Top 5 Insights From US War On Terror
By Clarion Project September 20, 2017 Share this article:
The Bipartisan Policy Research Center has just released a new
report assessing the impact of the war on terror. Entitled Defeating
Terrorists, Not Terrorism: An Assessment of U.S. Counterterrorism Policy
From 9/11 to ISIS, it looks at successes, failures and what we've
learned in the 16 years since 9/11.
Authored
by a group of high-level policymakers from across the political
spectrum, it outlines how a military solution is not enough and an
ideological component is necessary for victory.
It
was put together by their task force on terrorism and ideology and
chaired by Governor Thomas H. Keane, former chair of the 9/11
Commission, and Representative Lee Hamilton, former vice chair of the
9/11 Commission.
Here are the top five takeaways:
1.Jihadis
are recruiting as fast as the U.S. military can kill them. The report
says "despite estimates that U.S. forces have killed at least 60,000
ISIS fighters, the U.S. government believes the group has as almost as
many members now (15,000, according to the State Department) as it did
in 2014 (20,000, according to the CIA)."
It's not just ISIS either, al-Qaeda and other jihadist groups have been heavily recruiting despite counter-terror successes.
2.
The U.S. has done serious damage to international terror networks.
"Prodigious efforts by intelligence agencies, law enforcement, and the
military have prevented another mass-casualty attack on U.S. soil," the
report notes.
"American forces have found and killed tens of thousands
of terrorists abroad. The combined efforts of the U.S. government have
degraded terrorist leadership, disrupted terrorist financing, and
thwarted hundreds of terrorist plots."
3.Terror
attacks are still increasing. "It is impossible to conclude that the
enemy has been defeated. Rather, the threat of terrorism has
metastasized," the report says. "Last year, some 25,000 people died in
roughly 11,000 terrorist attacks in 104 countries.
That
is over three times as many deaths and five times as many attacks
(7,000 and 2,000, respectively) as were recorded in 2001."
4.The
Enemy Will Continue to Evolve. "Five years from now, new terrorist
organizations will emerge, remnants of the earlier jihadi organizations
will linger, and the extremists will adapt. Indeed, jihadist thinking
has never been static," the report states.
"Groups
like al Qaeda and the Islamic State are fanatically committed to their
worldview, but they have shown a remarkable ability to adapt their
tactics to the circumstances in which they find themselves. As ISIS's
terrestrial caliphate collapses, jihadist thinking will likely evolve in
response."
5.To defeat terror the U.S. needs a holistic approach that
strikes at the root of extremism. "Islamism's belief in the need for a
revolutionary transformation of the modern political world, from an
order based on individual liberty and composed of nation states to a
totalitarian and transnational autocracy, is the fundamental challenge
posed by terrorism," the report says. "The United States must confront
this ideology in all its forms."
Victory, the
authors state, is contingent on eradicating the ideology. "The
generational struggle against Islamist terrorism will come to an end
only when the ambitions that motivate groups such as al Qaeda and the
Islamic State return to the obscurity they richly deserve.
To
speed that process, the United States will have to support the
conditions and values that counteract and undermine Islamism's appeal:
governance, institutions, civil society, citizenship, pluralism,
tolerance, and a strong separation between public and private spheres."
Originally published at Clarion Project - reposted with permission.
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