APOCALYPSE NOW
Armageddon Enters the New Age of Terrorism
by John W. Morehead
This is a CNN special report. This just in. The Center for Disease
Control has just declared that an epidemic is widespread in Miami, Florida.
Doctors have not yet diagnosed the specific cause of the rampant disease,
but the illness initially resembles a chest cold that progresses into pneumonia-like
symptoms. It then progresses rapidly into fever and shortness of breath.
What is especially peculiar about this epidemic is that all the patients
who have sought medical attention attended the Orange Bowl football game
on New Year's Day. Authorities have asked that anyone who went to that
game seek medical care if cold-like symptoms appear. Stay tuned to CNN
for further developments on this story. Elsewhere in the news...1
Terrorism has been defined as "the unlawful use of force or violence
against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian
population, or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social
objectives."2 While the 1980s saw a growth
of politically inspired terrorism, the 1990s has seen a dramatic increase
in terrorism motivated by a religious agenda. As a result, intelligence
experts have claimed that we may well be witnessing an emerging trend and
shift away from terrorism motivated by political ideology towards a dominant
religious terrorism warranting a revision of our notions of the stereotypical
terrorist organization.3 This trend has received
some attention within the intelligence and law enforcement communities,
and should be of particular interest to individuals and organizations involved
in monitoring extremist and new religious groups and movements, especially
with regards to the U.S. domestic terrorism threat.4
A HISTORY OF RELIGION AND TERROR
The horrific attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, apparently
perpetrated by well organized terrorists with ties to radical Muslim extremist
groups, has America grappling with the threat of terrorism as never before.
Unfortunately, the combination of religion and violence is not new in history.
In fact, many English words used to describe terrorists and their actions,
such as "zealot," "assassin" and "thug," derive from the names of religious
groups.5 Yet in recent times, the religious
motivation for terrorism has been overshadowed by "ethnic and nationalist
separatist or ideologically motivated" political terrorism.6
While many secular terrorist groups do have religious elements, the political
dimension is the predominant characteristic. This began to change in the
1980s with the rise of religious terrorism in the form of militant Islamic
Shiite fundamentalism. As we will see, the shift toward terrorism motivated
by religious considerations is one of the reasons for terrorism's increasing
lethality.
DIFFERING FOUNDATIONS, DEADLY DIFFERENCES
RAND researcher Bruce Hoffman contrasts the ethical values of "secular
political" terrorists with "religious political" terrorists, and notes
that these differ radically in that for "holy terrorists...violence [is]
first and foremost a sacramental act or divine duty executed in direct
response to some theological demand or imperative."7
For such groups terrorism is a full time vocation and they take public
credit for such acts as a means of influencing their perceived constituency
on behalf of a goal with terrorism as the means to an end. By contrast,
unlike "secular terrorists," religiously motivated groups have no external
constituency for whom a terrorist act is designed to influence. Religious
terrorists often act anonymously and for no one but themselves, which results
in increased levels of violence and lethality. These differing ethical
foundations for terrorism provide the basis for the disturbing trend over
the last decade towards a willingness to use biological and chemical weapons,
as well as the increasing potential for their use in the future.8
HOLY TERROR'S NEW PLAYERS
Contrary to depictions in Western media, and popular stereotypes,
religious terrorism is not limited to radical Islamic groups in the Middle
East, and the U.S. domestic terrorist threat may lie closer to home. A
few new religious groups and movements may pose the greatest threat. Before
one is tempted to dismiss this thesis as alarmist and unwarranted, consider
the following incidents:
In September 1984, 750 people became sick after eating in restaurants
in The Dalles, Oregon. Investigators later learned that Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh,
the leader of the nearby religious commune of Rajneeshpuram, had ordered
followers to spread the salmonella bacteria in restaurants in order to
influence local elections. The event was thought to only be a trial run
for a larger attack, and "resulted in the largest outbreak of foodborne
disease" in the U.S. that year.9
In 1987, a number of white supremacists, influenced by "Christian
Identity teaching" (described below) were indicted for plotting to poison
the municipal water supplies of two major American cities.10
In March 1995, the Aum Shinrikyo ("Supreme Truth") sarin gas attack
on Tokyo's subways killed 12 and injured more than 5,000 in March 1995.
