10 Things to Know About
Terrorism
Mark LeVine
AlterNet
October 4, 2001
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=11647
1. What is terrorism?
Terrorism is hard to define. In its
broadest sense terrorism can be thought of as the use or threatened use of
force against civilians designed to bring about political or social
change. Moreover, while we think of terrorism as being both a political
and irrational act (especially suicide terrorism), terrorism can also be
thought of as a rational act conducted specifically because of the impact
-- fear, confusion, submission -- it will have.
Given the U.S. government's pledge to wage
a war against terrorism, it is important to look at its definitions.
According to both the Department of Defense (DOD) and the FBI, terrorism
is "the unlawful use of force or 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."
The DOD definition adds that a goal of terrorism can be "inculcating
fear" (thus the psychological dimension), while the State Department
is more elaborate, specifying that terrorism may include the use of
biological, chemical or nuclear devices as well as the act of
"assassination."
The latter would suggest that assassinating
bin Laden would be a terrorist act, should the U.S. government's attempt
to eliminate him lead to wide-scale violence and coercion in Afghanistan;
the former that the U.S., through its use of nuclear weapons to end World
War II and chemical weapons in Vietnam, has already engaged in terrorist
activities.
This is the grand conundrum of defining
terrorism; it is very difficult to separate it from acts of war, just or
unjust. We all have heard the saying, "One man's terrorist is another
man's freedom fighter." And indeed, Osama bin Laden and his comrades
were hailed as freedom fighters in the 1980s by the American government at
a time when politicians like Dick Cheney considered Nelson Mandela a
terrorist.
Further, the UN definition of terrorism
states that "all war crimes will be considered acts of
terrorism," in which case most every government in the world
(especially the major military powers, India, Pakistan, Israel, the major
Muslim states, most Latin American governments) has committed terrorism,
though few have ever faced justice or even opprobrium for doing so.
2. What is the history of
terrorism?
The first recorded use of
"terrorism" and "terrorist" was in 1795, relating to
the Reign of Terror instituted by the French government. The use of
"terrorist" to signify anti-government activities was recorded
in 1866 referring to Ireland, and in 1883 referring to Russia.
Throughout history humans have terrorized
their neighbors to generate fear and compel changes in behavior. At the
dawn of China's imperial age, T'ai Kung, the first Chinese general and
progenitor of strategic thought, described the "spreading of civil
offensives" to sow dissension, demoralize the populace and
incapacitate the government.
In the modern period, all regular armies
have recruited "irregulars" to do their dirty work: Cossacks,
hunters, Hussars, all were used to draw a civilized veil over the actions
of their sponsors as they raped and pillaged in towns and across
countrysides. (Ironically, Ivan the First had to subdue the very Cossacks
he used to pacify the Muslim regions of Russia; today the U.S. is forced
to subdue the Muslims we used to pacify Russia.)
Today terrorism must be viewed within the
context of the modern nation-state. Indeed, it was the rise of a
bureaucratic state, which could not be destroyed by the death of one
leader that forced terrorists to widen their scope of targets in order to
create a public atmosphere of anxiety and undermine confidence in
government. This reality is at the heart of the terrorism of the last 100
years, from anarchists' assassinations to hijackings and suicide bombings.
3. Who and where are
terrorists today?
According to the U.S. State Department,
there are at least 45 terrorist groups outside the United States.
Currently, at least seven "rogue states" -- Iraq, Iran, Syria,
Libya, Sudan, North Korea, Cuba and now Afghanistan -- are accused by the
U.S. of "supporting terrorism."
But the label of who is and isn't a
terrorist is still fuzzy. Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat was a terrorist,
and now isn't. Jerry Adams of Ireland's Sinn Fein and Nelson Mandela of
South Africa were terrorists, now they're statesmen. At least three
Israeli Prime Ministers were either self-avowed terrorists or could be
legitimately accused of engaging in terrorist activities. Our newest ally
in the war against terror, Russian President Vladimir Putin, continues to
lead a dirty war in Chechnya that could be described as terrorist in the
ferocity of its atrocities against civilians.
