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White extremist
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In a manifesto posted online before his attack, the gunman who killed 50 last month in a rampage at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, said he drew inspiration from white extremist terrorism attacks in Norway, the United States, Italy, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
His references to those attacks placed him in an informal global network of white extremists whose violent attacks are occurring with greater frequency in the West.
An analysis by The New York Times of recent terrorism attacks found that at least a third of white extremist killers since 2011 were inspired by others who perpetrated similar attacks, professed a reverence for them or showed an interest in their tactics.
The connections between the killers span continents and highlight how the internet and social media have facilitated the spread of white extremist ideology and violence.
In one instance, a school shooter in New Mexico corresponded with a gunman who attacked a mall in Munich. Altogether, they killed 11 people.
Many White Extremist Killers Were Inspired by Earlier Attacks
Circles show the number of people killed in deadly attacks since 2011. Highlighted circles and lines show connections from later attackers to the earlier attackers who influenced them.
2019
Christchurch attacks
Killed 50
Tallahassee shooting
Killed 2
The Christchurch shooter said he was inspired by the Norway attacker.
2018
Toronto van attack
Killed 10
Aztec High
School shooting
Killed 2
Finsbury Park van attack
Killed 1
2017
Quebec City
mosque shooting
Killed 6
These two shooters
corresponded directly.
Munich mall shooting
Killed 9
2016
Murder of Jo Cox
Killed 1
Sweden school attack
Killed 3
Umpqua Community
College shooting
Killed 9
2015
Charleston
church shooting
Killed 9
Four killers made statements online supporting the Isla
Vista attacker.
2014
Isla Vista massacre
Killed 6
Overland Park
Jewish Community
Center shooting
Killed 3
2013
Wisconsin Sikh
temple shooting
Killed 6
2012
Norway attacks
Killed 77
2011
2019
Christchurch attacks
Killed 50
Tallahassee shooting
Killed 2
2018
The Christchurch shooter
said he was inspired by
the Norway attacker.
Toronto van attack
Killed 10
Aztec High
School shooting
Killed 2
Finsbury Park van attack
Killed 1
2017
Quebec City
mosque shooting
Killed 6
These two shooters
corresponded directly.
Munich mall shooting
Killed 9
2016
Murder of Jo Cox
Killed 1
Sweden school attack
Killed 3
Umpqua Community
College shooting
Killed 9
2015
Charleston
church shooting
Killed 9
Four killers made statements
online supporting the Isla
Vista attacker.
2014
Isla Vista massacre
Killed 6
Overland Park
Jewish Community
Center shooting
Killed 3
2013
Wisconsin Sikh
temple shooting
Killed 6
2012
Norway attacks
Killed 77
2011
The Christchurch shooter said he was inspired by the Norway attacker.
Christchurch
attacks
Killed 50
2019
Tallahassee shooting
Killed 2
2018
Toronto van attack
Killed 10
Aztec High
School shooting
Killed 2
Finsbury Park
van attack
Killed 1
2017
These two shooters
corresponded directly.
Quebec City
mosque shooting
Killed 6
Munich mall shooting
Killed 9
2016
Murder of Jo Cox
Killed 1
Sweden school attack
Killed 3
Umpqua Community
College shooting
Killed 9
2015
Charleston
church shooting
Killed 9
Four killers made statements online supporting the Isla Vista attacker.
2014
Isla Vista massacre
Killed 6
Overland Park
Jewish Community
Center shooting
Killed 3
2013
Wisconsin Sikh
temple shooting
Killed 6
2012
Norway
attacks
Killed 77
2011
One object of fascination for the Christchurch killer and at least four other white extremists was Anders Behring Breivik, the far-right extremist who killed 77 in a bombing and mass shooting in Norway in 2011.
Mr. Breivik’s lengthy manifesto offered a litany of grievances about immigration and Islam — and the attacks became a model for future ones.
“I think that Breivik was a turning point, because he was sort of a proof of concept as to how much an individual actor could accomplish,” said J.M. Berger, author of the book “Extremism” and a research fellow with VOX-Pol, a European academic initiative to study online extremism.
“He killed so many people at one time operating by himself, it really set a new bar for what one person can do.”
Shortly after the Norway massacre, a prominent American white supremacist named Frazier Glenn Miller wrote on a white supremacist forum that Mr. Breivik had “inspired young Aryan men to action.” Mr. Miller opened fire on a Jewish retirement home and community center in Kansas a few years later, killing three.
Mr. Breivik was not the only mass killer to inspire copycats. The Christchurch shooter also paid tribute to a Canadian man who opened fire inside a Quebec City mosque in 2017, writing his name on one of the guns used in his attack.
That Canadian gunman read extensively about Dylann Roof, the American who killed nine worshipers at a black church in South Carolina in 2015.
At least four white extremist killers made statements online praising Elliot Rodger, a racist and misogynist who targeted women in a 2014 spree, before carrying out their own attacks.
All these attacks occurred amid a surge of white supremacist and xenophobic terrorism in the West that has frequently targeted Muslims, immigrants and other minority groups, the Times analysis found.
