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When Violent Right-Wing Extremism is Ignored

. Published on August 19, 2012

In 2009, Daryl Johnson was at the apex of a 15-year career as an expert on domestic terrorist groups — particularly white supremacists and neo-Nazis — as a senior government counterterrorism analyst, the last six of them at the Department of Homeland Security.

As the DHS “go-to” guy for what the DHS called non-Muslim counter-terrorism, Johnson’s six-person unit was about to release a comprehensive report on domestic terrorist groups as a government counterterrorism analyst.

But in 2009, according to WIRED Magazine’s Spencer Ackerman, Johnson’s career took an unexpected nosedive. That’s when he wrote an analysis on the rise of “Right-Wing Extremism”. The work triggered a testy political controversy, under pressure from conservatives inside and outside DHS. Conservative writers feared the DHS as demonizing — even, potentially, criminalizing — mainstream right-wing speech.

Stung, DHS responded by cutting “the number of personnel studying domestic terrorism unrelated to Islam, canceled numerous state and local law enforcement briefings, and held up dissemination of nearly a dozen reports on extremist groups,” the Washington Post reported in June 2009.

According to Johnson, his former team now consisted of a single analyst tasked with tracking all domestic non-Islamic extremism. His database has been shuttered. A Tea Party activist expressed his displeasure with Johnson’s 2009 report on the danger of far-right extremism. Rightwing hysteria came in the person of pundit Michelle Malkin.

Napolitano caved. As a craven and cowardly sop to her right-wing base, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano repudiated Johnson’s paper, deep-sixed it, and would soon close down Johnson’s unit, leaving only one analyst to track what it called non-Muslim domestic terrorism.

Journalist Ackerman describes Johnson’s frustrations regarding the Sikh massacre. For Johnson, Ackerman writes, “ …the shooting was a reminder that the government’s counterterrorism efforts are almost exclusively focused on al-Qaida, even as non-Islamist groups threaten Americans domestically.” Johnson told WIRED magazine .

“DHS is scoffing at the mission of doing domestic counterterrorism, as is Congress,” Johnson told Danger Room. “There’ve been no hearings about the rising white supremacist threat, but there’s been a long list of attacks over the last few years. But they still hold hearings about Muslim extremism. It’s out of balance.” But even if that balance was reset, he concedes, that doesn’t necessarily mean the feds could have found Page before Sunday’s rampage.

“Johnson’s team was dissolved in April 2010,” Johnson told Danger Room, at which point he left. He says had he been at DHS, he “would have published an analysis calling attention to a growing number of attacks on mosques”, which he thinks could serve as a “warning” to Sikh communities that are often mistaken for Muslim ones.

But, as WIRED correctly points out, finding so-called ‘lone wolf” terrorists like Page is a challenge no matter their motivations, since they operate outside established extremist cells and often don’t have criminal records, making it difficult for law enforcement or homeland security officials to spot them.

Now a security consultant in the Washington D.C. area, Johnson used to work for DHS’ analysis shop, the Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A). He supervised a team of six analysts studying what he calls “domestic non-Islamic extremism.”

Looking at al-Qaida, the DHS employed as many as 40 analysts who looked at al-Qaida and other jihadist groups’ inroads into the homeland.

According to WIRED Johnson ran everything else. One person on his team worked on the threat from anarchists; another, the threat from animal-rights extremists. Still others looked at anti-abortion radicalism, white supremacy and radical environmentalism. They were supplemented by analysts at the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms; but outnumbered by the literally thousands of analysts, operatives and other counterterrorism officials throughout the government who focus on jihadism. “Salaries were our major budget item,” he recalls.

Then, in April 2009, Johnson warned that the election of the first African-American president, combined with recession-era economic anxieties, could fuel a rise in far-right violence.

“The Department of Homeland Security protects our country from all threats, whether foreign or homegrown, and regardless of the ideology that motivates its violence,” spokesman Matt Chandler told Danger Room.

“We face a threat environment where violent extremism is neither constrained by international borders, nor limited to any single ideology. This is not a phenomenon restricted solely to any one particular community and our efforts to counter violent extremism (CVE) are applicable to all ideologically motivated violence. DHS continues to work with its state, local, tribal, territorial and private partners to prevent and protect against potential threats to the United States by focusing on preventing violence that is motivated by extreme ideological beliefs.”

Johnson, who has written a forthcoming book about far-right extremist groups, concedes that the definition of “right-wing” in his product was imprecise. In retrospect, he says he should have clarified that his focus was on “violent” right-wing organizations, like white supremacists, neo-Nazis and so-called Sovereign Citizens who believe the U.S. government is an illegitimate, tyrannical enterprise. Much like mainstream Muslims denounce terrorism and object to over-broad analysis portraying Islam as an incubator of extremism, so too do mainstream conservatives denounce neo-Nazis and white supremacists and dispute that those groups are authentically right-wing.

