The US Army is facing some serious scrutiny after a massive misstep during an anti-terrorism briefing at For Liberty, North Carolina, in July.

What was supposed to be a routine training session for military personnel turned into a PR nightmare when the briefing materials wrongly listed several mainstream activist groups as terrorist organizations.

The incident sparked outrage and raised questions about how such materials were even approved in the first place.

Let’s unpack what happened and why it matters.

What Went Wrong?

It all started when Army personnel at Fort Liberty were going through their usual anti-terrorism training—nothing out of the ordinary. I’m sure most of us have gone through this at least once during our time in service.

But this time, something in the PowerPoint presentation caught everyone’s attention.

The slides, reportedly, lumped in non-violent, mainstream groups like National Right to Life (a pro-life lobbying organization) and PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) with known hate groups like the Ku Klux Klan and terrorist organizations such as ISIS. Understandably, people were shocked. There are legal and constitutional challenges to designating domestic groups as terrorist organizations, and most of those designated as such are non-US entities.

To make matters worse, the presentation also mentioned Operation Rescue, another anti-abortion group, as a terrorist organization. Neither National Right to Life nor Operation Rescue has any direct history of violence, making their inclusion in the same category as violent extremist groups seem not just inaccurate but irresponsible.