http://www.aei.org/publications/filter.all,pubID.24647/pub_detail.asp
Political Strategies to Counterterrorism
 
Terrorism is a growing threat. The September 11, 2001 attack on the World
Trade Center and subsequent attacks on Madrid's Atocha train station and the
London underground signaled that 21st century terrorism was not a problem
that could be localized to the Middle East and South Asia. As the terror
threat grows and groups like Al-Qaeda and Hezbollah demonstrate worldwide
reach, democracies fumble not only for an effective political strategy to
combat terrorism, but also for a definition. In order to protect pet
interests or excuse specific groups, diplomats and officials complicate what
should be a simple definition. Whether in Berlin or Beirut, the definition
should be the same: Terrorism is the deliberate targeting of civilians for
political gain. Any nuance or justification of the targeting of civilians
for political gain merely undercuts efforts to eradicate terrorism. 

To combat terrorism effectively, political leaders and diplomats should look
not at the terrorists' goals, but rather at their success. After all,
terrorism is only a tactic. Adversaries commit terrorist acts when they win
more than they lose. Some commit terrorism for publicity, others for ransom,
and still others for concession. The key to defeat of terrorism is not
through diplomacy, but rather through strategies more forceful and less
compromising. Terrorism will only cease to be a useful tactic only when its
costs become too great for terrorists and their sponsors to bear.

Is Terrorism Ever Legitimate?

Terrorism should never be legitimate. While European politicians, conflict
resolution specialists, and some journalists counsel diplomats to address
root causes, any group utilizing terror, regardless of their goal, makes
their cause illegitimate. The greatest handicap to defeating terrorism today
is the assumption that addressing root causes will mitigate the problem.
Many seek to twist counter-terror efforts to their own pet cause. Some, for
example, say poverty breeds terrorism. This is false. Mali, one of the
world's poorest nations is, according to Freedom House, the most democratic
Muslim country. It does not produce terrorists.

Nor does lack of opportunity cause terrorism. Most of the September 11, 2001
hijackers were well-educated. Many were engineers. Many suicide bombers
likewise have received high school and, in some cases, even university
education. Indeed, a twenty-first century Modest Proposal might interpret
data collected about perpetrators of suicide bombings to suggest that
stymieing rather than creating educational opportunities could better
inhibit recruitment of terrorists. 

A third root cause cited by diplomats and scholars is the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The lack of a final status peace accord, the
argument goes, is what causes terror. This too is disingenuous. Terrorism
has spiked every time negotiators appear on the brink of Arab-Israeli peace.
It was during a declared Palestinian truce, for example, that terrorists
sought to import 50 tons of Iranian weaponry, a shipment only stopped when
the Israeli navy intercepted the Karine-A. Likewise, Usama Bin Laden started
planning the September 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon just before the Camp David II summit, at a time of great optimism
in the peace process.

Discussion of root causes can blur the immorality of terrorism and actually
encourage the act. No where was this more evident than when, on April 15,
2002, France, Belgium and four other European Union members endorsed a UN
Human Rights Commission resolution condoning "all available means, including
armed struggle" to establish a Palestinian state.[1] While publicly
declaring their opposition to terrorism, six EU members joined the 57-nation
Organization of Islamic Conference to legitimize suicide bombing, at least
in certain circumstances.

Political adversaries take advantage of the Western obsession with root
causes. Terror sponsors extend an olive branch on one hand, but seek to
advance their own goals by terrorist proxy on the other. In the midst of
Arab-Israeli negotiations in 1993, the Syrian government encouraged
Hezbollah to attack Israeli forces in Southern Lebanon.[2] While Iranian
president Muhammad Khatami won plaudits in Western capitals for his talk of
civilization dialogue, for example, his government continued to fund proxy
groups like Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah which worked to advance the Islamic
Republic's desire to export revolution and undermine the Middle East peace
process.

Legitimizing Terror

Too often Western powers try to make negotiating partners out of dictators
and terrorists. Seldom does this curb terrorism. Prior to the September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks, senior State Department official Robin Rafael, for
example, counseled the U.S. government to accommodate the Taliban.[3]
Diplomatic promises are as ephemeral as terrorists' sincerity. The Taliban
embraced engagement to entrench. The Palestinian Authority embraced
engagement to rearm. Meanwhile, the Taliban's regime facilitated al-Qaeda
and Palestinian Authority leader Yasir Arafat equipped his proxy militias
with far more lethal weapons, explosives, and missiles.

