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Dying to Win

Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism is Robert Pape's analysis of suicide terrorism from a strategic, social, and psychological point of view. It is based on a database he has compiled at the University of Chicago, where he directs the Chicago Project on Security and Threats (CPOST). The book's conclusions are based on data from 315 suicide terrorism attacks around the world from 1980 through 2003. Of these, 301 were classified into 18 different campaigns by 11 different militant groups; the remaining 14 appear to have been isolated. Published in May 2005, Pape's volume has been widely noticed by the press, the public, and policymakers alike, and has earned praise from the likes of Peter Bergen, Congressman Ron Paul (R-Texas),[1] and Michael Scheuer.[2]

Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism
AuthorRobert Pape
PublisherRandom House
Publication date
2005
Pages352
ISBN1-4000-6317-5

Dying to Win is divided into three parts, analyzing the strategic, social, and psychological dimension of suicide terrorism.

Detailed synopsis edit

Introduction edit

Chapter 1: The Growing Threat edit

Pape claims to have compiled the world's first "database of every suicide bombing and attack around the globe from 1980 through 2003—315 attacks in all" (3). "The data show that there is little connection between suicide terrorism and Islamic fundamentalism, or any one of the world's religions. ... Rather, what nearly all suicide terrorist attacks have in common is a specific secular and strategic goal: to compel modern democracies to withdraw military forces from territory that the terrorists consider to be their homeland" (4). It is important that Americans understand this growing phenomenon (4–7).

Chapter 2: Explaining Suicide Terrorism edit

Caveat: the book's conclusions do not hold for terrorism in general (8–9). Pape distinguishes among demonstrative terrorism, which seeks publicity, destructive terrorism, which seeks to exert coercion through the threat of injury and death as well as to mobilize support, and suicide terrorism, which involves an attacker's actually killing himself or herself along with others, generally as part of a campaign (9–11). Three historical episodes are introduced for purposes of comparison: the ancient Jewish Zealots (11–12; see also 33–34), the 11th-12th-century Ismaili Assassins (12–13; see also 34–35), and the Japanese kamikazes (13; see also 35–37).

Pape had graduate students fluent in many languages scour the international press for incidents of suicide terrorism. There was no suicide terrorism from 1945 to 1980 (13–14). They found 315 incidents, beginning with the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing (14). They were able to classify all but 14 of the incidents into 18 different campaigns by 10 different organizations of predominantly Muslim, Hindu or Sikh religious persuasion. These included the Tamil Tigers (July 1990), the Israeli occupation of Palestine (1994), Persian Gulf (1995), Turkey (1996), Chechnya (2000), Kashmir (2000), and the U.S. (2001) (14–15). Five campaigns were still ongoing in early 2004, when Dying to Win was being written (15–16).

Traditional explanations for suicide terrorism focus on individual motives, but fail to explain the specificity of suicide terrorism (16–17). Economic explanation of this phenomenon yields "poor" results (17–19). Explanation of suicide terrorism as a form of competition between radical groups is dubious (19–20).

Pape proposes an alternative explanation of the "causal logic of suicide terrorism": at the strategic level, suicide terrorism exerts coercive power against democratic states to cease occupation of territory terrorists consider homeland, while at the social level it depends on mass support and at the individual level it is motivated by altruism (20–23). All 18 campaigns shared two elements: (1) a foreign occupation (2) by a democracy. Only one of the 10 groups shared a religion with the occupiers: the Kurdistan Workers' Party in Turkey. "The bottom line, then, is that suicide terrorism is mainly a response to foreign occupation" (23).

Part I: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism edit

Chapter 3: A Strategy for Weak Actors edit

The willingness of an attacker to die has strategic value (27–29). As a weapon of weak groups incapable of "denial" as a "coercive strategy," suicide terrorism relies on punishment and, especially, "the expectation of future damage," which provides coercive leverage (29–33).

