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Chapter Twelve: Ideological Terrorism

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Title: Chapter Twelve: Ideological Terrorism


1
Chapter TwelveIdeological Terrorism
2
The Status of Ideological Terrorism
3
The Status of Ideological Terrorism
  • Ideological terrorism vs. single-issue terrorism
  • Ideological terrorism refers to small groups who
    terrorize for the purpose of imposing their
    political ideals on others
  • Single-issue terrorists embrace a single cause
    such as antiglobalism, animal rights, ecology,
    abortion, or anarchism
  • Ideological terrorism developed from theories of
    revolution and was closely tied to models of
    guerilla warfare

4
The Status of Ideological Terrorism
  • The effect of religious violence on ideological
    terrorism
  • Most of the groups lost sponsors when the Soviet
    Union collapsed
  • Right-wing groups modified their politics with
    tailored-made religions, especially in the United
    States
  • As death and violence increased with the advent
    of religious terrorism, many ideologues renounced
    violence
  • The nations that continued to support terrorism
    did so under the new rules of the game
  • They either endorsed religion or let the issue
    driving violence become a surrogate religion
    expressed in absolutist terms

5
The Status of Ideological Terrorism
  • Surrogate religion
  • The group replaces religious behavior with an
    ideology that has the power of religion
  • When violence is internalized, that is, focused
    on its own members, the group can become a
    religious cult
  • If the group targets victims in the outside
    world, it frequently behaves like a religious
    terrorist organization

6
The Status of Ideological Terrorism
  • State-sponsored terrorism
  • State-sponsored terrorism is terrorism supported
    by a nation-state
  • Ideology is related to state-sponsored terrorism,
    but ideological terrorism has been transformed
    since the fall of the Soviet Union
  • The ideology that supports terrorism tends to
    come from the passion surrounding an issue, not
    state sponsorship
  • State sponsorship may occur on the fringes, but a
    single ideology drives the violence

7
Ideology and Marighellas Urban Model
8
Ideology and Marighellas Urban Model
  • Urban guerilla and urban terrorism
  • Ideologically driven terrorism emerged from
    anticolonialism
  • The model for such terrorism was based on the
    idea of the urban guerilla and urban terrorism.
    These ideas were initially championed by Frantz
    Fannon

9
Ideology and Marighellas Urban Model
  • Frantz Fannon
  • In the Wretched of the Earth, Fannon writes that
    Western powers have dehumanized non-Western
    people by destroying their cultures and replacing
    them with Western values
  • The masses end up suffering a perpetual identity
    crisis To succeed, they are forced to deny their
    heritage. Fanon argues that the natives can
    follow only one course of action revolution
  • He claimed decolonization was destined to be a
    violent process because it involved replacing one
    group of powerful people with another group
    achieving freedom was inherently violent

10
Ideology and Marighellas Urban Model
  • Frantz Fannon
  • Fanon advocated rural guerrilla warfare as the
    primary method of revolution
  • Terrorism had a specific purpose to terrorize
    Westerners and their followers into submission
  • Urban terror was to create mayhem, and all
    terrorism was to be excessively brutal to
    communicate fear. Fanons guerrilla model thus
    uses terrorism as a strategy and deviates from
    typical guerrillas who try to build a military
    force

11
Ideology and Marighellas Urban Model
  • Carlos Marighella and the Marighella model
  • For the Liberation of Brazil and The Minimanual
    of the Urban Guerrilla, Marighella designed and
    presented practical guides for terrorism
  • Marighella wanted to move violence from the
    countryside to the city and designed a method for
    organizing a campaign of terror that has been
    used by groups ranging across the political
    spectrum
  • The Japanese Red Army
  • The Freemen of Montana
  • The basis of revolution was violence
  • All violence could be urban-based and controlled
    by a small group of urban guerillas

12
Ideology and Marighellas Urban Model
  • Robert Moss synopsis of Marighellas writings
  • Urban terrorism was to begin with two distinct
    phases, one designed to bring about actual
    violence, and the other designed to give that
    violence meaning
  • The terror campaign was to be accompanied by a
    psychological offensive, that is, a mass movement
    of revolutionary sympathizers, to provide
    peripheral support for terrorists
  • A campaign of revolutionary terrorism in an urban
    setting could be used to destabilize government
    power Governmental repression was the goal of
    terrorism at this stage
  • Marighella believed that the public supported
    government policies because they did not
    recognize the repressive nature of the state. A
    terrorist campaign would force the government to
    reveal that repressive nature, thereby alienating
    the public

13
Ideology and Marighellas Urban Model
  • The firing team
  • The purpose of the urban guerrilla is to shoot.
    The job of the firing team, Marighellas basic
    unit, is to kill
  • The firing team is composed of four to five
    terrorists. Several firing teams are needed to
    construct a terrorist organization, but the team
    can exist on its own
  • The firing team is the basic weapon of the urban
    guerilla

14
Ideology and Marighellas Urban Model
  • The Marighella model and terrorism
  • This model of urban terrorism and revolution
    would be an excellent theory for revolutionaries
    if it were functional
  • It does not work it does not topple governments
  • Most ideological terrorist groups have followed
    the path of Marighella. They cannot become strong
    enough to create a new order, but they can
    terrorize a community or country