The refusal of Arafat to acknowledge agreements made by his negotiators
further showed the fallacy of embracing dictators and terror sponsors. The
Palestinian Authority made no secret of its willingness to win concession
through terror. While Western powers trained the Palestinian police to keep
order and prevent terrorism, Palestinian Police Commander Ghazi Jabali told
the Palestinian Authority's official newspaper, "The Palestinian police will
be leading, together with all other noble sons of the Palestinian people
when the hour of confrontation arrives.."[4] On the month anniversary of the
collapse of Camp David II, Palestinian Authority Justice Minister Freih Abu
Middein, demanding further Israeli concessions, declared, "Violence is near
and the Palestinian people are willing to sacrifice even 5,000
casualties."[5]

Some in the international community risk replicating the mistake with
outreach to Hamas. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan's decision to
receive a senior Hamas delegation prior to that group's renunciation of
terrorism legitimatized both Hamas and its tactics. Indeed, the Kurdistan
Workers Party [PKK], as vicious in its targeting of civilians as Hamas,
seized upon the precedent established by Erdoðan. "Is it not blood that is
shed in the fighting between the Turkish army and the Kurdistan freedom
movement, just like the Palestinian-Israeli conflict?" asked senior PKK
commander Murat Karayilan.[6]

Erdoðan's decision has both undercut both the Turkish government's own fight
against terrorism as well as Ankara's diplomatic leverage should officials
in Athens, Nicosia, or other European capitals seek to engage the PKK. He
not only legitimized terrorists as negotiating partners, but reaffirmed that
the path to political recognition was through the murder of civilians.

The U.S.-led Coalition's willingness to negotiate with terrorists in Iraq
has likewise backfired. Between April 6 and April 30, 2004, U.S. Marines
surrounded the hotbed town of Fallujah. European officials and human rights
groups condemned the U.S. siege. Facing growing international pressure, U.S.
forces compromised: They empowered insurgent leaders into a Fallujah
Brigade. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell explained, "We want peace in
Fallujah, not war in Fallujah. And we won't have to take this to a military
climax." Islamists interpreted events differently. Minaret-mounted
loudspeakers lauded "victory over the Americans." Rather than bring peace,
the decision to compromise sparked an upsurge in violence. The Jihadists
learned that violence brings concession. While there were five car bombings
during the siege, in the same period following its lifting, there were 30.
For the car bombers of Fallujah, the gains of their terror far outweighed
its cost.

A Western desire for compromise can also backfire for the simple reason
that, while Western officials see their intercession as central to almost
every conflict, terrorists do not. At times a groups' decision to engage in
terror is due as much to local power politics as outside grievance. During
the Second Intifada, groups such as Force-17 and Tanzim took the lead in
launching attacks against Israeli targets. The reason was not enhanced
grievance relative to other terror groups, but rather a desire for local
legitimacy. While the first Intifada raged, Yassir Arafat's Palestine
Liberation Organization remained in Tunisian exile. Many West Bank and Gaza
Palestinians subsequently resented Arafat's henchmen as illegitimate
interlopers imposed on them by outside powers. Arafat used the second
Intifada to win local legitimacy through a contest to draw Israeli blood.[7]

A similar dynamic is at work with Hamas now. Hamas rose to popularity in the
Gaza Strip and the West Bank as a result of its terror attacks. While some
diplomats may also point to its Saudi-subsidized social service network, the
fact remains that non-governmental organizations which operated similar
programs did not win populist support because of their failure to bomb
buses. Hamas terrorism was meant not only to kill Israelis, but also to
bolster its own popularity vis-à-vis its rivals. The movement craved
publicity, and it received it. It is loathe to lose its populist card. 

Rewarding Violence

Further undercutting the fight against terrorism has been Western officials'
desire for a peaceful solution regardless of provocation. Even Jerusalem's
no-nonsense approach to terrorism has frayed in the face of equivocation and
compromise.[8] Any solution short of a violent response to terrorism is akin
to rewarding it. 

Rewarding violence always backfires. On May 25, 2000, the day after Israel
withdrew from southern Lebanon, Shaikh Hassan Nasrallah, the
secretary-general of Hezbollah declared, "The road to Palestine and freedom
is the road of the resistance and the intifada!"[9] While European and U.S.
officials hoped and predicted that withdrawal would curb violence on the
south Lebanon-Israeli border, the reality was far different. Hezbollah
refused to accept the UN ruling that Israel was in full compliance with UN
Security Council Resolution 425 and, instead, simply added new demands.[10] 

More importantly, the precipitous withdrawal demonstrated that Western
democracies were weak and would concede to violence. Two months after
Israel' pullback, Arafat turned down Israel's offer of a Palestinian state
with its capital in Jerusalem, on 97 percent of the West Bank and Gaza and
three percent of Israel proper and launched a war designed to strike not
only in the West Bank and Gaza, but also in Israel. And so was born the
second Intifada. The impact of the Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon
went beyond Israel and its neighbors, though. The willingness of a Western
democracy to make concessions to improvised explosive devices and mortar
attacks has subsequently inspired terrorists in Iraq, Turkey, and India.