Chapter 4: Targeting Democracies edit

Pape claims that his research reveals that the key to understanding the phenomenon of suicide attacks is not religion, but that they "compel democracies to withdraw military forces from the terrorists' national homeland" (38). Patterns of timing (39–41), nationalist goals (42–44), and the targeting of democracies (44–45) reveal its logical, not irrational, nature. "At bottom, suicide terrorism is a strategy for national liberation from foreign military occupation by a democratic state" (45). Foreign occupation is defined in terms of control of territory (not military occupation alone) (46). The targets selected by suicide terrorists suggests nationalist, not religious, aims (46–47). Hamas (47–51) and Al-Qaeda (51–58) are analyzed in some detail. In general, the harshness of occupation does not strongly correlate with suicide terrorism (58–60).

Chapter 5: Learning Terrorism Pays edit

Terrorists are predisposed to attribute success to their technique whenever plausible (62–64). Pape claims that "recent suicide terrorist campaigns ... are associated with gains for the terrorists' political causes about half the time" (64–65). Hamas's success is difficult to evaluate, but Hamas spokespersons express belief in their own success (65–73). Terrorists learn from each other; the spread of the method is therefore neither irrational nor surprising (73–75). But suicide terrorism has failed "to compel target democracies to abandon goals central to national wealth or security" (75–76).

Part II: The Social Logic of Suicide Terrorism edit

Chapter 6: Occupation and Religious Difference edit

"[T]he taproot of suicide terrorism is nationalism" not religion (79). It is "an extreme strategy for national liberation" (80). This explains how the local community can be persuaded to re-define acts of suicide and murder as acts of martyrdom on behalf of the community (81–83). Pape proposes a nationalist theory of suicide terrorism, seen from the point of view of terrorists. He analyzes the notions of occupation (83–84), homeland (84–85), identity (85–87), religious difference as a contributor to a sense of "alien" occupation (87–88), foreign occupation reverses the relative importance of religion and language (88–92), and the widespread perception of the method as a "last resort" (92–94). A statistical demonstration leads to the conclusion that a "linear" rather than "self-reinforcing spiral" explanation of suicide terrorism is best (94–100). However, different future developments of the phenomenon of suicide terrorism are very possible, and more study of the role of religion is needed (101).

Chapter 7: Demystifying al-Qaeda edit

With increasing knowledge of al-Qaeda, we see that "the presence of American military forces for combat operations on the homeland territory of the suicide terrorists is stronger than Islamic fundamentalism in predicting whether individuals from that country will become al-Qaeda suicide terrorists" (103). "Al-Qaeda is less a transnational network of like-minded ideologues ... than a cross-national military alliance of national liberation movements working together against what they see as a common imperial threat" (104). The nature of Salafism, a Sunni form of Islamic fundamentalism, is complex (105–07). Statistical analysis fails to corroborate Salafism-terrorism connection, but it does corroborate a connection to U.S. military policies in the Persian Gulf (107–17). Al-Qaeda propaganda emphasizes the "Crusader" theme, which is inherently related to occupation (117–24). Pape concludes that "the core features of al-Qaeda" are captured by his theory (125).

Chapter 8: Suicide Terrorist Organizations around the Globe edit

Robert Pape examines other campaigns to see if the "dynamics that make religious difference important" are present in other terrorist campaigns, acknowledging the difficulty of the inquiry (126–29). He offers detailed analyses of Lebanon (129–39), Sri Lanka (139–54), the Sikhs in Punjab (154–62), and the Kurdish PKK in Turkey (162–66). His conclusion: "Religion plays a role in suicide terrorism, but mainly in the context of national resistance" and not Islam per se but "the dynamics of religious difference" are what matter (166–67).

Part III: The Individual Logic of Suicide Terrorism edit

Chapter 9: Altruism and Terrorism edit

Pape presents a Durkheimian analysis of suicide (173–79). "Many acts of suicide terrorism are a murderous form of what Durkheim calls altruistic suicide" (179). Analytical difficulties are acknowledged (180–81). Pape uses suicide rates in general as points of comparison (181–84). Team suicide, which is frequent in suicide terrorism, is an indicator of altruistic suicide, he argues (185–87). Altruistic suicide is a socially constructed phenomenon (187–88): e.g., Hezbollah in Lebanon (188–91), Hamas (191–93), Tamil Tigers (193–95); al-Qaeda (195–96). The altruistic nature of suicide terrorism suggests the number of potential terrorists is large, that suicide terrorism is capable of growing in attractiveness and appeal, and that any attempt at profiling will miss a substantial number of potential suicide terrorists (197–98).

