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Crisis and crisis management in the war on terror Change, Conflict and Crisis 3 EUA 601 and 620 Contemporary World Arena
59

Lecture 19 changeconflictcrisis 3 war on terror

May 21, 2015

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Page 1: Lecture 19 changeconflictcrisis 3 war on terror

Crisis and crisis management in the

war on terror

Change, Conflict

and Crisis

3

EUA 601 and 620 Contemporary World Arena

Page 2: Lecture 19 changeconflictcrisis 3 war on terror

9-111

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origins2

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crises3

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managing crises4

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perceiving crises5

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the attacks1

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acts of violence that are intentionally directed at non-combatants for the purpose of securing political objectives

(Philips 2020: 137)

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Al-Qaeda and ‘transnational terror’

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Use of aircraft and low technology

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Part of a broader pattern

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BaliMadrid

London

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Major impact on US foreign and

domestic policy, and on US allies

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everyth ing

two hours that

Halliday 2001

“ changed

changed the world

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Where did it come from?2

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terrorists

sub-humans

freedoms haters

barbarians and savages

evil-doers

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But beyond pain and rhetoric…

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serious thinking suggests

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it’s more complex

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1991change in balance of power

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Decoupling

of Cold War proxy relationships

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crises3

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borderlandsAutonomous civil wars in

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failed states and

ungovernable zonesHelman and Ratner 1992; Kaplan 1994

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Security-development nexus

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managing crises4

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Bush doctrine

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to forestall or prevent such

hostile acts by our

adversaries, the United

States will, if necessary, act

pre-emptively in exercising

our inherent right of self-

defence

National Security Strategy, 20 Sept 2002

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Mixture of ‘traditional’ measures against states and ‘globalised’ actions

Rise of drone warfare based in (e.g.) Pakistan

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Moral certitude

Military primacy

M. East democracy

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Legitimised by UN and ‘coalition of the willing’

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but

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Extension into Iraq legitimacyundermined

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perceiving crises5

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crisis for whom?

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why was 9/11 welcomed by some

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US supports ME d i c t a t o r s

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Persistent interventions in

the borderlands

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US foreign policy has…

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strutted around for a century, without saying ‘thank you’,

or ‘please’…

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Western universalizing project

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Liberal terrorPropensity to flatten whatever disagrees with US policy, in the name of the liberal peace

Brad Adams

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9-11 As

response to

us hegemony

since 1991

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Page 46: Lecture 19 changeconflictcrisis 3 war on terror

Meaning in IR6

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Crisis in the

global systemCrisis of the

global system

Crisis of

participants

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legitimate response to

?violentamerican

hegemony

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Or

?primitivism,

barbarism, extremism

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Who are the ‘terrorists’?

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How useful is it to use such terms ?

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To demonise, dehumanize and

delegitimize ?

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to confiscate the word humanity, to invoke and monopolize such a

term… has certain effects, such as denying the enemy the quality of

being human and declaring him to be an outlaw of humanity; and a war

can thereby be driven to the most extreme inhumanity

Carl Schmitt, The Concept of the Political

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since all such acts are barriers to communication

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Conclusion

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nothing changes everything

George Will (2005)“

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Little… has changed. The forces of globalization continue

unabated... The issues of the day… are largely the same.

Across broad measures of political, economic, and social

data, the constants outweigh the variations. And United

States' foreign policy is marked by no greater strategic

clarity than it had on Sept. 10, 2001

Dobson, 2006:1 “

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Violence from hegemonic power inevitable to maintain status

realism

Attacks are war of ideas, beliefs and supremacy

constructivism

Violence sanctioned and

condoned by collective

security rules

liberalism

Opportunity to further goals of neoimperialism

marxism

Page 59: Lecture 19 changeconflictcrisis 3 war on terror