Willi Voss

Last updated
Willi Voss
Personal details
Born
Willi Pohl

May 9, 1934
Ruhr region, Germany
Other political
affiliations
PLO (former)
OccupationWriter, laborer, librarian, journalist

Willi Voss (born on 9 May 1934 as Willi Pohl) and sometimes writing under the pseudonym E. W. Pless, is a German writer. In the 1970s he was known as a neo-Nazi and as a PLO member, a procurer of weapons for Palestinian terrorist attacks. He was involved in the Munich Massacre. After defecting from the PLO, he became an informant for the CIA and returned later to Germany. Before becoming a writer, he worked as a laborer, librarian, and journalist. [1]

Contents

Biography

Willi Pohl grew up in the Ruhr region. In the 1970s, he was a member of the German neo-Nazi scene, with ties to the criminal milieu and to Palestinian . The contact had been established by the neo-Nazi Udo Albrecht, with whom Pohl was friends for several years. [2] As a PLO member, he organized weapons for Palestinian terrorist commandos in Germany. [3] Pohl helped the terrorist of the Palestinian organization Black September Organization, Abu Daoud in the planning and execution of the 1972 Munich attacks, according to his own account unknowingly. [4] After the assassination, he planned to take hostages in Vienna's St. Stephen's Cathedral and in parallel in Cologne Cathedral on Christmas 1972 in order to ransom the three surviving Munich assassins. Since the preparatory smuggling of weapons was exposed by an informant, he was arrested by the Bavarian police at the end of October 1972 with weapons and a threatening letter from Black September. Three days after his arrest came the hijacking of Lufthansa Flight 615, which was used to ransom the Palestinian terrorists. Pohl's hopes of also being ransomed were not fulfilled. [5]

"Despite the overwhelming evidence, Pohl was sentenced in 1974 to a prison term of two years and two months only for unlawful possession of weapons. Four days after the judge's verdict, the terrorist accomplice was already free again and departed for Beirut." [4]

In December 2012, Der Spiegel reported that Pohl, according to his own statements, had spied on the headquarters of the PLO intelligence service as an agent for the CIA since 1975, after defecting from the PLO. Under the alias Ganymede, he is said to have provided information on attacks in the Middle East and Europe and on cooperation between the neo-Nazi Udo Albrecht and his accomplices with the Palestinians. [6]

He returned to Germany from the Middle East in the late 1970s, after being captured by Christian militias in Lebanon and released in a prisoner exchange. He had received a remission from the authorities in return for his information. Back in Germany, he wrote as a freelance writer, mostly under his current name Willi Voss, but sometimes also under the pseudonym E.W. Pless. He wrote Western stories and Jerry Cotton novels, in addition to a number of crime novels and political thrillers, which were published by Bastei-Lübbe and Ullstein Verlag, among others. He has also written screenplays for episodes of the shows Großstadtrevier and Tatort .

He received an award for his novel Gegner in the Konsalik Novel Prize competition. With the book Das Gesetz des Dschungels (The Law of the Jungle), he won third place in the national competition for the German Crime Fiction Award in 1989.

Bibliography

As E. W. Pless

As Willi Voss

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References

  1. "Über den Autor - Willi Voss" (in German). 2013-08-02. Archived from the original on 2 August 2013. Retrieved 2022-09-19.
  2. "Dr. Schreck und die Neonazis". Der Spiegel (in German). 1981-09-06. ISSN   2195-1349 . Retrieved 2022-09-19.
  3. "Die Logik der Gewalt". www.zeit.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-09-19.
  4. 1 2 "Attentat auf Olympia 1972: "Ich wollte gewinnen, möglichst effektiv"". FAZ.NET (in German). ISSN   0174-4909 . Retrieved 2022-09-19.
  5. "Arafats Söldner - Die drei Leben des Willi Pohl". www.zdf.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-09-19.
  6. "Terrorhelfer der Olympia-Attentäter 1972 wurde CIA-Agent". Der Spiegel (in German). 2012-12-30. ISSN   2195-1349 . Retrieved 2022-09-19.