Chapter 10: The Demographic Profile of Suicide Terrorists edit

"In general, suicide attackers are rarely socially isolated, clinically insane, or economically destitute individuals, but are most often educated, socially integrated, and highly capable people who could be expected to have a good future" (200). Pape discusses problems of data-gathering (201–02). He establishes 462 individuals in his "universe" of suicide terrorists available for analytical purposes (203). Hezbollah suicide bombers in the period 1982–1986 were 71% Communist/Socialist, 21% Islamist, 8% Christian (204–07). In general, suicide terrorists are in their early 20s (207–08). Females are fewer in Islamist groups: "Islamist fundamentalism may actually reduce the number of suicide terrorists by discouraging certain categories of individuals" (208–09). Female suicide terrorists tend to be older than male (209–10). There is no documented mental illness in any case of suicide terrorism, though there are 16 cases of personal trauma (e.g., the loss of a loved one) (210–11). Arab suicide terrorists are in general better educated than average and are from the working or middle classes (211–16). "[T]hey resemble the kind of politically conscious individuals who might join a grassroots movement more than they do wayward adolescents or religious fanatics" (216).

Chapter 11: Portraits of Three Suicide Terrorists edit

Earlier work has tended to emphasize suicide terrorists' irrationality, but this generalization fit 1980s data better than more recent data (217–20). Pape looks at three individual cases: Mohamed Atta (220–26); Dhanu, a young woman from Jaffna, "the most famous Tamil Tiger suicide bomber" (226–30); and Saeed Hotari, of Hamas (231–34).

Conclusion edit

Chapter 12: A New Strategy for Victory edit

Though "we" cannot leave the Middle East altogether, Pape asserts, a "strategy for victory" is available (237–38). U.S. should define victory as the separate objectives of "defeating the current pool of terrorists" and preventing a new generation from arising (238–39). He rejects Frum-Perle view that the root of the problem is in Islam (241–44). "Rather, the taproot is American military policy" (244). The notion that Islamic fundamentalism is bent on world domination is "pure fantasy" (244–45). An attempt by the West to force Muslim societies to transform "is likely to dramatically increase the threat we face" (245). He calls for a policy of "'off-shore' balancing": establishing local alliances while maintaining the capacity for rapid deployment of military forces (247–50).

Appendices edit

Appendix I: Suicide Terrorist Campaigns, 1980–2003 edit

Analysis of 18 campaigns.

Appendix II: Occupations by Democratic States, 1980–2003 edit

Fifty-eight occupations by democratic states are listed (265–67).

Appendix III: Salafism in Major Sunni Muslim Majority Countries edit

Thirty-four countries with Sunni majority populations of 1 m or more and the importance of Salafism in these countries are the subjects of brief commentaries. Salafism is defined as "the belief that society should be organized according to the Quran and Sunna only" (269). Sunni Countries with Salafi-Influenced Populations: Afghanistan (10 m Pashtuns); Algeria (19 m/31m Sunni Muslims); Bangladesh (14 m/114m); Egypt (23 m/62m); Indonesia (26 m/185m); Jordan (2 m/6m); Nigeria (37 m/68m); Oman (2 m/2m); Pakistan (43 m/149m); Saudi Arabia (18 m/18m); Somalia (5 m/10m); Sudan (21 m/21m); Tunisia (5 m/10m); Yemen (8 m/11m) (270–74). Non-Salafi Sunni Countries: Albania, Burkina Faso, Chad, Guinea, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Libya, Malaysia, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Syria, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan (274–77).

Critiques edit

In a criticism of Pape's link between occupation and suicide terrorism, an article titled "Design, Inference, and the Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism" (published in The American Political Science Review), authors Scott Ashworth, Joshua D. Clinton, Adam Meirowitz, and Kristopher W. Ramsay from Princeton charge Pape with "sampling on the dependent variable" by limiting research only to cases in which suicide terror was used:[3] Pape's analysis has no control group. Appendix II lists 58 occupations by democracies, only 9 of which generated suicide terrorism. An analysis explaining the difference between the 9 with suicide terrorism and the 49 without is lacking.

