Exam 1: Principles of Terrorism and Theories of Terrorism
social disorganization theory application: Banlieues
- terrorism noted within zone of transition - Banlieues: mixed population (various Arab countries) of different immigrants that do not stay permanently; want to achieve certain status and move on - area is extremely poor; high poverty rates - attackers of Paris bombings residents of Banlieues - France has attracted most freedom fighters in the world
trait theory
- "most terrorists are males", Y chromosome - small applications, though has been endorsed as theory of explaining terrorism
"terrere"
- "to frighten" - Latin route - Reign of Terror (1793/French Revolution): 300K arrested, 17K killed, enemies of revolution
maritime terrorism
- 2% of terrorism - less common; easier to plan on land, organizations do not have equipment, does not attract enough media attention - 36 networks engage in maritime terrorism
Europe
- 3,000 terrorists living in Europe/ 20 terror networks - porous borders, open-border policies - greater amount of refugees = more terrorists entering countries - home of organizations committed to War on Terror
Who is targeting cities today?
- Al-Qaeda - Hamas - ISIS
Libya (failed state)
- Arab Springs- began in Tenesha; series of political revolutions in Arab world - Gadhafi eliminated from power; Libya became failed state - newest failed state - ISIS expanding to countries including Libya
drones
- ISIS use of drones to carry explosives to gain intelligence - easily purchased - ISIS Phantom 1- drop explosive over oil facility, leading to economic drawbacks
Urban Areas
- Irish Republican Army (IRA) first to engage in urban terrorism - ETA (Basque Homeland and Freedom) second to engage in urban terrorism
Israel/Palestine
- Israel targeted since 1948 - Israel achieved state, Palestine did not - Israel expanded beyond original borders; Arad-Israeli War (1967)
Afghanistan (failed state)
- Soviet forces invade Afghanistan in 1970s and implement communism - U.S. did not want communism to expand, aids rebel fighters with assets to defeat Soviets - Soviets retreat in 1989; by 1996 Taliban and Osama bin Laden forces came to power - now a place of training grounds for Al-Qaeda forces
strain theory application example: Tamerlan Tsarnaev
- Tsarnaev from central Asia, never able to be issued American citizenship - good boxer, supposed to box in Olympics to represent America; no citizenship, no competition - possible backlash equates Boston Bombing
social media and terrorism
- Twitter; provides information - can also provide false intelligence - citizen journalism
Why target cities?
- ample targets; many things to choose from - mass casualty; helps shed awareness for cause, upsets normalcy of life - create fear; change the way people think/act - media attention; foundation for recruitment, awareness
strain theory application example: ISIS
- attracting people to leave regions to come to ISIS where institutions have failed - offers financial incentives to come: no taxes. stipend, medical care, food, electricity - How to Make Your Journey to Syria
History of terrorism
- dating back to Ancient Rome - collapse of Ottoman Empire; westernization of Christian and Aryan race - American Revolution and Civil War - Japan WWII; first suicide bombing
Benefits of social media
- free; everyone can access - user friendly - gain followers in support of cause - communicate to global audience
What are terrorists targeting?
- iconic; something important to country - economic damage; financial institutions damaged - mass damage/casualty - weapons; nuclear waste, modes of transportation (i.e. planes, trucks, oil)
Iraq
- most terrorism incidents in last year - tops category for suicide bombs - Iraq, Afghanistan, Nigeria, Syria collect 75% of all events
martyrs
- person killed become of religious beliefs - to kill someone because of their beliefs
Somalia (failed state)
- president assassinated in 1969 followed by military coupe and dictator until 1991 - Clan warfare erupted; leader Mohamed Aidid - 1993 U.S. invaded Somalia to overthrow Aidid; operation unsuccessful - Somalia still vulnerable/lone country - Somaliland, Puntland, and Somalia (sub-region): stable regions, experiencing functional government with weak features
piracy
- relationship between pirates and terrorists mutual - coastal access allows for gathering of items needed to perform action
strain theory application example: Hamas
- situated in Palestinian regions - barriers/security walls in place to minimize terrorism activity - blames Israel for situation; common people cannot get by - terrorists (Hamas) provides social comforts: funding, schools, medicines, institutions, protective services - second most wealthy terrorist organization - norms of Hamas will eventually be accepted
Where is terrorism occurring?
1. 106 countries experienced at least 1 terror attack (2/3 countries) 2. North America has fewest terrorism events. 3. South Asia has most terrorism events.
2016 statistics on terrorism
1. 12,000 terrorism incidents in 2016 2. 25k people killed as result of incidents 3. cost to combat in global economy $1.7 trillion
Tactics of terrorism
1. IED 2. suicide bombs 3. beheadings and executions 4. cyber attacks
Waves of terrorism (4)
1. anarchist wave (1880s-1920) 2. anti-colonial wave (1920s-1950s) 3. new left wave (1960s- 1979) 4. religious wave (1979-present)
Why are humans aggressive?
