Thursday, May 3, 2018

Dan Lavigne What is Terrorism: revisited?


Dan Lavigne
May 2nd, 2018
Global Politics of Terrorism
Political Science


What is Terrorism: revisited?

            In February of 2018, I wrote an essay, defining terrorism. I suggested that completing a simple google search for the term would provide a sense of what this term is. What was shown on the screen is what many would expect, masked men aiming rifles at hostages. The second set of images included the aftermath of explosions from presumably the result of a bomb, as orange flames and black smoke left out of the vehicle. At the time I argued that the definition of terrorism is the use of illegitimate violence politically motivated by a force to promote and impose its ideology upon others, operating outside the standard definition of war.
            To construct this argument, I used leading works from security experts, focusing on terrorism. In terms of being critical of this original piece, more engagement was needed. It was summarized very well put failed to answer the question from a theoretical viewpoint, which was necessary for the successful completion of this essay. Additionally, what made this challenging was the lack of examples as they were not yet presented in the course until later.
            In this essay I made note of the different way the authors thought about terrorism. Rapport for example, thought of it as a process, thus breaking it down into four distinct eras, examining the goals of terrorism changed across time and culture, despite that tactics stayed the same. For Rapport he viewed terrorism as asymmetric and used to disrupt society, to demonstrate one’s grievances, domestically, and internationally. Bobbit notes that terrorism acts as an opposition to, or acts as a reflection to the current order, meaning that the definition of terrorism is fluid and will change over time. Lastly, Tilly frames this discussion that to talk about this phenomenon of terrorism, it must be thought of outside the terms of traditional warfare, which is a “political struggle”. This allows terrorist to be studied academically and put actions on a spectrum. My conclusion suggested that violent tactics are designed to enforce an ideology, and that proxy actors fall into the category of war, and very much agreed with Tilly on the academic study of classifying terrorism.
Twenty classes have passed since the original essay. I studied several cases dating from the 18th century to present day and have explored such questions as to what is terrorism? What is not terrorism? I questioned the idea of tactics versus strategy, in addition to terrorism as ends or a means. Now that several classes have passed, I argue that terrorism is a socially constructed concept to justify the use of violence for political purposes by the state against non-state actors. To demonstrate this, I will use two cases: Piracy and the Rohingya Crisis.
The first case explores piracy in the 18th century. Originally pirates were called privateers and were given letters of marque. These letters granted permission to carry out privateering missions on the high seas against Spanish ships, in which a majority of the loot was brought home to the English Crown.
As many European powers set up colonies in the new world, the economic situation began to change, and posed a larger security risk. During this time England was coming into its own as a naval power and established recognizable trade routes found in the triangular trade. European goods were shipped to Africa. Slaves were shipped to the New World. Raw materials for manufactured goods were sent back to England. “Trade functioned best in peace, and it became harder to justify continued warfare beyond the [territorial waters]” (Shirk, 2016,8-9). Privateering or piracy needed to end as trade was too valuable for every nation in Europe to be the cause for war.
The decade of the 1720’s marked the end of the Golden Age of Piracy in the Atlantic. As a final blow to piracy, the English enacted a policy defeating piracy once in for all. “In March 1722 it was enacted that anyone who ‘’trade[d] with any Pirate, by Truck, Barter, Exchange, or in any other Manner, or furnish[ed] any Pirate, Felon or Robber upon the Seas, with any Ammunition, Provision or Stores of any Kind’ might be punished with death” (Shirk, 2016,61). In this fashion not even, the normal citizenry could interact with this group demonized by the English Government. In 1726 William Fly hanged in Boston, bringing an end to this era of naval history.
            The second case used in this analysis is that of the Rohingya people of Myanmar. This group is found in western state of Rakhine located in Myanmar. During the colonial period, the British tried to get a dynamic mix of labor, consisting of farmers, merchants, and civil servants into the region, which would play later into the current hostile situation.
            In the early 1970’s, however, Burma gained independence from the United Kingdom. This was a period of peace which existed between the Buddhist Burman ethnic-majority and the Muslim Rohingya population, extending over the next decade. This is a period when the “.... Rohingya elite thrived. Rangoon University, the country’s top institution, had enough Rohingya students to form their own union. One of the cabinets of U Nu, the country’s first post-independence leader, included a health minister who identified himself as Arakanese Muslim. Even under Ne Win, the general, Burmese national radio aired broadcasts in the Rohingya language. Rohingya, women among them, were represented in Parliament” (Beech, 2017). No animosity existed between the two ethnic groups.
            Things changed starting in the 1980’s when the political environment started to churn, giving rise to ethnic nationalism and forced removal of the Rohingya and the burning of their villages to this day. According to Siegfried O. Wolf, he argues that “... civil-military relations ever since gaining independence … plus the experience of two military rules — Ziaur Rahman (1975-81) and Hussain M. Ershad (1982-90) — as well as an extra-constitutional military-backed caretaker government (2006-2008)  [was seen as] a hint for a traditional lack of civilian control over the armed forces” (Wolf, 2017, 17). Weak institutions were the catalyst for the events we see today.
            Wolf goes on to mention how the military operates in the country. He states. “... since the deficiencies of the country’s governance architecture, the civilian governments, and their administrations rely tremendously on the armed forces to avoid internal insecurity. The growth of domestic disorder arising from tensions between refugees and local communities, mostly due to conflicts over resources….” (Wolf, 2017, 17). The military uses force to keep control over the population, fearing the growing Muslim population.
In response to the attack from government forces, the Rohingya have fought back. In September of 2017 for example   “...a local police officer filed a counterterrorism suit accusing Mr. Shwe Maung of instigating violence through Facebook posts that called for an end to the security offensive in Rakhine...[He noted that] “They want every Rohingya to be considered a terrorist or an illegal immigrant,” he said. “We are much more than that” (Beech 2017). Here we see the label of terrorist being used, even though the people are fighting back against their government, do to demographic fears, by the Buddhist majority in the country.
In the original terrorism essay, I argued that definition of terrorism was the use of illegitimate violence politically motivated by a force to promote and impose its ideology upon others, operating outside the standard definition of war. What I failed to do in this first essay was to engage with the theoretical framework. This was due partly due to the lack of solidified examples, that we have since studied in this course. In this revised essay, I examined two cases, piracy and the Rohingya to bookend the class. Both forms of terrorism here, (as my new argument)  is socially constructed concept to justify the use of violence for political purposes by the state against non-state actors. In the case of piracy, the British Crown switch their policy regarding actions on the high seas. This went from being a sanction and encouraged activity, to one that was outlawed due to the changing nature of trade. For the Rohingya, this is slightly different. After independence a multiethnic culture existed peacefully in Burma. It was not until the institutions weakened did the military use the guise of security to promote Buddhist nationalism in the country, justifying the expulsion of the Rohingya people in neighboring countries, such as Bangladesh. The label of terrorist is used against groups that fight back for self-defense purposes.  


