A Hard Day's Night? The United States and the Global War on Terrorism
Abstract
This paper examines the jihadist threat and its implications for the Global War on Terrorism (GWOT) -- a threat noted for its commitment, determination, innovation, and lethality. The United States is struggling to configure its instruments of national power to address a threat that has thus far proven unresponsive to these national instruments. The paper argues that the jihadist threat needs to be framed in the context of fundamental changes in the dynamics of the international system. These dynamics have left the United States struggling to conceptually bound and define the jihadist threat in the new security environment. This paper offers explanations for this struggle and concludes that if not successful in bounding and understanding the threat, the United States may win battles in the GWOT, but it can never win the wider war. In assessing the nature of these threats, the paper will examine a series of implications and characteristics that the threats pose for U.S. policies and counterterrorism strategies and tactics. In defining the nature and characteristics of these threats, the paper will attempt to provide a terrorist perspective on the relevant religious, cultural, political, and military domains of the GWOT. Consideration of this perspective can offer a radically different paradigm for suggesting policy prescriptions and implications when compared to those commonly used in policy circles that remain driven by unipolar and bipolar assumptions and prescriptions.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 01, 2005
- Accession Number
- ADA484216
Entities
People
- James A. Russell
- Thomas H. Johnson
Organizations
- Naval Postgraduate School