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The dangerous illusion of independent terrorists

WHEN US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was in India this week, all the talk was about "non-state actors" and the challenge they throw up to the international system. The assumption was that the Pakistan-based terrorists responsible for the murders of about 175 people in Mumbai, and the injuries to hundreds more, were non-state actors.

Yet it may be that since the 9/11 attacks in New York, the world has completely misconceived the age of terror.

The radical increase in the lethality, range, political consequence and strategic influence of terrorists comes not from their being non-state actors at all. Instead it comes from their being sponsored by states.

Sometimes they are the instruments of states and at other times they make strategic alliances with states.

A terrorist group operating without any state sponsorship is an infinitely less dangerous outfit than a terrorist group operating with the co-operation of even the most ramshackle state.

However, states not only co-operate with terrorists, in many cases they direct and even found the terrorists.

Consider the prime example, al-Qa'ida. For a long time al-Qa'ida was the very image of decentralised, non-state globalisation. Men in caves, it was said, could bring death and destruction in New York.

Yet that image, powerful and pervasive as it was, does not really capture the truth about al-Qa'ida. Al-Qa'ida began life in its campaign against the Soviet Union's occupation of Afghanistan, with the support of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.

The US, too, was supporting the mujaheddin in Afghanistan, though it certainly didnot support transnational terrorism. After Osama bin Laden fell out with the ruling family in Saudi Arabia, he moved the centre of his operations to Sudan. Al-Qa'ida and its leadership would not have been able to keep going, much less consolidate as a global, revolutionary terrorist movement, without the safe haven and other facilities that the Sudanese provided for at least the first half of the 1990s.

Then, from 1996 onwards, al-Qa'ida headquartered itself in Afghanistan, where its ideological soul mates, the Taliban, were running the country.

The infrastructure the Taliban provided to al-Qa'ida was crucial. Tens of thousands of jihadists went through terrorist training camps that al-Qa'ida ran on Afghan soil.

Even after the 9/11 attacks, the US did not move immediately to attack Afghanistan and depose the Taliban. Rather it gave the Taliban a choice: they could avoid US military action if they handed over bin Laden and the other al-Qa'ida leadership.

What saved al-Qa'ida was the refusal of its state sponsor in Kabul to give it up. When the Taliban leadership escaped from Afghanistan, the al-Qai'ida leadership escaped with it. Nonetheless, al-Qa'ida at least has an independent existence apart from its succeeding state sponsors.

In the case of Iran, this is not so clear. Iran sponsored Hezbollah as its representative force in Lebanon. Increasingly, Tehran has taken direct control of Hezbollah.

Hezbollah undoubtedly commands some genuine popular support in Lebanon, but increasingly it is run as a unit of the Iranian state. That is one of the reasons it has been relatively quiet in the past 12 months. Iran plays these games with a lot of precision.

Hezbollah is a particular type of terrorist organisation. It is certainly capable of suicide terrorism, but it has become in effect a standing terrorist army, with its most important investment being in medium and even hi-tech missiles that it can launch at Israel whenever Iran gives the order.

Thus Hezbollah is less a non-state actor, as the popular jargon has it, and more an instrument of state power that nonetheless provides its state sponsor with political distance or a level of plausible deniability.

When Hezbollah struck Israel, Israel struck back against Lebanon, including Beirut, but the real return address on the Hezbollah rockets was Tehran. If Israel had attacked Iran it would have been accused of starting a Middle East war, but Hezbollah's rockets have the capacity to paralyse the northern half of Israel.

Similarly, Hamas is the Palestinian branch of the terrorist Muslim Brotherhood organisation. But its primary capacity is a conventional military capacity, especially the rockets it is now acquiring. It receives support from one big state, Iran, but it also constitutes on its own a kind of state power in Gaza.

Terrorists have to operate from somewhere. There are three alternatives. They can operate in what is truly ungoverned space, such as much of contemporary Somalia. Or they can operate clandestinely, against the wishes of a governing authority, as say the terrorist groups that have gathered in London. But of necessity such operations tend to be small and furtive. It is the third option that allows terrorists to grow to their full potential: where they are operating as either allies or agents of a sympathetic government.

Which brings us to Mumbai.

Pakistan has for many years been a significant state sponsor of terrorism. Its military intelligence agency, ISI, founded the Lashkar-e-Toiba terrorist group, initially to harass India in Kashmir. The ISI also founded the Taliban to ensure a pro-Pakistan government in Kabul.

Even when Pakistan allegedly turned against terror and rounded up a few al-Qa'ida leaders, it never captured a Taliban leader. Nor did it ever really try to.

Now US intelligence has determined that former leaders of the ISI and other former Pakistani military figures trained the terrorists who perpetrated the Mumbai massacres.

Even if the impotent Pakistani civilian Government was not directly involved in the Mumbai massacres, it makes sense to see the long campaign of terror against India as sponsored by at least part of the Pakistani state. Given the Pakistani state also pioneered the idea of the Islamic nuclear bomb, this should sound the gravest alerts.