In response, Pape argues that his research design is sufficient because it collected the universe of known cases of suicide terrorism.[4] In a rejoinder, Ashworth et al. discuss how even large samples of the dependent variable cannot be used to explain variation in outcomes, why suicide terrorism in some places but not others, if the sample does not vary.[5]

In a debate hosted by the Washington Institute, Martin Kramer argued that Pape's thesis was less relevant to Al Qaeda than to Lebanon and Palestine and that there were only 12,000 American troops in Saudi Arabia in 2001 and they had not caused any deaths.[6] In response Pape argued that "The U.S.-led war on terrorism is going badly because it is being waged on a faulty premise. That premise is that suicide terrorism is mainly a product of Islamic fundamentalism."[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Paul, Ron (2005-07-14) Suicide Terrorism, LewRockwell.com
  2. ^ Scheuer, Michael (2005-06-10) Throwing America a Life Preserver, AntiWar.com
  3. ^ American Political Science Review, Volume 102, Issue 02, May 2008, pp 269-273.
  4. ^ American Political Science Review, Volume 102, Issue 02, May 2008, pp 275-277.
  5. ^ Design, Inference, and the Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism: A Rejoinder, https://scholar.princeton.edu/sites/default/files/rejoinder3.pdf
  6. ^ Kramer, Martin (November 8, 2005). "Suicide Terrorism in the Middle East: Origins and Response (Prepared Remarks)". Washington Institute. Retrieved Jun 10, 2016.
  7. ^ Pape, Robert (November 16, 2005). "Suicide Terrorism in the Middle East: Origins and Response". Washington Institute. Retrieved Jun 10, 2016.

