The 5 Myths of Terrorism, Including That It Works
 From Scientific American.
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http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=five-myths-of-terrorism-including-that-it-works

Why terror doesn't work

By Michael Shermer
Monday, August 19, 2013

Because terrorism educes such strong emotions, it has led to at least five
myths. The first began in September 2001, when President George W. Bush
announced that •  ‚“we will rid the world of the evildoers•  ‚´ and that
they hate us for our •  ‚“our freedoms.•  ‚´ This sentiment embodies what
Florida State University psychologist Roy F. Baumeister calls •  ‚“the
myth of pure evil,•  ‚´ which holds that perpetrators commit pointless
violence for no rational reason.

This idea is busted through the scientific study of aggression, of which
psychologists have identified four types that are employed toward a
purposeful end (from the perpetrators' perspective): instrumental
violence, such as plunder, conquest and the elimination of rivals;
revenge, such as vendettas against adversaries or self-help justice;
dominance and recognition, such as competition for status and women,
particularly among young males; and ideology, such as religious beliefs or
utopian creeds. Terrorists are motivated by a mixture of all four.

In a study of 52 cases of Islamist extremists who have targeted the U.S.
for terrorism, for example, Ohio State University political scientist John
Mueller concluded that their motives are often instrumental and
revenge-oriented, a •  ‚“boiling outrage at U.S. foreign policy•  ‚·the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, in particular, and the country's support for
Israel in the Palestinian conflict.•  ‚´ Ideology in the form of religion
•  ‚“was a part of the consideration for most,•  ‚´ Mueller suggests, • 
‚“but not because they wished to spread Sharia law or to establish
caliphates (few of the culprits would be able to spell either word).
Rather they wanted to protect their co-religionists against what was
commonly seen to be a concentrated war on them in the Middle East by the
U.S. government.•  ‚´

As for dominance and recognition, University of Michigan anthropologist
Scott Atran has demonstrated that suicide bombers (and their families) are
showered with status and honor in this life and the promise of women in
the next and that most •  ‚“belong to loose, homegrown networks of family
and friends who die not just for a cause but for each other.•  ‚´ Most
terrorists are in their late teens or early 20s and •  ‚“are especially
prone to movements that promise a meaningful cause, camaraderie, adventure
and glory,•  ‚´ he adds.

Busting a second fallacy•  ‚·that terrorists are part of a vast global
network of top-down centrally controlled conspiracies against the West• 
‚·Atran shows that it is •  ‚“a decentralized, self-organizing and
constantly evolving complex of social networks.•  ‚´ A third flawed notion
is that terrorists are diabolical geniuses, as when the 9/11 Commission
report described them as •  ‚“sophisticated, patient, disciplined, and
lethal.•  ‚´ But according to Johns Hopkins University political scientist
Max Abrahms, after the decapitation of the leadership of the top extremist
organizations, •  ‚“terrorists targeting the American homeland have been
neither sophisticated nor masterminds, but incompetent fools.•  ‚´

Examples abound: the 2001 airplane shoe bomber Richard Reid was unable to
ignite the fuse because it was wet from rain; the 2009 underwear bomber
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab succeeded only in torching his junk; the 2010
Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad managed merely to burn the inside of
his Nissan Pathfinder; and the 2012 model airplane bomber Rezwan Ferdaus
purchased faux C-4 explosives from fbi agents. Most recently, the 2013
Boston Marathon bombers appear to have been equipped with only one gun and
had no exit strategy beyond hijacking a car low on gas that Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev used to run over his brother, Tamerlan, followed by a failed
suicide attempt inside a land-based boat.

A fourth fiction is that terrorism is deadly. Compared with the annual
average of 13,700 homicides, however, deaths from terrorism are
statistically invisible, with a total of 33 in the U.S. since 9/11.

Finally, a fifth figment about terrorism is that it works. In an analysis
of 457 terrorist campaigns since 1968, George Mason University political
scientist Audrey Cronin found that not one extremist group conquered a
state and that a full 94 percent failed to gain even one of their
strategic goals. Her 2009 book is entitled How Terrorism Ends (Princeton
University Press). It ends swiftly (groups survive eight years on average)
and badly (the death of its leaders).

We must be vigilant always, of course, but these myths point to the
inexorable conclusion that terrorism is nothing like what its perpetrators
wish it were.







[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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