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Functional anti-terrorism

We see terrorism as isolated acts conducted by some groups whose business it is to do such things. Our responses are thus focused on the latest incident we are trying to patch. Reactive, episodic attention that is rather disjointed in terms of continuity. We don’t have much of an understanding of terrorism as an evolving or continuous phenomenon or the psychology that makes it effective.

I am no security expert, and my views are strictly from reading news, thinking about people and development dynamics, reading opinions of other people including journalists and strategists.

I think terrorism is not just about blasts or attacks. It is an entire political offensive rooted in loss, hurt, threats, fear, violence and disruption of government credibility and authority. Terrorists may not have professions we like, but they have careers, they have conditions suitable to the market, they have conditions unfavorable. It is an ecosystem where many dots connect to create those spectacular “events” from a terrorist’s perspective, professional milestones.

Many experts have spoken on these matters and the systems we have in place, etc. Far wiser experts than me have detailed what needs done abundantly. I am trying to look at the less visible aspects of terrorism and see what else is there. When acting to disrupt a system, the main idea is to disrupt the system enough to prevent function. Thus, it makes sense to me that our anti terror efforts looking at more aspects that can be disengaged will lead to greater results and reduced terrorism.

Conditions

By conditions, I mean all circumstantial factors that are part of the chain of an attack coming to fruitition. We currently look at detecting the planning and disrupting it. We can’t stop what terrorists do, but we can throw wrenches in the works, and as long as they fail, it is good. However, there might be others. Some that come to mind:

Results

The common factor is that it damages the country by hurting its people, its well being, its functioning, its credibility, its economy…

We ignore that we have the possibility for terror acts to yield less results. Out of the results, the first is pretty much immediate and can be lowered through efficient emergency responses. This gets attention. This gets addressed. A lot of our reforms have targeted this, and are also showing results.

However, the rest are results too, and are worthy of attention, because they are the results that may not seem to deliver much to us by preventing, but they deliver a lot to the terrorists by being allowed and indeed are the things making their method viable.

It could be possible to devise and execute response strategies that cause terrorist attacks to backfire on terrorist goals or at least mute the impact. To some extent, we intuitively sense this, which is how terms like “spirit of Mumbai” or the city fights back, etc come about, where people see their victory on some level in continuing undaunted.

Seriously, for a minute, think like a terrorist. They have little resources that can attack an entire country. Their impact is insignificant compared with the size of a country, unless it is magnified using the resources of the country itself. In this, mental trauma is both a desired outcome, as well as an enabling tool for the terrorists.

The news media is sensationalist in its coverage of events, and the potential for horror is subtly played up constantly without overtly focusing on fear. Subtle ways this manifests is incoherent and jittery anchors in an otherwise polished and sophisticated platform, cameras panning around without pausing attention on anything – as though the person can’t make sense of what is happening. These things make an unconscious impact on the viewer of conveying shock. Other things include constant repetition of very simple and scarce facts – people in shock do that – they repeat simple things as though they can’t comprehend them. Through media, the public is literally taken on a guided tour through a shock response.

This can be seen in the way people hang on to the least bit of news once they begin watching.

Angad Chowdhry really sums it up in one tweet:

It’s the waiting that kills you. Which is why we go ballistic when something happens on the news. The rest of our lives are spent waiting.

Yesterday, an email from HuJI claiming responsibility for the attack became almost as big news as the attack. In spite of the fact that these have been proved false before. In spite of the fact that the email was unverified. In spite of the fact that our news channels ended up adding to the aura of HuJI as a dangerous organization and threat to the safety for everyone – exactly what any terror organization wants.

I am not saying that the media should not report news. However, there can be and there needs to be a conscious attempt to not magnify the impact of terror attacks. This should seriously be seen as an anti-terrorism mechanism, because it is. If the terror from one place can be made to infect the entire country, the media has literally served to expand the scope of terrorists. That simple. This can be prevented by educating media on the psychological impact of crisis/shock on them and that will help them to consciously take a minute to orient themselves so that their body language of panic doesn’t reach every home in the country.

Can we tune our responses and focus to deprive terrorists of attention and success? What if, instead of focusing on the stories of death, devastation, government incompetence, police incompetence, apathy, disillusionment, etc. We focus on facts of the incident without melodrama – like a bad plane crash, for example. And choose instead to focus on information, support for emergency services, politicians leading the country, people reaching out to aid injured and dead, and so on. In fact, this practice of politicians providing dramatic reactions to terror attacks should be completely stopped. What is happening is that this process allows a terror attack to discredit the political leadership of our country at will – at the hands of its own people. What can a politician say about an attack that is urgent? Why should they be hauled over coals at the will of terrorists? What is really happening? Very predictable – terror attack, anger, fear, politicians make generic statements, get lampooned. The people become a weapon against the pillars of the country.

I am not saying that people shouldn’t be angry, or that they shouldn’t demand answers, etc. But the immediate signature response to the attack should be of a country coming together and ignoring terror to swing into purposeful action. The questioning should happen, but more distanced from attack. Later, or brought up separately from blame games and fear. Difficult to suppress natural reaction, but important to try and not attack pillars of our own country on the trigger of an enemy – no matter who is wrong. We are doing it to some extent, but we seem to have created some kind of an unstated norm of an obligation to watching and feeling outraged to the max – which is not necessary. Described some of this in previous post too.

Where does that leave terrorists if their big attack hurt lives in its immediate impact but didn’t harm the country? They don’t know the victims, they have no joy or sorrow in those deaths. They want to disrupt the country, which can be prevented, even after an attack. If the attack holds risk of justice and yields low publicity, it ceases to be viable as a weapon – which is the greatest protection.

Just some raw thoughts.

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