Counter Terror (Part 2)

Presentation 11b

Counter-Terror Policy (part 2)

 

What is the future of counter-terrorism?

 

At this moment in US history in the world

 

Moreover, there is a large ‘terror-war’ trap that evades US thinking:


Predictions

The US has a big interest in the preservation of the security status quo and will consider any ‘terrorist’ attack as a threat and respond with massive force to defend ‘norms’ [or supply routes], or to fight the terrorists ‘there’ rather than here (i.e. within the US)

Such wars, in fact, will widen the economic gap, environmental deterioration, and further exacerbate the quest for new resources, likely creating more failed states as the normal political space is completely replaced by these opposing armed forces

These wars will also be increasingly divisive within the western alliance

Some of these wars we think we can/should do little about as they seem not to be linked to terrorism (e.g.: Sudan - Darfur). Others we can manage with aid and limited involvement (e.g.: Colombia; Afghanistan)

Our wars will need to be ‘media managed’ and politicized from all angles to sustain the anti-terror campaign 

Being in charge of the ‘lessons of the war on terror’ debate, or the Iraq war debate will be critical. 
 

The style of control: building ‘global regimes’

 

Examples of Global Regimes

Lots of parallels in the human rights and environment areas


Regime is the CTC-CTED

 

Counter-Terror Policies – Beyond the US

Citation: Lopez, G. (2009, April 08). Counter Terror (Part 2). Retrieved February 12, 2012, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/peace-studies/terrorism-peace-and-other-inconsistencies/notes/presentation-11b.
Copyright 2012, by the Contributing Authors. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Creative Commons License