The US Terrorist Threat Is Overblown

by John Mueller John Mueller is a professor of political science at Ohio State University. His most recent book, Overblown, deals with exaggerations of security threats, particularly terrorism. 15.08.2008
Keywords: Terrorism

Washington - In a recent interview, Homeland Security czar Michael Chertoff thundered that the "struggle" against terrorism is a "significant existential" one-carefully differentiating it, apparently, from all those insignificant existential struggles we have waged in the past.

Meanwhile, the New York Times assures us that "the fight against Al-Qaeda is the central battle for this generation," and John McCain more expansively labels it the "transcendental challenge of the 21st century," while Democrats routinely insist that the terrorist menace has been energized and much embellished by the war in Iraq.

It may be time to assess such strident and alarming proclamations about the threat terrorism presents to the United States. They hardly seem justified and are rather akin to Cold War concerns about the "threat" supposedly posed by domestic Communists, concerns that proved to be vastly exaggerated.

An excellent place to start is with analyses provided by Marc Sageman in lectures and in a recent book, Leaderless Jihad. Now a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Sageman is a former intelligence officer with experience in Afghanistan. Carefully and systematically combing through both open and classified data on jihadists and would-be jihadists around the world, Sageman sorts Al-Qaeda-just about the only terrorists who seem to want to target the US itself-into three groups.

First, there is a cluster left over from the struggles in Afghanistan against the Soviets in the 1980s. Currently they are huddled around, and hiding out with, Osama bin Laden somewhere in Afghanistan and/or Pakistan. This band, concludes Sageman, probably consists of a few dozen individuals. Joining them in the area is the second group: perhaps 100 fighters left over from Al-Qaeda's golden days in Afghanistan in the 1990s.

These key portions of the enemy forces would total, then, less than 150 actual people. They may operate something resembling "training camps," but these appear to be quite minor affairs. They also assist with the Taliban's far larger and very troublesome insurgency in Afghanistan.

Beyond this tiny band, concludes Sageman, the third group consists of thousands of sympathizers and would-be jihadists spread around the globe who mainly connect in Internet chat rooms, engage in radicalizing conversations and variously dare each other actually to do something.

All of these rather hapless-perhaps even pathetic-people should, of course, be considered to be potentially dangerous. From time to time, they may be able to coalesce enough to carry out acts of terrorist violence, and policing efforts to stop them before they can do so are certainly justified. But the notion that they present an existential threat to just about anybody seems at least as fanciful as some of their schemes, and any notion that these characters could come up with nuclear weapons seems farfetched in the extreme.

The threat presented by these individuals is likely simply to fade away in time. Unless, of course, the US overreacts and does something to enhance their numbers, prestige and determination-something that is, needless to say, entirely possible.

I've checked this remarkable and decidedly unconventional evaluation of the threat with other prominent experts who have spent years studying the issue. They generally agree with Sageman.

One of them is Fawaz Gerges of Sarah Lawrence College, whose brilliant book, The Far Enemy, based on hundreds of interviews in the Middle East, parses the jihadist enterprise. As an additional concern, he suggests that Sageman's third group may also include a small, but possibly growing, underclass of disaffected and hopeless young men in the Middle East, many of them scarcely literate, who, outraged at Israel and at America's war in Iraq, may provide cannon fodder for the jihad. However, these people would mainly present problems in the Middle East (including in Iraq), not elsewhere.

Another way to evaluate the threat is to focus on the actual amount of violence perpetrated around the world by Muslim extremists since 9/11 outside of war zones. Included in the count would be terrorism of the much-publicized and fear-inducing sort that occurred in Bali in 2002; in Saudi Arabia, Morocco and Turkey in 2003; in the Philippines, Madrid and Egypt in 2004; and in London and Jordan in 2005.

Although these tallies make for grim reading, the total number of people killed comes to some 200 or 300 per year. That, of course, is 200 or 300 per year too many, but it hardly suggests that the perpetrators present a major threat, much less an existential one. For comparison: Over the same period, far more people have drowned in bathtubs in the US alone.

An important reason for these low numbers, note Sageman and Gerges, is that policing agencies around the world, often working cooperatively, have rolled up, or rolled over, thousands of potential jihadist terrorists since 9/11. These include not only the police in Europe, but also in Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Iran, Indonesia, Morocco, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. They have been energized not out of any love for the US, much less for its foreign policy, but because the terrorists threaten them as well. In addition, terrorist acts mostly tend to be counterproductive. Before some Jordanian hotels were bombed by terrorists, some 25 percent of Jordanians viewed bin Laden favorably. After the attacks, this fell to less than 1 percent.

