Intelligence and Security Committee Report: Extreme Right-Wing Terrorism

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Intelligence and Security Committee Report: Extreme Right-Wing Terrorism (2022)
the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament
4594567Intelligence and Security Committee Report: Extreme Right-Wing Terrorism2022the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament

Intelligence and Security
Committee of Parliament

Extreme Right-Wing Terrorism

Chairman:
The Rt Hon. Dr Julian Lewis MP

Intelligence and Security
Committee of Parliament

Extreme Right-Wing Terrorism

Chairman:
The Rt Hon. Dr Julian Lewis MP

Presented to Parliament pursuant to section 3 of the Justice and Security Act 2013

Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed on 13 July 2022

© Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament copyright 2022

The material must be acknowledged as Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament copyright and the document title specified. Where third party material has been identified, permission from the respective copyright holder must be sought.

This publication is licensed under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3.

Any enquiries regarding this publication should be sent to us via our webform at isc.independent.gov.uk/contact

This publication is also available on our website at: isc.independent.gov.uk

ISBN 978-1-5286-3133-4

E0271003507/2022

Printed on paper containing 75% recycled fibre content minimum

Printed in the UK by HH Associates Ltd. on behalf of the Controller of His Majesty’s Stationery Office

THE INTELLIGENCE AND SECURITY
COMMITTEE OF PARLIAMENT


The Rt Hon. Sir Julian Lewis MP (Chairman)

The Rt Hon. Maria Eagle MP (from 10 February 2022)

The Rt Hon. Sir John Hayes CBE MP

The Rt Hon. Stewart Hosie MP (until 14 December 2022)

The Rt Hon. Dame Diana Johnson DBE MP (until 14 January 2022)

The Rt Hon. Kevan Jones MP

The Rt Hon. Mark Pritchard MP (until 22 January 2022)

Colonel The Rt Hon. Bob Stewart DSO MP

The Rt Hon. Theresa Villiers MP

Admiral The Rt Hon. Lord West of Spithead GCB DSC PC

The Rt Hon. Sir Jeremy Wright KC MP (from 10 February 2022)

The Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament (ISC) is a statutory committee of Parliament that has responsibility for oversight of the UK Intelligence Community. The Committee was originally established by the Intelligence Services Act 1994 and was reformed, and its powers reinforced, by the Justice and Security Act 2013.

The Committee oversees the intelligence and security activities of the Agencies,[1] including the policies, expenditure, administration and operations of MI5 (the Security Service), MI6 (the Secret Intelligence Service or SIS) and GCHQ (the Government Communications Headquarters). The Committee also scrutinises the work of other parts of the Intelligence Community, including the Joint Intelligence Organisation (JIO) and the National Security Secretariat (NSS) in the Cabinet Office; Defence Intelligence (DI) in the Ministry of Defence; and Homeland Security Group[2] in the Home Office.

The Committee consists of nine Members drawn from both Houses of Parliament. Members are appointed by the Houses of Parliament, having been nominated by the Prime Minister in consultation with the Leader of the Opposition. The Chair of the Committee is elected by its Members.

The Members of the Committee are subject to section 1(1)(b) of the Official Secrets Act 1989 and are routinely given access to highly classified material in carrying out their duties. The Committee sets its own agenda and work programme, taking evidence from Government Ministers, the Heads of the intelligence and security Agencies, senior officials, experts and academics as required. Its Inquiries tend to concentrate on current events and issues of concern, and therefore focus on operational[3] and policy matters, while its Annual Reports address administration and finance.

The reports can contain highly classified material, which would damage the operational capabilities of the intelligence Agencies if it were published. There is therefore a well-established and lengthy process to prepare the Committee's Reports ready for publication. The

Report is checked to ensure that it is factually correct (i.e. that the facts and figures are up to date in what can be a fast-changing environment). The Intelligence Community may then, on behalf of the Prime Minister, request redaction of material in the Report if they consider that its publication would damage their work—for example, by revealing their targets, methods, sources or operational capabilities. The Committee requires the Intelligence Community to demonstrate clearly how publication of the material in question would be damaging since the Committee aims to ensure that only the minimum of text is redacted from a Report. Where the Committee rejects a request for material to be redacted, if the organisation considers that the material would cause serious damage to national security if published, then the Head of that organisation must appear before the Committee to argue the case. Once these stages have been completed, the Report is sent to the Prime Minister to consider. Under the Justice and Security Act 2013 the Committee can only lay its Reports before Parliament once the Prime Minister has confirmed that there is no material in them which would prejudice the discharge of the functions of the Agencies or—where the Prime Minister considers that there is such material in the Report—once the Prime Minister has consulted the Committee and it has then excluded the relevant material from the Report.

