A new intelligence report delivered to Congress by the Biden administration warned about the rising threat of militias and white supremacists, adding urgency to calls for more resources to fight the growing problem of homegrown extremism in the United States, reported The New York Times.
In particular, the intelligence assessment highlighted the
threat from militias, predicting that it would be elevated in the coming months
because of “contentious sociopolitical factors,” likely a reference to the
fallout from the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob and the
increasingly partisan political climate.
Racially motivated violent extremists, such as white
supremacists, were most likely to conduct mass casualty attacks against
civilians while militias typically targeted law enforcement and government
personnel and facilities, the report said. Lone offenders or small cells of
extremists were more likely than organizations to carry out attacks, it said.
President Biden requested the comprehensive threat
assessment shortly after he took office in the wake of the Jan. 6 assault on
the Capitol, which laid bare the toxic domestic extremism that has shaken the
country. Only the brief executive summary was declassified and made public
while a classified version was sent to Congress and the White House.
The top-line assessment echoed earlier analyses by the
F.B.I. and Department of Homeland Security warning of the looming dangers of domestic terrorism, including after
followers of President Donald J. Trump embraced his
baseless claims of election fraud. An internal F.B.I. report that appeared
to have been compiled before Jan. 6 and was published days after the breach
predicted the violence to come, saying the events in 2020 were “likely to
embolden U.S. domestic violent extremists in 2021.”
The Homeland Security Department also previously issued a
rare terrorism bulletin warning that extremists continue to be galvanized over
“the presidential transition, as well as other perceived grievances fueled by
false narratives,” a clear reference to Mr. Trump’s false accusations that the
election was stolen.
Domestic extremism “poses the most lethal and persistent
terrorism-related threat to the homeland today,” Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the
homeland security secretary, told a House committee on Wednesday.
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