1. challenge to threat 2. social acceptance 3. need for space/resources 4. jealousy
Funding terrorism
1. cheap and sustaining industry; average attack under 10k 2. terrorist organizations wealthy
3 components of terrorism:
1. create destruction 2. ideological belief 3. religious component (established during 1970s)
How terrorist groups make money
1. drug trafficking 2. extortion/kidnapping 3. bank robbery; seizing assets/money from institutions 4. taxes 5. online banking; getting people to support cause/donate 6. counterfeiting; making fake money, flood market with cheap currency 7. selling antiquities on black market; seize artifacts and sell on market 8. natural resources; oil, diamonds, ivory 9. piracy; mutual benefit
purpose of terrorism
1. express grievances/frustrations 2. bring awareness to cause 3. change the normalcy of everyday life 4. create political change
Purpose of terrorism
1. express grievances/struggles 2. bring awareness to their cause 3. change the normalcy of everyday life 4. create political change
concepts of social disorganization theory
1. high poverty 2. high mobility; high migration rates; residents moving in and out of area 3. heterogenous population; mix of different cultures - collective efficacy; social imbalance and complications initiate crime
Ideologies of terrorism (5)
1. left-wing extremism 2. right-wing extremism 3. separatists 4. anti-government 5. single-issue
Why join a terror network?
1. social network; friends and family invite, familial past 2. strong grievances against government 3. deep religious/political beliefs that terror is for greater cause 4. economic pressures to support family/oneself
Terrorism tools
1. staffing; organizations well staffed, each person has role to fulfill 2. arsenal of weapons; explosives, drones, firearms 3. operational space; countries that are lawless, no apprehensions 4. training; facilities, books, manuals 5. YouTube; Hamas' personalized channel 6. intelligence/counterintelligence; large amounts of time to plan attacks, Google Earth, Google Maps 7. modes of communication; chat-rooms, androids
Who are terrorists?
1. young males (18-23); males of this age able to be influenced, lack of family/social support 2. well-educated; attended some college, degrees in engineering, medicine, social sciences (exception: suicide bombers) 3. middle class; not extremely wealthy/not poor 4. local; understand struggles of country the live in; understand the cause
Khalid and Brahim El-Bakraoui
Brussels attacks
wahhabism
Islamic fundamentalism; radical use of jihad
Salah and Ibrahim Abdelslam
Paris attacks
sub-culture theory
a combination of social learning theory, labeling theory, and rational choice theory - used to describe gangs and terrorism; terrorism essentially much more violent gang
right-wing extremism
against the establishment - viewed as hate groups; fear or hatred against those who are different; ethnocentrism - KKK, Neo-Nazis
human behavior
aggression- sub-broken down into 2 categories: - instrumental or expressive
social learning theory
also known as differential association theory - developed by Sutherland; behavior learned in intimate groups - behavior is innate and modeled by following others; learned through the acts of other individuals - behavior must be reinforced - extremism is taught, model behavior (ISIS in-person courses, madrassas)
caliphate
an Islamic state where political and religious leaders are the same; trying to establish an empire
single-issue
anti-technological; trying to fight against technological innovations - anti-abortion, Animal Liberation Front
geography/country size
as countries increase in size, terrorism increases - offers areas to operate/train - strain on government/military - terrorism thrives in large, spaced out countries; lack of control over citizens as opposed to small countries
Akers on social learning theory
behavior is learned in non-social context - YouTube - TV (commercials/shows); Pioneers of Tomorrow (Hamas) - Videogames; ISIS - Books/literature; Mujahedeen Poisons Handbook, Encyclopedia of the Afghan Jihad, Inspire Magazine (samir Khan)
Tamerlan and Dzokhar Tsarnaev
brothers; Boston bombers
Merton on strain theory
builds on Durkheim's classifications; defined anomie: breakdown of social norms - anomie seen in failed states - "goals and means": means are process of achieving goals; legitimate means (money, car, jobs) and illegitimate means (criminal acts, etc.)