The Committee believes that it is important that Parliament and the public should be able to see where information had to be redacted: redactions are clearly indicated in the Report by ***. This means that the published Report is the same as the classified version sent to the Prime Minister (albeit with redactions).

CONTENTS


 
 
'Domestic Extremism'
4
'Right-Wing Terrorism'
5
The importance of terminology
6
'Extreme Right-Wing Terrorism'
7
 
 
History of the threat
9
ERWT in 2012 and 2019: A comparison
12
 
 
The threat level
15
Number of incidents
16
Number of disruptions
16
The trajectory
17
How the ERWT threat could develop
17
The impact of recent events
19
 
 
'White Supremacist' and 'White Nationalist' groups
23
'Cultural Nationalist' groups
24
'Identitarian' movement
24
Satanism
25
Virtual groups
25
Incels and Right-Wing Extremists: Shared grievances
26
 
 
Mental health and developmental disorders
30
Drugs
32
 
 
 
 
The military
35
The police
37
 
 
ERWT groups in Northern Europe
41
ERWT activity in Germany
42
The ERWT threat in other Northern European countries
44
ERWT activity in the US and Canada
45
Links to the UK
48
***
49
ERWT support from other nation states: Russia
50
Mixed Martial Arts
51
 
 
Categories of ERWT content online
53
Platforms hosting ERWT material
56
 
 
Ethnic and religious groups
65
LGBTQ+ community
65
Politicians and other public figures
66
National institutions and infrastructure
67
 
 
The 2017 attacks
69
 
 
CONTEST (Counter-Terrorism Strategy)
73
Prevent strand
74
Pursue strand
75
Working with advocacy groups
75
 
 
The case for change
77
Threat assessments
82
Investigations
83
Counter-Terrorism Operations Centre
88
Resource implications
88
Behavioural Science Unit
90
GCHQ
92
SIS
93
 
 
Further legislation: Counter-Terrorism and Sentencing Act
99
 
 
 
 
The Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism
107
Wider work with communication service providers
109
Why ERWT online is a new challenge
109
The Government 'Online Harms' legislation
110
 
 
Closer co-operation: International partners
115
The impact of Brexit
117
 
 
 
 
Prevent strand
125
The Counter-Extremism Strategy
128
 
 

  1. Throughout the report, the term 'Intelligence Community' is used to refer to the seven organisations that the Committee oversees; the term 'Agencies' refers to MI5, SIS and GCHQ as a collective; and the term 'Departments' refers to the intelligence and security parts of the Ministry of Defence, Cabinet Office and the Home Office (DI, JIO, National Security Adviser (NSA), NSS and Homeland Security Group) as a collective, unless specified otherwise.
  2. From 1 April 2021, the Home Office moved to a new structure "based around missions and capabilities". Homeland Security Group (one of the new missions) comprises what was formerly known as the Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism (OSCT), along with three departments from the Serious Organised Crime Group (Economic Crime, Cyber Policy and the Serious Organised Crime Capability Team).
  3. The Committee oversees operations subject to the criteria set out in section 2 of the Justice and Security Act 2013.

This work is licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0 (OGL v.3).

You are free to:
  • copy, publish, distribute and transmit the Information;
  • adapt the Information;
  • exploit the Information commercially and non-commercially for example, by combining it with other Information, or by including it in your own product or application.
You must, where you do any of the above:
  • acknowledge the source of the Information in your product or application by including or linking to any attribution statement specified by the Information Provider(s) and, where possible, provide a link to this licence;
  • If the Information Provider does not provide a specific attribution statement, you must use the following:
Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

Note: Since 2010, almost all information owned by the UK Crown is offered for use and re-use under the Open Government Licence by authority of The Controller of His Majesty's Stationery Office.info

See also: Meta for information on usage on Wikimedia wikis.

Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse