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Political terrorism is a form of terrorism (a tactic of violence that targets civilians) used to influence socio-political events so that gains occur that might not have otherwise happened by peaceful means. There are obviously different types of psychic terror, from religious and magical terror, to fear of the natural world. Criminal terrorists — those who use blackmail, intimidation, and the promotion of fear — are differentiated from political terrorists because the former seek to enrich themselves, whereas for the latter, it is a sine qua non that terrorist action is motivated and justified by the furtherance of an objective cause.
Terrorist action and thought
Terrorist action is indiscriminate, arbitrary and unpredictable; the rules of
war are disregarded; and non-
combatants,
men,
women, and
children, are all seen as potential
victims. An action is considered to be terrorist when its
psychological influences are out of proportion with its physical consequences. Terrorism is not a single random act, nor it is number of interspersed
violent acts; it is a sustained, organized policy of terror that one group of some sort wages on another, usually more powerful, group. Terrorists either reject current
moral values as the ideology of the
status quo or they hold an amoral outlook, and they claim with their actions that
humanitarian considerations can be sacrificed along with human life for a greater political end. They are the ultimate
Nietzscheans: might is right, and terror is the weapon of the expedient. In the early stage of an insurgency, a terrorist group may use
symbolic violence (such as
assassinations) to advertise their cause and alert a population to their threat, but, by necessity, will become more clandestine.
Justifications of terrorism
The term
counter-terrorism is misleading because it implies that a state is not the initiator of
violence. The terrorist justifies his action with three arguments that have a moral context.
- The just-
vengeance doctrine: Often represented as "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth", the terrorist group believes that the original group deserves to experience actions similar to what they may have previously dealt.
- The theory of lesser evil: It may be claimed that a violent action can deter an even more violent consequence. The dropping of
atomic bombs is one example of this argument in practice, although nobody who has studied the issue, and who is not blinded by
jingoism, would accept this.
- The
ultima ratio argument: The terrorist group may justify its actions by stating that no other means, such as the
media or effective political representation, were available to them to express their discontent. The state uses similar arguments to legitimize its violence, and this is why it should always be borne in mind when thinking about terrorism. It is a didactic concept, used by victors, the powerful and the dominant, to isolate its opponents and vilify them as official enemies. It is often said that terrorism is the weapon of the weak, but if terrorism means using overt, destructive
violence to create a climate of
fear and to subjugate people to powerful abstractions, then it is obviously the weapon of the strong as well.
Types of political terrorism
Revolutionary terrorism
Revolutionary terrorism is the use of systemic, terroristic violence to bring about a
revolution. Most groups that succeed in doing so use similar tactics to maintain their rule. Revolutionary terrorism has its origins in
reactionary ideas, and in the purported cycles in human
societies that rotate the allocation of power. Only with the
French Revolution — the
Reign of Terror — in the
19th century did the idea evolve of a revolution that could bring about
democratic will, participation and collective
freedoms, that could carve
utopia out of earth, rise to prominence. This type of terrorism is associated with groups, however small they may be, which use
ideological and revolutionary constructs to change the existing
social order in someway.
Examples
=
Against indigenous autocracy
=
In contrast to the
18th century and before, when uprising were inspired and justified by
religions, the
French Revolution provided a
secular justification for agitation on behalf of the public will, and also for visiting vengeance upon the aristocrats of the old ecclesiastic, absolute ancient regime. In the early stages of the insurrection, violence was sporadic and mostly an expression of class
revolt. Violence was turned into a policy of terror with the
Jacobins, who during the
Reign of Terror (
1773–
1774), passed the
Law of Suspects that enabled the Revolutionary Tribunal to arrest anybody for the flimsiest of reasons, and to carry out grotesque mass
executions (including gunnings and
drownings). The innovations of this movement were the suppression of potential enemies — not only individuals, but whole groups — and the use of ideological terror. It is anti-clericalism, which was manifested as the confiscation of
churches,
execution of
priests and destruction of once sacred religious insignia, marked a changed from individual
assassinations to the use of whole scale terrorist
violence to carry out the collective will with an attendant ideological rationalization. The violence of the revolutionaries was waged against
tradition and the autocratic state.
Between
1800 and
1860, there were more than 500
peasant uprisings in
Russia against Tsarist regimes. The revolutionaries of the
19th century were pitted against probably the most oppressive
autocracy of the century and, following two armed revolutions (
March 8–
12 and
October 24–
25), overthrew the imperial order and established the
USSR in
1917.
