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Global Hate: Hate Travels

"Through international networks of influence, Americans are helping hateful allies make concrete gains across the globe."

A few years ago in Japan, a group of ultranationalists marched through city streets across the country, screaming, 鈥淜ill both good and bad Koreans!鈥 Now, that group has formed a political party to cripple minority rights. Last year, their leader crossed an ocean to meet with white supremacists in America. Once back in Japan, the party marketed its ties to fringe U.S. white nationalists to appear more established. Networking pays off.

Through international networks of influence, Americans are helping hateful allies make concrete gains across the globe. When it鈥檚 not Japan, it鈥檚 Europe, where the American anti-LGBT Christian right has built up an infrastructure of influence with deep ties inside the halls of power. As a result, dangerous anti-LGBT legislation and campaigns crop up on the continent, all with American support. Meanwhile, junk science equating homosexuality to pedophilia and conspiratorial calls to fight 鈥済ender ideology鈥 are replicated from one country to the next.

Hate is by no means an exclusively American business, but American hate groups have a lot to teach and a lot to appropriate. And they are traveling the world.

Photo by Andrea Roncini/Getty Images

Europe: Extremism Crosses the Pond

By Intelligence Report Staff

When the U.S. Supreme Court marriage equality in 2015, American right-wing extremists ramped up their against LGBT people and reproductive rights overseas.

In Europe, American anti-LGBT groups are replicating the three-pronged approach that made them so powerful in the U.S.: litigation, legislation and activism. In a coordinated fashion, they flood European countries and institutions with legal cases, petitions, lobbying, trainings and campaigns to advance a vision steeped in regressive traditionalism.

In Romania, for instance, four U.S. religious right groups pushed for a referendum to amend the constitution to redefine families as based on the marriage between a man and a woman. Such an amendment would add a significant obstacle to the legalization of same-sex marriage, which is already illegal in the country but not constitutionally banned.

To lobby for the referendum, anti-LGBT hate group and legal powerhouse Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) used its international arm to to the Romanian Constitutional Court. So did the (ECLJ) of the , which made its name by advocating for the criminalization of homosexuality abroad. Also stepping into the fray was anti-LGBT hate group Liberty Counsel, which describes same-sex marriage in its as 鈥済rounded in fraudulent 鈥榬esearch鈥 based on skewed demographics and the sexual abuse of hundreds of infants and children.鈥

Meanwhile, the U.S.-based anti-LGBT hate group World Congress of Families (WCF), headed by career right-wing activist Brian Brown, to the Romanian Parliament in favor of the referendum that was signed by many American anti-LGBT leaders. In parallel, ADF International lobbied members of the European Parliament.

Then, there was the activism: ADF International worked alongside a Romanian coalition 鈥 including a Christian nationalist operating a website with ties to white supremacist David Duke 鈥 to gather 3 million signatures on a petition in support of the referendum.

This onslaught of American involvement was not coincidental. As a report by the European Parliamentary Forum on Population and Development in 2018, three of the aforementioned groups were part of Agenda Europe, a secretive coalition through which conservative right-wing religious activists and politicians work together to try to erode LGBT and reproductive rights in Europe.

In September 2018, the Romanian Constitutional Court allowed the referendum to go through, but the effort failed when only 20 percent of Romanians up to vote in early October. Though they voted in favor of the ban, turnout fell of the 30 percent necessary for the constitutional change to take effect.

In Italy, the far-right party , a WCF ally, sailed into power in March 2018 as the most party of the country鈥檚 leading center-right coalition. Its head, , became the country鈥檚 deputy prime minister and opened the country鈥檚 doors wider to far-right American 鈥渢raditionalists.鈥 On top of with former Trump adviser and far-right media mogul Steve Bannon and statements to be read at the WCF, Salvini invited the WCF to hold its 2019 annual congress in Verona.

Regressive legislation tends to follow where the WCF treads. At its annual congresses, anti-LGBT activists and politicians from around the world confer on potential strategies to roll back LGBT and reproductive rights.

