Excerpt:
At first glance, the 1,500-page manifesto of Anders Behring Breivik, the man accused of the terrorist attacks in Oslo, appears to be a fairly standard ideological treatise of the far right. The document, which Mr. Breivik posted online on July 22 just hours before the attacks and which he titled "2083 — A European Declaration of Independence," evokes several of the movement's central themes and cites numerous right-wing ideologues.
On closer inspection, however, Mr. Breivik's worldview does not fit squarely into any of the established categories of right-wing ideology, like white supremacism, ultranationalism or Christian fundamentalism. Rather, it reveals a new doctrine of civilizational war that represents the closest thing yet to a Christian version of Al Qaeda.
For example, although Mr. Breivik says he fears "the extinction of the Nordic genotypes," racial hygiene is not high on his agenda. He wants to expel, not kill, Muslims in Europe, and he does not mind Jews and non-Muslim Asians. Similarly, while Mr. Breivik says he is "extremely proud" of his "Odinistic/Norse heritage," he is not a Norwegian nationalist — his "declaration of independence" applies to all of Europe. And while he is Christian, he admits that "I'm not going to pretend I'm a very religious person."