How
Terror Hardens Us/Jessica Stern, a professor at Boston University’s Pardee School of Global Studies, is a co-author, most recently, of “ISIS: The State of Terror.”
WE Americans are living through a dread-inducing
age — of school shootings and suicide bombers, of racist terror and mass
murder, of enemies who broadcast terrifying pronouncements against us. We are
not used to living with such bewildering uncertainty. Civilians are not
collateral damage in this seemingly endless war; they are the preferred target.
We
feel vulnerable in many different places where we used to feel safe — in cafes
or at concerts, at sporting events, at home or at work. The killers are not
just those coming in from abroad, but they are already here, some even born
here, seemingly ready to strike at any moment. The latest attack, in San
Bernardino, Calif., which came five days after a mass shooting in Colorado,
only reinforces this feeling of vulnerability.
In
the immediate aftermath, we didn’t know what to label it: terrorism or
workplace violence?
What
really concerns us is not so much what to call the crime, but whether the
ideology of the killers is shared by others, suggesting there may be more such
attacks to come — and how we will respond going forward.
As
I have written elsewhere, the experimental psychologists Tom Pyszczynski,
Sheldon Solomon and Jeff Greenberg are known for having developed what’s called
terror management theory, which suggests that much of human behavior is
motivated by an unconscious terror of death. What saves us from this terror is
culture. Cultures provide ways to view the world that “solve” the existential
crisis engendered by the awareness of death.
The
theory says that when people are reminded of their mortality — especially if
the reminder doesn’t register consciously, as happens after a brutal act of
terror — they will more readily enforce their cultural worldviews. If our
cultural worldview is xenophobic, nationalistic or moralistic, we are prone to
become more so. Hundreds of experiments, all over the world, have confirmed
these findings.
If
we believe guns will protect us from harm, a terrorist strike will further
strengthen our views. If we blame Muslims or white supremacists or the
government for whatever is wrong in our world, we will become more fearful and
more certain about who is to blame. For example, psychological experiments
found that being reminded both of one’s own mortality and the attacks of Sept.
11 increased support for military interventions in the Middle East among people
who identified as politically conservative. It had no effect on people who identified
as liberal.
An
attack can reinforce our certainty in our beliefs even — especially — before
anything is certain about what happened in the attack itself. As of this
writing, what we know about San Bernardino attacks, which were carried out by a
husband and wife, is that the male shooter reportedly knew some of the 14
victims, and may have had a dispute with a colleague immediately before the
rampage. The couple had acquired a large arsenal of weaponry. Authorities
revealed that the female shooter had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State,
or ISIS, in a Facebook posting. They also said that the man had been in
contact, years before, with individuals who were believed to have terrorist
ties. The F.B.I. is treating the shooting as an act of terrorism.
But
we don’t know why these two people brutally attacked an office holiday
gathering on Wednesday morning. And if, as it seems, they were working alone —
so-called lone actors — without formal connection to a larger group, it may be
difficult to parse their motivations.
Lone
actors or a pair of actors often combine religious or political grievances with
their own personal vendettas to form a way of viewing the world. In such pairs,
we often see one person leading another. As I noted in my book “Terror in the
Name of God,” for example, John Allen Muhammad, who, together with a
17-year-old protégé, carried out a series of sniper shootings in suburban
Washington, D.C., in the fall of 2002, appears to have been motivated by a mixture
of the personal and political. He reportedly told a friend that he endorsed the
Sept. 11 attacks, and he expressed admiration for the small group that had
managed to cause more damage to the United States than an army could have done.
But he also appeared principally to have been driven by anger at his ex-wife.
Another
example is Mir Aimal Kansi, who shot five C.I.A. employees in 1993, two of whom
died. When I interviewed him in 1999, three years before he was executed by
lethal injection, he mentioned a wide variety of motivations — some of them
political and some personal. He was described by friends and family as brooding
and a loner. A number of studies by terrorism scholars have shown that lone
actors are significantly more likely to suffer documented mental illness than
are terrorists who are part of groups.
LONE
actors are especially difficult for law-enforcement authorities to stop because
they generally do not communicate directly with a group. There is a limit,
though, to the damage a lone actor can cause. An individual or small group can
terrorize a city, as recent events made clear. But they are unlikely to be able
to carry out a Sept. 11-type attack, which required coordination among a large
number of operatives. As technology continues to improve and spread, virtual
networks and even lone-wolf avengers could become a major threat.
After
the Sept. 11 attacks we as a nation asked, how did we let this happen. With
attacks on Paris and now San Bernardino, the question has morphed: It’s not how
did this happen, but how often it will.
The
answers may be grim. Terrorism analysts have long observed imitative or
“copycat” crimes, as well as hoaxes. There are many reasons to believe that
violence — even terrorist violence — is at least partly contagious. Just as
ordinary suicide often appears in clusters, and is understood to be spread by
social contagion, the same may be true of suicide-murder and other forms of
mass violence.
People
often wonder, how afraid should we be? My answer is that it depends on who you
are, where you live, and what you do. But even with a rise in the number of
mass-casualty attacks, the likelihood that any given individual will be caught
in such an attack is vanishingly small. Statistically speaking, you are far
more likely to die in a car accident than in a terrorist attack, especially if
you don’t wear a seatbelt.
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weekday, get thought-provoking commentary from Op-Ed columnists, The Times
editorial board and contributing writers from around the world.
In
many years of studying this subject, I have come to understand that a mass
shooting or terrorist attack evokes a powerful sense of dread. It is a form of
psychological warfare whose goal is to bolster the morale of its supporters and
demoralize and frighten its target audience — the victims and their
communities. Terrorists aim to make us feel afraid, and to overreact in fear.
The
good news is that when people are reminded of what they value most, such as the
divine, before being reminded of their inevitable death, the negative impact is
reduced. And when people are reminded of values such as tolerance or their
commitment to individual rights, their awareness of mortality increases these
commitments.
If
we are to prevail in the war on terrorism, we need to remember that the
freedoms we aspire to come with great responsibilities. And these
responsibilities involve not just fighting terrorists, but also managing our
own terror.
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