A network of young neo-Nazis is setting up
terrorist cells across Europe and the US for the purpose of carrying out armed
attacks, a joint investigation reveals.
By
Alexander Nabert,and Christina Brause (Welt am Sonntag), Bryan Bender
(POLITICO) and Nick Robins-Early (Insider)
In Berlin,
Brussels, Las Vegas, Munich, New York, Potsdam and Washington
July 27,
2022 4:00 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/inside-teenage-terrorist-network-europe-death-weapons/
When Lukas
F. walks onto the site of an abandoned army barracks in the summer of 2021 as
part of his training to be a terrorist, he is 16 years old, a slender boy with
dark hair.
The site is
about 45 minutes from the center of Potsdam, a city just southwest of Berlin,
Germany. Once it was used by the Wehrmacht, Germany’s regular armed forces
during World War II; later by the Soviets. There are lakes close by, popular
with swimmers.
A roar of
thunder echoes across the yard, a fireball flashes. First one bomb goes off,
then a second.
Lukas F.
films the explosions on his mobile phone. Months before, he set up a group for
young neo-Nazis from multiple countries who think they are fighting a “race
war.” In their online chat, Lukas F. — a pseudonym used to protect his identity
as a minor — describes these bombs as a test for the group.
Lukas F. is
part of a network of young people from all over the world, teenagers who
exchange far-right ideas, Nazi propaganda and videos of attacks and, in the
process, egg one another on to the point where some of them come to believe
they must take up arms against the liberal order.
There are
dozens of groups like this, linked in an international network stretching from
the west coast of the U.S., to Western Europe and the remotest corners of the
Baltic states.
The groups
give themselves martial names, inspired by the propaganda of the National
Socialists. The most prominent among them in terms of membership calls itself
the Feuerkrieg, or Fire War, Division (FKD). Lukas F. from Potsdam, now 17
years old, is not just a follower: he set up his own group, closely tied into
the network and called it Totenwaffen, or Death Weapons.
Reporters
from Welt am Sonntag, POLITICO and Insider spent more than a year investigating
the inner workings of this far-right terrorist network. Using fake identities,
they gained access to about two dozen of its chat groups, spoke with insiders
and secured more than 98,000 messages, including photographs and videos. In the
process, they also uncovered death lists, death threats against politicians and
journalists, and instructions on how to make bombs and use 3D-printers to
produce weapons parts.
In the
course of this investigation, the editorial teams were able to identify the
real names of some of the group members, including that of Lukas F., who
concealed himself online behind changing pseudonyms. His case shows how
teenagers as young as this can become so radicalized that they talk of
committing murder. It also reveals the role played by the network in the
background, and why the security services find it so difficult to break it up.
School trip to Sachsenhausen
According
to sources in his circle, Lukas F. was born in Belarus. His mother is
Belarusian, his father a Kazakh of German origin. The family moved to Potsdam
when Lukas F. was a toddler; later, two more sons were born. Even now, Lukas F.
still shares a bedroom with one of them in their parental home in an apartment
block in the centre of Potsdam.
There are
childhood photos of Lukas F. on the internet, uploaded by his relatives. Birthdays
with plastic party beakers, a family holiday in Poland, proud grandparents. In
one of these photos, Lukas F. is sitting on a military vehicle with one of his
brothers and their father, and a source said that the family went to a firing
range when on holiday in Belarus, with the boys being allowed to join in the
shooting.
The family
still has relatives in Belarus and there are indications that they have a house
there, too. Lukas F. once wrote that he kept a gun there, which another person
close to him said was an air rifle belonging to the family.
In Potsdam,
Lukas F. attended a secondary school where, according to several of the staff,
he was not known for his diligence. However, he did once volunteer as a guide
for a school exhibition, they say. The exhibition was about right-wing
extremism, and Lukas F.’s role was to talk visitors through a display board of
far-right symbols.
Even at
this early stage, according to a source, Lukas F. was often on his computer and
spent a lot of time on Discord, a social platform for fans of video games.
There, he and others of his ilk harassed gays and lesbians.
At the age
of 15, Lukas F. went on a school trip to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.
The aim of such visits was to teach children about Nazi atrocities and the
dangers of Nazi ideology. But, as his brother later tells the reporters, for
Lukas F. the concentration camp visit was a turning point. When he got home, he
changed the desktop image on his computer to a swastika.
Later,
Lukas F. would write that he had first become aware of his “hatred” at the age
of 14 or 15. “At first i doesn’t wanted [sic] it to be real that I’m a
Nationalsocialist. But now I’m fighting for this.” In his chat group he
describes the Holocaust as a “purge” and writes that he cannot understand how
people can think it did not really happen: “It is real and it is right.”
