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Identifying and Exploiting the Weaknesses of White Supremacist Groups

The Lawfare Podcast

Release Date: 04/14/2021

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People are expressing anxiety about white supremacist violent terrorism, yet in a new Brookings paper entitled "Identifying and Exploiting the Weaknesses of the White Supremacist Movement," Daniel Byman and Mark Pitcavage say that while the threat is real, these movements have weaknesses that other terrorist groups do not. Benjamin Wittes sat down with them to talk about these weaknesses, how white supremacist groups are vulnerable and how law enforcement in the U.S. can exploit them to reduce the threat.

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A lot of people are expressing anxiety about white supremacist violent terrorism, yet in a new Brookings paper entitled "Identifying and Exploiting the Weaknesses of the White Supremacist Movement," Daniel Byman, Lawfare's foreign policy editor and a senior fellow at the Brookings Center for Middle East Policy, and Mark Pitcavage, a senior research fellow at the Center on Extremism at the Anti-Defamation League, say that while the threat is real, these movements have weaknesses that other terrorist groups do not. Benjamin Wittes sat down with Byman and Pitcavage to talk about these weaknesses, how white supremacist groups are vulnerable and how law enforcement in the United States can exploit them to reduce the threat.