Nor does he think DHS should ignore Islamic extremism. “It just needs to be more balanced,” Johnson says. New York congressman Peter Kin has held three hearings in the past year on Muslim extremism,” he says, referring to the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, “but he’s yet to have a single hearing on right-wing extremism when there’s been a lot more activity.”

His report – the one that got him fired – contains little that is sensational. People who follow non-Muslim hate groups will be familiar with most of the organizations included in the report.

The DHS/Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A) has no specific information that domestic rightwing terrorists are currently planning acts of violence, but rightwing extremists may be gaining new recruits by playing on their fears about several emergent issues.

“The economic downturn and the election of the first African American president present unique drivers for rightwing radicalization and recruitment,” the report concluded.

It continued: “Threats from white supremacist and violent antigovernment groups during 2009 have been largely rhetorical and have not indicated plans to carry out violent acts. Nevertheless, the consequences of a prolonged economic downturn—including real estate foreclosures, unemployment, and an inability to obtain credit—could create a fertile recruiting environment for rightwing extremists and even result in confrontations between such groups and government authorities similar to those in the past.”

The Report said, “Rightwing extremists have capitalized on the election of the first African American president, and are focusing their efforts to recruit new members, mobilize existing supporters, and broaden their scope and appeal through propaganda, but they have not yet turned to attack planning.”

“The current economic and political climate has some similarities to the 1990s when rightwing extremism experienced a resurgence fueled largely by an economic recession, criticism about the outsourcing of jobs, and the perceived threat to U.S. power and sovereignty by other foreign powers.”

Johnson doesn’t contend that more resources would necessarily have stopped Page from attacking the Sikh temple. Lone-wolf terrorists are hard to spot. What the government should do instead is broaden its counterterrorism focus beyond just jihads.

As for the FBI, it appears virtually impossible to separate the contra-terrorism operations into (a) against international terrorists and (homegrown)non-Muslim domestic terrorists. The FBI provides no figures as to budgets or personnel for the two operating tracks.

It is known that FBI brass thinks the international side of the assignment is much sexier and more likely to produce press conferences and headlines from which promotions come. Since 9/11, the FBI, DHS and similar state and federal agencies have been drowning in a tsunami of physical and human resources.

So climbing the FBI international success ladder appears to be a far easier goal to aspire to.

Prism’s future depends on your generosity

This approach, many believe, is the FBI’s natural inclination. They are having a hard time breaking free of the Middle East/Muslim brand that decimated the World Trade Center and The Pentagon. Those frantic days post 9/11 days chasing brown-skinned Muslims are seared into their brain, and it will probably be another generation or two before they begin to recede.

Meanwhile, the skinheads, the neo-Nazis, the KKK, the Sovereign Citizen Movement, the heavily armed militias – and a thousand others – will continue to enjoy their First Amendment rights as they burrow deeply into life blood of our country.

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3 Responses to When Violent Right-Wing Extremism is Ignored

  1. Mary-Sue Haliburton

    August 24, 2012 at 5:17 pm

    Though the article is concerned with the American political scene, we in Canada are not exempt. That omnibus budget bill was like the beginning of an avalanche of insufficiently-examined changes being pushed from the government benches. A further shift in Canadian society may happen due to the passage of this conservative private-member’s bill which its proponent titled “Protecting Freedom”. This overturns section 13 of the Human Rights Act concerning “hate speech” as applied to use of the internet or telephone. Please see: http://www.brianstorseth.ca/bill-c-304

    Some excerpts from the debate about bill C-304 can be found at the “Open Parliament” website
    ( http://openparliament.ca/bills/41-1/C-304/ ).
    Irwin Cotler states “… I believe that this initiative, while well-intentioned, is nonetheless ill-considered, uninformed and a prejudicial move in the wrong direction. Simply put, without effective recourse against hate and group-vilifying speech, we are both ignoring and betraying the lessons of history regarding the dangers of assaultive speech. The arguments of some in this place in support of a repeal, frankly, have made a mockery of our constitutional law, arguments regarding free speech and, indeed, the related jurisprudence, in particular Supreme Court jurisprudence.”

    Cotler’s expression “assaultive speech” aptly sums up the nature of this “freedom”. A better name for it might be an assertion of a psychological LICENCE to attack the character and emotional equilibrium of others solely due to their culture/religion/ethnic origin. Those who are thus targeted may have to endure worsening attitudes from others and a climate of disregard and negativity while having no recourse for this emotional bullying because no specific criminal action has taken place.

    I have no problem with people being proud of and celebrating their own culture and ethnicity. We can all give full expression to the heritage we value without tearing strips off each others’ cultures and beliefs. In a multicultural society like Canada’s we have to acknowledge the collective rights of ethnic groups, not least the right of the francophone community to safeguard its own language and social priorities while still being within Canada.

    In some nations in modern times, not respecting minority cultural communities has led to curtailment of their participation (such Iran denying the Bahai’s educational rights), and in more extreme cases ethnic cleansing (as we have seen in Bosnia).

