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Pentagon accelerates efforts to root out far-right extremism within the ranks

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Written By Eric Schmitt, Jennifer Steinhauer and Helene Cooper
The Pentagon is intensifying efforts to establish and fight white supremacy and different far-right extremism in its ranks as federal investigators search to find out what number of army personnel and veterans joined the violent assault on the Capitol.
In the times since a pro-Trump mob breached the Capitol on Jan. 6, senior leaders of the two.1 million active-duty and reserve troops have been grappling with fears that former or present service members can be discovered among the many horde.
The FBI investigation into the Capitol siege, nonetheless in its very early phases, has recognized no less than six suspects with army hyperlinks out of the greater than 100 individuals who have been taken into federal custody or the bigger quantity nonetheless underneath investigation. They embody a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel from Texas, an Army officer from North Carolina and an Army reservist from New Jersey. Another individual with army service was shot and killed within the assault.
The army’s examination of its ranks marks a brand new urgency for the Pentagon, which has a historical past of downplaying the rise of white nationalism and right-wing activism, whilst Germany and different international locations are discovering a deep pressure embedded of their armed forces.
“These people are not representative of our country’s military,” Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, stated. He stated most active-duty troops and veterans “continue to serve honorably and uphold their oath to protect and defend the U.S. Constitution.”
For greater than every week now, Milley has listened to analysts, learn stories and seen movies of the riots. “There was some indication that an unknown number of veterans associated with the insurrection,” he stated.
Milley stated he noticed rioters carrying army flags. At the rally and later on the Capitol breach, rioters had been seen with Marine Corps flags, Army patches and Special Forces insignia.

Federal officers are vetting 1000’s of National Guard troops arriving to assist safe the inauguration. Of the 21,500 Guard personnel who had arrived in Washington by Monday, any who can be close to President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will obtain further background checks, a regular process to counter insider threats that was additionally taken earlier than President Donald Trump’s inauguration in 2017.
Defense Department officers say they’re trying into stepping up the monitoring of social media postings from service members, in a lot the way in which corporations do with their staff.
Ashli Babbitt, who was shot and killed attempting to climb by a door within the Capitol, was an Air Force veteran with a strong social media presence.

Among the suspects with army ties are Timothy Hale-Cusanelli, one other protester on the Capitol, who federal brokers say is a neo-Nazi and white supremacist; he is also an Army reservist who works — with secret clearance — at a naval weapons station.
Capt. Emily Rainey, an Army officer who instructed The Associated Press that she had transported 100 folks to Washington for the Trump rally, is being investigated by the Army for any connection to the riots, based on a army official. Rainey had resigned from her submit final yr however was not set to depart till this spring.
Milley stated he noticed stories that “people were showing their CAC cards,” a reference to the identification playing cards used to enter army installations and the Pentagon.
Last Tuesday, Milley and the remainder of the Joint Chiefs of Staff despatched a unprecedented letter to all army personnel, reminding them that Biden would quickly be their commander in chief and that they had been obligation sure to defend the Constitution.
The Defense Department inspector common introduced an investigation final week into the effectiveness of Pentagon insurance policies and procedures that prohibited service members from advocacy of or participation in supremacist or extremist teams.
The reckoning on the Pentagon comes as retired Gen. Lloyd J. Austin III is poised to turn out to be the nation’s first Black protection secretary, an ascension that, relying on how Austin decides to proceed, might both sharpen or blur the U.S. army’s decadeslong battles with racial inequality and white supremacy.
Lloyd Austin III, President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee for secretary of protection, speaks to reporters in Wilmington, Del., on Dec. 8, 2020. Austin has instructed of how he needed to confront troops with Nazi insignia at Fort Bragg, N.C., when he was an Army officer. (Hilary Swift/The New York Times)
In his 41-year profession within the Army earlier than retiring as a four-star common in 2016, Austin witnessed firsthand each the probabilities and the restrictions of how the army offers with race. As an Army officer, he has instructed of how he needed to confront troops with Nazi insignia at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and of numerous conferences when he was the one individual of colour within the room. Now, if he’s confirmed as protection secretary, he must resolve if he’ll confront the far-right politics which have heightened throughout 4 years underneath Trump.
“This needs to be rooted out of our military,” Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., and an Iraq War veteran, stated in an interview final week. Austin, she stated, “will be in a unique position to head up that effort.”
Austin’s affirmation hearings start Tuesday, and lawmakers will most definitely press him on how he plans to sort out extremism within the ranks.
Pentagon officers have recognized for a while that they’ve an issue. The Defense Department routinely brags that the U.S. army is a microcosm of American society — however officers now acknowledge that if a section of American society holds white supremacist views, which means there can be an identical section of the army that does, too.

