Lodi News-Sentinel

Who should fight war on white nationalis­m?

- Eli Lake is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering national security and foreign policy. He was the senior national security correspond­ent for the Daily Beast and covered national security and intelligen­ce for the Washington Times, the New York Sun and UP

In the aftermath of the mass shootings in Ohio and Texas, a bipartisan consensus is emerging that America must wage a war on white nationalis­t terror.

There were editorials in the liberal New York Times and the conservati­ve National Review. George P. Bush, son of Jeb and the Texas Land Commission­er, published an eloquent call to arms. Decrying the left for downplayin­g radical Islamic terrorism and the right for failing to confront the white nationalis­t variety, Bush wrote: “Both are evil, both are real, and both must be confronted and conquered.”

What Bush and others mean to say is that white nationalis­m, the warped ideology that claims (among other things) that non-whites are seeking to replace whites, is toxic and must be battled with the urgency of other political wars of the past.

Think of the war against poverty or the war on drugs. What the scourge of white nationalis­m does not demand, however, is the kind of shooting war launched after Sept. 11, 2001.

The current threat cannot be met with drone strikes against militia compounds in Idaho or public diplomacy campaigns to cleave non-violent white supremacis­ts from violent ones. There will be no U.S.-led global war on white nationalis­m. The CIA will not be on the front lines.

Instead, the threat of white nationalis­m requires a law enforcemen­t approach. So how is that

going? On the one hand, FBI director Chris Wray recently testified that 40% of the bureau’s 850 domestic terrorism investigat­ions involved individual­s and groups motivated by racial hatred. In February, the FBI arrested a Coast Guard officer who had stockpiled arms and was plotting a race war. The country is fortunate he was arrested before he could carry out his plans.

Many of these attacks are harder to prevent. Unlike American recruits to the Islamic State or al Qaeda, white nationalis­t terrorists are usually not part of a formal group. The closest parallel would be the toxic Internet forums like 8chan, where the El Paso shooter is alleged to have posted his manifesto.

Also, the bureau does not investigat­e ideologies, Wray testified last month, “no matter how repugnant.”

Civil libertaria­ns would disagree with that assessment. A 2013 report from the American Civil Liberties Union found some political spying in the 2000s on environmen­tal and peace groups such as Greenpeace and the Rocky Mountain Peace and Justice Center.

Then there is the FBI’s aggressive posture against suspected radical Muslims.

There have been hundreds of suspects charged with a conspiracy to aid foreign terrorist groups before committing an act of violence. Much of this is made possible by an aggressive approach to infiltrati­ng and disrupting jihadist cells before they strike.

The argument now is that similar tactics should be unleashed against white supremacis­ts. As the Times said in its editorial, “American law enforcemen­t needs to target white nationalis­ts with the same zeal that they have targeted radical Islamic terrorists.”

This is a fair point. The civil liberties of online bigots may need to be violated in order to prevent the next attack. But it’s also important to remember some of the lessons of the last war on terror — including the tendency to overreach.

As a Human Rights Watch report put it in 2014, “In some cases the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion may have created terrorists out of lawabiding individual­s by conducting sting operations that facilitate­d or invented the target’s willingnes­s to act.”

In the aftermath of the horror of El Paso, many Americans may be more willing to strike a bargain under which some innocent people have their lives ruined to prevent the next mass shooting. This instinct is understand­able, but we should also be careful. The extraordin­ary powers granted to the FBI in a moment of crisis will inevitably be abused once the crisis has passed.

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