Thirty years ago Noam Chomsky reminded us
that two thirds of the national-security states using torture and
terrorism were clients of the United States. Moreover, almost every Middle
Eastern government, including our strongest allies, engage in
state-terrorism against its people or its neighbors. To cite just one
small example, Pakistan, our major security partner in Central Asia, is
about to execute Dr. Yunis Shaikh, a leading humanist and peace activist
[go to http://free-drshaikh.org
for more information and to help free him] on
concocted charges of "blasphemy," precisely in order to stifle
any dissent against the government's policies. And yet President Bush has
ignored this human rights abomination, waved American sanctions imposed
after the detonation of the Pakistani bomb and is putting together new aid
packages for the Pakistan government.
4. From where does the
trail of Osama bin Laden, and terrorists more generally, originate?
We are only beginning to understand the
incredibly complex logistical, financial and personnel network behind the
likes of Osama bin Laden. This complexity suggests the deeper we dig, the
wider the circle grows. What has long been clear is that bin Laden's main
support comes from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, both major U.S. allies and
pivots in our Middle Eastern and Central Asian security system.
The U.S. remains the lead arms supplier and
patron of the Saudi regime, and was very close to Pakistan during the
Afghan war, while the dictator Zia ul-Haq (one of the world's more
ruthless) was in power. The CIA was a main funnel of over $3 billion in
funds to the Afghan resistance, which became the core of the current
terrorist network. The Soviet Union was likewise a supporter of the
previous generation of Arab terrorists, such as Abu Nidal, the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine and other Palestinian groups.
The U.S. alliance with the Saudi royal
family goes back to the 1940s, when the Roosevelt administration pledged
to ensure the survival of the royal family as long as it ensured a supply
of cheap oil. Thus was born the petrodollar-arms cycle, in which dollars
sent to the Saudis in the form of oil revenues were recycled back to the
U.S. through arms purchases. To understand the finances of terrorism it is
important to keep in mind this petrodollar cycle, which keeps the vast
majority of oil revenue in the hands of corrupt regimes and thus out of
reach of most citizens of the region.
If we turn to the question of who is
harboring and financing terrorists, once again the West and its allies in
the Middle East and global south are implicated. For its part, the U.S. is
involved, through foreign aid and weapons sales totaling hundreds of
billions of dollars during and since the Cold War (from just 1993 to 1997,
the U.S. government sold, approved or gave away $190 billion in weapons to
virtually every nation on earth). The same has been true for the Soviet
Union, though on a smaller scale. Whether in Latin America, Africa, Asia
or the Middle East, regimes that have engaged in acts of terror could not
have survived without the support of the two (and now one) superpower.
But blame cannot just be laid with
superpowers. If bin Laden could not survive without the Taliban, the
Taliban could not exist were it not for Pakistan's patronage and support
of hundreds of "madrasas," or religious schools, that train
millions of young men to do little else other than hate and kill in the
name of God. In fact, the major financiers of the bin Laden and the
Taliban have been Saudi intelligence and eminent Saudis such as the
Governor of Riyadh and the Grand Mufti of the country. Moreover, bin Laden
has been linked to Saddam Hussein by researcher Laurie Mylroie in her
recent book Study of Revenge.
Yet it is not only princes and sheiks who
are to blame: average people through small donations have helped to
sustain myriad terrorist organizations, whether its Arabs giving to
duel-function groups like the Muslim Brotherhood or the Hamas that provide
social services and support violent activities, or poor Pakistanis who
still manage to give a rupee or two to add to bin Laden's millions.
5. What do Judaism,
Christianity and Islam have to say about terrorism?
The concept of terrorism arose centuries
after the classic texts of the three religions were handed down to
humanity, so it is difficult to discuss the concept of terrorism in this
sense. However, all three Abrahamic faiths allow war and set limits on
when, how and against whom it can be waged
If we start with Judaism, certainly the
Bible, in the Ten Commandments, admonishes "thou shalt not
kill," which clearly would prescribe any sort of violence against
non-combatants. Indeed, the Prophet Hosea warned Israel that her sins
would cause "the tumult of war [to] arise among your people, and all
your fortresses shall be destroyed… mothers dashed in pieces with their
children." Yet the Bible also describes the Lord as "a man of
war" who orders Israel to "go and smite Am'alek, and utterly
destroy all that they have; do not spare them, but kill both man and
woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass." In one
sense, this is not an act of terrorism, since the goal isn't political.
Yet in the larger context of teaching a lesson to Israel's enemies by
making Am'alek an example, it clearly meets the criteria. Moreover, if we
look at the Egyptians' killing of all the first born of the Hebrews, and
God's doing likewise as the tenth plague preceding the Exodus, both could
be described as "terroristic" because they involved the killing
of innocent non-combatants for political ends -- i.e., the changing of
attitudes and policies on each side.
Of course, by definition God cannot engage
in an act of evil, yet when Job questioned God, He did not answer
directly, but instead replied, "Where were you when I laid the
earth's foundation? Tell me, if you understand... Would you discredit my
justice? Would you condemn me to justify yourself?" Even the prophets
could not answer the question of evil and innocent suffering in a world
created in God's image.
If we turn to Christianity, the example of
Jesus's doctrine of blessing peacemakers and turning the other cheek has
influenced pacifist movements to this day. Instead of an "eye for an
eye," Jesus said, "Love your enemies and pray for those who
persecute you." Yet he did not challenge the Roman soldiers to give
up their profession—which certainly included "terrorism" as a
matter of course—while Paul in Romans exclaims that "He beareth not
the sword in vain: for he is God's minister, an avenger to execute wrath
upon him that doth evil."
As Christian theology developed with
Augustine and later Aquinas, the doctrine of "just war" helped
define the rules and limits of war, and are now being used by the Vatican
to indicate its support for the war against terrorism. Augustine
explained, "We do not seek peace in order to be at war, but we go to
war that we may have peace. Be peaceful, therefore, in warring, so that
you may vanquish those whom you war against, and bring them to the
prosperity of peace."
Such solipsisms are easily distorted to
justify any sort of barbarity, even as the just war doctrine prohibited
"private individuals" (like Osama bin Laden) from
"summoning together the people," to quote Aquinas. Yet
Augustine's definition of a just war as "one that avenges wrongs,
when a nation or state has to be punished, for refusing to make amends for
the wrongs inflicted by its subjects, or to restore what it has seized
unjustly" sounds just like the justifications offered by terrorists
everywhere for their extreme actions. And indeed, the commonly accepted
contemporary criteria for a just war -- having a "just case,"
being under "proper authority," fighting for justice and not
reasons of self-interest or aggrandizement -- can all be claimed by
terrorists as well as "just" states. Finally, we should remember
that the Crusades or Inquisition, which were executed largely through
terroristic means, were authorized directly by the Church.
Arriving at Islam, the concept of Jihad, or
"struggle," which in recent decades has been at the theological
core of justifying Muslim acts of terrorism, traditionally meant the
spiritual and moral struggle of an individual Muslim against his or her
evil inclinations. The "other" jihad, that is, war against other
human beings, is in classical Muslim sources a "defensive" war
with limits that cannot be "transgressed," even when fighting
those who "try to force you to adopt another religion or to leave
your home." In fact, the conservative Ayatollah Ali Khamenei of Iran
just called the fight against terrorism a "holy war" -- that is,
a jihad.
Yet while the Koran has plenty of verses
that talk about peace, even with Muhammad's enemies, there are also verses
that advocate war and violence. Indeed, God exclaims in Sura 8:12, "I
will instill terror into the hearts of the Unbelievers: smite ye above
their necks and smite all their finger-tips off them." Moreover,
while the Koran prohibits suicide, and the Prophet clearly prohibited
killing noncombatants, women and children, destroying property or even
poisoning wells (the precursor to chemical warfare), there are hadith
(prophetic sayings) that list jihad as among the highest religious duties,
higher even than performing the pilgrimage to Mecca, which is one of the
five pillars of the faith. And although it is not always clear which jihad
is being spoken of, the fact that the Prophet is quoted as saying that
booty will be the reward for "Jihad for God," one can assume
that the martial sense of jihad is intended much of the time.
Ultimately, the theological roots of
terrorism or war in general would seem to be moot, for religion has long
been used to justify politics and warfare. Nonetheless, this has not
stopped the terrorists who attacked the World Trade Center and Pentagon
from considering themselves to be good Muslims, nor the Jews who settle
the West Bank or uproot Palestinian homes from considering themselves to
be good Jews. Arguing with them about the "true" nature of their
religion is a waste of time. They might indeed by "good"
Christians, Muslims or Jews, but are in the end bad human beings.
6. What are the most common
acts of terrorism?
