El Dorado News-Times

Pentagon report cites threat of extremism in military

- By Robert Burns and Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON — Domestic extremist groups pose a serious threat to the military by seeking to recruit service members into their ranks and, in some cases, joining the military to acquire combat experience, according to a Pentagon report released Tuesday.

The report, prepared last year at the request of Congress, did not assess whether the problem of extremism in the military is growing, but it cited a number of examples of service members with extremist affiliatio­ns. It said the number of current and former military members who ascribe to white supremacis­t ideology is unknown.

“Military members are highly prized by these groups as they bring legitimacy to their causes and enhance their ability to carry out attacks,” the report said. “In addition to potential violence, white supremacy and white nationalis­m pose a threat to the good order and discipline within the military.”

For example, the report noted that a Marine was discharged in 2018 for having ties to a neo-Nazi group called Atomwaffen Division, and it said the group’s co-founder served in the Army National Guard in Florida.

Another Marine was determined to be the founder of a different white supremacis­t group, called AIM, which stands for American Identity Movement. The group spread propaganda through an operation it called “Project Siege” and as of March 2019 had about 500 members. The group’s founder was a former Marine sergeant and a former leader was an Army veteran. Several other members of the military and the Reserves were identified as being associated with the group, and the report noted that some were either demoted or discharged.

The report described a social media post, reported by a service member, who claimed to “see plenty of our kind” in combat arms. The message recommende­d ways to identify fellow group members, saying “simply wear a shirt with some obscure fascist logo.”

The military has long been aware of small numbers of white supremacis­ts and other extremists in its ranks, but the problem burst into public awareness after the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, where an outsized number of military veterans and some current military members were present. It quickly fell to a new Pentagon chief, Lloyd Austin, to determine the scale of the problem and try to fix it.

 ?? (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) ?? Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin listens to a question as he speaks during a media briefing Feb. 19 at the Pentagon in Washington.
(AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin listens to a question as he speaks during a media briefing Feb. 19 at the Pentagon in Washington.

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