Order Code IB95112
Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Terrorism, the Future, and
U.S. Foreign Policy
Updated May 30, 2002
Rensselaer Lee and Raphael Perl
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
September 11th and Aftermath
Background
Definitions
U.S. Policy Response
Framework
Dilemmas
Continuing Terrorist Threats
Policy Tools
Diplomacy/Constructive Engagement
Economic Sanctions
Economic Inducements
Covert Action
Rewards for Information Program
Extradition/Law Enforcement Cooperation
Military Force
International Conventions
Potential Tools
An International Court for Terrorism
Media Self-Restraint
Policy Reform
U.S. Organization and Program Response
Antiterrorism Assistance and Terrorism and Crime Programs
Assistance to Victims Programs
Counterterrorism Research and Development Program
Diplomatic Security Program
Options for Program Enhancement
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Terrorism, the Future, and U.S. Foreign Policy
SUMMARY
International terrorism has long been
Georgia. President Bush has expressed a
recognized as a foreign and domestic security
willingness to provide military aid to “gov-
threat. The tragic events of September 11 in
ernments everywhere” in the fight against
New York, the Washington, D.C., area, and
terrorism. Important issues for Congress
Pennsylvania have dramatically re-energized
include whether the Administration is provid-
the nation’s focus and resolve on terrorism.
ing sufficient information about the long-term
This issue brief examines international terror-
goals and costs of its military strategy and
ist actions and threats and the U.S. policy
whether military force is necessarily an effec-
response. Available policy options range from
tive anti-terrorism instrument in some circum-
diplomacy, international cooperation, and
stances.
constructive engagement to economic sanc-
tions, covert action, physical security enhance-
A modern trend in terrorism is toward
ment, and military force.
loosely organized, self-financed, international
networks of terrorists. Another trend is toward
The September 11th terrorist incidents in
terrorism that is religiously- or ideologically-
the United States, the subsequent anthrax
motivated. Radical Islamic fundamentalist
attacks, as well as bombings of the U.S.S.
groups, or groups using religion as a pretext,
Cole, Oklahoma City, World Trade Center in
pose terrorist threats of varying kinds to U.S.
1993, and of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and
interests and to friendly regimes. A third trend
Tanzania in 1998, have brought the issue of
is the apparent growth of cross- national links
terrorism to the forefront of American public
among different terrorist organizations, which
interest. Questions relate to whether U.S.
may involve combinations of military training,
policy and organizational mechanisms are
funding, technology transfer or political ad-
adequate to deal with both state-sponsored or
vice.
-abetted terrorism and that undertaken by
independent groups.
Looming over the entire issue of
international terrorism is a trend toward
Terrorist activities supported by
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction
sophisticated planning and logistics as well as
(WMD). For instance Iran, seen as the most
possible access to unconventional weaponry
active state sponsor of terrorism, has been
raise a host of new issues. Some analysts’
aggressively seeking a nuclear arms capabil-
long-held belief that a comprehensive review
ity. Iraq is thought to be stockpiling chemical
of U.S. counterterrorism policy, organizational
and biological agents. Also, indications have
structure, and intelligence capabilities is
surfaced that the al Qaeda organization at-
needed has now become a mainstream view.
tempted to acquire chemical, biological,
radiological and nuclear weapons. As a result,
U.S. policy toward international terror-
stakes in the war against international terror-
ism contains a significant military component,
ism and its supporters are increasing and
reflected in current U.S. operations in Afghan-
margins for error in selecting appropriate
istan and (on a smaller scale) the Philippines
policy instruments or combinations of them to
and in planned deployments of U.S. forces to
prevent terrorist attacks are diminishing
Yemen and the former Soviet republic of
correspondingly.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
According to CIA Senate testimony on March 19, 2002, documents recovered from an
al Qaeda facility showed that Osama bin Laden “was pursuing a sophisticated biological
weapons research program.” In addition, a captured al Qaeda leader reputed to be bin
Laden’s operations chief told interrogators in April 2002 that the organization was
attempting to build a radiological dispersal device to use against American targets in the
United States and abroad.

Allegations surfaced in a hearing before the House International Relations Committee
in April 2002 that three Irish nationals linked to the Irish Republican Army, who were
detained in Colombia in August 2001, had been training Colombian guerrillas of the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in the use of explosives and other
destructive techniques.

An ABC News report in May 2002, citing unnamed intelligence and law enforcement
officials, claimed that that leaders of al Qaeda, the militant Palestinian HAMAS movement
and Lebanon’s Hizballah guerrillas had held a secret meeting in Lebanon in late March to
discuss coordination of terrorist strategy. Lebanon’s Information Minister denied the report
.
According to press reports in late May, Libya has offered to pay $2.7 billion in
compensation to the families of the victims of the 1988 bombing of Pan Am flight 103. Libya
seeks in return the end of U.S. and international sanctions and removal of Libya from the
State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism.

BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
September 11th and Aftermath
On September 11, 2001, in an apparently well-financed/coordinated attack, hijackers
rammed jetliners into each of the New York World Trade Center’s Towers and ultimately
collapsed them. A third hijacked airliner plowed into the Pentagon and a fourth hijacked
airliner crashed near Pittsburgh, raising speculation that a related mission – aimed at the
Capitol or the White House – had failed. In the absence of a final death toll from New York
City, the U.S. State Department estimates that 3,000 persons died in the attacks, including
nationals of 78 different countries in the destruction of the World Trade Center alone.
The administration’s response to the September 11 events was swift, wide-ranging and
decisive. Administration officials attributed responsibility for the attack to Osama bin Laden
and the al Qaeda organization. A full-scale campaign was launched, using all elements of
national and international power, to go after al Qaeda and its affiliates and support structures.
