is currently a debate regarding whether this term should be asserted on Wikipedia. Its use on this page does not indicate a general acceptance of the term.


The Munich Massacre occurred at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany, when 11 members of the Israeli wrestling team were taken hostage by the Palestinian group Black September. A failed liberation attempt led to the deaths of all the athletes, five terrorists, and one policeman.

1 The Attack

At 04:30 on September 5, five members of the Palestinian organization Black September scaled a short chain-link fence surrounding the Munich Olympic village to enter Israeli quarters, converging with three more along the way. Cloaked in masks and armed with assault rifles, they quickly overcame what little resistance the sleeping Israelis could offer and took eleven hostages: David Berger, Ze'ev Friedman, Joseph Gottfreund, Eliezer Halfin, Joseph Romano, Andrei Schpitzer, Amitsur Shapira, Kahat Shor, Mark Slavin, Yaakov Springer, and Moshe Weinberg. Weinberg received a gunshot wound in the initial struggle, and Romano soon thereafter. Both would later die.

Over the ensuing 19 hours the world witnessed a display of incompetence by West German police so stunning and embarrassing that it ultimately provided the direct impetus for the creation of GSG-9, Germany's counter-terrorism unit.

The German authorities, under the leadership from Chancellor Willy Brandt and Minister for the Interior Hans-Dietrich Genscher rejected the offer from the Israeli Government to send a military group of special forces. The Germans apparently believed they had the means to solve the situation alone. As the events unfolded, it became clear that they hadn't. The German police who took part in the operation had no special training for this sort of situation.

The terrorists demanded the release and safe emigration of 232 Palestinians jailed in Israel, and an additional two in German prisons. Israel's response was immediate and absolute: there would be no negotiation.

Execution deadlines shifted first by three hours, and then by five more as German authorities attempted to negotiate. The terrorists demanded transportation to Cairo. The authorities pretended agreement, and two helicopters transported both the terrorists and their hostages to nearby FürstenfeldbruckFurstenfeldbruck is a town in Bavaria, Germany. It is the capital of the district Furstenfeldbruck. As of 2004 it has a population of 35,494 , and covers an area of 32. External link http://www. fuerstenfeldbruck. de Official website of the town. airbase, where a Boeing 727The Boeing 727 was, for a very long time, the most popular jet-liner in the world. The 727 first took the skies during the 1960s, much earlier than its bigger and more famous sister the Boeing 747. The 727 design arose as a compromise between United Airli aircraft was waiting for them.

The authorities planned an assault to the terrorists in the airport. It was probably one of the worst planned acts in the history of military special operations. There were only five snipers placed in the airport. The authorities were surprised to find out that the number of terrorists was nine; they had believed that there were fewer. There were no tanks in the location. During the shooting, which took place over 2 hours, one of the policemen had the belated idea of calling for tanks. The tanks were called, but it took them more than half an hour to arrive, as there was a lot of traffic in the area.

Two terrorists were to check the suitability of the plane, and then return to the helicopters. As they walked back across the tarmac to release the German helicopter pilots, five German snipers positioned nearby opened fire. It was now 23:00.

The five German snipers did not even have radio contact, and did not fire with coordination. The result was chaotic and calamitous. Two kidnappers near the pilots fell immediately, and a third as he fled. Three more began to return fire from the shadows of the helicopters, beyond the visual range of the snipers. A German policeman quickly succumbed to wild assault rifle salvos. The battle then turned into a protracted 45 minute struggle, until a unit of German armoured cars encroached on the terrorists' position.


Threatened, a terrorist opened fire on hostages from within the first helicopter, prompting two more to emerge from the shadows. He then leapt from the aircraft, leaving a grenade in his place. All three Arabs fell to sniper fire, and the subsequent explosion killed the hostages inside. The five hostages in the second helicopter were also killed during the battle. The German police investigation indicated that a few of the hostages may have inadvertently been shot by the German police during the fierce gun battle. There are also indications that one of the terrorists shot all of the hostages. However, a definitive conclusion was not possible due to the severely burned condition of the bodies.



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