In her first official act as Director of National Intelligence, Avril Haines issued a flashing red alert to the country. Jihadi-like Americans, especially those on the political Right, lurk among us and are plotting to commit vicious crimes such as kidnapping and assassinations.
(Article by Jullie Kelly republished from
AMGreatness.com)
These "US-based actors" allegedly will be moved to violence based on "narratives of fraud in the recent general election, the emboldening impact of the violent breach of the US Capitol, conditions related to the COVID-19 pandemic, and conspiracy theories," the March 1, 2021
document claims.
Haines divides "domestic violent extremists," or DVEs, into three categories; a graphic of the U.S. Capitol building sits atop the category entitled "anti-government/anti-authority violent extremists." That particular brand of terrorist, according to the report, is driven by their "opposition to perceived economic, social, or racial hierarchies or perceived government overreach, negligence, or illegitimacy." (
Perceived?)
The thin, three-page paper does little to substantiate her alarming assessment; it is short on proof but long on political usefulness for Democrats and the media, who continue to stoke fears about so-called domestic terrorists loyal to Donald Trump who orchestrated a "deadly insurrection" on January 6. (The word "unclassified" appeared on each page, as if to give the impression that a thick trove of "classified" material somewhere exists.)
A Politicized Intelligence Community
Haines, of course, takes her cues from the best in the business. As John Brennan's top deputy at the CIA during the Obama Administration, Haines learned intelligence can be weaponized to work against political enemies, Donald Trump in particular, with impunity. In fact, Haines' document conjures memories of Brennan's
2017 Intelligence Community Assessment, issued just two weeks before Donald Trump was sworn-in as president, concluding Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election to help Trump win the White House, a claim that remains without evidence to this day.
But the DNI report is just the latest chapter in the narrative-building surrounding the events of January 6. From false
accounts about the death of a Capitol Police officer and
tales of an "armed insurrection" to the fortification of Washington, D.C., political protest is being criminalized in a way that sets an extremely dangerous precedent for the future.
Biden's top officials are fully on board, too. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, now responsible for a massive crisis at the border,
insists violent domestic extremists are the country's "most lethal and persistent terrorism-related threat" and describes the Capitol attack as a "searing example."
Attorney General Merrick Garland compared January 6 to the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing; the investigation into what happened on January 6 is his top priority. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is rooting out "extremists" in the military.
But despite the incessant scaremongering, little evidence exists to make the case that armed groups of organized, violent domestic extremists attacked the Capitol.
One group often mentioned by the media and government officials as an insidious domestic threat is the Oath Keepers. An influential D.C.-based intelligence group recently
identified Oath Keepers as one of the violent domestic "militia" groups involved in the Capitol melee.
In a "60 Minutes" interview, Michael Sherwin, the acting U.S. attorney who led the first two months of the Capitol probe,
referred to the Oath Keepers as a "militia group." Sherwin claimed Oath Keepers had a plan to "come to D.C., organize, and breach the Capitol in some manner."
The FBI and local law enforcement agencies began arresting Oath Keepers shortly after the January 6 fracas. (Sherwin
bragged he authorized the arrest of more than 100 people before January 20 in a display of "shock and awe" meant to stop people from coming to D.C. to protest Biden's inauguration for fear of getting arrested.)
A D.C. grand jury indicted nine Oath Keepers last month. According to the
indictment, "some members of the Oath Keepers believe that the federal government has been co-opted by a cabal of elites actively trying to strip American citizens of their rights." (If this is crime, I suspect the overwhelming majority of Americans are guilty of it.)
Many Oath Keepers, the government wrote, are former members of the military and law enforcement faithful to their oaths to defend the Constitution.
Their grand conspiracy is based on text messages and travel arrangements made before January 6. Prosecutors claim the group, dressed in military garb, "did knowingly combine, conspire, confederate, and agree with each other and others known and unknown, to commit an offense against the United States, namely, to corruptly obstruct, influence, and impede an official proceeding, that is, Congress's certification of the Electoral College." (As I explained
here last week, the "obstruction of an official proceeding" is a vague provision in a 2002 law aimed at white collar criminals, not Americans engaging in political protest. More than 80 people now face that charge, which is a felony punishable by up to 20 years in jail.)
In addition to the conspiracy and obstruction count, each Oath Keeper is charged with entering "restricted grounds." Hundreds of Americans should not have been near or inside the People's House because the "Vice President was temporarily visiting and where a special event of national significance was in progress," prosecutors alleged.
Two Oath Keepers face an extra charge of tampering with documents for deleting photos and videos off their own social media accounts.
Yet only one charge—destruction of government property and the aiding and abetting of it—remotely could be considered an act of violence and the government's evidence of that flimsy charge is absurd. No Oath Keeper is accused of smashing a window or stealing government property or leaving a mark anywhere inside the Capitol.
The mere act of entering the building, according to federal prosecutors, somehow propelled others to enter the building and therefore caused "depredation against property of the United States." Even though the government does not cite any specific damages caused by the Oath Keepers, nonetheless, they "together and with others known and unknown, forcibly entered the Capitol and thereby caused damage to the building in an amount more than $1,000."
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