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Weather Underground
Weather Underground
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The Weather Underground was an American far-left Marxist militant organization first active in 1969, founded on the Ann Arbor campus of the University of Michigan.[2][page needed] Originally known as the Weathermen, or simply Weatherman, the group was organized as a faction of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) national leadership.[3] Officially known as the Weather Underground Organization (WUO) beginning in 1970, the group's express political goal was to create a revolutionary party to overthrow the United States government, which WUO believed to be imperialist.

Key Information

The FBI described the WUO as a domestic terrorist group,[4] with revolutionary positions characterized by Black Power and opposition to the Vietnam War.[3] The WUO took part in domestic attacks such as the jailbreak of Timothy Leary in 1970.[5][6] The "Days of Rage" was the WUO's first riot in October 1969 in Chicago, timed to coincide with the trial of the Chicago Seven. In 1970, the group issued a "Declaration of a State of War" against the United States government under the name "Weather Underground Organization".[7]

In the 1970s, the WUO conducted a bombing campaign targeting government buildings and several banks. Some attacks were preceded by evacuation warnings, along with threats identifying the particular matter that the attack was intended to protest. Three members of the group were killed in an accidental Greenwich Village townhouse explosion, but none were killed in any of the bombings. The WUO communiqué issued in connection with the bombing of the United States Capitol on March 1, 1971, indicated that it was "in protest of the U.S. invasion of Laos". The WUO asserted that its May 19, 1972, bombing of the Pentagon was "in retaliation for the U.S. bombing raid in Hanoi". On September 28, 1973, an ITT Inc building in New York City was bombed for the involvement of this company in the 1973 Chilean coup d'état.[8][9] The WUO announced that its January 29, 1975 bombing of the United States Department of State building was "in response to the escalation in Vietnam".[7][10]

The WUO began to disintegrate after the United States reached a peace accord in Vietnam in 1973,[11][page needed] and it was defunct by 1977. Some members of the WUO joined the May 19th Communist Organization and continued their activities until that group disbanded in 1985.

The group took its name from Bob Dylan's lyric "You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows", from the song "Subterranean Homesick Blues" (1965).[12] That Dylan line was also the title of a position paper distributed at an SDS convention in Chicago on June 18, 1969. This founding document called for a "White fighting force" to be allied with the "Black Liberation Movement" and other radical movements[13] to achieve "the destruction of U.S. imperialism and form a classless communist world".[14]

Background and formation

[edit]

The Weathermen emerged from the campus-based opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War as well as from the civil rights movement of the 1960s. One of the factors that contributed to the radicalization of SDS members was the Economic Research and Action Project that the SDS undertook in Northern urban neighborhoods from 1963 to 1968. This project was aimed at creating an interracial movement of the poor that would mobilize for full and fair employment or guaranteed annual income and political rights for poverty class Americans. Their goal was to create a more democratic society "which guarantees political freedom, economic and physical security, abundant education, and incentives for wide cultural variety". While the initial phase of the SDS involved campus organizing, phase two involved community organizing. These experiences led some SDS members to conclude that deep social change would not happen through community organizing and electoral politics, and that more radical and disruptive tactics were needed.[15]

In the late 1960s, United States military action in Southeast Asia escalated, especially in Vietnam. In the U.S., the anti-war sentiment was particularly pronounced during the 1968 U.S. presidential election.

The origins of the Weathermen can be traced to the collapse and fragmentation of the Students for a Democratic Society following a split between office holders of the SDS, or the "National Office", and their supporters and the Progressive Labor Party (PLP). During the factional struggle, National Office leaders such as Bernardine Dohrn and Mike Klonsky began announcing their emerging perspectives, and Klonsky published a document titled "Toward a Revolutionary Youth Movement" (RYM).[7][16]

RYM promoted the philosophy that young workers possessed the potential to be a revolutionary force which could overthrow capitalism, if not by themselves then by transmitting radical ideas to the working class. Klonsky's document reflected the philosophy of the National Office and it was eventually adopted as the SDS's official doctrine. During the summer of 1969, the National Office began to split. A group led by Klonsky became known as RYM II, and the other side, RYM I, was led by Dohrn and endorsed more aggressive tactics such as direct action, as some members felt that years of nonviolent resistance had done little or nothing to stop the Vietnam War.[7] The Weathermen strongly sympathized with the radical Black Panther Party. The police killing of Panther Fred Hampton prompted the Weatherman to issue a declaration of war upon the United States government.

We petitioned, we demonstrated, we sat in. I was willing to get hit over the head, I did; I was willing to go to prison, I did. To me, it was a question of what had to be done to stop the much greater violence that was going on.

SDS Convention, June 1969

[edit]

At an SDS convention in Chicago on June 18, 1969, the National Office attempted to persuade unaffiliated delegates not to endorse a takeover of SDS by Progressive Labor who had packed the convention with their supporters. It was at the 1966 convention of SDS that members of PLP began to make their presence known for the first time. The PLP was a Stalinist group that had turned to SDS as fertile ground for recruiting new members after meeting with little success in organizing industrial workers, their preferred base. SDS members of that time were nearly all anti-communist, but they also refused to be drawn into actions that appeared like red-baiting, which they viewed as mostly irrelevant and out of date. The PLP soon began to organize a Worker Student Alliance. By 1968 and 1969 they would profoundly affect SDS, particularly at national gatherings of the membership, forming a well-groomed, disciplined faction which followed the Progressive Labor Party line.[17] At the beginning of the convention, two position papers were passed out by the National Office leadership, one a revised statement of Klonsky's RYM manifesto,[16] the other called "You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows".[18]

The latter document outlined the position of the group that would become the Weathermen. It had been signed by Karen Ashley, Bill Ayers, Bernardine Dohrn, John Jacobs, Jeff Jones, Gerry Long, Howie Machtinger, Jim Mellen, Terry Robbins, Mark Rudd, and Steve Tappis. The document called for creating a clandestine revolutionary party.

The most important task for us toward making the revolution, and the work our collectives should engage in, is the creation of a mass revolutionary movement, without which a clandestine revolutionary party will be impossible. A revolutionary mass movement is different from the traditional revisionist mass base of "sympathizers". Rather it is akin to the Red Guard in China, based on the full participation and involvement of masses of people in the practice of making revolution; a movement with a full willingness to participate in the violent and illegal struggle.[19]

At this convention the Weatherman's faction of the Students for a Democratic Society, planned for October 8–11, as a "National Action" built around John Jacobs' slogan, "bring the war home".[20][page needed] The National Action grew out of a resolution drafted by Jacobs and introduced at the October 1968 SDS National Council meeting in Boulder, Colorado. The resolution, titled "The Elections Don't Mean Shit—Vote Where the Power Is—Our Power Is In The Street" and adopted by the council, was prompted by the success of the Democratic National Convention protests in August 1968 and reflected Jacobs' strong advocacy of direct action.[21]

As part of the "National Action Staff", Jacobs was an integral part of the planning for what quickly came to be called "Four Days of Rage".[20][page needed] For Jacobs, the goal of the "Days of Rage" was clear:

Weatherman would shove the war down their dumb, fascist throats and show them, while we were at it, how much better we were than them, both tactically and strategically, as a people. In an all-out civil war over Vietnam and other fascist U.S. imperialism, we were going to bring the war home. 'Turn the imperialists' war into a civil war', in Lenin's words. And we were going to kick ass.[22]

In July 1969, 30 members of Weatherman leadership traveled to Cuba and met with North Vietnamese representatives to gain from their revolutionary experience. The North Vietnamese requested armed political action in order to stop the U.S. government's war in Vietnam. Subsequently, they accepted funding, training, recommendations on tactics and slogans from Cuba, and perhaps explosives as well.[23]

SDS Convention, December 1969

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After the Days of Rage riots the Weatherman held the last of its National Council meetings from December 26 to December 31, 1969, in Flint, Michigan. The meeting, dubbed the "War Council" by the 300 people who attended, adopted Jacobs' call for violent revolution.[24][page needed] Dohrn opened the conference by telling the delegates they needed to stop being afraid and begin the "armed struggle". Over the next five days, the participants met in informal groups to discuss what "going underground" meant, how best to organize collectives, and justifications for violence. In the evening, the groups reconvened for a mass "wargasm"—practicing karate, engaging in physical exercise,[25] singing songs, and listening to speeches.[24][page needed][26][page needed][11][page needed][27][28]

The War Council ended with a major speech by John Jacobs. Jacobs condemned the "pacifism" of white middle-class American youth, a belief which he claimed they held because they were insulated from the violence which afflicted blacks and the poor. He predicted a successful revolution, and declared that youth were moving away from passivity and apathy and toward a new high-energy culture of "depersonalization" brought about by drugs, sex, and armed revolution.[24][page needed][26][page needed][11][page needed][27][28] "We're against everything that's 'good and decent' in honky America," Jacobs said in his most commonly quoted statement. "We will burn and loot and destroy. We are the incubation of your mother's nightmare."[29] Two major decisions came out of the War Council. The first was to go underground and to begin a violent, armed struggle against the state without attempting to organize or mobilize a broad swath of the public. The Weather Underground hoped to create underground collectives in major cities throughout the country.[20][page needed] In fact, the Weathermen eventually created only three significant, active collectives; one in California, one in the Midwest, and one in New York City. The New York City collective was led by Jacobs and Terry Robbins, and included Ted Gold, Kathy Boudin, Cathy Wilkerson (Robbins's girlfriend), and Diana Oughton.[21] Jacobs was one of Robbins's biggest supporters, and pushed the Weathermen to let Robbins be as violent as he wanted to be. The Weatherman national leadership agreed, as did the New York City collective.[30] The collective's first target was Judge John Murtagh, who was overseeing the trial of the "Panther 21".[31]

The second major decision was the dissolution of SDS. After the summer of 1969 fragmentation of SDS, Weatherman's adherents explicitly claimed themselves the real leaders of SDS and retained control of the SDS National Office. Thereafter, any leaflet, label, or logo bearing the name "Students for a Democratic Society" (SDS) was in fact the views and politics of Weatherman, not of the slate elected by Progressive Labor. Weatherman contained the vast majority of former SDS National Committee members, including Mark Rudd, David Gilbert, Vernon T. Grizzard and Bernardine Dohrn. The group, while small, was able to commandeer the mantle of SDS and all of its membership lists, but with Weatherman in charge there was little or no support from local branches or members of the organization,[32][33] and local chapters soon disbanded. At the War Council, the Weathermen had decided to close the SDS National Office, ending the major campus-based organization of the 1960s which at its peak was a mass organization with 100,000 members.[34]

Ideology

[edit]

The thesis of Weatherman theory, as expounded in its founding document, You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows, was that "the main struggle going on in the world today is between U.S. imperialism and the national liberation struggles against it",[35] based on Lenin's theory of imperialism, first expounded in 1916 in Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism. In Weatherman theory "oppressed peoples" are the creators of the wealth of empire, "and it is to them that it belongs." "The goal of revolutionary struggle must be the control and use of this wealth in the interest of the oppressed peoples of the world." "The goal is the destruction of U.S. imperialism and the achievement of a classless world: world communism"[36]

The Vietnamese and other third world countries, as well as third world people within the United States play a vanguard role. They "set the terms for class struggle in America ...".[37] The role of the "Revolutionary Youth Movement" is to build a centralized organization of revolutionaries, a "Marxist–Leninist Party" supported by a mass revolutionary movement to support international liberation movements and "open another battlefield of the revolution."[38][39]

The theoretical basis of the Revolutionary Youth Movement was an insight that most of the American population, including both students and the supposed "middle class", comprised, due to their relationship to the instruments of production, the working class,[40] thus the organizational basis of the SDS, which had begun in the elite colleges and had been extended to public institutions as the organization grew could be extended to youth as a whole including students, those serving in the military, and the unemployed. Students could be viewed as workers gaining skills prior to employment. This contrasted to the Progressive Labor view which viewed students and workers as being in separate categories which could ally, but should not jointly organize.[41]

FBI analysis of the travel history of the founders and initial followers of the organization emphasized contacts with foreign governments, particularly the Cuban and North Vietnamese and their influence on the ideology of the organization. Participation in the Venceremos Brigade, a program which involved U.S. students volunteering to work in the sugar harvest in Cuba, is highlighted as a common factor in the background of the founders of the Weather Underground, with China a secondary influence.[42] This experience was cited by both Kathy Boudin and Bernardine Dohrn as a major influence on their political development.[43]

Terry Robbins took the organization's name from the lyrics of the Bob Dylan song "Subterranean Homesick Blues",[44] which featured the lyrics "You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows." The lyrics had been quoted at the bottom of an influential essay in the SDS newspaper, New Left Notes. By using this title the Weathermen meant, partially, to appeal to the segment of U.S. youth inspired to action for social justice by Dylan's songs.[45]

The Weatherman group had long held that militancy was becoming more important than nonviolent forms of anti-war action, and that university campus-based demonstrations needed to be punctuated with more dramatic actions, which had the potential to interfere with the U.S. military and internal security apparatus. The belief was that these types of urban guerrilla actions would act as a catalyst for the coming revolution. Many international events indeed seemed to support the Weathermen's overall assertion that worldwide revolution was imminent, such as the tumultuous Cultural Revolution in China; the 1968 student revolts in France, Mexico City and elsewhere; the Prague Spring; the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association; the emergence of the Tupamaros organization in Uruguay; the emergence of the Guinea-Bissauan Revolution and similar Marxist-led independence movements throughout Africa; and within the United States, the prominence of the Black Panther Party, together with a series of "ghetto rebellions" throughout poor black neighborhoods across the country.[46]

We felt that doing nothing in a period of repressive violence is itself a form of violence. That's really the part that I think is the hardest for people to understand. If you sit in your house, live your white life and go to your white job, and allow the country that you live in to murder people and to commit genocide, and you sit there and you don't do anything about it, that's violence.