In September 2018, the WCF gathered in Moldova, a small country, , that shares a border with Ukraine and is fiercely divided between pro-Russian and pro-EU forces. At the event, , the country鈥檚 embattled pro-Russian president, promised attendees that he would outlaw 鈥渋mmoral鈥 (LGBT) festivals and events in the country.

Planned shortly after the Moldova congress, the Verona WCF will likely incorporate its usual anti-LGBT and anti-choice strategizing, being in a city where far-right groups have a stronghold. After the upcoming congress was announced in Verona, regressive legislation began to pass in an ominous prelude.

Americans and allies of Americans had been involved in Italy long before the Verona WCF, in particular through a platform close to WCF, . Based in Spain, CitizenGO is headed by a member of WCF鈥檚 board of directors. Brown and another WCF staffer also sit on . In 2013, when the popular anti-LGBT Italian activist group was launched, it had a number of close ties to CitizenGO. Throughout the years, it shared a of members with CitizenGO鈥檚 Italian branch, and the two would collaborate on .

members of CitizenGO Italy and WCF partner and anti-abortion group ProVita, Generazione Famiglia organized prominent anti-LGBT rallies in Italy in and in . The two 鈥淔amily Days鈥 gathered of to oppose same-sex civil unions. One of the 2015 鈥淔amily Day,鈥 attorney Gianfranco Amato, was an for the anti-LGBT hate group, ADF.

CitizenGO remained involved in the country even as a watered-down bill legalizing same-sex civil unions was passed. They organized a four-day in Rome in July 2018 to help local anti-LGBT and anti-abortion activist groups best support 鈥渢he natural family, life and liberty.鈥 It was specifically focused on 鈥済ender ideology, attacks against marriage and the family, the persecution of Christians in the East and the violation of freedom of opinion in the West.鈥 Generazione Famiglia and CitizenGO Italy members Filippo Savarese and Jacopo Coghe were present at the training.

Representatives from the most influential anti-LGBT groups in from the U.S. for the training to join a powerful consortium of European and American allies, including Travis Weber from the anti-LGBT hate group Family Research Council.

The Leadership Institute, an American conservative powerhouse forming 鈥渇uture conservative leaders,鈥 facilitated most of the training as part of its increasing effort to train anti-LGBT and anti-reproductive rights activists in Europe.

WCF harbors a number of ties to the far right and known fascists and monarchists on the continent, some so extreme that they openly call themselves fascist.

WCF repeatedly Hungarian strongman, Prime Minister Viktor Orb谩n, who at the WCF in Hungary in 2017. On the heels of the public congress but behind closed doors, the WCF then facilitated a in Budapest at the Hungarian Parliament. The forum together dozens of politicians and activists.

As Brown repeatedly traveled to Hungary, the legislation in the country started to reflect the so-called family values prized by the Christian right, for which Orb谩n claims to be the standard-bearer. In October 2018, Orb谩n鈥檚 party a law banning gender studies programs from universities.

The American influence on anti-LGBT activism in Europe is hard to ignore. Similar to stop so-called (a right-wing rallying cry based on a conspiracy theory) in schools have cropped up in , and and are conducted by WCF allies. Seasoned anti-LGBT activists from the U.S. are people across the continent. In the process, they are birthing a professional anti-LGBT infrastructure to pump out legislation that will further marginalize LGBT people and limit access to reproductive health care.

Photo by Shizuo Kambayashi/AP Images

Japan: Bridges to Bigotry

By Rachel Janik

On Oct. 12, 1960, in Tokyo, Japan, a young radical belonging to the country鈥檚 uyoku dantai, or far right, brought a sword to a political debate. Otoya Yamaguchi, just 17 years old and still wearing his school uniform, rushed the stage and drove his yoroi-doshi into the chest of Inejiro Asanuma, an influential leader in Japan鈥檚 Socialist Party. Asanuma was dead before he could reach a hospital, and just a few weeks later, so was his adolescent assassin.

Yamaguchi, who The New York Times described as a 鈥渞ight-wing fanatic鈥 鈥渘urturing fascistic ideology,鈥 had already been 鈥渁rrested several times for violent attacks on left-wing demonstrators.鈥 On Nov. 2, 1960, he scrawled his last words in toothpaste on the wall of his cell in juvenile detention and hanged himself.