=
Against foreign rule
=
Numerous groups seeking
independence from
British colonial rule most visibly occupy this classification. It should be noted that most
nationalists achieved
independence through political pressure and negotiation from a Britain that, in the post war period, realized that it was expedient for its inevitable transition from imperial ruler to be as inconspicuous as possible. These countries were freed from
military domination only to be
straitjacketed by economical and ideological neo-
imperialism. The recourse to terrorism was the exception and not the rule for anti-colonialist struggle.
The Mau Mau Rebellion of
Kenya, a secret society that embarked upon a course of violence in the early
1950s, against
Europeans who held land that the
Mau Mau claimed rightfully belonged to them. The British announced a
state of emergency, sent in
troops to suppress the threat of a
liberationist movement developing, and
imprisoned more than 80,000
Kĩkũyũ — the main ethnic group in
Kenya — in detention camps which have been unfavourably compared to those of
Nazi Germany. Violence was also used against British rule in
Ireland,
Palestine,
Malaya,
Cyprus,
Aden, and elsewhere.
=
Against totalitarian states
=
A
totalitarian state is one which not only outlaws what it forbids, but which tries to
control the minds of its subjects, and to strike
fear into their hearts with the use of
secret police. In this context, it should be differentiated from a
dictatorship or a
tyranny. The success of an attempt to indoctrinate the public mind with the story of a particular
regime explains the isolation that the internal dissident faces in a totalitarian nation, and also the ferocity with which the individuals of an invaded country will, at first, resist their invader. The infamous failed bomb plot of
July 1944 against
Hitler is one example of terroristic violence pitted against totalitarianism, others abound.
Sub-revolutionary terrorism
Sub-revolutionary terrorism is violence that is motivated by political and social concerns other than the ouster of a
government, such as for
land reforms, for desired
legislation, or simply in vengeance for governmental intervention into a particular way of life. Its origins lie in feuding groups who took the
law into their own hands to defend their
resources, and in
assassinations and sultanism (the wiping out of political rivals). In contrast to revolutionary terrorists, the motives of the sub-revolutionary actor are often blurred, so that it difficult to say whether he assassinates for authentic political reasons or because he is a deranged
psychopath. This form of terrorism is highly unpredictable and even more dangerous than revolutionary terrorism because it is not retrained within any determinable ideological paradigm.
Examples
The
Zealots were a
1st century Jewish group who refused to acknowledge the legitimacy of the
Roman leader
Judea, which they felt, was akin to repudiating the authority of god. The most extreme Zealots, the
Sicarii (dagger men), carried out assassinations of Romans and moderate Jews.
The word
assassination derives from the
Muslim sect, the
Assassins, who were probably the first
organized group to use violence for a cause it considered righteous, and who belonged to the larger, dissident
Shiite Ismaili sect. Some scholars claim that the word
assassin itself derives from the
Syrian "hashishi", which, of course, refers to
narcotics, the Assassins being almost certainly
addicts. They believed that their salvation lied in killing the unrighteous
Sunni Muslims, and developed
guerrilla tactics, such as a code of secrecy, raiding, and the dissemination of their beliefs among
peasants, that struck fear into townspeople and made them the first, prototypical terrorist organization.
=
Against liberal democracy
=
The
liberal democracy is a recent (
19th century) system that allows greater scope for political opposition than the autocracies and tyrannies which it developed from; the latter being the historical method for organizing any large social system. Yet it has not been immune from terrorism, and its inherent features —
freedom of the press,
freedom of association,
freedom of expression, etc. — allow terroristic organization, recruitment, and operations to be mounted with greater ease than ever before.
Anarchists are, of course, opposed to all forms of governance and see liberal democracy as a mask for the manipulation and oppression of the masses by the
bourgeois order. A number of anarchists who believed that violence in the name of the cause — or "propaganda of the deed" — was legitimate, such as Brousse in
France and Malatesta in
Italy, who supported assassination attempts. Ravachol of
France, who choose to live in poverty, held that property was immoral and that criminal acts, such as robbery and forgery, furthered the anarchic cause. He
murdered an aged miser, Jacques Brunel, and used the 15,000
Francs he stole from him to help the families of anarchists who had been sentenced for resisting
arrest. He also blew up the homes of the
prosecutors who had handed out the punitive sentences, and when sentenced to
death himself for the murder of the old man shouted "Vive l'anarchie!" ("Live anarchy!"). Other examples abound in
France in the years
1892–
1894, and considering the repression of anarchic practice and the blackening of its thought that followed, all that they indicate is the futility and the counter-productiveness of trying to create a new social order with
explosives. Although it is erroneous to associate
anarchism with violence, many groups claming to be anarchic, such as the
United Kingdom's
Angry Brigade in the
1970s, declared that revolutionary violence was a crucial tactic in any social struggle and subsequently developed, expertise in explosives. So did the following two groups:
- The
West German Red Army Faction (the Baader-Meinhoff Gang) who
robbed banks,
kidnapped political leaders, assassinated business men, and raided
U.S military stations. They also co-operated with
Palestinian terrorists, and were implicated in the notorious execution of
Israeli
athletes competing in the
Munich games.
- The
Italian Red Brigades: They are known for murdering the former Italian Prime Minster
Aldo Moro.
The Tupamaros of
Uruguay derived their moniker from
Tupac Amaru, an
Incan who staged an agrarian rebellion in
1780, later executed for doing so. The Tupamaros launched an urban, guerrilla campaign with the aim of bringing about a redistribution of
wealth and land. They also kidnapped
Uruguayan leaders and foreign
diplomats but avoided harming them because they had the intention of provoking the powers-that-be into harsh, violent repression that would turn the population against them and in favour of the Tupamaros'
revolt. They raided
police stations and
telephone exchanges, robbed banks, expropriated
weapons, and established their own mobile
transmitter to counter their exclusion from the
media. The government waged an internal war on the Tupamaros, and by
1972, 3,000 members of the organization were in
prison (and 300 had been assassinated) and the group thus lacked the ideological sophistication and resources to continue as a serious threat. In
1985, after most of its leaders had been released, the Tupamaros became a legitimate,
democratic political party.
Harvard educated
Theodore Kaczynski (the
Unabomber), a quirky former
mathematics professor who became a hermit, planted and mailed sixteen homemade bombs between
1978 and
1995, mostly targeting university professors. He opposed all
scientific progress,
industrialization, and
technology, believing that human suffering is the outcome of not living under the conditions with which we evolved, and he outlined his views in a 35,000 worded
manifesto that the
Washington Times published. This document, entitled
Industrial Society and Its Future[http://www.panix.com/~clays/Una/], has been dismissed as a rehash of the counter-cultural thought of the
1960s and praised for its lucid intelligence in equal measure. Kaczynski was sentenced to four
life terms in prison, plus thirty years, in
1998.
Repressive terrorism
Repressive terrorism is the use of systematic, centralized violence to suppress, put down, and restrain certain groups, such as
dissidents, or even an entire population. It is considered always unpredictable and arbitrary.
Secret police, state agents, and informers support the tyrannical rule, whose harsh methods, such as the use of
torture,
liquidation, and purges, strikes fear into a population.
Examples
The
Nazis who used mass terror in combination with electoral
propaganda are an obvious example that warrant no further comment. Along with
Mussolini's regime, the Nazis funded the
Croatian fascist Ustashi organization, and the
Rumanian Iron Guard, both of which held ultra-
right wing nationalist philosophies. With the Ustashi, for example, this included massacring large numbers of
Serbs and others, and establishing several
concentration camps.
Determining political terrorism
There is no adequate scientific or objective understanding of political terrorism. Although it is thought to be the tool of small movements, who lack any power base, and is most successful when waged against an indigenous oppressor, this thinking is too general. There are three main ways of conceptualizing terrorism.
- Frustration-
aggression relative
deprivation theory: The motivator for civil conflict is the awareness of a discrepancy between what one group (or individual) has and what is the general baseline of the collective. Rising expectations may overtake capabilities, or capabilities of bringing about a change may remain static while expectations are raised. Conflict often arises from the reluctance — or inability — of leaders to fulfil the demands of insubordinate groups, especially when that group is organized and armed with an ideology that sanctions violence as a means to an end.
- A focus on the terrorist:
Existential satisfaction that a person gains from serving a cause when he lacks belief in anything but his power to destroy is another conceptualization. This idea can be found in the plays of
Jean-Paul Sartre and
Albert Camus, and risks portraying the terrorists as a romantic outsider, as a man who uses his own will, actions and freedom, to resolve the tension he feels from living in a fundamentally philistine society. The flipside of this is, of course, seeing the terrorist as a
sociopath who is responsible for his actions and must live with their consequences.
- The notion of internal war: Terrorism is the first stage of a conflict that will develop into full-scale
guerrilla operations. The idea here is that terrorism is part of the fabric of dynamic social progression.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "political terrorism".
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