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Thought the US Capitol Attack Couldn’t Happen? Think Again

Officials worry a mob could shut down American democracy by targeting its weakly defended centres of power.

Jack L Rozdilsky
World
Published:
Violent protesters, loyal to President Donald Trump, stormed the US Capitol, on Wednesday, 6 January, in Washington DC.
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Violent protesters, loyal to President Donald Trump, stormed the US Capitol, on Wednesday, 6 January, in Washington DC.
(Photo: PTI)

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In a dark and surreal moment in American history, on the afternoon of 6 January, a group of Americans staged a violent protest by assaulting their own capitol building.

In this short-lived riot attempt, four lives were lost, numerous injuries occurred, blood was spilled inside of the Capitol, the halls of government were ransacked and the constitutionally prescribed mechanisms of an election were interrupted.

Law enforcement officials now worry that a dangerous lesson could linger – a mob could shut down American democracy itself, by targeting its weakly defended centers of power.

The origin of this disaster event lies with Trump’s inflammatory rhetoric spurring malcontents to attempt an insurrection. And in a rally earlier in the day, Trump ally Rudy Giuliani called for a “trial by combat.”

On the day after the quagmire, it is unclear how security authorities’ errors in tactics, techniques, and procedures failed to defend the Capitol from incursion. It will take some time to unwind the specific series of missteps that allowed for a mob of criminals to embarrass the US federal government.

What is clear is that a failure of imagination was one factor that contributed to the previously unimaginable and extremely dangerous events that unfolded in Washington DC, on 6 January.

It Can’t Happen Here

The US was – with an emphasis on was – a place that held the perception that something like this couldn’t possibly happen here. Images of intruders storming the symbolic center of the US government were reserved for action and disaster films, like Roland Emmerich’s White House Down.

One of the mistakes made in the lead up to the insurrection attempt was that it was not practically imagined that a hoard of hooligans could be unleashed to literally climb the walls of the chambers of the US Congress and that they would get away with it!

Prior to 6 January, in the popular American imagination, violent mobs obstructing legal election processes only occurred in faraway places with a fragile hold on democratic institutions.

The perception for America that “it can’t happen here” has been shattered. In a previous analysis of the potential for electoral violence in the US, I have stated that even falling a little towards the direction of a fragile state prior to 20 January can create a more permissive environment for inappropriate expressions of grievances through violence.

Unfortunately, such sentiments are now ringing true.

How Was This Chaos Allowed?

The second failure of imagination was by security authorities. For reasons unknown at this point, security forces were unable to stop invaders from attacking the Capitol, when the threat was in plain sight for weeks.

It may have been beyond the authorities’ range of imagination that pro-Trump mobs would actually attack the Capitol.

What is puzzling is that the US government clearly has forces at its disposal to defend key government sites. There are numerous historical examples of authorities taking a no-nonsense approach to putting down real or perceived threats to the nation’s Capitol.
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One historic example of a muscular use of force was on 28 July 1932, when President Herbert Hoover ordered the US Army to evict thousands of “Bonus Army” veterans from the Capitol.

Soldiers under General MacArthur’s command set the protestors’ camps on fire and forcibly expelled thousands of disgruntled veterans from Washington.

During the turbulence of the 1960s, on 21 October 1967, a large contingent of 35,000 anti-Vietnam war protesters marched on the Pentagon.

Some of the demonstrators attempted to disrupt military operations by storming the Pentagon. When 20 to 30 of the demonstrators pushed through the line of US Marshals and military police into the Pentagon’s Mall entrance, they were greeted by heavily armed troops. The business of the Pentagon was not interrupted.

One does not even have to look too far back in history to find a contrast in response methods. In June 2020, during Black Lives Matter protests, the tactic of an authoritative projection of force was used, as battle-ready soldiers from DC National Guard stood ready to put down potential violent disorder, which did not occur.

In stark contrast, during the violent assault on the Capitol by pro-Trump rioters, the National Guard was not deployed until the damage was already done.

The question of why a group of pro-Trump troublemakers was able to ravage the US Capitol and disrupt a joint session of Congress needs to be answered. This incident should not be viewed as mere political shenanigans, rather it should be considered as evidence of a serious gap in national security.

Trump supporters after storming the US Capitol.(Photo: Igor Bobic/Twitter)

Beyond the Pale

This level of dysfunction is beyond the pale. While Facebook and Twitter took action to ban Trump from pressing buttons and sending out dangerous social media messages, Trump still has access to the button that launches nuclear weapons.

At 3:41 am on 7 January, Congress eventually certified Joe Biden’s electoral college victory. The mechanisms of democracy will limp along, and Biden will be sworn in as President on 20 January.

Until that date, that nation remains in peril. Even once Biden is in office, the menace of Trump’s continued influence will remain.

The US cannot afford the political lack of will or lack of ability to defend itself against acts of insurrection and sedition. During these final two weeks of Trump’s term in office, the failure to consider the possibility of a repeated insurrection represents an existential threat to the US at this time.

(This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.)

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