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Atomwaffen Division

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Atomwaffen Division
Also known asNational Socialist Resistance Front[1]
FounderBrandon Russell
LeaderBrandon Russell (2013–2017)
John Cameron Denton (2017–?)[2]
Kaleb Cole (?–2022)[3]
Unknown, various cell leaders (2022-2024)
James Nolan Mason (advisor)[4]
Foundation2013[5]
CountryUnited States (country of origin)
Motives
Headquarters
Active regionsUnited States, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, Baltic States, Russia, Spain, Italy, Finland, Ireland and other European countries, as well as Argentina and Brazil.
Ideology
Political positionFar-right
Major actionsMurder of 5–8 people in the US and the murder of up to 10 people around the world[Note 1][19][20]
StatusDisbanded as of November 10, 2024[21]
SizeFull members (c. 2022): Initiates: +60 (US)[30][31]
Means of revenueArms trafficking, robbery, money laundering, clandestine chemistry, cybercrime[32]
Allies
OpponentsUnited States, Canada, Israel, European Union, Russia[44]
Designated as a terrorist group by

The Atomwaffen Division (Atomwaffen meaning "atomic weapons" in German[Note 2]), also known as the National Socialist Resistance Front,[1] was an international far-right extremist and neo-Nazi terrorist network.[10] Formed in 2013 and based in the Southern United States, it expanded across the United States and it had also expanded into the United Kingdom, Argentina, Canada, Germany, the Baltic states, and other European countries. The group was described as a part of the alt-right by some journalists, but it rejected the label[57][58][59] and it was considered extreme even within that movement.[57] Atomwaffen was described as "one of the most violent neo-Nazi movements in the 21st century".[60] It was listed as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), and it was also designated as a terrorist group by multiple governments, including the United Kingdom and Canada.[45][46][61][62]

Members of the Atomwaffen Division have been held responsible for a number of murders, bombings, planned terrorist attacks, and other criminal actions.[63]

History

[edit]

In 2015, the group's creation was announced by founding member Brandon Russell, on the Neo-fascist[10] and Neo-Nazi[10] web forum IronMarch.org,[5][10][64] which, prior to its shutdown in 2017, had been linked to several acts of Neo-Nazi terrorism and violent militant groups such as the Nordic Resistance Movement, National Action, CasaPound, and Golden Dawn.[10][55][56][65] In its initial posts, the group described itself as a "very fanatical, ideological band of comrades who do both activism and militant training. Hand to hand, arms training, and various other forms of training. As for activism, we spread awareness in the real world through unconventional means."[64]

As of 2017, the group's membership was mostly young, and it also recruited new members on university campuses.[66][67] Its campus recruitment poster campaigns[68] urged students to "Join Your Local Nazis!" and say "The Nazis Are Coming!". It posted recruiting posters at the University of Chicago,[69][64] the University of Central Florida,[70] the Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia,[71] and Boston University.[72][73] Atomwaffen Division had recruited several veterans and current members of the U.S. Armed Forces who trained the organization's members in the use of firearms and military tactics.[22][74] A U.S. Navy officer was expelled for allegedly recruiting 12 members for the group and four affiliated US Marines were charged with trafficking and manufacturing firearms for the group.[75][76] Atomwaffen members also sought to train with the Azov Battalion and Russian Imperial Movement.[77][78][79][80][81] In October 2020, Ukraine deported two Atomwaffen members who tried to join Azov for inciting murders and terrorism.[82][32][83]

As of 2018, Atomwaffen had ties to various affiliated neo-Nazi groups and the fascist Satanist Order of Nine Angles (O9A), an organization which advocates rape and human sacrifice.[65][84][85]

During an investigation in 2018, ProPublica obtained 250,000 encrypted chat logs written by members of the group.[86] It was estimated in early 2018, that Atomwaffen had 80 members,[87] while Propublica estimated as many as 100.[22] According to International Centre for Counter-Terrorism the group has a large number of "initiates" in addition to 60 to 80 full members.[31][88]

On March 14, 2020, Mason claimed that the Atomwaffen Division had disbanded. However, the group was believed to be on the cusp of being designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the State Department, and the Anti-Defamation League stated that "the move is designed to give members breathing room rather than actually end their militant activities".[89][90] An intelligence brief distributed by federal law enforcement warned that Atomwaffen and its branches had discussed taking advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic.[91] On March 25, 2020, a Missouri man affiliated with Atomwaffen allegedly planned to destroy a hospital treating coronavirus victims with a car bomb and died in a shootout with the FBI.[92][93]

According to counter-terrorism experts, the group remained active and it continued to established affiliates in Europe. On May 31, 2020, it was announced that a new Atomwaffen cell had been uncovered in Russia. Local security services had also just previously uncovered a cell in Switzerland, confirming the suspicions of the German officials that Switzerland served as the linchpin of Atomwaffen's German operation, allowing them to evade law enforcement. European security officials have asked their U.S. counterparts for assistance in combating these cells and urged designating them as terrorist organizations.[94][95][96]

In August 2020, months after the claimed disbanding, the group resurfaced yet again, this time as "National Socialist Order".[97]

On April 22, 2021, the British government announced its banning of Atomwaffen/National Socialist Order as terrorist organizations.[47][98] Similar actions were undertaken by Canada and Australia, which outlawed local Atomwaffen branches in sweeping bans against far-right organizations.[62][99]

On September 12, 2022, former NSO members released a blog post on their website claiming to start a new organization, the "National Socialist Resistance Front."[1]

According to Vice and the Guardian in 2023, Atomwaffen Division members have been active "and play key roles" in organizing the Active Club Network, which is a loose association of various neo-Nazi and white supremacy groups.[100][39] A leading member of Atomwaffen's Canadian branch, Patrick Gordon Macdonald, who has been charged with terrorism offenses, was allegedly also a member of Canadian Active Club.[101] Kristoffer Nippak, another founding member of the Northern Order was also a member of the Active Club.[102] According to the director of the University of New Brunswick's Criminology and Criminal Justice Program, David Hoffman, Atomwaffen is using Active Clubs as a cover for organizing where it has been outlawed as a terrorist group.[103]

Although Atomwaffen's ideology stressed opposition to democracy and parliamentarism, prominent Atomwaffen members have also risen to power as prominent members of their local far-right parties. Viljam Nyman of AWD Finland had been member of the Lapland board of the Finns Party, and another Finnish member was a party ideologue, publishing dozens of articles in the Finns party organ. MP Ruuben Kaalep from EKRE was also connected to Atomwaffen members[109] as was MP Daniel Halemba of Alternative for Germany.[110]

According to the Guardian, "mass shooters in Buffalo, New York; El Paso, Texas; and Jacksonville, Florida have cited Atomwaffen’s message as their inspiration."[18] The Guardian reported that as of November 10, 2024, Atomwaffen was disbanded.[21]

Ideology

[edit]

In its propaganda videos, Atomwaffen burned copies of the United States Constitution and flag and it also advocated attacks against the federal government of the United States, attacks against racial minorities, attacks against gay people, and attacks against Jews. The videos also contained footage of the attacks on said minorities.[86] Atomwaffen Division had engaged in several mass murder plots, plans to cripple public water systems and plans to destroy parts of the continental U.S. power transmission grid.[86] Atomwaffen has also been accused of planning to blow up nuclear power stations.[86] The organization's aim was to violently overthrow the federal government of the United States via terrorism and guerrilla warfare tactics. Since 2017, the organization had been linked to eight killings and several violent hate crimes in the US, including assaults, rapes and multiple cases of kidnapping and torture.[87][33][111][24]

