FAYETTEVILLE,
North Carolina (Reuters) - They call it "rahowa" - short for racial
holy war - and they are preparing for it by joining the ranks of the
world's fiercest fighting machine, the U.S. military.
White supremacists,
neo-Nazis and skinhead groups encourage followers to enlist in the Army
and Marine Corps to acquire the skills to overthrow what some call the
ZOG - the Zionist Occupation Government. Get in, get trained and get out
to brace for the coming race war.
If this scenario seems
like fantasy or bluster, civil rights organizations take it as deadly
serious, especially given recent events. Former U.S. Army soldier Wade
Page opened fire with a 9mm handgun at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin on
August 5, murdering six people and critically wounding three before
killing himself during a shootout with police.
The U.S. Defense
Department as well has stepped up efforts to purge violent racists from
its ranks, earning praise from organizations such as the Southern
Poverty Law Center, which has tracked and exposed hate groups since the
1970s.
Page, who was 40, was well
known in the white supremacist music scene. In the early 2000s he told
academic researcher Pete Simi that he became a neo-Nazi after joining
the military in 1992. Fred Lucas, who served with him, said Page openly
espoused his racist views until 1998, when he was demoted from sergeant
to specialist, discharged and barred from re-enlistment.
While at Fort Bragg, in
North Carolina, Page told Simi, he made the acquaintance of James
Burmeister, a skinhead paratrooper who in 1995 killed a black
Fayetteville couple in a racially motivated shooting. Burmeister was
sentenced to life in prison and died in 2007.
No one knows how many
white supremacists have served since then. A 2008 report commissioned by
the Justice Department found half of all right-wing extremists in the
United States had military experience.
"We don't really think this is a huge problem, at Bragg, and
across the Army," said Colonel Kevin Arata, a spokesman for Fort Bragg."In my 26 years in the Army, I've never seen it," the former company commander said.
Experts have identified the presence of street gang members as a more widespread problem. Even so, the Pentagon has launched three major pushes in recent decades to crack down on racist extremists. The first directive was issued in 1986, when Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger ordered military personnel to reject supremacist organizations.
That failed to stop former Marine T.J. Leyden, with two-inch SS bolts tattooed above his collar, from serving from 1988 to 1991 while openly supporting neo-Nazi causes. A member of the Hammerskin Nation, a skinhead group, he said he hung a swastika from his locker, taking it down only when his commander politely asked him to ahead of inspections by the commanding general.
"I went into the Marine Corps for one specific reason: I would learn how shoot," Leyden told Reuters. "I also learned how to use C-4 (explosives), blow things up. I took all my military skills and said I could use these to train other people," said Leyden, 46, who has since renounced the white power movement and is a consultant for the anti-Nazi Simon Wiesenthal Center.
RATTLED BY OKLAHOMA BLAST
In 1995, eight months before the Fort Bragg murders, two former Army soldiers bombed the Oklahoma City federal building, killing 168 people. With a growing awareness of the spreading militia movement, the Pentagon in 1996 banned military personnel from participating in supremacist causes and authorized commanders to cashier personnel for rallying, recruiting or training racists.
"What's scary about Page is that he served in the 1990s when putatively this was being treated quite seriously by the military. There's plenty of other Pages who served during the war on terror, and we don't know what they're going to be doing over the next decade or so," said Matt Kennard, author of the forthcoming book "Irregular Army: How the U.S. Military Recruited Neo-Nazis, Gang Members and Criminals to Fight the War on Terror."
Kennard argues the U.S. military was so desperate for troops while fighting simultaneous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that it allowed extremists, felons and gang members into the armed forces.
The military can grant a "moral waiver" to allow a convicted criminal or otherwise ineligible person into the armed forces, and the percentage of recruits granted such waivers grew from 16.7 percent in 2003 to 19.6 percent in 2006, according to Pentagon data obtained by the Palm Center in a 2007 Freedom of Information Act request. But the Pentagon says no waiver exists for participation in extremist organizations.
