Terrorists deliver message with lethal simplicity
Extremists find low-tech assaults are still effective in stoking fear, generating worldwide attention
In the months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, Western officials worried about additional attacks, possibly using weapons of mass destruction, that could kill thousands. The United States invested heavily in biological and nuclear detectors and other high-tech gear. Jihadi terrorism seemed a menace that would unnerve entire countries and might last a generation.
More than a decade and a half later, the threat and fear have proved real and lasting. But the death tolls in individual attacks in the West have remained relatively modest, partly because the assailants have learned that they do not need anthrax or dirty bombs to disrupt capitals, terrify tourists, rivet the attention of governments and impress potential recruits.
All they need is a gun, or, if that is too hard to acquire, a truck and a knife. And with simple preparation, such plotting, encouraged and sometimes directed by the Islamic State, is difficult to detect even with robust intelligence and law enforcement surveillance.
In the aftermath of the van-and-knife assault that left seven people dead in London on Saturday night, the third deadly attack in three months in Britain, it is hard to remember that years ago many experts predicted slaughter on a far larger scale.
But the attacks still seem a harbinger of further mayhem, especially at a time when the slow strangulation of the Islamic State means that more young Westerners drawn to its cause are left to plot havoc at home.
Lorenzo Vidino, director of the Program on Extremism at George Washington University, said the three London attackers might be a case in point.
“Two years ago, these three knuckleheads would have headed to Syria,” he said. “Now they can’t do that, so they do something else.”
Besides the victims killed or maimed, terrorism proves again and again its ability to draw obsessive news coverage and to polarize society. It poses a test for leaders, who must weigh what they want to say to fellow citizens and the future impact of their words.
President Donald Trump, as in other matters, offered a pugnacious contrast to his predecessor, Barack Obama, and to some European leaders. On Saturday night, Trump offered a standard message of support for London via Twitter.
But after that, he posted an extraordinary series of nine messages, mocking London’s mayor and claiming vindication for his own proposed “travel ban” on visitors from certain Muslim countries, now hung up in the courts.
In the wake of terrorism, Obama usually projected calm and restraint — to a fault, even some supporters said — and always distinguished violent jihadis from Islam and its adherents. His intent was to ensure he did nothing to vilify ordinary Muslims, which he saw as unfair and counterproductive. Most counterterrorism experts say that intimidating or alienating law-abiding Muslims simply makes it less likely they will report alarming extremism or suspicious activities. British officials have said they foiled at least 18 terrorist plots since 2013, often with the help of tips from the Muslim community.
Trump, perhaps with U.S. supporters rather than security tactics in mind, often makes a point of attaching the “Islamic” label to terrorism and extremism. This time, his eagerness to do battle with “slow and political” courts that have repeatedly rejected his travel ban and critics like Mayor Sadiq Khan of London, the first Muslim to lead a major Western capital, overcame any more deliberative strategy.
Bruce Hoffman, a Georgetown University professor who has advised the U.S. government on terrorism for years, said it was “a strategy of provocation,” and important for leaders not to respond viscerally.
“Any reaction that’s immediate and emotional rather than sober and considered plays into the terrorists’ hands,” Hoffman said.
Though he was often critical of Obama, Hoffman endorsed Obama’s care in responding to attacks. “His measured and calm response was right,” Hoffman said.
At the moment, certainly, the fear of jihadi terror in the United States is not nearly so acute as it is in Europe. Americans feel relatively protected from attack, both by oceans and by the relative affluence and assimilation of its Muslim population, which is small by European standards.
Vidino, who is completing a study of jihadi attacks in the West during the three years since the Islamic State declared its own state in parts of Syria and Iraq, counted 52 attacks in that time, leaving 402 dead. While France led the count, with 17 attacks and 239 dead, the United States came next, with 16 attacks and 76 dead. Britain had five attacks and 35 deaths.
Still, the attacks in Europe have created an atmosphere of apprehension unlike anything in the United States. “It’s shaping day-to-day life in Europe,” said Vidino, speaking from Italy. “It’s a completely different mindset.”
The same night as the London attack, he noted, a firecracker panicked a crowd watching a soccer match on a large outdoor screen in Turin, Italy, causing a stampede that injured 1,500 people, including a 7-year-old boy left in a coma.