The Weathermen were outspoken critics of the concepts that later came to be known as "white privilege" (described as white-skin privilege) and identity politics.[47][48] As the civil disorder in poor black neighborhoods intensified in the early 1970s, Bernardine Dohrn said, "White youth must choose sides now. They must either fight on the side of the oppressed or be on the side of the oppressor."[7]

The Weathermen called for the overthrow of the United States government.[49][50]

Anti-imperialism, anti-racism, and white privilege

[edit]

Weather maintained that their stance differed from the rest of the movements at the time in the sense that they predicated their critiques on the notion that they were engaged in "an anti-imperialist, anti-racist struggle".[51] Weather put the international proletariat at the center of their political theory. Weather warned that other political theories, including those addressing class interests or youth interests, were "bound to lead in a racist and chauvinist direction".[51] Weather denounced other political theories of the time as "objectively racist" if they did not side with the international proletariat; such political theories, they argued, needed to be "smashed".[52][53]

Members of Weather further contended that efforts at "organizing whites against their own perceived oppression" were "attempts by whites to carve out even more privilege than they already derive from the imperialist nexus".[51] Weather's political theory sought to make every struggle an anti-imperialist, anti-racist struggle; out of this premise came their interrogation of critical concepts that would later be known as "white privilege". As historian Dan Berger writes, Weather raised the question "what does it mean to be a white person opposing racism and imperialism?"[54]

At one point, the Weathermen adopted the belief that all white babies were "tainted with the original sin of "skin privilege", declaring "all white babies are pigs" with one Weatherwoman telling feminist poet Robin Morgan "You have no right to that pig male baby" after she saw Morgan breastfeeding her son and told Morgan to put the baby in the garbage. Charles Manson was an obsession within the group and Dohrn claimed he truly understood the iniquity of white America, with the Manson family being praised for the murder of Sharon Tate; Dohrn's cell subsequently made its salute a four-fingered gesture that represented the "fork" used to stab Tate.[55][56]

Practice

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Shortly after its formation as an independent group, Weatherman created a central committee, the Weather Bureau, which assigned its cadres to a series of collectives in major cities. These cities included New York, Boston, Seattle, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Buffalo, and Chicago, the home of the SDS's head office. The collectives set up under the Weather Bureau drew their design from Che Guevara's foco theory, which focused on the building of small, semi-autonomous cells guided by a central leadership.[57]

To try to turn their members into hardened revolutionaries and to promote solidarity and cohesion, members of collectives engaged in intensive criticism sessions which attempted to reconcile their prior and current activities to Weathermen doctrine. These "criticism self-criticism" sessions (also called "CSC" or "Weatherfries") were the most distressing part of life in the collective. Derived from Maoist techniques, it was intended to root out racist, individualist and chauvinist tendencies within group members. At its most intense, members would be berated for a dozen or more hours non-stop about their flaws. It was intended to make group members believe that they were, deep down, white supremacists by subjecting them to constant criticism to break them down. The sessions were used to ridicule and bully those who didn't agree with the party line and force them into acceptance. However, the sessions were also almost entirely successful at purging potential informants from the Weathermen's ranks, making them crucial to the Weathermen's survival as an underground organization.[58] The Weathermen were also determined to destroy "bourgeois individualism" amongst members that would potentially interfere with their commitment to both the Weathermen and the goal of revolution. Personal property was either renounced or given to the collective, with income being used to purchase the needs of the group and members enduring spartan living conditions. Conventional comforts were forbidden, and the leadership was exalted, giving them immense power over their subordinates (in some collectives the leadership could even dictate personal decisions such as where one went). Martial arts were practiced and occasional direct actions were engaged in. Critical of monogamy, they launched a "smash monogamy" campaign, in which couples (whose affection was deemed unacceptably possessive, counterrevolutionary or even selfish) were to be split apart; collectives underwent forced rotation of sex partners (including allegations that some male leaders rotated women between collectives in order to sleep with them) and in some cases engaged in sexual orgies.[59][60][61][58] This formation continued during 1969 and 1970 until the group went underground and a more relaxed lifestyle was adopted as the group blended into the counterculture.[62]

Life in the collectives could be particularly hard for women, who made up about half the members. Their political awakening had included a growing awareness of sexism, yet they often found that men took the lead in political activities and discussion, with women often engaging in domestic work, as well as finding themselves confined to second-tier leadership roles. Certain feminist political beliefs had to be disavowed or muted and the women had to prove, regardless of prior activist credentials, that they were as capable as men in engaging in political action as part of "women's cadres", which were felt to be driven by coerced machismo and failed to promote genuine solidarity amongst the women. While the Weathermen's sexual politics did allow women to assert desire and explore relationships with each other, it also made them vulnerable to sexual exploitation.[63]

Recruitment

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Weather used various means by which to recruit new members and set into motion a nationwide revolt against the government. Weather members aimed to mobilize people into action against the established leaders of the nation and the patterns of injustice which existed in America and abroad due to America's presence overseas. They also aimed to convince people to resist reliance upon their given privilege and to rebel and take arms if necessary. According to Weatherman, if people tolerated the unjust actions of the state, they became complicit in those actions. In the manifesto compiled by Ayers, Dohrn, Jones, and Celia Sojourn, entitled "Prairie Fire: The Politics of Revolutionary Anti-Imperialism," Weatherman explained that their intention was to encourage the people and provoke leaps in confidence and consciousness in an attempt to stir the imagination, organize the masses, and join in the people's day-to-day struggles in every way possible.[64]

In the year 1960, over a third of America's population was under 18 years of age. The number of young citizens set the stage for a widespread revolt against perceived structures of racism, sexism, and classism, the violence of the Vietnam War and America's interventions abroad. At college campuses throughout the country, anger against "the Establishment's" practices prompted both peaceful and violent protest.[65] The members of Weatherman targeted high school and college students, assuming they would be willing to rebel against the authoritative figures who had oppressed them, including cops, principals, and bosses.[66] Weather aimed to develop roots within the class struggle, targeting white working-class youths. The younger members of the working class became the focus of the organizing effort because they felt the oppression strongly in regard to the military draft, low-wage jobs, and schooling.[67]

Schools became a common place of recruitment for the movement. In direct actions, dubbed Jailbreaks, Weather members invaded educational institutions as a means by which to recruit high school and college students. The motivation of these jailbreaks was the organization's belief that school was where the youth were oppressed by the system and where they learned to tolerate society's faults instead of rise against them. According to "Prairie Fire", young people are channeled, coerced, misled, miseducated, misused in the school setting. It is in schools that the youth of the nation become alienated from the authentic processes of learning about the world.[68]

Factions of the Weatherman organization began recruiting members by applying their own strategies. Women's groups such as The Motor City Nine and Cell 16 took the lead in various recruitment efforts. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, a member of the radical women's liberation group Cell 16 spoke about her personal recruitment agenda saying that she wanted their group to go out in every corner of the country and tell women the truth, recruit the local people, poor and working-class people, in order to build a new society.[69]

Berger explains the controversy surrounding recruitment strategies saying, "As an organizing strategy it was less than successful: white working class youths were more alienated than organized by Weather's spectacles, and even some of those interested in the group were turned off by its early hi-jinks."[70]

Armed propaganda

[edit]

In 2006, Dan Berger (writer, activist, and longtime anti-racism organizer)[24][page needed] states that following their initial set of bombings, which resulted in the Greenwich Village townhouse explosion, the organization adopted a new paradigm of direct action set forth in the communiqué New Morning, Changing Weather, which abjured attacks on people.[24][page needed] The shift in the organization's outlook was in good part due to the 1970 death of Weatherman Terry Robbins, Diana Oughton and Ted Gold, all graduate students, in the Greenwich Village townhouse explosion.[71]

According to Dan Berger a relatively sophisticated program of armed propaganda was adopted. This consisted of a series of bombings of government and corporate targets in retaliation for specific imperialist and oppressive acts. Small, well-constructed time bombs were used, generally in vents in restrooms, which exploded at times the spaces were empty. Timely warnings were made, and communiqués issued explaining the reason for the actions.[72]

Major activities

[edit]

Haymarket Police Memorial bombing

[edit]
The Haymarket Square police memorial, seen in 1889

Shortly before the Days of Rage demonstrations on October 6, 1969,[73] the Weatherman planted a bomb which blew up a statue in Chicago commemorating the deaths of police officers during the 1886 Haymarket Riot.[11][page needed] The blast broke nearly 100 windows and scattered pieces of the statue onto the Kennedy Expressway below.[74] The city rebuilt the statue and unveiled it on May 4, 1970, but the Weathermen blew it up as well on October 6, 1970.[74][75] The city rebuilt the statue once again, and Mayor Richard J. Daley posted a 24-hour police guard to protect it,[74] but the Weathermen destroyed the third one, as well. The city compromised and rebuilt the monument once more, but this time they located it at Chicago Police Headquarters.[76]

"Days of Rage"

[edit]

One of the first acts of the Weathermen after splitting from SDS was to announce they would hold the "Days of Rage" that autumn. This was advertised to "Bring the war home!" Hoping to cause sufficient chaos to "wake" the American public out of what they saw as complacency toward the role of the U.S. in the Vietnam War, the Weathermen meant it to be the largest protest of the decade. They had been told by their regional cadre to expect thousands to attend; however, when they arrived, they found only a few hundred people.[7]

According to Ayers in 2003, "The Days of Rage was an attempt to break from the norms of kind of acceptable theatre of 'here are the anti-war people: containable, marginal, predictable, and here's the little path they're going to march down, and here's where they can make their little statement.' We wanted to say, "No, what we're going to do is whatever we had to do to stop the violence in Vietnam.'"[7] The protests did not meet Ayers' stated expectations.

