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Why Terrorism Works
Book

Why Terrorism Works

Yale UP, 2002 more...

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Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

Harvard don and civil-liberties lawyer extraordinaire Alan Dershowitz turns his keen and combative eye to the war on terrorism, and the results aren’t pretty. His conclusions about the causes of terrorism and the most effective means of fighting will not sit well with many of Dershowitz’s historically steadfast supporters. The normally liberal lawyer lambastes European governments for what he characterizes as their cowardly appeasement of terrorists, which he points to as the central driver of growth in the terrorism industry. He also proclaims flatly that the international community should purposefully refrain from addressing the "root causes" of any group that adopts terrorist means. How this would work in practice is never quite explained, but nevertheless, getAbstract.com recommends this important and damning book as a welcomed addition to the emerging debate on how best to wage the war on terrorism.

Summary

The Making of 9/11

To understand the events of Sept. 11, 2001, you must go back to Sept. 5, 1972, when terrorists conducted the Olympic massacre in Munich, Germany. That attack was part of a pattern of violence that had started just a few years earlier and extended through 9/11/01.

In 1972, the West Germans were warned about the possibility of a terrorist attack on the Olympic games, but they denied a request from Israeli officials for permission to help guard their own athletes. Eight armed Palestinian terrorists - almost certainly aided by East German officials - scaled the fence around the Olympic village. They murdered one of the Israeli coaches and threw his naked, bullet-riddled body out a window. Next, they shot an Israeli athlete, leaving him to bleed to death in front of seven teammates. The terrorists promised to kill the others unless some 200 imprisoned terrorists were set free.

The terrorists demanded to be flown to an Arab country. Israel requested permission to conduct a rescue operation with its highly trained troops. With its prestige on the line, the German government refused. Lacking trained antiterrorist police, and using border guards to ...

About the Author

Harvard University Professor of Law Alan M. Dershowitz is the best-selling author of several books, including Supreme Injustice and Chutzpah. He is one of America’s most renowned criminal defense and civil liberties attorneys. A frequent television commentator on politics, law and terrorism, Dershowitz himself became a terrorist target after calling for the Palestinian Liberation Organization to launch an internal investigation of attacks committed by agents who were trained by the PLO.


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