At some
point, Lukas F. creates a profile on a Russian social network. In his profile
picture he is camouflaged, his face covered by a skull mask. At the top of his
page he has written, “Cover the world in a bloodbath.” His parents are
“friends” with him on this network, though there are no grounds to assume they
share their son’s views. “Unfortunately, my father is a communist,” Lukas F.
writes at one point.
The ideologue from the US
To
understand what may be going on in the heads of young people like Lukas F., we
need to cast our minds back a few years and to the other side of the Atlantic,
to the US State of Colorado, home of James Mason, now 69. Mason joined an
American Nazi party when he was just 14 years old. Two years later, he was
making plans to murder his headteacher, although in the end he did not carry
them out. In the network of which Lukas F. is a member, Mason’s book, Siege, is
considered a must-read. For many young far-right extremists, it is more
important even than Hitler’s Mein Kampf.
In his
book, Mason calls for liberal society to be plunged into civil war. This does
not require the creation of mass organisations, he writes: it just needs
individual assassins or tiny cells to carry out attacks on infrastructure,
politicians or members of minorities. This will result in chaos and prepare the
ground for a far-right revolution.
Mason and
his ideas have gained many followers in the last few years: groups, cells and
individuals, in Europe, Canada and the U.S.
Extremism
researchers call this strategy “militant accelerationism.” Thomas Haldenwang,
president of Germany’s Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution,
told the reporters that the Siege scene is increasingly gaining ground in
Germany, too. “Young people especially, some of them still minors, are becoming
followers. It is no longer unusual to find minors advocating violence or even
planning acts of violence themselves.”
The list of
attacks linked to this ideology is growing by the year. It includes the
mass-shooting at the Olympia shopping centre in Munich in 2016 and the 2019
attack on a synagogue and a kebab shop in Halle. The attackers are lionized as
heroes in the network chats, and their victim counts are turned into a contest,
with the one who kills the most being declared the winner.
Arms factory in the bedroom
In the
summer of 2020, a few months after his visit to Sachsenhausen, Lukas F. leaves
the Potsdam secondary school and begins an apprenticeship. In November 2020 he
sets up a chat group on the Telegram messenger service and calls it
Totenwaffen. Its members include a few like-minded individuals whom he met on
the Discord and Roblox gaming platforms. Lukas F. becomes the group leader –
its Führer.
Between
November 2020 and May 2021, nearly 100 users post messages to the Totenwaffen
group. They come from many different countries, including Estonia, France and
the U.S., and chat with each other in English. They have given themselves names
like Maschinengewehr [Machine Gun], Kriegsmann [Man of War] and Joseph Goebbels
Gaming.
On
Telegram, they face no restrictions when sharing images of hacked-off heads
among the group’s members.
These
teenagers have moved on from video games. Toward the end of November, Lukas F.
writes: “I remember when I said lets [sic] make a real terrorist group out of
it” and adds that more group members voted for the idea than against.”
That same
day, a boy using the code name Edward posted a photo to the chat. It showed an
MP40 submachine gun pointing towards a laminate floor. This was the standard
weapon used by Hitler’s Wehrmacht.
Lukas F’s
response: “Nice.”
From his
digital tracks, Edward can be identified as a neo-Nazi living in Romania. At
the end of 2020 he is just 13 years old. For a while he seems to be a kind of
best mate to Lukas F., a younger brother in spirit. He and a user from Poland
calling himself “Gas Jews”, seemingly 11 years old, were among the first to
join Lukas F.’s chat group. Later, Lukas F. will describe the Totenwaffen group
as a “teenager organisation,” a kind of junior unit.
Soon, new
members of the group are required to take an oath, swearing that they will obey
the orders of the leadership. This does not take the form of a solemn ceremony
by torchlight, but is just a simple chat message, copy and paste. The new
members also have to state whether or not they have read Mason’s book, Siege.
For those who have not, the audio version is shared in the chat. It is 22 hours
and 33 minutes long.
Group
members praise the far-right terrorist who shot dead 51 people in two mosques
in the New Zealand city of Christchurch in 2019: “Tarrant is a legend.”
They
venerate Anders Breivik, the far-right terrorist who murdered 77 people in Oslo
and on the holiday island of Utøya in 2011. One of them calls him a “saint.”
Two days
after Edward posts his photo of the machine gun, his thoughts have turned to
acquiring more weapons. He writes that he wants a 3D printer so he can print
guns. Lukas F. suggests some models that would be suitable.
