Terrorism is the systematic
use of terror especially as a means of coercion.
There is no internationally agreed definition
of terrorism. Most common definitions of terrorism
include only those acts which are intended to
create fear (terror), are perpetrated for an ideological
goal (as opposed to a lone attack), and deliberately
target or disregard the safety of non-combatants.
Some definitions also include acts of unlawful
violence and war. A common opinion about terrorist
groups, especially after the 'Global War on Terror'
began after 9/11/2001, is that the majority of
terrorist attacks are due to Islamic-extremists
or radical religious groups. The 2001 attack of
the World Trade Center and the hijacking of four
passenger jets are a very well known and a well
documented example of Islamic terrorism in recent
memory.
Terrorism is also a form of unconventional
warfare and psychological warfare. The word is
politically and emotionally charged, and this
greatly compounds the difficulty of providing
a precise definition. One 1988 study by the US
Army found that over 100 definitions of the word
"terrorism" have been used. A person
who practices terrorism is a terrorist.
Terrorism has been used by a
broad array of political organizations in furthering
their objectives; both right-wing and left-wing
political parties, nationalistic, and religious
groups, revolutionaries and ruling governments.
The presence of non-state actors in widespread
armed conflict has created controversy regarding
the application of the laws of war.
An International Round Table
on Constructing Peace, Deconstructing Terror (2004)
hosted by Strategic Foresight Group recommended
that a distinction should be made between terrorism
and acts of terror. While acts of terrorism are
criminal acts as per the United Nations Security
Council Resolution 1373 and domestic jurisprudence
of almost all countries in the world, terrorism
refers to a phenomenon including the actual acts,
the perpetrators of acts of terrorism themselves
and their motives. There is disagreement on definitions
of terrorism. However, there is an intellectual
consensus globally, that acts of terrorism should
not be accepted under any circumstances. This
is reflected in all important conventions including
the United Nations counter terrorism strategy,
the decisions of the Madrid Conference on terrorism,
the Strategic Foresight Group and ALDE Round Tables
at the European Parliament
Origin of term
The word "terrorism"
was first used in reference to the Reign of Terror
during the French Revolution. In many countries,
acts of terrorism are legally distinguished from
criminal acts done for other purposes, and "terrorism"
is defined by statute; see definition of terrorism
for particular definitions. Common principles
among legal definitions of terrorism provide an
emerging consensus as to meaning and also foster
cooperation between law enforcement personnel
in different countries. Among these definitions
there are several that do not recognize the possibility
of legitimate use of violence by civilians against
an invader in an occupied country and would, thus
label all resistance movements as terrorist groups.
Others make a distinction between lawful and unlawful
use of violence. Ultimately, the distinction is
a political judgment. In November 2004, a United
Nations Security Council report described terrorism
as any act "intended to cause death or serious
bodily harm to civilians or non-combatants with
the purpose of intimidating a population or compelling
a government or an international organization
to do or abstain from doing any act." (Note
that this report does not constitute international
law.) U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) defined
terrorism as: “The calculated use of unlawful
violence or threat 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.”
Key criteria
Official definitions determine
counter-terrorism policy and are often developed
to serve it. Most government definitions outline
the following key criteria: target, objective,
motive, perpetrator, and legitimacy or legality
of the act. Terrorism is also often recognizable
by a following statement from the perpetrators.
Violence –
According to Walter Laqueur of the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, "the
only general characteristic of terrorism generally
agreed upon is that terrorism involves violence
and the threat of violence." However, the
criterion of violence alone does not produce a
useful definition, as it includes many acts not
usually considered terrorism: war, riot, organized
crime, or even a simple assault. Property destruction
that does not endanger life is not usually considered
a violent crime, but some have described property
destruction by the Earth Liberation Front and
Animal Liberation Front as violence and terrorism;
see eco-terrorism.
Psychological impact
and fear – The attack was carried out
in such a way as to maximize the severity and
length of the psychological impact. Each act of
terrorism is a “performance,” devised to have
an impact on many large audiences. Terrorists
also attack national symbols to show their power
and to shake the foundation of the country or
society they are opposed to. This may negatively
affect a government's legitimacy, while increasing
the legitimacy of the given terrorist organization
and/or ideology behind a terrorist act.
