US report warns of threats from white supremacists, militias
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Members of a pro-Trump mob storm the US Capitol in Washington on Jan 6, 2021.
PHOTO: NYTIMES
Follow topic:
WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - US spy agencies warned on Wednesday (March 17) that racially motivated extremists and militia extremists present the most lethal domestic terrorism threats, and warned that the threats could grow this year.
The assessment issued by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said racially motivated extremists were most likely to conduct major attacks against civilians, while militia members typically target police and government personnel and buildings.
The assessment said extremists who promote white racial superiority have potentially frequent communications with extremists abroad who hold similar ideological beliefs and each seeks to influence the other.
The agencies said that recent political and social developments - such as claims by Republican former President Donald Trump and his supporters about fraud in the recent US presidential election, restrictions related to Covid-19, fallout from the Jan 6 US Capitol riot, and conspiracy theories - "will almost certainly spur" some domestic extremists "to try to engage in violence this year".
Other domestic extremist categories which concern government investigators include animal rights and environmental activists, anti-abortion protesters, anarchists and people who call themselves sovereign citizens who "believe they are immune from government authority and laws," the agencies said.
Citing the report, House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, a Democrat, said in a statement that while lone actors posed some of the most difficult challenges to detect, the violence also involved sophisticated cells and plots.
Senate Intelligence Committee chair Mark Warner, also a Democrat, said in a statement that social media platforms had facilitated online radicalisation, helping white supremacists, violent extremist groups and militia movements to recruit, organize and in some cases, coordinate across continents.
US far-right and white supremacist groups sharply stepped up their distribution of racist or anti-Semitic fliers, posters banners and other forms of physical propaganda last year, according to a study released on Wednesday by the Anti-Defamation League.