In a
message posted in December 2020, Lukas F. makes it clear how far he himself is
prepared to go: “I bet sometime I get so mad that I will place a bomb on the
next location where Jewgela will do her speech.” He later clarifies that
“Jewgela” refers to Angela Merkel, an anti-Semitic play on her first name.
In late
February 2021, Lukas F. is making himself a uniform for a propaganda video he
has been planning for months. He posts a series of photos in which he can be
seen cutting a swastika from a piece of cardboard for use as a template. “Now i
[sic] need to paint it,” he writes. There follows a photo of spray cans, and
then one of a piece of red material with a white circle and a black swastika
painted on it. That same day Lukas F. posts a photo of himself wearing the
swastika as an armband in his bedroom in Potsdam.
One night
in early March Lukas F. goes out spreading his propaganda in Potsdam. He puts
up a poster with the words, “Rebel against the Jewish system.”
The Fire Warriors
To understand
how this network of teenage terrorists works, we need look no further than
Estonia.
In late
2018 a young boy living on the Estonian island of Saaremaa sets up a far-right
group. He calls it Feuerkrieg Division and gives himself the alias “Commander.”
He is just 11 years old. The group grows, with members all over the world.
These
members, mostly teenagers and young men, chat about their murder fantasies,
often in detail. The Feuerkrieg Division has been proven to be behind a long
list of planned and attempted attacks worldwide:
U.S., 2019:
Conor Climo, 23, is arrested in Las Vegas for plotting attacks on a synagogue
and a gay bar. He is sentenced to two years in prison.
UK, 2019:
Police arrest Paul Dunleavy, 16, after he tries to procure a gun. He has been
planning terrorist attacks. He is sentenced to five years and six months in
prison.
U.S., 2019:
Jarett William Smith, a soldier from Kansas, is arrested for planning an attack
on a news station. He is sentenced to 30 months in prison.
Lithuania,
2019: Gediminas Berzinskas, 20, is arrested in Vilnius after trying to blow up
an office building. He is sentenced to two years and four months in prison.
UK, 2019:
Luke Hunter, 21, incites terrorist attacks. He is sentenced to four years and
two months in prison.
Germany,
2020: In the district of Cham special forces arrest Fabian D, a 22-year-old
electrician, at his place of work, for trying to build an assault rifle for use
in an attack, he is sentenced to two years in prison.
All these
young men were members of the Feuerkrieg Division, which has been classified as
a serious threat by security forces worldwide. In the UK it was classified as a
terrorist group in 2020, and other countries have followed suit. It also featured
in the latest annual report of the German Federal Agency for Internal Security.
The
Feuerkrieg Division is Lukas F.’s main source of inspiration. He frequently
refers to it in the Totenwaffen chat group. In March 2021, for example, he
writes that the group needs its own logo and that it should be based on the
Feuerkrieg Division one — a skull.
An unequal battle
For the
state authorities this is not a battle on equal terms. Groups disappear, only
to pop up again. Group names and aliases are re-used. The connections between
group members are less the product of rigid organisation than of shared
ideology. The strength of the network lies in the fact that it is not a fixed
group but simply a loose collection of individuals who can be based anywhere in
the world. All they need is a computer, a mobile phone and a bedroom. And all
they have in common is their ideology and their hatred: hatred of Jews, hatred
of politicians, hatred of journalists.
According
to the European law enforcement agency, Europol, it is this shift from a clear
hierarchy to a loose collection of individuals that makes it so difficult to
prosecute these groups: “In these complex situations we have to deal with
individuals, since one or two individuals acting on their own initiative can pose
a real threat.”
Miro
Dittrich is an expert in far-right terrorism at the Center for Monitoring,
Analysis and Strategy in Berlin, which systematically monitors far-right
communications on Telegram. He said it took years for the authorities to start
taking digital spaces seriously and that, even now, there is a lack of law
enforcement. This has allowed a far-right terrorist sub-culture to develop
there unhindered — a sub-culture easily accessed by minors. “Young people are
starting to become radicalized much earlier,” he says. “By the age of 14 or 15
they have often already reached the end of a spiral of hatred.” The strategy of
loosely connected cells and lone wolf attackers proposed by James Mason can be
easily implemented by teenagers.
In
democracies, there is also the issue of the age of criminal responsibility: the
Estonian authorities were not able to prosecute the young “Commander” of the
Feuerkrieg Division (FKD) because he was only 13. In February 2020, after
police paid the boy a visit, the FKD announced its dissolution.
A year
later, however, it turned up again, both in propaganda posters and flyers and
on Telegram. It now had a new leader, another teenager from Estonia, still
using the “Commander” alias. Everyone is replaceable.