Unfortunately, the West has not learned its lesson. While Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon argued that Israel's unilateral disengagement was a
move for peace, various Palestinian and terrorist groups portrayed Israel's
withdrawal as a victory. Former Palestinian Authority security chief
Mohammed Dahlan explained, "Hizbullah turned Israel's retreat from southern
Lebanon into victory. The withdrawal of the Israeli army from the Gaza Strip
and some West Bank settlements is one of the most important achievements of
the Intifada."[11] Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri similarly proclaimed, "All
the Israeli statements about a withdrawal from the Gaza Strip are due to the
Palestinian resistance operations. We are completely confident that as the
Hezbollah Organization managed to the Israeli forces out of Lebanon, the
Palestinian resistance will kick them out of the Palestinian territories,
and we will continue our resistance."[12] Hamas put a video on its official
website which showed footage of the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza
accompanying singing of "The army of the Jews has been defeated. The home
and homeland is returning through blood. Not through negotiations, surrender
or promises." The "homeland is returning" is sung over a photo of Haifa.[13]


Indeed, like the aftermath of Israel's withdrawal from Lebanon, the Israeli
army's Gaza evacuation promises to spark more violence. Already Hezbollah
has set up a forward base in Gaza from which to operate cells in the West
Bank.[14] On March 2, 2006, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas raised
concern of al-Qaeda infiltration into Gaza and the West Bank.[15] Indeed,
while some U.S. and European officials believe that Israeli occupation of
disputed territories is a root cause of terror, the fact is that their
prescription of more concession and/or withdrawal will increase rather than
decrease international terrorism.

While terrorists consider Israel vulnerable, they realize that its defeat
will require protracted struggle. From the Palestinian perspective, Israel's
surrender in Gaza occurred after 35 years of constant struggle. Terrorists
see Israel as vulnerable, but recognize that the Jewish state still has a
residue of strength. Not so Europe. In the wake of the Atocha station
bombing, the Spanish electorate ousted Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar.
Their perceived ability to swing an election convinced terrorists that
Europe was both weak and malleable. The decision of Aznar's successor Jose
Luis Rodriguez Zapatero to withdraw immediately from Iraq guaranteed
Europeans to be in terrorist crosshairs for years to come. Islamists use
terrorism because it works. Zapatero demonstrated that at very little cost,
terrorists could win tremendous result.

Just as damaging was Philippine President Gloria Arroyo's July 2004 decision
to comply with terrorist demands to evacuate Filipino troops from Iraq in
exchange for a Filipino truck driver's life. Terrorism and hostage-taking
subsequently skyrocketed. Foreign workers are dead because Arroyo's decision
to comply with the kidnappers' demands convinced terrorists that their aims
could be achieved through violence.

Ransom and Hostage-Taking

Hostage-taking has become a particularly effective tactic. Terrorists crave
an audience. With the spread of terrorism in the late twentieth century,
audiences became inured to violence. Suicide bombings which might once have
garnered headlines and commentary for a week now pass with bare mention. For
a bombing or slaughter to win significant public attention, it must target
children (the Palestine Liberation Organization's slaughter of school
children in Ma'alot in 1974 or Chechen Jihadists' seizure of a Beslan school
thirty years later); shock (Black September's 1972 massacre of the Israeli
Olympic team or the 2006 bombing of the Askariya mosque in Samarra); or
result in several thousand casualties, such as occurred on September 11,
2001. Planning and execution of such attacks is difficult and costly. As
audiences become increasingly inured to violence, the ability to shock and
achieve aims through terror becomes harder. Each incident must surpass the
last or it will simply fade into background static. While the Western media
once covered every car bombing in Iraq, explosions which claim several dozen
lives now seldom get more than a brief mention on television or a couple
lines of newspaper print.

Kidnapping allows terrorists to bypass this dynamic. Hostage-taking extends
media attention and allows reporters to humanize the victim. For
journalists, an assassination or bombing is anti-climatic; the press only
begins its coverage after the operation has ended. But uncertainty about
whether a hostage remains alive creates the suspense necessary for a good
story. Terrorists have repeatedly used videos of hostages pleading for their
lives in order to seize headlines. The plight of freelance journalist Jill
Carroll captivated audiences as each video is released and deadline passed.