"Our standards have not changed; participation in extremist activities has never been tolerated and is punishable under the Uniformed Code of Military Justice," said Eileen Lainez, a Defense Department spokeswoman.
The Pentagon's third directive against white supremacists was issued in 2009 after a Department of Homeland Security report expressed concern that right-wing extremists were recruiting veterans returning from wars overseas.
The Pentagon's 2009 instruction, updated in February 2012, directs commanders to remain alert for signs of racist activity and to intervene when they see it. It bans soldiers from blogging or chatting on racist websites while on duty.
"This is the best we've ever seen," said Heidi Beirich, leader of the Southern Poverty Law Center's intelligence project, referring to the Pentagon's attitude. "It was really disheartening under the Bush administration how lightly they took it, so this is a major advance."
Her group monitors online
chatter among self-described active-duty warriors serving overseas and
reports it to military officials. It also receives regular calls from
military investigators asking about racists in the service.
The Southern Poverty Law
Center and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), another civil rights
monitor, have helped train officers on how to spot extremists, although
Mark Pitcavage, director of investigative research at the ADL, says the
military lacks comprehensive training for recruiters and commanders. He
called the military's reaction when alerted to white supremacists
"patchy."
"We've discovered a great
range of response, from getting a phone call the next day saying, 'He's
already out,' to not doing anything at all," Pitcavage said.
THE TATTOO MATRIX
The Army showed Reuters a
one-hour presentation it says was designed to educate soldiers and Army
leaders about its extremism policy and how to respond, including to
white supremacy groups. Penalties for extremist ideology may include
being removed from the military, having security clearances yanked or
being demoted.
"The standard hateful message has not been replaced, just
packaged differently with issues like freedom of speech, anti-gun
control themes, tax reform and oppression," the presentation says,
noting that recruitment may be difficult to detect, occurring quietly
"in bars and break areas" on bases.The presentation instructs Army leaders to look out for tattooed symbols of lightning bolts, skulls, swastikas, eagles and Nordic warriors. Skinheads may have tattoos showing barbed wire, hobnailed boots and hammers.
In a detailed flowchart called a "Tattoo Decision Support Matrix," Army leaders are shown how to respond to various tattoos. At the time of publication, the Army was unable to identify the locations where this course was being taught.
SCREENING OUT ROGUES
"We're very strict on the tattoo policy here within this recruiting station," said Sergeant Aaron Iskenderian, head of the Army recruiting office in Fayetteville, the Army town next to Fort Bragg.
With the United States withdrawn from Iraq, winding down from Afghanistan and unemployment stuck above 8 percent, recruiters can be choosy again.
Iskenderian cited the example of a young man who came in recently with a tattoo of the Confederate flag.
"We're in the South here. It's considered Southern heritage. It's on the General Lee," Iskenderian said, referring to the car from the television show "The Dukes of Hazzard."
"Is it racist? I asked him, 'What does it mean to you?' and he said, 'Southern pride.'"
The potential recruit also told Iskenderian he had a black girlfriend. Iskenderian sent the issue up the chain of command, and the young man was rejected.
Academics who study white
supremacists say proponents of the "infiltration strategy" of joining
the U.S. military have adapted, telling skinheads to deceive military
recruiters by letting their hair grow, avoiding or covering tattoos, and
suppressing their racist views.
"You have to differentiate
between some of the grandiose fantasies of some of the leaders of the
movement and what actually is going on," cautioned the ADL's Pitcavage.
For neo-Nazis who get past
the screeners, as with the gang members, the military needs a
comprehensive strategy, said Carter F. Smith, a former military
investigator who is now a professor of criminal justice at Austin Peay
State University in Tennessee.
"They are some of the most disciplined soldiers we have. They
really want to learn to shoot those weapons," Smith said. "The problem
wasn't just that we were opening the floodgates to let them in. We let
them out after prosecution or when their time was up and we didn't let
the police know."
(Additional reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Lee Aitken and Prudence Crowther)
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