Title: International Relations and International Security
1International Relations and International Security
2Overview
- Conceptualising Terrorism
- Definitions
- Terrorism as a Political Act
- The Strategic Rationality of Suicide Terrorism
- Historical Perspectives on Terrorism
- Origins
- Precursors of modern-day terrorism
- Types of Terrorism
- Ideological
- Ethnonationalist
- Religious/fundamentalist
- Single-issue
- Trends in Terrorism
- Policy Responses
3Conceptualising Terrorism
- Definitions of terrorism are fundamentally
political one persons terrorist is another
persons freedom fighter - Focus on actions or intended outcomes How much
are you willing to apply your definition of
terrorism regardless of how you may feel toward
certain political actors and/or their agendas? - Hence, no agreed upon definition, but most
definitions include - The use of violence, fear, intimidation, coercion
- For political purposes (otherwise, criminal)
- Planned, calculated, unpredictable (but NOT
random violence) - Other elements that are more controversial
- The targeting of innocents or civilians
- The use of political violence by non-state actors
4Terrorism as a Political Act
- One (often internally controversial) tactic in an
arsenal of strategies of political movements - Targets are not generally the victims, but other
actors governments, publics, decision makers,
constituencies - Audiences
- External opponents that are to be coerced into
certain actions/non-actions - Internal potential recruits and supporters
- Aim to change the political climate by making a
policy or set of policies more costly Coercion
of opponents without directly engaging them
5Terrorism as a Political Act
- About power
- Instrumental use of terrorism acquisition of
power in order to effect political change - Relies on media coverage and symbolism
- High value of symbolic targets
- Ability to generate a response depends on how
open society is - Weapon of the weak
- Weaker actor can coerce stronger one
- Asymmetric warfare exploiting critical
vulnerabilities of otherwise superior opponent
6The Strategic Rationality of Suicide Terrorism
- Suicide terrorism occurs in coordinated clusters
and with announcements of political aims - Suicide terrorism may be effective with modern
democracies - Relies on media coverage, public opinion, and
normative pressure - Suicide terrorism on the increase over past 20
years due to its effectiveness - Evidence that groups are moderately more
successful in achieving their political aims
after use of suicide terrorism - Suicide terrorism signals a groups level of
commitment to its cause
7Historical Perspectives on Terrorism
- French Revolution
- Reign of Terror (1793-4) policy to
systematically root out counter-revolutionaries
by Robespierres government - Virtue, without which terror is evil terror,
without which virtue is helpless. - Terror is nothing but justice, prompt, severe
and inflexible it is therefore an emanation of
virtue. - State terrorism continues to exist in parallel to
use of terrorism by non-state actors - Nazi, Fascist and Stalinist regimes in Germany,
Italy, Russia - Targeting of innocent civilians by states in war
(Coventry, Hiroshima/Nagasaki, Dresden,
Srebrenica) - State-sponsored death squads, disappearances,
human rights abuse and terrorization of civilian
populations (El Salvador, Sudan, East Timor) - Grey area state sponsorship of terrorism
- Libya (IRA)
- Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia (various Palestinian
groups) - USSR, Cuba (various liberation groups, e.g.,
Sendero Luminoso) - US (various anti-communist groups, e.g., UNITA)
8Historical Perspectives on Terrorism
- Before World War I
- Anarchist movement in Europe and US in late 19th
century/early 20th century - propaganda by deed and strategy to publicize
cause - policy of tyrannicide/assassinating leaders
- 1880s/1890s Armenian and Macedonian national
movements use terrorism against Ottoman rule - 1914 Young Bosnians assassinate Archduke Franz
Ferdinand in Sarajevo, setting in motion chain of
events that led to WWI
9Historical Perspectives on Terrorism
- After World War II
- Anti-colonial and national liberation movements
- Algeria-France
- Cyprus-UK
- Israel-UK
- PLO
- Contemporary nationalist, separatist and autonomy
movements - Northern Ireland/IRA
- Sri Lanka/Tamil Tigers
- Kurdistan/PKK
- Basque Country/ETA
10Types of Terrorism
- Ideological
- Leftist inspiration from communism
(Baader-Meinhof Gang, Red Brigades, Weathermen) - Rightist inspiration from fascism (Neo-Nazi
groups, Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations) - Ethnonationalist
- Inspiration from anti-colonial/self-determination
movements (Tamil Tigers, PLO, IRA) - Religious/fundamentalist
- Inspiration from politicized religion
(Islamism/al-Qaeda, Christian identity/Anti-aborti
on Movement, Jewish Defense League) - Single-issue
- Animal rights (Animal Liberation Front, Win
Animal Rights WAR) - Environmentalist (Earth Liberation Front, Earth
First!)
11Types of Terrorism
Source Terrorism Knowledge Base
12Trends in Terrorism
Source Terrorism Knowledge Base
13Trends in Terrorism
Source Terrorism Knowledge Base
14Trends in Terrorism
Incidents by Target Group (1998-2005)
Source Terrorism Knowledge Base
15Trends in Terrorism
Deaths and Injuries by Target Group (1998-2005)
Source Terrorism Knowledge Base
16Trends in Terrorism
Now al-Qaeda as Movement of Movements
Late-1990s Monolithic Structure of al-Qaeda
- Centrally controlled organization
- Strategic assaults executed by inner core of
jihadist activists
- Nebulous, segmented, and polycentric organization
- Tactically oriented strikes done by affiliated
cells (individuals) and when opportunity arises
Source Rand Corporation/Peter Chalk
17Trends in Terrorism
- al-Qaeda
- Continuing interest in hard targets but increased
focus on soft, civilian-centric venues - Ongoing emphasis on economic attacks
- Continued reliance on suicide strikes
- Desire to use CBRN weapons but little abilityto
execute large-scale conventional attacks - Anti-Globalisation Movement-inspired anarchism
- Radicalization of fringe elements toward
terrorist designs attacks on symbolic government
targets and political leaders - Right-wing/xenophobic militias
- Convergence with leftist strands of
anti-globalisation movement own racist,
anti-Semitic doctrines attacks on symbolic
government targets, political leaders, ethnic
communities - Eco-terrorism
- Increasingly anti-capitalist/anti-globalist
focus attacks on symbolic private sector targets
and personnel
18Policy Responses
- Military and Policing Responses
- Defensive Actions Homeland Security West Bank
Security Fence - Offensive Actions target leadership or state
sponsors of terrorism - Regulatory Responses
- Capacity building in states and international
cooperation (terrorist financing, grey economy
networks regulating charities improving and
harmonizing travel documents, etc.) - Political Responses
- Change in policy (moral hazard problem)
- Public diplomacy war of ideas
- Isolating radicals and mobilizing moderates
- Political channels for dissent and interest
articulation
19Policy Responses
- Potential trade-offs
- Security vs. civil liberties
- Security vs. efficiency (airport security, visa
applications) - Security vs. public diplomacy
- Cost-benefit and risk analysis
- low number of victims compared to other policy
areas (more efficient to promote seatbelt usage) - Fusing policy objectives
- Public health
- Disaster management
20Policy Responses
21Policy Responses
- Safeguard democracy at home
- Homeland security
- Avoid unnecessary trade-offs
- Confront terrorists and their support
infrastructures - Intelligence on leadership and operatives
- Target operatives, leadership and communication
infrastructure that links them - Disrupt financial and material support networks
- Address root causes of terrorism
- Development
- Democracy promotion
- Engagement
22International Relations and International Security