Perpetrated for a political
goal – Something all terrorist attacks
have in common is their perpetration for a political
purpose. Terrorism is a political tactic, not
unlike letter writing or protesting, that is used
by activists when they believe no other means
will effect the kind of change they desire. The
change is desired so badly that failure is seen
as a worse outcome than the deaths of civilians.
This is often where the interrelationship between
terrorism and religion occurs. When a political
struggle is integrated into the framework of a
religious or "cosmic" struggle, such
as over the control of an ancestral homeland or
holy site such as Israel and Jerusalem, failing
in the political goal (nationalism) becomes equated
with spiritual failure, which, for the highly
committed, is worse than their own death or the
deaths of innocent civilians.
Deliberate targeting
of non-combatants – It is commonly held
that the distinctive nature of terrorism lies
in its intentional and specific selection of civilians
as direct targets. Specifically, the criminal
intent is shown when babies, children, mothers,
and the elderly are murdered, or injured, and
put in harm's way. Much of the time, the victims
of terrorism are targeted not because they are
threats, but because they are specific "symbols,
tools, animals or corrupt beings" that tie
into a specific view of the world that the terrorist
possess. Their suffering accomplishes the terrorists'
goals of instilling fear, getting a message out
to an audience, or otherwise accomplishing their
often radical religious and political ends.
Disguise –
Terrorists almost invariably pretend to be non-combatants,
hide among non-combatants, fight from in the midst
of non-combatants, and when they can, strive to
mislead and provoke the government soldiers into
attacking the wrong people, that the government
may be blamed for it. When an enemy is identifiable
as a combatant, the word terrorism is rarely used.
Unlawfulness or illegitimacy
– Some official (notably government) definitions
of terrorism add a criterion of illegitimacy or
unlawfulness to distinguish between actions authorized
by a government (and thus "lawful")
and those of other actors, including individuals
and small groups. Using this criterion, actions
that would otherwise qualify as terrorism would
not be considered terrorism if they were government
sanctioned. For example, firebombing a city, which
is designed to affect civilian support for a cause,
would not be considered terrorism if it were authorized
by a government. This criterion is inherently
problematic and is not universally accepted, because:
it denies the existence of state terrorism; the
same act may or may not be classed as terrorism
depending on whether its sponsorship is traced
to a "legitimate" government; "legitimacy"
and "lawfulness" are subjective, depending
on the perspective of one government or another;
and it diverges from the historically accepted
meaning and origin of the term. For these reasons
this criterion is not universally accepted. Most
dictionary definitions of the term do not include
this criterion.
Pejorative use
The term "terrorism"
and "terrorist" (someone who engages
in terrorism) carry a strong negative connotation.
These terms are often used as political labels
to condemn violence or threat of violence by certain
actors as immoral, indiscriminate, unjustified
or to condemn an entire segment of a population.
Those labeled "terrorists" rarely identify
themselves as such, and typically use other euphemistic
terms or terms specific to their situation, such
as: separatist, freedom fighter, liberator, revolutionary,
vigilante, militant, paramilitary, guerrilla,
rebel, or any similar-meaning word in other languages
and cultures. Jihadi, mujaheddin, and fedayeen
are similar Arabic words that have entered the
English lexicon.
This is further complicated by
the moral ambiguity that surrounds terrorism.
On the question of whether particular terrorist
acts, such as murder, can be justified as the
lesser evil in a particular circumstance, philosophers
have expressed different views: While, according
to David Rodin, utilitarian philosophers can in
theory conceive of cases in which evil of terrorism
is outweighed by important goods that can be achieved
in no morally less costly way, in practice utilitarians
often universally reject terrorism because it
is very dubious that acts of terrorism achieve
important goods in a utility efficient manner,
or that the "harmful effects of undermining
the convention of non-combatant immunity is thought
to outweigh the goods that may be achieved by
particular acts of terrorism." Among the
non-utilitarian philosophers, Michael Walzer argued
that terrorism is always morally wrong but at
the same time those who engaged in terrorism can
be morally justified in one specific case: when
"a nation or community faces the extreme
threat of complete destruction and the only way
it can preserve itself is by intentionally targeting
non-combatants, then it is morally entitled to
do so."
