Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Dutch amphibious soldiers of NLMARSOF surfacing in hostile territory
Dutch amphibious soldiers of NLMARSOF surfacing in hostile territory - Credit: Photo: Rijksoverheid.nl / Wikimedia Commons
Crime
Defense
Ministry of Defense
MIVD
extremism
right-wing extremism
jihadism
Ank Bijleveld
Barbara Visser
Tuesday, 2 July 2019 - 09:16

Share this article:

Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window

Four soldiers left Dutch army over right-wing extremism accusations: report

In the past five years, four soldiers left the Dutch armed forces due to right-wing extremist statements or behavior. Military intelligence service MIVD launched a total of 21 investigations into possible extremism in the armed forces, the vast majority of which involved suspicions of right-wing extremism, the Volkskrant reports based on a list the MIVD drew up after the newspaper appealed to the Intelligence and Security Services Act.

At least four soldiers are no longer active in the armed forces after the MIVD investigated them for right-wing extremism. In 2015 a reservist was dismissed because of links with right-wing extremist groups. In 2016 a solider who moved "in right-wing extremist circles" left the army while the investigation into him was still ongoing. Defense also sent a temporary worker away who turned out to be a right-wing extremist. And a soldier was fired last year after photographs of "extreme right-wing expressions" were found on their phone.

In most cases, the MIVD found "no suspicion of criminal offenses" after investigating reports. This was the case for swastikas and an SS emblem found in a soldier's residence, and for a Dutch version of Mein Kampf found on the Defense intranet, according to the newspaper. Other incidents received too little priority. For example, in 2015 the MIVD was keeping an eye on a soldier suspected of having ties "with skinheads and right-wing extremist circles". While these suspicions were neither confirmed nor denied, the service did not do a follow up investigation due to "prioritization". The MIVD also dismissed a "white power" logo found on a toilet door in 2016 as "not relevant enough" after a brief investigation.

The Ministry of Defense describe these as isolated incidents. "In recent years, the MIVD established based on incidental indications of right-wing extremist expressions within the Defense organization that none of these cases involved right-wing extremist networks or terrorist activities", Minister Ank Bijleveld of Defense wrote to parliament in January.

Two weeks ago, State Secretary Barbara Visser announced that action was taken against five cadets from the Royal Military Academy because they shared "insulting and offensive pornographic and racist footage with references to Nazi Germany" in a WhatsApp group. She also said that investigation found no "affinity with national socialist ideals" in the cadets.

The MIVD also investigated at least five reports of possible jihadism among soldiers over the past years, according to the newspaper. One such involved a sick soldiers who "rebelled against Western society", and last year a soldier was advised to end his or her romantic relationship in the deployment area due to the risk of jihadist influencing. Various services have also been monitoring a soldier with post-traumatic stress disorder since 2017. This soldier was spotted in a building squatted by "hardcore" anarchists.

More like this

Image
Dutch soldiers
Multiple Dutch soldiers under investigation for right-wing extremism
Image
Drones from Amsterdam-area firm DeltaQuad were used by Dutch soldiers during a "drone day" training in Oirschot, April 2026
Defense pushes millions into A'dam drone software company, with option for golden share
Image
Dutch soldier; Flag of the Netherlands on military uniform
Nearly half of Dutch lack confidence in government handling of rising defense spending
Image
Damen Shipyards in Gorinchem
Dutch State considering buying shares in shipbuilder Damen
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Violence at Amersfoort Pride shows need for LGBTQIA+ safe spaces, advocates say
  • New public transport strikes looming as contract talks stall
  • Dutch foundation launches class action lawsuit against buy-now-pay-later service Klarna
  • Explosion at apartment complex in Woerden; Dozens of homes evacuated
  • Dutch SMEs investing less due to high costs and inconsistent gov't policy: study

Top stories

  • New public transport strikes looming as contract talks stall
  • Explosion at apartment complex in Woerden; Dozens of homes evacuated
  • Dutch SMEs investing less due to high costs and inconsistent gov't policy: study
  • Man severely beaten after Amersfoort Pride; Police probe anti-LGBTQ+ motive
  • Video: Fights break out outside Ter Apel center on first night after aid groups pull out

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content