Terrorism and U.S. Foreign Policy

Front Cover
Brookings Institution Press, Jan 1, 2001 - Political Science - 272 pages

The United States government-backed by the overwhelming support of the American public-takes a hard line against international terrorism. The tenets of official U.S. counterterrorist policy are: make no concessions or deals with terrorists; bring them to justice for their crimes; isolate and apply pressure on states that sponsor terrorism; and bolster the counterterrorist capabilities of countries willing to work with the United States. While these tenets are sound principles, their application, specifically overseas, raises difficult questions. Does the "no deal" policy actually deter terrorists acts? Are there cases where agreements might reduce terrorism, while advancing other U.S. interests? Do isolation and pressure really force offending states to alter their support for terrorists? What factors affect the willingness, not just the capability, of foreign governments to help the United States in counterterrorism? In this critical study, a career CIA officer provides a guide to constructing and executing counterterrorist policy, urging that it be formulated as an integral part of broader U.S. foreign policy. In the first four chapters, Paul R. Pillar identifies the necessary elements of counterterrorist policy, he examines why the United States is a prime terrorist target, and he reveals why the counterterrorist policies that seem strongest are not always the most effective. Chapter 5 examines the widely varying nature of terrorist groups and the policy tools most appropriately applied to them. Chapter 6 focuses on states that sponsor terrorism (including Iran, Libya, North Korea, and Cuba), along with those that enable it to occur (particularly Greece and Pakistan). Pillar examines ways in which the American public's perspective toward terrorism can actually constrain counterterrorist policy, and he concludes that terrorism cannot be "defeated" only reduced, attenuated, and to some degree, controlled. The final chapter summarizes his recommendations for amending U.S. policy.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Introduction
1
The Dimensions of Terrorism and Counterterrorism
12
Why It Matters
18
The Elements of Counterterrorist Policy
29
Terrorism the United States and the World Order
41
The Absence of a Terrorist International
50
The Superpower as Target
57
Managing Vulnerability
69
Groups
130
Peace Processes
140
Lists
150
States
157
Enablers
178
Cooperators
186
Publics
197
Americans
200

Counterterrorist Instruments
73
Criminal Law
79
Financial Controls
92
Military Force
97
Intelligence and Covert Action
110
Coordinating the Instruments
123
Lessons and Futures
217
Recommendations
220
A Cloudy Crystal Ball
229
Notes
236
Index
261
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2001)

Paul Pillar , who spent 28 years in the U.S. intelligence community, is now a visiting professor at Georgetown University.

Bibliographic information