Today, Japan remembers the murder, which was televised, as a tragic eruption of political violence. But in the U.S., the radical right lauds the killing as nothing short of heroic.

鈥淲hat a great icon, what a great hero!鈥 hailed Gavin McInnes, the founder of the far-right fight club the Proud Boys.

McInnes 鈥渞e-enacted鈥 the assassination at an event in New York City last October, in a theatrical bit that he played mostly for laughs. It featured a pair of glasses with slanted eyes drawn over them in a racist caricature (McInnes is vocal about his disdain for 鈥減olitical correctness鈥) and even a plastic samurai sword. The Canadian internet talk show host, once known for being a pioneer of the hipster aesthetic and now infamous for his misogynist and anti-Muslim screeds and the violent behavior of his polo-clad followers, concluded his skit on a serious note.

鈥淣ever let evil take root,鈥 he said. His audience cheered. Later that night, a mob of McInnes鈥 acolytes were filmed assaulting protesters in the streets of Manhattan.

McInnes was parroting a far-right meme that had been circulating on internet boards for years. It features the Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph that captured the scene of Asanuma鈥檚 assassination at the moment Yamaguchi pulled his sword out of the man鈥檚 rib cage. The grisly image has been retouched in the racist 鈥渁lt-right鈥檚鈥 popular retro-futurist 鈥渇ashwave鈥 aesthetic, and superimposed over it is the same phrase, 鈥淣ever let evil take root.鈥

The Yamaguchi meme is perhaps the most visible example of American radicals taking cues from the Japanese far-right. But more direct and insidious ties have been growing between radical-right figures in the U.S. and Japan over the past few years.


Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

The Radical Right in Japan

On its own, the ultranationalist far right in Japan is thriving. In 1960, the far-right of Otoya Yamaguchi pined for a return to imperial rule, denied accounts of wartime atrocities by the Imperial Japanese Army and fixated on the threat of the perceived post-World War II communist menace. While those pillars still remain somewhat important (historical denial in particular), it has shifted in the 21st century. Now, some of its most vocal factions stoke nativist animosity, fear of foreigners and hatred of Japan鈥檚 ethnic Korean and Chinese minorities.

In 2007, a far-right organization emerged called Zaitokukai, 鈥淐ivic Group Against Privileges of Koreans in Japan.鈥 The group was dedicated to demonizing the ethnic Koreans who have resided in Japan for generations (an ethnic group called 鈥淶ainichi鈥 Koreans). In the late 2000s, hundreds of representatives of Zaitokukai marched through the streets in cities across Japan, chanting 鈥淜ill both good and bad Koreans!鈥

On the Zaitokukai phenomenon, Japanese scholar Naoto Higuchi writes, 鈥淯nlike its predecessors, the group Zaitokukai 鈥 seems quite similar to European radical-right groups in the sense that it targets ethnic minorities with violent attacks.鈥

The leader and founder of Zaitokukai is a right-wing agitator named Makoto Sakurai. One of his chief advisers, Hiroyuki Seto, is well-known in Japan as a neo-Nazi. In 1993, Seto published a book called Recommendation of Hitler鈥檚 Idea 鈥 Remedy to Nature and Human Kind, 120% affirmation of Nazi and Hitler.

Zaitokukai capitalized on ethnic prejudice that had long lurked in Japan鈥檚 history. In 1923, following a devastating earthquake in the Kanto region, police, soldiers and vigilante civilians massacred 6,000 Zainichi Koreans after rumors circulated that Koreans were poisoning wells and sabotaging Japanese citizens in the disaster鈥檚 aftermath.