The Iron Order
At 5:45
a.m. on 8 May 2021, Lukas F. writes in his group that he has just been out on
patrol. He shares some photos of Totenwaffen propaganda posters that he has
been putting up. One of them consists of a list of names: Jewish activists
campaigning for transgender rights. Above it are the words, “Death to.”
He has hung
one of these posters outside his old school, which he left about a year
earlier. Next morning, when staff discover the poster, they report it and the
police come. Now the police have a file on the Totenwaffen group, but it seems
they do not know at this stage that it was Lukas F. who set it up.
Less than
two weeks later, Lukas F. has a quantity of chemicals delivered to his parental
home in Potsdam: a kilo of sulphur, 250 grams of magnesium powder and similar,
purchased for less than 60 euros on Amazon. These are the chemicals that he
will use to make the bombs he later tests at the abandoned army site.
A few days
after Lukas F. posts the photos of his chemicals in the Totenwaffen chat, he
announces a new coalition: “I’m happy to have Feuerkrieg Division on our side,
Sieg Heil to our alliance!”
But there
is more: the new “Commander” of the FKD is a member of the Totenwaffen group,
and our investigations have revealed that he was in direct contact with Lukas
F.
At the time
in question, the FKD was creating a kind of terrorist umbrella organisation
under the name “Iron Order.” An internal document from 2021, seen by the
reporters carrying out this investigation, includes the logos of eleven groups
that had signed up. They describe themselves as a “National Socialist
coalition”.
One of them
is Lukas F.’s Totenwaffen.
Many
members of the groups in the Iron Order are active in multiple chat groups; it
is a loose network and the boundaries are blurred. Lukas F., for example, also
posts to the Inject Division, another member of the coalition. Inject Division
was set up by a Texan who was arrested in May 2021 for planning a terror attack
on a Walmart store.
Slow investigations
Later,
Lukas F. starts thinking about how he, too, can acquire a firearm. An arms
dealer has sent him photos of two guns and he posts them to the chat.
“First or
second?” he asks.
“If you get
the first one, get some spare magazines too,” writes Edward.
In the
summer of 2021, Brandenburg police get a tip-off from another authority.
Shortly afterwards, officers search the family apartment and seize Lukas F.’s
laptop and mobile phone, along with a Nazi Party flag and chemicals apparently
left over from his bomb-making experiment.
The
officers take Lukas F. to the police station, question him and let him go.
The seizure
of his devices means that Lukas F. is no longer able to access his chat groups.
Edward replaces him as head of the Totenwaffen. In the autumn of 2021 he, too,
disappears — followed by the rest of the group. A rumor goes around the various
far-right chat rooms that Edward’s mother has simply taken his mobile phone
away.
The
investigations then drag on for months. The reporters’ research shows that, at
the time of writing, police have still not secured any evidence from the site
where Lukas F. set off his bombs. One of the bombs shattered a concrete base
into pieces that are still there. And the school to which Lukas F. returned one
night was never warned of the potential danger by police, even though the
far-right scene has produced several school attackers.
Last
August, for example, a 15-year-old at a school in the Swedish town of Eslöv
knifed a teacher in the stomach. In January this year a 16-year-old boy injured
a teacher and a fellow student at a school in Kristianstad, in the south of
Sweden, again with a knife. The two teenagers were in contact with each other —
and documents from the Swedish investigations show that they moved in the same
kind of circles as Lukas F. Both masked themselves with tube scarves on which
lower jaws were printed. This mask is used by many members of the network
around Lukas F. and the wider scene. It is both an identifier and a concealer
of the wearer’s identity.
A response
to an enquiry from a Left Party member of the Bundestag, Martina Renner,
revealed that the German Federal Republic’s Joint Extremism and Terrorism
Prevention Centre, which includes the intelligence services and the police,
discussed the Totenwaffen group four times last year and again repeatedly in
2022. The content of those discussions was strictly confidential.
The
investigations carried out by the Brandenburg authorities have not as yet
produced any results.
There have
been arrests elsewhere, however: according to an Estonian intelligence report,
two young men linked to the Feuerkrieg Division were arrested in the Baltic
nation in October 2021. Information acquired by the reporters reveals that one
of them is the second “Commander.” Two Americans then take the group over, and
a Dutchman sets up a splinter group with the same name.
In late
December 2021, when the investigations are still ongoing, Lukas F. turns up in
the network chat groups again. He is trying to make contact with the Feuerkrieg
Division, and wants to be admitted to an internal chat. The reporters have seen
a private message he sent at that time to a trusted associate: “I had and still
have big plans for Totenwaffen.”
In early
2022 Lukas F.’s mobile phone and laptop are returned to him.
The
Brandenburg authorities involved in the investigation refuse to answer the
reporters’ questions about all this. “The press’s right to information,” writes
the local prosecutor general, “is limited by the interests of the persons in
question, which take precedence and are entitled to protection.”
The interview
In March
2022 the reporters contact Lukas F. He writes that he does not want a
face-to-face meeting but that the reporters can text him their questions.
So messages
go back and forth, first for a whole day, then over several weeks. He writes
that he cooperated with the police when they searched his home and that he
“unfortunately” gave them his passwords — “because my mother was putting
pressure on me.” But at least he now knows how to “hide from the government”,
he writes.
He does not
hide very successfully, however: in April he orders a copy of the 35,000-word
manifesto of Theodore Kaczynski, the “Unabomber” who sent at least 16 parcel
bombs in the U.S. between 1978 and 1995, killing three people. That same month,
Lukas F. leaves a review of the manifesto online … using his full name.
The public
prosecutor’s office in Brandenburg is still investigating him at this point,
but does nothing. In their view, he does not pose an imminent threat.
In his
texts to the reporters, Lukas F. writes: “I was prepared to do a lot.”
How much?
“No
comment.”
Has he
changed since then?
“No
comment.”
Asked why
he still posts to the old chats, he replies, “I know a few of the people,
they’re very nice, I like them.” He writes that he is a “nationalist.” He writes that he might give legal activism a
try, maybe join a party. But first he’ll have to find a foothold. He writes
that he has always had to sort everything out by himself: he even made his
police statement without a lawyer present.
What if he
is charged?
“Then I’m
screwed.”
More
recently, there has been some movement among international investigative
authorities: shortly before Easter 2022 a 15-year-old was arrested in Denmark,
accused of being a member of the Feuerkrieg Division. Around the same time,
several key players in the network disappeared and propaganda channels fell
silent. Since then, there has been a little less activity in many of the chats.
People in the movement assume that several of their comrades were all arrested
at the same time, in the U.S., in the Netherlands.
But new
groups have long since been set up.
Home visit
At the end
of May this year, the reporters ring the doorbell of a flat on the eighth floor
of an apartment block in the centre of Potsdam. The door is opened by Lukas
F.’s parents. His mother is a petite woman who smiles a lot but says little.
His father is wearing a sports brand t-shirt and does all the talking,
demanding to know who these people are and why they have turned up unannounced.
The
reporters tell him they know about the police search from the chats. And that
they want to speak with Lukas.
“We’re already
having a conversation,” said his father, “but okay” — and he disappears inside
the flat. A moment later Lukas F. appears at the door. He is now 17 years old,
thin, almost lanky. His eyes are cast downwards, his dark hair comes down to
his ears.
“Not
interested,” he said, and slams the door shut. Afterwards he texts the
reporters, telling them never to come back.
His parents
do not say anything that day either. Later they write to refuse the reporters’
request for a meeting, though they do answer a few questions by text. In these
replies Lukas’s father said his son is a victim of puberty and of
circumstances. He minimizes: “He’s never harmed anyone.” Lukas’s mother replies
in Russian, saying she is shocked, horrified and does not understand how all this
can be happening.
Several
family members tell us there had been an argument earlier that day, and that
the father had thrown away Lukas’s Nazi literature, including Mein Kampf,
saying it was making him stupid.
In early
June, the Brandenburg authorities take action. A special police unit arrests
Lukas F. in his parents’ flat. He is now in prison somewhere in
Märkisch-Oderland. The state security service has classified him as dangerous,
someone who poses a real threat to the public. Officials are sti
investigating.
They suspect him of having been preparing a “serious act of violence against
the state”: a terrorist attack, in other words.
Shortly
afterwards, the reporters write to Lukas F. in prison, offering him another
chance to comment. Their letter remains unanswered.
In recent
months a new band of far-right teenagers has formed in Brandenburg. Their base
is an abandoned house to which they have acquired access. They greet each other
by forming the fingers of their right hands into an L and shouting, “Free L”:
Freedom for Lukas.
This
investigation is the result of a journalistic collaboration between reporters
from POLITICO, Insider and Welt am Sonntag, working together as Axel Springer
Investigations. The reporters used fake identities to infiltrate the network.
They also spoke to insiders, scientists, terrorism experts, intelligence
services, security authorities and leading figures in the network, and their
families.
This story
has been translated from the original German by Paula Kirby and edited by
POLITICO.


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