The organization explicitly advocated neo-Nazism, drawing a significant amount of influences from James Mason and his publication Siege, a mid-1980s newsletter of the National Socialist Liberation Front that paid tribute to Adolf Hitler, Joseph Tommasi, Charles Manson, and Savitri Devi.[112] It was published into a book with the same title that was required reading for all Atomwaffen Division members. Mason, a neo-Nazi and a Holocaust denier who advocates murder and violence in order to create lawlessness and anarchy and destabilize the system, was the main advisor to the group.[113][65]

The AWD was one of the most notable groups who belong to the militant far-right accelerationist movement popularized by James Nolan Mason and the now-defunct Iron March forum. In the context of contemporary neo-fascist politics, far-right accelerationism is a radical approach to societal change which maintains the belief that attempting to achieve such through civilized political activities is ineffective. Instead, it emphasizes using violently terroristic actions (the 'accelerant') to increasingly destabilize a nation until its own government completely loses the ability to maintain fundamental security and development functions.[114][115] Meanwhile, it is at this point that a revolutionary vanguard party can successfully seize power and rebrand the former democratic government into, in this case, a white ethnostate based upon authoritarian neo-fascist ideals akin to Nazi Germany.[116][117]

Atomwaffen also drew influences from Nazi esotericism and the occult, and its recommended list of reading materials for aspiring initiates included the works of Savitri Devi and the works of Anton Long, a founding member of the Order of Nine Angles, a British neo-Nazi and a Satanist leader.[65][33] Some members of the group also sympathized with the Salafi and jihadist forms of Islam. Atomwaffen Division's founder, Brandon Russell, is alleged to have described Omar Mateen, who perpetrated the Orlando nightclub shooting and pledged allegiance to the Islamic State, as "a hero". In its propaganda, the group also idolized Osama bin Laden, and it also considered "the culture of martyrdom and insurgency" within al Qaeda and ISIL as something which should be emulated.[118] Atomwaffen promoted White jihad and has advocated for an alliance with Islamic terrorists such as Hamas and its Telegram channels have promoted the group.[119][120][121][122] A member of the Atomwaffen Division, Steven Billingsley, was photographed at a vigil in San Antonio, Texas, for the victims of the Orlando shooting, with a skull mask and a sign which read "God Hates Fags", a motto connected to the homophobic Westboro Baptist Church.[123][124][125][126] Although the Atomwaffen Division was anti-communist, it sympathized and promoted North Korean Juche as model of racial purity and autarky.[127][128][129]

Members in the United States who faced criminal charges

[edit]
Members of the Atomwaffen Division have been alleged to have been responsible for a number of murders, planned terrorist attacks, as well as other criminal actions. This list contains some of those who have been criminally charged for activities done in connection with the Atomwaffen Division in the United States, including those who have been convicted.

Non-U.S. branches

[edit]

United Kingdom (Sonnenkrieg Division)

[edit]

The Sonnenkrieg Division (/ˈzɒnənˌkrɡ/; Sonnenkrieg being German for "sun war") was a neo-Nazi group that was the United Kingdom-based branch of the Atomwaffen Division, and it maintained its links to the Atomwaffen Division by e-mail and chat room discussion as well as by its use of similar names and its distribution of similar propaganda. It surfaced in December 2018, when it was revealed that members of the group had suggested on the group's Discord server that Prince Harry was a "race traitor" who should be shot for marrying Meghan Markle, who is of mixed race; that police officers should be raped and killed; and that white women who date non-whites should be hanged.[130] At its formation in 2018, the group was thought to have had 10 to 15 members in the UK and Europe, and some suspected members were thought to have been involved in a previous neo-Nazi group, the System Resistance Network (one of the aliases of National Action), which was linked to various acts of racial violence and arson in the UK.[131] The BBC revealed that the leaders of the group were Andrew Dymock, 21, and Oskar Dunn-Koczorowski, 18.[28]

Police arrested three suspected members of the Sonnenkrieg Division in early December 2018 as part of an "ongoing investigation into extreme right-wing activity". MI5, the British domestic intelligence agency, took the lead in the government's monitoring of far-right terrorism.[132]

Logo used by the Sonnenkrieg Division in some statements

On June 18, 2019, Sonnenkrieg members Dunn-Koczorowski and Michal Szewczuk, 19, were jailed for terrorism offences. According to the prosecutor the men promoted "engaging in a "total attack" on the system", Dunn-Koczorowski having proclaimed "terror is the best political weapon for nothing drives people harder than a fear of sudden death" and were intent on action. Furthermore, the group was influenced by James Mason who "may well represent the most violent, revolutionary and potentially terroristic expression of right-wing extremism current today". Dunn-Koczorowski was sentenced to 18 months in prison for encouraging terrorism, and Szewczuk was sentenced to four years in prison for encouraging terrorism and possessing documents that are useful to a terrorist, such as bomb-making instructions.[133]

British anti-fascists say Sonnenkrieg Division had been influenced by the Order of Nine Angles and it was more extreme and potentially more violent than National Action. Hope not Hate's annual "State of Hate" report stated that: "some members have also carried out some of these satanic fantasies and allegations of rape and imprisonment against their own members are circulating." Sonnenkrieg Division members had shared videos of one female supporter being tortured and scored with a knife by one of the group's male members.[111] The private messages which belonged to Sonnenkrieg Division and were acquired by the police included footage of the members of the group abusing women, such as images of the rape of a woman, who had a swastika and runes cut into her flesh.[24][134]

On February 20, 2019, Jacek Tchorzewski, 18, was stopped by the counter-terrorism unit at Luton Airport. He was arrested on suspicion of terror offences, and the police uncovered "an enormous amount" of manuals on how to make weapons and explosives and Nazi propaganda. In court, it was heard Tchorzewski had said it was "his dream" to commit a terrorist attack and he intended to smuggle firearms and explosives from Germany for this purpose. Also presented was a notebook from his prison cell where he had written, "Let's fill our hearts with terror and London's streets with blood." Commander Richard Smith, the head of the counter terrorism unit, said that Tchorzewski was connected to the Sonnenkrieg Division. Judge Anuja Dhir said Tchorzewski was a "deeply entrenched neo-Nazi with an interest in Satanism and occult practices" and an "offender of particular concern". On September 20, 2019, Tchorzewski was sentenced to four years imprisonment for terrorism offences at the Old Bailey.[135][136]

On December 4, 2019, Andrew Dymock was arrested and charged with 15 terror offences, including encouraging terrorism and raising funds for a terrorist group. He was first arrested in June 2018 at Gatwick Airport on his way to the United States. Dymock was questioned over alleged sexual offences against a teenage girl, in connection to the earlier assaults on women.[134][137] He was convicted on all counts on June 12, 2021,[138] and sentenced to seven years' imprisonment on July 21, 2021.[139]

In February 2020, Sonnenkrieg Division became the second far-right group to be banned as a terrorist organization after National Action.[45]

On September 2, 2020, Harry Vaughan pleaded guilty to 14 terrorism offences and possession of child pornography. Vaughan was connected to both National Action and Sonnenkrieg Division. A police search of his house uncovered child pornography, documents showing how to build bombs and detonators, and "satanic, neo-nazi" ONA books advising rape and murder. In addition to this, he was described at the Old Bailey as a firearms enthusiast living with his two young sisters at the time of the arrest.[140] In June 2023, Vaughan plead guilty to new charges for his production of child pornography.[141]

