Terrorist Anders Breivik Now Claims He Lied About Pro-Israel Views to Diguise Nazi Beliefs

When Anders Breivik went on his shooting rampage in Norway in 2011, he left behind a curious and lengthy manifesto identifying himself as Christian with zionist sympathies. The media focused narrowly on his pro-Israel Christian views when discussing his motivation, even though the addled manifesto he left behind raised almost as many questions about Breivik’s ideology as it purported to answer. Breivik was a protestant who wished the Church of Norway would convert back to Rome, disliked politically liberal priests who supported Palestinians, and other evidence suggests he was a free mason. All of this points to some very unusual and complicated Christian beliefs. Making matters worse, after the killings, a deputy police chief in Norrway further muddied the waters by calling him a “fundamentalist Christian.” In fact, Breivik was not a “fundamentalist” in either the pejorative or actual meaning of the word.

Still, the media’s predictable response was to exploit the tradgedy to drive an ideological agenda. The headline in The Atlantic was “The Christian Extremist Suspect in Norway’s Massacre.” At the Daily Beast, Michelle Goldberg argued “Breivik’s embrace of Israel is the latest sign of a shift among reactionaries in Europe—with fascism and Zionism going hand in hand.” A respected Swedish academic suggested the government of Israel was behind the attack. Also at the Daily Beast, Peter Beinhart wrote a column using Breivik to argue that there’s been “a lot of right-wing, extremist Christian terrorism in the U.S. in recent years.” Beinhart’s column was so riddled with mischaraterization and errors that he really should have retracted nearly all of what he wrote. Salon was even more direct: “Note to conservatives: Anders Breivik is a Christian.” The Washington Post wrote about “When Christianity becomes lethal.”

Now Breivik has written a letter to the Norwegian media claiming that many of his professed beliefs were a calculated ruse to throw the media off the scent of his true white-nationalist, Nazi ideology. A translation of the letter comes, interestingly enough, from Gates of Vienna — one of the so-called “counter-jihad” blogs that Breivik originally cited in his manifesto:

When dealing with media psychopaths, a good way to counter their tactics is to use double-psychology, or at least so I thought. The compendium was, among other things, of a calculated and quite cynical <<gateway-design>> (the 2+?+?=6-approach), created to strengthen the ethnocentrist wing in the contra-jihad movement, by pinning the whole thing on the anti-ethnocentrist wing (many of the leaders are pro-multiculti social democrats or liberalists), while at the same time protecting and strengthening the ethnocentrist-factions. The idea was to manipulate the MSM and others so that they would launch a witch-hunt and send their <<media-rape-squads>> against our opponents. It worked quite well.

And here’s what Breivik is now saying about his claims he was a zionist:

I know a lot of people will be dissapointed when reading this, but my love for Israel is limited to its future function as a deportation-port for disloyal jews. I am aware of the sad fact that all available statistics confirm that only aprox. three percent of eurojews oppose multiculti (but from an anti-islamist perspective), and that only aprox. 0,2 percent support nordic indigenous rights. I wish it wasnt so… However, there is in fact a strong anti-nordicist/ethnocentrist wing within the counter-jihad movement, represented by Fjordman and his Jewish network, the EDL-leader, the SIOE-leaders, Wilders, Farage etc., but their organisations are so heavily infiltrated by nordicists and ethnocentrists that its hard to say which wing are actually controlling them. … I could have easily avoided excessive pathologisation by keeping the message short and by clinging to the already established ideological cliff of national socialism (its important to remember that this was at a time when all right wing radicals were labeled as nazis), but if they had been allowed to label me as a nazi, the ideological considerations and discussions would be over, and my court-speeches and propaganda performance would never be broadcasted world wide, during the trial. Furthermore, people would not be forced to seek answers in the compendium along the way. Regardless of their efforts, I felt I managed to make the best out of an almost impossible situation, despite of the fact that I made a few mistakes during the process.

Breivik doesn’t say anything new about his supposed Christian views, but Nazi-ism has historically rejected Christianity in favor of pervsions of Nietsche. (The Holocaust museum shooter and Nazi James von Brunn was explicit in his belief that “CHRISTIANITY AND THE HOLOCAUST are HOAXES.”) False claims to being a believing Christian would certainly be in keeping with his desire to stir up a clash of civilizations. At this point it’s hard to tell what Breivik’s motivations were or if he is just insane. The story of Breivik should be a cautionary tale for the media about rushing to judgment on complicated ideological matters when it confirms their biases. But it was obvious the media was too quick to presume Breivik’s motivations in the immediate aftermath of his crimes. These latest revelations are really a reminder that readers should express additional skepticism whenever terrorists are labeled Christians or Zionists.

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