'Be aware': The Pentagon's target list for
extremist infiltrators — right and left
An internal "training module" singles out a
range of groups, ideologies and symbols seen as primary insider threats.
By BETSY
WOODRUFF SWAN and BRYAN BENDER
03/27/2021
12:45 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/03/27/military-extremism-target-list-478200
Flags from
the left-wing Antifa movement. Depictions of Pepe the Frog, the cartoon
character that's been misappropriated by racist groups. Iconography from the
far-right Proud Boys, including the phrase "stand back and stand by"
from former President Donald Trump.
They are
all signs that extremists could be infiltrating the military, according to
internal training materials that offer a more detailed view into the array of
radical groups and ideologies the Pentagon is trying to keep out of the ranks.
“There are
members of the [Department of Defense] who belong to extremist groups or
actively participate in efforts to further extremist ideologies,” states a
17-page briefing obtained by POLITICO that was compiled by the DoD Insider
Threat Management and Analysis Center, which is part of the Defense
Counterintelligence and Security Agency.
"Be
aware of symbols of far right, far left, Islamist or single issue ideologies,"
it warns, stressing that members of the military and civilian personnel have “a
duty and responsibility” to report extremist behavior or activity.
The
materials were prepared as part of a broader Pentagon effort to crack down on
extremists who may be lurking inside the military after dozens of ex-service
members were arrested for their roles in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol
to stop the certification of the presidential election.
The
prevalence of extremists in the Defense Department appears to be small. For
example, the 222,000-strong Marine Corps recently reported that it kicked out
four members last year for extremist activity.
But the
Pentagon says one is too many and the true numbers are not known because
adherents who have been recruited by extremist groups or encouraged to enlist
often organize and communicate in secret.
“No one
truly knows,” Audrey Kurth Cronin, the director of American University’s Center
for Security, Innovation and New Technology, told a House panel this week. “No
serious plan can be built without defining the scope of the problem.”
The
internal training materials focus on extremist behavior and symbolism — of all
different stripes — and point out the risk of making false assumptions about
people who do not pose any threat. This includes pointing out that religious
conservatives are often mistakenly lumped together with white supremacists or
other extremists.
The
Department of Homeland Security has said white supremacist extremists are the
most lethal terror threat facing the U.S. And while Republicans accused
far-left groups such as Antifa of taking part in the insurrection, FBI Director
Christopher Wray told lawmakers this month there's "no evidence"
those groups played a role.
Last month,
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin ordered a force-wide stand down requiring all
units to discuss the threat of extremism within 60 days.
He called
it the first step in "a concerted effort to better educate ourselves and
our people about the scope of this problem and to develop sustainable ways to
eliminate the corrosive effects that extremist ideology and conduct have on the
workforce."
The stand
downs also include "listening sessions" to hear from Pentagon
personnel about their experiences with activity, such as one held on Friday by
a unit of the Army's 101st Airborne Division.
Capitol
riot
The Pentagon
is cracking down on extremists who may be lurking inside the military after
dozens of ex-service members were arrested for their roles in the Jan. 6 attack
on the U.S. Capitol. | John Minchillo/AP Photo
The
department published broad guidance for commanders to address address
extremism, which focuses on reinforcing the military's core principles
enshrined in the oath they take to the Constitution and several case studies of
military members who were prosecuted for engaging in extremist activity or plotting
with radical groups.
But those
materials did not identify specific threat groups, and Austin has provided wide
leeway for individual units and commands to address the challenge as they see
fit.
The
internal briefing shared with POLITICO was compiled by the human resources
office at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, a small Pentagon
agency of several hundred military personnel, civilian employees and
contractors that manages research into breakthrough technologies.
Pentagon
spokesman Jamal Brown noted that military units and individual components have
been given broad authority to tailor their own approaches to addressing the
extremist threat with their employees. He could not immediately say how many
personnel have received this specific information and deferred questions about
it to DARPA.
Jared
Adams, a spokesperson for DARPA, explained in an email that "our training
module was copied verbatim from the material provided by the DOD Insider Threat
Management & Analysis Center of the Defense Counter Intelligence and
Security Agency.