Though the October 8, 1969, rally in Chicago had failed to draw as many as the Weathermen had anticipated, the two or three hundred who did attend shocked police by rioting through the affluent Gold Coast neighborhood. They smashed the windows of a bank and those of many cars. The crowd ran four blocks before encountering police barricades. They charged the police but broke into small groups; more than 1,000 police counter attacked. Many protesters were wearing motorcycle or football helmets, but the police were well trained and armed. Large amounts of tear gas were used, and at least twice police ran squad cars into the mob. The rioting lasted about half an hour, during which 28 policemen were injured. Six Weathermen were shot by the police and an unknown number injured; 68 rioters were arrested.[24][page needed][11][page needed][20][page needed][77]

For the next two days, the Weathermen held no rallies or protests. Supporters of the RYM II movement, led by Klonsky and Noel Ignatin, held peaceful rallies in front of the federal courthouse, an International Harvester factory, and Cook County Hospital. The largest event of the Days of Rage took place on Friday, October 9, when RYM II led an interracial march of 2,000 people through a Spanish-speaking part of Chicago.[24][page needed][77]

On October 10, the Weathermen attempted to regroup and resume their demonstrations. About 300 protesters marched through The Loop, Chicago's main business district, watched by a double line of heavily armed police. The protesters suddenly broke through the police lines and rampaged through the Loop, smashing the windows of cars and stores. The police were prepared, and quickly isolated the rioters. Within 15 minutes, more than half the crowd had been arrested.[24][page needed][77]

The Days of Rage cost Chicago and the state of Illinois about $183,000 ($100,000 for National Guard expenses, $35,000 in damages, and $20,000 for one injured citizen's medical expenses). Most of the Weathermen and SDS leaders were now in jail, and the Weathermen would have to pay over $243,000 for their bail.[20][page needed]

Flint War Council

[edit]

The Flint War Council was a series of meetings of the Weather Underground Organization and associates in Flint, Michigan, that took place 27–31 December 1969.[78] During these meetings, the decisions were made for the Weather Underground Organization to go underground[34] and to "engage in guerilla warfare against the U.S. government."[79] This decision was made in response to increased pressure from law enforcement,[80] and a belief that underground guerilla warfare was the best way to combat the U.S. government.[79]

During a closed-door meeting of the Weather Underground's leadership, the decision was also taken to abolish Students for a Democratic Society.[81] This decision reflected the splintering of SDS into hostile rival factions.[81]

New York City arson attacks

[edit]

On February 21, 1970, at around 4:30 a.m., three gasoline-filled Molotov cocktails exploded in front of the home of New York Supreme Court Justice John M. Murtagh, who was presiding over the pretrial hearings of the so-called "Panther 21" members of the Black Panther Party over a plot to bomb New York landmarks and department stores.[82] Justice Murtagh and his family were unharmed, but two panes of a front window were shattered, an overhanging wooden eave was scorched, and the paint on a car in the garage was charred.[82] "Free the Panther 21" and "Viet Cong have won" were written in large red letters on the sidewalk in front of the judge's house at 529 W. 217th Street in the Inwood neighborhood of Manhattan.[82] The judge's house had been under hourly police surveillance and an unidentified woman called the police a few minutes before the explosions to report several prowlers there, which resulted in a police car being sent immediately to the scene.[82]

In the preceding hours, Molotov cocktails had been thrown at the second floor of Columbia University's International Law Library at 434 W. 116th Street and at a police car parked across the street from the Charles Street police station in the West Village in Manhattan, and at Army and Navy recruiting booths on Nostrand Avenue on the eastern fringe of the Brooklyn College campus in Brooklyn, causing no or minimal damage in incidents of unknown relation to that at Judge Murtagh's home.[82]

According to the December 6, 1970, "New Morning—Changing Weather" Weather Underground communiqué signed by Dohrn, and Wilkerson's 2007 memoir, the fire-bombing of Judge Murtagh's home, in solidarity with the Panther 21, was carried out by four members of the New York cell that was devastated two weeks later by the March 6, 1970, townhouse explosion.[83][84][85][86][87][88][21]: 324–325 

Greenwich Village townhouse explosion

[edit]

Weather Underground members Diana Oughton, Ted Gold, Terry Robbins, Wilkerson, and Kathy Boudin were making bombs in a Greenwich Village townhouse on March 6, 1970, when one of the bombs detonated. Oughton, Gold, and Robbins were killed; Wilkerson and Boudin escaped unharmed.

These bombs were made to target a Non-Commissioned Officer (NCO) dance at Fort Dix, which would be attended by non-commissioned officers and their companions, as well as Butler Library at Columbia University.[3] An FBI report stated that they had enough explosives to "level ... both sides of the street".[89] Weather Underground leadership members Bill Ayers, Bernardine Dohrn, and Jeff Jones claimed the planned bombings of the Fort Dix NCO dance and Columbia University building were a rogue operation led by more extreme Greenwich Village townhouse residents, Ayers singling out Terry Robbins.[90][91] However, later researchers concluded Weather Underground leaders planned and approved the bombings of an NCO dance, a Columbia University building, and several bombings in Detroit which were defused by the Detroit Police aided by informant Larry Grathwohl.[90][92][91]

The site of the Village explosion was the former residence of Charles Merrill, co-founder of the Merrill Lynch brokerage firm, and the childhood home of his son James Merrill. James Merrill memorialized the event in his poem 18 West 11th Street, the address of the brownstone townhouse.[93]

Underground strategy change

[edit]

After the Greenwich Village townhouse explosion, per the December 1969 Flint War Council decisions the group was now well underground, and began to refer to themselves as the Weather Underground Organization. At this juncture, WUO shrank considerably, becoming even fewer than they had been when first formed. The group was devastated by the loss of their friends, and in late April 1970, members of the Weathermen met in California to discuss what had happened in New York and the future of the organization.

In 2003, Weather Underground members stated in interviews that they had wanted to convince the American public that the United States was truly responsible for the calamity in Vietnam.[7] The group began striking at night, bombing empty offices, with warnings always issued in advance to ensure a safe evacuation. According to David Gilbert, who took part in the 1981 Brink's robbery that killed two police officers and a Brink's guard, and was jailed for murder, "[their] goal was to not hurt any people, and a lot of work went into that. But we wanted to pick targets that showed to the public who was responsible for what was really going on."[7] After the Greenwich Village explosion, in a review of the documentary film The Weather Underground (2002), a Guardian journalist restated the film's contention that no one was killed by WUO bombs.[94]

We were very careful from the moment of the townhouse on to be sure we weren't going to hurt anybody, and we never did hurt anybody. Whenever we put a bomb in a public space, we had figured out all kinds of ways to put checks and balances on the thing and also to get people away from it, and we were remarkably successful.

— Bill Ayers, 2003[7]

Declaration of war

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In response to the death of Black Panther members Fred Hampton and Mark Clark in December 1969 during a police raid, and the Kent State Shootings 5 months later, on May 21, 1970, the Weather Underground issued a "Declaration of War" against the United States government, using for the first time its new name, the "Weather Underground Organization" (WUO), adopting fake identities, and pursuing covert activities only.[95] These initially included preparations for a bombing of a U.S. military non-commissioned officers' dance at Fort Dix, New Jersey, in what Brian Flanagan said had been intended to be "the most horrific hit the United States government had ever suffered on its territory".[96]

We've known that our job is to lead white kids into armed revolution. We never intended to spend the next five to twenty-five years of our lives in jail. Ever since SDS became revolutionary, we've been trying to show how it is possible to overcome frustration and impotence that comes from trying to reform this system. Kids know the lines are drawn: revolution is touching all of our lives. Tens of thousands have learned that protest and marches don't do it. Revolutionary violence is the only way.

— Bernardine Dohrn[97]

Dohrn subsequently stated that it was Fred Hampton's death that prompted the Weather Underground to declare war on the U.S. government.

We felt that the murder of Fred required us to be more grave, more serious, more determined to raise the stakes and not just be the white people who wrung their hands when black people were being murdered.

— Bernardine Dohrn[7]

In December 1969, the Chicago Police Department, in conjunction with the FBI, conducted a raid on the home of Black Panther Fred Hampton, in which he and Mark Clark were killed, with four of the seven other people in the apartment wounded. The survivors of the raid were all charged with assault and attempted murder. The police claimed they shot in self-defense, although a controversy arose when the Panthers, other activists and a Chicago newspaper reporter presented visual evidence, as well as the testimony of an FBI ballistics expert, showing that the sleeping Panthers were not resisting arrest and fired only one shot, as opposed to the more than one hundred the police fired into the apartment. The charges were later dropped, and the families of the dead won a $1.8 million settlement from the government. It was discovered in 1971 that Hampton had been targeted by the FBI's COINTELPRO.[98][99] True to Dohrn's words, this single event, in the continuing string of public killings of black leaders of any political stripe, was the trigger that pushed a large number of Weatherman and other students who had just attended the last SDS national convention months earlier to go underground and develop its logistical support network nationally.

On May 21, 1970, a communiqué from the Weather Underground was issued promising to attack a "symbol or institution of American injustice" within two weeks.[100] The communiqué included taunts towards the FBI, daring them to try to find the group, whose members were spread throughout the United States.[101] Many leftist organizations showed curiosity in the communiqué, and waited to see if the act would in fact occur. However, two weeks would pass without any occurrence.[102] Then on June 9, 1970, their first publicly acknowledged bombing occurred at a New York City police station.[103] The FBI placed the Weather Underground organization on the ten most-wanted list by the end of 1970.[11][page needed]

Activity in 1970

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On June 9, 1970, a bomb made with ten sticks of dynamite exploded in the 240 Centre Street headquarters of the New York City Police Department. The explosion was preceded by a warning about six minutes prior to the detonation and was followed by a WUO claim of responsibility.[104]

On July 23, 1970, a Detroit federal grand jury indicted 13 Weathermen members in a national bombing conspiracy, along with several unnamed co-conspirators. Ten of the thirteen already had outstanding federal warrants.[105]

In September 1970, the group accepted a $25,000 payment from the largest international psychedelic drug distribution organization, called The Brotherhood of Eternal Love, to break LSD advocate Timothy Leary out of a California prison in San Luis Obispo, north of Santa Barbara, California, and transport him and his wife to Algeria, where Leary joined Eldridge Cleaver.[7][106]

In October 1970, Dohrn was put on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted List.[107]

United States Capitol bombing

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On March 1, 1971, members of the Weather Underground set off a bomb on the Senate side of the United States Capitol. While the bomb smashed windows and caused hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of damage, there were no casualties.[108]

Pentagon bombing

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Investigators search for clues after the May 19, 1972, Weatherman bombing of the Pentagon

On May 19, 1972, Ho Chi Minh's birthday, the Weather Underground placed a bomb in the women's bathroom in the Air Force wing of the Pentagon. The damage caused flooding that destroyed computer tapes holding classified information. Other radical groups worldwide applauded the bombing, illustrated by German youths protesting against American military systems in Frankfurt.[11][page needed] This was "in retaliation for the U.S. bombing raid in Hanoi."[109]

Withdrawal of charges

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In 1973, the government requested dropping charges against most of the WUO members. The requests cited a recent decision by the Supreme Court of the United States that barred electronic surveillance without a court order. This Supreme Court decision would hamper any prosecution of the WUO cases. In addition, the government did not want to reveal foreign intelligence secrets that a trial would require.[110] Bernardine Dohrn was removed from the FBI's Ten Most Wanted List on 7 December 1973.[111] As with the earlier federal grand juries that subpoenaed Leslie Bacon and Stew Albert in the U.S. Capitol bombing case, these investigations were known as "fishing expeditions", with the evidence gathered through "black bag" jobs including illegal mail openings that involved the FBI and United States Postal Service, burglaries by FBI field offices, and electronic surveillance by the Central Intelligence Agency against the support network, friends, and family members of the Weather Underground as part of Nixon's COINTELPRO apparatus.[112]

These grand juries caused Sylvia Jane Brown, Robert Gelbhard, and future members of the Seattle Weather Collective to be subpoenaed in Seattle and Portland for the investigation of one of the first (and last) captured WUO members. Four months afterwards the cases were dismissed.[113][114][115] The decisions in these cases led directly to the subsequent resignation of FBI Director, L. Patrick Gray, and the federal indictments of W. Mark Felt or "Deep Throat" and Edwin Miller and which, earlier, was the factor leading to the removal of federal "most-wanted" status against members of the Weather Underground leadership in 1973.

Prairie Fire

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With the help of Clayton Van Lydegraf, the Weather Underground sought a more Marxist–Leninist ideological approach to the post-Vietnam reality.[116][page needed] The leading members of the Weather Underground (Bill Ayers, Bernardine Dohrn, Jeff Jones, and Celia Sojourn) collaborated on ideas and published a manifesto: Prairie Fire: The Politics of Revolutionary Anti-Imperialism.[11][page needed][117] The name came from a quote by Mao Zedong, "a single spark can set a prairie fire." By the summer of 1974, five thousand copies had surfaced in coffee houses, bookstores and public libraries across the U.S. Leftist newspapers praised the manifesto.[118]

Abbie Hoffman publicly praised Prairie Fire and believed every American should be given a copy.[119] The manifesto's influence initiated the formation of the Prairie Fire Organizing Committee in several American cities. Hundreds of above-ground activists helped further the new political vision of the Weather Underground.[120] Essentially, after the 1969 failure of the Days of Rage to involve thousands of youths in massive street fighting, Weather renounced most of the Left and decided to operate as an isolated underground group. Prairie Fire urged people to never "dissociate mass struggle from revolutionary violence". To do so, asserted Weather, was to do the state's work. Just as in 1969–1970, Weather still refused to renounce revolutionary violence for "to leave people unprepared to fight the state is to seriously mislead them about the inevitable nature of what lies ahead". However, the decision to build only an underground group caused the Weather Underground to lose sight of its commitment to mass struggle and made future alliances with the mass movement difficult and tenuous.[121]

By 1974, Weather had recognized this shortcoming and in Prairie Fire detailed a different strategy for the 1970s which demanded both mass and clandestine organizations. The role of a clandestine organization would be to build the "consciousness of action" and prepare the way for the development of a people's militia. Concurrently, the role of the mass movement (i.e., above-ground Prairie Fire collective) would include support for, and encouragement of, armed action. Such an alliance would, according to Weather, "help create the 'sea' for the guerrillas to swim in".[121]

According to Bill Ayers, writing in 2001, by the late 1970s, the Weatherman group had further split into two factions—the May 19th Communist Organization and the Prairie Fire Collective—with Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers in the latter. The Prairie Fire Collective favored coming out of hiding and establishing an above-ground revolutionary mass movement. With most WUO members facing limited criminal charges (most charges had been dropped by the government in 1973) against them creating an above-ground organization was more feasible. The May 19 Communist Organization continued in hiding as the clandestine organization. A decisive factor in Dohrn's coming out of hiding was her concerns about her children.[122][page needed] The Prairie Fire Collective faction started to surrender to the authorities from the late 1970s to the early 1980s. The remaining Weather Underground members continued to attack U.S. institutions.