Thus it may be that modern terrorism is not so much the emergence of non-state actors on to the strategic field but, rather, the latest refinement of state power, giving the option of state military and terrorist action with plausible, or at least politically useful, deniability. If anything, therefore, we have tended to underestimate the strategic importance of terrorism.


# reads: 219

Original piece is http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24757395-7583,00.html


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Of course the Muslim clergy are inciting the Palestinian population. Just go the Palestinina Media Watch www.pmw.org and also review what Walid Shoebat, former Fatah terrorist, says at www.shoebat.com

Posted by Haifadiarist on 2008-12-09 14:26:49 GMT


Thank you for your message. But I stick to my guns : I consider that, aside from being definitely directly or indirectly state sponsored and funded, the main sorce, the spiritual base of it is the Mulsim clergy which, as crazy as it may sound,should be hunted down and liquidated at any cost and then and only then, will this menace dissappear. We must recognize there is no substitute for radical surgery. FACT : When in 1954 Fidel Castro et al failed in their attempt to take the MONCADA army barracks in Havana, killing many soldiers, after being captured (Castro was the last to be taken)the National Police chief went to see President Batista, who was at a meeting with Havana"s Archbishop and Senator Diaz Balart, father of the Diaz-Balart brothers, Florida representives in Congress and told Batista that since the end of WWII, sharks had no longer their human flesh ration and how about loading those bastards conveniently ballasted on a plane and dropped at the Caribbean Sea deepest part, to which both visitors were horrified and pleaded with Batista to please exiled them insted and after a while, the President agreed and had them exiled to Mexico The rest is history but can you imagine how much blood, tears, suffering and misery to this day, would the Cuban people been spared had Batista dismissed the pleads and allowed his police chief to have his way ?? Simon Bolivar, the Liberator sentenced once : "CLEMENCY TO CRIMINALS IS AN ATTEMPT ON VIRTUE" I can only say that, if WWII would have been fought with the same foolish rules wars are nowadys, we would still be fighting Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan...

Posted on 2008-12-09 13:43:28 GMT


One should constantly assess the distortions of articles, and language in our media as stated by Mark Steyn "Jews get killed, but Muslims feel vulnerable". Following the Mumbai Islamic terrorist attack, the major local commentary in the other paper, was by Waleed Aly - ("Mr everywhere moderate") Muslim. Rather than condemn the Mumbai terrorist attack, he supported the Muslims in Chechnya, Thailand, Philipinnes and especially Kashmir who are "oppressed" and seeking "their rightful" homeland, but not one word of the innocent people who were murdered in Mumbai. Let us think of this statement about the "oppressed" - in reality the situation is that Islamists/jihadists want the countries they are living in as their Islamic states with sharia law, (ie) the indigenous or home growns can convert, be murdered or leave. It is the Islamists who are perpetuating the ideology that Islamisation = global. (eg) Chechnya, Thailand,next India and Sri Lanka. I am left to assume that Mr Aly is the poster boy to normalise that which is deemed to be "moderate", and contemporary Australian Islamic ideology(you know, has his favourite footy team, and is just like any normal bloke). So if he is "normal" and therefore moderate, why didn"t he condemn these atrocities? So he writes of barbarous, hate-filled murderers described as "freedom fighters" and Rabbis and others in Chabad House as mere "victims" of "teenage gunmen". When are we all going to wake up to the scourge of Islamisation - the tentacled, insidious cancer indoctrinating the vulnerable (and not so vulnerable) if you understand what is happening to supposed secular education facilities in all Western countries. The most alarming segment of Mark Steyn"s article is this: "Rabbi Holtzberg was not murdered because of a territorial dispute over Kashmir .... He was murdered in the name of Islam -"Allahu Akbar". Let all of us use the words, Islamists, terrorists, murderers, jihadis and eliminate to define those who murder innocent people whether Jew, Christian or Hindu. Eliminate "freedom fighter", "vulnerable and moderate Muslims" from our vocabulary; otherwise we become, or remain, a people lost in the fog of terror and dehumanisation because of our laxity and stupidity. In another era a terrorist and murderer wanted the Jewish peoples to wear the identifiable yellow star marked "Jude". Recently, a prominent British Muslim stated when the UK becomes a Muslim state, non-Muslims will be required to wear insignia identifying them as infidels. Sound familiar? The stage is now set.

Posted by Carol Ballarat on 2008-12-09 09:39:47 GMT


Until we learn to define terrorism exactly for what it is, the world in general and Europe in particluar will keep their heads in the sand.

Posted by Haifadiarist on 2008-12-08 17:52:41 GMT


It is incredible how 9/11 has been completely forgotten and no lessons at all learned from it... Islamofascists know they can take over the West without firing a shot, considering the braying of our Supreme Court decreeing protected under the Geneva Convention, al Quaida"s cutthroats of Guantanamo.. Want to do away with suicide bombers ??? Do away with the Muslim clergy... DEAD DOG, END OF RABIES...

Posted on 2008-12-08 04:02:34 GMT