Despite the attempts by some to downplay the severity of Aum's activities,11
the Aum attack has the distinction of being the world's first mass-scale
chemical terrorist attack. The group built a vast arsenal of biochemical
and conventional arms, including mustard gas, anthrax, botulism, Q-fever,
sarin nerve gas, and TNT. Aum also experimented with seismic weapons designed
to trigger cataclysmic earthquakes in Japan, an idea dismissed by geologists
but taken very seriously by the U.S. and Soviet militaries.12
While Aum appeared to meet its end with the arrest and trials of its founder,
leadership and key members, recent news reports indicate the group is rebuilding
and growing in membership. It poses a continued threat worth monitoring.
ACKNOWLEDGED POSSIBILITY
Admittedly, not every new religious group or movement should be considered
a domestic terrorist threat to the U.S. Most do not exhibit violent tendencies
or incorporate an eschatological emphasis (the theology of "last things,"
including the supernatural climax of human history) upon an apocalyptic
vision which could be used to justify terrorism in a self-fulfilling prophecy
of doomsday. But the real possibility for religious terrorism by a few
such groups has not escaped the notice of those grappling with the challenge
and complexities of national security. Michael Osterholm, state epidemiologist
at Minnesota's Department of Health stated, "There is a growing number
of millennium cults who believe the year 2000 could be the end of the Earth
and should be the end of the Earth, and are actively pursuing ways to bring
that about."13
Osterholm's words are echoed by Jessica Stern, a former chemical
and biological weapons specialist with the National Security Council: "These
kinds of groups might turn to extreme violence and weapons of mass destruction
because they believe Armageddon is coming...They want to hasten the appearance
of the Messiah."14
Even former Defense Secretary William Cohen said, "Regional aggressors,
third-rate armies, terrorist cells, and even religious cults will
wield disproportionate power" through the possible use of weapons of mass
destruction [emphasis mine].15
SOME WORTH WATCHING
Predicting who may commit an act of terrorism, and when, is a risky
venture. Even so, given their doomsday eschatology, racist and/or anti-government
rhetoric and activities, the following groups and movement are worth watching.
.House of Yahweh, founded by "Yisrayl" Hawkins, with branches in Odessa
and Abilene, Texas. This group may have a large collection of weapons,
they believe their group will play a major role in the coming War of Armageddon,
and members of the group have been linked to Posse Comitatus, a
radical, anti-government group connected to the racist Christian Identity
movement.16
.Nation of Yahweh, founded by Hulon Mitchell, Jr. (Yahweh ben Yahweh),
in Miami, Florida. Although Mitchell is currently in prison for a murder
conspiracy conviction, this militant black separatist group has a history
of violence, including an incident in 1986 when Mitchell ordered the fire-bombing
of a neighborhood, the sending of "death angels" to kill whites, and acts
of retribution against blacks who interfered with Mitchell's business activities.17
The FBI has investigated this group in the past under terrorism guidelines
established by the attorney general.18
.Nation of Islam under the leadership of Louis Farrakhan. This is another
black separatist sect with militant tendencies. Although he has softened
his rhetoric in recent years, Farrakhan has prophesied a doomsday for white
America, including the total destruction of the country, while also calling
for the establishment of a separate black territory in the U.S.19
He frequently makes anti-American statements in the media both in the U.S.
