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DoD Working To Keep White Supremacists, Neo-Nazis Out of Military

White Supremacists

To avoid enlisting neo-Nazis, skinheads and other white supremacists, military recruiters are told to watch for tattoos showing barbed wire, hobnailed boots and hammers. Also to look for tattoos of lightning bolts, skulls and swastikas.

“There is no place for racial hatred or extremism in the Marine Corps,” Marine Corps Commandant Gen. Robert B. Neller said Tuesday.

Those comments, like those of the other service chiefs who denounced bigotry following the “Unite the Right” rally that brought white men bearing torches and chanting “Jews will not replace us” to Charlottesville, Va., reaffirmed military policies forbidding extremist advocacy or participation.

“The Department of Defense’s strength comes from those that serve their nation every day honorably and with distinction,” Lt. Col. Paul Haverstick, a Pentagon spokesman, told Stars and Stripes. “Association or participation with hate or extremist groups of any kind violates the Department of Defense’s core values of duty, integrity, ethics, honor, courage and loyalty. We take any and all allegations of misconduct very seriously.”

Yet the leader of white supremacist group Vanguard America at the Aug. 11-12 Charlottesville rally was until earlier this year a Marine staff sergeant in good standing.

Dillon Ulysses Hopper was a Marine from 2006 through January, his service record states. He became the leader of Vanguard America last year, according to the Anti-Defamation League, which tracks extremist groups. Hopper spent more than two years with the Marines as a recruiter.

Vanguard America is a white supremacist group that opposes multiculturalism and “believes that America is an exclusively white nation,” the Anti-Defamation League stated. “Using a right-wing nationalist slogan, Blood and Soil, VA romanticizes the notion that people with ‘white blood’ have a special bond with ‘American soil.’”

Meanwhile, an armed security detail composed of military veterans assisted the white nationalist groups gathered in Charlottesville, according to “Vice News Tonight” reporter Elle Reeve. “They have a circle of mostly Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who now do security for Richard Spencer and other white nationalist groups,” Reeve told CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

Persistent infiltration efforts

There have been longstanding concerns about right-wing extremists in the military, about such groups seeking to infiltrate the services to gain tactical knowledge and about troops’ radicalization after they’ve joined.

A 2008 FBI assessment titled “White Supremacist Recruitment of Military Personnel since 9/11” found just over 200 identifiable neo-Nazis with military training.

Military experience “ranging from failure at basic training to success in special operations forces” was evident throughout the white supremacist movement, the report said.

“FBI reporting indicates extremist leaders have historically favored recruiting active and former military personnel for their knowledge of firearms, explosives, and tactical skills and their access to weapons and intelligence in preparation for an anticipated war against the federal government, Jews, and people of color,” the report added.

In 2009, a security analyst with the Department of Homeland Security, Daryl Johnson, alerted local police departments to a rising risk of terrorist attacks by the extremist right. The department “is concerned that right-wing extremists will attempt to recruit and radicalize returning veterans in order to boost their violent capabilities,” the report said.

Johnson’s report, issued just after the election of Barack Obama, set off a conservative media firestorm that claimed it disparaged troops and law-abiding conservatives. The report was pulled and Johnson’s office was shut down.

The same year, the Southern Poverty Law Center, another group that tracks extremist groups, compiled a list of 40 users of a white supremacist social networking website who identified themselves as active-duty military and asked Congressional committees to pressure the Pentagon to crack down.

“In the wake of several high-profile murders by extremists of the radical right, we urge your committees to investigate the threat posed by racial extremists who may be serving in the military to ensure that our armed forces are not inadvertently training future domestic terrorists,” group co-founder Morris Dees wrote to the legislators.

Haverstick said it’s important to remember that “the overwhelming majority of servicemembers are honorable, law-abiding, disciplined patriots who represent the very best of America’s population.”

No anti-extremist group has disputed that assertion. Still, military veterans have been conspicuous in some of the most horrific right-wing extremist attacks, from the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people to the 2012 killings of six people at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin.

Johnson, now a security consultant, said that the number of military white supremacists is relatively small. But he said veterans comprise a significant part of the militia movement that sprung up after the Obama election.

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This article was written by Nancy Montgomery originally appeared on www.Stripes.com

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