On March 2, 2021, the Australian home affairs minister, Peter Dutton, accepted an Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) recommendation to label Sonnenkrieg Division a "terrorist organisation", citing their reach into Australia.[142] The Sonnenkrieg Division was officially proscribed in Australia on March 22, 2021.[49]

A Buckinghamshire man planned to attack his Jewish neighbours and broadcast it live in December 2022. High Wycombe Youth Court ordered him to take part in a two-year rehabilitation program in 2023.[143] It was reported by the Economist that British Atomwaffen members took part in the 2024 United Kingdom riots.[144] Telegram channels linked to Atomwaffen also "co-ordinated promotion and planning of riots".[145]

Germany (AWD Deutschland)

[edit]

On June 1, 2018, in a video in German and English titled AWD Deutschland: Die Messer werden schon gewetzet ("AWD Germany: The knives are already being sharpened"), the group announced the establishment of a cell or branch in Germany, followed by the promise of a "long fight". The group's flyers were spotted in Berlin, targeting students.[146][147] In June 2019, Atomwaffen propaganda was discovered in a Turkish neighborhood in Cologne on the site of a nail bomb attack, threatening further similar attacks.[148]

An unnamed American activist had emigrated to Germany for safety reasons due to threats from Atomwaffen Division. In November 2018 they received a call from the Federal Criminal Police Office to urgently come to authorities. Atomwaffen members had traveled to Germany and the police believed they were in imminent danger of being murdered by the group based on a tip from the FBI.[149]

In October 2019, people claiming to be members of the organization sent death threats to German politicians Cem Özdemir and Claudia Roth. "At the moment, we are planning how and when we will execute you; At the next public rally? Or will we get you in front of your home?" read part of the message sent to the office of the Member of Bundestag,[150] who has Circassian roots. The death threats were condemned by Angela Merkel, and Interior Ministry spokesman Steve Alter commented the security services have "already had this group in their sights for some time".[151]

German T-Online managed to uncover the identity of one of the members of the group, who is referred to as "A" to comply with German privacy laws. "A" had previously instructed people on a now-defunct website how to handle chemicals and how to make the explosive HMTD. He also has a conviction for illegal possession of armor. According to the article "A" is also experienced in martial arts and his social media shows him practicing with guns. The group has a house for meetings somewhere in Eisenach in Thuringia.[152]

On February 5, 2020, a 22-year-old member was arrested in a Bavarian town near the Czech border and several firearms were confiscated from him. He was investigated on suspicion of preparing a terrorist attack. According to the German police the man had announced his intention of "martyring" himself in an attack against their "enemies" to other members of the group. In addition to this he allegedly instructed others how to procure and smuggle illegal firearms.[153][154][25]

It emerged that the Halle synagogue shooting perpetrator Stephan Balliet was in possession of material by Atomwaffen Division.[16]

In September 2021, a 20-year-old Marvin E. from the northern Hessian town of Spangenberg was arrested on suspicion of terrorism. The investigators found 600 self-made explosive devices belonging to him. According to the investigators the man had been in contact with the Atomwaffen Division.[155] On 8 May 2023 Marvin E. was found guilty of forming a local chapter of Atomwaffen Division in Hesse, building explosives, procuring firearms and planning attacks with them, he was sentenced to 3 years and 10 months in jail.[156]

In April 2022, hundreds of police officers in eleven federal states took action against suspected members of the "Atomwaffen Division". Among the 50 accused members was a Bundeswehr sergeant. Kalashnikov rifles and gold bars were confiscated in the raids in addition to money and ammunition.[157][26]

After months of observation, the police took action in Potsdam on June 3, 2022 and arrested a 17-year-old neo-Nazi said to have prepared right-wing terrorist attacks. The teen was said to have obtained instructions for the construction of weapons, ammunition and explosive devices and chemicals for the construction of explosive devices, as well as having built explosive devices and incendiary devices himself and carried out initial explosive tests. According to the investigators, findings in his house and business premises confirmed the suspicion. The Brandenburg Public Prosecutor's Office initiated proceedings on suspicion of preparing a serious act of violence that is dangerous to the state, violating the explosives law and using signs of unconstitutional organizations.[158]

On 4 October 2022, the trial of Maurice P. begun. Maurice was an alleged Atomwaffen Division member and was charged with attempted murder for cutting the throat of a Jamaican man, barely missing the carotid artery.[159]

Atomwaffen Division Europe was a subgroup for Ukrainians and Poles affiliated with the Germans. One of the leaders of the group was Patrick G. who was connected to far-right music label Neuer Deutscher Standard and far-right fashion brand Isegrim Clothing. The Polish police raided the apartment of a member and uncovered Nazi memorabilia and expensive body armor. According to an investigation by German Amadeu Antonio Foundation published on 19 April 2021, the members were acquiring Uzi submachine guns and had attended Azov training camps in Ukraine.[160]

Canada (Northern Order)

[edit]

The group also had a presence in Canada via an affiliated organization called Northern Order that included members of the Canadian Armed Forces. Members of the group had also been known to attend the Atomwaffen training camps in the United States.[161][162][163] One of the pseudonymous individuals found to be part of the group was a 21-year-old "Dark Foreigner" who created propaganda for Atomwaffen.[164] The group celebrated the anniversary of the Quebec City mosque shooting by defacing Canadian mosques with neo-Nazi slogans. Gunfire was also reported outside a defaced mosque in Ottawa.[165][166]

A neo-Nazi affiliated with Atomwaffen serving in the Royal Canadian Navy was discovered to be selling handguns, assault rifles, grenades and RPG-7s from the Balkans to French neo-Nazis in Marseille. The man was discovered to be connected to Serbian Combat 18 and to another local neo-Nazi gang, "MC Srbi". It was confirmed the man had travelled to at least half a dozen cities in the Balkans to meet with his contacts and to procure firearms.[167][168][169]

Master Corporal Patrik Jordan Mathews, 26, a trained explosives expert, was among the Canadian Armed Forces members accused of being connected to the group and recruiting for it. He was also accused of being affiliated with The Base. In August 2019, two days after being outed by the Winnipeg Free Press as a neo-Nazi recruiter, his truck was found abandoned near the border and it was suspected he was smuggled across the border and had gone underground in the United States.[170][171] Mathews was arrested in Maryland by the FBI in January 2020. Also arrested were two other members of the group accompanying him: 33-year-old Brian Lemley, Jr, a US Army veteran, and 19-year-old William Bilbrough IV. According to the affidavit the men were building assault rifles and manufacturing the psychedelic drug DMT for occult rituals.[172] They also possessed body armor, a machine gun and in excess of 1600 rounds of ammunition. They faced a maximum sentence of 50 years for firearm offenses, including transporting a machine gun and transporting a firearm and ammunition with intent to commit a felony. Both men were each sentenced to nine years in prison after pleading guilty.[173]

According to the law enforcement officials the men had planned opening fire from multiple positions on the upcoming 2020 VCDL Lobby Day rally. Bilbrough had also previously talked about fighting with the Azov Battalion.[174][175][176] Mathews had instructed others to "Derail some fucking trains, kill some people and poison some water supplies ... If you want the white race to survive, you're going to have to do your fucking part." Lemley told that he could not wait and was excited "to claim my first kill", and said they could ambush and kill police officers and steal their equipment.[177]

