Terrorism: Difference between revisions

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*[[Nuclear Terrorism]] – the use of nuclear materials in a terrorist attack, either a nuclear bomb or a "dirty bomb" (highly radioactive chemicals spread by an ordinary exposive)
*[[Nuclear Terrorism]] – the use of nuclear materials in a terrorist attack, either a nuclear bomb or a "dirty bomb" (highly radioactive chemicals spread by an ordinary exposive)
*[[Eco Terrorism]] - the use of acts of violence, sabotage, vandalism, property damage and intimidation committed in the name of environmentalism.
*[[Eco Terrorism]] - the use of acts of violence, sabotage, vandalism, property damage and intimidation committed in the name of environmentalism.
*[[Religious Terrorism]]


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 11:54, 6 July 2007

The bombed remains of the Federal Building in Oklahoma City after a terrorist bomb exploded killing 168 and wounding another 800, 19 Apr. 1995.

Terrorism refers to any act, nearly always violent, unpredictable, and chaotic in nature, often targetting civilians, intended to create an atmosphere of fear in order to obtain a political objective. Terrorism has been practiced by both left-wing and right-wing political organizations, religious and nationalistic groups, revolutionaries, as well as — to use the somewhat controversial notion of "state terrorism" — armies, police, and security forces. Since non-governmental terrorist groups are generally small in numbers and have few resources available, they rely on dramatic and destructive hit-and-run acts of violence to seize the attention of the general population, thereby seeking to impose their influence through the publicity associated with their violence. Acts of terrorism include bomb scares and bombings, hijackings, assassinations, kidnappings, cyber-attacks, and attacks using biological, chemical, and — theoretically — nuclear weapons.

Definition

Terrorism has many definitions and the concept is the subject of much controversy. The term terrorism was first used in the 1790s to describe terror used by government during the French Revolution. [1]

Based on a survey of leading academics, there are at least 109 different definitions of terrorism (Schmidt & Jongman 1988). A compiled analysis of this survey identified the following recurring elements:

Recurring elements of terrorism

  • Violence, force (83.5%)
  • Political (65%)
  • Fear, emphasis on terror (51%)
  • Threats (47%)
  • Psychological effects and anticipated reactions (41.5%)
  • Discrepancy between the targets and the victims (37.5%)
  • Intentional, planned, systematic, organized action (32%)
  • Methods of combat, strategy, tactics (30.5%)

The common elements of terrorism, as stated by Ganor (2002), are “the use of, or threat to use, violence”; “the goal is to attain political objectives”; and “the targets of terrorism are civilians”. The most widely accepted legal definition is defined in Title 22 of the United States Code, Section 2656f(d), which states: "The term ‘terrorism’ means premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against non-combatant targets by sub-national groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an audience."

Often the definition of terrorism varies among the various agencies of a country's government, an example of this is in the United States:

AgencyDefinition
Department of DefenseThe calculated use of unlawful violence to inculcate fear, intended to coerce or to intimidate governments or societies in the pursuit of goals that are generally political, religious, or ideological. [2]
FBIThe unlawful use of force and violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives [3]
State DepartmentPremeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an audience. [4]

State Sponsorship of Terrorism

There are basically three categories of state sponsorship of terrorism. These are as follows:

1. States supporting terrorism – “states that support terrorist organizations, providing financial aid, ideological support, military or operational assistance” (Ganor 2002)

2. States operating terrorism – “states that initiate, direct and perform terrorist activities through groups outside their own institutions” (Ganor 2002)

3. States perpetrating terrorism – “states perpetrating terrorist acts abroad through their own official bodies” (Ganor 2002) or perpetrating terrorist acts domestically (i.e. within its own borders).

Characteristics of Terrorist attacks

Planning and organization

Planning is one characteristic that all terrorists share. A terrorist will never commit an act of terrorism in a desultory or senseless manner. Terrorist attacks are carefully planned to ensure the largest amount of publicity to spread their cause to the general population. A perfect example of this is the 1998 bombing of U.S. embassies in Kenya, which took al-Qaeda nearly five years to plan.

First, when planning a major attack, the terrorists must gather detailed intelligence on the intended target such as it's defenses and vulnerabilities. Logistics specialists assemble the weapons, communications equipment, and arrange transportation and escape routes for the team that will carry out the attack. Once all the preparations are complete, the terrorist team will execute the plan. Usually separate teams carry out each step for security reasons so if one team is captured, they can't tell about the other team.