Works  Consulted

Shirk Mark. “Bringing the State Back In” to the Empire Turn: Piracy and the Layered Sovereignty of the Eighteenth Century Atlantic. International Studies Review. August 21, 2016. 1–23

Bobbitt, Philip. Terror and Consent: The Wars for the Twenty-First Century. Knopf. New York. 2008. 27-63.

Rapoport, David C. “The Four Waves of Rebel Terror and September 11”. Anthropoetics VIII, no. 1 Spring/ Summer 2002.

Tilly, Charles. “Terror, Terrorism, Terrorists”. Sociological Theory, Vol. 22, No. 1, Theories of Terrorism: A Symposium. (Mar., 2004), pp. 5-13.

Wolf, Seyfried O.  “Genocide, exodus and exploitation for jihad: the urgent need to address the Rohingya crisis”  South Asian Democratic Forum. 2017 1-41

Beech, H. (2018). ‘No Such Thing as Rohingya’: Myanmar Erases a History. Nytimes.com. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/02/world/asia/myanmar-rohingya-denial-history.html

Redefining Terrorism

Redefining Terrorism

     In my original post on defining terrorism, I argued that instead of containing the term into a single scientific definition, we should recognize that terrorism is instead socially constructed by the generation experiencing the current threat.  The continuous nature of terrorism means that it can and should be reevaluated and thus redefined as the tactics behind the term evolve.  I agree with Philip Bobbit and David Rapoport's reference to "waves of terrorism", as each author points out that terrorism has changed as humanity has developed and advanced (Bobbit 27 2008, Rapoport 1 2002).  I additionally argued that the State Department put forth the best objective definition for terror threats in our current generation, but it should only be taken as a working example due to its inaccuracy and incomplete description of terror over an extended amount of time. 

      After completing this course, I continue to agree with my initial definition.  I still feel that terrorism is largely socially constructed and that there is no way to condense the term into a single scientific explanation.  I have also come to see terrorism as a means, or tactic, that arises in order to achieve an end goal rather than the main priority of a terrorist organization, which is something that Charles Tilly argues.  After examining each of the case studies included in our class, I feel that I can articulate these points of view better as I can draw upon concrete examples such as pirates during the Golden Age of Piracy and the Kurdish fighters against ISIS today.

