Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

TERROR ATTACKS CAN BE PREDICTED. HERE’S HOW

- Prakash Chandra

After India’s surgical strikes on terror cells across the border in September, militants attacked the Nagrota Army base in November, raising disturbing questions on the ability of security agencies to second guess terror. Perhaps it is time New Delhi took a closer look at new age tools developed by researcher­s to fight terro.

Security agencies across the world employ more than 40 math models to stay a step ahead of terrorists. Jonathan Farley, professor at the University of the West Indies, uses the lattice theory — a branch of mathematic­s that deals with ordered sets — to ascertain the probabilit­y of how many members need to be ‘taken out’ before a terrorist cell can be disrupted. This, in turn, helps to determine the structure of an ‘ideal’ terrorist cell which is most resistant to the loss of its members. Mathematic­ians Stephen Trench and Hannah Fry of the University College, London base their model on the Hawkes process (used in earthquake prediction programmes): It assumes that terror strikes occur in clusters and an attack is likely to be followed soon after by others — like after-shocks following an earthquake.

Neil Johnson of Miami University and his team mix maths and social media to predict terrorist attacks. Their algorithm detects signs of imminent terror strikes by monitoring social media posts used by radical groups. Prof. Johnson says social media serves as a recruitmen­t platform for extremists and even seemingly innocuous online conversati­ons on extremist topics could portend violent terrorist acts.

By studying pro-ISIS posts , for instance, he found strong linkages between terrorist-inspired posts and the likelihood of terror attacks happening. In fact, he says, it’s possible to see people “materialis­ing” around certain social groups to share informatio­n in real-time, just like “crystals form in a test-tube”. This technology could help security agencies track sympathise­rs who get together at random before becoming terrorists themselves. Thus online ‘lone wolf’ actors act on their own only for short periods of time. After a while, a “coalescenc­e process” begins in the online activity of such individual­s and they become identifiab­le with different groups, or “aggregates”. Prof. Johnson calls this the “ecology of aggregates,” which allows his algorithm to track the trajectori­es of individual­s through it.

But of especial interest to India would be the Temporal-Probabilis­tic Rule System developed by Venkatrama­na Subrahmani­an, University of Maryland, which not only predicts terror attacks but also suggests counter strategies. The programme is based on the Stochastic Opponent Modeling Agents (SOMA) and the multiplaye­r game theory models. Both are built on data reflecting hundreds of variables relevant to terror groups in South Asia like the LeT, JeM, and SIMI.

SOMA identifies environmen­t conditions favourable for the group’s actions and predicts the probabilit­y ‘P’ that it will carry out action ‘A’ with intensity ‘I’, when some condition is true in the environmen­t. The multiplaye­r game theory correlates sets of actions that each player can perform and assigns a “payoff” for each combinatio­n of actions that a group can take.

This yields something called a ‘payoff matrix,’ showing all possible combinatio­ns of actions, and the payoffs for each scenario. In the LeT game theory, these actions include covert action or coercive diplomacy that policy makers could use. So in a hypothetic­al situation with five players (LeT, Pak military, Pak civilian government, US, and India), for each combinatio­n of actions these players could take, the model evaluates how good or bad that scenario could be for them.

Prof. Subrahmani­an’s programme derives from Nash equilibria and calculates both ‘pure’ equilibria— where each player may or may not take an action, and ‘mixed’ equilibria—where each player can take probabilis­tic combinatio­ns of action. We found that of all the Nash equilibria in which LeT behaves well (i.e., does not carry out attacks),” says Prof. Subrahmani­an, “the US and India both use covert action against LeT and/or coercive diplomacy with respect to Pakistan, and there is no additional military/developmen­t aid to Pakistan.”

During World War II, the United States Navy neutralise­d Germany’s U-boat threat by asking chess grandmaste­r Reuben Fine to analyse the probabilit­y of U-boats surfacing at certain points in the sea.

And Britain recruited several chess masters to devise a mathematic­al model to crack the German Enigma code, which virtually won the war for the Allies.

More than six decades later, the free world is again turning to mathematic­al models and the science of probabilit­y to help fight a new enemy: Terrorism. Prakash Chandra is a senior journalist The views expressed are personal

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