COINTELPRO

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Event

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In April 1971, the "Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI" broke into an FBI office in Media, Pennsylvania.[123] The group stole files with several hundred pages. The files detailed the targeting of civil rights leaders, labor rights organizations, and left-wing groups in general, and included documentation of acts of intimidation and disinformation by the FBI and attempts to erode public support for those popular movements. By the end of April, the FBI offices were to terminate all files dealing with leftist groups.[124] The files were part of an FBI program called COINTELPRO.[125]

After COINTELPRO was dissolved in 1971 by J. Edgar Hoover,[126] the FBI continued its counterintelligence on groups like the Weather Underground. In 1973, the FBI established the "Special Target Information Development" program, where agents were sent undercover to penetrate the Weather Underground. Due to the illegal tactics of FBI agents involved with the program, government attorneys requested all weapons- and bomb-related charges be dropped against the Weather Underground. The most well-publicized of these tactics were the "black-bag jobs", referring to searches conducted in the homes of relatives and acquaintances of Weatherman.[120] The Weather Underground was no longer a fugitive organization and could turn themselves in with minimal charges against them.[120] Additionally, the illegal domestic spying conducted by the CIA in collaboration with the FBI also lessened the legal repercussions for Weatherman turning themselves in.[118]

Investigation and trial

[edit]

After the Church Committee revealed the FBI's illegal activities, many agents were investigated. In 1976, former FBI Associate Director W. Mark Felt publicly stated he had ordered break-ins and that individual agents were merely obeying orders and should not be punished for it. Felt also stated that acting Director L. Patrick Gray had also authorized the break-ins, but Gray denied this. Felt said on the CBS television program Face the Nation that he would probably be a "scapegoat" for the Bureau's work.[127] "I think this is justified and I'd do it again tomorrow," he said on the program. While admitting the break-ins were "extralegal", he justified it as protecting the "greater good". Felt said, "To not take action against these people and know of a bombing in advance would simply be to stick your fingers in your ears and protect your eardrums when the explosion went off and then start the investigation."

The Attorney General in the new Carter administration, Griffin Bell, investigated, and on April 10, 1978, a federal grand jury charged Felt, Edward S. Miller, and Gray with conspiracy to violate the constitutional rights of American citizens by searching their homes without warrants. Gray's case did not go to trial and was dropped by the government for lack of evidence on December 11, 1980.[128][116][page needed]

The indictment charged violations of Title 18, Section 241 of the United States Code. The indictment charged Felt and the others "did unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly combine, conspire, confederate, and agree together and with each other to injure and oppress citizens of the United States who were relatives and acquaintances of the Weatherman fugitives, in the free exercise and enjoyments of certain rights and privileges secured to them by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America."[129]

Felt and Miller attempted to plea bargain with the government, willing to agree to a misdemeanor guilty plea to conducting searches without warrants—a violation of 18 U.S.C. sec. 2236—but the government rejected the offer in 1979. After eight postponements, the case against Felt and Miller went to trial in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia on September 18, 1980.[130] On October 29, former President Richard Nixon appeared as a rebuttal witness for the defense, and testified that presidents since Franklin D. Roosevelt had authorized the bureau to engage in break-ins while conducting foreign intelligence and counterespionage investigations.[131]

It was Nixon's first courtroom appearance since his resignation in 1974. Nixon also contributed money to Felt's legal defense fund, with Felt's legal expenses running over $600,000. Also testifying were former Attorneys General Herbert Brownell Jr., Nicholas Katzenbach, Ramsey Clark, John N. Mitchell, and Richard G. Kleindienst, all of whom said warrantless searches in national security matters were commonplace and not understood to be illegal, but Mitchell and Kleindienst denied they had authorized any of the break-ins at issue in the trial.

The jury returned guilty verdicts on November 6, 1980. Although the charge carried a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, Felt was fined $5,000. (Miller was fined $3,500.)[132] Writing in The New York Times a week after the conviction, Roy Cohn claimed that Felt and Miller were being used as scapegoats by the Carter administration and that it was an unfair prosecution. Cohn wrote it was the "final dirty trick" and that there had been no "personal motive" for their actions.[133]

The Times saluted the convictions, saying that it showed "the case has established that zeal is no excuse for violating the Constitution".[134] Felt and Miller appealed the verdict, and they were later pardoned by Ronald Reagan.[135]

Dissolution

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Despite the change in their legal status, the Weather Underground remained underground for a few more years. However, by 1976 the organization was disintegrating. The Weather Underground held a conference in Chicago called Hard Times. The idea was to create an umbrella organization for all radical groups. However, the event turned sour when Hispanic and Black groups accused the Weather Underground and the Prairie Fire Committee of limiting their roles in racial issues.[118] The Weather Underground faced accusations of abandonment of the revolution by reversing their original ideology.

The conference increased divisions within the Weather Underground. East coast members favored a commitment to violence and challenged the commitments of old leaders, Dohrn, Ayers, and Jones. These older members found they were no longer liable for federal prosecution because of illegal wire taps and the government's unwillingness to reveal sources and methods favored a strategy of inversion where they would be above-ground "revolutionary leaders". Jeremy Varon argues that by 1977 the WUO had disbanded.[118]

Matthew Steen appeared on the lead segment of CBS's 60 Minutes in 1976 and was interviewed by Mike Wallace about the ease of creating fake identification, the first ex-Weatherman interview on national television.[136][137] (The House document has the date wrong, it aired February 1, 1976, and the title was Fake ID.)

The federal government estimated that only 38 Weathermen had gone underground in 1970, though the estimates varied widely, according to a variety of official and unofficial sources, as between 50 and 600 members. Most modern sources lean towards a much larger number than the FBI reference.[138] An FBI estimate in 1976, or slightly later, of the current membership was down to 30 or fewer.[139]

Plot to bomb the office of a California State Senator

[edit]

In November 1977, five WUO members were arrested on conspiracy to bomb the office of California State Senator John Briggs. It was later revealed that the Revolutionary Committee and the PFOC had both been infiltrated by the FBI for almost six years. FBI agents Richard J. Gianotti and William D. Reagan lost their cover in November when federal judges needed their testimony to issue warrants for the arrest of Clayton Van Lydegraf and four Weather people. The arrests were the results of the infiltration.[140][141] WUO members Judith Bissell, Thomas Justesen, Leslie Mullin, and Marc Curtis pleaded guilty while Van Lydegraf, who helped write the 1974 Prairie Fire Manifesto, went to trial.[142]

Within two years, many members took advantage of President Jimmy Carter's amnesty for draft dodgers by turning themselves in.[11][page needed] Mark Rudd turned himself into authorities on January 20, 1978. Rudd was fined $4,000 and received two years' probation.[11][page needed] Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers turned themselves in on December 3, 1980, in New York, with substantial media coverage. Charges were dropped for Ayers. Dohrn received three years' probation and a $15,000 fine.[11][page needed]

Brink's robbery

[edit]

Some members remained underground and joined splinter radical groups. The U.S. government states that years after the dissolution of the Weather Underground, three former members, Kathy Boudin, Judith Alice Clark, and David Gilbert, joined the May 19 Communist Organization, and on October 20, 1981, in Nanuet, New York, the group helped the Black Liberation Army rob a Brink's armored truck containing $1.6 million. The robbery resulted in a shootout and the deaths of Brink's Guard Peter Paige, Police Sergeant Edward O'Grady Jr., and Police Officer Waverly Brown, the first black police officer on the Nyack police force.[11][page needed] [143] [144] [145] [146]

Boudin, Clark, and Gilbert were found guilty and sentenced to lengthy terms in prison.[144] Media reports listed them as former Weatherman Underground members[147] considered the "last gasps" of the Weather Underground.[148] The documentary The Weather Underground described the Brink's robbery as the "unofficial end" of the Weather Underground.[5]

May 19th Communist Organization

[edit]

The Weather Underground members who were involved in the May 19th Communist Organization's alliance with the Black Liberation Army continued to perpetrate a series of jail breaks, armed robberies and bombings until 1985, when most of them were finally arrested and sentenced for their involvement in the Brink's robbery and the Resistance Conspiracy case.[149]

Coalitions with non-WUO members

[edit]

Throughout their years in the underground, the members of the Weather Underground worked closely with their counterparts in other organizations, including Jane Alpert, to bring attention to their further actions to the press. She helped the Weathermen pursue their main goal of overthrowing the U.S. government through her writings.[150][page needed] However, there were tensions within the organization, brought about by her famous manifesto, "Mother Right", that specifically called on the female members of the organization to focus on their own cause rather than anti-imperialist causes.[151] Weather members then wrote in response to her manifesto.

Legacy

[edit]

Widely known members of the Weather Underground include Kathy Boudin, Linda Sue Evans, Brian Flanagan, David Gilbert, Ted Gold, Naomi Jaffe, Jeff Jones, Joe Kelly, Diana Oughton, Eleanor Raskin, Terry Robbins, Mark Rudd, Matthew Steen, Susan Stern, Laura Whitehorn, Eric Mann, Cathy Wilkerson, and the married couple Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers.

The Weather Underground was referred to as a terrorist group by articles in The New York Times, United Press International, and Time.[152][153][154] The group fell under the jurisdiction of the FBI-New York City Police Anti-Terrorist Task Force, a forerunner of the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Forces. The FBI refers to the organization in a 2004 news story titled "Byte out of History" published on its website as having been a "domestic terrorist group" that is no longer an active concern.[155] Some members have disputed the "terrorist" categorization and justified the group's actions as an appropriate response to what they described as the "terrorist activities" of the war in Vietnam, domestic racism, and the deaths of black leaders.[156]

Ayers objected to the description of the WUO as a terrorist organization in his 2001 book Fugitive Days. "Terrorists terrorize," he argues, "they kill innocent civilians, while we organized and agitated. Terrorists destroy randomly, while our actions bore, we hoped, the precise stamp of a cut diamond. Terrorists intimidate, while we aimed only to educate."[157] Dan Berger asserts in Outlaws of America that the group "purposefully and successfully avoided injuring anyone" as an argument that their actions were not terrorism. "Its war against property by definition means that the WUO was not a terrorist organization."[158]

Others, however, have suggested that these arguments are specious. Former Weather Underground member Mark Rudd admitted that the group intended to target people prior to the accidental explosion in the town house. "On the morning of March 6, 1970, three of my comrades were building pipe bombs packed with dynamite and nails, destined for a dance of non-commissioned officers and their dates at Fort Dix, New Jersey, that night."[159][160] Grand juries were convened in 2001 and 2009 to investigate whether Weather Underground was responsible for the San Francisco Police Department Park Station bombing, in which one officer was killed, one was maimed, and eight more were wounded by shrapnel from a pipe bomb. They ultimately concluded that members of the Black Liberation Army were responsible, with whom WUO members were affiliated. They were also responsible for the bombing of another police precinct in San Francisco, as well as bombing the Catholic Church funeral services of the police officer killed in the Park Precinct bombing in the early summer of 1970.[161][162] Ayers said in a 2001 New York Times interview, "I don't regret setting bombs".[163] He has since claimed that he was misquoted.[164] Mark Rudd teaches mathematics at Central New Mexico Community College, and he has said that he doesn't speak publicly about his experiences because he has "mixed feelings, guilt and shame". "These are things I am not proud of, and I find it hard to speak publicly about them and to tease out what was right from what was wrong."[7]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Weather Underground Organization (WUO), commonly known as the Weather Underground or Weatherman, was a far-left terrorist group founded in 1969 as a radical faction of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, advocating armed struggle against what it viewed as U.S. imperialism, racism, and the Vietnam War. The group, led by figures such as Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers, adopted its name from a line in Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues" as referenced in its founding manifesto, "You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows," which called for revolutionary violence to dismantle the American state. Between 1970 and 1975, the WUO conducted over two dozen bombings targeting symbols of government and military power, including the U.S. Capitol, the Pentagon, and police stations, while issuing communiqués claiming responsibility and emphasizing efforts to avoid civilian casualties. A pivotal early incident was the March 1970 Greenwich Village townhouse explosion, in which three members died while assembling bombs, prompting the group to go fully underground and evade a massive FBI manhunt that placed several leaders on its Ten Most Wanted list. Though the WUO disbanded by the late 1970s amid internal fractures and the war's end, its actions marked it as a domestic terrorist organization responsible for property destruction and heightened national security concerns during a period of widespread anti-war unrest.

