In Bad Company: America’s Terrorist Underground

Amazon.com Price: $35.00 (as of 02/05/2019 21:52 PST- Details)

Description

The dramatic sieges at Randy Weaver’s cabin in Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, combined with the FBI’s reluctance to admit wrongdoing in those tragic confrontations, fueled a virulent hatred of the federal government that unified prior to now isolated voices within the extreme radical right movement. Consequently, the scores of clandestine paramilitary cells that flourished in the aftermath of Ruby Ridge and Waco formed a loosely knit underground network with a shared goal to violently overthrow the U.S. government.

This gripping volume explores some of the dangerous of those phantom cells-the Aryan Republican Army (ARA). In response to trial transcripts, interviews, a secret diary, newspaper accounts, and ethnographic research, Mark S. Hamm provides a compelling history of the ARA, its organizers, and the revolutionary group’s significance in supporting acts of domestic terrorism, including its prior to now unrecognized role in Timothy McVeigh’s devastating bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. He interweaves his narrative with a penetrating discussion of why people like McVeigh and the ARA members turn hatred into terrorist actions.

Hamm centers his riveting account of the ARA at the troubled life histories of founders Peter Kevin McGregor Langan and Richard “Wild Bill” Guthrie, in addition to on profiles of the foot soldiers in the movement. He explores the identical social, cultural, and personal forces that attracted these men to the White Supremacy movement and Christian Identity, a theology that gives the blessing of God to the racist cause, and that drove them on a criminal path to terrorism. Drawing historical parallels with the motives and tactics of Jesse James and his gang’s crime spree, Hamm makes a speciality of how Langan and his paramilitary gang committed a string of professionally executed armed bank robberies to finance the overthrow of the federal government through such terrorist attacks as train derailments, assassinations, and bombings.

Hamm concludes this absorbing yet disconcerting journey through The united states’s underground terrorist conspiracy by challenging the government’s assertion that Timothy McVeigh acted as a lone wolf in the Oklahoma City bombing. As a substitute, he offers startling new evidence that connects McVeigh to the Aryan Republican Army.

Home » Shop » Books » Subjects » Arts and Photography » History and Criticism » History » Americas » United States » State and Local » In Bad Company: America’s Terrorist Underground

Recent Products