All terror groups usually keep their plans secret, operating underground and away from the public and government authorities. Terrorists are often organized into small groups called terror cells which are part of a larger terrorist network and several cells can work together to plan a terrorist attack. Members of one cell usually only know about an adjacent cell, but aren't awhere of any other cells. This means that if members of one cell are captured, the entire network will not be discovered. This way terror groups maintain secrecy and can plan their attacks to make them as surprising as possible.

Targets

The main targets of terrorism are innocent civilians, because they are easy to attack and create an atmosphere of fear. Other terrorist attacks target specific targets such as diplomats or their facilities such as embassies and consulates; military bases; police; business executives and corporate offices; water supply and pipelines; power facilities such as power plants, dams and power grids; and transportation facilities such as airplanes and airports, subways, trains and train stations, and buses and bus terminals. Buildings of political and economic importance are targeted as shown during the 9-11 Attacks in 2001 when the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were hit, while the US Capitol Building was targeted, but never attacked. [5] Most attacks on buildings are usually used to draw attention to the terrorist group rather than to cause death and destruction; though this is caused nonetheless.

Weapons

The Soviet AK-47 Kalashnikov assault rifle is a favorite weapon of terrorists because of its low cost and high availability.

Historically, bombing is the most common terrorist tactic because of its simplicity and lack of the need of skill to create, plant, and detonate a crude bomb. Assassination, kidnapping, and assaults against well-defended targets require a much more sophisticated knowledge of organization, planning, and weaponry to pull off. These bombs can consist of commercially produced explosives such as black powder, TNT, plastic explosives; or commercially available materials made into homemade explosives, such as fertilizer (ammonium nitrate) mixed with diesel fuel; these homemade explosives are called "Improvised Explosive Devices" (IEDs). [6] Bombs can be either explosive or incendiary and the most effective bombs usually employ a shaped charge that moves the force of the blast in a specific direction. Bombs can be detonated by time-delay detonators which rely on clocks, watches, and other timing devices; remote-control detonators which use radio or other electronic signals; command-wire detonators use a button which is pressed to trigger the explosion.

Many terrorists use automatic firearms such as assault rifles, pistols, machine guns and submachine guns or rifles with sniper sights. Some terrorist weapons are made outside legal arms factories, these include the Soviet AK-47 Kalashnikov assault rifle and the U.S. manufactured M60 machine gun, which are manufactured in the northwest of the Indian subcontinent. These illegaly manufactured arms are called "improvised firearms" [7] Terrorists have also used both small-sized and heavy-calibre mortars and rocket-propelled grenades or RPGs; the most widely used model of this weapon being the RPG-7. [8] The RPG-7 can pierce through up to 12 inches of the ceramic and reinforced steel layers of armor that protects military and police vehicles. Another favorite weapon of terrorists is the hand grenade and incendiary weapons like the "molotov cocktail" (a glass bottle of gasoline).

Fear of terrorist use of chemical and biological weapons increased after the 1995 sarin nerve gas attack on a Tokyo subway [9] and the 2001 discovery of anthrax spores mailed in the United States. [10] Chemical weapons contain toxic chemical compounds, like dioxin or nerve gas, while biological weapons use living organisms or toxins like anthrax spores.

History

The earliest example of terrorism are the actions of the Jewish Zealots. Known to the Romans as sicarii or dagger-men, the Zealots engaged in violent attacks on Roman occupation forces and fellow Hebrews who were accused of collaboration with the Romans. The next group to show characteristics of terrorism were the Assassins. The Assassins were a breakaway faction of Shia Islam called Nizari Ismalis who used the tactic of assassination of enemy leaders. The tactics used by the Assassins involved sending a lone man to kill an enemy leader at the sacrifice of his own life, instilling fear in the enemy.

The French government under Robespierre systematically used terrorism during the French Revolution; the word "terrorism" was first used for his Reign of Terror. The agents that enforced the policies of the Reign of Terror were referred to as "terrorists". During Reconstruction after the American Civil War the Ku Klux Klan was formed by defiant Southerners against freed former slaves and supporters of Reconstruction. In the late 19th century small groups of revolutionaries were formed. These anarchists successfully assassinated heads of state from Russia, France, Spain, Italy, and the United States. But their lack of organization and refusal to cooperate with other social movements made anarchism ineffective as a political movement. However, Communism was just beginning as a ideological basis for political terrorism and the 20th century would bring about many new developments in terrorism.

