Al Qaeda killed over 3,000 US citizens on September 11, 2001, and
terrorism leapt to the fore of US strategic and political priorities.
Yet, after nearly six years of concentrated effort by the United
States, the dominant power in the international system, Al Qaeda
survives and is still acknowledged as a potent threat. This begs the
question not just of why, but also of what the United States can do to
redress the situation. Confronting Al-Qaeda asserts that Al-Qaeda is
primarily a political threat, not a military one. This is because
terrorists subvert legitimate political processes to achieve political
ends. Al-Qaeda challenges not only specific U.S. policy decisions, but
also the very nature of the U.S. political system and the U.S.-lead
international order created after World War II. Therefore the
character of the U.S. political response to the threat from Al-Qaeda
is critical. Al-Qaeda’s capacity for violence is the direct source
of its power. This must be reduced, and coercive means, such as the
military, intelligence, and law enforcement, are necessary, for they
alone directly degrade Al-Qaeda’s potential. A singularly coercive
approach, however, is insufficient. As the leader of the international
system, the United States is in a position to politically undercut
Al-Qaeda. The United States can do so by adhering to globally revered
traditional US political values and foreign policy.
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New Strategies to Combat Terrorism
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781612510330
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Vendor
Naval Institute Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter