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Fine line between terrorism and insanity in the age of ISIS

WASHINGTON — In December 2014, a middle-aged man driving a car in Dijon, France, mowed down more than a dozen pedestrians within 30 minutes, occasionally shouting Islamic slogans from his window.

French Police stand in front of a Chapel of Rest to welcome families of victims three days after a truck mowed through revellers in Nice, France. Photo: AP

French Police stand in front of a Chapel of Rest to welcome families of victims three days after a truck mowed through revellers in Nice, France. Photo: AP

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WASHINGTON — In December 2014, a middle-aged man driving a car in Dijon, France, mowed down more than a dozen pedestrians within 30 minutes, occasionally shouting Islamic slogans from his window.

The chief prosecutor in Dijon described the attacks, which left 13 injured but no one dead, as the work of a mentally unbalanced man whose motivations were vague and “hardly coherent”.

A year and a half later, after Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel slaughtered dozens of people when he drove a 19-tonne refrigerated truck through a Bastille Day celebration Thursday in Nice, France, the authorities did not hesitate to call it an act of Islamic terrorism. The attacker had a record of petty crime — though no obvious ties to a terrorist group — but the French prime minister, Mr Francois Hollande, swiftly said Lahouaiej Bouhlel was “a terrorist probably linked to radical Islam one way or another”.

The age of the Islamic State (ISIS), in which the tools of terrorism appear increasingly crude and haphazard, has led to a re-imagining of the common notion of who is and who is not a terrorist.

Instances of wanton violence by deranged attackers — whether in Nice or in Orlando, Florida — are swiftly judged to be the work of terrorists. These judgements occur even when there is little immediate evidence that the attackers had direct ties to terrorist groups and when they do not fit a classic definition of terrorists as those who use violence to advance a political agenda.

“A lot of this stuff is at the fringes of what we would historically think of as terrorism,” said Mr Daniel Benjamin, a former State Department coordinator for counter-terrorism and a professor at Dartmouth College. But, he said, “the Islamic State and jihadism has become a kind of refuge for some unstable people who are at the end of their rope and decide they can redeem their screwed-up lives” by dying in the name of a cause.

Mr Benjamin said this also led the news media and government officials to treat violence like the Nice attack differently from other mass attacks, like shootings at schools and churches that have been carried out by non-Muslims.

“If there is a mass killing, and there is a Muslim involved, all of a sudden it is by definition terrorism,” he said.

The spectrum of terrorism is widening, and now includes attacks loosely inspired by ISIS, those carried out by its affiliate groups and attacks directed by the group’s leadership. All have drawn public condemnation and concern, but the plots organised and executed by ISIS usually prompt greater concern from the authorities.

On Saturday (July 16), a bulletin on ISIS’s Amaq News Agency channel described Lahouaiej Bouhlel as a “soldier of the Islamic State” who answered a call to attack nations involved in the military campaign against the group. But the bulletin gave no specifics about the extent of the attacker’s ties to the terrorist network.

On one hand, there is now good reason for government officials to make immediate assumptions after some mass killings that ISIS has played a role, however indirect. The group’s ideology, spread widely through social media and slick propaganda videos, appears to have inspired a scourge of violence for more than a year — including the shootings in December in San Bernardino, California; the mass killings last month at a gay nightclub in Orlando; and the deadly attack early this month at a cafe in Bangladesh. These were in addition to attacks that top ISIS operatives apparently planned directly, like the Paris assaults in November and the Brussels bombings in March.

At the same time, governments also see a benefit in linking the Islamic State to what are sometimes random and unconnected acts of violence. It is a way to project order amid chaos, and to try to assure jittery publics that there is a strategy to end the violence. For example, in the days since the Nice attack, French officials have pledged to bolster the resources the country is devoting to the bombing campaign against ISIS in Syria and Iraq.

“Even if Daesh doesn’t do the organising, Daesh inspires this terrorist spirit against which we are fighting,” the French defence minister, Mr Jean-Yves Le Drian, said on Saturday, using an Arabic acronym for ISIS.

Similarly, US officials have cited progress in the military campaign as a measure of success in draining ISIS’s power, resources and influence. Mr Brett H McGurk, President Barack Obama’s special envoy in the fight against ISIS, recently told Congress that the group had lost 47 per cent of its territory in Iraq and 20 per cent in Syria — territory used to extract oil from the ground and taxes from its residents, as well as to plot attacks against the West. Top representatives of nations participating in the bombing campaign will meet in late-July in Washington to assess the progress in the fight.

But terrorism experts caution that because the Islamic State seems to have broad appeal to the mentally unbalanced, the displaced and others on the fringes of society, there are limits to how much any military campaign in Syria and Iraq can reduce violence carried out in other countries on the group’s behalf.

Dr William McCants, a scholar at the Brookings Institution and the author of The ISIS Apocalypse, said there was a large cadre of “men and women who have no organisational ties to ISIS but murder in its name”. These irreligious criminals and social misfits, which he described as “ISIS-ish”, are “rebels looking for a cause”, he said.

During congressional testimony last week, Mr Nicholas J Rasmussen, director of the National Counterterrorism Centre, gave a sober assessment of the broad campaign against ISIS. “It is our judgement that ISIS’s ability to carry out terrorist attacks in Syria, Iraq and abroad has not to date been significantly diminished,” he said.

“Either lone actors or small insular groups continue to gravitate towards simple tactics that do not require advance skills or outside training,” he said.

The murderous truck-driving rampage by Lahouaiej Bouhlel, 31, a Tunisian-born Frenchman, is the embodiment of this phenomenon. The authorities in France are still trying to piece together what direct ties, if any, Lahouaiej Bouhlel had to ISIS.

On Saturday, the Islamic State Bayan radio station said Lahouaiej Bouhlel had used “a new tactic” to wreak havoc.

“The crusader countries know that no matter how much they enforce their security measures and procedures, it will not stop the mujahedeen from striking,” the station said.

Such ominous warnings about indiscriminate violence create formidable challenges for world leaders who must strike a balance between raising awareness about the terrorist threat without gratuitously stoking fears.

“As for how governments can calm their citizens, I’m at a loss,” Dr McCants said. “Every attack is discussed endlessly on television and social media, which heightens fear of future attacks, makes citizens scared of one another” and puts pressure on governments to look tough, he said.

And, he added, it “gives politicians a cudgel to club their governing opponents when they don’t react strongly enough”. THE NEW YORK TIMES

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