Evidence tied to last week's deadly attack on a California mosque
illustrates a violent ideology and playbook that is all too familiar to
counterterrorism and extremism experts. A 75-page typewritten document,
attributed to the teenage suspects, and a livestreamed video showing
the attack show extensive grounding in far-right, neo-Nazi thinking.
But one facet of the ideology behind this attack has, so far, been left out of much mainstream coverage.
"He
just flat out says he hates women and that they're the devil and
they're destroying everything. And this is an important thing, because
that kind of misogyny did not exist in white supremacist circles, say,
10, 15 years ago," said Heidi Beirich, co-founder of the Global Project
Against Hate and Extremism. Bierich was referring to the first part of
the written document, authored by one of the two suspects.
For many, the suspects' apparent misogyny may seem irrelevant, given
that they targeted a Muslim house of worship. But Alex DiBranco,
executive director and co-founder of the Institute for Research on Male
Supremacism, says it is comparable to antisemitism, a foundational
underpinning of white nationalist thinking that is rooted in conspiracy
theories. Antisemitism has been an essential ideological component
behind white supremacist attacks at mosques, retail establishments
frequented by African Americans and Latinos, gay bars and schools.
"We've
seen similar kinds of conspiratorial thinking about women 'pulling the
strings behind the scenes' as well," DiBranco said. "And so the
targeting of a mosque in San Diego is something that is interrelated not
only with Islamophobia, but also with antisemitism and deep misogyny."
"Anti-feminist conspiracies"
DiBranco
says that scholarship and news coverage of violence that is partly
rooted in anti-women conspiracy theories has failed to keep pace with
the spread of those dangerous beliefs. The attack at the Islamic Center
of San Diego is the most recent example.
"I was surprised when I
opened the manifesto – having looked at the prior media coverage – at
how deeply blatant the misogyny was throughout," said DiBranco. "[One of
the suspects] starts with talking about Jewish people as the No.1
enemy. And then in his next section says, 'And then right after Jews,
women are the No. 1 enemy.' "
Just as writings of neo-Nazis and white nationalist killers often use
offensive slurs for Jewish people, the document uses a dehumanizing
term meant to shorthand "female humanoid organism."
"That
section on women uses dehumanizing language that's really popular in the
misogynist incel community," DiBranco said, referring to "involuntary
celibate" communities, which have evolved into virulently misogynistic
online spaces, and have even been linked to femicide.
"[It's] a term that is intended to indicate that women are actually not
human, that they are 'humanoid,' and this has been popular for a number
of years."
DiBranco said that the line of thinking expressed
in the suspects' writings follows a tired trope: that women are
essentially responsible for everything wrong in the world. She has
helped to develop a framework for
this category of narrative, which she terms "anti-feminist
conspiracies." She said that it is important to broaden public
understanding of the ties between these narratives and white nationalist
violence.
One of the clearest examples of an anti-feminist
conspiracy theory that lay behind a neo-Nazi attack, DiBranco said, took
place in Norway in 2011. There, a man killed 77 people, including
dozens of teenagers at a summer camp. In that case, the perpetrator also
left writings behind that outlined his beliefs.
"That
manifesto was very clear as well about the fact that he saw feminism and
women … responsible for the 'feminization' of the West and of Europe.
They were responsible for what he views as a 'Muslim invasion,' "
DiBranco said. "He adhered to another conspiracy theory called 'cultural Marxism,'
he talked about anti-political correctness, and all of those things he
actually rooted with the idea of feminism of Western women as the key
problem."
Beirich said there were also other signs that far-right extremist
movements were trending toward full-throated endorsement of misogynistic
conspiracism. She points to the 2014 "Gamergate"
controversy, which blew the lid off of a culture of sexualized trolling
and harassment in the video gaming space; and the culture of violent,
anti-woman rhetoric nurtured on The Daily Stormer, once the
main online messaging board for neo-Nazis. Still, Beirich, whose career
tracking far-right extremism spans decades, said the degree to which
this misogyny has spread is notable.
"It has completely infected the white supremacist realm," Beirich
said. "Misogyny is as important, I would argue, as racism or
neo-Nazi-ism now to people that traffic in these kinds of ideas and live
in these cultures."
"It is an ideology that is heavily
invested in the idea of 'cultural degeneracy' and what are the sources
of it," said Elliot Chandler, CFO and researcher at Revontulet, a
Norway-based company that does online threat monitoring. "And
historically, femininity and the excessive expression of femininity is a
core aspect of degeneracy. That is the classic, 'This is what the Nazis
think' way of approaching it."
This panic over the
"feminization" of society also plays a role in the extreme hostility
toward LGBTQ people, and to inclusive agendas, said DiBranco.
"What's
basically at stake at the core is they feel like they had a system in
which cisgender white men were supreme and had unshaken dominance. And
now these other forces, what they call 'cultural degeneracy,' are
undermining that control that they felt … they had and that they felt …
they had a right to," she said.
Following a "cultural script"
While
the primacy of anti-women, or anti-feminist, conspiracism stands out to
extremism experts, the attack at the mosque in San Diego has otherwise
followed a predictable pattern. In fact, even as some conservative
voices on social media falsely claimed that
it was "staged," evidence so far suggests that the attack is one of the
most ideologically clear-cut to have taken place in recent years.
"It's
been a while since we've had … a true white nationalist attack in the
vein of Brenton Tarrant," said Chandler. Tarrant is a terrorist whose
deadly attack on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2019 has
inspired numerous similar acts of white supremacist violence.
The video and document attributed to the San Diego suspects were
uploaded to an online forum where users share graphic media of murders,
suicide, rape and torture. Both are filled with markers that call back
to the Christchurch massacre. Matthew Kriner, executive director of the
Institute for Countering Digital Extremism, said that the very creation
of the video and document for public consumption strongly situates this
attack within a specific subculture of far-right extremism.
"The
perpetrators filmed their activities in the same script that we've seen
previous accelerationist attackers do," Kriner said. "I think what
we're seeing right off the bat is a recreation of the Tarrant model of
the 'Saints attacker,' wherein Tarrant provided himself as a cultural
script."
Accelerationism is a tactic embraced by a subset of far-right white
supremacists and neo-Nazis. Its adherents promote terrorism and sabotage
to incite a race war and to bring about social collapse. Their ultimate
goal is to then rebuild society into a patriarchal, white ethnostate.
"Saints culture" is a practice within accelerationist and white
nationalist spaces, of glorifying and venerating people who have
committed violence in pursuit of their ideological goal.
Kriner
noted that in addition to referring to themselves as "Sons of Tarrant"
in their presumed writings, their manner of dress for the attack, the
white scrawlings on their weapons and their display of the "Sonnenrad" symbol
on their clothing were all hallmarks of the Christchurch attack. He and
other experts say the suspects likely created the document and video to
shape their own legacy within that subculture and to guide and inspire
others to copy them.
"That is the goal, is to [say], 'Look at
what I am doing … remember me for it. … and venerate it. … And in that
veneration, copy it. Do it yourself. Create more of it,'" explained
Chandler. "That is one of the goals of accelerationism is that by
engaging in accelerationism, more people will do it. … and then it will
become this tidal wave of violence that will wash away society."
This
model of movement violence has been disturbingly successful, Chandler
said. The Christchurch attack provided inspiration for numerous attacks
on U.S. soil. Those include a deadly 2019 massacre at a Walmart in El
Paso, Texas; a white supremacist's 2022 shooting spree at a Tops grocery
store in a predominantly African American neighborhood of Buffalo, New
York; a 2022 mass shooting at a gay bar in Colorado Springs, Colo.; a
2023 attack on African Americans at a Dollar General store in
Jacksonville, Fla. Outside of the U.S., it has similarly been tied to
numerous instances of hate-driven violence.
"These movements, they're not confined by borders. They are truly
transnational," said Beirich. "There have been killings in multiple
countries motivated by the same idea: in Germany, in Norway, in the
United States, in New Zealand, in Serbia not that long ago, in
Bratislava, in Slovakia."
Turning a blind eye to far-right violence
Beirich
and other extremism experts say the attack at the Islamic Center of San
Diego is a clear warning signal that the longstanding problem of white
supremacist terrorism has not gone away. And so it has rekindled concern
over the Trump administration's pivot away from countering violent,
far-right extremism domestically and abroad.
This month, the White House released the 2025 United States Counterterrorism Strategy
document, outlining its priorities and approach to protecting the
homeland. It highlights three major terrorist threats to the U.S.:
narcoterrorists, Islamist terrorists and violent left-wing extremists.
Nowhere does the document mention far right, neo-Nazi or white
supremacist threats.
"Far-right terrorism is alive and well,
but you wouldn't know it from reading this document," said Colin Clarke,
executive director of the Soufan Center, a nonprofit that focuses on
global security. "This is an unserious document written by unserious
people about a deadly serious subject."
In addition to the
omission of far-right terrorism, the document's mention of "violent
secular political groups" who are "radically pro-transgender" and of
political movements like the Muslim Brotherhood have raised eyebrows.
"I'm not sure … why gender should factor into a counterterrorism strategy, but there it is," Clarke said.
Although
the strategy document opens with a rejection of partisanship in the
work of assessing and countering security threats to the U.S., Clarke
and others say the strategy reeks of partisanship. Clarke pointed out
that former President Joe Biden's name is mentioned seven times
throughout the document. Lebanese Hezbollah, a proxy of the Iranian
government, with which the U.S. is currently at war, is mentioned twice.
In a statement about the counterterrorism strategy, the White House's
principal deputy press secretary, Anna Kelly, wrote, in part, "When
President Trump returned to the White House, four years of weakness,
failure, surrender, and humiliation under the failed Biden
administration came to an end. Today, our nation is strong, our borders
are secure, and the United States is respected all over the world.
"I'd
like to think about what threats myself and my family will face if
we're going to a concert, a parade to the mall, and who is going to harm
us," said Michael Duffin, a candidate for Virginia's 8th Congressional
District and a former counterterrorism official at the State Department.
"And it's not members of the Muslim Brotherhood. It's not members of
the far left. It's white supremacists. It's people inspired by ISIS. And
those are the actors that this national security strategy should be
focused on."
"It's quite dangerous," said Clarke. "It makes the
country less safe because it shows you what this administration is
focused on and what it's not focused on, where we're going to dedicate
resources and where we're not going to dedicate resources."