ABSTRACT

This volume is a collection of articles that critically examine the efficacy, ethics, and impact of the War on Terror as it has evolved since 9/11.

During the decade and a half of the Global War on Terror (GWOT), numerous books have considered the political, psychosocial, and economic impacts of terrorism. However, there has been little systematic effort to examine the effectiveness of the GWOT in achieving its goals. Furthermore, there is virtually nothing that presents a comparative analysis of the GWOT by the people most directly affected by it—citizens and scholars from conflict zones in the Middle East. There is, therefore, great need for a book that analyzes the strategies, tactics, and outcomes of the GWOT and that also presents facts and ideas that are missing or underrepresented in the dominant public narratives. The contributions in this volume were chosen to specifically address this need. In doing so, it uniquely provides not only Western perspectives of the GWOT, but also importantly includes perspectives from the Middle East and those most directly affected by it, including contributions from scholars and policy makers. Overall, the contributions demonstrate how views differ based on geographical location, and how views have changed during the course of the still-evolving War on Terror.

The book will be of much interest to students and scholars of terrorism and counter-terrorism, foreign policy, Middle Eastern politics, security studies and IR, as well as policy makers.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

Edited ByCharles Webel

part I|2 pages

Framing and assessing the War on Terror

chapter 1|11 pages

The evil scourge of terrorism

Reality, construction, remedy 1
Edited ByNoam Chomsky

chapter 2|27 pages

The complex relationship between peacebuilding and terrorism approaches

Towards post-terrorism and a post-liberal peace? *

chapter 3|12 pages

Trauma and the city

The psychology of America’s terrorism trauma

part II|3 pages

Hearing from the victims of terror-inflicted regions

chapter 4|22 pages

The Syrian tragedy

The role of the West, a government insider’s account

chapter 5|26 pages

Iraq

A victim of terror and the War on Terror

chapter 6|29 pages

The ideological origins of ISIS

Fighting terror with common sense
Edited ByMark Tomass

part III|2 pages

Calculating the costs of the War on Terror

chapter 8|16 pages

The global war on terrorism

How ethical and effective?

chapter 9|33 pages

Led astray

Legal and moral blowback from the global War on Terror

chapter 10|18 pages

Terror from above and within

The hidden cultural and political costs of lethal drones

part IV|3 pages

Analyzing, negotiating with, and ending terrorist groups

chapter 12|6 pages

Negotiating with the Taliban

Not war on terrorism, but dialogue for solutions
Edited ByJohan Galtung

chapter 13|19 pages

A tale of two CTs

A ground-level counterinsurgency perspective on Belgian counter-terrorism measures

chapter 14|20 pages

The “war on terrorism”

What does it mean to win? *

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion

Edited ByCharles Webel