And that backfired, too; it just takes longer when it's the state terrorizing its own citizens.For terrorism to work, it must be omnipresent and inescapable, as it was, for example, in the Soviet Union, under Stalin.
And that backfired, too; it just takes longer when it's the state terrorizing its own citizens.For terrorism to work, it must be omnipresent and inescapable, as it was, for example, in the Soviet Union, under Stalin.
And that backfired, too; it just takes longer when it's the state terrorizing its own citizens.For terrorism to work, it must be omnipresent and inescapable, as it was, for example, in the Soviet Union, under Stalin.
Human nature being what it is, I believe terrorism is always unworkable; I can't think of any instance where terrorism has been successful.
Sure, the Soviet Union ultimately collapsed. But so will every country.
Were those deliberate acts to get the survivors to change their political behavior under threat that they will be next if they don't comply? If so, it's terrorism. If not, it's military action. Maybe it's sloppy or unnecessary military action but that's a question of competence. Terrorism is about intent.Terrorism is hard to define because people always seek find exceptions. The leveling of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the wholesale destruction of towns and cities throughout Europe during WWII were all military actions. Civilian dead in Iraq and Afghanistan are collateral damage, or the civilians are stupid for living amongst the terrorists. Are we terrorists for leveling cities, killing innocents who are being used as shields, and etc?
That's a good point to remind people of. Terrorism isn't a tactic that people resort to because they are weak. It's a tactic that people use if they think it will work (and are not ideologically bound to using traditional forms of persuasion from a liberal democratic perspective.)What's more, the worst terrorists in history have invariably been states, not insurgents.
Human nature being what it is, I believe terrorism is always unworkable; I can't think of any instance where terrorism has been successful.
I can think of a few. The Irish War of Independence, for example. The Algerian War of Independence, for another.
But I guess it all depends on how you define "success."
On a long enough timeline, nothing is successful, because nothing lasts forever.
But on the other hand, the Terror arguably saved revolutionary France from its internal and external enemies in 1792-94, though the Terrorists themselves were ultimately overthrown.
Dzerzhinsky's Red Terror made a crucial contribution to the Bolshevik victory in the Russian Civil War. And terrorism kept Stalin in power until his death.
Sure, the Soviet Union ultimately collapsed. But so will every country.
Sure, the Soviet Union ultimately collapsed. But so will every country.
The Soviet Union's collapse was due to economic warfare at its best. They were financially suffocated to death, which in itself might be considered a form of Western terrorism, given the number of civilian casualties that resulted during the period following the power shift.
But anyway, there was no "overthrow." And state-sponsored terrorism ended in the Soviet Union a long long time before the end -- at least it did in the RSSR (what is, today, the Russian Federation).
I don't think you can classify anything done in war (actual declared wars, WWII was the last war to officially be declared by the US Congress I believe) as an act of terrorism.
Dropping nukes on Hiroshima and Nagasaki was meant to instill fear but war had been declared by both sides and they were fighting for several years already.
If you want to say that is terrorism, then what about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor? Was that an act of terrorism or was it a declaration of war?
A terrorist is anyone who doesn't want America to come into their country and change their government and way of life... duh!
If the Japanese thought that the one attack would scare us and we'd just give up the Pacific, then yes, it was terrorism. But I don't know if that was their plan. If they expected to fight back then it wasn't terrorism.
Well, so will the Universe, probably.Human nature being what it is, I believe terrorism is always unworkable; I can't think of any instance where terrorism has been successful.
I can think of a few. The Irish War of Independence, for example. The Algerian War of Independence, for another.
But I guess it all depends on how you define "success."
On a long enough timeline, nothing is successful, because nothing lasts forever.
But on the other hand, the Terror arguably saved revolutionary France from its internal and external enemies in 1792-94, though the Terrorists themselves were ultimately overthrown.
Dzerzhinsky's Red Terror made a crucial contribution to the Bolshevik victory in the Russian Civil War. And terrorism kept Stalin in power until his death.
Sure, the Soviet Union ultimately collapsed. But so will every country.
TERRORIST - Someone who does acts to cause Terror in other people.
TERRORISM - The act of doing something to instil terror in other people.
For a while there the media view seemed like: Terrorist: Someone who is different.
If the Japanese thought that the one attack would scare us and we'd just give up the Pacific, then yes, it was terrorism. But I don't know if that was their plan. If they expected to fight back then it wasn't terrorism.
Not expecting retaliation -- does that mean its intending to meet its objective with less casualties in the long term?
Judging by some of the bumper stickers I see in my state, apparently the U.S. military are terrorists.![]()
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