Cutting the Fuse: The Explosion of Global Suicide Terrorism and How to Stop
It
By Robert A. Pape and James K. Feldman (University of Chicago, 2010)
349 pages, $30.00
On 9/11, America woke up to an enemy willing to die in order to kill. And we
were shocked. Looking for answers, experts and amateurs alike sifted through
Osama Bin Laden's references to a lost Caliphate and fulminations against infidels,
and concluded that Islamic radicalism was to blame for the suicide attacks.
Newspapers soon carried stories about jihad, martyrdom, and angry young men.
Pundits turned a worried eye to the Middle East and wondered how Islam could
ever modernize.
Then, in 2005, Robert Pape came out with Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic
of Suicide Terrorism. In his book, the noted air power theorist argued that
nationalist resistance to foreign occupation, not Islamic extremism, was the
engine that drove suicide bombings. The solution, therefore, was not to reform
the Middle East. It was to leave. As expected, this theory was embraced by the
Arab-American community, realpolitik strategists, and critics of U.S. interventionism
and of the war in Iraq, in particular.
However, recent events in the Muslim world have confounded Pape's theory. Suicide
bombings have spread to Algeria, Iran and Bangladesh—none of which is
occupied by Western troops. And while Iraq remains a hellish garden of car bombs
and suicide belts, the terrorists there are mainly targeting the local Shiite
community, its political institutions and shrines. Likewise, the influx into
Baghdad and Mosul of foreign militants ready to blow themselves up leads one
to question the national resistance model used by Pape.
In Cutting the Fuse: The Explosion of Global Suicide Terrorism and How to
Stop It, Pape and co-author James Feldman attempt to rescue the stricken
theory and push ahead with policy prescriptions. It's a valiant effort, to be
sure. Nevertheless, the model collapses under the weight of too many ad hoc hypotheses,
while the solutions for combating suicide terror are hardly developed. Will
this matter to Pape's fans at Foreign Policy and the Council on American-Islamic
Relations? Not likely. But it should to us.
Now, Pape was quite right when he first noted that, al Qaeda jihadists aside,
many suicide bombers are not Islamic fundamentalists. In fact, some are not
even Muslims. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)—the separatist
group in Sri Lanka that invented the bomb belt—was, for example, a mainly
Hindu movement. But rather than consider that there might be multiple causes
for suicide terrorism, Pape simply replaced radical Islam with nationalism as
the One Big Explanation.
And that's when the trouble began.
Early on, the Pape thesis had to address three problems. First, most nationalist groups (the Irish Republican Army, Basque ETA, etc.) do not resort to suicide attacks. Therefore, some additional mechanisms had to come into play for the model to hold. Two, the United States never occupied Saudi Arabia, so how could self-determination be al Qaeda's motive for the 9/11 attacks? Three, despite the existence of the LTTE (and a handful of Indian Sikh and Arab Christian outliers), the vast majority of suicide bombers are Muslim.
In Dying to Win, Pape deftly handled these objections by arguing that suicide bombers target a very special class of occupier: democracies—and not just any democracies, those whose citizens are of another faith. Why democracies? Because they are seen as soft. At the same time, religious differences cast the occupier as profoundly alien, which prepares the insurgents for extreme forms of self-sacrifice on behalf of the nation. So, yes, there have been lots of Muslim suicide bombers hitting democracies, but the issue has never been Islam per se.
Now, to clinch his argument, Pape had to eschew the standard definition of military occupation. Instead, a territory is occupied if the terrorists say so. It doesn't matter if, like the Chechens in southern Russia, they are ethnic separatists and their state is just an aspiration. Or if the foreign troops were invited in by the local government, as in the case of U.S. troops who came to Saudi Arabia during Operation Desert Shield. It is enough that the Americans who remained there until 2003 were perceived as propping up a puppet king.
Indeed, once Pape reframed the situation on the Arabian Peninsula as an occupation of sorts, al Qaeda could take on an entirely different look. Al Qaeda's Saudi core and its bristling foreign tentacles were simply "a cross-national military alliance of national liberation movements working together against what they see as the common imperial threat," he argued.
Of course, even after all this, he had to add a few caveats (e.g., suicide bombings are a weapon of last resort) to his theory to disqualify potential challenges—and then, with only moderate success. He still could not explain why there were no Palestinian Christian suicide bombers from the Occupied Territories or why Hizbullah made its debut in Lebanon with so-called "martyrdom operations." Likewise, the theory stumbled when it came to Kurdish Muslims using suicide terror against Turkish Muslims.
Regardless, most reviewers gave Pape the benefit of the doubt.
Then more and more Muslims started to die at the hands of their co-religionists.