Meanwhile, after years of well-funded sleuthing, the FBI and other investigative agencies have been unable to uncover a single true Al-Qaeda cell in the US. Any "threat" appears, then, principally to derive from Sageman's leaderless jihadists: self-selected people, often isolated from each other, who fantasize about performing impressive deeds.

From time to time, some of these characters may actually manage to do some damage, though in most cases their capacities and schemes-or alleged schemes-seem to be far less dire than initial press reports vividly, even hysterically, suggest. There is, for example, the diabolical would-be bomber of shopping malls in Rockford, Illinois, who exchanged two used stereo speakers for a bogus handgun and four equally bogus hand grenades supplied by an obliging FBI informant. Had the weapons been real, he might have caused harm, but he clearly posed no threat that was existential (significant or otherwise) to the US, to Illinois, to Rockford, or, indeed, to the shopping mall.

If the "struggle" against enemies such as that is our generation's (or century's) "central battle" or "transcendental challenge," we are likely to come out quite well.

Copyright NEW PERSPECTIVE QUARTERLY - NPQ.

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Comments (4)

But they are the new enemy...

by truth_be_told
Orwell had it right in 1984 that the state will manufacturer an enemy to justify perpetual war, which has the been the plan of the Neo-Cons since they were all at PNAC.

Osama bin Laden is the U.S. version of Emmanuel Goldstein – The number One Enemy of the People according to the Party. He is believed to have written a subversive book and to head a mysterious anti-party organization called The Brotherhood. But instead of being simply subversive (50% of Americans are subversive) they had to cast him as a mass killer, many theories exist that point to the use of 9/11 to prop up bin Laden specifically to create and enemy de jour that we could rally around.

Does anyone have any evidence of an actual terrorist plot prevented since 9/11 ? If so why have we not seen the evidence and perpetrators - I would think BushCo would march them out in front of the cameras for all to see.
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Existential Scam

by Paul Shelton
John Mueller's insights are not often written about, but I'm sure there are many of us who see through this most egregious national scam the Bushites have cast over our gullible nation. It is more than speculation to proclaim that the threat of foreign terrorism on our soil is over-blown. The evidence is as clear as day. Terrorism is easy to undertake; it's purpose is simply to terrorize. There has been more than ample motive presented by Bush doctrine to precipitate strikes all over our country. Yet nothing has happened. The conclusions are obvious. Either all jihadist terrorists are cowards -- or they don't exist. To assume our law enforcement agencies have foiled countless terrorist plans is absurd, for we surely would have known about it. But if this is the case, then the greatest existiential danger we face is our own police state.
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paranormal

by mohit
the terror attacks in US and around the world are a paranormal feature..and they have the potential to happen again
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Hope

by Sajjad
Actually, there has never been more destruction and blood of innocent people by invaders, their own armies and governments, displacement and hunger than in recent years. To add to this turmoil there the non stop financial burdens resulting from by products of the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and now in Pakistan.

Having an enemy that everyone is told is out there to destroy modern way of life as we know it must be serving someones interest. For what I see is mostly poor people and refugees suffering at the hands of all. Who is the real culprit, what will it take to end this unnecessary war on terror. Anyone can be labeled a terrorist or a jihadist and most dangerous. But they are terrorizing and killing by standers. People who just want to take food home and make a living. Terrorists, if they are a reality then they are very few. What I see is more and more people getting hurt and turning against their own governments for putting them in the situation that they are in.

They protest and detest their plight and may one day take up arms as a last resort. For now the solution in my opinion is to leave Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan Alone. It may take a while for the countries to find their own solutions but right now the people there are killing each other in far greater numbers than they could ever in US or any other country.

It was not the case before 9/11. I fully support and grieve for the families of those who were lost in 9/11. They were from several countries and not from US alone. On what account can we justify the deaths, injuries and sufferings of millions?

Justice is justice when it is served in proportion to the crime. They culprits of 9/11 were very few and are mostly dead or free. The ones that are suffering had mostly nothing to do with it. Young men and women of USA and other countries are fighting in far away lands to prevent a terror plot that is unlikely to take place in the first place. Is it wise to have the killings on both sides? Would it not be appropriate to spend a fraction of the resources engaged in the WARS to resolve the issues that are leading to it in the first place and save the agony of all, the West, East, Muslims and Non-Muslims.

If it continues the way it is now, I am afraid man real terrorists may be created. Let us join hands and use every opportunity that we get to raise hope and eliminate words of hate. Let us stop the war on terror and start a war on hatred. Specially when we know our facts.



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