The Irish Mail on Sunday

This neo-Nazi leader was in the crowd at Charlottes­ville as a car mercilessl­y mowed down anti-racism protesters. He is as offensive as he is ludicrous. But he is not alone. A chilling dispatch from the front line of a vile ideology... BORN IN THE USSA

- From Ian Birrell IN CHARLOTTES­VILLE

SAVAGE street fighting had been raging for several hours after far-right agitators, many prepared for battle and backed by gun-toting militia, invaded the laid-back college town of Charlottes­ville. The day became bloodier and nastier. A state of emergency was imposed. Then a car driven by a young extremist powered into anti-racist protesters and reversed away at speed, leaving one woman dead and 19 people wounded.

As the crowds melted away, bellicose farright leaders returned to bases around their nation to celebrate what they proclaimed as a major victory. Despite the death of an innocent woman, these demagogues declared it ‘an absolutely stunning success’. Deluded extremists even see it as a stepping stone on the path to another civil war over race.

I spent last week talking to some of these repellent characters. All insist they are not racist, blame others for the violence in Charlottes­ville – such as the mayor, who is Jewish – and say they are simply standing up for ordinary people. Veteran Ku Klux Klan leader Thomas Robb claimed Charlottes­ville showed white nationalis­m was on the rise and blamed all the trouble on ‘anti-white terrorists’.

‘It was a huge moral victory in terms of the show of force,’ said Richard Spencer, a key speaker at last weekend’s Unite the Right rally. Jeff Schoep, anti-Semitic ‘commander’ of the National Socialist Movement, who was in Charlottes­ville, said that despite what he called a ‘car accident’, the disruptive event had empowered disparate white nationalis­t groups across America.

‘This is the start of something. Now the Right is united,’ said Schoep. ‘I think a white ethno-state would be a good thing. It was like when you had Martin Luther King marching for the rights of blacks. We were basically peaceful but if we are attacked we are going to fight. Next time we will bring in bats.’

Few would agree the hardcore agitators went to Charlottes­ville with peaceful intent after the city decided to remove the statue of a Confederat­e general in a park. They sought to inflame national debate over historic artefacts and the legacy of slavery. It was the boldest show of force by violent white supremacis­ts in generation­s, with chilling scenes of flaming torches, KKK insignia, swastikas, anti-Semitic slogans and menacing gun-toting militia. Many protesters wore protective gear and carried shields, staves and pepper spray.

Schoep even tweeted: ‘Self defence is beautiful. I knocked out an antifa [anti-fascist] scumbag who attacked us in Charlottes­ville. Laid him out in the street :)’

Yet it led to a response from President Donald Trump that flirted with these modern fascists, which finally forced some conservati­ve supporters to question his fitness to lead their divided country.

This prompts big issues: who are these malevolent racists, how serious a concern are they for America – and, perhaps most alarmingly – have nasty fringe forces been fired up by a President who preaches much of their hardline nationalis­t rhetoric? There are 917 hate groups in the US, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks such organisati­ons. It saw a rise to near-historic levels in this number since Trump’s election.

They include traditiona­l far-right groups such as the KKK – infamous for its robes, cross-burnings and lynchings – along with a motley collection of neo-Nazis, white nationalis­ts, southern separatist­s, skinheads and libertaria­n ‘patriot’ movements. These groups have been boosted by recent emergence of the so-called ‘alt-Right’, led by Spencer and tending to be younger, urban, better educated and smarter at using the internet to recruit, organise and spark outrage.

Another key ‘alt-Right’ figure is Augustus Invictus, who has encouraged followers to arm themselves for a new civil war, challenged the Holocaust and ended speeches with the words ‘Hail Death’. He says he is running for the Senate as a Republican. Robb, a Christian pastor who rebranded the KKK as The Knights Party in a bid to move closer to the mainstream, alleged the Charlottes­ville marchers were just decent white people with ‘love for their heritage, their history and for their families’. Rachel Pendergraf­t, his daughter and the party spokeswoma­n, admitted ‘some of our people’ marched in with flags.

‘Everything is inflammato­ry to some people,’ she said.

‘I find signs saying we’re going to kill you pretty inflammato­ry.’

Yet the sensitivit­y of the statue issue should not be understate­d. The capital of the slave-holding confederac­y was in Virginia – a tobacco-growing state that saw scores of racist lynchings, often involving groups that took part in the protests. Jason Kessler was the local organiser of the protests, who previously tried to unseat the city’s only black councillor. He told me he was in hiding after receiving death threats and said he was ‘angry’ at the city’s failure to protect marchers.

But let them talk and bigotry starts to spew. Kessler complained about ‘disproport­ionate influence of Jews in elites of government and power’ and said he feared white people might soon need a separate nation. He also used false facts about Britain to shore up his arguments, claiming ‘native people’ were dying out in England, British Muslims voted only for other Muslims and that London Mayor Sadiq Khan ‘got elected through this foreign invasion’.

Kessler outrageous­ly compared himself to non-violent icons such as King. He said he would sue Charlottes­ville for impeding free speech in a case he claimed would be comparable to civil rights landmarks of the 1960s. Similarly, Schoep, a convicted petty crook who heads perhaps the country’s biggest neo-Nazi group, started by complainin­g of being pelted by ‘communists’ with urine on the protest and ended up praising Adolf Hitler’s policies.