Another Canadian neo-Nazi attempted to cross the US border a few months after Mathews in November 2019, but was detained by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection's Tactical Terrorism Response Team. It discovered an assault rifle, a shotgun and a pistol and a large amount of Atomwaffen Division propaganda. According to a Federal Bureau of Investigation affidavit, the man was going to meet American neo-Nazis with whom he had discussed attacking electrical sub-stations to cause power outages.[178]

On September 18, 2020, Toronto Police arrested 34-year-old Guilherme "William" Von Neutegem and charged him with the murder of Mohamed-Aslim Zafis. Zafis was the caretaker of a local mosque who was found dead with his throat cut. The Toronto Police Service said the killing was possibly connected to the stabbing murder of Rampreet Singh a few days prior a short distance from the spot where Zafis' murder took place. Von Neutegem was a member of the O9A and social media accounts established as belonging to him promote the group and included recordings of Von Neutegem performing satanic chants. In his home there was also an altar with the symbol of the O9A adorning a monolith.[179] According to Evan Balgord of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network, they were aware of more O9A members in Canada and their affiliated organization Northern Order.[180][181]

Canadian Armed Forces launched an internal investigation in October 2020 after a special forces soldier with the CJIRU was identified as a member of the Northern Order and Order of Nine Angles. According to the SPLC, the man was among "some pretty well-known, high-up people in these organizations" and an acquaintance of Mathews and Mason.[182][183]

The group was designated as a terrorist organization on February 3, 2021.[48][184]

In May 2022, RCMP laid terrorism charge against Seth Bertrand of Ontario over alleged links to Atomwaffen. He was also charged with vandalizing a transgender centre.[185] In June 2022 the RCMP raided houses in St-Ferdinand and Plessisville in rural Quebec allegedly connected Atomwaffen Division.[186] La Presse subsequently reported the raids were related to an Atomwaffen training camp in an old school building in Victoriaville.[187] Member of the Northern Order Patrick Gordon Macdonald was arrested on July 5, 2023 by the Canadian Police and charged with participating in a terrorist group, facilitating terrorist activity, and commission of an offense for a terrorist group.[188]

On December 8, 2023, two Ontario men Kristoffer Nippak and Matthew Althorpe were charged with making propaganda for Atomwaffen and membership in a terrorist group.[189] On October 30, 2024, a Canadian Atomwaffen member named Alexander Moucka was arrested. Moucka is alleged to have hacked the customer information from 160 companies and extorting them with it. AT&T alone paid $370,000 to get the stolen information removed.[190]

Baltic states (Feuerkrieg Division)

[edit]
Flag of the FKD.

In October 2018, a group which was modeled after Atomwaffen and called itself the Feuerkrieg Division (German for "Fire War Division") was established in the Baltic states, most likely in Saaremaa, Estonia where several members of its leadership resided.[191][192] In mid-2019, the Feuerkrieg gained attention when it issued death threats against Belgian MEP Guy Verhofstadt and YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki.[193] It had previously praised the actions of Dylann Roof, Robert Bowers, Timothy McVeigh and Brenton Harrison Tarrant, and encouraged violence against government authorities, Jews, LGBTQ people, leftists and feminists.[194][195] Propaganda videos produced by the group showed its members building and detonating homemade explosive devices in Estonia.[196] Feuerkrieg also shared a video among its members that instructs how to make TATP bombs, used by ISIS in the Manchester Arena bombing.[118] On June 13, 2019, Feuerkrieg Division announced their presence in Ireland and encouraged people in the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada and Germany to join the intercontinental network.[citation needed] Later that year the Gardaí announced it had deported a member of the Atomwaffen network from Ireland for his role in a murder plot.[197]

According to Eesti Rahvusringhääling, an investigation revealed that Estonian MP Ruuben Kaalep (EKRE) was connected to British neo-Nazi terrorists from the former National Action who went on to form the British branch of the Atomwaffen Division, which subsequently opened a branch in Kaalep's native Estonia in the form of the Feuerkrieg Division.[198] ADL and Hope not Hate also confirmed that American and English Nazis and Azov members had visited Tallinn multiple times, organizing events with Kaalep and Feuerkrieg "which began in early 2019, originally organized with Sonnenkrieg" before becoming a full-fledged branch. The Finnish Resistance Movement and its successor Atomwaffen Finland cooperated with the group as well.[199][200] Kaalep was also found to have been organizing firearms training with pistols and assault rifles to groups of youths recruited from Blue Awakening, some of whom wore skull masks associated with Atomwaffen and were shown doing Nazi salutes. Kaalep had said that they are ready for armed combat and the collapse of law and order. The Estonian Internal Security Service had earlier expressed its concern over his events.[201]

On September 2, 2019, the British police arrested a 16-year-old Feuerkrieg member for plotting a mass shooting and arson attacks. The army cadet had professed his admiration for Adolf Hitler and James Mason. Prosecutor Michelle Nelson said he adhered to "occult Nazism" and satanism. He had also allegedly surveyed the synagogues in the Durham area in preparation for the attack and talked with another man about buying a gun from him. He also tried to obtain a dangerous chemical from his neo-Nazi friend. The boy wrote in his journal how he needed to "shed empathy" in preparation for the attack.[202][203][204][205] The group published the addresses of the force's station buildings, custody suites and training centres in retaliation and encouraged its members and sympathizers to kill West Midlands Chief Constable Dave Thompson. It was added that all police are "race traitors" and that police stations should be "considered high value targets to any local NS [National Socialist]".[206] On November 20, 2019, he was found guilty of preparing a terrorist attack and several other terror offenses and is awaiting sentencing in custody.[207] In addition to the terror offenses, he is charged with sexually assaulting a 12-year-old girl.[208] He was eventually convicted of five sexual assaults in addition to the terror offenses.[209]

On October 8, 2019, Feuerkrieg Division took responsibility for the unsuccessful bombing of Western Union offices on the Balčikonis street in Vilnius, Lithuania, posting footage of the bomb being constructed and stated that "Our threats are not empty". Nazi symbols were also spray painted on the building.[210][211] The next day, a 21-year-old Luke Hunter appeared in court in London charged with terror offences, allegedly having supported the Feuerkrieg Division and encouraged the mass murder of Jews, non-white people and homosexuals. In December 2020 he was sentenced to four years in prison.[212][213] Subsequently, a 21-year-old Lithuanian named Gediminas Beržinskas was arrested and charged with the bombing and Lithuanian police removed a large quantity of explosives and firearms from his apartment. It was also revealed that his gang had previously been charged with the brutal beating and sexual assault of a teenage girl.[214] The Estonian Internal Security Service also stated that their operation had stopped a similar bombing from taking place in Estonia by another member of Feuerkrieg Division.[215]

On January 16, 2020, a 22-year-old Latvian named Arturs Aispurs was charged with preparing an act of terrorism for building a bomb he was planning to detonate in a crowd of "Muslims and foreigners" during the New Year's Eve celebration in Helsinki. During the search of his apartment the police found a large amount of propaganda in his possession linking him to the neo-Nazi network.[215] In response, Feuerkrieg Division announced that it was ceasing its public activities.[216][217] However, according to an investigation by Der Spiegel into firearm smuggling from the Balkans and Eastern Europe to Germany by Atomwaffen, the purported halt of activities was a ruse targeted at law enforcement, and that the group was still very much active.[153][25]