Historical Context and Formation

Roots in the New Left and Students for a Democratic Society

The arose in the late 1950s and early 1960s in the United States and Western Europe as a diverse coalition of activists rejecting both traditional Marxist orthodoxy and mainstream liberal reforms, emphasizing , civil rights, anti-nuclear activism, and opposition to the . Unlike the Old Left's focus on industrial labor and , the New Left prioritized cultural and personal liberation, campus organizing, and against perceived systemic injustices, drawing intellectual influence from figures like and . This movement gained traction amid post-World War II affluence and tensions, with U.S. student groups channeling discontent over , the military draft, and U.S. foreign policy. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), founded in 1960 as a successor to the moribund Student League for Industrial Democracy, emerged as the flagship organization of the American , initially promoting nonviolent civil rights support and through initiatives like the Economic Research and Action Project (ERAP). The group's seminal , adopted at a 1962 convention in , articulated a vision of "" critiquing corporate bureaucracy, racial inequality, and foreign policy, attracting thousands of young intellectuals and expanding SDS chapters to over 200 campuses by 1965. SDS membership swelled amid escalating U.S. involvement in , with the organization leading major antiwar demonstrations, such as the 1965 March on Washington that drew 25,000 participants, positioning it as the largest and most influential student radical group by the late . The Weather Underground's ideological precursors took shape within SDS's increasingly fractious ranks during 1968–1969, as the organization radicalized following events like the protests and the , fostering debates over strategy between reformist, Maoist-influenced, and Trotskyist factions. Leaders including , , and , active in SDS's (RYM), advocated intensifying militancy to "bring the war home" by linking domestic white privilege to U.S. abroad, drawing on Third World liberation models like those in and . This RYM faction, which split into competing wings, produced the April 1969 manifesto "You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows," outlining a vision of urban guerrilla warfare against monopolist , named after a lyric to signal revolutionary urgency. At the SDS National Convention in Chicago from June 18–22, 1969, the Weatherman faction—comprising about 600 members—seized control by expelling the Progressive Labor Party's workerist wing, which emphasized class struggle over anti-imperialist nationalism, effectively dissolving the original SDS structure into competing splinters. This takeover reflected deeper tensions between electoral reform and violent rupture, with Weatherman prioritizing clandestine cells and symbolic attacks to catalyze mass uprising, though it alienated broader constituencies and accelerated the group's shift toward underground operations. By late 1969, SDS's collapse left Weatherman as its militant heir, inheriting a legacy of campus radicalism but pivoting to armed praxis amid FBI scrutiny and internal debates over tactics' efficacy.

Ideological splits at SDS conventions

The ideological fissures within Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) deepened at its national conventions in late 1968 and mid-1969, reflecting broader debates over revolutionary strategy, class analysis, and the role of students versus workers in anti-imperialist struggle. At the December 27–30, 1968, convention in Austin, Texas, tensions escalated between the Progressive Labor Party (PL) faction, which advocated a strict worker-student alliance modeled on Maoist principles and emphasized organizing industrial proletarians against revisionism, and emerging anti-PL groups coalescing around the Revolutionary Youth Movement (RYM) document. RYM proponents, influenced by third-world liberation struggles and cultural revolution tactics, critiqued PL's focus on white workers as insufficiently attuned to domestic colonialism against Black Americans and argued for youth-led disruption of U.S. imperialism through immediate action rather than patient base-building. These divisions culminated at the June 18–22, 1969, in Chicago's Coliseum, attended by approximately 2,000 delegates, where PL's disciplined caucusing initially dominated proceedings, pushing resolutions for a Worker-Student to prioritize blue-collar organizing over student-centric activism. RYM forces, viewing PL as dogmatic and complicit in sidelining national liberation movements, staged a on after passing a motion to expel PL and non-adherents to RYM principles, effectively fracturing SDS into rival claimants to the organization's legacy. Within the post-split RYM, a further emerged between the militant Weatherman faction—led by figures like , , and , who won internal elections—and the more moderate RYM II, with Weatherman advocating aggressive anti-racist youth organizing, rejection of white-skin privilege, and preparation for urban guerrilla warfare as essential to smashing monopoly capitalism, in contrast to RYM II's emphasis on sustained mass movements and coalition-building. The convention's chaos, marked by fistfights, Black Panther interventions denouncing PL's "white worker" focus, and competing officer slates, underscored irreconcilable views on imperialism's domestic manifestations: PL saw the U.S. as potentially revolutionary if purged of , while Weatherman analogized American society to a settler-colonial outpost requiring violent rupture to align with global anti-imperialist forces. This tripartite fragmentation—PL retaining control of the convention hall, Weatherman dominating RYM's national leadership, and RYM II dissolving amid internal disputes—rendered SDS defunct as a unified entity by summer's end, paving the way for Weatherman's underground turn.

Emergence of the Weatherman faction

The Weatherman faction arose from the (RYM) wing of (SDS) during the organization's national convention in from June 18 to 22, 1969, where deep divisions over strategy and fractured the group. Opposing the dominant Progressive Labor (PL) faction's focus on orthodox Marxist class struggle and worker-student alliances, RYM leaders emphasized anti-imperialist solidarity with global revolutions and criticized white American youth for complicity in domestic oppression. Within RYM, a more militant subgroup coalesced around figures including , , , and Jeff Jones, adopting the name "Weatherman" from the lyric "you don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows" in Bob Dylan's 1965 song "." Prior to the convention, on June 12, 1969, this faction released its foundational manifesto, "You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows," which outlined a program for immediate revolutionary violence against U.S. imperialism, framing white working-class Americans as beneficiaries of global exploitation rather than potential allies. The document, drafted by the national SDS office leadership, rejected PL's influence—rooted in Maoist but anti-cultural revolution stances—and positioned Weatherman as the vanguard for youth-led armed struggle, prioritizing disruption of institutions tied to the and racial oppression over traditional organizing. At the convention itself, chaotic debates and physical confrontations ensued, culminating in the Weatherman slate's within RYM; they expelled PL delegates, elected their own officers, and declared themselves the legitimate SDS leadership. This maneuver, however, accelerated SDS's collapse, as PL formed the Worker Student Alliance, RYM splintered into RYM II (a less alternative), and multiple entities claimed the SDS mantle, leaving Weatherman to operate semi-independently by summer's end. The faction's emergence thus represented a decisive pivot from SDS's earlier protest-oriented roots toward clandestine militancy, driven by leaders' conviction that electoral or nonviolent paths were futile against entrenched power structures.

Core Ideology and Revolutionary Rationale

Marxist-Leninist anti-imperialism

The Weather Underground Organization (WUO) framed its revolutionary politics within a Marxist-Leninist analysis of , positing the as the foremost imperialist power perpetuating global capitalist exploitation through monopoly control of finance capital and military dominance. Drawing on Lenin's characterization of as capitalism's advanced stage, WUO members contended that U.S. , exemplified by the , represented aggressive expansion to suppress national liberation movements in the Third , thereby sustaining domestic privilege for the white complicit in imperial superprofits. This perspective rejected reformist anti-war efforts as insufficient, insisting that only violent opposition could dismantle the imperialist system responsible for colonial oppression abroad and racial subjugation at home. Central to this ideology was the 1969 manifesto "You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows," drafted by the Weatherman faction at the (SDS) national convention in from June 18–22, which declared the primary task of U.S. revolutionaries to be aiding Third World struggles against U.S. , viewed as the main contradiction driving global class war. The document argued that the conflict, initiated with U.S. advisory involvement in 1950 and escalating to full combat by 1965, exemplified imperialist aggression against socialist-oriented forces, necessitating white youth to repudiate national and align with oppressed peoples rather than the "bought-off" domestic . WUO theorists maintained that imperialism's internal logic rendered peaceful change impossible, as the state's repressive apparatus—bolstered by events like the 1968 police riots—protected elite interests against mass upheaval. By 1974, in their underground publication "Prairie Fire: The Politics of Revolutionary ," the WUO refined this stance to emphasize building a broader anti-imperialist front, including alliances with Puerto Rican independence fighters and Native American activists, while critiquing earlier ultra-left errors in prioritizing armed actions over mass organizing. The tract reiterated imperialism's role in fostering U.S. internal divisions, such as the oppression of and communities as internal colonies, and called for protracted struggle to achieve a "classless communist world" by eradicating capitalist-imperialist structures. This document, distributed clandestinely to thousands of copies, underscored the group's unwavering commitment to Leninist principles of guerrilla warfare against what they termed the "pig empire," despite tactical shifts toward symbolic bombings to minimize civilian casualties.

Domestic analogies to imperialism and white privilege

The Weather Underground drew parallels between U.S. abroad and domestic racial , framing African American, Puerto Rican, and communities as "internal " exploited within the imperialist "mother country" of the . In their 1969 manifesto, You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows, they described the black explicitly as a , subject to genocidal mirroring the subjugation of nations by U.S. capital, where wealth extracted from global and domestic subsidized higher living standards for whites. This analogy positioned black liberation as a nationalist struggle akin to anti-colonial revolts, with the black population viewed as the revolutionary vanguard capable of separate from whites, forming alliances only on their own terms. The group argued that ending this internal required white revolutionaries to act as auxiliaries, bringing the war home to disrupt the empire's operations from within. Central to this framework was the concept of white privilege as a direct byproduct of , providing white workers with "short-range privileges" such as preferential treatment over black labor, access to consumer goods like televisions and cars, and insulation from the full brutality of capitalist exploitation—benefits derived from the super-exploitation of peoples and internal colonies. These privileges, described as "very real short-range benefits" rather than illusory, created a material basis for and counter-revolutionary loyalty to the system, dividing the along racial lines and rendering the white a "tiny, and the most privileged, sector" unlikely to lead without first confronting their complicity. The contended that whites, brainwashed by upbringing in "white America," must relinquish "white-skin privilege" maintained "off the backs of blacks and Vietnamese" to align with global anti-imperialist forces, viewing failure to do so as perpetuating the empire's divide-and-rule tactics. This ideology rejected traditional Marxist focus on white proletarian class struggle, insisting instead that imperialism's privileges rendered whites "insulated from the " and spiritually tied to the , necessitating armed anti-imperialist action to forge with oppressed colonies rather than organizing white workers independently. By analogizing domestic white dominance to colonial mastery, the Weather Underground justified prioritizing support for minority-led struggles and symbolic attacks on imperialist symbols, aiming to erode the privileges sustaining U.S. both at home and abroad.

