[7] Their first solo attack was when they left a bank branch in the Vitacura district on November 5, 2011, in a statement four years later they explain that this group was in disuse due to tactical differences with other militants.
[8] On November 20, 2011, a cell of the group (Anonimxs por la Destrucción) left a simulated device, which was collected by members of the police and the GOPE.
At the scene of the attack, leaflets were left alluding to the death of Sebastián Oversluij, an anarchist militant who was assassinated five years before during a bank robbery.
[40][41] In a statement released in August 2019, they claimed to have been in clashes with the police during demonstrations against the Meeting of Presidents of South America on March 22, rejecting the presence of Jair Bolsonaro and the other leaders, and also being present during the commemoration of the Day of the Young Combatant and other riots during the month of April.
[42][43][44] On April 20, militants set fire to a Transantiago bus in the Quinta Normal district in honor of the guerrillas Erick Rodríguez and Iván Palacios, as well as having participated in violent demonstrations and barricades during the months of May to August.
[45][46][47][44] On August 4, militants threatened a Transantiago driver in the Pedro Aguirre Cerda district, setting the bus on fire and carrying out some shots into the air.
[48][49] On September 11, during the protests commemorating the 1973 coup in Chile, members of the NANGU attacked and set fire to a car launches gases belonging to the Chilean Police, this in the Peñalolén district.
They also stated that members and former members of the NANGU participated in various groups and First Line blocs, arguing that initiatives such as the Anti-Barricade Law are a sample of repression compared to operations such as Operation Gladio, the military dictatorship, and other international examples, demonstrating that popular insurrection was a way out of increasingly authoritarian state policies.