According to Eesti Ekspress, Estonian Internal Security Service detained a local teenager alleged to be one of the leaders and recruiters for the group, operating under the nickname "Commander" or "Kriegsherr" ("Warlord"). He had instructed others how to build bombs, spoke about planning attacks and encouraged members to take part in the paramilitary training. However, the authorities could not legally arrest him due to his minor status, and being not criminally liable. His alleged status in the group was also disputed by Eesti Ekspress.[218] In a published picture, the boy can be seen wearing a skull mask and holding a pistol, taking part in the firearms training organized by Kaalep, who is also believed to have taken part in the group's chats under the pseudonym "Kert Valter".[221]

In the United Kingdom, the Home Office announced on July 13, 2020, that it has designated the Feuerkrieg Division as a terrorist organization and the designation came into effect on July 17.[46][222] In addition John Mann, Baron Mann proposed "discussions with Estonian ministerial counterparts, given that the FKD and the Sonnenkrieg Division appear to have strong Estonian links ... to see what we can learn about the reason for the growth in such organisations in the Baltics".[223]

On September 2, 2020, Paul Dunleavy from Warwickshire appeared in Birmingham Crown Court, charged with preparing an act of terrorism. He had allegedly stated he was getting armed and in shape for a mass shooting to "provoke a race war", having acquired a handgun and ammunition for this purpose.[224] He was found guilty on October 2, 2020,[225] and was jailed for five years and six months.[226] On February 1, 2021, a Cornish teenager said to have been the leader of the UK branch of the Feuerkrieg Division pleaded guilty to 12 terrorism offences, making him one of Britain's youngest convicted terrorists. Police had previously raided his home in 2019 for firearms and had found bomb building instructions and O9A literature.[227][228] Luca Benincasa was sentenced to nine years and three months at Winchester Crown Court in January 2023. He had instructions on bomb making and was a recruiter and "prominent member" of the Feuerkrieg Division and ONA. He pleaded guilty to terrorism offences and possession of child porn.[229]

In May 2023, a large-scale operation took place across Austria where 10 people accused of being affiliated with Feuerkrieg were raided and arrested. The police also confiscated multiple firearms and Nazi paraphernalia. A Viennese man was accused of building bombs and calling for terrorist attacks.[230]

In July 2024, a leader of the Eastern European Accelerationist group Maniac Murder Cult (MKU), Michail "Butcher" Chkhikvishvili, native of Georgia, was arrested and is facing 50 years in prison for a plot to poison Jewish people. Under him MKU co-operated with the Feuekrieg Division.[231] On July 1, 2024, a German 21-year-old member of the Feuerkrieg was sentenced to two years in prison for among other things, membership in a criminal organization. During a house search in May 2023, firearms and bulletproof vests were confiscated from his apartment. In Feuerkrieg chats he talked about attacking Jewish people and muslims with poison gas and explosives. At the same time he was employed as a guard at Jewish institutions and was issued a firearm. However, he was intercepted by the police before he could carry out his plans.[51]

Russia (AWD Russland)

[edit]
Flag of the AWDR

On May 31, 2020, Atomwaffen announced the formation of a new cell in Russia. It received military training from the Russian Imperial Movement, designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department. United States citizens affiliated with the group were also believed to have taken part.[236] Leader of the Atomwaffen Division Kaleb Cole was one of the Americans who was trained by RIM. The ties between Atomwaffen and RIM reached back to 2015 when Brandon Russell met with the leadership of RIM.[239] Groups of Atomwaffen members trained in RIM's facilities at least around 2018 and 2020 according to the Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism and there was some "overlap" between the groups.[237]

BBC News Russian investigation managed to identify some of the members of the group. Some had previously been active in the banned National Socialist Society whose members committed 27 hate crime murders and decapitated a police informant.[240] The members published a Russian language translation of Brenton Tarrant's accelerationist manifesto. A copy of the book was found in the apartment of Yevgeny Manyurov who was allegedly inspired by it to shoot and kill multiple Federal Security Service agents in the Moscow FSB headquarters. The cell maintained contact with the rest of the Atomwaffen network and affiliated militants in Ukrainian Galicia. In July 2020 Security Service of Ukraine conducted a raid against allegedly affiliated neo-Nazis in Kyiv who operated printing presses and sold printed versions of the manifesto and other Nazi literature. Another raid was conducted against a group of neo-Nazis in Odesa planning to burn down a synagogue. Firearms were seized in the raids. According to the Security Service of Ukraine both of these operations were masterminded by men from Russia.[17]

As is the case elsewhere, AWD Russland was connected to the Russian O9A chapter. The group is tied to numerous crimes, including murder, burning down a church, sexual assaults, child prostitution, possession of occult extremist material and incitement to murder due to religious and racial hatred. Multiple members have been arrested and one was sent to involuntary psychiatric treatment.[246] On August 20, 2021, four O9A members were arrested for satanic ritual murders in Karelia and St. Petersburg. Two of them are also accused of large-scale drug trafficking as a large amount of narcotics was found in their home.[247][248][249] In October 2021 an AWD cell in Buryatia was arrested for having planned attacks against the government and migrants. The police seized firearms, explosives and Nazi paraphernalia from their hideout in Ulan-Ude.[250] Siege was banned as "extremist material" in response to Atomwaffen's activities in Russia.[251]

AWD Russland was part of a coalition of neo-Nazi groups taking part in Russian invasion of Ukraine consisting of Russian ONA, Rusich Group and Russian Imperial Movement, with some overlap.[255]

Italy (Nuovo Ordine Sociale)

[edit]

Already previously active in the Italian speaking Switzerland, by 2021, Atomwaffen had a full-fledged chapter in Italy with 38 members, formed in Savona. The group was called Nuovo Ordine Sociale or New Social Order in English. On January 22, 2021, the police arrested a 22 year old leader named Andrea Cavalleri in Savona and searched the houses of 12 other members in Genoa, Turin, Cagliari, Forlì-Cesena, Palermo, Perugia, Bologna and Cuneo in an anti-terrorism operation. Various firearms were seized. Cavalleri is suspected, among other things, of preparing to commit a mass shooting and the police believe they foiled an attack. Ten rifles and three pistols were confiscated from his house.[256][257] According to investigators he also had published and distributed propaganda inciting a revolution against "Zionist Occupation Government" and extermination of the Jewish people and "race traitors". Cavalleri also allegedly encouraged people to commit mass murder attacks like Anders Breivik and Brenton Tarrant and rape and kill enemies of the group. He is charged with forming a terrorist organization and incitement to criminal actions motivated by racial hatred. The NOS described itself as "A special unit of National Socialist revolutionaries" which "only welcomes warriors ready to die" and has "race war as its main purpose".[262]

On December 27, 2021, five Italian Atomwaffen leaders were arrested and searches were conducted in Pordenone, Brindisi, Milan, Turin, Ferrara, Modena, Verona and Bologna. Nazi propaganda and weapons were confiscated during the raids. The arrested leaders are suspected of distributing information on explosives.[263] On February 5, 2024, 24-year-old Luigi Antonio Pennelli was sentenced to 5 years in prison for "apologia and recruiting for Nazism". Pennelli had joined Atomwaffen two years prior.[53]

Finland (AWD Finland)

[edit]

Atomwaffen Division Finland "Siitoin Squadron" (AWDSS) was formed after the ban of the Nordic Resistance Movement (NRM) in 2019, following members of the underground group embracing accelerationism and occultism.[232][264][265][266] Named after Pekka Siitoin, the AWDSS was announced on September 15, 2021, the anniversary of the adoption of the swastika flag and the Nuremberg laws in Germany, with footage of members holding assault rifles. However, the group had already been active long before the announcement, and a few of their members had previously been exposed by antifascist activists.[267] The former NRM accelerationists had been active temporarily as Kansallissosialistinuoret ("National Socialist Youth") prior to the formation of the AWDSS.[268][269] AWDSS also maintains particularly close relations with the Feuerkrieg Division in neighboring Estonia.[270] According to an investigation by Yleisradio, two thirds of the known members who were previously involved with NRM or Soldiers of Odin had a conviction for a violent crime, and multiple have been convicted of murder.[271][272][273] In their private chats Finnish Atomwaffen members talk about raping political enemies and publish videos of firearms training.[27]

