Fr. 67.00

Counter-Terrorism - Containment and Beyond

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The 9/11 attacks revealed that the transnational terrorist threat facing the US and its partners was far more dangerous than most had previously discerned. It was now clear that al-Qaeda intended to, and could threaten the West's - particularly the US' - political and military leverage, with the aim of shifting the balance of power from the West to Islam after a violent global confrontation. In that sense, the new terrorist threat is strategic, and it has led to a worldwide mobilisation comparable to that required by a world war.

This Paper argues that prevailing in the 'war' on terror, much like victory in the Cold War, entails containment, deterrence, outperformance and engagement. Military power is secondary to intelligence, law enforcement, enlightened social policy and diplomacy. Diplomatic engagement with the larger Muslim world is paramount as a means of denying al-Qaeda not merely recruits but the'clash of civilisations' it seeks.

The US-led intervention in Iraq, though intended to introduce democratic reform in the wider Middle East, has so far antagonised Islam and strengthened Islamist terrorism. This suggests that coercive or aggressively ideological diplomacy is unlikely to win over an Islamic population biased by anti-Western propaganda. Successful Western diplomacy will have to be discreet, nuanced and incremental.

List of contents

Introduction, Chapter 1 Securing Territory Against al-Qaeda, Chapter 2 Law-enforcement and Intelligence Capabilities, Chapter 3 Social Science and Diplomacy Chapter 4 Outperforming the Terrorists

About the author










Jonathan Stevenson

Summary

The 9/11 attacks revealed that the transnational terrorist threat facing the US and its partners was far more dangerous than most had previously discerned. It was now clear that al-Qaeda intended to, and could threaten the West’s – particularly the US’ – political and military leverage, with the aim of shifting the balance of power from the West to Islam after a violent global confrontation. In that sense, the new terrorist threat is strategic, and it has led to a worldwide mobilisation comparable to that required by a world war.

This Paper argues that prevailing in the ‘war’ on terror, much like victory in the Cold War, entails containment, deterrence, outperformance and engagement. Military power is secondary to intelligence, law enforcement, enlightened social policy and diplomacy. Diplomatic engagement with the larger Muslim world is paramount as a means of denying al-Qaeda not merely recruits but the‘clash of civilisations’ it seeks.
The US-led intervention in Iraq, though intended to introduce democratic reform in the wider Middle East, has so far antagonised Islam and strengthened Islamist terrorism. This suggests that coercive or aggressively ideological diplomacy is unlikely to win over an Islamic population biased by anti-Western propaganda. Successful Western diplomacy will have to be discreet, nuanced and incremental.

Product details

Authors J. Stevenson, Jonathan Stevenson, Stevenson Jonat
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 18.11.2004
 
EAN 9780198567592
ISBN 978-0-19-856759-2
No. of pages 134
Series Adelphi
Adelphi series
Adelphi series
Subjects Fiction > Suspense
Guides > Motor vehicles, aircraft, ships, space travel > Military vehicles, aircraft, ships
Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous
Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

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