After his success mobilizing people on the streets, Sakurai turned to the new frontier of the worldwide radical right: the internet. Japan鈥檚 equivalent of the Western phenomenon of the primarily online-incubated racist 鈥渁lt-right鈥 is called netto uyoku (sometimes shortened to netouyo), or 鈥渋nternet right.鈥 Like the noxious stew of conspiracy and race hate that characterize online alt-right forums, netto uyo likewise trafficks in fake news and ethnic bigotry. The Anti-Racism Information Center (ARIC) tracks the activities of the radical right and netto uyoku in Japan and advocates for laws protecting minorities from discrimination. ARIC鈥檚 founder, Ryang Yong-Song, said in an interview with the Intelligence Report that he and his team have observed denizens of netto uyoku indulging the same dangerous lies that led to the slaughter of thousands of Koreans nearly 100 years ago. 鈥淵ou will see many hate speeches that say 鈥楰orean minority throw toxin in the well,鈥欌 Yong-Song said.

Sakurai has positioned himself as an influencer in netto uyoku, and in 2016, he launched a new far-right political enterprise. Emulating the populist nationalism that had gripped the U.S., embodied by the presidential campaign of Donald Trump, Sakurai called his new project the Japan First Party (JFP).


Photo by Yasushi Nagao/Getty Images

East Meets West

The JFP has chapters across the country, and its members participate in elections in addition to the anti-immigrant street demonstrations that characterized Zaitokukai. And to bolster his new venture, Sakurai has been soliciting relationships with far-right groups in the U.S. and around the world.

In June last year, Sakurai traveled to the U.S. to be a featured guest speaker at the annual conference of the American Freedom Party (AFP), a collection of old-school white nationalists and antisemites with long-shot political aspirations.

At that event, which Sakurai later called an 鈥淚nternational Alliance鈥 meeting, he rubbed elbows with AFP leaders like longtime racist William Daniel Johnson and antisemitic author Kevin MacDonald. But he wasn鈥檛 the only international visitor. He also networked with Dominic Luthard of the far-right Swiss Nationalist Party, which denounces 鈥渢he multicultural society鈥 as a 鈥減erversion of natural coexistence.鈥

Exploiting Globalization

Organizations that traffic in hate, despite being generally isolationist by definition, are capitalizing on globalization (and the global trend of populist nationalism) to build connections, relationships and resources. And why wouldn鈥檛 they? They can learn from one another. For Sakurai鈥檚 part, he has used his recent U.S. visits to legitimize his movement.

But ARIC鈥檚 representatives worry the influence of the Japanese far-right could have even darker consequences for the U.S., especially when it comes to one of their movement鈥檚 pillars: historical revisionism. The sociologist Higuchi explains, 鈥淚n the Japanese context, historical revisionism seeks to justify and glorify war and aggression against other countries by the Japanese Empire (1868鈥1945).鈥 In particular, far-right agitators and radical politicians deny war crimes committed during the empire, chief among them the use of so-called comfort women 鈥 kidnapped Korean and Chinese women who were forced into sexual slavery 鈥 and incidents like the infamous massacre called the Rape of Nanjing.

Far-right activist Satoshi Katsurada, who was active in Zaitokukai, was arrested in February for being involved in a drive-by shooting at a Korean embassy. According to ARIC鈥檚 database tracking hate speech in Japan, his daughter, who is also active in the ultranationalist right, once declared in a speech, 鈥淵ou (Koreans in Japan) had better stop 鈥 otherwise we will carry out not the Nanjing massacre, but the 鈥楾suruhashi massacre!鈥欌 (Tsuruhashi is a neighborhood in Japan known for its high population of Zainichi Koreans).

Yong-Song cautioned that Japan鈥檚 tradition of historical revisionism would embolden bigots in the West seeking to erase the history of the Holocaust or minimize the brutality of American slavery. 鈥淚f you can deny comfort women, you can deny the Holocaust, you can deny anything,鈥 he said.

Historical revisionism has had traction as a political tool in Japan. Even school textbooks have been successfully censored to downplay the worst chapters of the nation鈥檚 past.

And let鈥檚 not forget Yamaguchi鈥檚 lasting impact in the West. Lacking any historical or cultural context, violent extremist groups like the Proud Boys characterize Asanuma as an evil, radical leftist who would have taken Japan down the path of communist, authoritarian China. When Yong-Song heard this, he was astounded. 鈥淭hat is fake news!鈥 he said.

But why sweat the details or the truth? When far-right street fighters like the Proud Boys misrepresent figures like Asanuma as an existential threat, they justify political violence as a moral imperative.