Nationalism intensified around the world during the early 20th century and it became a powerful force in the various peoples of colonial empires. Native peoples from Egypt and Vietnam rebelled against the colonial regimes, using dramatic acts which were described as terrorism. [11] The Black Hand was a group active before World War I that was involved in the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria which was considered an act of terrorism that started the First World War. [12] After World War I terrorism became an official policy in states such as Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin, the leaders of these states, used arrest, torture, imprisonment, and execution to bring fear to the people of the country so they would not question their actions. Though the first example of modern terrorism was Algeria's Font de Liberation Nationale (FLN) which killed random French civilians. In 1956 France executed two Algerian rebels which caused the FLN to kill 49 French civilians in three days, bombing beachside cafes and raising the price of colonialism to levels too expensive for many colonial empires. The FLN's success inspired rebel groups around the world such as Basque and Quebecois separatists, Palestinian and Irish nationalists, and Marxist African and Latin American cabals. Terrorism was common in many nations, even well-developed ones, by the 1960s.

But Western terrorism of the 60s and 70s wasn't nearly as deadly as the violence in the Middle East that was yet to come. Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) committed countless violent acts of terrorism including the massacre of 11 Israeli athletes during the 1972 Munich Olympics. But since the PLO's goals were political, rather than religious, Arafat decided to distance himself from terrorism to prove he could lead a government. As the actions of the PLO ended, Islamic fundamentalism spread throughout the Middle East, spawning groups such as al-Qaeda and Hamas. Hamas, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, and other groups adopted suicide bombing tactics, not just to inflict damage, but for religious motivation. Many Muslims thought that the United States stood for satanic Western values and many terrorists, such as Osama bin Laden, made the United States their primary target. These terrorists thought that destroying the United States would be doing the work of God. Some of the deadliest terrorist attacks on US soil happened in the 1990s, including the 1993 World Trade Center Bombing and the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, when 168 people were killed and another 800 injured. Several other American targets overseas were attacked including military installations in Saudi Arabia in 1996 [13] and U.S. embassies in Kenya in 1998. In response to this attack, the United States attacked several terrorist targets in Afghanistan and Sudan with ship-launched cruise missiles.[14]

But the deadliest terrorist attacks to date were the 9-11 Attacks when al-Qaeda hijacked four American airliners in a suicide mission, crashing two into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon, and the fourth crashing in rural Pennsylvania when the passengers attempted to take control of the plane. The attacks killed nearly 3,000 people. Shortly after these attacks US president George W. Bush declared a global war on terrorism in 2001. After 2001, terrorist attacks continued around the world, most notably the 2004 Madrid, Spain train bombings [15] and bombings in London, United Kingdom on one double-decker bus and three London Underground trains in 2005. [16]

Types of Terrorism

  • Bio Terrorism – the release of germs or viruses, such as anthrax
  • Chemical Terrorism – the release of poisonous chemicals
  • Cyber Terrorism – the electronic attack on critical computer infrastructure
  • Nuclear Terrorism – the use of nuclear materials in a terrorist attack, either a nuclear bomb or a "dirty bomb" (highly radioactive chemicals spread by an ordinary exposive)
  • Eco Terrorism - the use of acts of violence, sabotage, vandalism, property damage and intimidation committed in the name of environmentalism.
  • Religious Terrorism

