More than 100 plots, attacks ‘homegrown’ – ‘Trump should not ignore domestic terrorist threats’

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Protesters gather outside US District Court during a hearing for Daniel Ramirez Medina, a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipient who was detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), in Seattle, Washington on Feb 17.

OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb 18, (AP): Bud Welch knows something about the human cost of terrorism. His 23-year-old daughter was killed when a rental truck packed with explosives destroyed the Oklahoma City federal building. That was in 1995, when domestic terrorism seemed to be the nation’s most immediate security threat.

Now President Donald Trump sees the greatest risk in potential attackers who sneak into the US from abroad. But Welch and others say the administration can’t ignore threats from home. “ISIS, to me, is really not a hell of a lot different than the militia movement in the US,” he said, referring to anti-government groups that were provoked by deadly standoffs with federal agents in Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and Waco, Texas — two flashpoints cited by Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. A list of worldwide attacks recently released by Trump’s administration left off many that were carried out by right-wing extremists and white supremacists. And organizations that track terrorist and hate groups say the government focuses too narrowly on threats from the outside instead of adopting a broader approach.

In a move that the administration described as an anti-terrorism measure, Trump last month suspended the nation’s refugee program and banned travel from seven predominantly Muslim nations, although a federal court soon halted his executive order. Welch disagrees with Trump’s order banning travelers from certain countries, particularly when no terrorist attack in the US has been tied to refugees from those places. “You’ve got to be honest with people and quit making up these stories,” he said. “But that’s the problem nowadays. We let politics get too involved.” Since the Oklahoma City bombing, the Southern Poverty Law Center has tracked domestic terrorist plots and attacks in the United States.

It lists more than 100, including some that shocked the nation: A 2012 shooting at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin that killed six; the slaying of nine black churchgoers during a 2015 prayer meeting in Charleston, South Carolina; and the ambushes last year that killed eight police officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Legal scholar William Yeomans said Dylann Roof, convicted in the Charleston attack, is a “classic example of a homegrown domestic terrorist.” “He certainly was inspired by domestic organizations,” said Yeomans, who is on the faculty at American University and formerly served as a high-ranking official in the Justice Department’s civil rights division. “He spent a lot of time on the internet looking at far right-wing websites.”

Some Republicans have sought to distinguish between attacks carried out by white assailants and those tied to foreign extremist organizations. Sean Duffy, a GOP congressman from Wisconsin, recently asserted that the Charleston church shooter and a Canadian man accused of gunning down six people last month at a Quebec City mosque did not get support from a network like the Islamic State and other extremist organizations. “There’s no constant thread that goes through these attacks,” Duffy said on CNN.

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