Since 1968, when the United States
government began keeping such statistics, more than 7,000 terrorist
bombings have occurred worldwide. The State Department currently lists 30
"designated foreign terrorist organizations" and another 14 as
"other terrorist organizations" [for a full list, see this
report ]
According to the State Department, the
number of terrorist acts has hovered between 300 and 500 per year during
the 1980-1999 period. Perhaps surprisingly, about two thirds of all acts
of terrorism are against business, numbering five-fold more than attacks
on diplomatic, military and government personnel or property, or
civilians. Moreover, while the Middle East dominates media coverage of
terrorism, in fact Latin America, followed by Western Europe, suffered the
most attacks in 1999 (96 and 30 respectively out of a total of 169), with
bombings the most popular method of attack, followed by firebombing,
kidnapping, arson, and hijacking.
But the State Department numbers are
misleading, because an incident is classified as international terrorism
only if it involves the citizens or territory of more than one country;
thus terrorism within countries not harming foreign nationals is not
counted. A more accurate accounting comes from Pinkerton Security's Annual
Risk Assessment, which show an average of almost 5,000 incidents per year
during the last decade, with terrorism confined to one country. Yet even
these numbers don't account for terrorist actions by governments. Indeed,
while hijackings and suicide bombings get the most attention, the fact is
that the most common act of terror is torture committed by states against
their own citizens, as Amnesty International reports that tens of
thousands of cases of torture and extra-judicial killings occur each year
(and complains that more often than not, the U.S. "shares the
blame" for them).
7. What are the most
renowned acts of terrorism?
The attacks of September 11 may become the
most famous acts of terror ever perpetrated, and are linked to other
terrorist attacks apparently sponsored by bin Laden on U.S. embassies in
Africa and the USS Cole in Yemen. Yet many of the most famous terrorist
attacks of the modern era were attacks on individual political leaders.
The turn of the 20h century, like today, was rife with terrorism, as
evidenced by anarchist killings of a French and Spanish Prime Ministers (Sadi
Carnot and Antonio Canovas), Empress Elizabeth of Austria, Italy's King
Umberto I, and the assassination of the Arch Duke Ferdinand on June 28,
1914, which sparked the first World War. Anarchist mail bombs in the U.S.
started the Palmer Raids in 1920, one of the worst violations of civil
liberties by U.S. government in U.S. history.
In the post-war period, acts of terrorism
have included the Munich Olympic massacre in 1972, plane hijackings and
airport shootings throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the 1993 World Trade
Center attack, the bombing of the Federal Building in Oklahoma City and
the murderous acts of the Ted Kazinsky, the "Unibomber," the
latter three of which signaled the arrival of large-scale terrorism as
permanent fact of life on American soil.
Finally, the Tokyo sarin subway attack by
Aum Shinrikyo in 1995 has augured a new era in terrorism, now crowned by
the September 11 attacks. Yet while we focus on high-tech problems and
responses, these attacks reveal that the new dynamics of terror combine
devoted militants, often well-educated, using relatively primitive means
to commit acts of extreme and indiscriminate violence.
8. Does terrorism work; and
if so, how can it be stopped?
Terrorism by the IRA, the PLO and other
Palestinian groups, Sikhs, Tamils, Basques, Philippino Muslims -- none of
these has succeeded in altering the policies of the affected states.
Neither has state-sponsored terror by Rogue states led to the defeat of an
enemy. However, if the goal of terrorist acts by these groups is to
prevent peace and reconciliation, terrorism has worked.
The variables determining the success or
failure of acts of terror are thus indeterminate and complex. Perhaps the
most we can say is that terror can help the stronger party in a conflict
win more quickly and with less loss of life on its side (the rationale
underlying the Nagasaki and Hiroshima bombings or the massacre of
Palestinians in 1948). Yet as perpetrators of terrorism move away from
single issue causes (freeing Northern Ireland or Palestine) and become
more apocalyptic, hoping like Osama bin Laden to start war on a global
scale, the standard for measuring success changes, as the worst possible
scenario on all sides is exactly what is hoped for.
In such a situation it becomes all the more
important for citizens and leaders in the West and its allies in the
Muslim world -- in fact, all people everywhere -- to understand the role
their policies, and indeed the whole world system as presently and
unequally structured, plays in the fostering and sustaining this new
generation of terrorists. Yet the scope and horror of the violence
inflicted by the new terrorism makes such introspection all but
impossible. In this sense, Osama bin Laden and his comrades around the
world might achieve their goals through their very destruction.