The campaign involved rallying the international community, especially law enforcement and
intelligence components, to shut down al Qaeda cells and financial networks. A U.S. military
operation, Operation Enduring Freedom, was launched in early October 2001 against the
Taliban regime – which had harbored al Qaeda since 1996 – and against al Qaeda
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strongholds in Afghanistan. A total of 136 countries offered a range of military assistance
to the United States, including overflight and landing rights and accommodations for U.S.
forces. As a result of Operation Enduring Freedom, the Taliban was removed from power,
all known al Qaeda training sites were destroyed, and a number of Taliban and al Qaeda
leaders were killed or detained. In March 2002, ground troops from the United States and
five other nations commenced Operation Anaconda, designed to crush the remnants of al
Qaeda. Yet pockets of al Qaeda resistance remain and key figures – such as Osama bin
Laden and the Taliban’s Mullah Omar – still are unaccounted for. As of early April 2002,
12 of 31 top al Qaeda leaders and 6 of 27 Taliban leaders had been definitively killed or
captured; the whereabouts of the others is a mystery.
In the context of this campaign the United States has stepped up intelligence-sharing
and law enforcement cooperation with other governments to root out terrorist cells. It is
increasingly apparent that such cells are operating not just in places where they are welcomed
or knowingly tolerated but in many other places, including Western Europe and the United
States. (Much terrorist fund-raising and banking activity occurs in Western countries.) An
aggressive international law enforcement effort has detained nearly 1,600 suspected al
Qaeda operatives in 95 countries since September 11; moreover, at least $104 million in
terrorists assets have been frozen by more than 140 countries.
An encouraging sign in the anti-terrorism struggle has been the evident willingness of
certain state sponsors of terrorism to distance themselves from extremist groups that they had
supported in the past or from international terrorism generally. For example, Libya has been
“sending signals” that it wants to get out of the terrorism business and has offered to
compensate the families of the victims of the bombing of Pan Am flight 103; Sudan has
arrested al Qaeda members and “by and large” shut down al Qaeda training camps on its
territory; and both Libya and Sudan have offered to share intelligence information on al
Qaeda’s activities with U.S. authorities. Also, almost exactly 2 months after the September
11 attack, North Korea signed two international conventions against terrorism, albeit with
reservations: the 1999 International Convention against the Financing of Terrorism and the
1979 International Convention against the Taking of Hostages.
Background
Until recently, terrorism has been primarily viewed as an international and foreign
policy issue. U.S. policies, citizens, and interests are prime targets for international terrorism
— in 2001, approximately 63% of all terrorist incidents worldwide were committed against
U.S. citizens or property compared to 23 % in 1995, according to the U.S. Department of
State — and the vast majority of those acts have taken place on foreign soil. State
Department data indicate that between 1991 and 2001 100 American nationals were killed
in terrorist attacks abroad. However, U.S. public perception of terrorism as primarily an
overseas issue was dramatically changed by the catastrophic events of September 2001.
On May 21, 2002 the State Department released its annual report on trends in
international terrorism, Patterns of Global Terrorism 2001. According to the report, a total
of 3,547 people were killed in international terrorist incidents in 2001, the highest death toll
from terrorism ever recorded. Most of the deaths were associated with the September 11
attacks. In terms of the number of attacks by region, Latin America ranked first, as in
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previous years; Asia ranked second; Africa third; and the Middle East fourth. Almost 90%
(191) of the 219 attacks against U.S. citizens or interests occurred in Latin America, and
most of these (178) were bombings of a multinational oil pipeline by leftist guerrillas in
Colombia.
Both timing and target selection by terrorist groups can have significant political and
economic impact on many activities, ranging from U.S. commercial activities to nuclear
nonproliferation to the Middle East peace process. Some analysts believe that radical
Islamic groups may seek to exploit economic and political instability in Saudi Arabia, Egypt,
Indonesia, Russia, Pakistan and other countries. A growing area of concern is the
demonstrated ability of terrorists to raise funds through non-state sources, often through
charitable contributions, kidnaping, and drug trafficking.
Patterns 2001 still lists 7 state sponsors of terrorism: Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North
Korea, Sudan and Libya. The report indicated that, of the 7, Libya and Sudan were closest
to being taken off the terrorism list. Patterns also noted that Iran, North Korea, and Syria
have “made limited moves to cooperate with the international community’s campaign
against terrorism.” Syria, for instance, cooperated with U.S. investigations of al Qaeda and
other terrorist groups and Iran provided certain support to the U.S.-led campaign to topple
the Taliban in Afghanistan. Yet Iran is still described in Patterns as the most active state
supporter of terrorism and both Iran and Syria continue to support groups such as HAMAS
and Hizballah that oppose the Middle East peace process. Mention also can be made of
Yemen and Lebanon which, though not on the terrorism list, allow several terrorist groups
to operate legally on their territory. Furthermore, Lebanon views the Hizballah
organization’s actions that target Israel as legitimate, deeming them “resistance activities.”
International terrorism is recognized as a threat to U.S. foreign and domestic security,
and it undermines a broad range of U.S. foreign policy goals. Terrorism erodes international
stability, a major foreign and economic policy objective for the United States. Terrorism
undermines peace processes in which the United States has invested heavily. Terrorist
groups often draw their support from public discontent over the perceived inability of
governments to deliver peace, security, and economic prosperity. Efforts by governments
to enhance national or regional economic development and stability may become the object
of particularly virulent attack by those opposed to modernization. In this regard, and because
of their avowed goals to overthrow secular regimes in countries with large Muslim
populations, extremist Islamic fundamentalist groups and Iran’s support for such groups are
seen as a particular threat to U.S. foreign policy goals and objectives.
Definitions
There is no universally accepted definition of international terrorism. One definition
widely used in U.S. government circles, and incorporated into law, defines international
terrorism
as terrorism involving the citizens or property of more than one country.
Terrorism is broadly defined as politically motivated violence perpetrated against
noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents. For example, kidnaping
of U.S. birdwatchers or bombing of U.S.-owned oil pipelines by leftist guerrillas in Colombia
would qualify as international terrorism. A terrorist group is defined as a group which
practices or which has significant subgroups which practice terrorism (22 U.S.C. 2656f).
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One shortfall of this traditional definition is its focus on groups and its exclusion of
individual (“lone wolf”) terrorist activity which has recently risen in frequency and visibility.