Theoretical justification for armed struggle

The Weather Underground faction articulated its theoretical justification for armed struggle primarily in the 1969 position paper "You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows", which framed the as the epicenter of global , requiring violent overthrow to achieve socialist . Drawing from Marxist-Leninist-Maoist principles, the document asserted that imperialism's contradictions—manifest in the War's escalation (with U.S. troop levels reaching 543,000 by 1969) and domestic racial oppression—rendered peaceful protest inadequate, as the state maintained monopoly capitalist control through coercive violence. The authors contended that white working-class integration into imperial privilege had neutralized it as a revolutionary force, shifting focus to a "" (RYM) of disaffected youth allied with "national liberation struggles" of oppressed internal colonies, such as and Puerto Rican communities, to initiate protracted armed conflict. This rationale extended Lin Biao's 1965 essay "Long Live the Victory of People's War!", adapting rural guerrilla tactics to urban environments by positing that small, disciplined cells could conduct symbolic attacks on state symbols to expose imperialism's brutality and inspire broader , much like Vietnamese revolutionaries had eroded U.S. resolve. The group rejected electoral or strategies as collaborative with the system, arguing that only "bringing the war home" through offensive actions—targeting military and corporate pillars of empire—could disrupt the state's war machine and forge a vanguard party capable of leading the . Empirical precedents cited included Revolution's success via guerrilla methods under , where 300 fighters ignited nationwide revolt by 1959, though the Weather paper acknowledged U.S. conditions demanded mass base-building amid advanced industrialization. By 1974's "Prairie Fire", the underground phase refined this theory, emphasizing low-casualty bombings to minimize backlash while advancing anti-imperialist propaganda, but core justification remained: armed struggle as dialectical response to state repression, with historical analogies to ' 1917 seizure of power validating violence against a fascist trajectory evidenced by COINTELPRO's infiltration of leftist groups (disclosing over 500,000 FBI files on activists by 1971). Critics within the , such as Progressive Labor Party factions, dismissed this as adventurism detached from worker organizing, yet Weather proponents maintained it aligned with Lenin's State and Revolution (1917), where smashing bourgeois state machinery precluded non-violent transition. The approach presupposed that unmasking U.S. aggression—killing 58,000 American troops and millions of Vietnamese by war's end in 1975—demanded reciprocal escalation to catalyze global anti-imperialist unity.

Early Mobilizations and Violence

Days of Rage in Chicago

The were a series of violent protests organized by the Weatherman faction of (SDS) in from October 8 to 11, 1969, intended to "bring the war home" by confronting American imperialism domestically and sparking revolutionary action against the . Weatherman leaders, including and , planned the event as their first major national action following the SDS split, targeting high school students and expecting thousands to join in street warfare modeled on urban guerrilla tactics. However, turnout was far lower than anticipated, with only about 600 participants assembling in on October 8, wearing helmets, carrying lead pipes and chains, rather than the hoped-for 50,000. The protests began on with a rally commemorating , escalating into clashes as demonstrators marched toward the Gold Coast neighborhood, smashing windows of cars and storefronts while police responded with tear gas and nightsticks. Over the next days, actions included a women's march on and further skirmishes, culminating in the bombing of a Haymarket Square police on October 10, symbolizing opposition to law enforcement as agents of . Violence peaked with protesters wielding steel pipes and baseball bats against officers, who fired guns in response, resulting in 48 police injuries, including six shot, and an unspecified number of demonstrator injuries; Cook County Elrod was permanently paralyzed after being thrown from a staircase by a protester. Nearly 300 arrests occurred by the event's end, with charges including mob action and aggravated battery, straining Chicago's resources and prompting Governor Richard Ogilvie to mobilize the . focused on commercial areas but was limited compared to the planners' aims, as the low participation failed to ignite widespread unrest or alienate the broader , which distanced itself from the tactics. Weatherman viewed the Days of Rage as a demonstration of commitment, but empirically it marked a tactical pivot toward clandestine operations, as proved ineffective for their goals of urban guerrilla warfare. The event highlighted the disconnect between Weatherman's ideological insistence on offensive violence and the actual dynamics of public response, contributing to their underground shift by late 1969.

Initial symbolic attacks like Haymarket bombing

On October 6, 1969, members of the Weathermen faction detonated an explosive device at the base of the Haymarket police memorial statue in Chicago, completely destroying the monument. The statue, a bronze figure of a police officer erected in 1889, honored the seven officers killed during the Haymarket affair of May 4, 1886, when a bomb exploded amid a labor protest against police intervention. The Weathermen selected this target as part of their "Days of Rage" mobilization, viewing the statue as a symbol of state repression and police authority enforcing imperialist policies domestically. The blast scattered debris across a nearby expressway, shattering windows in adjacent buildings, but caused no injuries. The group publicly claimed responsibility for the bombing shortly after, framing it within their broader call for revolutionary violence against institutions of "Amerikan ." This action marked one of the Weathermen's earliest uses of explosives, preceding the street confrontations of the Days of Rage starting October 8, and signaled their shift toward symbolic property destruction over mass demonstrations alone. Unlike the historical Haymarket bombing, which targeted police directly and resulted in fatalities, the Weathermen emphasized precision to avoid casualties, aligning with their strategy of "armed propaganda" to expose systemic violence without mirroring it in scale. The statue was subsequently rebuilt, only to be targeted again on , 1970, in a similar nighttime attributed to the now-clandestine Weather Underground. A caller to a news outlet following the second bombing stated, "We just blew up Haymarket Square Statue for the second year in a row," reaffirming the group's intent to dismantle icons of perceived oppressive power. These repeated attacks on the Haymarket memorial exemplified the Weather Underground's initial phase of symbolic assaults, aimed at high-profile, low-risk targets to propagate their anti-imperialist message amid escalating internal debates over tactics.

Clandestine Operations and Bombing Campaign

Greenwich Village townhouse explosion

On March 6, 1970, an accidental explosion demolished a townhouse at 18 West 11th Street in , , when members of the Weather Underground were assembling explosive devices in the basement. The blast, caused by the premature detonation of and other materials during bomb construction, reduced much of the four-story structure to rubble and damaged neighboring buildings, shattering windows blocks away. The operation involved a small cell of Weather Underground militants, including , who led the effort to build powerful anti-personnel bombs packed with nails and other shrapnel, intended to kill soldiers attending a dance at , . Three members perished in the explosion: , a graduate and activist; , a student; and , the bomb-maker. Two others, Cathy Wilkerson and , escaped through a basement amid the chaos but evaded immediate capture, going underground with the group. Emergency responders and police discovered over 60 sticks of , blasting caps, and bomb components in the debris, confirming the site's use as an illicit bomb factory rather than a natural gas mishap initially suspected. The townhouse, owned by Wilkerson's father and rented covertly to the group, had been stocked with enough explosives to level multiple structures, highlighting the militants' intent for escalated urban guerrilla actions against perceived U.S. . The incident marked a pivotal setback for the Weather Underground, killing key leaders and destroying a major cache of materials, which forced the group into stricter compartmentalization and a temporary halt in operations to reassess security protocols. It drew intense scrutiny, including FBI involvement, and prompted the organization to issue a communiqué acknowledging the deaths as sacrifices in their while vowing continued armed resistance. The event underscored the inherent risks of their clandestine bomb-making, contributing to a tactical shift toward smaller, more precise devices in subsequent actions to avoid such self-inflicted losses.

Shift to targeted, low-casualty bombings

Following the accidental explosion at their safe house on March 6, 1970, which killed three members—, , and —while they were assembling powerful anti-personnel bombs, the Weather Underground reevaluated their operational approach to prioritize symbolic property destruction over indiscriminate violence. This incident exposed the risks of high-explosive preparations in urban settings and prompted a doctrinal pivot away from tactics that could inadvertently or intentionally harm civilians, reflecting internal recognition of tactical limitations in sustaining a prolonged clandestine campaign. The strategic shift was formalized in the group's December 1970 communiqué titled "New Morning—Changing Weather," signed by , which announced their formal name change from Weatherman to Weather Underground and explicitly rejected violence against people in favor of attacks on "the monsters" of state power through property-focused actions. This document emphasized endurance in underground warfare, critiqued prior adventurism, and aligned with a broader Marxist-Leninist framework of protracted struggle against , where bombings served as communicative acts to expose systemic vulnerabilities rather than maximize destruction. Historian Bryan Burrough, in his book Days of Rage, argues that later claims by former members such as Bill Ayers denying any plans to harm individuals obscure internal expectations, particularly among mid-level ranks, that the group would engage in violence against people as revolutionary actors. To execute low-casualty operations, the group instituted a protocol of advance warnings to building operators or switchboards, enabling evacuations before and ensuring no fatalities or injuries from their blasts, as verified across their claimed 25 bombings between 1970 and 1975 targeting institutions like police stations, courthouses, and federal agencies. Devices were typically placed in restrooms or unoccupied areas during off-hours, using or pipe bombs calibrated for structural damage—estimated at hundreds of thousands of dollars per incident—while communiqués justified selections as strikes against "pig power" and war machinery. This method sustained their visibility and propaganda efforts without the moral or operational liabilities of lethal outcomes, though it drew FBI scrutiny for evading direct confrontation.

Specific operations: Capitol, Pentagon, and others

The Weather Underground executed a bombing at the on March 1, 1971, at approximately 1:32 a.m., targeting a men's restroom one floor below the chamber. The device, consisting of with a fuse, was placed behind a five-foot wall, supplemented by a smaller secondary after an initial ; it caused extensive structural including shattered walls, sinks, fixtures, and a stained-glass window depicting the signing of the Declaration of Independence, with repair costs estimated between $100,000 and $300,000. A warning call was made to the Capitol switchboard around 1 a.m., ensuring no injuries occurred despite the early hour and building evacuation. The group claimed responsibility via communique, stating the attack protested the U.S.-backed invasion of amid the . On May 19, 1972—coinciding with Ho Chi Minh's birthday—the Weather Underground detonated a in a women's restroom at , selecting the site to symbolize opposition to U.S. military actions. The operation included advance warnings to authorities, resulting in no casualties or significant injuries, consistent with the group's post-1970 shift toward symbolic destruction of government property while minimizing human harm. Damage was limited primarily to the targeted area, though exact figures remain undocumented in federal records. Other operations encompassed the January 29, 1975, bombing of the U.S. State Department headquarters in , where an explosion inflicted extensive damage across 20 offices on three floors but caused no injuries following evacuation warnings; a second device was defused at a military induction center in , later that day. The group also struck the Attorney General's office, a police station, and additional symbols of perceived imperialist authority, such as corporate offices tied to contracts. These actions formed part of a broader campaign claiming 25 bombings by 1975, emphasizing precise, low-collateral attacks on institutional targets to publicize anti-imperialist grievances without intending fatalities. Federal investigations, including FBI records, confirmed the group's responsibility through forensic evidence, communiques, and operational patterns, though many perpetrators evaded capture via clandestine cells.

Internal Organization and Strategy

Recruitment, cells, and security practices

The Weather Underground recruited primarily from the militant faction of (SDS), targeting college-educated youth radicalized by opposition to the and domestic imperialism. Following the June 1969 SDS national convention, where the (RYM) faction—led by figures such as , , and —prevailed over rivals, recruitment focused on activists demonstrating willingness for and ideological purity, including participation in events like the October 8–11, 1969, in , which drew several hundred committed participants despite low turnout. Recruits were vetted through intense political education sessions emphasizing Maoist self-criticism and rejection of white privilege, often requiring abandonment of personal ties and bourgeois lifestyles to prove dedication to protracted urban guerrilla warfare. After the March 6, 1970, Greenwich Village townhouse explosion, which killed three members and prompted a shift to full clandestinity, the group reorganized into small, autonomous cells of three to five individuals—typically mixed-gender collectives living communally in rented apartments—to execute bombings and propaganda while minimizing exposure. This cellular model, inspired by urban guerrilla manuals like those of Carlos Marighella, decentralized operations: each cell handled independent actions, such as bomb construction and placement, with central leadership providing broad guidance via communiqués rather than direct coordination. By 1970, cells formed in cities including New York, San Francisco, and Detroit, though the total active underground membership numbered fewer than 100, limiting scalability. Security practices emphasized compartmentalization to thwart FBI infiltration, with cells maintaining no knowledge of others' identities or locations, communicating only through dead drops or intermediaries when necessary. Members adopted false identities—using stolen or forged documents, dyes for hair changes, and avoidance of family contact—and pursued off-grid living arrangements to evade surveillance, characterized by heightened paranoia about monitoring and low-profile routines that enabled evasion of the FBI for years despite placement on the Most Wanted list. Additional measures included rotating living arrangements every few months, prohibiting personal relationships that could foster betrayal, and conducting "security collectives" for threat assessment before operations; however, these proved imperfect, as arrests like that of associate Lisa Meisel in 1970 compromised peripherals, though core cells endured due to isolation. FBI analyses noted that such practices prolonged the group's evasion until the mid-1970s, when internal fractures and legal amnesties eroded .

