Veterans a Focus of FBI Extremist Probe
Updated April 17, 2009 12:01 a.m. ET
WASHINGTON -- The Federal Bureau of
Investigation earlier this year launched a nationwide operation
targeting white supremacists and "militia/sovereign-citizen extremist
groups," including a focus on veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan,
according to memos sent from bureau headquarters to field offices.
The
initiative, dubbed Operation Vigilant Eagle, was outlined in February,
two months before a memo giving a similar warning was issued on April 7
by the Department of Homeland Security.
Disclosure
of the DHS memo this week has sparked controversy among some
conservatives and veterans groups. Appearing on television talk shows
Thursday, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano defended the
assessment, but apologized to veterans who saw it as an accusation.
"This
is an assessment of things just to be wary of, not to infringe on
constitutional rights, certainly not to malign our veterans," she said
on NBC's Today Show.
The documents
outlining Operation Vigilant Eagle cite a surge in activity by such
groups. The memos say the FBI's focus on veterans began as far back as
December, during the final weeks of the Bush administration, when the
bureau's domestic counterterrorism division formed a special joint
working group with the Defense Department.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano,
pictured this month in Mexico, defended the assessment Thursday but
apologized to veterans.
Associated Press
A Feb. 23 draft memo from FBI domestic
counterterrorism leaders, obtained by The Wall Street Journal, cited an
"increase in recruitment, threatening communications and weapons
procurement by white supremacy extremist and militia/sovereign-citizen
extremist groups."
The FBI said in the
memo that its conclusion about a surge in such activities was based on
confidential sources, undercover operations, reporting from other
law-enforcement agencies and publicly available information. The memo
said the main goal of the multipronged operation was to get a better
handle on "the scope of this emerging threat." The operation also seeks
to identify gaps in intelligence efforts surrounding these groups and
their leaders.
The aim of the FBI's
effort with the Defense Department, which was rolled into the Vigilant
Eagle program, is to "share information regarding Iraqi and Afghanistan
war veterans whose involvement in white supremacy and/or militia
sovereign citizen extremist groups poses a domestic terrorism threat,"
according to the Feb. 23 FBI memo.
Michael
Ward, FBI deputy assistant director for counterterrorism, said in an
interview Thursday that the portion of the operation focusing on the
military related only to veterans who draw the attention of Defense
Department officials for joining white-supremacist or other extremist
groups.
"We're not doing an
investigation into the military, we're not looking at former military
members," he said. "It would have to be something they were concerned
about, or someone they're concerned is involved" with extremist groups.
Mr.
Ward said that the FBI's general counsel reviewed the operation before
it began, "to make sure any tripwires we set do not violate any civil
liberties."
Some Republican lawmakers,
talk-show hosts and veterans groups complained this week after the
internal DHS assessment cited the potential for the same extremists
groups to target returning combat veterans for recruitment. The
Democratic chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, Rep.
Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, also echoed the concerns.
The
separate DHS assessment, leaked this week after being sent to
law-enforcement agencies, said the "willingness of a small percentage of
military personnel to join extremist groups during the 1990s because
they were disgruntled, disillusioned or suffering from the psychological
effects of war is being replicated today." Veterans could draw special
attention, the report said, because of their advanced training.
Rep.
John Boehner of Ohio, the House Republican leader, said Wednesday he
was offended that veterans were characterized as potential domestic
terrorists.
Amy Kudwa, a DHS
spokeswoman, said Thursday the report was issued before an objection
about one part of the document raised by the agency's civil-rights
division was resolved. She called it a "breakdown of an internal
process" that would be fixed.
The FBI
documents show the bureau was working with investigators inside the
nation's uniformed services "in an effort to identify those current or
former soldiers who pose a domestic terrorism threat." The other
agencies working with the FBI are the U.S. Army Criminal Investigative
Division, the U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations and the
Naval Criminal Investigative Service.
Documents detailing the operation are unclassified, but were meant for internal distribution only.
—Evan Perez contributed to this article.
Write to Cam Simpson at cam.simpson@wsj.com and Gary Fields at gary.fields@wsj.com
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