    We are all free to appreciate our own culture and history, and to express that in artistic, social and intellectual ways. But if that expression takes the form of attacks on someone else’s ethnicity, religion and right to participate in society, then it raises the question of why. If our country guarantees that all of us have equal rights, why would anyone feel threatened by the mere existence and presence of a group of people who choose to retain some different beliefs?

    Shouldn’t we all uphold the anti-discrimination aspects of the constitution as the best way to protect all of our cultures and place in this country?
    
Despite the passage of Bill C-304, hate speech as incitement to violence is still illegal.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2012/06/08/bill-c-304-hate-speech-tories_n_1581437.html
    EXCERPT:
    “The new law doesn’t make hate speech legal on the web or by phone — hate speech remains illegal under the Criminal Code. But by removing it from the Canadian Human Rights Act, it takes away the authority of the country’s human rights commissions to investigate online hate speech and request that violating websites be taken down.”

    So, the effect of taking hate speech out of the Human Rights Act is to remove one of the avenues for redress. At this point we don’t know what will unfold from this change. Some “white pride” groups based in Canada have welcomed this bill’s passage as giving them more freedom to promote their views with impunity.
    (Please see: http://www.canadianprogressiveworld.com/2012/08/08/the-day-canadas-white-supremacists-saluted-stephen-harper/ )

    Based on their quoted statements, the white-pride activists appear to be assuming that it will be more difficult to prove criminal intent behind their racist bluster, and therefore they feel more free to spread these attitudes. Will that “freedom of expression” result in circulation of more intense versions of their racial beliefs?

    And will unchallenged immoderate language in turn lead to more acts of vandalism, personal intimidation, and so on? We do not yet have answers for these questions, but will have to watch unfolding events. A blog “Anti-Racist Canada” has set out to track reported violence in a “Timeline” article for which they invite further verifiable updates.
    ( http://anti-racistcanada.blogspot.ca/2011/10/history-of-violence-1989-2011.html _

    Since the American South has long been a hotbed of racial hate-speech, it’s not merely coincidental that in the same region we’ve had many reports of acts arising from that attitude. And crimes took place that were not prosecuted — and in some cases not reported as such, if the whole community kept silent about what they knew. One such story, about a black store owner, who died when his place of business was burned down by a white-racist group, was reported in detail on CBC radio.

    If you search on the topic of “American South” and “racism”, high in the list of results are many American websites castigating “liberals” for disagreeing with their attitudes, and for daring to publish historical facts exposing and criticizing racially-motivated violence.

    At the same time some of these racial-pride sites attack “islamofascists” for their racism, their religious intransigence, and for their acts of hatred. The argument could be summed up as “they are more hate-filled than we are, so we are justified in fighting back”. Is this more than a tactic to deflect attention from their own attitudes and actions?

    Does the culture of defamatory and inflammatory language tend to stimulate the same extremism among American Muslims who feel threatened by the hostility of the majority’s self-described “Christian” culture?

    On August 21, 2012, in Toronto, a second dismembered body found this year was identified as a Canadian woman of Chinese descent ( http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2012/08/21/more-dismembered-human-remains-found-in-canada/ ). News reports appear to be avoiding connecting the obvious dots. We have heard no translations of any reactions from Chinese-language social media. It’s not hard to imagine that they would have connected those dots, and reacted accordantly. Following upon that previous highly-publicized case of a murderer who posted a video to the internet of his dismembering his victim Lin Jun, it’s highly disturbing that the more recent victim is of the same ethnic origin as the first.

    Is this going to become a pattern? Is there any connection, psychological, cultural or political, among the perpetrators of these two heinous acts?

    How shall we as Canadians get to a place where everyone is equally respected and safe in our country regardless of their country of origin, language, skin colour, and religious beliefs? The price of the social peace we Canadians have enjoyed for decades was a combination of respect for collective rights and tough negotiations producing liveable compromises. This Conservative party does not like that framework for the nation’s constitutional rights.

    Even if the human-rights law no longer provides legal tools, can we still find a way to tone down the hate-rhetoric? The Conservatives boasted that we would not recognize Canada when they were finished with it. The direction they are leading appears to be a road we used to travel, and having come from there, do we really want to return to ethnic conflict?

  2. Paul Repstock

    August 24, 2012 at 1:14 am

    Thus giving carte blance to Domestic terrorism which would trigger martial law. More and more justification for a few billion rounds of hollow point ammunition.
    And the anti muslim bias is a sop to the baser instincts of the rednecks.

    • Paul Repstock

      August 24, 2012 at 11:49 am

      We, the people of the Earth, must wake up.
      Demanding, total security is illogical. For all their grand promises, our governing bodies could never provide total security. We are so foolish to believe.

      It is not possible to legislate, and often difficult to even judge, Sanity. A Norweigian court has found Breiviac to be “sane”. He may be competent and unrepentant. But, murdering scores of people to further a racial agenda is not sane.

      Our demands for security merely lend credibility to ever tighter govenmental restrictions. And these restrictions continually increase the frustrations of the people.
      The endless laws and regulations are like cheap bandaids on the phony and rotten ship of Total Security. They serve no one except those who have employment plugging leaks.