What is the Impact of Foreign Military Intervention on Radicalization?

In an era where the use of military intervention is being debated by governments and societies all around the globe, the potentially radicalizing impact of the specific form of intervention has remained chronically underexplored. The article addresses this lack of research, by examining the radicali...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tom Pettinger
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Daniel Koehler 2015-12-01
Series:Journal for Deradicalization
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.sfu.ca/jd/index.php/jd/article/view/36
id doaj-c02a760f0edf4cda9ad0d65bc09103b1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c02a760f0edf4cda9ad0d65bc09103b12020-11-25T01:06:44ZdeuDaniel KoehlerJournal for Deradicalization2363-98492363-98492015-12-015Winter92119What is the Impact of Foreign Military Intervention on Radicalization?Tom Pettinger0University of HullIn an era where the use of military intervention is being debated by governments and societies all around the globe, the potentially radicalizing impact of the specific form of intervention has remained chronically underexplored. The article addresses this lack of research, by examining the radicalizing effects of full-scale military engagement and the consequences of more limited, aerial intervention. In an effort to inform the contentious discussion around foreign military intervention, it draws examples from the ‘War on Terror’ in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as the more recent airstrikes employed through the US drone programme against Al-Qaeda and coalition strikes against the so-called Islamic State, illustrating the risks and outcomes of ‘boots on the ground’ versus engaging in more ‘distant’ warfare. It concludes that whilst other factors clearly play a role in an individual’s journey towards extremism, intervention by a foreign power can encourage the process of radicalization, or ‘de-pluralization’ - the developing perception that there exists only one solution, extreme violence - to take place. However, it finds that the type of intervention plays a critical role in determining how individuals experience this process of de-pluralization; full-scale intervention can result in a lack of monitoring alongside frustrations (about lost sovereignty for example), a combination which paves the way for radical ideology. Conversely, airstrikes present those underneath with unequal and unassailable power that cannot be fairly fought, fuelling interest in exporting terrorism back to the intervening countries.http://journals.sfu.ca/jd/index.php/jd/article/view/36RadicalizationMilitary InterventionInternational ConflictRoot Causes
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tom Pettinger
spellingShingle Tom Pettinger
What is the Impact of Foreign Military Intervention on Radicalization?
Journal for Deradicalization
Radicalization
Military Intervention
International Conflict
Root Causes
author_facet Tom Pettinger
author_sort Tom Pettinger
title What is the Impact of Foreign Military Intervention on Radicalization?
title_short What is the Impact of Foreign Military Intervention on Radicalization?
title_full What is the Impact of Foreign Military Intervention on Radicalization?
title_fullStr What is the Impact of Foreign Military Intervention on Radicalization?
title_full_unstemmed What is the Impact of Foreign Military Intervention on Radicalization?
title_sort what is the impact of foreign military intervention on radicalization?
publisher Daniel Koehler
series Journal for Deradicalization
issn 2363-9849
2363-9849
publishDate 2015-12-01
description In an era where the use of military intervention is being debated by governments and societies all around the globe, the potentially radicalizing impact of the specific form of intervention has remained chronically underexplored. The article addresses this lack of research, by examining the radicalizing effects of full-scale military engagement and the consequences of more limited, aerial intervention. In an effort to inform the contentious discussion around foreign military intervention, it draws examples from the ‘War on Terror’ in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as the more recent airstrikes employed through the US drone programme against Al-Qaeda and coalition strikes against the so-called Islamic State, illustrating the risks and outcomes of ‘boots on the ground’ versus engaging in more ‘distant’ warfare. It concludes that whilst other factors clearly play a role in an individual’s journey towards extremism, intervention by a foreign power can encourage the process of radicalization, or ‘de-pluralization’ - the developing perception that there exists only one solution, extreme violence - to take place. However, it finds that the type of intervention plays a critical role in determining how individuals experience this process of de-pluralization; full-scale intervention can result in a lack of monitoring alongside frustrations (about lost sovereignty for example), a combination which paves the way for radical ideology. Conversely, airstrikes present those underneath with unequal and unassailable power that cannot be fairly fought, fuelling interest in exporting terrorism back to the intervening countries.
topic Radicalization
Military Intervention
International Conflict
Root Causes
url http://journals.sfu.ca/jd/index.php/jd/article/view/36
work_keys_str_mv AT tompettinger whatistheimpactofforeignmilitaryinterventiononradicalization
_version_ 1725188511992119296