Foreword by Bill Dunne
Projectiles for the People, Volume One of The Red Army Faction: A Documentary History, is an important exposition of what it means to wage armed struggle as an urban guerilla in the post WWII western imperial-capitalist paradigm. Via the fast-turning pages of Projectiles, Smith and Moncourt usher us through the RAF ’s emergence in Germany from a moribund and constrained left opposition misdirected and suppressed by U.S. imperialism and a quisling bourgeoisie. The RAF ’s “projectiles for the people” documented their political, practical, intellectual, and emotional trajectory into taking up and using the gun in service of revolutionary communist class war. Projectiles brings us their voices and links their context to ours.
Projectiles shows us how the RAF engaged in people’s warfare
without descending into adventurism. It reveals how the guerilla was
able to work with apparently unlikely allies and eschew involvement
with ostensibly likely ones based on sophisticated analysis of the
demands of conditions, time, and place. It illustrates how the comrades
were able to internalize the trauma of frequently fatal mistakes and
defeats as well as the euphoria of correct practice and victories. It
explains how the organization recognized and responded to the enemy’s
slanderous campaign of vilification aimed at creating a false
opposition to the underground. Projectiles, in this
exploration of these and many other elements of raf praxis, thus
illustrates that and how the RAF developed arguably the highest
expression of armed struggle in the late capitalist first-world.
Projectiles for the People is more than a dry historical
treatise, however; it is a highly accessible rendition of a story of
struggle that puts us into both the thought and the action. That
placement conveys more than a sense or understanding of the raf’s
praxis. It transmits a connection in a visceral way. Not since reading Ten
Days that Shook the World have I been so drawn into a political
narrative. Reading like a historical thriller notwithstanding, Projectiles
lets us see a rare confluence of theory and practice of which anyone
who aspires to make revolution should be aware. The RAF may no longer
be with us, but it has prepared the ground for and can yet aid the
current movement for the most equitable social reality in which all
people will have the greatest possible freedom to develop their full
human potential. Nowhere else has the RAF ’s life, times, and legacy
been so clearly laid out.
Bill Dunne was captured on October 14, 1979. He had been shot three times by police, and according to the state had been involved in an attempt to break a comrade out of the Seattle jail, as part of an unnamed anarchist collective. In 1980, he received a ninety-five-year sentence, and in 1983 had a consecutive fifteen years with five concurrent added due to an attempted escape. As he has stated, “The aggregate 105 years is a ‘parole when they feel like it’ sort of sentence.”
` |
![]() |
![]() |