Flint War Council debates

The Flint War Council consisted of approximately 400 members of the Weatherman faction of (SDS) who convened in , from December 27 to 31, 1969, to evaluate the outcomes of the preceding riots in and chart future organizational strategy. The gathering, framed as the final national council meeting of SDS's radical wing, featured intense discussions on the efficacy of above-ground mass mobilizations versus clandestine operations, with leaders like Bernadine Dohrn opening proceedings by exhorting participants to overcome fear and initiate "armed struggle" against perceived imperialist structures. Central debates revolved around tactical shifts post-Days of Rage, where low turnout and arrests had exposed vulnerabilities in public demonstrations; proponents of underground warfare, influenced by Maoist guerrilla models, argued for dissolving visible SDS chapters in favor of small, secure cells focused on to build momentum among the white , despite skepticism about its radical potential. John Jacobs, a key Weatherman figure, advocated aggressively for immediate violent confrontation as the path to proletarian uprising, contrasting with voices questioning the sustainability of such isolation from broader leftist alliances. Dohrn's remarks, including a provocative endorsement of the Tate-LaBianca murders by the as a symbolic "declaration of war" against establishment complacency—phrased as "dig it" in reference to the victims' bound thumbs—intensified ideological fervor but alienated some attendees and later drew internal recriminations for glorifying over disciplined praxis. The council ultimately resolved in favor of armed struggle as the primary vehicle for anti-imperialist resistance, mandating the group's transition to a , decentralized structure that prioritized symbolic bombings over mass actions to minimize casualties while escalating pressure on U.S. institutions. This consensus, symbolized by a large cardboard suspended overhead, formalized Weatherman's rupture from SDS's remnants and set the stage for its as the Weather Underground Organization, though the meeting's infiltration by law enforcement—later confirmed by participants—compromised operational security from inception. Outcomes included the production of pamphlets like "," outlining women's roles in the vanguard, but the debates underscored underlying fractures, such as tensions between revolutionary purity and pragmatic , that would persist amid escalating federal scrutiny.

Prairie Fire manifesto and outreach attempts

In July 1974, the Weather Underground published Prairie Fire: The Politics of Revolutionary Anti-Imperialism, a 188-page articulating the group's ideological framework for overthrowing U.S. through armed struggle and socialist . The document, primarily authored by , , Jeff Jones, and Celia Sojourn, analyzed the perceived decline of American amid the War's fallout, domestic crises like Watergate, and economic strains such as the energy shortage. It justified the group's prior bombings—such as those targeting in 1972 and New York City Police Headquarters in 1970—as retaliatory actions against state violence toward Black and communities, while endorsing , people's militias, and mass organization of oppressed groups including workers, youth, women, and prisoners. The manifesto framed U.S. capitalism as inherently exploitative, drawing on dialectical materialism to argue that imperialism perpetuated underdevelopment in the Third World and domestic oppression through racism, sexism, and white supremacy. It celebrated national liberation movements, such as those in Vietnam, Palestine, and Puerto Rico, and called for unity among communists, anti-imperialists, and radical organizations to build a revolutionary front, explicitly seeking alliances with entities like the Black Liberation Army and Symbionese Liberation Army. Demands included amnesty for war resisters, release of over 200,000 political prisoners, cessation of aid to South Vietnam's government, and trials for U.S. war leaders, positioning the Weather Underground as catalysts for broader insurgency rather than isolated actors. To facilitate outreach, the group clandestinely printed and distributed tens of thousands of copies—exceeding 40,000 in total—through aboveground networks, marking a strategic shift from pure clandestinity toward ideological propagation. This effort birthed the Prairie Fire Organizing Committee (PFOC) in late 1974 as the Weather Underground's legal front, tasked with disseminating the , supporting political prisoners (e.g., via campaigns for rebels and figures like Ruchell Magee), and coordinating anti-imperialist events across U.S. cities. PFOC activities included publishing journals like , organizing solidarity with struggles, and attempting coalitions at conferences, such as the 1976 Hard Times gathering in , where Weather-aligned factions sought to rally far-left support for revolutionary unity. Despite these initiatives, outreach yielded limited success, as the Weather Underground's advocacy for bombings and rejection of reformism alienated potential allies within the fragmented , contributing to internal Weather splits and PFOC's eventual decline by the late 1970s. The manifesto's emphasis on violent vanguardism, while resonating with some radicals, underscored the group's isolation, with distribution efforts failing to translate into a mass base amid post-Vietnam War disillusionment and FBI scrutiny.

FBI's COINTELPRO operations against the group

The FBI's Counter Intelligence Program (), specifically its operations initiated on May 16, 1968, targeted (SDS) factions, including the emerging Weathermen collective that seized control of SDS at its June 1969 national convention in . The program's objectives, as outlined in FBI directives, were to "expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize" the activities of these groups deemed threats to domestic order, employing tactics such as informant penetration, forged correspondence to sow internal distrust, and leaks of derogatory information to media outlets and academic institutions. Against the Weathermen, who advocated armed struggle and organized the "Days of Rage" riots in from October 8–11, 1969, resulting in over 280 arrests and significant property damage, the FBI intensified efforts to preempt violence through pre-event surveillance and coordination with local police. A key COINTELPRO-linked operation involved the infiltration of informant Larry Grathwohl, a recruited by the FBI's Cincinnati field office in August 1969 and inserted into the Weathermen by November 1969. Grathwohl attended collective meetings in and , rising to participate in weapons training and -making preparations, and reported detailed intelligence on plans to target military installations and government figures, including discussions of assassinations and a proposed "national action" involving simultaneous bombings across U.S. cities. His reports contributed to FBI disruptions, such as alerting authorities to potential attacks, though the group's shift to clandestinity after the 1970 —where three members died assembling a —limited further immediate penetrations under formal COINTELPRO protocols. Additional tactics included anonymous letters sent to universities and employers highlighting Weathermen leaders' criminal associations and foreign ties, aiming to isolate them from broader student support, as well as efforts to exploit factional rifts post-SDS dissolution in 1969 by amplifying Progressive Labor Party criticisms through planted stories. These actions occurred amid broader -New Left activities that amassed over 23,000 intelligence reports by 1971, though specific Weathermen targeting intensified in late 1969 amid their escalation toward symbolic bombings. officially terminated on April 28, 1971, following public exposure via the March 1971 burglary of an FBI office in , but declassified records indicate that similar disruptive methods persisted informally against the now-underground Weather Underground Organization through dedicated task forces. The program's revelations, detailed in the 1976 report, highlighted unconstitutional elements like warrantless surveillance, which later invalidated evidence in Weather-related prosecutions.

Key arrests, charges, and trial outcomes

Several early arrests of Weather Underground members stemmed from the group's participation in the "Days of Rage" riots in on –11, 1969, where participants engaged in and clashes with police, leading to charges of aggravated battery, mob action, and . was arrested during these events and released on bail, but she failed to appear in court, resulting in additional fugitive warrants. Cathy Wilkerson was also detained on similar charges during the riots. Fugitive members began surfacing in the late 1970s amid declining group activity and expiring statutes of limitations on some charges. , a founding leader, surrendered on September 14, 1977, facing misdemeanor counts from the Days of Rage; he received no prison time, as the charges were resolved without significant penalties due to their age and minor nature. Similarly, Robert H. Roth and Phoebe Hirsch, underground for seven years, surrendered on March 25, 1977, and faced related state charges but avoided extended incarceration. Cathy Wilkerson, one of two survivors of the March 6, 1970, that killed three members while assembling bombs, remained a until turning herself in during 1980. She was convicted in January 1981 of unlawful possession of explosives tied to the incident and sentenced to up to three years, but served less than one year before release on in December 1981. Bernardine Dohrn, designated an FBI Most Wanted fugitive in 1970, surrendered on December 3, 1980, in and was arraigned on revived charges including aggravated battery and mob action. She ultimately pleaded guilty to bail jumping from her 1969 arrest, receiving a $1,500 fine and three years' in ; related charges from refusing to testify in a 1969 conspiracy trial were incorporated into the plea. Bill Ayers, Dohrn's partner and a co-founder, surrendered in February 1981; while federal indictments for bombings and conspiracy existed, they were not pursued to trial against him, resulting in no conviction or imprisonment for Weather Underground activities. Few members faced trials for the group's 1970–1975 bombing campaign, as most evaded capture during that period and later federal cases collapsed short of conviction due to evidentiary challenges; outcomes typically involved pleas to minor state offenses with light sentences, reflecting both the passage of time and prosecutorial focus on violations over charges.

Withdrawal of charges due to illegal surveillance

In 1973, federal prosecutors dismissed major conspiracy charges against several Weather Underground Organization (WUO) members stemming from 1970 indictments for plotting bombings, as the primary evidence derived from the FBI's warrantless electronic surveillance and surreptitious entries into suspected safe houses, rendering it inadmissible under the Fourth Amendment. These operations, conducted without judicial warrants as part of intensified efforts following the group's in March 1970, involved over 200 unauthorized "black bag jobs" targeting WUO locations nationwide, a tactic later exposed in congressional investigations into FBI overreach. The dismissals highlighted systemic prosecutorial challenges, as courts ruled that evidence chains were irreparably tainted; for instance, wiretap logs and physical items seized during break-ins at addresses linked to fugitives like and could not be used without violating , prompting U.S. Attorney's offices in multiple districts to abandon cases rather than risk acquittals on technical grounds. This outcome frustrated , with FBI Director Hoover's successors defending the methods as necessary against a group responsible for at least 25 bombings between 1970 and 1973, yet judicial scrutiny post-1971 termination prioritized constitutional protections over national security imperatives. Subsequent revelations in 1974 extended these setbacks, as additional state-level charges in —related to the 1969 Haymarket Police Memorial bombing—were withdrawn against Dohrn and others due to confirmed involving the same illegal techniques, further eroding the government's ability to secure convictions despite the WUO's admitted violent actions in communiqués like "Prairie Fire." While these rulings did not exonerate the defendants of underlying crimes, they effectively shielded key figures from federal prosecution until statutes of limitations expired, contributing to the group's operational continuity into the mid-1970s.

Decline, Dissolution, and Offshoots

Internal fractures and operational wind-down

By the mid-1970s, the Weather Underground faced deepening internal fractures driven by strategic divergences and the strains of prolonged underground operations. After releasing the Prairie Fire manifesto in July 1974, which called for alliances with diverse leftist and oppressed groups to build a mass , debates intensified over balancing clandestine violence with aboveground outreach efforts. A faction aligned with the newly formed advocated distributing the document—estimated at over 20,000 copies—and fostering public support networks, but this clashed with hardliners who viewed any surface engagement as a dilution of guerrilla purity and security protocols. These rifts echoed earlier Flint War Council tensions but escalated amid evidence that bombings had not ignited widespread uprising, fostering accusations of tactical miscalculation and leadership detachment from grassroots realities. The psychological and logistical burdens of fugitive life compounded these ideological splits, with reports of , interpersonal conflicts, and burnout eroding cohesion among the estimated 100-200 core members dispersed in . Members grappled with the manifesto's unfulfilled promise of broader solidarity, as outreach yielded limited endorsements from sympathetic groups like the or Puerto Rican independistas, while mainstream leftists largely rejected the group's . Internal critiques, later articulated by former leaders, highlighted how rigid adherence to Maoist-inspired armed struggle alienated potential allies and isolated the organization, prompting defections and informal splintering into autonomous units by 1976. Operational wind-down accelerated following the group's final documented bombing on September 22, 1975, targeting the offices of the Fraternal Order of Police to police brutality; no injuries occurred, but the action underscored diminishing capacity and resolve. With resources strained and revolutionary momentum absent—U.S. troop withdrawals from in 1973-1975 further deflated antiwar fervor—the collective curtailed explosives operations, shifting to sporadic communiqués and theoretical writings. By 1977, coordinated activities had ceased, as members increasingly prioritized personal survival over , leading to the organization's dissolution without a formal announcement; remnants either surfaced amid legal developments or evolved into peripheral offshoots. This phase reflected causal recognition that isolated , absent , could not sustain a protracted guerrilla campaign against a stable state apparatus. In the late 1970s, as the Weather Underground Organization (WUO) fragmented amid internal debates and legal pressures, surviving members sought external alliances to sustain revolutionary momentum, particularly with black nationalist groups emphasizing armed struggle against perceived imperialism. A key partnership emerged with the (BLA), a Marxist-Leninist militant organization focused on black through violence, leading to the formation of the (M19CO) around 1978. M19CO explicitly positioned itself as a multiracial alliance uniting white WUO radicals with BLA fighters to support black liberation as a vanguard for broader anti-capitalist revolution, conducting joint operations including bombings and expropriations. This alliance manifested in the October 20, 1981, armored car robbery in , executed by an M19CO unit comprising former WUO members and BLA associates to seize funds—approximately $1.6 million—for arming radical causes. Key WUO-linked participants included , a founding WUO member who had evaded capture since the , and , who drove the getaway vehicle after the heist. The operation involved around 11 individuals, with assailants using automatic weapons to ambush the truck, killing guard during the initial holdup and, in a subsequent with responding Nyack police, officers Edward O'Grady and Waverly Brown. The heist precipitated the rapid dismantling of M19CO and severed remaining WUO ties to active militancy, as arrests—including and —exposed the network through recovered evidence and interrogations, prompting federal charges for , , and . BLA leader , implicated in planning, fled but was later convicted, underscoring the interracial alliance's operational interdependence despite tactical failures like the premature abandonment of the getaway van. These events marked the effective end of WUO-influenced armed alliances, shifting surviving radicals toward aboveground activism or incarceration rather than sustained guerrilla collaboration.

