As Americans protest police behaviour, hardline anti-riot tactics draw fire
WASHINGTON — As anguished Americans flood the streets to rage against police brutality in the United States, some say the aggressive pushback from heavily armoured riot squads is proving their point.
Experts describe what they call a culture of “militarism” in U.S. police forces, amplified by the use of the reservist National Guard and the sight of armoured vehicles rolling through American streets.
Others, however, acknowledge the challenge police face in allowing protests to continue peacefully while taking a zero-tolerance approach to disruptive looting and wanton destruction of storefronts, police vehicles and public buildings.
Both images have been prevalent in recent days as thousands of demonstrators take to the streets across the country to protest the police killing of George Floyd, a black man who died at the hands of police last week while being arrested in Minnesota.