The Mail on Sunday

UK’s secret mission to inf iltrate neo-Nazis

- By Jake Ryan

A GOVERNMENT propaganda unit has been secretly working to dismantle a British neo-Nazi network l i nked t o murders and extremist plots around the world, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

Undercover agents from the security service’s Research, Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Unit (RICU) have been ordered to infiltrate the far-Right Order of Nine Angles (ONA) movement.

Intelligen­ce chiefs are increasing­ly concerned about the threat from far-Right terrorism.

Jonathan Hall QC, the UK’s Independen­t Reviewer of Terrorism Legislatio­n, warned last week that the terrorist threat was increasing­ly coming from such ideologies that were spreading among young men through the internet.

New MI5 chief Ken McCallum recently said that 30 per cent of major late-stage terror plots that had been thwarted by the security services since 2017 were linked to far- Right extremism, while Scotland Yard Assistant Commission­er Neil Basu said ten of the 12 under-18s arrested for terrorism in 2019 were inspired by farRight ideology.

Whitehall sources said t he RICU operation was set up to build a case for banning ONA, which is considered by some to be the most extreme far-Right network in the world. Establishe­d in Britain in the 1960s, a leaked report from the US National Counterter­rorism Center last month said ONA was suspected of ‘exacerbati­ng’ conflicts among racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists.

Two years ago, a 16-year-old boy became the youngest person in the UK to be convicted of plotting a terror attack that prosecutor­s said was partly inspired by ONA.

Nick Lowles, chief executive of the anti-extremism group Hope Not Hate, said: ‘In the online world you earn your spurs by being more extreme.

‘There is nothing more extreme than ONA material.

‘What they’ve done is successful­ly utilise social media and growth of extremist online forums to propagate ideas of terrorism, Nazism and sexual violence.’

A source said RICU agents were infiltrati­ng secret chatrooms, adding: ‘ The Dark Web is no longer as dark as some terrorists and paedophile­s believe.

‘ Far- Right terrorism is a real threat, and this is an effort to dismantle it at its roots.’

A spokesman for t he Home Office, which oversees RICU, said: ‘The Government is taking a range of actions against groups that promote extreme Right-wing views.’

A 37-year-old Briton and two Germans with suspected far-Right links have been arrested in Spain following the seizure of explosives, 160 guns and, reportedly, portraits of Hitler.

‘There is nothing more extreme’

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