AWDSS was connected to and shared membership with Finnish O9A nexions.[7] Finnish MP Vilhelm Junnila quoted a newspaper article about Atomwaffen that the nationally active group should be added to the list of proscribed organisations.[274] In September 2021, Save the Children foundation warned that extreme movements like Atomwaffen and O9A were grooming and recruiting children in Finland.[275][276] Five Finns were previously arrested for sexually abusing multiple children, and according to the police the activities involved "Nazism and satanism" and consumption of methamphetamine.[277][278] On September 25, 2021, Atomwaffen members assaulted antifascist counterdemonstrators to a Nazi demonstration in Helsinki and were arrested by the police at the scene.[citation needed] Atomwaffen and Finnish lodge of the Black Order also formed a border patrol militia in co-operation, recruiting former military police. According to Seura magazine, some members had previously served in the Azov Battalion.[279][280] In addition to Azov, the Russian Imperial Movement had also provided paramilitary training to the Finnish neo-Nazis.[281] Finnish neo-Nazis have been recruited for the war in Ukraine by local far-right pro-Russian parties.[287]

On December 4, 2021, the Finnish police arrested a five-man cell in Kankaanpää on suspicion of planning a terror attack and confiscated numerous firearms, including assault rifles, forty kilos of explosives and hundreds of litres of explosive precursors. According to the Finnish media, the men were part of AWD Finland.[293] Further, they adhered to the ideology of accelerationism and ONA satanism.[294][295] The men are suspected of having planned to blow up a refugee centre in Niinisalo for which they had acquired explosives, and the men are suspected of homophobic assaults and arson of another refugee center.[296][297] In July 2023, the Finnish police arrested five men in Lahti who possessed assault rifles and adhered to accelerationism and Siege and planned to ignite a race war by attacking the infrastructure, electric grid and railroads.[298] The men discussed forming a new Atomwaffen cell, and discussed assassinating Prime minister Sanna Marin. It was reported the men had at least planned training in Russia, and had met with Janus Putkonen. Later Iltalehti confirmed the men had acquired training for the use of firearms and explosives.[299] Additionally the group committed burglaries against left-wing targets.[300] On October 31, 2023, the men from Lahti were convicted of terrorism offenses. A 29-year old Viljam Nyman was sentenced to 3 years and 4 months. A man born in 2001 was sentenced to 7 months of probation and another man born in 1996 was sentenced to 1 year and 9 months. The fourth man was sentenced to 1 year and 2 months in jail.[299] The Finnish Police also surveyed an O9A adherent and associate of Nyman who was suspected of planning a ritual murder and was subsequently arrested.[301] The man is also suspected of a string of letter bombs sent to Social Democrat, Green and Left party offices.[104]

As of November 2023, Finnish police was investigating at least three terrorism cases connected to ONA and Atomwaffen.[302] According to Iltalehti, the Finnish central nexion in Tampere[7] is potentially connected to unsolved murder cases in the city.[8]

France (L'Œuvre)

[edit]

According to Le Parisien, a French man referred to as Simon planned a double mass murder with an Alsatian man known as Nicholas which was to occur on Hitler's birthday, April 20. As a preparation, Simon had already scouted around his former high school and a nearby mosque, in Seine-Maritime. Simon wrote that "[he] want[ed] to do worse than Columbine", also professing an admiration for mass murderer Anders Breivik. Simon was arrested and taken into custody on September 28, by the police from the General Directorate for Internal Security (DGSI). Brought before an anti-terrorism judge, he was indicted for "criminal terrorist association" and placed in pre-trial detention. At his home, investigators discovered a collection of around 20 knives and at least three firearms including a long rifle equipped with a telescopic sight and a shotgun. Through Atomwaffen Division, Simon came to meet his "brothers in arms", Leila B and Nicholas. Like Simon, Leila B. planned to carry out a deadly attack in her high school. She also planned to plant a bomb in the church closest to her home during the Easter holidays. Detected by the DGSI a few days before the planned day of action, she was indicted on April 8, 2021, for "criminal terrorist association".[303]

Argentina (AWD Argentina)

[edit]

The existence of Atomwaffen Division affiliate in Argentina was first reported in early 2020. Tomás Gershanik of the Public Prosecutor's Office in Buenos Aires stated that Argentina was no exception, and the local chapter spread propaganda in universities and organizes firearm drills. The expose by the media was spurred by Grand Rabbi Gabriel Davidovich of Asociación Mutual Israelita Argentina being violently beaten by the Argentinian neo-Nazis. According to Cyber Threats Research Centre (CYTREC) at Swansea University, AWD Argentina maintained contacts with Atomwaffen-affiliated neo-Nazis in neighbouring Brazil.[304][305][306][307] Atomwaffen Argentina was member of Iron Order, a coalition of accelerationist groups.[308] In October 2023, a new Atomwaffen cell was discovered in Mar del Plata by the police, and assault rifles were confiscated in raids.[309] Atomwaffen cells in Tucumán, Santa Fe and General Belgrano, Buenos Aires were also raided by the police, and some of the arrested were minors.[310][311]

Two Atomwaffen members were arrested for threatening a prominent Argentinian LGBT activist and "forming a white supremacist association".[311][310]

The attempted assassination of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner was inspired by Atomwaffen according to Tiempo Argentina.[312][313]

Brazil (AWD Brazil)

[edit]

Since the presidency of Jair Bolsonaro, Atomwaffen and other organizations had rapidly worked to create neo-Nazi cells, counting up to 330 as of 2019, this growth being even with the number of hate crimes.[314][315][316] The offshoot of the Atomwaffen Division had been active since at least 2019, responsible for translating and disseminating propaganda in Portuguese and distribution of a manual for making explosive devices.[317]

In May 2021, in the podcast "Infiltrado No Cast", presenter Ale Santos infiltrated an AWD Brasil chat, using false information, documenting the group's recruitment process.[318][319] In November 2023, Brazilian Intelligence Agency arrested seven men affiliated with Atomwaffen in an operation titled "Operation Accelerare". Around 100 civil police officers participated in the action. They are charged with participation in a criminal group and promoting Nazism. The men were allegedly leaders of the neo-nazi cells in Rio Grande do Sul and Ceará. The police also raided 23 addresses in Rio Grande do Sul, Curitiba, São Paulo, Araçoiaba da Serra, Ribeirão Pires and Fortaleza where they seized electronic devices, weapons and nazi paraphernalia.[320][321]

During 2023, Brasil suffered a series of school shootings and attacks, some of them inspired by the Columbine Massacre and attacks carried out by neo-Nazis. [322][323][324] As an example, Gabriel Rodrigues Castiglioni, perpetrator of two shootings that occurred in Aracruz, used to be active in Terrorgram Collective and during the shooting wore a swastika patch and Atomwaffen uniform. He confessed to being the perpetrator of the crime and stated that he planned it for two years.[325][324][326] Furthermore, his father shared an image of the book Mein Kampf on social networks. The publication was deleted after the crime.[324][327][326]

Spain (Blue Division)

[edit]

In September 2020, the Civil Guard and the Mossos d'Esquadra arrested two men in La Pobla de Cérvoles and El Campello, for planning terror attacks in order to provoke a "race war". Explosives and firearms were confiscated in the raid. The men had been involved with a project to create all-white rural community and stockpile firearms for the collapse of the society. Two months later, in December 2020, two men in Pamplona and Ronda were arrested for plotting similar terror attacks. According to the investigators the four men were involved with Atomwaffen Division and had produced Atomwaffen propaganda in Spanish. Besides stockpiling firearms and explosives, the men manufactured aphrodisiac psychoactive drugs. In addition to these late 2020 arrests, El Confidencial reported of two previous foiled terror attacks by affiliated men: A young man with 150 kilos of explosives planned to blow up the University of the Balearic Islands and a Mexican national living in Spain planned to attack a far-left demonstration with Asphyxiant gas.[328][329][330][331]

Later in December 2023, the Spanish Civil Guard arrested 11 leaders and an additional 11 individuals are under investigation for belonging to a Nazi paramilitary group linked to Atomwaffen. Ten firearms, more than 9,000 cartridges, 34 bottles of sulfuric acid, explosive precursors, and numerous prohibited weapons were seized. The association had headquarters in the province of Málaga.[332]

[edit]

Atomwaffen has been the subject of five full length documentaries, United Gangs of America: Atomwaffen by Vice TV, Documenting Hate: New American Nazis by PBS, "Im Verhör: Die Atomwaffen-Division" (parts one and two) by Spiegel TV and MSNBC's Breaking Hate: Atomwaffen Division.[333][334][335][336]

Karin Slaughter's book The Last Widow features Brandon Russell as a neo-Nazi leader.[337] Incendiary Attraction by Sarah Andre features afictional neo-Nazi group, "the Race", that is the sister group of Atomwaffen Division and it perpetrates a terror attack killing Muslims.[338] Ghost Hunter: Occultus by Martin J. Best mentions Atomwaffen and Sonnenkrieg as being tied to a satanic ritual murder.[339]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Informational notes

  1. ^ US Canada Germany Russia Brazil
    Not counting the 37 shot in the Atomwaffen copycat killings[18]
  2. ^ Modern standard German prefers Kernwaffen (lit.'nuclear weapons') for the concept.

Citations

  1. ^ a b c "Extremist Content Online: White Supremacist Raising Money On GiveSendGo To Support Campground To Be Used For Training". Counter Extremism Project. September 30, 2022.
  2. ^ "Atomwaffen Division/National Socialist Order". Center for International Security and Cooperation. July 3, 2022. Following Russell's arrest and imprisonment, he was replaced as leader of AWD by John Cameron Denton
  3. ^ "Neo-Nazi Gets 7 Years for Threats Sent to Reporters, Activists". Voice of America. July 3, 2022. Investigators said [Cole] became a leader of Atomwaffen Division after another leader was arrested on explosives charges.
  4. ^ ""Atomwaffen Division/National Socialist Order, Center for International Security and Cooperation, January 14, 2022 "Mason is a former member of the American Nazi Party and serves as an advisor to AWD."
  5. ^ a b c "AtomWaffen Division". Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on December 2, 2019. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  6. ^ "Atomwaffen Division". Southern Poverty Law Center.
  7. ^ a b c Koch, Ariel (February 14, 2022). "The ONA Network and the Transnationalization of Neo-Nazi-Satanism". International Institute for Counter-Terrorism: 11. doi:10.1080/1057610X.2021.2024944. S2CID 245950861. " For instance, the "AWD cell" in Finland claimed to be a nexion of ONA in Tampere. A now-suspended Twitter account that served the group contained photos of a masked and armed man dressed in military uniform, ONA books, and Siege, and a photo of half-naked women that holds two ONA booksin her hands.
  8. ^ a b "Terrorismiin yhdistetty natsisatanismi rantautui Suomeen – Nyt sitä markkinoidaan myös nuorille". Iltalehti. November 26, 2023.
  9. ^ "La Guardia Civil investiga a un segoviano por su implicación en un grupo paramilitar de ideología nazi | el Adelantado de Segovia". December 16, 2023.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Upchurch, H. E. (December 22, 2021). Cruickshank, Paul; Hummel, Kristina (eds.). "The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the "Skull Mask" Neo-Fascist Network" (PDF). CTC Sentinel. 14 (10). West Point, New York: Combating Terrorism Center: 27–37. Archived (PDF) from the original on December 27, 2021. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  11. ^ Multiple sources:
  12. ^ "Neo-Nazis Are Using Eco-Fascism to Recruit Young People". September 25, 2020.
  13. ^ "Weapons of Mass Hate Dissemination: The Use of Artificial Intelligence by Right-Wing Extremists". February 23, 2024.
  14. ^ Thayer, Nate (December 5, 2019), Secret Identities of U.S. Nazi Terror Group Revealed, archived from the original on December 7, 2019
  15. ^ "Eco-Fascism: More than Tree-Loving Terrorists". January 6, 2021.
  16. ^ a b "Bundesanwaltschaft ermittelt gegen die 'Atomwaffendivision'" [Federal prosecutor investigates the "nuclear weapons division"] (in German). t-online. October 5, 2020. Gemeinsame Grundlage sind extremer Antisemitismus, Rassismus, Sexismus, ein Hang zum Okkultismus und hohe Internet-Affinität. Zuletzt stellte sich im Prozess um den Terroranschlag von Halle heraus, dass der Angeklagte Stephan B. Propagandamaterial der Gruppe besaß. [Common principles are extreme antisemitism, racism, sexism, a tendency towards occultism, and high internet affinity. Lastly, it emerged during the trial of the terror attack at Halle that the defendant, Stephan B., possessed propaganda material for the group.]
  17. ^ a b "Интернационал Тарранта. Кто распространяет в России манифест массового убийцы?" [Who is distributing the mass murderer manifesto in Russia?]. BBC News (in Russian). July 2, 2020. Archived from the original on July 3, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  18. ^ a b "Neo-Nazi to face trial in killing of former high school classmate Blaze Bernstein". The Guardian. April 7, 2024. Archived from the original on April 7, 2024. Its legacy has been bloody. Dozens of convicted militants, several copycat organizations and mass shooters in Buffalo, New York; El Paso, Texas; and Jacksonville, Florida have cited Atomwaffen's message as their inspiration.
  19. ^ Multiple sources:
  20. ^ "Telegram is crawling with antisemitism". Wired. October 13, 2021. AtomWaffen Division, which has been linked to at least 11 murders worldwide
  21. ^ a b "Terrorist groups embrace chance of weakened US hegemony under Trump". The Guardian. November 10, 2024.
  22. ^ a b c "Ranks of Notorious Hate Group Include Active-Duty Military". ProPublica. June 14, 2019. Archived from the original on June 20, 2018. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
  23. ^ "'I mean you no harm': From troubled teen to neo-Nazi foot soldier". Politico. May 11, 2024. By some estimates, FKD has just 100 members.
  24. ^ a b c "State of Hate 2020" (PDF). Hope not Hate. March 2, 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 2, 2020. Retrieved March 2, 2020.
  25. ^ a b c "Chats der 'Feuerkrieg Division' 'Wir töten jeden ...'" [Chats of the Fire War Division "We will kill everyone..."] (in German). N-TV. March 11, 2020. Archived from the original on May 24, 2020. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
  26. ^ a b "Ermittler sprengen mutmaßliche Neonazi-Terrorgruppe". Spiegel.de. April 6, 2022.
  27. ^ a b "Näistä Suomen äärioikeistolaiset unelmoivat keskusteluryhmissään: seksuaalisesta väkivallasta, atleettinatseista – ja hakaristipizzasta". Seura. September 13, 2021.
  28. ^ a b "British Neo-Nazis suggest Prince Harry should be shot". BBC News. August 3, 2019. Archived from the original on April 19, 2020. Retrieved December 6, 2018.
  29. ^ a b Fabrizi, Chiara (January 23, 2021). "'Primo obiettivo la guerra di razza': anche due umbri tra i 38 del Nuovo ordine sociale". Umbria24. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  30. ^ Thompson, A.C. (July 8, 2019). "Documenting Hate: New American Nazis". Archived from the original on January 2, 2020. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  31. ^ a b "Siege: The Atomwaffen Division and Rising Far-Right Terrorism in the United States" (PDF). International Centre for Counter-Terrorism. October 9, 2019. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 25, 2019. Retrieved October 9, 2019.
  32. ^ a b "Transnational White Terror: Exposing Atomwaffen And The Iron March Networks". Bellingcat. December 20, 2019. Archived from the original on December 20, 2019. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  33. ^ a b c "Backgrounder: Atomwaffen Division (AWD)". Anti-Defamation League. Archived from the original on April 18, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
  34. ^ "We need to talk about Azov". Hill Times. July 26, 2022. The Azov Battalion has cultivated a relationship with members of the Atomwaffen Division as well as with U.S.-based militants from R.A.M
  35. ^ "Examining Atomwaffen Division's Transnational Linkages". The Cipher Brief. July 26, 2022. AWD has cultivated a relationship with the notorious Azov Battalion, which has emerged as a critical node in the broader WSE movement.
  36. ^ "Ukraine Could Become a Training Ground for Neo-Nazi Groups". Eye on European Radicalization. July 26, 2022. Archived from the original on February 6, 2023. Retrieved July 26, 2022. With the current state of chaos in Ukraine and porous borders near Poland, members of Atomwaffen Division and other neo-Nazis will be welcomed with open arms and plentiful resources provided by the Azov Regiment.
  37. ^ "Russia's misguided 'denazification' of Ukraine is a self-fulfilling prophecy". MSNBC. July 26, 2022. And although it is a relatively small battalion, estimated at only 900 volunteers, Azov's reputation and global reach is far bigger. The group has recruited foreign fighters from at least half a dozen countries and has globally become "a larger-than-life brand among many extremists," according to Katz. U.S.-based militants from the now-defunct Rise Above Movement, along with members of the terrorist group Atomwaffen Division, have been cultivated by Azov.
  38. ^ Ali Winston (October 8, 2023). "Revealed: neo-Nazi active club counts several of US military as members". The Guardian. In Telegram group chats with members of other violent neo-fascist groups, including the Base, Liel has claimed he was once affiliated with the Atomwaffen Division,
  39. ^ a b Mack Lamoureux (October 8, 2023). "Neo-Nazi Fight Clubs Are Fat-Shaming Men Into White Nationalism". Vice News. Other sources told VICE News that former members of the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen, which has been designated a terrorist organization in Canada, are playing key roles in organizing active clubs north of the border.
  40. ^ "Dangerous Organizations and Bad Actors: Nordic Resistance Movement". Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism, Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey. November 19, 2022. Nordic Resistance Movement (NRM) is a neofascist and accelerationist organization with a strong propensity for violence...NRM is a neofascist organization with a propensity towards accelerationist tactics. While upholding traditional facets of neofascism, including the goal of establishing a white Nordic ethnostate, NRM's history also points to widespread support for other openly accelerationist organizations and simultaneous endorsements from explicitly accelerationist organizations and networks like the Iron March forum...NRM publicly supports a number of openly militant accelerationist organizations, including Atomwaffen Division (AWD) and Russian Imperial Movement (RIM).
  41. ^ "Combat training for European neo-Nazis in Russia". Lansing Institute. January 14, 2022. Retrieved August 22, 2022.
  42. ^ a b "Putin's Stealth Mobilization". New America (organization). March 16, 2024. We also observed significant overlap between members of [RIM and Rusich] and well-known transnational White supremacist organization Atomwaffen Division...adherents of the Russian Imperial Movement, Rusich and related identitarian paramilitary groups such as...Atomwaffen Division
  43. ^ a b White, Daniel J., Jr. (August 16, 2024). Vanguard of a White Empire: Rusich, the Russian Imperial Movement, and Russia's War of Terror (Thesis). Center for Homeland Defense and Security. hdl:10945/72291. RIM has developed supportive relationships with other transnational violent extremist groups grounded in mutual aid and training. The closest of these connections are with...the Russian neo-Nazi organization Rusich, and the transnational accelerationist neo-Nazi organization Atomwaffen Division...Rusich and the Russian Imperial Movement [have] U.S. nationals sympathetic to their cause [like] far-right organizer Matthew Heimbach and U.S. cells of the extremist Atomwaffen Division.{{cite thesis}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  44. ^ "«Атомная дивизия»: в Бурятии задержаны неонацисты, подражавшие банде из США".
  45. ^ a b c "Extremist neo-Nazi group to be banned under terror laws". BBC News. February 24, 2020. Archived from the original on February 26, 2020. Retrieved February 25, 2020.
  46. ^ a b c "Eesti teismelise juhitud neonatsirühmitus kuulutatakse Suurbritannias terroristlikuks" [A neo-Nazi group led by an Estonian teenager is declared terrorist] (in Estonian). Postimees. July 13, 2020. Retrieved July 13, 2020.
  47. ^ a b "British Government Bans Atomwaffen Division As Criminal Terrorist Organization". Vice News. April 22, 2021.
  48. ^ a b "Atomwaffen Division, The Base, Proud Boys, and Russian Imperial Movement added to the Canadian terrorism list". Canadian Anti-Hate Network. February 3, 2021.
  49. ^ a b "Australia bans far-right extremist Sonnenkrieg Division". Deutsche Welle. March 22, 2021.
  50. ^ "Australia to list Hamas as terror group". Seven News. February 17, 2022.
  51. ^ a b ""Feuerkrieg Division": Rechtsextremer in Wien erneut auf freiem Fuß". Die Presse. August 16, 2024.
  52. ^ Found by the Vienna Regional Court to be criminal/terrorist organization and banned[51]
  53. ^ a b "Apologia e proselitismo nazista, condanna a 5 anni per un 24enne". Rai News 24. February 5, 2024.
  54. ^ Found by the Bari court to be "international terrorist organization" and banned[53]
  55. ^ a b Poulter, James (March 12, 2018). "The Obscure Neo-Nazi Forum Linked to a Wave of Terror". Vice. Archived from the original on May 4, 2020. Retrieved June 18, 2019.
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  238. ^ "Neo-Nazi organizations and radicals as a tool of influence in Scandinavia". Robert Lansing Institute. February 9, 2023. Meanwhile, Canada and the U.S. recognized the RIM as a terrorist organization, which is suspected of being involved in mailing improvised explosive devices in late 2022. Besides, two RIM members were killed in Libya, which is validly suggests their affiliation with the GRU. In 2022, organization members took part in the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The RIM is also reported to have a relationship with the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen Division's Russian affiliate. We see common features in the structure and functioning of Atomwaffen Division and the NRM, which suggests common sources of their organizational development.
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