National Socialist Movement (United Kingdom)

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The National Socialist Movement (NSM) was a British

neo-Nazi group active during the late 1990s. The group is not connected to the earlier National Socialist Movement of Colin Jordan
.

Origins

The roots of the NSM lay in a split that developed in

Charlie Sargent, who at the time was on remand for the murder of fellow C18 member Chris Castle, had acted as a paid informant for the police, although no evidence for this allegation was provided. Whilst Sargent was disowned by some of the rank and file membership of C18, his brother Steve, also a C18 member, supported Sargent and together with David Myatt led away fifty or so like-minded members to form a separate group, the National Socialist Movement, in June 1997.[2][3][4][5]

Development

David Myatt was the first leader of the NSM

Arlington, Virginia where they were given to the American Nazi Party.[11] As leader, the duties of Williams included overseeing membership inquiries and levying the £10 annual fee from registered supporters.[12]

Mike Whine of the Board of Deputies of British Jews described the NSM as a "very small but very violent neo-Nazi group. Their whole programme is one of terrorism ... against Jews, against blacks and against Asians."[13] Myatt, who was the architect of the NSM, denied that NSM supported racial hatred but admitted that they intended to accomplish their aim of "an entirely new society, based upon personal honour" through revolutionary activity.[14] The group's own mission statement claimed that the NSM was "formed in June 108 yf ["Year of the Führer" - a system of measuring the years from Adolf Hitler's birth also employed by the National Alliance and similar groups] for the purpose of championing the cause of Aryan identity and Aryan freedom" whilst also committing the group to the establishment of a "National Socialist State",[5] and although the NSM claimed to be a political party, much of its literature advocated violent revolution.[15]

Steve Sargent served as propaganda director of the new group and produced their magazine White Dragon, which, although a neo-Nazi publication, garnered a following due to its often humorous style of reporting and Sargent's propensity to fill its pages with his take on events at his favourite football club, Arsenal.[5] A further magazine was also published in support of the NSM, sharing the name Column 88 with an earlier neo-Nazi paramilitary group, although this was as much a personal concern of Williams as White Dragon was of Sargent.[16]

Nail bomber

The NSM was not widely known until 1999 when

David Copeland, the London nail-bomber, received six life sentences for his April 1999 bombing campaign against London's black, Asian, and gay communities, which killed three people, including a pregnant woman, and injured 129, some of whom lost limbs. Copeland, who had joined the NSM after becoming disillusioned with the British National Party, served as Hampshire organiser for the group.[17]

David Myatt would claim that the attacks had been the work of Copeland on his own and could not be blamed on the NSM.[14] Nonetheless the arrest of Copeland saw the other members of the NSM go to ground.[18]

References

  1. ^ McLagan & Lowles, Mr. Evil, pp. 63-64
  2. ^ Langenohl, Andreas Langenohl & Westphal, Kirsten. (eds.) "Comparing and Inter-Relating the European Union and the Russian Federation," Zentrum für internationale Entwicklungs- und Umweltforschung der Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, November 2006, p.84.
  3. ^ "The Nailbomber", transcript of BBC Panorama documentary, aired June 30, 2000
  4. ^ a b Michael, George. (2006) The Enemy of My Enemy: The Alarming Convergence of Militant Islam and the Extreme Right. University Press of Kansas, p. 142.
  5. ^ a b c McLagan & Lowles, Mr. Evil, p. 64
  6. ^ Goodrick-Clark, N. (2001) p.50 Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism and the Politics of Identity
  7. ^ Searchlight, April 1998
  8. ^ "Cyberspace: A New Medium for Communication, Command and Control by Extremists". Retrieved 2011-05-05.
  9. ^ Ryan, Homeland, p. 77
  10. ^ McLagan & Lowles, Mr. Evil, p. 66
  11. ^ McLagan & Lowles, Mr. Evil, pp. 66-67
  12. ^ Transcript of Panorama
  13. ^ a b What the neo-Nazi fanatic did next: switched to Islam
  14. ^ McLagan & Lowles, Mr. Evil, p. 65
  15. ^ McLagan & Lowles, Mr. Evil, p. 67
  16. ^ Ryan, Homeland, p. 84
  17. ^ Ryan, Homeland, p. 225

Bibliography