1st Edition

Ten Years After 9/11 - Rethinking the Jihadist Threat

By Arabinda Acharya Copyright 2013
    194 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    Ten years after the 9/11 attacks this book reassesses the effectiveness of the "War on Terror", considers how al-Qaeda and other jihadist movements are faring, explores the impact of wider developments in the Islamic world such as the Arab Spring, and discusses whether all this suggests that a new approach to containing international, especially jihadist, terrorism is needed. Among the book’s many richly argued conclusions are that the "War on Terror" and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq have brutalised the United States; that the jihadist threat is not one, but rather a wide range of separate, unconnected struggles; and that al-Qaeda’s ideology contains the seeds of its own destruction, in that although many Muslims are content to see the United States worsted, they do not approve of al-Qaeda’s violence and are not taken in by the jihadists’ empty promises of utopia.

    Introduction  1. 9/11 and Globalization of Violence  2. Construction of the Adversary 3. Strategy of the Global Jihadist Movement  4. Tactics of the Global Jihadist Movement  5. Fighting the Jihadist Threat  6. Ten Years After: Bringing the Conflict to an End  Conclusion: Stealing Jihadists’ Playbook; Exploiting the Fissures within the Jihadist Movement

    Biography

    Arabinda Acharya is a Research Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.