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US media, Ashcroft silent on conviction of right-wing terrorists
in Texas
Conspirators built chemical bomb
By Bill Vann
9 December 2003
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The US government and media continuously bombard the American
public with scare stories about terrorist threats. The war
on terrorism is invoked by the Bush administration to justify
every facet of its policyfrom the war in Iraq, to the abrogation
of civil liberties, to economic measures designed to further enrich
Americas financial elite.
Bush has declared that the fight to eradicate terror around
the globe is the overriding mission of his administration. Yet,
a recent study has found that in the more than two years since
September 11, 2001, the number of defendants receiving substantial
jail sentences on terrorism-related charges has actually declined
compared to the two previous years.
According to the study by the Transactional Records Access
Clearinghouse (TRAC), a nonpartisan research center at Syracuse
University, of the 184 people convicted of terrorism over the
last two years, 171 received either no prison time or less than
one year in prison.
The median jail sentence for all those convicted on such charges
was just 14 days. For the most part, the light sentences reflect
a lack of evidence linking the indicted individuals to actual
terrorist acts or conspiracies to carry out such acts. In case
after case, prosecutors have had to accept pleas on minor charges.
Given this unimpressive track record, one would think that
the conviction of two individuals in a terrorism-related case
involving actual weapons of mass destruction and a
conspiracy to carry out large-scale terrorist attacks on US soil
would be major news.
The threat was serious enough to be included regularly in the
presidential daily briefings and to trigger a nationwide FBI manhunt.
Yet, outside of Texas, the case remains virtually unknown. The
reason for the silence is clear.
The convicted individuals were not Arab or Muslim immigrants,
nor could they be linked to any Islamist groups. Rather, they
were native-born US citizens connected to the extreme right.
William J. Krar, 62, pleaded guilty last month in a Texas federal
court to possession of a chemical weapon, a charge punishable
by up to life in prison. He received an 11-year sentence. His
common-law wife, Judith Bruey, pleaded to a lesser charge of conspiracy
to possess illegal weapons and faces up to five years in prison.
A third individual, Edward Feltus of New Jersey, is in custody
in connection with the case, accused of receiving false identification
cards for the United Nations and the US Defense Intelligence Agency
from Krar. Feltus has also pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing.
According to a statement by the US Attorneys Office for
the Eastern District of Texas, Krar accumulated a large
quantity of sodium cyanide and acids such as hydrochloric, nitric
and acetic acids. It noted that the chemicals are extremely
lethal. Under the proper conditions, a chemical bomb using
these materials could kill hundreds. The statement said in addition
that a search of Krars home turned up multiple illegal
weapons including machine guns, silencers, destructive devices,
thousands of rounds of ammunition and a handgun with an obliterated
serial number.
An affidavit submitted by the FBI to obtain a search warrant
described Krar as someone actively involved in the militia
movement ... a good source of covert weaponry for white supremacists
and anti-government militia groups in New Hampshire.
According to KTVT, the CBS affiliate in Dallas-Fort Worth,
federal authorities seized at least one weapon of mass destructiona
sodium cyanide bomb capable of delivering a deadly gas cloud
as well as at least 100 other bombs, bomb components, machine
guns, 500,000 rounds of ammunition and chemical agents.
The station reported that Krar had been the subject of government
attention since 1995, when he and another man were investigated
on weapons charges. The second suspect told the authorities that
Krar had planned to bomb federal facilities. This was the same
year that right-wing militia-connected conspirators used a truck
bomb to demolish the federal building in Oklahoma City, killing
168 people. After the second suspect recanted this claim, the
government dropped the case.
It was evident from the quantities of chemicals and other materials
recovered by the authorities that Krar and his collaborators were
running a bomb-making facility out of a storage facility in the
small east Texas town of Noonday. Federal investigators told KTVT
that they suspected Krar may have been selling chemical weapons
and bomb components to extreme right-wing groups around the country.
Neither he nor the other two people in custody divulged any information
about their activities to authorities.
The television station reported: Evidence seized and
the fact that none of the defendants will talk has given rise
to speculation that unknown conspirators may still be involved
in a broader plot to use Krars home-built chemical weapons,
government officials say. Included in the material seized
in the case were copies of far-right literature as well as detailed
notes indicating planning for attacks with other co-conspirators.
Federal authorities have reportedly issued hundreds of subpoenas
nationwide in an attempt to track down other chemical weapons
that may have originated with Krar.
The silence of the media on this case echoes that of the Bush
administration itself. Had the defendants been Arab or Muslim
immigrants, there is little doubt that the administration would
have organized a nationally televised press conference by US Attorney
General John Ashcroft and Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge
to claim credit for foiling a major terrorist plot.
Publicizing a conspiracy by the extreme right, however, cuts
across the administrations aims on two counts. First, it
diverts from the principal tactic pursued by the Bush White House
ever since September 11: exploiting alleged terrorist threats
to justify US military aggression first against Afghanistan and
then against Iraq. Second, the fascistic politics of the defendants
present a major problem because of the political ties of the Bush
administration and the Republican Party to extreme right-wing
elements, including militia fanatics and white supremacists.
The virtual blackout of the Texas case follows a pattern established
with the anthrax attacks that claimed five lives beginning in
October 2001. Initially, the media devoted blanket coverage to
the attacks, as attempts were made to attribute them to either
Osama bin Laden or Iraq.
As the facts began to emerge, however, it became clear that
the principal targets of the deadly anthrax letters were the media
and the Democratic leadership in Congress, suggesting that their
most probable source was the homegrown fascistic right. Tests
on samples of the anthrax further indicated that whoever was responsible
had obtained the materials from a US military facility. The medias
response was to drop the story. Two years later, no one has been
charged with these fatal terrorist attacks.
The case in Tyler, Texas constitutes a serious warning. It
demonstrates that fascistic elements like Krar and his associates
have both the capability and motivation for carrying out a major
terrorist attack in the US.
Moreover, the blackout of this case suggests that if such an
attack were to take place, both the government and the media could
well attempt to blame it on foreign terrorists in order to further
the administrations foreign policy agenda and provide the
pretext for even more sweeping attacks on democratic rights.
Given the affinity between the politics of these terrorists
and those of extreme right-wing layers within the Republican Party,
the question arises: could such an attack be in preparation as
part of a provocation aimed at keeping the Bush administration
in power?
See Also:
Why is the US government
protecting the anthrax terrorist?
[3 July 2002]
Ashcroft defends Bushs
war against the Constitution
Tells Senate hearing that critics aid terrorists
[12 December 2001]
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