      Pirates during the Golden Age of Piracy clearly show how terrorism is constructed by the majority of the population living during the given time period.  To the majority of Europe, pirates were seen as a threat to the established way of life in the Atlantic; they strived to upend current order by instituting policies of equality on their ships and disrupting the natural flow of goods and services across the ocean.  Actions such as ransacking ships or diverting resources can be viewed as nothing more than organized crime, but because these tactics were employed by the poor, formerly enslaved, or opposite gender they were seen as dangerous to the order and stability of European and Atlantic society.  Specifically, at the time the British were striving to create “an ideal type of empire”, and pirates posed a direct threat to this desired structure because of their uncontrolled nature and difficulty to capture and punish these actors once legal infractions occurred (Shirk 2016).  The same felonies were being carried out on land across the globe, yet the individuals at sea were rapidly gaining influence and success, more so than any criminal organization on land.  Therefore, this group of maritime outcasts were labeled as terrorists by the society they were aiming to uproot because of their presence and growing success towards their end goal.  The end goal of the pirates was what specifically instilled fear in the majority of land-dwelling Europeans, not the methodology or tactics employed to reach this objective.

       Kurdish fighters against ISIS are another example that clearly shows why terrorism is socially constructed. The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) is a militant Kurdish nationalist organization that ultimately aims to create a sovereign state for the Kurdish people which are currently scattered among many Middle Eastern states.  Turkey houses a minority population of these people and therefore is opposed to Kurdish autonomy that would take land and sectors population away from the Turkish state, therefore seeing these forces as a terrorist organization.  The United States, in an effort to preserve the Turkish alliance, has taken similar measures and placed the PKK on their organized terror lists.  However, the PKK has simultaneously received recognition for their fruitful and effective fight against ISIS from multiple countries including the United States, and thus have received $22 million in aid for their success (McLeary 2017).  The paradox can be summed up in one simple sentence published by the New York Times: “The Kurdish fighters who are battling the Islamic State jihadists in Syria are regarded by the United States as its most reliable partners there. But to Turkey, a NATO ally of the United States, these Kurds are terrorists” (Barnard and Hubbard, 2018).  The United States has placed the PKK on their established list of terrorist organizations because their ally feels they are a separatist, non-state threat, but they are also one of the most reliable allies in one of, if not the most demanding fight in which the United States is currently involved.  Clearly, the list of terror organizations put forth by the United States is constructed to suit the interests of the country and its allies, as the government currently funds one ‘terror organization’ with the intention to defeat another.

      Though my definition of terrorism has not dramatically changed throughout the course of this semester, I have been influenced by the definitions and case studies we have examined.  I am now able to back my original definition with facts and specific cases, which overall has strengthened my argument and reaffirmed my initial opinions.  Prior to this class, I had never thought that I could play a role in defining terrorism, but I have come to learn that anyone who uses this term in our society plays a role in its development and progression.  It has become clear to me that a list of characteristics or motivations does not constitute a definition, especially for something as serious as terrorism, and this is something that is not and likely will not be discussed in news media today.  Therefore, I feel that I am accurate in my assessment that terrorism is a social construct that will continue to evolve and change as our society progresses.

Works Cited
Barnard, Anne, and Ben Hubbard. “Allies or Terrorists: Who Are the Kurdish Fighters in Syria?” The New York Times, The New York Times, 26 Jan. 2018, www.nytimes.com/2018/01/25/world/middleeast/turkey-kurds-syria.html.


Bobbitt, Philip. Terror and Consent: The Wars for the Twenty-First Century. Alfred A. Knopf, 2008.

McLeary, Paul. “With Referendum Approaching, Kurds Wait for More U.S. Military Aid.” Foreign Policy, Foreign Policy, 28 Aug. 2017, foreignpolicy.com/2017/08/28/with-referendum-approaching-kurds-wait-for-more-u-s-military-aid/.


Rapoport, David C. The Four Waves of Rebel Terror and September 11. Anthropoetics: the  Journal of Generative Anthropology, 2002.

Shirk Mark. “Bringing the State Back In” to the Empire Turn: Piracy and the Layered Sovereignty of the Eighteenth Century Atlantic. International Studies Review. August 21, 2016. 1–23.

Terrorism: A Validation of Previous Thoughts

Lauren Journet
Professor Shirk
Global Politics of Terrorism
3 May 2018
Terrorism: A Validation of Previous Thoughts
Even before doing all of the work, research, and discussion that this class requires, I had a working definition of terrorism. Prior to this class, I viewed terrorism as any act that inflicted harm, fear, or chaos on a population- large or small. I never took into account the difference between whether this source of fear was a state or non-state actor. Looking at the United States of America State Department definition, I found some clarity and further validation. The U.S. State Department defines terrorism as the “premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents.” We then covered David Rapoport’s definition of terrorism based on his piece Four Waves of Terror and September 11. Rapoport described terrorism as any political violence against non-military targets by non-state actors. While it was similar to the U.S. State Department’s definition, Rapoport’s definition was careful to include the idea of “non-state” actor. Because I did not find the distinction between state and non-state actors as a factor in determining whether an action was terrorism or not terrorism, I included both actors in my definition. In my first paper Terrorism: a Matter of State and Non-State Actors, I settled on the definition that terrorism is “an act of violence made by either non-state or state groups that has political motivations and uses non-combatant and non-military personnel as potential targets.”
Terrorism is merciless. It is goal-oriented, usually involving some working of politics no matter how latent this is. I really wanted to get these points across in my definition. The difference between state and non-state actors was not as important as the act itself. After reading through countless articles, books, and scholarly essays, I stand by my original definition. The U.S. State Department’s definition, influenced by some of David Rapoport’s logic, still provides a fitting definition of terrorism. I still fully stand by the idea that terrorism is an act of violence with political motivations made by both state and non-state actors. If anything, the cases presented in class have all served as evidence for my definition.
All of the cases that we worked with in class involved political violence, goals, and motives. All of the cases that we worked with in class involved fear and chaos. Some cases involved state actors, others involved non-state actors. In each of the cases we reviewed in class, the context on both sides was extremely complicated. Regardless, each case had specific factors that contributed to the definition of terrorism. For example, which lasted from September of 1793 to July of 1794, led to 16,594 death sentences in the country of France. This was a time when the political infrastructure of France was falling apart due to disruptions in the workings of the traditional absolute monarchy. The noble paid little to no taxes and spent excessive amounts of money, which contributed to the outstanding economic difficulties in France such as their debt crisis. Mike Rapport in The French Revolution and Early European Revolutionary Terrorism, discussed how the citizens of France took part in the watching and gathering around the death sentences (Rapport 68). Citizens who may have supported the nobility was executed. This is a clear example of a state actor promoting violence and political motivations.
Another classroom topic of discussion, taking place nearly 200 years after the Reign of Terror, was the Islamic State of Syria (ISIS). Branching off from the 2006 group the Islamic State in Iraq (ISI), ISIS was formally established in 2013 and immediately began capturing territory in Iraq and committing attacks on other groups. Since then, the group has committed and claimed responsibility for countless attacks worldwide- ranging from suicide bombings to vehicular strikes, targeting mainly the non-military personnel. Their goal could not be more political, as the group is trying to develop a global caliphate- a one-government world. ISIS has a theme of taking to social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube to gain followers for their extremist ideologies. As it is right now, ISIS does not belong to any one nation-state, making the group a clear example of a non-state actor promoting violence and political motivations.
These events happened with 200-year gap in the middle of them. In these two centuries, the world saw many other instances of terror very similar to the two discussed above. All of the cases that we talked about in class further emphasized my initial definition of terrorism, that it is any and every act of violence made by either non-state or state groups. These actions almost always have political motivations and target non-combatant and non-military personnel. For this reason, my definition of terror has not changed. It has only been further validated.
Works Cited
Chapter 1: Legislative Requirements and Key Terms. U.S. Department of State,
www.state.gov/documents/organization/65464.pdf.
Rapoport, David C. "The Four Waves of Rebel Terror and September 11." Anthropoetics: the
Journal of Generative Anthropology, vol. VIII, no. 1, 2002,
anthropoetics.ucla.edu/ap0801/terror/. Accessed 30 Jan. 2018.
Rapport, Mike. “The French Revolution and Early European Revolutionary Terrorism.” The
Routledge History of Terrorism, Routledge Publishing, 2015.
“Timeline: the Rise, Spread and Fall of the Islamic State.” Wilson Center, 30 Jan. 2018,

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Defining Terrorism: Part Two

At the beginning of the semester I thought that the United States State Department definition of terrorism was the best to describe what constituted terrorism. However, now after seeing many different cases that could be considered terrorism. the State Department definition no longer is the most accurate definition. The key elements to terrorism are obvious to many — violence, noncombatant targets, intention of spreading fear, and political aims. The problem with the United States State Department definition of terrorism is that it holds that only sub-national groups, not states themselves, can commit acts of terrorism. The State Department definition does not account for all scopes of terrorism. The State Department definition states the violence must be politically motivated, but does not mention instilling or spreading fear.  Terrorism can be defined as an edited version of the State Department Definition. Terrorism is the unlawful use of force and violence against persons to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives. This definition of terrorism is exhibited by the cases of the Holocaust, the FARC, and even pirates.

One of the distinctive features of the Nazi state was its use of institutionalized violence . It's highly organized and well planned system of terrorizing the population culminated in the creation of the concentration camp . The first camp, Dachau, was established as early as March 1933. The camps were used to suppress the regime's political opponents and later to coerce various segments of society whose behavior did not conform to Nazi values. The camps also became a tool for the exploitation of the inmates by means of forced labor, as well as for the implementation of the Nazi racial policy, especially for its antisemitic policies. The Holocaust demonstrates all the characteristics of terrorism previously defined. The death of Jews showed the immense violence of the Nazi's against a population, while the political motivation was to further Adolf Hitler's power and agenda. Specifically, the Holocaust shows the "coercion" of civilian population by using the Jewish civilians in labor camps to progress the work of the Nazi's and doing so out of the fear of execution.

The range of where the terror is being applied to is not relevant in deciding terrorism however. The Holocaust was a horrific spout of terrorism that .... But an example of a smaller scale of terrorism which still brought about a violent outcome is The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The FARC has been responsible for horrific acts of violence throughout its five decades of existence. Operating mostly in the rural corners of the country, FARC guerrillas have long terrorized citizens with murders, kidnappings and the constant threat of extortion. In 2002, the FARC kidnapped presidential candidate Íngrid Betancourt, holding her hostage until she was rescued, along with three U.S. military contractors, during a raid in 2008. The FARC goes out of their way to endanger not only government officials, but also the general public. To protect their positions as well as their interests they reverted to setting up landmines and other explosive devices often placed in remote villages. While to some these maneuvers seem like only a tactical move, to the villagers and those that have to live in the same region of the FARC the landmines are a constant terror to their every day life. The FARC intentionally employs violence to get what they want politically, even if it means endangering the civilians that live around them.

These problems of politically motivated violence have led some social scientists to adopt a State Department view based not on criminality, but on the fact that the victims of terrorist violence are most often innocent civilians. Perpetrators of terrorism always claim to have noble causes and values, advocate that their goals are righteous and that are working as a freedom fighter, to justify their actions.

An even smaller scale demonstration of terrorism is from the Golden Age of piracy. Piracy wreaked havoc on the open seas during the late sixteen hundreds by a rogue group of civilians who did not want to be under British Rule anymore. The pirates might be seen as a rebellion who were choosing to live a free life out at sea but their actions of plundering and killing make them a terrorist group to civilization. The actions of the pirates were not political however, making their actions against the State Department definition of terrorism. Pirates fought and plundered for the desire of getting economic gain and the dream of a better life out from under rule of a government. The State Department again fails to justify violence against a population of people just because of a simple misconception of motive.

Another grey area from my first post this semester was who commits these horrendous acts against society? Depending on the definition of terrorism, the answer may change. The State Department’s working definition of terror singles out violence committed by relatively well-connected groups and directed against politically significant targets of other nationalities, especially of American nationality. Abiding to the US state department definition, non-state actors are the main perpetrators of terrorism. Non-state actors are individuals and groups that hold influence and which are independent of state governments in some regard. However, I now do not think that the field can be narrowed to non-state actors or state actors. By making a distinction on what actors commit terrorism, we alienate a whole faction of terrorists that may not only fit this one aspect of the definition.

The US State Department definition of terrorism is no longer the most effective way to look at terrorism because it holds that the violence must be politically motivated, but does not mention instilling or spreading fear.  There is the moral dilemma of situations that calls into question if an act is deemed justified, is it still terrorism even though its intentions were justified? By not defining every aspect, the country is able to have wiggle room in investigating possible terrorist connections and incidents that might otherwise slip by on a technicality in the definition of what terrorism is. The definition by the US State Department fails to cover all the facets of terrorism. The definition of terrorism by the US State Department definition can only be valid with modifications.

Bibliography
Bobbitt, P. (2008). Terror And Consent. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

Momayezi, N., & Momayezi, M. L. (2017). Suicide Terrorism: Motivations beyond Religion. The Journal of Public and Professional Sociology, 1-18.

Rapaport, D. C. (2002). The Four Waves of Modern Terrorism. Anthropoetics, 1-19.

Sinai, J. (2008). How to Define Terrorism. Perspectives on Terrorism, 1-2.

Stampnitzky, L. (2013). Disciplining Terror. Cambridge University Press.

“The Reign of Terror.” The Reign of Terror : Terrorism - Oi, oxfordindex.oup.com/view/10.1093/actrade/9780199603947.003.0003.

United States Department of State. (2003). Patterns of Global Terrorism. Washington, DC: Office of the Secretary of State, Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (n.d.). Retrieved May 1, 2018, from https://www.ushmm.org/learn/introduction-to-the-holocaust/ethical-leaders/background/causes-and-motivations

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Thomas Drake’s Fight Against the War on Terror

Lauren Journet
Professor Shirk
Global Politics of Terrorism
25 April 2018
Thomas Drake’s Fight Against the War on Terror
On the topic of data surveillance, both domestically and internationally, it is unclear whether or not the methods are justified and effective. If the surveillance works to protect other people, the argument for justification and effectiveness is far more persuasive. But this is only justified if the rights of the people are not infringed upon, particularly those people on American soil. Thomas Drake began his time with the National Security Agency in 1989 as a software evaluator for contracting. It took until the year 2001 for Drake to be hired as a full-time employee of the NSA. His first day on the job was the morning of the September 11th attacks. His time with the NSA brought on a battle with the War on terror, specifically methods of data surveillance.
He was initially brought on the force with the job of keeping the NSA relevant, creating alterations across the board and was in the process of building a change leadership team. Soon after the attacks, the NSA asked all employees for any and all information they had. Nothing was insignificant and everything was analyzed as they persisted terminating the threat. Drake was tasked with finding the answers to the threat at large and making sense of the piles of data from the surveillance following the 9/11 attacks. He was told that the NSA had rejected a computation and analysis software called Thin Thread about one month before the attacks on September llth, prompting Drake to renew his connections to the system. With a two-page implementation plan drawn up, Drake recommended placing the Thin Thread software in the top 18 terrorist websites. Meanwhile, Drake found out that the NSA was using unclassified and unwarranted surveillance methods. In doing so, they were going against their oath of office.
The oath for the National Security Agency can be found online and reads as follows:
“I will support and defend…
the Constitution of the United States…
against all enemies foreign and domestic
that I take this obligation freely…
without any mental reservation…
or purpose of evasion…”
The primary statement from the above excerpt pledges that members of the NSA will keep the country safe from all enemies foreign and domestic. By using the software that breached the security and privacy of civilians, the NSA became a domestic enemy of sorts. The following statement pledges that members of the NSA are under oath with accordance of their will and do not have any intentions of going against their words and taking advantage of their privilege in serving the country. However, they knowingly and intentionally invaded the privacy of countless American citizens. Thomas Drake was doing exactly what the NSA was not in terms of their oath. He was supporting and defending the Constitution from domestic enemies while under oath without the purpose of evasion.
It should be noted that Drake acted in accordance with the legal protection laws for whistleblowers at the time. He worked alongside the legal protocols for employees of the government, as there protections for employees that detect any questionable activities. Working based off of what the Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act, Thomas Drake primarily listed a complaint to internal authorities. This included his bosses, Inspector Generals, and the House and Senate intelligence committees. Legally, Drake did everything right. But he was soon brought to trial and charged with espionage, the first American to receive the charge in about forty years. But so long as Drake pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor of misusing the National Security Agency’s computer system, the government agreed to drop all other charges against Drake, cutting out jail time. The judge finalized Thomas Drake’s sentence Drake with 240 hours of community service in addition to one year of probation.
The government’s abuse of surveillance is still a very relevant topic. While Thomas Drake was working with the National Security Agency, he fought for the rights of all citizens. He knew that the methods of data surveillance could only be justified and effective if they protected the people of America. He protected the right of all citizens, the rights that the NSA so carelessly infringed upon. And in doing this, he brought on a battle against the War on Terror.

Works Cited
“Former NSA Senior Executive Charged with Illegally Retaining Classified Information,
Obstructing Justice and Making False Statements.” The United States Department of
“NSA Espionage Case: Thomas Drake Pleads Guilty to Computer Violation, Espionage Charges
to Be Dropped.” Tribunedigital-Baltimoresun, 10 June 2011,
articles.baltimoresun.com/2011-06-10/news/bs-md-nsa-drake-guilty-20110609_1_espion
age-case-drake-case-espionage-act.
Shane, Scott. “Former N.S.A. Official Is Indicted on Charges of Leaking Secrets.” The New York
Times, The New York Times, 15 Apr. 2010,
www.nytimes.com/2010/04/16/us/16indict.html.
“The FRONTLINE Interview: Thomas Drake – United States of Secrets.” PBS, Public

Laying the Groundwork for ISIS


Laying the Groundwork for ISIS: The U.S. Invasion of Iraq
The United States invaded Iraq in 2003 in order to “Defeat … a regime that developed and used weapons of mass destruction, that harbored and supported terrorists, committed outrageous human rights abuses, and defied the just demands of the United Nations and the world” (U.S. Department of State Bureau of Public Affairs 2003).  Directly following this engagement new terrorist organizations, most notably the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), rose to prominence. The development of ISIS cannot be attributed to a single reason, but abuses within the American military prison system and the failure of Arab Spring have both enabled a foundation of extremist loyalty to form as the war in Iraq was underway.
After the invasion of Iraq, American military forces promptly refurbished the detention center known as Abu Ghraib to imprison and interrogate people suspected of collaborating with insurgency movements.  However, the site became notorious for its use of torture and other human rights abuses against prisoners being held. Sabrina Harman, an American soldier convicted in the Abu Ghraib prison scandal, frequently wrote letters describing her thoughts and actions while working as a guard in the compound.  She once detailed, “At first it was funny but these people [American soldiers] are going too far … I can’t get it out of my head … These people [Iraqi prisoners] will be our future terrorists” (Gourevitch and Morris 2008). Most of the detainees held at Abu Ghraib were innocent of the crimes they were accused of and thus subjected to needless torture and mockery.  While the majority of these people were not members of a terrorist movement at the time, this shared traumatic experience created a recruiting field for ISIS members after the war in Iraq ended. Fawaz Gerges wrote a book about the history of ISIS, and in this piece he explains that “Such experiences had radicalizing and transformative effects on detainees, who were not members of Al-Qaeda in Iraq and did not believe in its Salafi-jihadist ideology.  By the time they left prison many had become hardliners and subsequently joined AQI and other militant factions” (Gerges 2016). Despite the short period of American management at Abu Ghraib, a distinct basis was created where future members of ISIS could be recruited to expand the extremist organization.
Beginning in December 2010 a series of uprisings broke out across the Middle East and Northern Africa, collectively known as Arab Spring. The rebellions broke out with the main intention of overthrowing problematic authoritarian regimes within multiple Middle Eastern and North African states, many of which that had been backed by western democracies.  These revolutionary movements lasted until approximately 2012, yet the cumulative effect is continuously felt in the region. In Syria, Arab Spring destabilized the Assad regime and encouraged the spread of armed rebellion, as “The Assad regime responded to peaceful protests with severe repression. As the opposition took up arms, the regime escalated to artillery, airpower and chemical weapons” (Pearlman 2016).  A multi-faceted civil war broke out as a response to the harsh retribution, and internal political turmoil ensued. ISIS had been steadily growing and recruiting disgruntled individuals, many of which had been directly impacted by Abu Ghraib or oppressive regimes. The escalating conflict in Syria allowed ISIS to gain territory easily, as “The outbreak of the civil war in Syria also provided ISIS with a golden opportunity to expand its influence to a neighboring Arab country and gain strategic depth there” (Gerges 2016).  ISIS was thus able to vastly increase the scope of their movement that had previously been limited within Iraq. After these rebellions were suppressed, loyal revolutionaries turned to groups such as ISIS, who exploited the disgruntled population with promises of an end to tumultuous western influence within the region. United States involvement in Iraq gave the Arab Spring movement more traction and ultimately allowed for ISIS to recruit more civilians than what was previously possible before the rebellions.
As previously stated, the rise of ISIS cannot be attributed to a single cause, but it can certainly be tied to the inception of American military prisons and subsequent Arab Spring revolts.  The severe human rights abuses at Abu Ghraib created a breeding ground for future terrorists targeting the United States. Additionally, the Arab Spring revolts against unpopular government structures were a direct result of foreign intervention in the region, and when the protests failed the general public turned to militant groups such as ISIS for support in achieving their goals.  Individuals throughout Northern Africa and the Middle East had suffered at the hands of military prisons and harsh dictatorships, and ISIS leadership used these shared instances to recruit those who were especially disillusioned. These two aspects helped lay the groundwork for the emergence of ISIS and have influenced the reasoning behind both terrorist recruitment and motives for terrorist attacks.

Works Cited
Bureau of Public Affairs: U.S. Department of State. "Winning the War on Terror." September 11, 2003. https://2001-2009.state.gov/documents/organization/24172.pdf.
Gerges, Fawaz A. ISIS: A History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2016.
Gourevitch, Philip, and Errol Morris. "Exposure." The New Yorker. March 24, 2008. https:// www.newyorker.com/magazine/2008/03/24/exposure-5.
Pearlman, Wendy. "The surprising ways fear has shaped Syria’s war." Refections Five Years After the Uprisings. March 28, 2016. http://pomeps.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/POMEPS_Studies_18_Reflections_Web.pdf.

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Dan Lavigne The Human Impact of Conflicts: The Forgotten Story (FARC)