To these standard definitions which refer to violence in a traditional form must be added
cyberterrorism. Analysts warn that terrorist acts will now include more sophisticated forms
of destruction and extortion such as disabling a national computer infrastructure or
penetrating vital commercial computer systems. Finally, the October 12, 2000 U.S.S. Cole
bombing of a U.S. military vessel raises issues of whether the standard definition would
categorize this attack as terrorist, as the Cole may not qualify as a “non-combatant” (see CRS
Report RS20721 on the Cole bombing). Though the definition of terrorism may appear
essentially a political issue, it can carry significant legal implications.
Current definitions of terrorism mostly share one common element: politically
motivated behavior. Such definitions do not include violence for financial profit or religious
motivation. However, the growth of international and transnational criminal organizations
and the growing range and scale of such operations has resulted in their use of violence with
financial profit as the driving motivation. Also, the high-profile activities of such groups as
al Qaeda and Hamas underscore the significance of selective religious ideologies in driving
terrorist violence, or at least providing a pretext. To illustrate: Osama bin Laden issued a
fatwah (edict) in 1998 saying that “all those who believe in Allah and his prophet
Muhammad must kill Americans wherever they find them.”
With respect to the international community: International organizations historically
have been unable to agree on a definition of terrorism, since one man’s terrorist is often
another man’s freedom fighter. Because of this overriding political constraint, countries have
taken the approach of creating networks of conventions, which criminalize specific acts such
as kidnaping, detonating bombs or hijacking airplanes. Still, the 1999 International
Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism comes close to a definition,
since according to the text it is a crime to collect or provide funds with the intent of killing
or injuring civilians where the purpose is to intimidate a population or coerce a government.
U.S. Policy Response
Framework
Past Administrations have employed a range of measures to combat international
terrorism, from diplomacy and international cooperation and constructive engagement to
economic sanctions, covert action, protective security measures, and military force. The
application of sanctions is one of the most frequently used anti-terrorist tools of U.S.
policymakers. Governments supporting international terrorism (seven such countries are
listed by the Department of State) are prohibited from receiving U.S. economic and military
assistance. Export of munitions to such countries is foreclosed, and restrictions are imposed
on exports of “dual use” equipment such as aircraft and trucks. Presence of a country on the
“terrorism list,” though, may reflect considerations – such as its pursuit of WMD or its
human rights record or U.S. domestic political considerations – that are largely unrelated to
support for international terrorism.
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Generally, U.S. anti-terrorism policy from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s focused on
deterring and punishing state sponsors as opposed to terrorist groups themselves. The
passage of the landmark Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-
132) signaled an important shift in policy. The Act, largely initiated by the Executive
Branch, created a legal category of Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) and banned
funding, granting of visas and other material support to such organizations. The USA
PATRIOT Act of 2001 (P.L.107-56) extended and strengthened the provisions of that
legislation. As of May 2002, 33 groups were designated by the Secretary of State as FTOs.
The Bush Administration’s global diplomatic, military and economic assault against al
Qaeda and its affiliates epitomized the new U.S. focus on rooting out and dismantling self-
supporting terrorist entities. At the same time, the Clinton and Bush Administrations have
tried selectively to improve relations with state sponsors. The State Department’s Patterns
2000
contained promising language about the possible removal of North Korea and Sudan
from the terrorism list, and Patterns 2001 indicates that Libya and Sudan have made
significant headway in renouncing terrorism.
Dilemmas
In their desire to combat terrorism in a modern political context, nations often face
conflicting goals and courses of action: (1) providing security from terrorist acts, i.e.,
limiting the freedom of individual terrorists, terrorist groups, and support networks to
operate unimpeded in a relatively unregulated environment versus (2) maximizing
individual freedoms, democracy, and human rights. Efforts to combat terrorism are
complicated by a global trend towards deregulation, open borders, and expanded commerce.
Particularly in democracies such as the United States, the constitutional limits within which
policy must operate are often seen by some to conflict directly with a desire to secure the
lives of citizens against terrorist activity more effectively. This issue will likely come to the
fore as the United States develops its response to the September 2001 incidents.
Another challenge for policymakers is the need to identify the perpetrators of particular
terrorist acts and those who train, fund, or otherwise support or sponsor them. As the
international community increasingly demonstrates its ability to unite and apply sanctions
against rogue states, states will become less likely to overtly support terrorist groups or
engage in state sponsored terrorism. The possibility of covert provision of weapons,
financing, and logistical support nonetheless remains, and detecting such transfers will
require significantly increased deployment of U.S. intelligence assets in countries and zones
where terrorists operate.
Today U.S. policy focus is on terrorist organizations such as al Qaeda and affiliated
networks, and state supporters. But in the future, it may be that new brands of terrorists will
emerge: individuals who are not affiliated with any established terrorist organization and
who are apparently not agents of any state sponsor. The terrorists who masterminded the
1993 World Trade Center bombing apparently did not belong to any larger, established, and
previously identified group. Also, the worldwide threat of individual or “boutique”
terrorism, or that of “spontaneous” terrorist activity, such as the bombing of bookstores in
the United States after Ayatollah Khomeini’s death edict against British author Salman
Rushdie, appears to be on the increase. Thus, one likely profile for the terrorist of the 21st
century may well be a private individual not affiliated with any established group. Another
profile might be a group-affiliated individual acting independent of the group, but drawing
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on other similarly minded individuals for support. Because U.S. international
counter-terrorism policy framework has been sanctions-oriented, and has traditionally
sought to pin responsibility on state sponsors, changes in policy are being considered and
implemented.
Another problem surfacing in the wake of the number of incidents associated with
Islamic fundamentalist groups is how to condemn and combat such terrorist activity, and
the extreme and violent ideology of specific radical groups, without appearing to be
anti-Islamic in general. A desire to punish a state for supporting international terrorism may
also conflict with other foreign policy objectives involving that nation.
Continuing Terrorist Threats
Although a number of states may be rethinking their sponsorship of terrorist
organizations, such organizations are establishing operating bases in countries that lack
functioning central governments or that do not exercise effective control over their national
territory. Al Qaeda continues to seek new sanctuaries and base areas – most recently in
mostly Moslem Indonesia, according to press reports. In general, gray area “terrorist
activity not functionally linked to any supporting or sponsoring nation” represents an
increasingly difficult challenge for U.S. policymakers.
Terrorists increasingly have been able to develop their own sources of financing, which
range from NGOs and charities to illegal enterprises such as narcotics, extortion, and
kidnaping. Colombia’s Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) is said to make
some $500 million to $1.0 billion annually from criminal activities, mostly from taxing or
participating in the narcotics trade. Bin Laden’s al Qaeda depends on a formidable array of
fundraising operations including charities, legitimate businesses, and money transfer
networks, as well as various smuggling and fraud activities.
Furthermore, indications have surfaced of cross-national links among different terrorist
organizations. For example, reports are rife that Chechen rebels were trained in al Qaeda
terrorist camps in Afghanistan. Al Qaeda funding reputedly helped establish the Islamic
separatist group Abu Sayyaf in the Philippines. In the Western Hemisphere, two members
of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and a member of Sinn Fein, the IRA’s political wing,
were arrested in Colombia in August 2001, suspected of training FARC guerrillas in use of
explosives to conduct urban terrorism. A summary of a report by the majority Republican
staff of the House International Relations Committee in April 2002 concluded that
“explosives management training for the FARC by the IRA, and possibly by other foreign-
based terrorists suspected by the Colombians...has markedly improved the FARC’s
proficiency in urban terrorism in the last few years.” This conclusion was disputed by some
Committee members, however.
Looming over the entire issue of international terrorism is an apparently inexorable
trend toward proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD), or the means to make
them. All of the seven officially designated state sponsors of terrorism also have known or
suspected programs for the development of nuclear, chemical or biological weapons. (The
seven sponsors are Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria.) Four of the
states – Iran, Iraq, Libya and North Korea – have nuclear weapons programs at varying
stages of development. Although no credible published information exists that listed states
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that have actually supplied terrorists with WMD wherewithal, the possibility of covert
transfers or leakages clearly exists. Furthermore terrorists have attempted to acquire WMD
means through their own resources and connections. For instance, the Aum Shinrikyo cult
was able to procure technology and blueprints for producing Sarin, a deadly nerve gas from
Russia in the early 1990s. The gas was subsequently used in an attack on the Tokyo subway
in March 1995 that killed 12 people and injured 5,000.
Various media reports suggest that Osama bin Laden has joined the WMD
procurement game. One source cites “long discussions” between bin Laden and Pakistani
nuclear scientists concerning nuclear, chemical and biological weapons. Another claims
that a bin Laden emissary tried to buy radioactive waste from an atomic power plant in
Bulgaria. A U.S. federal indictment handed down in 1998 charges that bin Laden operatives
sought enriched uranium on various occasions. Other accounts credit al Qaeda with
attempting to purchase backpack weapons or “suitcase bombs” from insecure Russian
arsenals and also with stockpiling radioactive materials for the purpose of making a
radiological dispersal device. A former bin Laden associate claims that bin Laden and the
Sudanese Government cooperated in an effort to develop chemical weapons in a factory in
Khartoum in 1993-1994. Furthermore, U.S. government sources recently reported
discovery of a laboratory under construction in Afghanistan, in which al Qaeda planned to
develop biological agents, including anthrax. In April 2002, a captured al Qaeda leader, Abu
Zubaydah, told American interrogators that the organization had been working aggressively
to build a so-called “dirty bomb,” in which conventional explosives packaged with
radioactive material are detonated to spread contamination and sow panic.
Policy Tools
Instruments used by the U.S. government to combat international terrorism are
described briefly below:
Diplomacy/Constructive Engagement. Use of diplomacy to help create a global
anti-terror coalition is a central component of the Bush Administration response to
September 11 events. To date, the United Nations Security Council has condemned the
attacks in a unanimous declaration, and NATO Secretary General George Robertson has
characterized the attacks, in terms of Article V (mutual defense provisions) of the NATO
Treaty, as an attack on all members of the NATO alliance. Some argue that diplomacy
holds little hope of success against determined terrorists or the countries that support them.
However, in most cases, diplomatic measures are considered least likely to widen the
conflict and therefore are usually tried first.
In incidents of international terrorism by subnational groups, implementing a policy
response of constructive engagement is complicated by the lack of existing channels and
mutually accepted rules of conduct between governmental entities and the group in
question. In some instances, as was the case with the PLO, legislation may specifically
prohibit official contact with a terrorist organization or its members. Yet for groups that are
well-entrenched in a nation’s political fabric and culture, engaging the group might be
preferable to trying to exterminate it. Increasingly, governments appear to be pursuing
policies which involve verbal contact and even direct negotiations with terrorist groups or
their representatives. Colombia’s on-again, off-again peace process with the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia is one recent example. Some observers, though, are skeptical
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of the value of engaging with terrorists. As former CIA director James Woolsey has noted,
“Increasingly, terrorists don’t just want a place at the table, but rather to destroy the table
and all sitting there, possibly with weapons of mass destruction.”
On a different level, in the wake of the September 11 attacks, the Bush administration
clearly has explored the possibility of enlisting state sponsors of terrorism, such as Libya
and Sudan, in a broader Islamic coalition against al Qaeda and its followers. The United
States also has held discussions with Iran concerning formation of a post-Taliban coalition
government in Afghanistan. To some critics, though, such initiatives detract from the
imperative of taking a principled stand against international terrorism in all its guises.
The media remain powerful forces in confrontations between terrorists and
governments. Appealing to, and influencing, public opinion may impact not only the
actions of governments but also those of groups engaged in terrorist acts. From the terrorist
perspective, media coverage is an important measure of the success of a terrorist act or
campaign. In hostage-type incidents, where the media may provide the only independent
means a terrorist has of knowing the chain of events set in motion, coverage can complicate
rescue efforts. Governments can use the media in an effort to arouse world opinion against
the country or group using terrorist tactics. Public diplomacy and the media can be used to
mobilize public opinion in other countries to pressure governments to take action against
terrorism. An example would be to mobilize the tourist industry to pressure governments
into participating in sanctions against a terrorist state. See CRS Report 97-960, Terrorism,
the Media, and the Government: Perspectives, Trends, and Options for Policymakers
.
