New Orleans attack and Vegas explosion highlight extremist violence by
active military and veterans
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[January 06, 2025]
By JASON DEAREN, MICHELLE R. SMITH and AARON KESSLER
The military ties of the man who carried out an attack in New Orleans on
New Year’s and another who died in an explosion in Las Vegas the same
day highlight the increased role of people with military experience in
ideologically driven attacks, especially those that seek mass
casualties.
In New Orleans, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a veteran of the U.S. Army, was
killed by police after a deadly rampage in a pickup truck that left 14
others dead and injured dozens more. It’s being investigated as an act
of terrorism inspired by the Islamic State group.
In Las Vegas, officials say Matthew Livelsberger, an active duty member
of the U.S. Army Special Forces, shot himself in the head in a Tesla
Cybertruck packed with firework mortars and camp fuel canisters, shortly
before it exploded outside the entrance of the Trump International
Hotel, injuring seven people. On Friday, investigators said Livelsberger
wrote that the explosion was meant to serve as a “wake up call” and that
the country was “terminally ill and headed toward collapse.”
Service members and veterans who radicalize make up a tiny fraction of a
percentage point of the millions and millions who have honorably served
their country. But an Associated Press investigation published last year
found that radicalization among both veterans and active duty service
members was on the rise and that hundreds of people with military
backgrounds had been arrested for extremist crimes since 2017. The AP
found that extremist plots they were involved in during that period had
killed or injured nearly 100 people.
The AP also found multiple issues with the Pentagon’s efforts to address
extremism in the ranks, including that there is still no force-wide
system to track it, and that a cornerstone report on the issue contained
old data, misleading analyses and ignored evidence of the problem.
Since 2017, both veterans and active duty service members radicalized at
a faster rate than people without military backgrounds, according to
data from terrorism researchers at the National Consortium for the Study
of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, or START, at the University of
Maryland. Less than 1% of the adult population is currently serving in
the U.S. military, but active duty military members make up a
disproportionate 3.2% of the extremist cases START researchers found
between 2017 and 2022.
While the number of people with military backgrounds involved in violent
extremist plots remains small, the participation of active military and
veterans gave extremist plots more potential for mass injury or death,
according to data collected and analyzed by the AP and START.
More than 480 people with a military background were accused of
ideologically driven extremist crimes from 2017 through 2023, including
the more than 230 arrested in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021,
insurrection — 18% of those arrested for the attack as of late last
year, according to START. The data tracked individuals with military
backgrounds, most of whom were veterans, involved in plans to kill,
injure or inflict damage for political, social, economic or religious
goals.
The AP’s analysis found that plots involving people with military
backgrounds were more likely to involve mass casualties, weapons
training or firearms than plots that didn’t include someone with a
military background. This held true whether or not the plots were
carried out.
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This image provided by Alcides Antunes shows a Tesla Cybertruck that
exploded outside President-elect Donald Trump's Las Vegas hotel
early Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025. (Alcides Antunes via AP)
The jihadist ideology of the Islamic State group apparently
connected to the New Orleans attack would make it an outlier in the
motivations of previous attacks involving people with military
backgrounds. Only around 9% of such extremists with military
backgrounds subscribed to jihadist ideologies, START researchers
found. More than 80% identified with far-right, anti-government or
white supremacist ideologies, with the rest split among far-left or
other motivations.
Still, there have been a number of significant attacks motivated by
the Islamic State and jihadist ideology in which the attackers had
U.S. military backgrounds. In 2017, a U.S. Army National Guard
veteran who’d served in Iraq killed five people in a mass shooting
at the Fort Lauderdale airport in Florida after radicalizing via
jihadist message boards and vowing support for the Islamic State. In
2009, an Army psychiatrist and officer opened fire at Fort Hood,
Texas, and killed 13 people, wounding dozens more. The shooter had
been in contact with a known al-Qaida operative prior to the
shooting.
In the shadow of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol — led in part by
veterans — law enforcement officials said the threat from domestic
violent extremists was one of the most persistent and pressing
terror threats to the United States. The Pentagon has said it is
“committed to understanding the root causes of extremism and
ensuring such behavior is promptly and appropriately addressed and
reported to the proper authorities.”
Kristofer Goldsmith, an Army veteran and CEO of Task Force Butler
Institute, which trains veterans to research and counter extremism,
said the problem of violent extremism in the military cuts across
ideological lines. Still, he said, while the Biden administration
tried to put in place efforts to address it, Republicans in Congress
opposed them for political reasons.
“They threw, you know, every roadblock that they could in saying
that all veterans are being called extremists by the Biden
administration,” Goldsmith said. “And now we’re in a situation where
we’re four years behind where we could have been.”
During their long military careers, both Jabbar and Livelsberger
served time at the U.S. Army base formerly known as Fort Bragg in
North Carolina, one of the nation’s largest military bases. One of
the officials who spoke to the AP said there is no overlap in their
assignments at the base, now called Fort Liberty.
Goldsmith said he is concerned that the incoming Trump
administration will focus on the New Orleans attack and ISIS and
ignore that most deadly attacks in the United States in recent
history have come from the far right, particularly if Trump’s
nominee for defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, is confirmed.
Hegseth has justified the medieval Crusades that pitted Christians
against Muslims, criticized the Pentagon’s efforts to address
extremism in the ranks and ahead of Joe Biden's inauguration in the
weeks after the Jan. 6 attack was himself flagged by a fellow
National Guard member as a possible “insider threat.”
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AP reporter Tara Copp contributed from Washington, D.C.
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