Suicide attack: Difference between revisions
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A '''suicide attack''' is a method of directing a weapon against a target, guided by a human being, who will inevitably die in the attack. In modern times, the first class of frequent suicide attacks were by various Japanese weapons in the | A '''suicide attack''' is a method of directing a weapon against a target, guided by a human being, who will inevitably die in the attack. In modern times, the first class of frequent suicide attacks were by various Japanese weapons in the Second World War, primarily conventional aircraft, ''kamikaze'', that would crash into the target. These weapons were used exclusively against military targets. | ||
Defining the attack type is difficult, and explaining the motivation is even harder.<ref name=Mansdorff>{{citation | Defining the attack type is difficult, and explaining the motivation is even harder.<ref name=Mansdorff>{{citation | ||
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| title = The Psychological Framework of Suicide Terrorism | | title = The Psychological Framework of Suicide Terrorism | ||
| author = Irwin J. Mansdorff | | author = Irwin J. Mansdorff | ||
| url = http://www.jcpa.org/jl/vp496.htm}}</ref> Not all suicide attacks meet the basic criterion of | | url = http://www.jcpa.org/jl/vp496.htm}}</ref> Not all suicide attacks meet the basic criterion of terrorism: attack on civilian targets. Indeed, the suicider may not even attempt to harm anyone directly, but instead attack a political objective, as in the self-immolation of monks in the South Vietnamese Buddhist crisis and coup of 1963. Definite terrorist attacks, however, were characterized by spokesmen for the George W. Bush Administration as "homicide attacks",<ref name=Fleischer>{{citation | ||
| author = Ari Fleischer | | author = Ari Fleischer | ||
| title = Press Briefing, Office of the Press Secretary | | title = Press Briefing, Office of the Press Secretary | ||
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| url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/news/2009/01/mil-090105-irna03.htm}}</ref> | | url = http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/news/2009/01/mil-090105-irna03.htm}}</ref> | ||
Suicide attacks, often by an individual wearing an explosive charge and walking to the target, are common terrorist attacks; the targets may be military but often are civilian. Larger and deadlier attacks come when the explosives are in a vehicle (e.g., | Suicide attacks, often by an individual wearing an explosive charge and walking to the target, are common terrorist attacks; the targets may be military but often are civilian. Larger and deadlier attacks come when the explosives are in a vehicle (e.g., 1983 Beirut barracks bombings) or by boat (''USS Cole'', 2000) and by large aircraft as in the 9/11 attack. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist|2}} | {{reflist|2}} |
Latest revision as of 07:36, 18 March 2024
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A suicide attack is a method of directing a weapon against a target, guided by a human being, who will inevitably die in the attack. In modern times, the first class of frequent suicide attacks were by various Japanese weapons in the Second World War, primarily conventional aircraft, kamikaze, that would crash into the target. These weapons were used exclusively against military targets. Defining the attack type is difficult, and explaining the motivation is even harder.[1] Not all suicide attacks meet the basic criterion of terrorism: attack on civilian targets. Indeed, the suicider may not even attempt to harm anyone directly, but instead attack a political objective, as in the self-immolation of monks in the South Vietnamese Buddhist crisis and coup of 1963. Definite terrorist attacks, however, were characterized by spokesmen for the George W. Bush Administration as "homicide attacks",[2] while their sponsors called them "martyrdom operations."[3] Suicide attacks, often by an individual wearing an explosive charge and walking to the target, are common terrorist attacks; the targets may be military but often are civilian. Larger and deadlier attacks come when the explosives are in a vehicle (e.g., 1983 Beirut barracks bombings) or by boat (USS Cole, 2000) and by large aircraft as in the 9/11 attack. References
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