The Rise in White Extremist Terrorism Attacks
In Europe, North America and Australia.
A large share of
attacks in 2015
targeted migrants
in Europe.
135
88
65
22
16
12
9
2011
2013
2015
2017
The analysis was based on data from the Global Terrorism Database and identified nearly 350 white extremist terrorism attacks in Europe, North America and Australia from 2011 through 2017, the latest year of available data. We also examined preliminary data on attacks in the United States in 2018.
The database is a project of the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism at the University of Maryland. It relies on news reports and other records to capture episodes that meet its definition of terrorism: the use of violence by a non-state actor to attain a political or social goal.
Over this period, white extremism — an umbrella term encompassing white nationalist, white supremacist, neo-Nazi, xenophobic, anti-Muslim and anti-Semitic ideologies — accounted for about 8 percent of all attacks in these regions and about a third of those in the United States.
Erin Miller, who manages the database, said the increase in white extremist terrorism parallels a rise in hate crimes and bias episodes in the West and that deadly attacks are occurring more often.
“There’s a common framing of far-right terrorism or domestic terrorism as being ‘terrorism lite’ and not as serious,” she said. “It’s an interesting question given that far-right attacks can be quite devastating.”
Xenophobia Drives Violence in Europe
In recent years, Europe has seen a surge in far-right and xenophobic violence amid an influx of migrants and refugees from conflicts in the Middle East and Africa.
Attacks in North America Are More Deadly
In North America, the ideologies of older white supremacist groups like the Ku Klux Klan have mixed with anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim sentiment and the fresh-faced fascism of the “alt right” to give rise to a more lethal terror.
The Global Reach of White Extremism
There were five white extremist attacks in Australia from 2011 through 2017, all of which were attacks on mosques and Islamic centers. There were no such attacks in New Zealand during that same period.
Then the massacre of worshippers at two mosques in Christchurch on March 15 — the deadliest shooting in modern New Zealand history — helped put the global nature of white extremism into relief. The shooter was an Australian man who said he was radicalized during his travels in Europe and designed his attack to draw an American audience.
Experts say the same broad motives are at play whether the target is a mosque in Perth or an asylum seekers’ shelter in Dresden or a synagogue in Pittsburgh. Attackers who identify as white, Christian and culturally European see an attack on their privileged position in the West by immigrants, Muslims and other religious and racial minorities.
The difference now is that it is easier than ever for extremists to connect both domestically and across continents, according to Mr. Berger, the “Extremism” author. The entry point for radicalization is less narrow than it was during earlier waves of white supremacist action, when finding ideological fellow travelers typically required meeting in person.
“This is a particularly strong wave,” Mr. Berger said, “and I think it’s being fueled by a lot of political developments and also by the sort of connective tissue that you get from the Internet that wasn’t there before that’s really making it easier for groups to be influenced and to coordinate, or not necessarily coordinate but synchronize over large geographical distances.”
Heidi Beirich, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligence Project, said that given these international connections, it’s important to reconsider the nature of the threat. “We conceive of this problem as being a domestic one,” she said. “But that’s not the case.”
The challenge for law enforcement will be to buck a sometimes myopic focus on Islamic extremism as the only driver of international terrorism.
It may also require rethinking the legal framework for what constitutes terrorism: from violence that arises from a command and control structure to a looser definition that can account for a wider range of violent actors who share a common ideology.
“They don't see themselves as Americans or Canadians, very much like the Christchurch killer didn’t see himself as an Australian; he saw himself as part of a white collective,” Dr. Beirich said.
“It has never been the case that these people didn’t think in a global way. They may have acted in ways that looked domestic but the thinking was always about building an international white movement.”
Methodology
This analysis was based on data from the Global Terrorism Database for the years 2011 through 2017 and preliminary data for the United States for 2018. To identify episodes involving white extremists, we looked at the available data on perpetrators; their affiliations with terrorist groups; stated motives and targets; and conducted independent research.
We examined attacks perpetrated by anti-immigrant extremists, anti-Muslim extremists, neo-Nazi extremists, right-wing extremists, anti-Semitic extremists, neo-fascists, white extremists, anti-Arab extremists, the Ku Klux Klan, anti-Sikh extremists and incel extremists. We also examined attacks on migrants and refugees, places of worship and religious figures, and attacks on black people, Hispanic people and Hindus.
For episodes in which the identity of the perpetrator was unknown, we made a determination about ideology based on the target or through further research. We excluded episodes with insufficient evidence of ideological motivation.
We excluded cases that might otherwise have met our criteria — for example, an attack on a mosque — if they took place as part of an active conflict, like in a war zone.
We excluded the small number of instances of right-wing and anti-government political violence in which the perpetrators did not appear to be motivated by white extremist ideology.
Global Terrorism Database researchers mark certain cases as in doubt as to whether they constitute terrorism, but since they were ultimately included in the database, they were included in our analysis when they met our criteria.
Attacks by the same perpetrator that occurred on the same day were counted separately. Location information was not available for two attacks in Europe. These are not shown on the maps but are included in the analysis. The chart showing connections among attackers only includes attacks in the United States and Canada for 2018.