'It is serious and intense': white supremacist
domestic terror threat looms large in US
Donald
Trump
From the frequency of attacks to the scope of
ambition, racist terror groups – encouraged by the president, are showing
unparalleled activity in the modern era
Ed
Pilkington
@edpilkington
Mon 19 Oct
2020 06.00 BSTLast modified on Mon 19 Oct 2020 13.44 BST
On 6
October Chad Wolf, the acting secretary of homeland security, released his
department’s annual assessment of violent threats to the nation. Analysts
didn’t have to dig deep into the assessment to discover its alarming content.
In a
foreword, Wolf wrote that he was “particularly concerned about white
supremacist violent extremists who have been exceptionally lethal in their
abhorrent, targeted attacks in recent years. [They] seek to force ideological
change in the United States through violence, death, and destruction.”
Two days
later, the FBI swooped. It arrested 13 rightwing extremists who had allegedly
been plotting to carry out a range of attacks in Michigan, including the
kidnapping of the Democratic governor, Gretchen Whitmer.
Later
revelations revealed that a group of anti-government paramilitaries that
included some of those arrested had also discussed kidnapping the governor of
Virginia.
The double
strike, just days apart, of the threat assessment and the Michigan plot arrests
marked an important moment in America’s tortured history of racist terrorism.
US authorities appeared not only to have woken up finally to the extent of the
white supremacist threat but were actually doing something about it.
As the FBI
director, Christopher Wray, told Congress in February, “racially and ethnically
motivated violent extremists” have become the “primary source of ideologically
motivated lethal incidents” in the US. The danger overshadowed the jihadist
threat that has dominated the security debate since 9/11.
Last year
was the deadliest on record for domestic extremist violence since the Oklahoma
City bombing of 1995. White supremacists were responsible for most of that
bloodshed in 2019 – 39 out of 48 deaths, including 23 people who died at the
hands of an anti-Hispanic racist in El Paso, Texas, and a Jewish worshipper
murdered at Poway Synagogue in California.
While
federal authorities may be showing a new resolve to tackle the problem, experts
on white supremacy warn that the extremists are showing even greater
determination. The movement is stirring, nationwide.
“The threat
is serious and intense,” said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a terrorism and extremism
expert at Brookings. “It is by far the most serious domestic danger in the US
on many levels – the frequency of attacks, the level of recruitment, the scope
of ambition of the groups and the wider political capital they are building.”
If 2019 was
the deadliest year in a quarter of a century for domestic terrorism in America,
2020 is shaping up to be the year that white supremacy spreads its wings.
Groups are showing a degree of confidence unparalleled in the modern era.
Agitators
have seized the dual opportunities of the coronavirus pandemic and the Black
Lives Matter protests to come out of the shadows and on to the streets. Even
before the start of the pandemic, they were flexing their muscles.
Felbab-Brown
recalls attending the gun rally in Richmond, Virginia, in January that
attracted thousands of extremists carrying semi-automatic assault rifles.
“There were militia members from all across the US, Trump supporters with guns,
gun rights supporters, all mixing together in large crowds. They drew energy
from each other, enlarged their networks and emboldened their thinking – and
that was before Covid.”
Since the
pandemic struck in late January, the rightwing surge has gathered pace. Armed
groups of extremists have presented themselves as vigilante security guards,
ostensibly protecting property during anti-police brutality protests but in
reality confronting peaceful protesters and sowing chaos and violence that has
culminated in loss of life.
Though
studies have noted the rise of far-right violence in the US as far back as
2007, there is one aspect of today’s political climate that makes the current
threat level uniquely dangerous: Donald Trump. In the recent presidential
debate with Joe Biden he notoriously declined to denounce the extremist group
the Proud Boys, exhorting them to “stand back and stand by”.
Trump has
done far more than refuse to criticize white supremacist groups – he has
actively communicated with them through his Twitter feed and dog-whistles blown
on the campaign trail. “He may not be talking to them in person, but he
definitely is talking to them through the frequency,” Felbab-Brown said.
Trump has
issued calls to arms to domestic terrorist groups during pandemic lockdowns in
Democratic-controlled states. In April his cry of “Liberate Michigan!” was
interpreted by militant groups as an invitation to storm the state capitol with
their weapons.
His
incendiary “law and order” posture in the wake of largely peaceful protests has
had similar effect, as did his defence of Kyle Rittenhouse, the white teenager
charged with killing two people amid anti-police brutality protests in Kenosha,
Wisconsin.
