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Former FBI special agent singles out Senator Josh Hawley for instigating Capitol riot

‘For the most part, the groups aren’t picking the targets. It’s the elected leaders,’ says former FBI terrorism expert

Bevan Hurley
In New York
Monday 13 September 2021 18:41 BST
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Sen Josh Hawley helped to urge the crowd to attack the US Capitol on January 6, an expert says
Sen Josh Hawley helped to urge the crowd to attack the US Capitol on January 6, an expert says (UPI)

A terrorism expert believes Senator Josh Hawley’s fist-bumping antics helped stir up the crowd before the January 6 riots.

Former FBI Special Agent Clint Watts told MSNBC’s The Sunday Show that politicians were helping to fuel the rise of domestic extremism and singled out Mr Hawley and Donald Trump by name.

Mr Watts said political leaders were directing extremists at particular targets such as the US Capitol.

“It’s our political leaders that are doing this more than domestic extremists,” Mr Watts, who served on the Joint Terrorism Task Force, said.

“What you see right there President Trump told them they were going to the Capitol that day. They didn’t pick the Capitol, he said it, his organizers they promoted it, his fellow congressmen in the GOP, they promoted it.

Clint Watts, former FBI special agent, says politicians are directing extremists at their targets (MSNBC’s The Sunday Show)

“It was Josh Hawley out there fist-bumping the crowd, right? Before it went in," he added.

“That’s the thing we look for to see, hey, where are they tipping to. For the most part, the groups aren’t picking the targets. It’s the elected leaders.”

Mr Watts was asked about former President George W. Bush’s comments at Saturday’s Flight 93 memorial in which he linked the ideology of the 9/11 terrorists and the mob who stormed the US Capitol.

Mr Bush was widely praised for the speech, where he warned “dangers can come not only across borders but from violence that gathers within”.

Mr Watts said law enforcement didn’t have the same tools at its disposal to fight domestic threats.

“We developed an entire architecture that was focused on a group or relatively defined group, I should say, al Qaeda and then it spawned the Islamic State, so we had a terrorist designation. That we just do not have in the domestic space and it perplexes our ability because that brings up laws and procedures.”

“It’s been the crux of the debate since January 6th; what are Americans, you know, willing to let American law enforcement do to protect them? It’s just not very clear,” he continued.

The US Capitol Police are bracing for a rally on September 18 in support of the more than 600 rioters who were arrested after January 6.

Experts have warned of the danger of further violence at the rally, which will be the largest gathering of Trump supporters in DC since January 6.

A suspected white supremacist was arrested on Sunday night by US Capitol Police carrying a bayonet and machete in his pickup truck near the Democratic National Headquarters.

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