How States Carry Out Acts of Terror: Wars, Strategies and Tactics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo

Terrorism is a notoriously difficult concept that defies single universal definition. Terrorists intentionally employ violence in order to instill fear in their victims and the wider public. Terrorist movements aim to achieve their political, social and/or religious goals through use of violent acts...

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Main Author: MA. Astrit Lleshi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Felix-Verlag 2016-01-01
Series:ILIRIA International Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://iliriapublications.org/index.php/iir/article/view/261
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spelling doaj-a3f5f89937d24413a206ae9b7f976a1b2020-11-25T03:35:28ZengFelix-VerlagILIRIA International Review2192-70812365-85922016-01-016216117210.21113/iir.v6i2.261224How States Carry Out Acts of Terror: Wars, Strategies and Tactics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and KosovoMA. Astrit Lleshi0University of Salford, Manchester, United KingdomTerrorism is a notoriously difficult concept that defies single universal definition. Terrorists intentionally employ violence in order to instill fear in their victims and the wider public. Terrorist movements aim to achieve their political, social and/or religious goals through use of violent acts. (Hoffman, 1998: 43) In most cases terrorism is perpetrated by non-state actors and is "bottom up" challenge to the existing political order. However this article argues that the nature of the crime and not the perpetrator should determine whether some criminal act constitutes terrorism and acts of terror can also be committed by states and/or state actors. In this article, the author will examine the overall strategy and tactics used by the Milosevic and Karadzic regimes in BiH and Kosovo to fulfil their wartime ambitions of maintaining and consolidating control over Serb and Serb-occupied territory, relying primarily upon the indictments and judgments of the ICTY in which they and members of their armed forces acting under their authority have been charged and/or convicted of war crimes and terror, along with reports from international organizations such as the United Nations and other sources. Through an analysis of these tactics against leading definitions of terrorism, it will be demonstrated that rather than fighting against terrorists and insurgents, the Milosevic and Karadzic regimes carried out acts of terror during the wars in Kosovo and BiH, respectively, and furthermore Milosevic was sponsoring state-terrorism in BiH (Blakely, 2012: 3-4).http://iliriapublications.org/index.php/iir/article/view/261War CrimesTerrorismEthnic CleansingPolitical ViolenceUNICTYBosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author MA. Astrit Lleshi
spellingShingle MA. Astrit Lleshi
How States Carry Out Acts of Terror: Wars, Strategies and Tactics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
ILIRIA International Review
War Crimes
Terrorism
Ethnic Cleansing
Political Violence
UNICTY
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
author_facet MA. Astrit Lleshi
author_sort MA. Astrit Lleshi
title How States Carry Out Acts of Terror: Wars, Strategies and Tactics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
title_short How States Carry Out Acts of Terror: Wars, Strategies and Tactics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
title_full How States Carry Out Acts of Terror: Wars, Strategies and Tactics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
title_fullStr How States Carry Out Acts of Terror: Wars, Strategies and Tactics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
title_full_unstemmed How States Carry Out Acts of Terror: Wars, Strategies and Tactics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
title_sort how states carry out acts of terror: wars, strategies and tactics in bosnia and herzegovina and kosovo
publisher Felix-Verlag
series ILIRIA International Review
issn 2192-7081
2365-8592
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Terrorism is a notoriously difficult concept that defies single universal definition. Terrorists intentionally employ violence in order to instill fear in their victims and the wider public. Terrorist movements aim to achieve their political, social and/or religious goals through use of violent acts. (Hoffman, 1998: 43) In most cases terrorism is perpetrated by non-state actors and is "bottom up" challenge to the existing political order. However this article argues that the nature of the crime and not the perpetrator should determine whether some criminal act constitutes terrorism and acts of terror can also be committed by states and/or state actors. In this article, the author will examine the overall strategy and tactics used by the Milosevic and Karadzic regimes in BiH and Kosovo to fulfil their wartime ambitions of maintaining and consolidating control over Serb and Serb-occupied territory, relying primarily upon the indictments and judgments of the ICTY in which they and members of their armed forces acting under their authority have been charged and/or convicted of war crimes and terror, along with reports from international organizations such as the United Nations and other sources. Through an analysis of these tactics against leading definitions of terrorism, it will be demonstrated that rather than fighting against terrorists and insurgents, the Milosevic and Karadzic regimes carried out acts of terror during the wars in Kosovo and BiH, respectively, and furthermore Milosevic was sponsoring state-terrorism in BiH (Blakely, 2012: 3-4).
topic War Crimes
Terrorism
Ethnic Cleansing
Political Violence
UNICTY
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo
url http://iliriapublications.org/index.php/iir/article/view/261
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