Dan Lavigne
April 23, 2018
Global Politics of Terrorism
Political Science

The Human Impact of Conflicts: The Forgotten Story

            The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) formed in the early 1960’s as a guerilla group following a Marxist ideology. In a brief civil war of the late 1950’s the Liberal and Conservative parties in the country entered into a power-sharing agreement. They agreed to have forced alternation of power within the government, in which each political party would take turns running the government for four years, known as the National Front. This arrangement lasted until 1974 (Hanratty, 1988). Many of the country’s rural poor felt neglected by Bogata and filled in the gap forming a Marxist military group (FARC) that would best address their interests. After over 50 years of fighting a peace agreement was reached the FARC and the Colombian government.
In many cases the conflict may end but underlying issues in these societies remain. I argue that neglecting the remnants of conflict, acts as a form of negative terrorism that continues to harm society even after a peace agreement is signed. In “positive terrorism” (demonstrating violent actions) for example, actions are executed for several different reasons, including, but not limited to, shock value or spectacles like 9/11, or to a lesser extent, the IRA bombings of the 1970’s and 1980’s. Both were designed to play to the fear element of society. “Negative terrorism” by contrast is failure to remove such explosive devices in society.
Over the years FARC has shifted its image going from a Marxist group to one that has been primary focused on the sale of drugs. To protect their positions as well as interest they reverted to setting up landmines as one of the leading tactics of defense. Examples of this are seen in the Caquetá region of Colombia. Groups have established strongholds in the mountains and dense jungles, often with a single access point.  (VICE, 2013). In addition to these strongholds landmines and other explosive devices are often placed in remote villages, like the one found in Evelio Rosero’s work The Armies, to be discussed later. This causes fear within the community, as these landmines are often placed in areas where citizens walk or go to school.
            One such case involved a little girl by the name of Jamie Sanchez. She discovered a landmine accidently near the river while playing with her friends. It went off and they rushed her by boat and motorcycle to the nearest medical facility. She survived this incident and lives with a missing part of her liver and intestines. Through reconstructive surgery and a team of doctors they were able to create plastic “inners” for this little girl (Vice, 2013). In the video we can see the scars on this little girl has, a reminder of a conflict in which she does not remember the origins, nor in which she was directly involved.
In Colombia these explosive devices, though meant for one group ends up negatively affecting civilians in society. This includes landmines and other such devices in once-occupied FARC territories of Colombia. These landmines act as secondary collateral terrorism, killing or injuring non-combatants. Non-combatants are defined as people who are not engaged in fighting during a war. According to the documentary film “Colombia's Hidden Killers” by Vice, they note that since 1990 there has been 10,000 landmine victims. Many of these are farmers and ranchers in the region, once held under FARC.
The internal conflict in Columbia has seeped into the world of literature as well.  In Evelio Rosero’s work The Armies, published in 2007, he tells the story of this conflict. What is worth noting is that neither the conflict, nor the actors involved are named. The best way to describe the period of this novel, is to think in terms of film footage. The novel, from the perception gathered through the discussion, is like viewing only a few of those tiny frames denoting a six-month period. In this fashion the author alludes to the fact that it really does not matter when the reader enters, as this conflict has been going on for a long time. Using the publication date as a marker, the conflict with the FARC had been going on for more than forty years at that point. The author also illustrates ambiguity by not including formal chapters names in his work. In most traditional novels segments are divided by either chapter name or by providing numbers. One section ends, as another begins, as if time does not really matter.
The aim of this novel is to focus around the relationship of people in a small rural town, far from major population centers such as Bogota. One of the most interesting relationship is the one between the Professor, who has taught for many years, and the children of the town. This relationship speaks to the group that is most affected by these conflicts, children. The author uses both the Professor and the children to comment on the “passing the conflict baton” from one generation to the next, and the guilt his generation has. In one scene the professor finds an unexploded grenade in the grass. He expresses that he is “...riddled with shame…. [and how he] forgot about that grenade for months: the grass must have grown up around it, covering it… “(Rosero, 2007, 124). Symbolically the older generation had the opportunity to end the conflict but for whatever reason did not have the capacity to do so. The younger generation lives in the shadow of their mistakes.
Analyzing this scene at a psychological level provides more detailed societal construct.  In the same scene as the Professor tries to get rid of the grenade he tells the children to go “... away. ‘“...shout[ing] at them…. This will blow us all up.”’ They [the children] carry on, unperturbed, and it even seems that more children come out of their houses, interrogate the first ones in whispers, and remain at my back, implacable” (Rosero, 2007, 122). Conflict is all these children know. They are unafraid by dangers that lie hidden. Lastly, the Professor states outright that he feels, “...sorry for the children who have a hard road ahead of them, with all this death, they’re inheriting, and through no fault of their own” (Rosero, 2007, 51).  He believes that this conflict will draw out into the foreseeable future.
The common theme carried here is that conflict and tactics carry consequences that last long even the conflict has ended. Children are often the ones most affected by such scenarios as demonstrated here. Conflict became such a large part of society that the children did not know any better, not fully understanding the dangers of the explosive devices in each case. Leaving such devices still evoke terror in the community, as the community is left to deal with the consequences by military forces from decades before.





Works Cited

Rosero, Evelio. The Armies. New Directions Publications.  New York. 2007. Print.

“Colombia's Hidden Killers: Part 1/2 Documentary”. VICE. Jul 16, 2013. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SKJblKuj84E

Dennis M. Hanratty and Sandra W. Meditz, editors. Colombia: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1988. http://countrystudies.us/colombia/26.htm