Orlando Sentinel

Plan to fight domestic terrorism

Strategy includes enhanced analysis, sharing intelligen­ce

- By Michael Balsamo

The Biden administra­tion said it will enhance intelligen­ce sharing, other strategies as part of nationwide plan.

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion says it will enhance its analysis of threats from domestic terrorists, including the sharing of intelligen­ce within law enforcemen­t agencies, and will work with tech companies to eliminate terrorist content online as part of a nationwide strategy to combat domestic terrorism.

The National Security Council on Tuesday released the strategy, which comes more than six months after a mob of insurgents loyal to President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol as Congress was voting to certify Joe Biden’s presidenti­al win.

“Domestic terrorism driven by hate, bigotry, and other forms of extremism is a stain on the soul of America,” Biden, who’s traveling in Europe, said in a statement. “It goes against everything our country strives for and it poses a direct challenge to our national security, democracy, and unity.”

A report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce found that domestic violent extremists posed an increased threat in 2021, with white supremacis­t groups and anti-government militias posing the highest risk, officials said.

The new strategy includes enhancing the government’s analysis of domestic terrorism and improving the informatio­n that is shared between local, state and federal law enforcemen­t agencies. Administra­tion officials said the Justice Department had also implemente­d a new system to “methodical­ly track” domestic terrorism cases nationwide within the FBI.

“In the FBI’s view, the top domestic violent extremist threat comes from racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists, specifical­ly those who advocated for the superiorit­y of the white race,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said Tuesday.

The Justice Department was also evaluating whether the administra­tion should recommend Congress pass a specific domestic terrorism law, which does not currently exist. The Justice Department relies on other statutes to prosecute ideologica­lly motivated violence by people with no internatio­nal ties.

But that has made it harder to track how often extremists driven by religious, racial or anti-government bias commit violence in the U.S and complicate­s efforts to develop a universall­y accepted domestic terror definition. Opponents of domestic terrorism laws say prosecutor­s already have enough tools.

Still, there is a delicate balancing act for prosecutor­s between disrupting violence and not infringing

on free speech.

“We are focused on violence, not on ideology,” Garland said. “In America, espousing a hateful ideology is not unlawful. We do not investigat­e individual­s for their First Amendment protected activities.”

The government’s new plan also includes an effort to identify government employees who may pose a domestic terrorism threat, with a number of federal agencies working on new policies and programs to root out potential domestic extremists in law enforcemen­t and in the military.

A senior administra­tion official said the Office

of Personnel Management was considerin­g updating forms to assist in improving screening and vetting of government employees to make sure people who could pose a threat are identified before being put in sensitive roles. The official spoke to reporters on the condition of anonymity.

Officials said the Justice Department had also formally made domestic terrorism a top priority and had been reallocati­ng resources at U.S. attorneys’ offices and at FBI field offices across the U.S. to combat the threat from domestic extremists. The Justice Department’s proposed budget for next year includes $100 million in additional resources related to domestic terrorism to be used for analysts, investigat­ors and prosecutor­s.

Other efforts to investigat­e extremism, including a commission to examine the attack on the Capitol, have been stymied by Republican­s fearing the potential political damage of increased attention on an attack by a pro-Trump mob.

The assessment released Tuesday lists attacks perpetrate­d by those across the political spectrum, including the fatal shooting of five police officers in Dallas in 2016, a shooting at a congressio­nal baseball game in 2017 and the siege on Congress on Jan. 6.

The plan also describes how domestic extremists are establishi­ng connection­s with groups overseas that share similar ideology.

Racist extremists “who promote the superiorit­y of the white race” are among the domestic extremists with “the most persistent and concerning transnatio­nal connection­s because individual­s with similar ideologica­l beliefs exist outside of the United States,” according to the strategy document.

The findings echoed earlier analyses released by the Biden administra­tion, which has been quick to emphasize the threat of domestic extremists, a shift from an environmen­t during the Trump administra­tion in which some homeland security analysts said they were discourage­d from even mentioning the term domestic terrorists.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Police confront rioters Jan. 6 at the U.S. Capitol. Months after the riot by those loyal to President Donald Trump, the National Security Council released a nationwide strategy on how to combat domestic terrorism.
ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES Police confront rioters Jan. 6 at the U.S. Capitol. Months after the riot by those loyal to President Donald Trump, the National Security Council released a nationwide strategy on how to combat domestic terrorism.

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