Domestic Terrorism Is Likely to Grow

Domestic Terrorism Is Likely to Grow

Gilroy. El Paso. Dayton. Three mass shootings ineight days are all being investigated as acts of domestic terrorism—coerciveviolence fueled by extremist ideologies of a political, religious, social,racial, or environmental nature.

These jarring, tragic events have cast new attention on the rise of extremist behavior in the United States. Researchers and law enforcement officials say the issue has been neglected, allowed to fester and proliferate. Stoked by divisive rhetoric on cable news, social media, and online message boards, domestic terrorism is an expanding national security threat, and while white supremacist violence has been the most prevalent, extremism is growing in all corners and ideologies.

As far back as 2009 analysts at the Department ofHomeland Security warned of the rising threat of domesticterrorism, particularly from white supremicist factions. At the time, thereport got caught in the political spin cycle, dismissed as partisan fare thatdemonized conservative views, and the team that produced it was reassigned.Today, agents investigating foreign terrorism still wield far more resourcesand legal power than those pursuing threats at home.

“On the left and the right there is denial aboutthe extent that this is happening,” said David Neiwert, a reporter who hascovered white nationalists for decades and the author of Alt-America: Rise of the Radical Right in the Age ofTrump. “It’s such an ugly thing, nobody wants to acknowledge thesethings are going on in America.”
Hate,extremist violence spread

In 1995, 168 people were killed in the bombing ofthe Oklahoma federal building, and Google was still three years from existence.Today, domestic terrorists are proliferating online, according to lawenforcement officials, coordinating, planning, and drawing inspiration from oneanother through digital postings and manifestos.

Anders Breivik, the Norwegian who killed 77 people in a 2012 mass shooting and bomb attack, influenced the man who attacked two mosques on March 15, 2019, in Christchurch, New Zealand, Neiwert said. He, in turn, appears to have influenced the El Paso shooter.

Several of the manifestos, including that of theNew Zealand shooter entitled “The Great Replacement,” drew on theories promotedby French writer Renaud Camus, who claims European elites wish to replace whiteEuropeans with immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa.

As violent crime rates nudged slightly downward from 2010 to 2017, FBI-reported hate crimes climbed more than 8%, according to an analysis by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism led by director Brian Levin. In May, the head of the FBI’s counterterrorism division said the bureau was investigating 850 domestic terrorism cases, 40% driven by racist motivations.

FBI Director Christopher Wray said at a July House hearing white supremacypresents a “persistent” and “pervasive” threat to theUnited States.

The El Paso shooter, who drove 10 hours acrossTexas to a Walmart where he shot and killed 22 people, has been connected to amanifesto dripping with racism and hatred posted to 8chan, the online communitypopular with radical right extremists. The unsigned document, titled “TheInconvenient Truth,” bluntly states: “This attack is a response to the Hispanicinvasion of Texas.”

The gunman who opened fire at a synagogue in Poway,Calif., in April posted an anti-Semitic rant on 8chan before killing one andwounding three others. The man accused of killing 11 people at a Pittsburghsynagogue in October 2018 derided immigrants, Jews and other groups online.

“After an event like El Paso takes place the talkon sites like the Daily Stormer, Gab, 8chan etc. is downright celebratory,”Neiwert said. “They have this competition going where they are scoring eachevent, and basically your body count is how you score points. They aregamifying mass killing.”

The Poway shooter was “mocked for having a lowbody count,” Neiwert added.
Deluge ofDivisive Rhetoric

On Aug. 3, the same day as the El Paso shooting, a man at a Montana county fair choked and body slammed a 13-year-old boy, fracturing his skull, allegedly because the boy didn’t remove his hat during the national anthem.

“His commander in chief is telling peoplethat if they kneel, they should be fired, or if they burn a flag, they shouldbe punished,” the man’s attorney told the Missoulian. “He certainly didn’tunderstand it was a crime.”

While extremist organizations and messaging haveexisted for decades, Trump’s ascendancy to the White House coupled with easyaccess to extremist messages and community building on the internet haveemboldened people to express and act out radical views, analysts argue.

“This is not just going to pass,” Neiwert said.“America has to wake up to the reality that we have 24/7 cable channels thatcoach half of America how to hate the other half.”

Hate crimes spiked around Trump’s November 2016 victory, according to a study by Levin and his colleagues, with 27 reported incidents the day after the election alone. There were 735 reports that month, the worst month since 2007. Between 2016 and 2017, hate crime reports jumped 17%. After seeing Trump’s statements about certain groups, people were more likely to write offensive things, not only about those targeted by the president, but about other groups as well, according to Tufts University research.

Documenting Hate, a media collaborative, hasrecorded more than 300 cases of Trump’s name being invoked in hate speech orhate crimes since 2017. Trump’s eliminationist rhetoric—when he refers toopponents as vermin or diseases—adds fuel to the violent, extremist factionsgrowing in the United States, Neiwert said.

“It’s granting permission for people to act outany way they can toward the end of purifying the nation and getting rid ofthese evil influences,” he said. “A lot of these people wind up being thoseposting against race mixing like the El Paso shooter was going on about in hismanifesto, it was about maintaining the purity of their community.”

Trump and his supporters deny allegations thatthe president’s rhetoric encourages violence.

“To simply ask the question every timesomething like this happens overseas, or even domestically, to say, ‘Oh mygoodness, it must somehow be the President’s fault,’ speaks to a politicizationof everything that I think is undermining sort of the institutions that we havein the country today,” acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaneysaid after the New Zealand attacks.
Growingthreat met by unfocused response

Now, experts are concerned not just about far left or right terrorism but about new extremists who favor violence and destruction above all else, unbound by traditional political ideologies.

“While white supremacists and ultra-nationalistswill maintain their position at the top of the threat matrix,” Levin wrote in aJuly 2019 report on U.S. hate crimes and extremism,“the risk is also diversifying” to include people with “antagonisticideologies, those inspired by zealots and conflicts abroad, and those with morepersonal grievances.”

Neiwert is following a spike in“accelerationism,” people who believe democracy has failed and have a “let’sblow it all up” mentality reminiscent of Tyler Durden in “Fight Club.”

“They want the system to come down—to destroy thesystem,” he said. “… They don’t fall on the right or left side of thespectrum, they are just misanthropes ultimately.”

One of the former analysts behind the dismissed2009 DHS report is still sounding the alarm. In June, Daryl Johnson published “Hateland,”a book chronicling the recent rise of U.S. domestic terrorism andradicalization. He recently told The Guardian he sees the issue “gettingworse,” and not “going away anytime soon” without more resources and focus fromgovernment.

Still, while the three recent mass shootings arebeing investigated as domestic terror attacks, there is no criminal chargebehind the label, and no U.S. agency has the task of officially identifyingdomestic terrorism organizations.

In an August 6 Washington Post Op-Ed, retired four-star Marine Corps General JohnR. Allen and national security expert Brett McGurk—both former specialpresidential envoys for the Global Coalition to Counter ISIS—called “domesticand homegrown white nationalist terrorism” the “new national securitythreat.”

“It is terrorism directed at innocent American civilians,” they wrote. “If the Islamic State or al-Qaeda were committing such acts, the nation would mobilize as one to overcome it.”

Source: fortune