Last yr, the FBI notified the Defense Department that it had opened prison investigations involving 143 present or former service members. Of these, 68 had been associated to home extremism circumstances, based on a senior Pentagon official. The “vast majority” concerned retired army personnel, many with unfavorable discharge data, the official stated.
The majority of the home extremism circumstances concerned anti-government or anti-authority motivations, together with assaults on authorities amenities and authorities, the official stated. One-quarter of the circumstances had been related to white nationalism. A small quantity had been related to anti-fascist or anti-abortion motivations.

The performing secretary of protection, Christopher C. Miller, directed Pentagon officers final month to toughen insurance policies and rules banning extremist actions amongst troops, and replace the Uniform Code of Military Justice to particularly deal with extremist threats.
“We in the Department of Defense are doing everything we can to eliminate extremism,” Garry Reid, the Pentagon’s director for protection intelligence, instructed reporters final week. Reid, nonetheless, was unable to stipulate specifics and declined to handle any facet of energetic obligation members’ participation on the Capitol.
Rising considerations about right-wing activism within the armed forces are usually not concentrated solely within the United States. In Germany, safety companies counted greater than 1,400 circumstances of suspected far-right extremism amongst troopers, cops and intelligence brokers within the three years ending in March, based on a authorities report launched within the fall.
The U.S. army, in contrast to police departments and different regulation enforcement teams, has the power to make use of extremist beliefs to disqualify these in search of to affix. But, critics notice, it has repeatedly didn’t broadly apply these mandates.
“The military has unique abilities to set boundaries on conduct that other parts of government don’t have,” stated Katrina Mulligan, managing director of nationwide safety and worldwide coverage on the Center for American Progress, a liberal assume tank. “But they have been unevenly applied.”
Military officers and unbiased specialists say Austin will face a frightening problem. Pentagon officers concede that regardless of the checks in place, white supremacist and different far-right teams actively recruit service members or have their very own members attempt to be a part of the army to be taught abilities and experience, which additionally lends legitimacy to their trigger.

All army personnel, together with these within the National Guard, endure intensive background investigations and bodily examinations together with assessments of tattoos. Troops are repeatedly monitored for indications that they’re concerned in extremist exercise and obtain coaching to establish others round them who may very well be “insider threats.”
But critics say the army’s management has usually failed to carry violators accountable persistently.
“Current regulations have penalties that are largely left up to commanders, often at the unit level,” Heidi Beirich, a co-founder of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, instructed a House listening to in February. “There appears to be no process to track people expelled for ties to white supremacists’ groups.”
At the identical time, there are a lot of inside cultural points throughout the army — from the recruitment course of to coaching and past — which will take years to unravel.

The lately authorised National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2021, which units annual Pentagon coverage and spending priorities, contained measures meant to assist the division deal with the problem, together with a brand new place within the Defense Department inspector common’s workplace: a deputy inspector common for variety and inclusion and supremacist, extremism and prison gang exercise. Congress additionally charged the inspector common with establishing a “mechanism to track and report” extremist or gang exercise within the army.