Formation of May 19th Communist Organization

The (M19CO) formed in the late 1970s as a clandestine alliance of splinter factions from the Weather Underground Organization (WUO) and the (BLA), amid the WUO's operational wind-down due to arrests, internal debates, and strategic shifts away from bombings. Key participants included former WUO members such as Judy Clark, , and , who sought to refocus revolutionary efforts on supporting international anti-imperialist struggles in regions like , the , and Central America, while pursuing domestic objectives like prisoner extractions. The group's formation reflected a tactical evolution from the WUO's earlier symbolic bombings toward more targeted alliances with black nationalist militants, driven by a shared Marxist-Leninist commitment to armed propaganda against U.S. . Named to commemorate the shared birthdate of (May 19, 1925) and (May 19, 1890), M19CO articulated its ideology in the early 1979 manifesto Principles of Unity of the , which positioned the group as a support apparatus for broader , emphasizing unity across racial lines in the fight against . The alliance's core objectives included liberating U.S. political prisoners, bolstering armed for communities, and disrupting American infrastructure to weaken foreign interventions. Predominantly led and staffed by women—who directed planning and executions—M19CO represented a shift toward gender-integrated but female-dominant command structures in underground militant networks. This formation marked a direct offshoot of WUO praxis, adapting its cells and security protocols to new coalitions while maintaining underground discipline, though it operated with greater emphasis on joint operations with groups like the . By 1980, M19CO had begun executing high-profile actions, signaling its emergence as a successor entity committed to escalating rather than abandoning violent anti-state tactics.

Direct Consequences

Casualties among members and targets

On March 6, 1970, three Weather Underground members—, , and —died in a premature detonation of explosives they were assembling in the basement of a townhouse at 18 West 11th Street in , . The blast, which leveled the structure and caused an estimated $300,000 in damage, occurred while the group prepared nail-filled anti-personnel bombs targeted at a military dance and a police facility, highlighting the inherent risks of their clandestine operations. Two other members present, and Cathlyn Wilkerson, escaped with minor injuries after fleeing the scene amid the chaos. These deaths represented the only fatalities among Weather Underground members during the organization's operational phase from 1969 to 1976, stemming directly from an internal rather than confrontations with authorities or rival groups. No additional member casualties, including injuries requiring hospitalization, were reported in connection with the group's subsequent bombings or evasion activities, though some members like faced long-term status following the incident. The Weather Underground's 25 documented bombings—targeting symbols of U.S. military, governmental, and corporate power, such as on May 19, 1972, and the U.S. Capitol on March 1, 1971—produced no deaths or injuries among intended targets or bystanders. Group communiqués emphasized precision timing for unoccupied buildings and advance warnings in some cases to minimize human harm, a tactic former members later cited as evidence of restrained intent amid their declared war on . Federal records confirm the absence of casualties from these attacks, attributing any disruptions solely to .

Property damage and economic impacts

The Weather Underground Organization (WUO) executed approximately 25 bombings from 1970 to 1975, targeting symbols of U.S. government and corporate power, with explosives designed to inflict structural damage while avoiding human fatalities through advance warnings and off-hours timing. These actions resulted in repair costs borne primarily by federal agencies, though comprehensive aggregate figures remain undocumented in official records; individual incidents provide insight into the scale. On March 1, 1971, a bomb detonated in a Capitol building restroom, shattering marble, breaking windows, and damaging doors across multiple areas, with estimated repair costs of $300,000. Similarly, the May 19, 1972, bombing of the Pentagon's women's restroom caused $300,000 in damage to fixtures, walls, and adjacent spaces, occurring on Ho Chi Minh's birthday as a against the . The January 29, 1975, attack on the U.S. State Department inflicted extensive structural harm, affecting 20 offices spanning three floors, including blown-out walls and destroyed equipment, though no monetary estimate was publicly detailed. Additional bombings, such as those on a police station, the Attorney General's office, and corporate targets like the ITT building in , contributed further to property losses through shattered glass, structural breaches, and disrupted operations, but specific cost data for these events is sparse. Economically, the attacks prompted heightened expenditures at federal facilities, including reinforced structures and , amplifying long-term fiscal burdens beyond immediate repairs; however, the WUO's strategy of symbolic, low-lethality strikes limited broader disruptions like those from human casualties or halted commerce.

Broader societal disruptions and costs

The Weather Underground's campaign of over 25 bombings between 1970 and 1975 targeted symbolic government and sites, prompting repeated evacuations and temporary operational halts that disrupted federal functions. For instance, the March 1, 1971, bombing of the U.S. Capitol led to the evacuation of the building and surrounding areas, suspending legislative activities amid heightened alert for additional devices. Similarly, the May 19, 1972, bombing followed a warning call that enabled evacuation, though it damaged offices and restrooms, requiring repairs and sweeps that interrupted administrative operations. These incidents, combined with bomb threats attributed to the group, fostered a climate of caution among public officials and institutions, contributing to procedural delays in targeted facilities. The accidental March 6, 1970, explosion at a Greenwich Village townhouse used as a bomb factory not only killed three members but also damaged adjacent structures, necessitating extensive police searches that unearthed additional explosives and weapons, thereby unsettling the local community and prompting neighborhood-wide investigations. Such events amplified public apprehension regarding domestic militancy, with media coverage of the group's communiqués and actions linking urban radicalism to broader threats of instability during the Vietnam War era. Economically, the group's evasion tactics imposed substantial investigative burdens on federal agencies, with the FBI expending tens of millions of dollars and tens of thousands of man-hours in and pursuit efforts that yielded no prevented bombings or captures until the late . These resources diverted from other priorities reflected taxpayer-funded costs for a that prioritized symbolic disruption over mass casualties. Beyond direct outlays, the bombings eroded confidence in nonviolent protest within the , alienating moderate supporters and fragmenting organizations like by associating activism with violence, thus diminishing public tolerance for radical left-wing tactics.

Assessments and Legacy

Designation as domestic terrorists

The (FBI) classified the Weather Underground Organization (WUO) as a domestic terrorist group based on its campaign of bombings against U.S. government, military, and corporate targets from 1970 to 1975, aimed at protesting the and imperialism. The FBI documented over two dozen such incidents, including the March 1, 1971, bombing of the U.S. Capitol, which caused $300,000 in damage but no injuries due to advance warnings, and the January 29, 1975, explosion at the U.S. Department of State headquarters. These actions met the FBI's criteria for : ideologically motivated violence intended to intimidate or coerce civilian populations or government policy through unlawful acts like bombings. The U.S. Army War College has similarly designated the WUO as a domestic terrorist group, noting its on America" to influence political outcomes, such as U.S. withdrawal from , through disruptive violence. FBI Director initiated a nationwide manhunt in the early 1970s, devoting significant resources—estimated at tens of millions of dollars and thousands of man-hours—to apprehend leaders like and , who evaded capture until surfacing voluntarily in the late 1970s and early 1980s. This pursuit underscored the group's status as a priority domestic threat, with members added to the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list. Post-dissolution assessments by federal agencies have maintained this classification, with the FBI continuing to reference the WUO as terrorists in official histories and public communications as recently as 2024. Unlike foreign terrorist organizations under formal State Department listings, domestic groups like the WUO lack a singular statutory designation but are categorized through FBI investigative priorities and legal prosecutions under anti-terrorism statutes, such as those invoked in related cases. Academic and media sources occasionally frame the group's actions as "symbolic" or non-lethal resistance, but these interpretations contrast with empirical records of targeted destruction and the government's consistent terrorist labeling, which prioritizes and methods over self-proclaimed justifications.

Debates on effectiveness and moral legitimacy

Critics of the Weather Underground's tactics contend that their bombings, numbering over two dozen between 1970 and 1975, exerted negligible influence on U.S. policy regarding the , which concluded primarily due to military overextension, the 1968 Tet Offensive's erosion of public support, and negotiated withdrawals under Presidents Nixon and Ford rather than domestic militancy. While former members such as have retrospectively argued that the actions amplified anti-imperialist consciousness and pressured elites, empirical assessments reveal no causal linkage to troop reductions or the 1973 Paris Accords, as anti-war sentiment peaked through nonviolent protests and electoral shifts predating the group's clandestine phase. Strategic analyses further highlight how the bombings alienated potential allies within the broader , fostering perceptions of extremism that marginalized radical critiques and contributed to the organization's internal dissolution by 1977 without achieving revolutionary mobilization. Proponents occasionally posit a indirect "victory" through cultural permeation, suggesting the group's defiance normalized confrontational and influenced subsequent leftist strategies, though such claims rest on anecdotal ideological diffusion rather than measurable policy or societal shifts. Counterarguments emphasize operational blunders, including the 1970 that killed three members during bomb construction, as emblematic of tactical incompetence that not only failed to build a sustainable but also underscored the futility of in a democratic context with established channels for . Regarding moral legitimacy, defenders within radical circles, including Ayers and , justified the bombings as proportionate resistance to state-sponsored violence in and domestic oppression, framing them as ethical imperatives under a Marxist-Leninist lens of anti-imperialist struggle. This perspective, articulated in manifestos like the 1974 Prairie Fire, posits revolutionary violence as morally equivalent to the system's alleged aggressions, yet it encounters rebuttals for conflating symbolic property destruction with defensive action, as targets like bathrooms in federal posed no immediate . Critics, drawing from just war principles and consequentialist ethics, decry the tactics as illegitimate that eroded rule-of-law norms, risked civilian bystanders despite stated precautions, and flirted with escalatory plans for mass casualties, thereby forfeiting in public discourse. The unintended deaths of their own cadre in accidents further illustrate the moral perils of improvised explosives and secrecy, arguments compounded by the group's post facto designations as domestic terrorists by federal authorities for endangering public safety without commensurate strategic gains.

Former members' post-group activities and reflections

Following the operational decline of the Weather Underground by the mid-1970s, numerous former members emerged from clandestinity and integrated into mainstream society, often channeling their energies into academia, legal advocacy, and progressive activism. and , key leaders, surfaced publicly in 1980 after federal charges against them were dismissed in 1974 due to involving illegal . Ayers subsequently earned a doctorate in and served as a of and senior university scholar at the until his retirement, focusing on curriculum reform and initiatives. Dohrn, meanwhile, obtained a and became an associate clinical professor at School of Law, where she founded and directed the Children and Family Justice Center from 1992 until her retirement, emphasizing juvenile justice reform. Other prominent figures followed similar trajectories into intellectual and activist roles. , a co-founder, surrendered in 1977, resolved his legal issues without incarceration, and later worked as an organizer for anti-apartheid and environmental causes while teaching and history at community colleges in . He authored the 2009 memoir Underground: My Life with SDS and the Weathermen, critiquing the group's insular "cult-like" dynamics and the strategic error of prioritizing symbolic bombings over . Former member Jim Mellen transitioned to academia as a college professor, advocating Marxist perspectives before his death in 2023 at age 87. Reflections on their involvement have varied, often acknowledging tactical missteps while reaffirming ideological commitments to and . In a 2001 New York Times interview tied to his Fugitive Days, Ayers expressed no regrets for the bombings—stating he felt "we didn't do enough"—and declined to rule out similar actions in the future, framing them as proportionate responses to U.S. actions in and domestic , though he conceded their limited political impact. Dohrn, in joint interviews with Ayers, has echoed this, describing the violence as a desperate bid for with colonized peoples and against , without disavowing the underlying motivations. Rudd, by contrast, has been more self-critical, arguing in 2021 that the Weather Underground's rejection of alienated potential allies and failed to build sustainable movements, urging contemporary activists to prioritize organizing over . These accounts, drawn from and interviews, reveal a pattern of rationalizing the era's as youthful amid perceived systemic injustices, tempered by admissions of ineffectiveness in altering power structures.

References

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