9. Does violence stop
terrorism?
All we have to do is look at both sides of
the Israeli-Palestinian divide to understand that violence, including
terrorism by a state or occupied population, rarely stops further violence
as long as the grievances motivating them are not addressed.
In that context, 15 years ago Connor Cruise
O'Brien warned that "the free, or capitalist, world provides highly
favorable conditions for terrorist recruitment and activity." Why?
Because the number of frustrated were increasing along with their
awareness of how good life was for the few and better off. Ten years
later, Bill Clinton made the "war on terrorism" a lynchpin of
his reelection campaign just as the neo-liberal paradigm of globalization
he championed achieved unparalleled power in international policy-making.
It should come as no surprise, then, that in pushing for Star Wars funds,
the U.S. Space Command's pamphlet "Vision for 2020" argues that
"the globalization of the world economy" will widen the gap
between haves and the have-nots, and thus the U.S. government has a
mission to "dominate the space dimension of military operations"
in order to protect the U.S. from the rest of the world.
In the context of a world were conservative
estimates declare half of humanity to be living on less than $2 a day,
asking the CIA or other military agencies to fight terrorism is probably
not going to work, as the "blowback" from policies that produce
ever-widening gaps between rich and poor between and within countries will
likely be at least as bad as the blowback produced by the CIA overthrow of
the Mossadeq Government and installation of the Shah of Iran in 1953.
Even on an operational level, as former CIA
officer Reuel Marc Gerecht wrote only months before the 9/11 attacks, it
has proved impossible to place even the best trained Muslim operative into
the tight-knit structures that constituted contemporary terrorist
organizations. As for America's technological supremacy, President Clinton
sent dozens of cruise missiles after bin Laden, none of which hit their
target.
From a broader perspective, the ever
growing world trade in arms, which fuels violence at all levels, has
multiplied opportunities for anyone with a grievance to spread terror
anywhere, including here. Yet our entire military-industrial system is
based on the large-scale trade in arms, which helps to fund our own
defense budget. Finally, since much of the rest of the world, especially
citizens of the Global South, harbor deep resentments against the United
States for its "cultural invasion" as much as for its economic
and foreign policies, using unilateral acts of large-scale violence in the
war against terrorism will only feed that hatred.
10. What are the
alternatives to our current policies on terrorism?
There have been two phases of the U.S.
approach to fighting terrorism. The first, lasting until September 11, has
been a "defensive approach" (also called
"antiterrorism") that sought to protect against terrorism
through increased security measures in airports and cooperation among
intelligence services. With the 9/11 attacks, the U.S. has officially
changed its policy to a more "offensive approach" (called
"counter-terrorism") that focuses on the "sources of
violence," that is the terrorists themselves and those who harbor
them. A host of bills have also been proposed, including the
"Combating Terrorism Act," the "Anti-Terrorism Act"
and the "Public Safety and Cyber Security Enhancement Act," all
of which civil libertarians argue go well beyond any necessary response to
terrorism.
However, in terms of international law,
there is a clear recourse in situations of this sort: going through the UN
Security Council, the only body under international law that can authorize
military action, or even authorize the equivalent of an international
arrest warrant. Moreover, there are at least nine international
multilateral terrorism conventions that the U.S. can use as the basis for
a legal war against terrorism through international law, rather than
unilateral war.
There is also the International Criminal
Court in the Hague, which has the moral and legal basis to enter this
process, be it state of non-state actors who are ultimately accused of
engaging in and/or supporting terrorism. This would clearly constrain the
range and freedom of action of the U.S. government in prosecuting its war
on terrorism, but that is precisely the point of the UN -- to limit the
use of violence by member nations to secure international peace and
security.
In the last analysis, breaking the cycle of
terrorism, and the incredible violence that fuels it, requires a radical
rethinking of a world system that forces half of its members to live in
abject poverty and destroys ever more of the earth that sustains it. As
the philosopher Slavoj Zizek wrote in the wake of 9/11, "the only way
to ensure that it will not happen HERE again is to prevent it going on
ANYWHERE ELSE." Only then will the war on terrorism see
victory.
Mark LeVine is an assistant professor of
history at University of California, Irvine and a contributing editor to
Tikkun magazine.
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