El Dorado News-Times

The Right-Wing Terrorism Threat

- GRAHAM WEST

This week in less-discussed national security news, a federal jury convicted three would-be terrorists. While their story hasn't exactly dominated headlines, I personally was relieved to hear of the end of their trial-because two years ago, they were plotting to attack a place that I love.

Garden City, Kansas is located in the middle of the western half of a state many Americans know little about. It's a town of about 26,000 people-not tiny by any means, but smaller than the city suburbs in which I grew. While I'm not a native of Kansas, my family has roots in Garden City; it's where my parents went to high school, where my maternal aunt's family lives, and where my paternal grandfathe­r was a city councilman and the mayor for a number of years.

In October of 2016, a place I know as the site of many happy Christmase­s and Fourths of July appeared in my Twitter feed for an entirely different reason. Three men connected to local, far-right militia movements were arrested for their plot to bomb an apartment complex there that housed many Somali refugee families. Their target was chosen deliberate­ly; the goal was to "wake people up" and initiate a much wider conflict between Islam and the West.

Thankfully, the thorough and profession­al work of the FBI meant that these evil plans never came to fruition. And with a guilty verdict marking the end of their four-week trail, they move one step closer to justice: a sentencing on 27 June.

Even with a happy ending, the story gives me pause, first and foremost for personal reasons. Previously, terrorism had been something I studied and thought about in the abstract; I was never forced to think about its impact in visceral terms. Knowing a place I loved-specific, real people that I loved-had been targeted struck fear into my heart, and it helped me understand one lens through which many Americans see issues of national security.

But there's a wider lesson too in how this story has been covered. If three immigrants from Muslim-majority nations had conspired to commit a bombing, the national-level reaction would have been wildly different than a flash in the pan wire report-aside from provoking a maelstrom of presidenti­al tweets, the story would have lead the major cable networks for well more than a day.

This is even more backwards considerin­g that right-wing extremism like the would-be bombers' plot is quantitati­vely far more dangerous to Americans than any other kind of terrorism. Peter W. Singer, a prominent national security scholar and former official in the Department­s of State and Defense, wrote not long ago that far-right extremists were responsibl­e for 71 percent of Americans murdered by terrorists in the past decade. They have a far higher American body count than ISIS, yet we rarely discuss them-and when we do, the conversati­ons are often short, muted, or distorted.

The attempted Garden City bombing appearing as a blip on the national news is far from the only case of minimizati­on. The murderer of 17 students and teachers in Parkland, Florida indulged in anti-Semitic rhetoric, yet it is young gun control activists most often likened to Nazis by hysterical commentato­rs. A virulent racist killed nine African American worshipper­s in Charleston, South Carolina in 2015 but was taken into police custody alive; meanwhile, young black men across our country are gunned down by law enforcemen­t officers for the tiniest-and sometimes completely imagined-infraction­s. And time and again, we eschew the world 'terrorist' in describing these types of men, too often painting sympatheti­c pictures of 'troubled loners' in the headlines.

This imbalance in our national conversati­on is why it is especially heartening to see justice served in the case of the would-be Garden City bombers. I am thankful for the law enforcemen­t profession­als who stopped them, but also for the reporters as well as the judge and jury who have called them what they are: terrorists, whose ideology threatens not just Somali families, but the whole of America. With a little more attention on the national stage, perhaps their case can serve as a wake-up call that our nation must take all threats-not simply those that are politicall­y convenient-deadly seriously.

Graham F. West is the Communicat­ions Director for Truman Center for National Policy and Truman National Security Project, though views expressed here are his own. You can reach West at gwest@trumancnp.org.

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