¶ … Terrorism, destabilization, and the modern global environment
Modern terrorism is often said to have a very unique and particular character, not the least of which is the dominant influence of the Internet in shaping and supporting its activities. Of course, it could be argued that on a very basic level certain aspects of terrorism have remained unchanging across the eras, namely terrorists' desire to inflict fear upon a population by using indiscriminate violence against civilians and the desire to garner publicity for a cause. However, the tools available to terrorists have changed, just as the social and political environment is constantly undergoing shifts and alternations that give rise to new motivations for violence. The decentralization of the 21st century balance of power combined with decentralized methods of communication has created a uniquely toxic environment fertile for terrorism, in contrast to previous eras.
The Internet: A new tool for terrorism
Many people keep abreast of new security developments in the field of terrorism online. However, while the Internet offers additional resources for people wishing to expand their base of knowledge and awareness, it has also offered terrorists a new weapon through which to disseminate their message and to perpetuate their actions. The source of this, ironically, is the fact that the Internet was intentionally created as a decentralized rather than a centralized system: "out of fear of the Soviet Union" at the time "when the U.S. Department of Defense was concerned about reducing the vulnerability of its communication networks to nuclear attack" (Weimann 2004: 2). Decentralization seemed to be the safest available option. However, this "now serves the interests of the greatest foe of the West's security services since the end of the Cold War: international terror" (Weimann 2004: 3).
Terrorists have exploited the Internet's decentralization to serve their own needs. Terrorists can use the Internet to disseminate their views in an unfiltered fashion that is difficult to censor. Many of the reasons the Internet is such a useful means of communication, namely its accessibility due to its speed, cost, and timeliness; relative lack of regulation due to its international, borderless quality, and above all its anonymous nature make it conducive to illegal activities and the spread of terrorist propaganda (Weimann 2004: 3). For example, as early as 1998, the anti-Israeli pro-Palestinian Hezbollah "was operating three web sites: one for the central press office (www.hizbollah.org), another to describe its attacks on Israeli targets (www.moqawama.org), and the third for news and information" (Denning 2001: 252). Both Hezbollah and Hamas update their websites to note the causalities their actions have generated (Weimann 2004:4).
Although the common expression is that 'words cannot hurt you,' there is widespread agreement that much of the propaganda disseminated by terrorists has been very destructive in a meaningful fashion. For example, terrorists "can use the Internet to spread disinformation, to deliver threats intended to distill fear and helplessness, and to disseminate horrific images of recent actions, such as the brutal murder of the American journalist Daniel Pearl" (Weimann 2004: 5). Additionally, terrorists can also use the online medium as a means of connection with other terrorists and to recruit new persons to their cause. In many instances, it is virtually impossible to shut down such sites because of free speech laws: especially when the terrorists often do not broadcast plans to the world, or threats, merely stoke the fires of radicalism with rhetoric.
To avoid detection, terrorists online have undertaken a number of precautions. One is to avoid explicitly discussing terrorist actions at all and simply to use propaganda to discuss the evils of the enemy. "Even if they expound at length on the moral and legal basis of the legitimacy of the use of violence, most sites refrain from referring to the terrorists' violent actions or their fatal consequences -- this reticence is presumably inspired by propagandist and image-building considerations" (Weimann 2004:4). Another is to use the fluidity of the medium to take down websites and put up new ones with relative ease, to...
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