-Caveat Lector- Electronic Telegraph ISSUE 1437 Sunday 2 May 1999 White Wolves manifesto of hate By Rajeev Syal, Olga Craig and David Bamber http://www.telegraph.co.uk/et?ac=000252141601804&rtmo=fMvwN3Vs&atmo=mmmmmmmR &pg=/et/99/5/2/nwolf02.html Searchlight: http://www.s-light.demon.co.uk/index.html British National Party: http://www.bnp.net/ Secret spies keep watch on our streets: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/et?ac=000252141601804&rtmo=wstfAeeb&atmo=99999999 &pg=/et/99/5/2/nwolf102.html Cheap, unsophisticated and utterly lethal: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/et?ac=000252141601804&rtmo=wstfAeeb&atmo=99999999 &pg=/et/99/5/2/nwolf202.html THE White Wolves are the far-Right splinter group claiming to be behind the Soho bomb, they have spent the past four years laying the ground work for a bombing campaign against racial minorities and gays It's language is chilling, its message calculated to incite, its tone terrifyingly controlled: "Many immigrants are innocent of any recognised crime individually, but collectively they make up an invading army which threatens the birthright of children and the unborn generations of our folk. Their presence spells the death of our people, so if they must be forced out with extreme violence, then so be it. "The desired effect can be had by stabbing a solitary Pakistani picked randomly (the more randomly the better) in an Asian area. The chances of being caught are remote, as it is a motiveless attack with no connection between the attacker and the victim. But the repercussions would be great once the White Wolves claim responsibility." So begins the 15-page manifesto of the neo-Nazi White Wolves, the Combat 18 splinter group that on Friday night exploded its third bomb in as many weeks in the capital. This time it targeted the gay community, which it describes as "part of a culture we wish to destroy". Yesterday, as the grim final toll of the explosion at the Admiral Duncan in Soho, central London, stood at three dead and 64 injured, a Telegraph investigation into the mindset of this small but tightly-knit band has revealed a highly dangerous, highly motivated Right-wing organisation that has spent the years since its inception in 1995 laying the ground work for a sustained bombing campaign against minorities. Its manifesto, uncovered by an infiltrator of the group who handed it to anti-race activist, explains in chilling clarity how to fund attacks, avoid detection, destroy forensics and select targets. It urges its followers to gain military training through the Territorial Army or other volunteer army units, and culls interrogation advice from Irish paramilitary groups such as the IRA and UDA. Its weaponry may, at present, be crude and unsophisticated - though devastatingly effective - but its hate-filled manifesto warns that as its commandos become more "experienced" so, too, will its arsenal increase. Prospective members are told to arm themselves with bombs and bullets and told: "A suitcase bomb at the Notting Hill Carnival would certainly upset the blacks - of course, as White Wolf cells become more experienced, some will develop more advanced capabilities and get heavier weaponry." The rules for use will remain the same: "Anything which stirs the racial pot is justified." Acutely aware of the IRA's success in the use of a small cell structure, which is difficult to infiltrate and nigh on impossible to detect, it advises members to adopt the same strategy. "If you are a member of an established nationalist party, stay with it," it advises. "A sudden exodus of a group of keen members prior to WW activities will be a dead giveaway. If your cell operates properly and uses its head, it will do immense damage and function for a long time. "Keep the cell small. Five is maximum: two to watch, two to carry out the action, one to stay with the car if you use one." Every detail has been thought of. If you use a car, it warns its members, pay cash for petrol, because credit card receipts can be used to trace your movements. No opportunity must be missed, it stresses, to gain new weapons skills. "Every cell leader should be on the lookout for chances to learn new skills which would help with the struggle. The Territorial Army is an obvious one but look for others," it urges. A month ago The Telegraph exclusively revealed how a year-long inquiry into neo-Nazi infiltration of the Army had resulted in several arrests. Two serving soldiers and one ex-soldier were arrested on suspicion of using their military expertise to offer weapons training to neo-fascist organisations, including Combat 18. During the inquiry, carried out by MI5, Special Branch and military police, racist literature, computer disks, knives and ammunition were seized. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/et?ac=000252141601804&rtmo=wstfAeeb&atmo=99999999 &pg=/et/99/3/7/narm107.html At the time, one senior defence official said that, in addition to the soldiers, a further dozen men in Regular and TA units were under investigation for neo-Nazi activity. "There are pockets of neo-fascist activity in some regiments," he said. "There has been an attempt [by neo-fascist groups] to spread the word in the Army and that is the basis on which we are acting." He added, however, that 99 per cent of the Army would "rebuff this sort of activity very strongly". To avoid detection members are told to socialise as little as possible with each other and not to dress alike. "It draws attention to the group, as would having the same haircuts." Once a major "race hate" operation has been carried out, the cell is told to call the media and the police and then go into hiding. "Once an action is complete - get out of the area as quickly as is legally possible, calm down then go to a phone box." Every effort must be made to ensure that no forensic evidence is left. "Holding the receiver with a gloved hand, ring the newspaper and give them a short statement claiming responsibility and saying what was done." IRA codewords are not to be used, it insists. "We want any group of white youths to be able to do exactly the same." Though police and the public have been stunned at the ferocity and the speed of attacks of the past three weeks, the White Wolves see their campaign as one that will be waged over years. "There is no need to try to carry out deadlines on a regular basis - it