This article is about the British group. For the alleged South African white supremacist group, see Strijdom Square massacre. For other uses, see White Wolf (disambiguation).
The White Wolves was a British neo-Nazi and white supremacist terrorist organisation that claimed to adhere to the doctrine of leaderless resistance,[1] which claimed responsibility for several racially motivated bombings in London in 1999.
"The White Wolves is a tiny secretive group of nazi fanatics organised in cells. It first came to attention in 1994 when it issued a 'blueprint for terror' in which it set out the events now being played out in London. Copying the concept of "leaderless resistance" from American far-right extremists, they formed small cells and planned terror bombings and cold- blooded murder."[2] The anonymous 15 page 1994 blueprint for terror – which announced the formation of the White Wolves, contained practical instructions on bomb making, and which called for a race war[3] – has been widely attributed to the then neo-nazi ideologue David Myatt.[4]
Mike Whine, head of the Board of Jewish Deputies theorised that the White Wolves were a splinter group of Combat 18, deriving their name from a Serbian paramilitary formation.[citation needed]
^Nadine Gurr; Benjamin Cole (2000). The new face of terrorism: threats from weapons of mass destruction. I.B. Tauris. p. 191. ISBN 978-1-86064-460-3.
^Sunday Mirror, 2 May 1999, page 4
^https://www.newsweek.com/hatred-london-166706 Susan Greenberg, Newsweek", 5 September 1999
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