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What is Nazi etiquette for German troops? Is it illegal to use Nazi etiquette

What is Nazi etiquette for German troops? Is it illegal to use Nazi etiquette

4hw.org: after foreign tourists were arrested for Nazi ceremony in Germany a few days ago, the scandal of "Nazi ceremony" broke out again in Germany recently. Moreover, the party concerned is an officer of German special forces. It's amazing. What's the matter? What's the Nazi ceremony? Let's have a look!

According to German media reports, the prosecutor's office of T? Bingen announced on Thursday (August 17) that an investigation into the alleged extreme right-wing activities of the German special forces (ksk) was launched, following the revelations of several German public law television stations.

Michael Pfohl, the head of the investigation team, said that the first thing to do was to find out where the incident happened and find out the relevant departments. He himself learned about it through media reports. The federal defense has also launched an internal investigation. A spokesman for the army affiliated to the ksk special forces told DPS that according to the information available so far, ksk has been accused of violating the constitution, but has not been confirmed.

A survey by the German Broadcasting Union, German television 2, Bremen radio and North German television reported that on April 27 this year, at a farewell party for a ksk officer, many soldiers saluted the Nazis and cheered up with right-wing rock. The original source was a witness who was present at the time. She said she was invited by a soldier she knew to attend a farewell party at a shooting training ground near Stuttgart as the officer's grand prize. Media reports said the witness had information on the communications software WhatsApp as evidence.

Ksk special forces, an elite unit of the Bundeswehr, was established in 1996 to rescue Germans in crisis areas. So far, they have been operating in secret. Over the past 20 years, they have carried out missions in Afghanistan and the Balkans.

"Nazi rite" is also called "Der Deutsche grueszlig". The way is to raise the right arm by 45 degrees, and put the fingers together to move forward. Germany and its people and interests are above all else. July 24, 1944 - four days after the '7 & middot; 20' incident, Hitler, the Nazi head of state, in the name of 'the army must be loyal to its head of state and strengthen the relationship with the Party', ordered the IDF to replace the military ceremony with German ceremony on all occasions. Before that, the national defense forces had always been based on standard military etiquette. This gesture is prohibited by law in many countries.