embassy in Buenos Aires in March 1992. Six Americans were killed and over 1,000 injured inthe bombing of the World Trade Centre in February 1993, and 96 were killed and 200 injuredin the bombing of the Jewish community's building in Buenos Aires in July 1994. The attackson the Jewish community in Buenos Aires and London in July 1994 show not only thatterrorist crimes endanger life and limb and are often aimed at intimidating particular religiousor ethnic minorities; they also graphically demonstrate how terrorist groups and their statesponsors use terrorism as an international weapon, in this case to derail or at least severelydisrupt the peace process in the Middle East.It is clear, then, that the international and national problems of response to terrorists threatsare interwoven. To be effective, action against terrorists must be synchronised to both levels.By tolerating the terrorists' capacity to provoke and incite further conflictthe international community is playing with fire. And we have seen that terrorists confrontliberal democracies internally with a ruthless challenge against the safety of their citizens, thesecurity of the state, and the rule of law. Liberal democratic governments have to decide howto react to terrorist violence, and they have to carry a majority of their citizens with them behind their policies.Counter-terrorism is not an insignificant or purely marginal responsibility which can safely beleft entirely to secret intelligence and police agencies. By its very nature it raises importantissues of democratic accountability, legal powers, and civil liberties.Clumsy and heavy-handed responses can endanger human rights and weaken democracy andthe rule of law. Weakness and under-reaction can invite worse violence by signalling toterrorists that they can commit their crimes with relative all deaths caused by international terrimpunity and can gravely damage public confidence in the authorities andtheir ability and will to uphold the law. It would be foolish to pretend that it is easy for liberaldemocratic states to get this balance right. It is also important to bear in mind that, in the post-Cold War world, the national policies of major democratic states, especially the United Statesand the key European Union (EU) member states, have the predominant influence on theshaping of the international order. If they get things badly wrong, this has major repercussionson the global strategic environment.
The Current Threat in Britain and Western Europe
The United Kingdom has experienced the most protracted and lethal terrorist campaign inWestern Europe: the bombing campaign by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in the twenty-seven years since 1970. This campaign, mainly centred in Northern Ireland but frequentlyspilling over into attacks on the British mainland, and occasionally against British targets onthe continent of Europe, has been more than three times as lethal as the terrorist campaignconducted against Spain by ETA-M-Euskadi ta Askatasuna (military faction), the armed wingof the Basque separatist movement, and has resulted in hundreds of deaths, thousands of injuries and hundreds of millions of pounds of damage to property.10. It has also provoked aretaliatory terror campaign by Loyalist extremist groups, the UVF and UFF, though thesegroups declared a cease-fire in October 1994, and although extremely tenuous this has not yet been formally renounced.The IRA declared a cease-fire in September 1994, but resumed violence in February 1996. Itis now clear that the hardline IRA leadership is determined to keep to the bomb and the gun,the mortar and the land mine, their habitual weapons, and that the talk by Sinn Fein, the IRA's political wing, of their 'peace strategy' was intended as a political ploy. It should be clearly
Leave a Comment