is better to operate continuously for years, carrying out a dozen well planned operations than to go berserk for a month and spend years in prison." It is believed the manifesto is the work of Del O'Connor, the White Wolves self-claimed leader. Last year Mr O'Connor, a 39-year-old former football hooligan who has been involved in neo-Nazi politics since the late 1970s and has been closely connected to far-Right organisations in the United States, made a film in which he boasted: "We have been forming small cells and if you are wondering where the money has gone, it's gone on guns. Now the war is on." Last November he travelled to Dallas to meet white supremacists and is known to have attended a skinhead concert in Coventry the following month. In recent months he has "disappeared" from his Wigan home and police believe he may be in America. Mr O'Connor, who was born in Streatham in south London - a mile from where the Brixton bomb exploded two weeks ago - has always considered himself Combat 18's leader in the north of England, claiming to have units in Bridlington, Halifax, Preston and Oldham. A skinhead in the British Movement in the late 19070s, he later joined the Ku Klux Klan, becoming its UK "security officer". While little is said of its money-raising activities in its manifesto, it is believed the White Wolves learnt most of their techniques from Combat 18, its parent group. Vast sums are derived from robbing Asian corner shops to minimise scrutiny, while the rest are the profits from lucrative drug deals in south and east London. Another rich source is a skinhead record label, Blood and Honour. Several high-profile Combat 18 members, including Charlie Sargent - who was jailed for murder last year - made thousands from promoting the label. Its popularity has vastly increased in the past few years and today the international Nazi music scene is a multi-million-dollar industry which is thriving in the US, eastern Europe and Scandinavia. As Gerry Gable, publisher of Searchlight, an anti-fascist magazine, explains: "They do runs of around 1,000 CDs, which cost only 1 to produce and sell for 15 each. They are also merchandising the bands' T-shirts, posters and badges." While the organisation clearly recruits from predominantly white, working-class areas, Scotland Yard has spent the past week compiling a psychological profile that it hopes will give a valuable insight into those likely to be members. According to the brief given to the anti-terrorist squad, the terrorist are mainly white men in their twenties and thirties. Most are loners. All are believed to be intelligent but not well educated, probably having left school at 16. "It is likely he is angry at opportunities he sees denied to him because of the presence in Britain of the minority groups he is targeting," the squad has been told. He is likely to feel the traditional values of the country have been undermined by other cultures and probably revolted by the idea of homosexuality." Many are thought to have had connections with far-right organisations, but are believed to have grown disillusioned with formal party organisations, opting for more direct action. Though the devices used are crude, most are expertly made and police are convinced that several members must have spent the past few months practising in large gardens or fields with low-level explosives. While information on the size of membership is sketchy, its manifesto makes it clear that only unified action will have the "desired effect". Such attacks, it argues, will polarise multi-racial Britain and broaden the White Wolves' appeal. "It is true that racial attacks are taking place even now," it says, "but they fail to spark immigrants into serious reaction because they are the work of isolated individuals. "A phonecall [to the press] claiming responsibility for a knife or petrol bomb attack 45 minutes earlier by the White Wolves is bound to create more fear and hatred than just another racial attack. The greater the shock, the greater the chances of the tit-for-tat war which can force ordinary whites to stand up for themselves." The manifesto alludes to other terror groups from which it has culled information. Urging its members to read interrogation advice from the IRA and UDA, it adds: "Remember the golden rule: say nothing." And as a final, chilling warning, it ends: "History belongs to those who are prepared to sacrifice all in the defence of what they believe in. Nothing less is good enough. Only a blood sacrifice can now save our Nation." But though new laws are to be introduced later this year to target violent right-wing organisations, the Government will stop short of outlawing them, fearing that such action would serve only to drive them further underground. Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, will replace the current Prevention of Terrorism Act with much broader proposals which, it is hoped, will dismantle their organisational and fundraising abilities. The new Prevention of Terrorism Bill will, for the first time, include religious and ideological as well as political motives. Right-wing, extremist animal rights groups and religious cults that use violence to pursue their goals are also to be targeted. The new definition covers "the use of serious violence against persons or property, or the threat to use such violence to intimidate or coerce a government, the public, or any section of the public for political, religious or ideological ends". This could mean that right-wingers who firebomb Asian shops or beat up black people in an organised way would fall foul of the anti-terrorist laws. Serious violence would be defined so that it included disruption to public utility systems, such as sabotage of water and electricity networks, and computer hacking. The definition could cover religious groups, such as the Japanese cult that poisoned the Tokyo metro system, and anti-abortion activists, who have bombed clinics and killed doctors in America. 7 March 1999: Neo-Nazis who lurk in the British Army: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/et?ac=000252141601804&rtmo=wstfAeeb&atmo=99999999 &pg=/et/99/3/7/narm107.html � Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 1999. Terms & Conditions of reading. Commercial information. DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing! 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