In his book "Inside Terrorism"
Bruce Hoffman wrote in Chapter One: Defining Terrorism
that
"On one point, at least,
everyone agrees: terrorism is a pejorative term.
It is a word with intrinsically negative connotations
that is generally applied to one's enemies and
opponents, or to those with whom one disagrees
and would otherwise prefer to ignore. 'What is
called terrorism,' Brian Jenkins has written,
`'thus seems to depend on one's point of view.
Use of the term implies a moral judgment; and
if one party can successfully attach the label
terrorist to its opponent, then it has indirectly
persuaded others to adopt its moral viewpoint.'
Hence the decision to call someone or label some
organization `terrorist' becomes almost unavoidably
subjective, depending largely on whether one sympathizes
with or opposes the person/group/cause concerned.
If one identifies with the victim of the violence,
for example, then the act is terrorism. If, however,
one identifies with the perpetrator, the violent
act is regarded in a more sympathetic, if not
positive (or, at the worst, an ambivalent) light;
and it is not terrorism."
The pejorative connotations of
the word can be summed up in the aphorism, "One
man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter."
This is exemplified when a group that uses irregular
military methods is an ally of a State against
a mutual enemy, but later falls out with the State
and starts to use the same methods against its
former ally. During World War II, the Malayan
People’s Anti-Japanese Army was allied with the
British, but during the Malayan Emergency, members
of its successor, the Malayan Races Liberation
Army, were branded terrorists by the British.
More recently, Ronald Reagan and others in the
American administration frequently called the
Afghan Mujahideen freedom fighters during their
war against the Soviet Union, yet twenty years
later when a new generation of Afghan men are
fighting against what they perceive to be a regime
installed by foreign powers, their attacks are
labelled terrorism by George W. Bush. Groups accused
of terrorism usually prefer terms that reflect
legitimate military or ideological action. Leading
terrorism researcher Professor Martin Rudner,
director of the Canadian Centre of Intelligence
and Security Studies at Ottawa's Carleton University,
defines "terrorist acts" as attacks
against civilians for political or other ideological
goals, and goes on to say:
"There is the famous statement:
'One man's terrorist is another man's freedom
fighter.' But that is grossly misleading. It assesses
the validity of the cause when terrorism is an
act. One can have a perfectly beautiful cause
and yet if one commits terrorist acts, it is terrorism
regardless."
Some groups, when involved in
a "liberation" struggle, have been called
terrorists by the Western governments or media.
Later, these same persons, as leaders of the liberated
nations, are called statesmen by similar organizations.
Two examples of this phenomenon are the Nobel
Peace Prize laureates Menachem Begin and Nelson
Mandela.
Sometimes states that are close
allies, for reasons of history, culture and politics,
can disagree over whether members of a certain
organization are terrorists. For example for many
years some branches of the United States government
refused to label members of the Irish Republican
Army (IRA) as terrorists, while it was using methods
against one of the United States' closest allies
(Britain) that Britain branded as terrorist attacks.
This was highlighted by the Quinn v. Robinson
case.
Many times the term "terrorism"
and "extremism" are interchangeably
used. However, there is a significant difference
between the two. Terrorism essentially threat
or act of physical violence. Extremism involves
using non-physical instruments to mobilise minds
to achieve political or ideological ends. For
instance, Al Qaeda is involved in terrorism. The
Iranian revolution of 1979 is a case of extremism.
A global research report An Inclusive World (2007)
asserts that extremism poses a more serious threat
than terrorism in the decades to come.
For these and other reasons,
media outlets wishing to preserve a reputation
for impartiality are extremely careful in their
use of the term.
Definition in international
law
There are several International
conventions on terrorism with somewhat different
definitions. The United Nations sees this lack
of agreement as a serious problem.
Types of terrorism
In the spring of 1975, the Law
Enforcement Assistant Administration in the United
States formed the National Advisory Committee
on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals. One of
the five volumes that the committee was entitled
Disorders and Terrorism, produced by the Task
Force on Disorders and Terrorism under the direction
H.H.A. Cooper, Director of the Task Force staff.
The Task Force classified terrorism into six categories.
Civil Disorders
– A form of collective violence interfering with
the peace, security, and normal functioning of
the community.