Economic Sanctions. Sanctions regimes can be essentially unilateral – such as
U.S. bans on trade and investment relations with Cuba and Iran – or multilateral, such as
that mandated in response to the Pan Am 103 bombing. In the past, use of economic
sanctions was usually predicated upon identification of a nation as an active supporter or
sponsor of international terrorism. Yet sanctions also can be used to target assets of terrorist
groups themselves. On September 25, 2001, President Bush signed an executive order
(Executive Order 13324) freezing the assets of 27 organizations known to be affiliated with
bin Laden’s network and giving the Treasury’s secretary broad powers to impose sanctions
on banks around the world that provide these organizations access to the international
financial system. Subsequently many more entities and persons were added to the list.
According to Patterns 2001, 189 groups, entities, and individuals currently are covered by
the executive order. In addition, on September 28, 2001 the U.N. Security Council adopted
Resolution 1373 which requires all states to “limit the ability of terrorists and terrorist
organizations to operate internationally” by freezing their assets and denying them safe
haven. The Security Council also set up a Counter Terrorism Committee to oversee
implementation of Resolution 1373. By May 2002, more than $100 million in terrorist
funds had been frozen worldwide as a result of these initiatives.
The effects of the above-described economic measures, though, are uncertain because
much of the flow of terrorist funds takes place outside of formal banking channels (in
elusive “hawala” chains of money brokers). Also, some observers have noted that lethal
terrorist operations are relatively inexpensive. Estimates of the cost to the terrorists of the
World Trade Center-Pentagon bombings range from $200,000 to $500,000. Finally, the
continued proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and the possibility that sub-national
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groups such as terrorists could gain access to them pose increasing threats to global security
and stability.
With respect to nation-states, economic sanctions fall into six categories: restrictions
on trading, technology transfer, foreign assistance, export credits and guarantees, foreign
exchange and capital transactions, and economic access. Sanctions may include a total or
partial trade embargo, embargo on financial transactions, suspension of foreign aid,
restrictions on aircraft or ship traffic, or abrogation of a friendship, commerce, and
navigation treaty. Sanctions usually require the cooperation of other countries to be
effective, and such cooperation is not always forthcoming. Furthermore, sanctions provide
no effective defense against possible clandestine transfers of WMD materials, components,
or finished weapons either between states or from states (or entities within them) to
terrorists groups.
The President has a variety of laws at his disposal, but the broadest in its potential
scope is the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. The Act permits imposition
of restrictions on economic relations once the President has declared a national emergency
because of a threat to the U.S. national security, foreign policy, or economy. While the
sanctions authorized must deal directly with the threat responsible for the emergency, the
President can regulate imports, exports, and all types of financial transactions, such as the
transfer of funds, foreign exchange, credit, and securities, between the United States and the
country in question. Specific authority for the Libyan trade embargo is in Section 503 of
the International Trade and Security Act of 1985, while Section 505 of the Act authorizes
the banning of imports of goods and services from any country supporting terrorism. (See
also CRS Report RS20871, The Iran-Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA).) Other major laws that
can be used against countries supporting terrorism are the Export Administration Act, the
Arms Export Control Act, and specific items or provisions of foreign assistance legislation.
P.L. 104-132 prohibits the sale of arms to any country the President certifies is not
cooperating fully with U.S. antiterrorism efforts. The seven terrorist list countries and
Afghanistan are currently on this list. The law also requires that aid be withheld to any
nation providing lethal military aid a country on the terrorism list.
Economic Inducements. Possible counter-terrorism initiatives might include
efforts to change economic and social conditions that provide a breeding ground for
terrorists. It has been noted that most terrorists worldwide are unemployed or
underemployed with virtually nonexistent prospects for economic advancement. Some
analysts believe that targeted assistance programs to reduce poverty and ignorance (which
might also include supporting secular educational alternatives to the Madrassahs – Islamic
religious schools) can make a difference in lifestyles and attitudes and diminish the
proclivity for terrorism. Critics, though, argue that economic conditions are not the sole or
even the main motivational factors driving the emergence of terrorism. Resentment against
a particular country or political order and religious fanaticism also are important
motivations. They point to Osama bin Laden’s personal fortune (informally estimated at
$300 million) and his far-flung business empire. All of the 15 Saudi Arabian hijackers
implicated in 9/11 were from middle-class families or well-connected ones. The Basque
ETA is a relatively well-heeled terrorist organization. It is possible that economic variables
influence some kinds of terrorist behavior more than others or that the relationship between
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positive economic change and reductions in terrorist behavior occurs over a timeframe
measured in years or decades.
Covert Action. Intelligence gathering, infiltration of terrorist groups, and military
operations involve a variety of clandestine or so called “covert” activities. Much of this
activity is of a passive monitoring nature aimed at determining the strategic intentions,
capabilities and vulnerabilities of terrorist organizations. A more active form of covert
activity occurs during events such as a hostage crisis or hijacking when a foreign country
may quietly request advice, equipment, or technical support during the conduct of
operations, with no public credit to be given the providing country. Covert action may also
seek to exploit vulnerabilities of terrorist organizations, for example, by spreading
disinformation about leaders, encouraging defections, or promoting divisions between
political and military factions.
Many experts believe that the events of September 11 signified an “intelligence
failure” of major proportions and that better intelligence on the inner workings of terrorist
organizations could have prevented the attack. Past restriction on use of informants to
penetrate such organizations was cited as a factor in the failure. Addressing this concern,
Section 403 of the Foreign Intelligence Authorization Act of FY2002 (P.L.107-108) directs
the Director of Central Intelligence to rescind 1995 guidelines involving “foreign assets or
sources with known human rights violations” and to issue new ones facilitating intelligence-
gathering from human sources relating to “indications and warnings of plans and intentions
of hostile actors and events.”
Some nations have periodically gone beyond monitoring or covert support activities
and resorted to unconventional methods beyond their territory for the express purpose of
neutralizing individual terrorists and/or thwarting preplanned attacks. Examples of
activities might run the gamut from intercepting or sabotaging delivery of funding or
weapons to a terrorist group to destroying a terrorist’s embryonic WMD production
facilities to seizing and transporting a wanted terrorist to stand trial for assassination or
murder. Arguably, such activity might be justified as preemptive self-defense under Article
51 of the U.N. charter. On the other hand, it could be argued that such actions violate
customary international law. Nevertheless, a July 1989 memorandum by the Department
of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel advises that the President has the authority to violate
customary international law and can delegate such authority to the Attorney General level,
should the national interest so require.
Assassination is specifically prohibited by U.S. executive order (most recently, E.O.
12333), but bringing wanted criminals to the United States for trial is not. There exists an
established U.S. legal doctrine that allows an individual’s trial to proceed regardless of
whether he is forcefully abducted from another country, or from international waters or
airspace.
Experts warn that bringing persons residing abroad to U.S. justice by means other than
extradition or mutual agreement with the host country, i.e., by abduction and their
surreptitious transportation, can vastly complicate U.S. foreign relations, sometimes
jeopardizing interests far more important than “justice,” deterrence, and the prosecution of
a single individual. For example, the abduction of a Mexican national in 1990 to stand trial
in Los Angeles on charges relating to torture and death of a DEA agent led to vehement
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protests from the government of Mexico, a government subsequently plagued with evidence
of high level drug related corruption. In November 1994, the two countries signed a Treaty
to Prohibit Transborder Abductions. Notwithstanding the unpopularity of such abductions
in nations that fail to apprehend and prosecute those accused, the “rendering” of such
wanted criminals to U.S. courts is permitted under limited circumstances by a January 1993
Presidential Decision Directive. Such conduct, however, raises prospects of other nations
using similar tactics against U.S. citizens.
Although conventional explosives — and innovative use of existing technologies —
appear to be the terrorism weapon of choice, the world is increasingly moving into an era
in which terrorists may gain access to nuclear, chemical or biological weaponry. Faced with
the potential of more frequent incidents and higher conventional casualty levels, or a nuclear
or biological attack, the Bush Administration has announced its intention to resort
increasingly to covert operations to neutralize such threats.
Rewards for Information Program. Money is a powerful motivator. Rewards
for information have been instrumental in Italy in destroying the Red Brigades and in
Colombia in apprehending drug cartel leaders. A State Department program is in place,
supplemented by the aviation industry, usually offering rewards of up to $5 million to
anyone providing information that would prevent or resolve an act of international terrorism
against U.S. citizens or U.S. property, or that leads to the arrest or conviction of terrorist
criminals involved in such acts. This program was at least partly responsible for the arrest
of Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, the man accused of masterminding the 1993 World Trade Center
bombing, and of the CIA personnel shooter, Mir Amal Kansi. The program was established
by the 1984 Act to Combat International Terrorism (P.L. 98-533), and is administered by
State’s Diplomatic Security Service. Rewards over $250,000 must be approved by the
Secretary of State. The program can pay to relocate informants and immediate family who
fear for their safety. The 1994 “Crime Bill” (P.L. 103-322) helps relocate aliens and
immediate family members in the United States who are reward recipients. Expanded
participation by the private sector in funding and publicizing such reward programs has
been suggested by some observers. A $25 million reward has been offered by the U.S.
government for information leading to the apprehension of Osama bin Laden.
Extradition/Law Enforcement Cooperation. International cooperation in such
areas as law enforcement, customs control, and intelligence activities is an essential pillar
of the Bush Administration antiterrorism policy and response to the September 11, 2001
attacks on America. For example, the stationing of FBI agents overseas (in some 44
countries as of late 2000) facilitates investigations of terrorist crimes and augments the flow
of intelligence about terrorist group structure and membership. One critical law
enforcement tool in combating international terrorism is extradition of terrorists.
International extradition traditionally has been subject to several limitations, including the
refusal of some countries to extradite for political or extraterritorial offenses or to extradite
their nationals. Also, the U.S. application of the death penalty (eliminated in many
countries) for certain crimes can impede extradition in terrorism related cases. The United
States has been encouraging the negotiation of treaties with fewer limitations, in part as a
means of facilitating the transfer of wanted terrorists. Because much terrorism involves
politically motivated violence, the State Department has sought to curtail the availability of
the political offense exception, found in many extradition treaties, to avoid extradition.
Increasingly, rendition is being employed by the United States as a vehicle for gaining
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physical custody over terrorist suspects. Where custody has been established, the range of
law enforcement instruments includes plea bargaining – offering terrorism suspects lighter
penalties in return for information about the inner workings of the target group:
membership, organizational structure, weaponry, and finances, for example. Amnesty
programs such as those offered in Italy and (at one time) in Colombia can influence
terrorists to defect and to inform on others.
Military Force. Although not without difficulties, military force, particularly when
wielded by a superpower such as the United States, can carry substantial clout. Proponents
of selective use of military force usually emphasize the military’s unique skills and
specialized equipment. The April 1986 decision to bomb Libya for its alleged role in the
bombing of a German discotheque exemplifies use of military force. Other examples are:
(1) the 1993 bombing of Iraq’s military intelligence headquarters by U.S. forces in response
to Iraqi efforts to assassinate former President George Bush during a visit to Kuwait; (2) the
August 1998 missile attacks against bases in Afghanistan and an alleged chemical
production facility, al-Shifa, in Sudan; and (3) the successful removal of the Taliban regime
in Afghanistan in 2001-2002.
Concerns about the terrorist threat prompted an extensive buildup of the military’s
counter-terrorism capabilities. U.S. military forces currently are being deployed to help fight
terrorist groups in the Philippines, Yemen and the former Soviet republic of Georgia as part
of the next phase in the international war against terrorism.
Successful use of military force for preemptive or retaliatory strikes presupposes the
ability to identify a terrorist perpetrator or its state sponsor, as well as the precise location
of the group, information that is often unavailable from U.S. intelligence sources.