External links edit

dying, strategic, logic, suicide, terrorism, robert, pape, analysis, suicide, terrorism, from, strategic, social, psychological, point, view, based, database, compiled, university, chicago, where, directs, chicago, project, security, threats, cpost, book, conc. Dying to Win The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism is Robert Pape s analysis of suicide terrorism from a strategic social and psychological point of view It is based on a database he has compiled at the University of Chicago where he directs the Chicago Project on Security and Threats CPOST The book s conclusions are based on data from 315 suicide terrorism attacks around the world from 1980 through 2003 Of these 301 were classified into 18 different campaigns by 11 different militant groups the remaining 14 appear to have been isolated Published in May 2005 Pape s volume has been widely noticed by the press the public and policymakers alike and has earned praise from the likes of Peter Bergen Congressman Ron Paul R Texas 1 and Michael Scheuer 2 Dying to Win The Strategic Logic of Suicide TerrorismAuthorRobert PapePublisherRandom HousePublication date2005Pages352ISBN1 4000 6317 5 Dying to Win is divided into three parts analyzing the strategic social and psychological dimension of suicide terrorism Contents 1 Detailed synopsis 1 1 Introduction 1 1 1 Chapter 1 The Growing Threat 1 1 2 Chapter 2 Explaining Suicide Terrorism 1 2 Part I The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism 1 2 1 Chapter 3 A Strategy for Weak Actors 1 2 2 Chapter 4 Targeting Democracies 1 2 3 Chapter 5 Learning Terrorism Pays 1 3 Part II The Social Logic of Suicide Terrorism 1 3 1 Chapter 6 Occupation and Religious Difference 1 3 2 Chapter 7 Demystifying al Qaeda 1 3 3 Chapter 8 Suicide Terrorist Organizations around the Globe 1 4 Part III The Individual Logic of Suicide Terrorism 1 4 1 Chapter 9 Altruism and Terrorism 1 4 2 Chapter 10 The Demographic Profile of Suicide Terrorists 1 4 3 Chapter 11 Portraits of Three Suicide Terrorists 1 5 Conclusion 1 5 1 Chapter 12 A New Strategy for Victory 1 6 Appendices 1 6 1 Appendix I Suicide Terrorist Campaigns 1980 2003 1 6 2 Appendix II Occupations by Democratic States 1980 2003 1 6 3 Appendix III Salafism in Major Sunni Muslim Majority Countries 2 Critiques 3 References 4 External linksDetailed synopsis editIntroduction edit Chapter 1 The Growing Threat edit Pape claims to have compiled the world s first database of every suicide bombing and attack around the globe from 1980 through 2003 315 attacks in all 3 The data show that there is little connection between suicide terrorism and Islamic fundamentalism or any one of the world s religions Rather what nearly all suicide terrorist attacks have in common is a specific secular and strategic goal to compel modern democracies to withdraw military forces from territory that the terrorists consider to be their homeland 4 It is important that Americans understand this growing phenomenon 4 7 Chapter 2 Explaining Suicide Terrorism edit Caveat the book s conclusions do not hold for terrorism in general 8 9 Pape distinguishes among demonstrative terrorism which seeks publicity destructive terrorism which seeks to exert coercion through the threat of injury and death as well as to mobilize support and suicide terrorism which involves an attacker s actually killing himself or herself along with others generally as part of a campaign 9 11 Three historical episodes are introduced for purposes of comparison the ancient Jewish Zealots 11 12 see also 33 34 the 11th 12th century Ismaili Assassins 12 13 see also 34 35 and the Japanese kamikazes 13 see also 35 37 Pape had graduate students fluent in many languages scour the international press for incidents of suicide terrorism There was no suicide terrorism from 1945 to 1980 13 14 They found 315 incidents beginning with the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing 14 They were able to classify all but 14 of the incidents into 18 different campaigns by 10 different organizations of predominantly Muslim Hindu or Sikh religious persuasion These included the Tamil Tigers July 1990 the Israeli occupation of Palestine 1994 Persian Gulf 1995 Turkey 1996 Chechnya 2000 Kashmir 2000 and the U S 2001 14 15 Five campaigns were still ongoing in early 2004 when Dying to Win was being written 15 16 Traditional explanations for suicide terrorism focus on individual motives but fail to explain the specificity of suicide terrorism 16 17 Economic explanation of this phenomenon yields poor results 17 19 Explanation of suicide terrorism as a form of competition between radical groups is dubious 19 20 Pape proposes an alternative explanation of the causal logic of suicide terrorism at the strategic level suicide terrorism exerts coercive power against democratic states to cease occupation of territory terrorists consider homeland while at the social level it depends on mass support and at the individual level it is motivated by altruism 20 23 All 18 campaigns shared two elements 1 a foreign occupation 2 by a democracy Only one of the 10 groups shared a religion with the occupiers the Kurdistan Workers Party in Turkey The bottom line then is that suicide terrorism is mainly a response to foreign occupation 23 Part I The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism edit Chapter 3 A Strategy for Weak Actors edit The willingness of an attacker to die has strategic value 27 29 As a weapon of weak groups incapable of denial as a coercive strategy suicide terrorism relies on punishment and especially