Political Terrorism – Violent
criminal behaviour designed primarily to generate
fear in the community, or substantial segment
of it, for political purposes.
Non-Political Terrorism – Terrorism
that is not aimed at political purposes but which
exhibits “conscious design to create and maintain
high degree of fear for coercive purposes, but
the end is individual or collective gain rather
than the achievement of a political objective.”
Quasi-Terrorism – The activities
incidental to the commission of crimes of violence
that are similar in form and method to genuine
terrorism but which nevertheless lack its essential
ingredient. It is not the main purpose of the
quasi-terrorists to induce terror in the immediate
victim as in the case of genuine terrorism, but
the quasi-terrorist uses the modalities and techniques
of the genuine terrorist and produces similar
consequences and reaction. For example, the fleeing
felon who takes hostages is a quasi-terrorist,
whose methods are similar to those of the genuine
terrorist but whose purposes are quite different.
Limited Political Terrorism –
Genuine political terrorism is characterized by
a revolutionary approach; limited political terrorism
refers to “acts of terrorism which are committed
for ideological or political motives but which
are not part of a concerted campaign to capture
control of the State.
Official or State Terrorism –"referring
to nations whose rule is based upon fear and oppression
that reach similar to terrorism or such proportions.”
It may also be referred to as Structural Terrorism
defined broadly as terrorist acts carried out
by governments in pursuit of political objectives,
often as part of their foreign policy.
In an analysis prepared for U.S. Intelligence
four typologies are mentioned.
Nationalist-Separatist
Religious Fundamentalist
New Religious
Social Revolutionary
Politics and terrorism
Terrorism is currently, and
has been historically, an important issue in politics
around the world. Parties on the right of the
political spectrum are usually more security focused
then parties on the left. It is therefore perceived
that terrorist threats or acts are beneficial
to the electoral results of the right wing parties.
Democracy and domestic
terrorism
The relationship between domestic
terrorism and democracy is complex. Such terrorism
is most common in nations with intermediate political
freedom and that the nations with the least terrorism
are the most democratic nations. However, one
study suggests that suicide terrorism may be an
exception to this general rule. Evidence regarding
this particular method of terrorism reveals that
every modern suicide campaign has targeted a democracy-
a state with a considerable degree of political
freedom. The study suggests that concessions awarded
to terrorists during the 1980s and 1990s for suicide
attacks increased their frequency.
Some examples of "terrorism"
in non-democracies include ETA in Spain under
Francisco Franco, the Shining Path in Peru under
Alberto Fujimori, the Kurdistan Workers Party
when Turkey was ruled by military leaders and
the ANC in South Africa. Democracies, such as
the United States, Israel, and the Philippines,
also have experienced domestic terrorism.
While a democratic nation espousing
civil liberties may claim a sense of higher moral
ground than other regimes, an act of terrorism
within such a state may cause a perceived dilemma:
whether to maintain its civil liberties and thus
risk being perceived as ineffective in dealing
with the problem; or alternatively to restrict
its civil liberties and thus risk delegitimizing
its claim of supporting civil liberties. This
dilemma, some social theorists would conclude,
may very well play into the initial plans of the
acting terrorist(s); namely, to delegitimize the
state.
Perpetrators
Acts of terrorism can be carried
out by individuals, groups, or states. According
to some definitions, clandestine or semi-clandestine
state actors may also carry out terrorist acts
outside the framework of a state of war. However,
the most common image of terrorism is that it
is carried out by small and secretive cells, highly
motivated to serve a particular cause and many
of the most deadly operations in recent times,
such as 9/11, the London underground bombing,
and the 2002 Bali bombing were planned and carried
out by a close clique, composed of close friends,
family members and other strong social networks.
These groups benefited from the free flow of information
and efficient Telecommunications to succeed where
others had failed. Over the years, many people
have attempted to come up with a terrorist profile
to attempt to explain these individuals' actions
through their psychology and social circumstances.
Others, like Roderick Hindery, have sought to
discern profiles in the propaganda tactics used
by terrorists.
It has been found that a "terrorist"
will look, dress, and behave like a normal person,
such as a university student, until he or she
executes the assigned mission. Terrorist profiling
based on personality, physical, or sociological
traits would not appear to be particularly useful.