and abroad, and has close ties to Libya and it's leader Qaddafi, a nation
and leader known for supporting international acts of terrorism. He also
has ties to El Rukn, a radical, black Muslim street gang in Chicago,
which "reportedly offered to carry out terrorist operations in the United
States on behalf of Libya in return for money."20
.Christian Identity Movement. Many of the episodes of terrorist violence
in the U.S. have been perpetrated by white supremacists. They come from
a variety of organizations, including neo-Nazi, Ku Klux Klan and the growing
militia movement, with sympathizers found across the U.S. These white supremacists
are radically anti-government, racist and anti-Semitic. The increasingly
popular Christian Identity teaching is the ideological glue which holds
a large segment of this movement of hate together:
The basic tenets of the Identity movement include the beliefs
that Jesus Christ was not a Semite, but an Aryan; that the Lost Tribes
of Israel are composed not of Jews, but of "blue eyed Aryans;" that white
Anglo-Saxons and not Jews are the true "Chosen People;" and, that the United
States is the "Promised Land."21
The Christian Identity movement is of special concern given its
emphasis upon a future racial and religious Armageddon, a holy war between
Yahweh's Aryan race on the one side, and the Jews and other "sub-human
races" on the other. Identity teachings are spreading rapidly through a
growing number of hate groups,22 as well as
undiscerning Christian fundamentalist churches in the South, Midwest and
Pacific Northwest. It represents a powerful religious ideology who's teachings
or teachers may have influenced both Timothy McVeigh, convicted and executed
for the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma
City,23 and the perpetrator(s) of the 1996
Centennial Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta.24
INCREASED VIGILANCE
In commenting on the Aum gas attack in Tokyo, terrorism expert Bruce
Hoffman stated, "We've definitely crossed a threshold. This is the cutting
edge of hi-tech terrorism for the year 2000 and beyond. It's the nightmare
scenario that people have quietly talked about for years coming true."25
It is also a scenario that may be repeated elsewhere, therefore the significance
of Aum and other groups, must be noted and we would do well to learn the
lessons in preparation for the possibility of similar incidents.
We have noted the current trend toward terrorism dominated by
a religious imperative, coupled with the tendency towards increased violence
and lethality. The FBI has also noted an increase in terrorist activities
from right wing extremists and "special interest groups." These facts,
combined with recent examples of terrorist acts carried out by new religious
groups or movements, and the probable rise of new doomsday groups, as well
as existing groups putting a new emphasis on doomsday eschatology26
give great cause for concern.
After investigating the Aum attack (within the context of the
global proliferation of weapons of mass destruction), a U.S. Senate investigative
report asked:
'How does a fanatic [Aum and its founder, Shoko Asahara], intent
on creating Armageddon, with relatively unlimited funds and a world-wide
network of operatives, escape notice of Western intelligence and law-enforcement
agencies outside of Japan?'
The answer was as direct as it was alarming. 'They simply were
not on anybody's radar screen,' replied a top U.S. counter-terrorism officer.
Not on anybody's radar screen? Apparently we need a new radar.27
While the intelligence, defense, disaster response and medical
communities continue to grapple with the implications of the Aum, and now
World Trade Center attacks, and the prospect for future acts of domestic
terrorism, those who monitor new religious groups and movements have an
important contribution to make. Here those who labor in this field must
give due recognition to the present trend and future prospects presented
by such groups. While special attention is usually paid to the possibility
of a new religious group's self-destruction in the wake of the Jonestown,
the Branch Davidians, Solar Temple and Heaven's Gate tragedies, as we have
seen, consideration must also be given to the possibility that some groups
may direct acts of violence outside the group. While it may be that "[i]n
dealing with unconventional groups that have both religious and political
agendas, government officials and law enforcement agents have not always
been sufficiently sensitive to their [religious] self-definitions,"(28)
hopefully those monitoring extremist, fringe and new religious movements
and groups can provide a needed corrective. With an increased vigilance,
we may be able not only to stem the tide of false teaching and abusive
practices, but may save lives as well.
ENDNOTES
1. Fictional scenario from Lt. Col. Terry N. Mayer, USAF,
"The Biological Weapon: A Poor Nation's Weapon of Mass Destruction," Battlefield
of the Future, Chapter 8, Internet edition at <http://www.cdsar.af.mil/battle/chp8.html>.
2. "Terrorism in the United States 1995," from the FBI's
Terrorist Research and Analytical Center, National Security Division <http://www.terrorism.com/terrorism/index.html>.
3. Bruce Hoffman, "'Holy Terror:' The Implications of
Terrorism Motivated by a Religious Imperative" (RAND, 1993).
4. While this should be an area of concern for U.S.
domestic terrorism, by no means is it simply an American problem. The former
Soviet Union is destabilized on a number of fronts, and has also seen an
explosion of new religious movements and extremists. The region is also
well stocked as a "weapons supermarket" with complementary technological
expertise available to those inclined to utilize it.
