
First, the groups accomplished their forty-two policy objectives only 7 percent of the time. Second, although the groups achieved certain types of policy objectives more than others, the key variable for terrorist success was a tactical one: target selection. Groups whose attacks on civilian targets outnumbered attacks on military targets systematically failed to achieve their policy objectives, regardless of their nature.Why?— Why Terrorism Does Not Work, by Max Abrahms, MIT Press Journals, 2006
Because civilians, when attacked, conclude that the goal of the terrorists is terror, and oddly civilians don’t like being killed and maimed. In other words, attacking civilian targets distracts from the real goals of the terrorists, which tend to be more about expelling foreign occupiers.
A really clever terrorist can play this to his advantage, because if the targets conclude that the terrorists are out to kill everybody, the reaction can be wildly disproportionate and poorly aimed. Which produces blowback against the counter-attacking government. Most terrorists aren’t that clever, and most governments aren’t that stupid. Well, I’m pretty sure about the first part of that, at least.
So what should people and governments do in the face of terrorism?
If target countries systematically resist rewarding terrorism, the international community is armed with a powerful message to deter groups from terrorizing civilians.Don’t launch poorly aimed invasions. Don’t arrest and torture people. Don’t give up liberties in exchange for illusory security. Work on fixing the bad things about your society, strengthen the good things, and don’t give in.
Or, to put it another way, laugh in the face of terrorism.
Happy Fourth of July.
-jsq
Your conclusions are fine … but there is another reason, more core, why it is best to deal with terrorism in a low key fashion.
Terrorism is primarily used by groups to prove their own worth, for recruiting and support purposes. That is, they are primarily interested in convincing their *local* population that they are doing something, are capable of doing something, and can really make a difference. A “plausible promise” etc etc, “proving” that when the time comes, support is worthwhile.
Hence, targetting civilian v. military targets matters far less than the effect on the media, and how the local community sees the attack. Currently the Brits and Americans continue to play to the terrorists’ tune by playing every minor attack up as much as they can.
One could almost wonder whether the two opponents are fighing separate enemies … because their actions seem more designed to help their nominal enemies than harm them.
“We may laugh. And we should.”
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/story/0,,2126235,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=networkfront