The physical and behavioral description of the
terrorist could describe almost any normal young
person.
State terrorism
The concept of state terrorism
is controversial. Military actions by states during
war are usually not considered terrorism, even
when they involve significant civilian casualties.
The Chairman of the United Nations Counter-Terrorism
Committee has stated that the Committee was conscious
of the 12 international Conventions on the subject,
and none of them referred to State terrorism,
which was not an international legal concept.
If States abused their power, they should be judged
against international conventions dealing with
war crimes, international human rights and international
humanitarian law. Former United Nations Secretary-General
Kofi Annan has said that it is "time to set
aside debates on so-called 'state terrorism'.
The use of force by states is already thoroughly
regulated under international law." However,
he also made clear that, "...regardless of
the differences between governments on the question
of definition of terrorism, what is clear and
what we can all agree on is any deliberate attack
on innocent civilians, regardless of one's cause,
is unacceptable and fits into the definition of
terrorism."
State terrorism has been used
to refer to terrorist acts by governmental agents
or forces. This involve the use of state resources
employed by a state's foreign policies, such as
the using its military to directly perform acts
of considered to be state terrorism. Professor
of Political Science, Michael Stohl cites the
examples that include Germany’s bombing of London
and the U.S. atomic destruction of Hiroshima during
World War II. He argues that “the use of terror
tactics is common in international relations and
the state has been and remains a more likely employer
of terrorism within the international system than
insurgents." They also cite the First strike
option as an example of the "terror of coercive
dipolomacy" as a form of this, which holds
the world "hostage,' with the implied threat
of using nuclear weapons in "crisis management."
They argue that the institutionalized form of
terrorism has occurred as a result of changes
that took place following World War ll. In this
analysis, state terrorism exhibited as a form
of foreign policy was shaped by the presence and
use of weapons of mass destruction, and that the
legitimizing of such violent behavior led to an
increasingly accepted form of this state behavior.
(Michael Stohl, “The Superpowers and International
Terror” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting
of the International Studies Association, Atlanta,
March 27-April 1, 1984;"Terrible beyond Endurance?
The Foreign Policy of State Terrorism." 1988;The
State as Terrorist: The Dynamics of Governmental
Violence and Repression, 1984 P49).
State terrorism is has also been
used to describe peace time actions by governmental
agents or forces, such as the bombing of Pan Am
Flight 103 flight. The concept is also used to
describe political repressions by governments
against their own civilian population with the
purpose to incite fear. For example, taking and
executing civilian hostages or extrjuducial elimination
campaigns are commonly considered "terror"
or terrorism, for example during Red Terror or
Great Terror. Such actions are often also described
as democide which has been argued to be equivalent
to state terrorism. Empirical studies on this
have found that democracies have little democide
Tactics
Terrorism is a form of asymmetric
warfare, and is more common when direct conventional
warfare either cannot be (due to differentials
in available forces) or is not being used to resolve
the underlying conflict.
The context in which terrorist
tactics are used is often a large-scale, unresolved
political conflict. The type of conflict varies
widely; historical examples include:
Secession of a territory to
form a new sovereign state
Dominance of territory or resources by various
ethnic groups
Imposition of a particular form of government
Economic deprivation of a population
Opposition to a domestic government or occupying
army
Terrorist attacks are often
targeted to maximize fear and publicity. They
usually use explosives or poison, but there is
also concern about terrorist attacks using weapons
of mass destruction. Terrorist organizations usually
methodically plan attacks in advance, and may
train participants, plant "undercover"
agents, and raise money from supporters or through
organized crime. Communication may occur through
modern telecommunications, or through old-fashioned
methods such as couriers.
Responses to terrorism
Responses to terrorism are broad
in scope. They can include re-alignments of the
political spectrum and reassessments of fundamental
values. The term counter-terrorism has a narrower
connotation, implying that it is directed at terrorist
actors.
Specific types of responses include:
Targeted laws, criminal procedures,
deportations, and enhanced police powers
Target hardening, such as locking doors or adding
traffic barriers
Pre-emptive or reactive military action
Increased intelligence and surveillance activities
Pre-emptive humanitarian activities
More permissive interrogation and detention policies
Official acceptance of torture as a valid tool
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