Generally, terrorists possess modest physical facilities that present few high-value targets
for military strikes. Some critics have observed that military action is a blunt instrument
that can cause foreign civilian casualties as well as collateral damage to economic
installations in the target country. Others argue that such action inflates terrorists’ sense of
importance and facilitates their recruitment efforts. A 1999 U.S. study of the sociology and
psychology of terrorism states that “counterterrorist military attacks against elusive terrorists
may serve only to radicalize large sectors of the Muslim population and damage the U.S.
image worldwide.” Other disadvantages or risks associated with the use of military force
include counter-retaliation and escalation by terrorist groups or their state sponsors, failure
to destroy the principal leaders of the organization, and the perception that the United
States ignores rules of international law. In addition, the costs associated with Operation
Enduring Freedom (an estimated $1.8 billion a month) and the apparently open-ended
nature of the U.S. military commitment in Afghanistan have concerned some observers.
International Conventions. To date, the United States has joined with the world
community in developing all of the major antiterrorism conventions. These conventions
impose on their signatories an obligation either to prosecute offenders or extradite them to
permit prosecution for a host of terrorism-related crimes, including hijacking vessels and
aircraft, taking hostages, and harming diplomats. An important convention is the
Convention for the Marking of Plastic Explosives. Implementing legislation is in P.L.
104-132. On September 8, 1999, the United States signed the U.N. Convention on the
Suppression of Terrorist Bombings; and on January 12, 2000, the U.N. Anti-Terrorism
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Financing Convention was signed as well. Both these conventions were submitted to the
Senate for advice and consent during the 106th Congress and currently remain there.
Potential Tools
An International Court for Terrorism. Many experts have urged that an
international court be established, perhaps under the U.N., to sit in permanent session to
adjudicate cases against persons accused of international terrorist crimes. The court would
have broad powers to sentence and punish anyone convicted of such crimes. Critics point
out many administrative and procedural problems associated with establishing such a court
and making it work, including jurisdictional and enforcement issues. An International Court
of Justice in the Hague exists, but it deals with disputes between states and lacks
compulsory jurisdiction and enforcement powers.
Media Self-Restraint. For some, the term “media self-restraint” is an oxymoron;
the sensational scoop is the golden fleece, and dull copy is to be avoided. The media are
occasionally manipulated into the role of mediator and often that of publicist of terrorist
goals. The publication of the Unabomber’s “manifesto” illustrated this. Notably, there have
been attempts by the media to impose its own rules when covering terrorist incidents.
Standards established by the Chicago Sun-Times and Daily News include paraphrasing
terrorist demands to avoid unbridled propaganda; banning participation of reporters in
negotiations with terrorists; coordinating coverage through supervising editors who are in
contact with police authorities; providing thoughtful, restrained, and credible coverage of
stories; and allowing only senior supervisory editors to determine what, if any, information
should be withheld or deferred. Such standards are far from uniformly accepted. In an
intensely competitive profession consisting of a multinational worldwide press corps,
someone is likely to break the story. On October 11, 2001, it was agreed by five major U.S.
news organizations that they would abridge video statements by Osama bin Laden. See
generally, CRS Report 97-960, Terrorism, the Media, and the Government: Perspectives,
Trends and Options for Policymakers
.
Policy Reform
Well before the September 11 events various legislative proposals and
Congressionally-mandated panels had called for reconfiguring the federal government’s
strategic planning and decision processes vis a vis the global terrorist threat. For instance,
a January 31, 2001 report of the bipartisan U.S. Commission on National Security
recommended unifying the Coast Guard, the Customs Service, the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA), and the Border Patrol into a new Cabinet status homeland
security body — in effect, a national homeland security agency. Under such a proposal, the
new agency would coordinate defense against, and responses to, terrorist attacks on U.S.
soil. Also under this concept, the National Guard would be given domestic security as a
primary mission. Furthermore, legislation sponsored by Senators Joseph Lieberman and
Arlen Specter in the Senate (S. 1534) and by Representative Mac Thornberry in the House
of Representatives (H.R. 1158) also would amalgamate FEMA, the Border Patrol, Customs
and the Coast Guard into a new federal agency. Further legislation contemplated by
Senators Specter and Lieberman would create a Department of National Homeland
Security, as well as a coordinating body, a National Office for Combating Terrorism, with
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domestic and international responsibilities. Together these entities would develop both a
National Strategy for Combating Terrorism and a comprehensive antiterrorism budget.
In the 107th Congress, the USA PATRIOT Act enacted in October 2001 (P.L.107-56)
contained a number of provisions related to terrorism. It gave law enforcement increased
authority to investigate suspected terrorists, including enhanced surveillance procedures
such as roving wiretaps; it provided for strengthened controls on international money
laundering and financing of terrorism; it improved measures for strengthening of defenses
along the U.S. northern border, said to be an important conduit for terrorists; and it
authorized disclosure of foreign intelligence information obtained in criminal investigations
to intelligence and national security officials.
U.S. Organization and Program Response
The chain of command on antiterrorism planning runs from the President through the
National Security Council’s (NSC’s) Principals Committee, through the NSC’s Deputies
Committee, a representative of which chairs a senior interagency Counterrorism and
National Preparedness Policy Coordinating Committee (PCC). The PCC oversees four
working groups charged with overseeing policy in four generic areas: (1) continuity of
federal operations; (2) preventing and responding to foreign terrorism; (3) preventing and
responding to weapons of mass destruction (WMD) attacks; and (4) preventing and
responding to cyberthreats. The State Department is designated the lead agency for
countering terrorism overseas; the Justice Department’s Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) is the lead agency for domestic terrorism; the Federal Aviation Administration is the
lead for hijackings when a plane’s doors are closed; and the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) is the lead agency for consequence management.
Intelligence-sharing on foreign terrorist threats is carried out through the Counterterrorism
Community Terrorist Threat Warning System housed in the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center.
The system is a joint product of five agencies: CIA, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the
National Security Agency, the State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research, and
the FBI. Warnings, advisories, and assessments are distributed from the system to other
federal government agencies.
