*Scott Roeder has been alleged to have killed obstetrician George Tiller on 31 May 2009.
*On 1 June 2009 Abdulhakim Mujahaid Muhammad, an American who had converted to Islam opened fire on a United States military recruiting office in Little Rock, Arkansas, known as the 2009 Little Rock recruiting office shooting. Abdulhakim has been indicted on one count of capital murder in the death of Private William Long and 15 counts of terrorism. Private Quinton Ezeagwula was also wounded in the attack.[11][12] Preliminary investigation (as of 12 June 2009) indicated that Muhammad acted alone.[13]
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum shooting was a shooting at that nation's memorial to The Holocaust in Washington, D.C. on June 10, 2009, at 12:50 p.m.[1][4][5] Shooting suspect James Wenneker von Brunn was charged in federal court on June 11, 2009, with first-degree murder and firearms violations.[6] On July 29, 2009, von Brunn was indicted on seven counts, including four which make him eligible for the death penalty.[7] In September of 2009, a judge ordered von Brunn to undergo a competency evaluation to determine whether or not he can stand trial.[8]
According to the six-page indictment, von Brunn entered the building and shot security guard Stephen Tyrone Johns, who died from his injuries.[9] Von Brunn is a white supremacist and Holocaust denier who had previously been arrested and convicted for entering a federal building with various weapons in 1981.[10]
Three lone wolf terrorist attacks has occured in the United States in 2009. Terrorist attacks for different reasons, protesting the Iraq War, protesing abortion, protesting...um...Jews? The US failed to stop Scott Roeder, Abdulhakim Mujahaid Muhammad, and Mr. von Brunn, but we see nobody calling for an intelligence commitee to determine why.
That's because lone wolves are harder to find, so the public gives the government some slack. Lone wolves operate independently, so they cannot be infilitrated. They are not interested in grabbing bombs and biological weapons...guns and cars (why waste bullets when you can run people over?) would do just fine. They are interested in not causing the most bloodshed, but rather just causing bloodshed, believing that the shock of an attack would do the deed well. And I'm not even caring right now about eco-terrorists and other organizations who
don't even want to kill anyone, they just want to destroy property.
Lone wolves don't seem to really have that much of an effect, and in the case of Scott Roeder, was, at teh time, seen to even be counterproductive (abortion terrorism might alienate Pro-Lifers, doing more damage to the cause rather than just removing a single abortion doctor). But at the same time, the fact that all three of these events are off the news cycles suggest that nobody really cares about these issues, dismissing them as just some lone insane gunmen with mental problems (...which may very well be true, it would be very lame if we view every random attack by an insane gunman as a Terrorist Attack, for example, seeing a school shooting as a protest against higher taxes). Support for the Iraq War really isn't going to increase when news got around about Abdulhakim Mujahaid Muhammad, so prehaps LCS' Alienation Theory may prove to be inadequate.
My question is this: Is there any real strategic benieft for a terrorist to engage in to Lone Wolf Terrorism, considering it is less spectular and more likely to be reported on page 8A? I don't really know. I suppose that it does act to rally support for a political cause, in the hopes that someone will launch a better terrorist attack, but in all three circumstances (pro-life, anti-Iraq War, anti-Semitism), there is already a groundswell of political support, and you are likely not going to gain any new political support for these issues. No need for vanguardism there. Does it make terrorists feel good that "something" is being done? Possibly, but "feeling good" seems rather pointless considering the costs to the individual concerned and the fears of "backfires". Time could be better spent arguing for your position, by operating your own Guardian. Create a "climate of fear"? Possible, but it's going to be hard to measure, and it could even backfire: People might actually be more willing to risk their lives.