On
Thursday, and again over the weekend at his rallies, Trump returned to the
theme of the enabling of extremists during the NBC town hall in which he
effectively endorsed the toxic pedophilia conspiracy theory espoused by QAnon,
the rightwing movement identified by the FBI as a potential domestic terrorism
threat. The president also renewed his attacks on Whitmer – an astonishingly
rash act given the terrorist plots against the Michigan governor.
“Trump’s
messages to the groups have been egregious and disastrous, on a par with the
behavior of Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil and Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines,”
Felbab-Brown said. “They have been enormously harmful to the US.”
Michael
German, a fellow of the Brennan Center for Justice who worked in the 1990s as
an undercover FBI agent infiltrating white supremacist and militia groups, has
studied how Trump’s racist appeals and implicit encouragement of violence have
played with far-right militants. “Now they feel sanctioned. They think, ‘my
violence is no longer criminal, it’s allowed, it’s what the president wants us
to do’,” he said.
German has
watched too as the groups have grown more methodical and practiced in their
tactics over the past four years of Trump approbation. The tacit approval they
have received from the Trump administration has rendered them far more
effective and dangerous.
“As an
undercover agent, I was present in the room when militants tried to convince a
recruit to carry out a violent act and either go to the grave or become a
fugitive. That’s a hard hump to get over. If you feel the president of the
United States has authorized you to engage in this activity, it’s a lot easier.”
With white
supremacy showing a new vitality, German is skeptical that the FBI and the
Department of Homeland Security are serious about taking on the threat. The
recent acknowledgments of the extent of the danger from Wolf and Wray are a
step in the right direction, but much more urgency is needed.
“I want to
see it in data. I want to see the arrests, the investigations, I want to know
what the FBI is actually doing. I suspect the data would show that there have
been a lot of deaths caused by white supremacists, but disproportionately few
investigations,” German said.
The FBI’s
use of resources tells its own story. The agency divides its counter-terrorism
pie up 80 to 20: 80% goes on fighting international terrorism, 20% domestic.
The
bureau’s own figures compiled for 2008 to 2018 indicate that the balance of
threat is the exact reverse – some 73% of all extremist murders in the US in
that period were by far-right terrorists, only 23% by Islamist terrorists.
At least at
the federal level, the FBI is having some success in infiltrating extremist
groups as the arrests of the alleged Michigan kidnap plotters attested. The
record among state and local law enforcement looks far less impressive.
Among local
police forces, the pattern is less likely to be infiltration of far-right
groups by officers than the other way round – extremists are inveigling
themselves into police forces. German’s work for the Brennan Center, drawing on
FBI policy documents, has pointed out that white supremacist and
anti-government groups often have “active links” with law enforcement
officials.
Yet the
justice department has no national strategy for spotting and removing white
supremacist police officers.
On
Thursday, armed members of the Boogaloo Bois – extremists agitating for a
second civil war – illegally assembled outside the police headquarters in
Newport News, Virginia. Instead of arresting the men for violating a ban on
firearms on city property, the police chief handed their leader a bottle of
chocolate milk and allowed him to address his ranks through a microphone and
sound system that the force provided.
An insight
into the world that is being created by this heady combination of a supportive
president and fraternizing local police amid the turmoil of the pandemic and a
fast-approaching volatile election is afforded by a new podcast from the
Southern Poverty Law Center. Baseless takes listeners inside the leadership of
the Base, a domestic terror group dedicated to destroying US democracy and
sparking a race war that they believe and hope will transform America into a
white ethno-state.
Drawing on
83 hours of secret recordings of top leaders inside the Base, including its
founder Rinaldo Nazzaro whose true identity was revealed by the Guardian in
January, the podcast conveys with chilling intimacy the scale of the white
supremacists’ ambitions.
The
militants describe the intricate vetting process that they follow for all new
recruits. Potential new members are required to fill out a questionnaire that
asks them whether they have had any military training.
Promising
applicants are then invited into the “vetting room” in which a panel of five or
six Base extremists, headed by Nazzaro, quiz them through an encrypted phone
app. If they pass that stage, they are then given a task such as posting flyers
around schools and college campuses that say “Save your race, join the Base”;
and “Learn, train, fight, organize”.
The Base
perceives itself not so much as an organization, but as a web of like-minded
violent extremists. “We see ourselves more of a network,” Nazzaro is heard
saying on the tapes.
But the one
quality above all others that the terrorists crave is military experience. One
in five of the 100 individuals who make an appearance on the recordings have
had combat training as former or serving military personnel.
“This is a
clear target,” said Jamila Paksima, co-producer of the Baseless podcast. “They
are looking for people with military experience who can then train other
recruits. So the US government is equipping people with the skills of warfare
that are then potentially being turned back against the American people.”



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