He refused to discuss ‘the socalled Holocaust’ and went on an anti-Semitic rant, concluding that Jewish people should not be allowed in government. Schoep said his country faced risks of civil war and ethnic cleansing. ‘You have all the racial groups pushed together and a lot of us don’t get along. Look at what happened in former Yugoslavia. We feel this may be a possibilit­y here in the US.’

Tom Metzger is another notorious far-right figure who founded NeoNazi organisati­on White Ayran Resistance and declares: ‘We are racist and we don’t beat around the bush.’ He claimed civil war on multi-racial lines was ‘inevitable… a free-for-all similar to Syria.’

In a bid for more appeal, Schoep’s group stopped wearing Nazi-style brown shirts nine years ago in favour of black ‘battledres­s uniform’ and then, following Trump’s election, replaced swastikas with the Odal rune, a less obvious fascist symbol.

‘The masses believe exactly as we do but have steered clear of us due to our use of the swastika,’ wrote Schoep on his party website. Their views are risible, their fancy dress ridiculous. Rebranding and the ‘Unite the Right’ rally shows how hate-filled fanatics are joining forces to claim spurious white victimhood, fight diversity, exploit free speech and stir up cultural struggles.

The internet, with its swirling conspiracy theories and potential for secrecy, has given them new energy and appeal for younger supporters – what the founder of the far-right Daily Stormer website called ‘a reboot of the white nationalis­t movement’. And as seen in

‘This is the start. Now the Right is united’

Charlottes­ville, they can pose a significan­t threat of civil disorder – especially with their savvy use of internet provocatio­n and the rise of determined opponents who will use direct action and violence to stymie their activities. So do they get too much attention given their minority appeal? None of the far-right leaders would tell me their membership figures but even the KKK – which had millions of members in its 1920s peak – is estimated to have only 3,000 adherents nationwide.

Yet despite their small numbers white supremacis­ts are believed to be the biggest source of extremist-related violence in the US and they are often linked to criminal activities, according to the respected Anti-Defamation League. An FBI report blamed them for 49 killings in 29 attacks between 2000 and 2016. Dylann Roof, who murdered nine African-American churchgoer­s two years ago, was inspired by a group whose leader talks about ‘racial genocide’ against whites.

Metzger’s group has been linked to a mail bombing and the beating to death of an Ethiopian student, which led to a multi-million dollar fine for deliberate incitement of skinhead violence. He did not go to Charlottes­ville, saying it was stupid to announce such events in advance. ‘I would do it the opposite way. I would seek out the opposition’s meeting places, rallies and their homes and pay them a visit. At our own opportune time.’

One of Metzger’s lieutenant­s was Tony McAleer, who spent 15 years as a far-right activist and admits to attacking opponents and gay men. Today he chairs Life After Hate, which fights extremism and encourages other militants to quit. He said the far-Right was very dangerous and growing in popularity, especially with a surge of altRight activity on campuses. ‘They have a disdain for the skinheads but are just as angry, except much of their violence is online.’

McAleer said many recruits found a sense of acceptance and belonging inside the groups, just as he did after a difficult childhood – and that Life After Hate had seen a tenfold increase in approaches from alarmed families and friends over the past 18 months.

And in this astonishin­g statistic lies the cause of such concern over Trump’s latest bout of bizarre behaviour: the fear he is stoking up far-Right racism and dangerous nationalis­m with his crude populism. First he blamed ‘many sides’ for chaos in Charlottes­ville. Then he read a statement condemning neo-Nazis as ‘repugnant to everything we hold dear’ – before reverting the next day to blaming both sides and attacking ‘very violent’ groups on the left. He even insisted that people bearing flaming torches, shouting ‘Sieg Heil’ and chanting slogans such as ‘Jews will not replace us’ were simply ‘protesting very quietly’ over a statue’s removal.

White supremacis­ts were thrilled by Trump’s refusal to explicitly condemn them while backing preservati­on of Confederat­e icons. ‘I really appreciate­d his remarks this week,’ said Pendergraf­t, spokeswoma­n for The Knights Party.

She complains about how immigratio­n over the past half-century has eroded their ‘white Western civilisati­on’ and claims the UK’s Brexit vote last year was the result of anger over ‘mass mobilisati­on of non-white people who are for the most part against Christiani­ty.’

The President, remember, has been openly racist and won KKK endorsemen­t. ‘I’m a fan of Donald Trump,’ said Robb.

‘I don’t think he is a white nationalis­t but he has promoted policies we’ve wanted for years on the economy and building a wall.’

Clearly, Trump is playing to his core constituen­cy of voters angry with the liberal establishm­ent.

But he is also playing with fire given the divisions and dark forces in his country, exposed in such stark light by those fatal events in Charlottes­ville.

‘Trump’s promoted policies we want’

 ??  ?? FLASH POINT: Protesters against the Unite the Right rally are thrown into the air as a vehicle is driven at them. Right: The Knights Party’s Rachel Pendergraf­t
FLASH POINT: Protesters against the Unite the Right rally are thrown into the air as a vehicle is driven at them. Right: The Knights Party’s Rachel Pendergraf­t
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? DARK FORCE: Jeff Schoep, ‘commander’ of the National Socialist Movement, at a protest on the lawn of the US Capitol in Washington DC
DARK FORCE: Jeff Schoep, ‘commander’ of the National Socialist Movement, at a protest on the lawn of the US Capitol in Washington DC

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland