Consider this. Suppose the FBI and local police raid a home and a storage unit
rented by the individual living in the home. In this raid, they discover:
Now, what is your guess as to the nationality and motivation of the individual who was
arrested? Well, of course, he must be a Muslim from some Middle Eastern country, a
fundamentalist associated with an international terrorist group. His motivation is
simple -- he wants to destroy the U. S. because of our support for Israel and because of
our war on Iraq.
If that's your guess, you would be 100 percent wrong. In fact, the man who was
arrested in November 2003 in Tyler, Texas, is a natural-born, red-white-and-blue American
terrorist. He is one of an estimated 25,000 "domestic terrorists" --
Timothy McVeigh was one of these.
"Without question, it ranks at the very top of all domestic
terrorist arrests in the past 20 years in terms of the lethality of the arsenal,"
says Daniel Levitas, author of "The Terrorist Next Door: The Militia Movement and the
Radical Right."
But outside Tyler, Texas, the case is almost unknown. In the past nine months, there
have been two government press releases and a handful of local stories, but no press
conference and no coverage in the national newspapers.
Experts say the case highlights the increased cooperation and quicker response by US
agencies since Sept. 11. But others say it points up just how political the terror war is.
"There is no value for the Bush administration to highlighting domestic terrorism
right now," says Robert Jensen, a journalism professor at the University of Texas in
Austin. "But there are significant political benefits to highlighting foreign
terrorists, especially when trying to whip up support for war."
Mr. Levitas goes even further: "The government has a severe case of tunnel vision
when it comes to domestic terrorism. I have no doubt whatsoever that had Krar and his
compatriots been Arab-Americans or linked to some violent Islamic fundamentalist group, we
would have heard from John Ashcroft himself."
The case began in the fall of 2002 when a package bound for New Jersey was misdelivered
to a New York address. The family inadvertently opened the package and found fake
identification badges, including Department of Defense and United Nations IDs. The FBI
eventually tracked the package back to Mr. Krar in Noonday, Texas.
The cache of weapons and bombs was found when the FBI served a search warrant in April
of this year. Krar and his common-law wife, Judith Bruey, and the receiver of the package,
New Jersey Militia member Edward Feltus, were arrested.
All three have pleaded guilty to separate counts and are awaiting sentencing.
Brit Featherston, the assistant US attorney in charge of the case, says it was Krar and
Ms. Bruey's connections to white-supremacist groups that prompted further investigation.
"Any little town has worse criminals on paper than these two. But because of their
background, the red flags were flying all over the place - especially after Sept.
11," says Mr. Featherston, in the eastern district of Texas.
Before Sept. 11, he says, the case most likely would have been worked as a false-ID
case and ended there. Instead, dozens of law-enforcement agencies were involved and
hundreds of subpoenas were served. "This case was very high priority," says
Featherston.
Still, investigators have been unable to answer questions such as: Where was the
sodium-cyanide bomb destined? And were the weapons being prepared for a group or sold
individually? Featherston says the investigation is ongoing and won't end until these
questions are answered.
Experts say the case is important not only because of what it says about increased
government cooperation, but also because it shows how serious a threat the country faces
from within. "The lesson in the Krar case is that we have to always be concerned
about domestic terrorism. It would be a terrible mistake to believe that terrorism always
comes from outside," says Mark Potok at the Southern Poverty Law Center in
Montgomery, Ala.
The fact is, the number of domestic terrorist acts in the past five years far outweighs
the number of international acts, says Mark Pitcavage of the fact-finding department at
the Anti-Defamation League. "We do have home-grown hate in the United States, people
who are just as ill-disposed to the American government as any international terrorist
group," he says.
Levitas estimates that there are approximately 25,000 right-wing extremist members and
activists and some 250,000 sympathizers. The Southern Poverty Law Center counted 708 hate
groups in 2002.
While Mr. Pitcavage was surprised the Krar case did not receive more attention,
"It is a fact that a lot of stories involving domestic extremists get
undercovered," he says. He points to a case he calls one of "the major terrorist
plots of the 1990s" in which militia from around the country converged in central
Texas allegedly to attack a military base. They were arrested at a campground near Fort
Hood on the morning of July 4, 1997, with a large collection of weapons and explosives.
"There was virtually no media coverage of that incident either," says Pitcavage.
Featherston speculates that the Krar case got little attention because the arrests were
made just after the war began in Iraq. "Excuse me, a chemical weapon was found in the
home state of George Bush," says Levitas. "I'm not saying the Justice Department
deliberately decided to downplay the story because they thought it might be embarrassing
to the US government if weapons of mass destruction were found in America before they were
found in Iraq. But I am saying it was a mistake not to give this higher profile."
For his part, Krar has remained silent. He will most likely be sentenced sometime in
February, and could receive up to life in prison. His attorney, Tonda Curry, says the US
government has no reason to be afraid of him. "It looks a whole lot worse than it is.
He had a lot of things that most people would never have any desire to have, but much of
what he had was perfectly legal."
You can be certain that if the man arrested had been a Middle Easterner this would have
been headline news. We would have known about this arrest immediately. Fox
News would have broadcast this story for 96 hours straight with learned commentator after
learned commentator. Instead, this story is little known outside Tyler, Texas.
All we hear about are threats and warnings of attacks by foreign terrorists. No
one ever points out the fact that, up until the September 11 attack on the World Trade
Center, the most deadly terrorist attack on U. S. soil was Timothy McVeigh's bombing of
the Murah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.
Domestic terrorists have it much easier than foreign terrorists -- they are part of us.
They do not need to disguise themselves, to fabricate a background, or do anything
except be themselves. No one suspects them, no one questions them. They can
move freely, purchase anything they need, go anywhere they please.
Let's not forget some important facts.
Ashcroft likely shares many of the "christian" beliefs of these domestic
terrorists. He also knows that the hardcore "christian right" that support
George Bush also supports the goals of most domestic terrorists -- limit or destroy the
federal government, establish a "christian nation," and similar goals. I
believe it is not at all far-fetched to believe that John Ashcroft suppresses news of
domestic terrorism and domestic terrorists because, deep in his heart, he shares many of
their beliefs.