In Cutting the Fuse, Pape and co-author James Feldman, an expert in decision analysis and economics, take on this new round of challenges. In doing so, they simply ignore the inconvenient cases of Bangladesh and Algeria and declare "the target of every suicide terrorist campaign from 2004 to 2009 has been a democracy where there has been a religious difference between the occupier and the occupied communities." (The omission of Iran can be excused on the grounds that the campaign there only began in mid-2009.)
Then, moving on to Iraq, the two point out that the country had suffered no
suicide bombings until the Americans overthrew the Baathist regime and planted
military bases all over the place.
Now, this chronology of terror is essentially true—though, back in 1981,
the Shiite Dawa party did blow up an Iraqi embassy in Lebanon. But are the suicide
bombings in Iraq really against the Coalition or something else the invasion
set into motion?
The oddest thing about Pape and Feldman's treatment of Iraq is that they acknowledge
that suicide terrorism is committed by Sunni Arabs, that this group was knocked
off its perch when Saddam Hussein fell, and that the 7,800-13,000 victims of
the attacks are mostly locals. The authors even admit that the insurgents are
trying to preempt the emergence of a strong central state led by Shiites. Yet
the two never reach the obvious conclusion: Suicide bombings in Iraq are a weapon
in a Muslim civil war.
The authors are not shaken in their conviction even when confronted by the fact
that over 50 percent of all identified suicide bombers in Iraq are foreigners.
To explain away the presence of Saudi, Jordanian, and Kuwaiti jihadists, Pape
and Feldman argue that these militants come from neighboring countries that
are "possible targets of American military control." So it's a preemptive
strike against future occupation. Setting aside the fact that the U.S.
just left Saudi Arabia in 2003, this utterly fantastic explanation offers no
insight into the North African and European suicide bombers in Iraq1 —or
the lack of Iranians. Indeed, Iran has far more reason to fear regime change
than does Jordan.
As for Afghanistan, the occupation thesis holds. But it falters again in Pakistan,
where the local Taliban have perpetrated over 200 suicide attacks without any
U.S. troops being in the country.
At this point, a less creative analyst would relent and grant that his theory
is not as comprehensive as first thought. But not Robert Pape. In his new book,
he and Feldman contend that, as of 2006, Pakistan has been under indirect
occupation (a new category to the rescue!) by the Americans. Accordingly,
attacks on Sufi shrines, Shiite processions, and Pakistani soldiers are an indirect
blow to foreign overlords in Washington, DC. And as for the 12 suicide bombings
that occurred in 2003-2005, they are dismissed as small change.
But as in the case of Iraq, the evidence cited by the authors actually upends
the nationalism model. For example, the Pashtun tribesmen who fill the ranks
of the local Taliban are an isolated ethnic minority. They resent the encroachment
of Islamabad and hold no particular reverence for national elections. By contrast,
the average Pakistani citizen opposes the Taliban suicide bombings, and 69 percent
fear a militant takeover of the country—hardly the reaction one would expect
to get for a liberation movement.
Why does all this matter? Because identifying root causes helps one craft matching
policies.
Unfortunately, Pape and Feldman devote precious little space in their book
for solutions, and much of what they include are underdeveloped thoughts. For
instance, regarding Pakistan, the two authors declare that the U.S. "needs
a balanced strategy among military, political and economic initiatives …"
Indeed. Likewise, the authors want the U.S. to eventually adopt a policy of
offshore balancing (whatever that means) instead of basing troops in Muslim
lands.
However, it is unclear how balancing "offshore" from landlocked Afghanistan
is supposed to ensure the capture of the al Qaeda leadership. Furthermore, what
are countries dealing with insurgencies within their own borders supposed to
do?
For the short term, Pape and Feldman suggest that the U.S. help local groups
take control of security operations in their own towns and villages. No doubt,
it's a good idea. It worked with the Anbar Awakening in Iraq. But it is rather
like saying, "We will win the war by outwitting the enemy." It's easier
said than done. In fact, just a week ago, two suicide bombers attacked a group
of tribal leaders in northwest Pakistan, who were trying to form an anti-Taliban
militia. Fifty people died.
Now this is the part in the book review where one is supposed to say that, despite
its many flaws, Cutting the Fuse is a welcome contribution to the growing
literature on suicide terrorism.
It isn't.
NOTES:
1
Some examples of foreign jihadists: Muriel Degauque, a 38-year-old Belgian convert
to Islam, killed herself and five Iraqi policemen in 2005. Five years later, a
Swedish citizen with Tunisian roots likewise died as a suicide bomber in Iraq.
The Moroccan village of Tetuan has sent as many as 30 suicide bombers to Iraq,
while the Libyan village of Darnah has also contributed more than its share of
young men seeking martyrdom.