5. Hoffman, "Holy Terror," 1.
6. Ibid., 2.
7. Ibid., 2.
8. Bruce Hoffman, "The Contrasting Ethical Foundations
of Terrorism in the 1980s" (RAND, January 1988). See also <http://www.abcnews.com.sections/us/DailyNews/terrorism_incidents.html>.
9. "Bioterrorism is next big threat, expert warns,"
The Oregonian, March 11, 1998. See also New York Times, August
12, 1997, B8; Thomas J. Torok, MD, et. al., Journal of the American
Medical Association (1997), 278:389-395 <http://www.ama-assn.org/sci-pubs/journals/most/recent/issues/jama/oc71206a.htm>;
and Leonard A. Cole, "The Specter of Biological Weapons," Scientific
American <http://www.sciam.com/1296issue/1296cole.html>.
10. Arkansas Gazette, April 27, 1987 cited in
Hoffman, "Holy Terror, 6."
11. James R. Lewis, "Japan's Waco: AUM Shinrikyo and
the Eclipse of Freedom in the Land of the Rising Sun," Prevailing Winds
Magazine/Number 2, 52-60.
12. David E. Kaplan and Andrew Marshall, The Cult
at the End of the World (Crown Publishers, 1996), 213, 224-225. See
also "Hearings Before the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the
Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate," Part I, October
21 and November 1, 1995.
13. Maggie Fox, "U.S. ripe for bio-terrorist attack,
experts say," April 14, 1998 (Reuters).
14. David Phinney, "Random and Unpredictable: The 'New
Terrorist': Willing to Kill for the Sake of Killing," <http://www.abcnews.com/sections/us/DailyNews/terrorism_face.html>.
15. David Phinney, "New Tools of Fear and Death: Preparing
for Terrorists Wielding Weapons of Mass Destruction," <http://www.abcnews.com/us/DailyNews/terrorism_main.html>.
16. Richard Horn and Loretta Fulton, "House of Yahweh
has ties to Anti-government group Posse Comitatus," Abilene Reporter-News,
May 5, 1996.
17. "Conviction of Miami cult leader upheld," St.
Petersburg Times, January 6, 1996, 3A.
18. The Center for National Security Studies, "The
FBI Domestic Counterterrorism Program" <http://www.cdt.org/policy/terrorism/cnss.FBI.auth.html>.
19. Louis Farrakhan, "The Divine Destruction of America:
Can She Avert It?," <http://www.noi.org/finalcall/MLFspeaks/destruction.html>
as quoted in Richard Abanes, Cults, New Religious Movements, and Your
Family (Crossway, 1998), 122-123.
20. Los Angeles Times, October 11, 1985; New
York Times, October 2, 1985; and Washington Times, August 11,
1986 as cited in Bruce Hoffman, "Recent Trends and Future Prospects of
Terrorism in the United States" (RAND, May 1988).
21. Hoffman, "Holy Terror," 18-19.
22. Richard A. Serrano, "Hate groups rise as 2000 nears,"
Los Angeles Times, March 3, 1998.
23. James L. Graff, "The White City on a Hill," Time,
February 24, 1997 <http://www.time.com/nation.the_white.html>.
24. "Spokane link to Olympic bombing, FBI investigates
3 held in NW blasts," by Associated Press, The Seattle Times, January
27, 1997 <http://www.seattletimes.com/todaysnews/browse/html97/atlbomb_012797.htm>,
and "The Hunt for Eric Robert Rudolph, San Jose Mercury News, February
2, 1998, A1.
25. Kaplan and Marshall, Cult at the End of the
World, 289.
26. For a helpful analysis of doomsday prophets with
a helpful corrective see Richard Abanes, End-Time Visions: The Road
to Armageddon? (Four Walls, Eight Windows: 1998), and C. Marvin Pate
and Calvin B. Haines, Jr., Doomsday Delusions (InterVarsity, 1995).
27. Kaplan and Marshall, Cult at the End of the
World, 295.
28. Eugene V. Gallagher, "God and Country: Revolution
as a Religious Imperative on the Radical Right," in Terrorism and Political
Violence, Volume 9, Number 3 (Autumn 1997), 63.
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