"We
did not add any symbols and used all the imagery provided," Adams said.
The
briefing was sent to civilian employees as part of required training across the
department for "Extremism and Insider Threat in the DoD." Adams said
it is required training to be completed by this month. Employees have to digest
the material and then answer some questions.
The more
detailed materials break down extremist movements into three main categories,
including “Patriot” extremism, anarchist extremism, and ethnic/racial supremacy.
“Patriot”
extremism, according to the document, holds that the U.S. government “has
become corrupt, has overstepped its constitutional boundaries or is no longer
capable of protecting the people against foreign threats.” Adherents reject the
government’s authority to tax and govern, believe they don’t have to follow the
law, and, in some cases, form militias and call for the government to be
violently overthrown.
It cites as
examples the symbols of the Oath Keepers and Boogaloo Boys, both of which took
part in the Capitol attack. It also lists groups such as the Sovereign Citizens
and Proud Boys.
Anarchist
extremism, meanwhile, opposes all forms of government, the document says, along
with capitalism and corporations. It cites as examples the left-wing Antifa and
Occupy movements, as well as the Workers' Solidarity Alliance,
The third
main category of extremists is organized around "Ethnic/Racial
Supremacy," which blames the U.S. government for “forcing race mixing.”
“While the
vast majority of these groups hold white supremacist views," the document
states, "a wide array of ethnic and racial groups hold similar beliefs
about the supremacy of their ethnicity or race." Its examples include
Aryan Nations and the Ku Klux Klan, Evropa and Atomwaffen Division.
The
document also singles out violent Islamic terrorist groups such as ISIS and the
conspiracy movement QAnon.
The slides
list other radical ideologies that don’t specifically target the military,
including religious extremism, environmental extremism, and
“Anti-feminism."
It says
religious extremists espouse purity through subjugation or elimination of other
religions. But it also warns that "Christian extremism is often conflated
with white supremacy for a joint ideology focused on racial and religious
purity which they believe to be God's intention."
Anti-feminists
"openly call for the attack, raping and killing of women,” it reads.
“Primary
target: Women, especially women they perceive as attractive (referred to as
‘Stacys’) who sexually reject or would likely reject unattractive men;
attractive men (referred to as 'Chads') who are not sexually rejected by women;
feminists; men who don’t stand against feminism.”
But how to
spot extremists is proving to be exceedingly difficult because the language,
symbols, tattoos and other identifiers they use are regularly replaced with new
ones.
"The
landscape of home grown extremist ideologies is constantly evolving," the
briefing slide explains.
The slides
reflect the challenge of cracking down on extremists without singling out
political views. Just this week, Republicans in Congress raised fresh concerns
that the Pentagon effort could be overreaching and singling out conservatives.
“I’m very
concerned that we’re seeing people through all walks of society lose their jobs
and other things simply because of a Facebook post or some other post that was
made when somebody was mad,” Rep. Austin Scott (R-Ga.) said during a hearing
before the House Armed Services Committee on the issue.
Marine
Corps veteran Michael Berry, general counsel for the First Liberty Institute, a
nonprofit organization that defends religious liberty, told the panel that he
has seen Defense Department publications "indicating that people who
identify as evangelical Christian or Catholic or of other faith groups are at
least considered possibly extremist."
"You're
essentially telling those who are, according to data, most likely to join our
military, that they're unwelcome that they should look somewhere else," he
said.
Some Democrats
also expressed concern over the military inadvertently punishing troops for
their political opinions or religious views. "It is not the case that
extremism is simply anyone who disagrees with your political views and I think
increasingly I've seen some who sort of take it to that level," said the
panel's chair, Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.). "People who serve in the
military are entitled to have political views. Those views will undoubtedly be
different from each other."
Other
Republicans on the panel also downplayed the warnings that the ranks have been
infiltrated because the Pentagon lacks hard data and has been relying mostly on
anecdotal information.
“We lack
any concrete evidence that violent extremism is as ripe in the military as some
commentators claim,” said Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.), the committee’s top
Republican. “While I agree with my colleagues that these numbers should be
zero, this is far from the largest military justice issue facing our armed
services.”
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