While negotiating may successfully address the short-term objective of
freeing the hostage, without exception, it causes terrorism to proliferate.
Dialogue is dangerous. The very act of negotiating, whether directly or
through intermediaries, legitimizes the perpetrators and the act. On the
twenty-fifth anniversary of the U.S. embassy seizure in Iran, many former
hostages reflected upon their ordeal. According to David Roeder, one of the
captives, "If we had done something other than just walked away [from Iran
at the conclusion of the ordeal], I keep thinking maybe, just maybe, we
wouldn't have planted the seed that terrorism is a profitable thing."[16]
Terrorism has been very profitable. Kidnapping of Westerners in Lebanon
increased in the 1980s after the U.S. and Iran entered into secret talks to
win their release.[17]

Governments have made matters worse by engaging hostage-takers and, in some
cases, even paying ransom. The Philippines had previous experience with high
profile hostage seizure. In March 2000, for example, Libyan leader Muammar
al-Qadhafi paid an estimated $25 million ransom to win the release of
priests, teachers, and children seized from a school on Basilan Island.
While the ransom may have solved a short-term problem, it compounded the
long-term terrorist threat. Within months of receiving the ransom, Abu
Sayyaf expanded from a couple hundred to more than a thousand members. The
group used the influx of cash to upgrade their equipment. The ransom paid
for speedboats and weapons used in subsequent kidnappings.[18] 

The pattern is international. In April 2003, Ammari Saifi, the "Bin Laden of
the Desert," seized 32 European vacationers in the Algerian desert, holding
them captive for 177 days. He released them only after the German government
paid a five million euro ransom. Rather than settle for peace, Saifi used
the money to buy new vehicles and better weapons.[19] He remains at large
and a threat to stability across the Sahel.

In Iraq, hostage negotiation has sparked a kidnapping industry. The French
and Italian government's decision to ransom its hostages has encouraged
further hostage taking. In August 2004, the Iraqi Islamic Army seized two
French journalists. Contradicting official denials, a high official in the
Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure, France's secret service,
confirmed that ransom had been paid.[20] Serge July, editor of left-leaning
Liberation questioned whether the cost of Chirac's political gestures was
too high.[21] The Italian government did little better. While the Italian
government denied the payment of any ransom for kidnapped Italian
journalists Simona Torretta and Simona Pari, Gustavo Selvo, the head of an
Italian parliamentary foreign affairs committee, said that there had been a
payment of $1 million. He told France's RTL radio, "The lives of the girls
was the most important thing. In principle, we shouldn't give in to
blackmail, but this time we had to."[22] The terrorists rightly calculated
that European leaders were weak. They were right.

How then should Western governments respond to the seizure of hostages? With
firmness calculated to defend the long-term safety of both their own
citizens and Iraqis. Terrorists do not employ ineffective tactics. The key
to defeating the scourge of kidnapping is to make it unprofitable. Sometimes
long-term victory trumps short-term tragedy.

The Importance of Ideology

The belief that engagement can moderate terrorists is naïve, for it ignores
the importance of ideology. Too often, political correctness undercuts the
war on terrorism. It has become fashionable to suggest that religion does
not motivate terrorism.[23] The statements of many terrorists--and the last
will and testament of the 9-11 hijackers--undercuts such a belief. While
foreign policy realists pride themselves on their practicality, they often
adhere blindly to the belief that diplomacy and negotiation can resolve any
conflict. They may be sincere, but their analysis is undercut by mirror
imaging. When Islamist terrorists kidnapped and later beheaded Wall Street
Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, their goal was to humiliate, not negotiate.
Sheer brutality is effective. The video of the beheading of U.S. traveler
Nicholas Berg circulated around the world shocking the Iraqis and Westerners
alike. There were no demands for his life.

Often terrorists are either unwilling to compromise upon ideology. Sheikh
Omar Abdel Rahman, mastermind of the first World Trade Center bombing,
declared, "There is no truce in Jihad against the enemies of Allah."[24] In
other instances, the price of accommodation is too high. In a video tape
aired on January 23, 2005, al-Qaeda-in-Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
declared "We have declared a bitter war against democracy." To engage
Zarqawi would be counterproductive. No government should be willing to
sacrifice democracy for peace. Still, many in the West try, especially when
the negotiating chit is not their own society. This too backfires. Engaging
ideologues not only legitimizes extremism, but may actually encourage it. If
the natural inclination of Western diplomats is to compromise with any
demand, why not stake out even more extreme positions? 