fragile states
countries that could fail - have some form of working government institutions, therefore state has some form of money - suitable environment for terrorist - Yemen, Syria, Nigeria, Haiti
social disorganization theory: zone of transition (ZOT)
crime and delinquency 6x-10x higher within zone of transition - 5 zones: 1. central business district 2. transitional zone 3. working class zone 4. residential zone 5. commuter zone - poorest zone is transitional zone; little to no investment, abandoned homes/factories, people moving in and out (high mobility)
theories of terrorism
criminology- the study of criminal behavior - subdivided into biological and ecological studies
Syria
currently ruled by Bashar Al-Assad - last country to endure Arab-Springs - more than 100k people have died in Syrian Civl War
structure of government
democratic states with high civil liberties more prone to terrorism - democratic more willing to change/negotiate with terrorist organizations - new democracies at risk; vulnerability
separatists
desire an independent state - trying to separate from institution - ETA; trying to separate themselves from Spanish and French rule
routine activity theory
developed by Cohen and Felson; 3 components: 1. motivated offender; poliitical ideological beliefs 2. viable target; mass casualty 3. absence of capable guardian; absence of law enforcement - each component must be present to explain theory - countries have started to harden targets; prevent guardians - places blame on victim
strain theory
developed by Emile Durkheim; organic vs. mechanical society - organic- institutional dependent - mechanical- self-dependent; rural setting able to self-sustain society - strain builds on population and institution; leads to institutional failure - inability to provide basic services (water, food, electricity)
labeling theory
developed by Lemert- primary and secondary deviance; deviance not an inherent quality of an act - psychological perspective that society is not accepting of you; society is "labeling" as 'terrorist', 'criminal' - resorting back to old habits
social disorganization theory
developed by Shaw and McKay in 1940s; trying to look at human behavior - argued that it is not abnormal people, it is people living in abnormal conditions that cause crime - not biological, purely where person is being raised
Old terrorism
discriminate bombings - not used to create mass damage, simply targets one institution - targeting institution causing oppression
economic sanctions
economic sanctions- restricting the trade of desired items - sanctions increase motive to attack; more sanctions = more terrorism - income inequality - per-capita income - education
madrassas
educational institutions
left-wing extremism
for the establishment - trying to provide equal distribution of money/resources to all - predominantly in Latin America (FARC)
Adburajok and Khadaffy Janjaloni
founders of Abu Sayaaf in Philippines; both brothers believed in extreme violent behavior
mujahedeen
holy warriors/soldiers of Allah; individuals fighting for the cause
rational choice theory
humans are rational actors; risk and reward/pros and cons basis - cost benefit analysis - events/targets well-planned/executed - understand purpose and motive - well-educated - mentally stable
strain
inability to provide basic services or legitimate opportunities - leads to frustrations amongst people; initiates illegitimate industries - strain.. frustration.. rebellion.. restoration or new power (terrorist organization assumes government position)
jihad
internal struggle/war against non-Muslims
anti-government
lack of/do not believe in the government - Timothy McVeigh; targeted federal government building
nations without states (nation without a state)
nations alone do not have the ability for self government; nations are people driven - groups of people that do not have a country: Kurds, Basque people, Chechnya, Palestinian, Tibetan
kafir/infidels
non-believers
New terrorism
non-discriminate bombings - broad bombings, targeting people rather than institutions - creates mass damage
caliph
political leader of Muslim state
Yemen
poorest country in Middle East - projected to run out of water and oil - AQAP Al-Qaeda branch based in Yemen - attack on USS Cole in port in Yemen
Haiti
poorest country in Western hemisphere - high unemployment rate - government corrupt - access to clean drinking water is poor
fundamentalism
preserving the ideology/beliefs of your state
expressive behavior
purpose is to inflict harm - offensive in nature - terrorists offensive in nature
instrumental behavior
secure or protect something - defensive in nature
electromagnetic pulse weapon (EMP)
sends surge of energy to overload system - useful in shutting down power grid - damages infrastructure/air space
triggering events
sort of event that sparks further terrorist attacks - natural disasters
state enabled terrorism
states allowing terrorism to continue - states not necessarily putting pressure on organizations to discontinue terrorism - state may be pushing counter-terrorism measures - Mali, Mogadishu, Philippines
state sponsored terrorism
states that endorse terrorism - Iran directly funded Hezbollah- Khobar tower Bombing - North Korea and Turkey
state perpetrated terrorism
states that use resources to directly engage in terrorism - worst kind of terrorism - Pan American 103 flight bomb directly funded by IRA
state involved terrorism
states where terrorism is occurring within their borders - terror events include genocides (Armenia, Germany, Iraq, Rwanda, Sudan, Syria - states indirectly involves in terrorism
failed states
states- countries, in terms of NS failed states- countries without governments; government has failed/collapsed, do not have fully functional government - Somalia, Afghanistan, Libya
hard targets
targets relatively secure; harder for terrorists to attack
soft targets
targets with minimal security; areas where one may easily walk in/access
Nigeria
top 5 terrorism events; 2nd country in suicide bombings - religious division between north and south - protected to run out of oil - Boko Haram; sole objective to create Islamic state in Nigeria - MEND (Emancipation for the Niger Delta); trying to establish freedom for people of Nigeria
population variables
total population- as population of location increases, terrorism also increases - population increase creates train on resources/space - refugees allow for more radicalization, lack of political voice, camps ungoverned, strain on resources
terrorism
violent acts intended to upset the normalcy of life (destruction of buildings.infrastructure, or killing of people)
state weakness
weakening institutions (AKA state failure) more prone to terrorism - low risk of capture - incubators of training and operating; no authoritative figures - large terror groups correlated with state failure - no markets/ability to obtain illegal goods - no infrastructure present - no media outlets/communication - no internal competition/businesses
weapon trade
weapons necessary tool for terrorism; positive correlation between weapons and terrorism
South Sudan
worst failed state