On October 8, 2001, President Bush signed Executive Order 13228 establishing the
Office of Homeland Security (OHS) to lead, oversee, and coordinate a comprehensive
national strategy to protect the nation against terrorism as part of a complex web of new
organizational structures and relationships. The OHS is chaired by former Governor Tom
Ridge of Pennsylvania. A Homeland Security Council (HSC) including subordinate
councils similar in structure and function to the existing National Security Council (NSC)
system was established as well. The executive order creating OHS specified that the
Homeland Security Council would be responsible for administering policy for national
security emergency preparedness “with respect to terrorist threats and attacks within the
United States” and that it would be the “principal forum for consideration of policy” related
to such threats and attacks. In addition, retired General Wayne Downing was designated as
the President’s National Director and Deputy National Security Adviser for Combating
Terrorism. Former NSC anti-terrorism coordinator Richard Clarke was selected to be the
Special Adviser to the President for Cybersecurity. Director Downing and Adviser Clarke
report both to OHS Director Ridge and to National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice.
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General Downing chairs the Policy Coordinating Committee on Counterterrorism and
National Preparedness.
In light of the recent terrorist attacks, it is likely that a comprehensive review of
counter- terrorism policy, organizational structure, and preparedness to respond to major
terrorist incidents in the United States will be undertaken. Whether establishing a director
for combating terrorism at the NSC takes too much terrorism decision making out of the
realm of congressional oversight, as NSC members generally do not testify before Congress,
is another issue. Similar questions of congressional access arise with respect to the high-
profile OHS – responsible for coordinating domestic responses to terrorism – which was
established by executive order and the direction of which is vested in a presidential
assistant.
A number of Administration programs focus specifically on combating international
terrorism. Among the most important are the Department of State’s (1) Antiterrorism
Assistance Program (ATA), (2) Counterterrorism Research and Development Program, and
(3) Diplomatic Security Program.
Antiterrorism Assistance and Terrorism and Crime Programs
The State Department’s antiterrorism assistance (ATA) program provides training and
equipment to foreign countries to help them improve their antiterrorism capabilities. More
than 35,000 individuals from 152 countries have received training since the program’s
inception in 1983 in such skills as crisis management, VIP protection, airport security
management, and bomb detection and deactivation. The Administration is requesting $52
million for FY2003 for a consolidated Center for Antiterrorism and Security Training which
would “help reduce the terrorist and security risk for U.S. personnel and assets, as well as
non-official Americans abroad.” The TIPOFF terrorism and crime database, maintained by
the State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research, enables the use of sensitive
intelligence to detect “known persons of concern” as they apply for U.S. visas overseas, and
as of May 2002 had provided the names of almost 60,000 terrorists to State’s Consular
Lookout and Support System (CLASS). The Department requested $3.4 million for the
program for FY2003.
Assistance to Victims Programs
Facilitating payment of compensation to victims of terrorism by state sponsors or their
agents was the subject of legislative focus in the 106th Congress as well. P.L. 106-386,
among other things, allowed victims of terrorist acts committed by Cuba and Iran to collect
payment of judgments rendered from funds held by the U.S. government and clarified
circumstances under which immunity from jurisdiction or attachment may not apply when
victims of state sponsored terrorism seek compensation.
Counterterrorism Research and Development Program
The State Department’s Counterterrorism Research and Development Program is
overseen by State’s Coordinator for Counterterrorism and is managed by the Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict. The program
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focuses on the inter-agency Technical Support Working Group (TSWG) which constitutes
an R&D response to the threat posed by increasingly sophisticated equipment and
explosives available to terrorist groups. TSWG’s major project areas include the following:
chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear countermeasures; explosives detection and
defeat; infrastructure protection; investigative support and forensics; personnel protection;
physical security; surveillance collection and operations support; and tactical operations
support. State and DoD provide core funding for TSWG activities. Total TSWG program
funding was $65 million in 2001.
Diplomatic Security Program
The Diplomatic Security Program of the State Department is designed to protect U.S.
personnel, information, and facilities domestically and abroad. Constructing secure
facilities abroad, providing security guards, and supporting counterintelligence are some
important elements of the program. Detection and investigation of passport and visa fraud
is another important component. The Diplomatic Security Program is contained in three
budget accounts: the Diplomatic and Consular Programs account (which covers salaries and
operating expenses such as guards and armored vehicles), the Embassy Security,
Construction, and Maintenance account (which covers our overseas offices and residences),
and the Protection of Foreign Missions and Officials account (which provides extraordinary
protection for these purposes in the United States).
The FY2002 budget estimate for the Diplomatic Security Program included $713
million in security for the Diplomatic and Consular Programs account ($488 million for
worldwide security upgrades and $226 million for ongoing operations and salaries); $665
million for worldwide security construction in the Embassy Security, Construction and
Maintenance account; and $10 million in the Protection of Foreign Missions and Officials
account. The FY2003 budget request includes $553 million for worldwide security
upgrades in the Diplomatic and Consular programs account, $609 million in worldwide
security construction in the Embassy Security, Construction and Maintenance account and
$11 million for Protection of Foreign Missions and Officials.
Options for Program Enhancement
Some notable areas cited for improvement of programs to combat terrorism include
contingency planning; explosives detection; joint or multinational research, operational, and
training programs/exercises; nuclear materials safeguarding; development of detection
equipment for nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons, and disaster/crisis consequence
management, including training of first responders. Cybersecurity remains an important
area for program enhancement. Another option includes enhancing investigative, law
enforcement, and prosecution capabilities in other countries to target terrorism fundraising.
An option which has been recommended by a number of bipartisan congressional
commissions is an enhanced role for the National Academies and the National Laboratories
in facilitating more concerted and better coordinated involvement of the U.S. scientific
community in assessing threats, developing countermeasures, and designing responses to
terrorism.
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FOR ADDITIONAL READING
CRS Products
CRS Report RL31119, Terrorism, Near East Groups and State Sponsors, 2001, by Kenneth
Katzman.
CRS Terrorism Briefing Book: Military Responses, by Christopher Bolkom.
CRS Terrorism Briefing Book: State-Sponsored Terrorism, by Kenneth Katzman,
Rensselaer Lee, and Raphael Perl.
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