the expectation of future damage which provides coercive leverage 29 33 Chapter 4 Targeting Democracies edit Pape claims that his research reveals that the key to understanding the phenomenon of suicide attacks is not religion but that they compel democracies to withdraw military forces from the terrorists national homeland 38 Patterns of timing 39 41 nationalist goals 42 44 and the targeting of democracies 44 45 reveal its logical not irrational nature At bottom suicide terrorism is a strategy for national liberation from foreign military occupation by a democratic state 45 Foreign occupation is defined in terms of control of territory not military occupation alone 46 The targets selected by suicide terrorists suggests nationalist not religious aims 46 47 Hamas 47 51 and Al Qaeda 51 58 are analyzed in some detail In general the harshness of occupation does not strongly correlate with suicide terrorism 58 60 Chapter 5 Learning Terrorism Pays edit Terrorists are predisposed to attribute success to their technique whenever plausible 62 64 Pape claims that recent suicide terrorist campaigns are associated with gains for the terrorists political causes about half the time 64 65 Hamas s success is difficult to evaluate but Hamas spokespersons express belief in their own success 65 73 Terrorists learn from each other the spread of the method is therefore neither irrational nor surprising 73 75 But suicide terrorism has failed to compel target democracies to abandon goals central to national wealth or security 75 76 Part II The Social Logic of Suicide Terrorism edit Chapter 6 Occupation and Religious Difference edit T he taproot of suicide terrorism is nationalism not religion 79 It is an extreme strategy for national liberation 80 This explains how the local community can be persuaded to re define acts of suicide and murder as acts of martyrdom on behalf of the community 81 83 Pape proposes a nationalist theory of suicide terrorism seen from the point of view of terrorists He analyzes the notions of occupation 83 84 homeland 84 85 identity 85 87 religious difference as a contributor to a sense of alien occupation 87 88 foreign occupation reverses the relative importance of religion and language 88 92 and the widespread perception of the method as a last resort 92 94 A statistical demonstration leads to the conclusion that a linear rather than self reinforcing spiral explanation of suicide terrorism is best 94 100 However different future developments of the phenomenon of suicide terrorism are very possible and more study of the role of religion is needed 101 Chapter 7 Demystifying al Qaeda edit With increasing knowledge of al Qaeda we see that the presence of American military forces for combat operations on the homeland territory of the suicide terrorists is stronger than Islamic fundamentalism in predicting whether individuals from that country will become al Qaeda suicide terrorists 103 Al Qaeda is less a transnational network of like minded ideologues than a cross national military alliance of national liberation movements working together against what they see as a common imperial threat 104 The nature of Salafism a Sunni form of Islamic fundamentalism is complex 105 07 Statistical analysis fails to corroborate Salafism terrorism connection but it does corroborate a connection to U S military policies in the Persian Gulf 107 17 Al Qaeda propaganda emphasizes the Crusader theme which is inherently related to occupation 117 24 Pape concludes that the core features of al Qaeda are captured by his theory 125 Chapter 8 Suicide Terrorist Organizations around the Globe edit Robert Pape examines other campaigns to see if the dynamics that make religious difference important are present in other terrorist campaigns acknowledging the difficulty of the inquiry 126 29 He offers detailed analyses of Lebanon 129 39 Sri Lanka 139 54 the Sikhs in Punjab 154 62 and the Kurdish PKK in Turkey 162 66 His conclusion Religion plays a role in suicide terrorism but mainly in the context of national resistance and not Islam per se but the dynamics of religious difference are what matter 166 67 Part III The Individual Logic of Suicide Terrorism edit Chapter 9 Altruism and Terrorism edit Pape presents a Durkheimian analysis of suicide 173 79 Many acts of suicide terrorism are a murderous form of what Durkheim calls altruistic suicide 179 Analytical difficulties are acknowledged 180 81 Pape uses suicide rates in general as points of comparison 181 84 Team suicide which is frequent in suicide terrorism is an indicator of altruistic suicide he argues 185 87 Altruistic suicide is a socially constructed phenomenon 187 88 e g Hezbollah in Lebanon 188 91 Hamas 191 93 Tamil Tigers 193 95 al Qaeda 195 96 The altruistic nature of suicide terrorism suggests the number of potential terrorists is large that suicide terrorism is capable of growing in attractiveness and appeal and that any attempt at profiling will miss a substantial number of potential suicide terrorists 197 98 Chapter 10 The Demographic Profile of Suicide Terrorists edit In general suicide attackers are rarely socially isolated clinically insane or economically destitute individuals but are most often educated socially integrated and highly capable people who could be expected to have a good future 200 Pape discusses problems of data gathering 201 02 He establishes 462 individuals in his universe of suicide terrorists available for analytical purposes 203 Hezbollah suicide bombers in the period 1982 1986 were 71 Communist Socialist 21 Islamist 8 Christian 204 07 In general