15
The Demise of Left-Wing Ideology in Europe
16
The Demise of Left-Wing Ideology in Europe
  • Raymond Corrado and Rebecca Evans
  • The ideological terrorists of the 1960s, on both
    the left and the right, were expressing their
    frustration with the social structures imposed by
    a modern industrial society
  • The fundamental difference between ideological
    and nationalist terrorists can be found in their
    goals. Ideological terrorists in Europe reject
    the economic and social structure of industrial
    capitalism they want a new order
  • Nationalists, on the other hand, frequently
    embrace capitalism and fight for ethnic
    self-determination. They desire economic
    opportunity within the context of a strong
    national identity. Nationalism stays, ideology
    does not

17
The Demise of Left-Wing Ideology in Europe
  • Raymond Corrado and Rebecca Evans
  • Corrado and Evans conclude, the popularity of
    nationalistic and left-wing terrorism was
    changing
  • As pluralistic governments worked to relieve
    frustration, the attractiveness of terrorism
    waned, and terrorists lost their support base.
    Corrado and Evans assumed that terrorist violence
    would fade away, only reappearing in a few
    sporadic incidents

18
The Demise of Left-Wing Ideology in Europe
  • Three key events that changed the political
    destiny and the world
  • The Berlin Wall came down, leading to the
    reunification of Germany
  • To the south, new nations emerging from the
    former Yugoslavia took up arms and resumed a
    centuries-old struggle
  • The Soviet Union dissolved, along with the
    authoritarian rule of the Communist Party in the
    republics of the former Soviet Union and Eastern
    Europe

19
The Demise of Left-Wing Ideology in Europe
  • Pluchinsky and supraindigenous terrorism
  • By the term supraindigenous terrorism, Pluchinsky
    meant that local terrorist activities would
    extend beyond local boundaries Each time a
    government brings one variety of terrorism into
    check, a new strain appears
  • As the structure of Europe and the world changed
    from 1989 to 1992, European terrorism also
    changed
  • Ideological terrorism swung from the left to
    right, changing its structure as it moved

20
The Demise of Left-Wing Ideology in Europe
  • Stephen Segaller
  • Segaller believes that the European leftists were
    seeking unity out of weakness, not strength
  • Modern European terrorism emerged in the 1960s as
    an extreme reflection of left-wing activism
  • By 1970, most left-wing groups and the resurgent
    nationalist groups modeled themselves after the
    Marighella model
  • In 1985, the left-wing movement faced its
    weakness and tried to form a confederation to
    gain momentum
  • The left-wing coalition was an effort to pool
    dwindling resources and support

21
The Demise of Left-Wing Ideology in Europe
  • The Red Brigades
  • The organization of the Red Brigades was unique
    in European terrorism
  • They came closer to matching the Marighella model
    than did any other group in Europe
  • The Red Brigades had a variety of urban centers.
    Each unit became a fairly autonomous organization
    within its own area

22
The Demise of Left-Wing Ideology in Europe
  • The current state of left-wing terrorism in
    Europe
  • The ideological basis for left-wing terrorism in
    Europe is out of vogue
  • Only three groups remained active in the 1990s
  • Dev Sol in Turkey
  • GRAPO in Spain
  • 17N in Greece
  • The ideological basis for left-wing terrorism has
    been eliminated
  • Single-issue terrorism is in its infancy in
    Europe
  • The bigger threat comes from international
    Jihadists, cultlike groups, and new strains
    replacing the old

23
Iraq Insurgency Guerillas or Terrorists,
Ethnic or Ideological?
24
Iraq Insurgency Guerillas or Terrorists, Ethnic
or Ideological?
  • Objectives for the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq
  • The United States sought to enforce a mandate
    from the United Nations to end the production and
    possession of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq
  • The United States wanted to end the reign of
    Saddam Hussein and implement a democratically
    elected government
  • The stated purpose was to end collusion between
    Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda
  • After the major offensive, the campaign of
    violence against the United States and its allies
    was horrendous
  • Democratic elections took place in Iraq in
    January of 2005, but the Iraq insurgency continued

25
Iraq Insurgency Guerillas or Terrorists, Ethnic
or Ideological?
  • Three main insurgent groups
  • Displaced Baathists who were part of Sadddam
    Husseins regime
  • Many Baathists believe they can reclaim power.
    The see themselves engaged in a guerilla campaign
  • Iraqis who want the United States to leave their
    country
  • Sunni militants
  • Militant Shiites
  • Iraqi Criminals

26
Iraq Insurgency Guerillas or Terrorists, Ethnic
or Ideological?
  • Jihadists who have come to Iraq to fight the
    United States
  • Some flock from surrounding areas to fight as
    guerillas
  • Some are terrorists within an al Qaeda\-style
    umbrella
  • They are behind many of the murderous kidnappings
    and suicide bombings
  • The three insurgent groups do not share a common
    vision for the future of Iraq and they are
    frequently at odds with each other

27
Iraq Insurgency Guerillas or Terrorists, Ethnic
or Ideological?
  • The culture factor
  • An old Arab folk saying illustrates the
    overriding importance of family ties in Arab
    culture and the response to the stranger I
    and my brothers against my cousins I and my
    cousins against the stranger
  • When such cultural aspects combine with the
    various ideologies motivating insurgent groups,
    it is possible to see that a major portion of the
    insurrection does not involve terrorism
  • Many of the actions against Americans and their
    allies do not involve terrorism
  • If the United States is to end major combat
    operations in Iraq, it will need to implement a
    strategy that addresses the major issues that
    insurgents and terrorist groups use to justify
    violence
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