See also

References

  1. Online Etymology Dictionary - Terrorism
  2. United States Department of Defense, Office of Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint Publication 1-02: Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms ( Washington , DC : United States Department of Defense, 12 April 2001 – As amended through 5 June 2003 ), p. 531. Online at: http://www.dtic.mil/doctrine/jel/new_pubs/jp1_02.pdf
  3. Counterterrorism Threat Assessment and Warning Unit, National Security Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Terrorism in the United States 1999: 30 Years of Terrorism – A Special Retrospective Edition, (Washington, DC: United States Department of Justice, 1999), p. i. Online at http://www.fbi.gov/publications/terror/terror99.pdf
  4. Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism, Patterns of Global Terrorism 2002, US Department of State Publication 11038 ( Washington , DC : State Department, April 2003), p. 13. Online at: http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/20177.pdf This document further states: “For purposes of this definition, the term “noncombatant” is interpreted to include, in addition to civilians, military personnel who at the time of the incident are unarmed and/or not on duty.”
  5. Congressional Record - Senate (September 10, 2002)
  6. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Terrorist Weapons
  7. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Terrorist Weapons
  8. Terrorist Weapons - Firearms
  9. Policastro, Anthony Gordon, Susanna The Use of Technology In Preparing Subway Systems for Chemical/Biological Terrorism. April, 1999 Online at: http://www.terrorisminfo.mipt.org/pdf/Preparing-Subways-Chemical-Biological-Terrorism.pdf
  10. "The Anthrax Letters", Albion Monitor, August 16, 2002 http://www.monitor.net/monitor/0208a/anthrax.html
  11. Greenberg, David Is Terrorism New?. History News Network (October 21, 2001) http://historynewsnetwork.org/articles/article.html?id=289
  12. Edgerton, Keith How Did World War I Begin?. History News Network (October 17, 2001) http://historynewsnetwork.org/articles/article.html?id=273
  13. Chris Hellman, CDI Senior Analyst Victoria Garcia, CDI Research Intern [Chronology of Major Terrorist Attacks Against U.S. Targets (Nov. 16, 2001)
  14. Chris Hellman, CDI Senior Analyst Victoria Garcia, CDI Research Intern Chronology of Major Terrorist Attacks Against U.S. Targets (Nov. 16, 2001)
  15. CNN Madrid Bombings In-Depth Special
  16. BBC 7, July Bombings Overview

Bibliography

  • Conference of Foreign Ministers (2005). Kuala Lumpur Declaration on International Terrorism at [1]
  • Boyle, G. (2002). Theories of Justification and Political Violence: Examples from Four Groups. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).
  • Brynen, R. (1990). "Sanctuary and Survival: The PLO in Lebanon". Westview Press.
  • Committee of Privy Counsellors (2004, July). Review of Intelligence on Weapons of Mass Destruction. United Kingdom House of Lords.
  • Cragin, K. & Daly, S. (2004). The Dynamic Terrorist Threat, An Assessment of Group Motivations and Capabilities in a Changing World. Project Air Force.
  • Crelinsten, R. (2002). Analysing Terrorism and Counter-terrorism: A Communications Model. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).
  • Emerson, S. (1997, August 4). "The terrorist infrastructure". Wall Street Journal.
  • Ganor, B. (2002). Defining Terrorism: Is One Man’s Terrorist Another Man’s Freedom Fighter? Police Practice and Research. 3(4).
  • Hookway, J. (2002). Terrorist Bombings Hit Philippines --- Series of Weekend Explosions Kill 10 People, Highlighting Militants' Threat to Region. Wall Street Journal.
  • Hufbauer, G., Schott, J. & Oegg, B. (2005). Policy Brief 01-11: Using Sanctions to Fight Terrorism at [2]
  • Israeli, R. (2002). A Manual of Islamic Fundamentalist Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(4).
  • Israeli, R. (2002). Western Democracies and Islamic Fundamentalist Violence. Terrorism and Political Violence. 12(4).
  • Lenzer, R. & Vardi, N. (2004). Terror Inc.. Forbes.
  • National Commission on Terrorism (2005). Countering the Changing Threat of International Terrorism at [3]
  • Nedoroscik, J. (2002). Extremist Groups in Egypt. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).
  • Perl, R. (2005). Terrorism, The Media, and the Government: Perspectives, Trends, and Options for Policymakers. CRS Issue Brief at [4]
  • Post, J., Sprinzak, E. & Denny, L. (2003). The Terrorist in Their Own Words: Interviews with 35 Incarcerated Middle Eastern Terrorists. Terrorism and Political Violence. 15(1).
  • Sedgwick, M. (2004). Al-Qaeda and the Nature of Religious Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 16(4).
  • Schmidt, A. & Jongman, A. (1988). Political Terrorism. SWIDOC and Transaction Books.
  • Trimble, D. (2004). "The Lesson of Northern Ireland". Wall Street Journal.
  • Tucker, D. (2001). Chapter Seven: Combating International Terrorism. The Terrorism
  • Threat and U.S. Government Response: Operational and Organizational Factors. USAF Institute for National Security Studies.
  • Weinberg, L., Pedahzur, A. & Hirsch-Hoefler, S. (2004). The Challenges of Conceptualizing Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 16(4).
  • Wentz, L. (2002). Lessons From Kosovo: The KFOR Experience. CCRP.

External Links