suicide terrorists are in their early 20s 207 08 Females are fewer in Islamist groups Islamist fundamentalism may actually reduce the number of suicide terrorists by discouraging certain categories of individuals 208 09 Female suicide terrorists tend to be older than male 209 10 There is no documented mental illness in any case of suicide terrorism though there are 16 cases of personal trauma e g the loss of a loved one 210 11 Arab suicide terrorists are in general better educated than average and are from the working or middle classes 211 16 T hey resemble the kind of politically conscious individuals who might join a grassroots movement more than they do wayward adolescents or religious fanatics 216 Chapter 11 Portraits of Three Suicide Terrorists edit Earlier work has tended to emphasize suicide terrorists irrationality but this generalization fit 1980s data better than more recent data 217 20 Pape looks at three individual cases Mohamed Atta 220 26 Dhanu a young woman from Jaffna the most famous Tamil Tiger suicide bomber 226 30 and Saeed Hotari of Hamas 231 34 Conclusion edit Chapter 12 A New Strategy for Victory edit Though we cannot leave the Middle East altogether Pape asserts a strategy for victory is available 237 38 U S should define victory as the separate objectives of defeating the current pool of terrorists and preventing a new generation from arising 238 39 He rejects Frum Perle view that the root of the problem is in Islam 241 44 Rather the taproot is American military policy 244 The notion that Islamic fundamentalism is bent on world domination is pure fantasy 244 45 An attempt by the West to force Muslim societies to transform is likely to dramatically increase the threat we face 245 He calls for a policy of off shore balancing establishing local alliances while maintaining the capacity for rapid deployment of military forces 247 50 Appendices edit Appendix I Suicide Terrorist Campaigns 1980 2003 edit Analysis of 18 campaigns Appendix II Occupations by Democratic States 1980 2003 edit Fifty eight occupations by democratic states are listed 265 67 Appendix III Salafism in Major Sunni Muslim Majority Countries edit Thirty four countries with Sunni majority populations of 1 m or more and the importance of Salafism in these countries are the subjects of brief commentaries Salafism is defined as the belief that society should be organized according to the Quran and Sunna only 269 Sunni Countries with Salafi Influenced Populations Afghanistan 10 m Pashtuns Algeria 19 m 31m Sunni Muslims Bangladesh 14 m 114m Egypt 23 m 62m Indonesia 26 m 185m Jordan 2 m 6m Nigeria 37 m 68m Oman 2 m 2m Pakistan 43 m 149m Saudi Arabia 18 m 18m Somalia 5 m 10m Sudan 21 m 21m Tunisia 5 m 10m Yemen 8 m 11m 270 74 Non Salafi Sunni Countries Albania Burkina Faso Chad Guinea Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Libya Malaysia Mali Mauritania Morocco Niger Senegal Sierra Leone Syria Tajikistan Turkey Turkmenistan United Arab Emirates Uzbekistan 274 77 Critiques editIn a criticism of Pape s link between occupation and suicide terrorism an article titled Design Inference and the Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism published in The American Political Science Review authors Scott Ashworth Joshua D Clinton Adam Meirowitz and Kristopher W Ramsay from Princeton charge Pape with sampling on the dependent variable by limiting research only to cases in which suicide terror was used 3 Pape s analysis has no control group Appendix II lists 58 occupations by democracies only 9 of which generated suicide terrorism An analysis explaining the difference between the 9 with suicide terrorism and the 49 without is lacking In response Pape argues that his research design is sufficient because it collected the universe of known cases of suicide terrorism 4 In a rejoinder Ashworth et al discuss how even large samples of the dependent variable cannot be used to explain variation in outcomes why suicide terrorism in some places but not others if the sample does not vary 5 In a debate hosted by the Washington Institute Martin Kramer argued that Pape s thesis was less relevant to Al Qaeda than to Lebanon and Palestine and that there were only 12 000 American troops in Saudi Arabia in 2001 and they had not caused any deaths 6 In response Pape argued that The U S led war on terrorism is going badly because it is being waged on a faulty premise That premise is that suicide terrorism is mainly a product of Islamic fundamentalism 7 References edit Paul Ron 2005 07 14 Suicide Terrorism LewRockwell com Scheuer Michael 2005 06 10 Throwing America a Life Preserver AntiWar com American Political Science Review Volume 102 Issue 02 May 2008 pp 269 273 American Political Science Review Volume 102 Issue 02 May 2008 pp 275 277 Design Inference and the Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism A Rejoinder https scholar princeton edu sites default files rejoinder3 pdf Kramer Martin November 8 2005 Suicide Terrorism in the Middle East Origins and Response Prepared Remarks Washington Institute Retrieved Jun 10 2016 Pape Robert November 16 2005 Suicide Terrorism in the Middle East Origins and Response Washington Institute Retrieved Jun 10 2016 External links editChicago Project on Security and Threats Downloadable audio interview with Scott Horton It s the Occupation Stupid by Robert A Pape Foreign Policy magazine October 18 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dying to Win amp oldid 1189719741, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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