What does Hamas believe? Article 13 of its Charter makes clear: 

[Peace] initiatives, the so-called peaceful solutions, and the international
conferences to resolve the Palestinian problem, are all contrary to the
beliefs of the Islamic Resistance Movement. For renouncing any part of
Palestine means renouncing part of the religion; the nationalism of the
Islamic Resistance Movement is part of its faith, the movement educates its
members to adhere to its principles and to raise the banner of Allah over
their homeland as they fight their Jihad. 

It should simply never be acceptable to open negotiations with any group
whose goal is the destruction of a state or a people. Unfortunately, the
willingness to engage Hamas politically--or, in the case of Jacques Chirac's
government--financially[25] has undercut the moral clarity of the fight
against terrorism and encouraged more. Unfortunately, here Hamas is more the
rule rather than the exception. European governments and self-described
peace activists still continue to engage Hezbollah, even after the group's
leader, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, declared, "If they [the Jews] gather in
Israel, it will save us the trouble of going after them worldwide."[26] It
does not make sense to excuse an organization that stands by such principles
in the midst of a battle against terror and a fight for peace.

Effective Counterterrorism

How then can governments counter terrorism? Ideologues ultimately must be
marginalized to the point of impotence, isolated, or eliminated. If Western
officials, diplomats, and self-described progressives engage with
terrorists, they empower them. Rather than be treated as powerbrokers,
Nasrallah and Hamas political bureau chief Khalid Mishaal should be
international pariahs. Likewise, engagement with Arafat increased rather
than diminished Palestinian terrorism.

Terrorists, whether secular or religious, engage in terrorism for a simple
reason: They find it a useful tactic. If the West is to defeat terror, it
must raise the cost of terrorism beyond the endurance of terrorists. In
this, diplomacy and compromise can be counterproductive. The second
Palestinian intifada was sparked by Israel's willingness to engage in
diplomacy and withdrawal from southern Lebanon. It was ended because of
Jerusalem's willingness to engage in targeted assassination. 

Such forceful measures work on a number of levels. In the short-term, they
can disrupt planning for specific attacks. When the Israeli military
assassinated Hamas official Umar Sa'adah in July 2001, he was planning a
major attack at the Maccabiah Games, the Jewish Olympics. His death foiled
the attack.[27]

In the long-term, disrupting leadership weakens terrorist organizations.
When terrorist leaders are eliminated, leadership struggles ensue. Rather
than spark a cycle of violence, a desire for revenge can exhaust it. After
Israel began targeting terrorist leaders, their deputies began rushing
revenge attacks. Many of these were ill-prepared and accelerated the
exposure and elimination of terror cells.[28] The Israeli government raised
the cost of engaging in terrorism beyond what Palestinian supporters could
bare. Only with unilateral disengagement did the cost of engaging in
terrorism again become worthwhile.

The same logic works on a state level. Libyan leader Mu'ammar Qadhafi
reduced terrorism--at least that directed against the West--after President
Ronald Reagan launched an air strike against the North African state in
response to a Libyan-sponosred Berlin disco bombing. The Syrian government
ceased sheltering PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan after the Turkish military
staged exercises along the Syrian border. Likewise, a 1999 Turkish air
strike on the Iranian border city of Piranshahr convinced Tehran that using
PKK fighters as leverage against the Turkish state might not be in Iran's
national interest. President George W. Bush's willingness to oust the
Taliban prevented attacks on the U.S. mainland not only by denying al-Qaeda
a safe-haven, but also by giving pause to other potential terror sponsors.

Still, many governments are afraid to take action. They fear a cycle of
violence. Terrorists do not need a reason to attack. The Clinton
administration's failure to respond to the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing did
not prevent the 1998 East Africa embassy bombings, nor did its inaction
against al-Qaeda after the 2000 USS Cole bombing convince Bin Laden to call
off the World Trade Center attack. Indeed, terrorists feed off of diplomatic
hand-wringing and fear of a cycle of violence to amplify the cost
effectiveness of their attacks.

It may be difficult for democracies to take effective counter terror
measures, but it is necessary. Terrorists may exploit public opinion. As
Israeli Major General Dan Halouts said, "Israel's democracy is particularly
sensitive to the humanitarian aspects of the conflict, and is far more
exposed to the media than the regimes of its opponents."[29] The same holds
true in the United States, Great Britain, or France. Political leadership
should be about protecting national security, not just winning popularity in
the weekly opinion poll. Ultimately, investing in short-term force can win
long-term security and contain the terrorist scourge. Democratic nations
must not forget, though, that they are up against an international community
that accommodates terrorists and blames the victims--Western democracies and
Israel--for terrorists' actions. If democracies do not defend their own
legitimacy, no one will. 

Michael Rubin is a resident scholar at AEI. Suzanne Gershowitz is a foreign
policy and defense studies researcher at AEI.



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