1. The Brutal Logic of Terror: The Privatization of War on Modernity.
- Author
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Münkler, Herfried
- Subjects
- *
WAR (International law) , *ECONOMICS , *TERRORISM , *VIOLENCE , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This article investigates privatized economic rationality of war-making. The privatization of war is based on an economy in which the use of force and economic life have one again merged, meaning that those involved in war have no rational interest in its conclusion. The strategy of terrorism aims much less at the immediate physical consequences of the use of force than at the psychological consequences of violence. Thus, terrorist violence has two addresses. First of all, those who feel connected in a broad sense to those attacked, be it by reason of belonging to the same class or social stratum or by reason of national or ethnic identity or palace of residence. They are signaled that henceforth they will no longer live in safety, since from now on violence can reach them always and everywhere. The other addresses of terrorist violence are not so much the members of small terror groups or the constituency that supports them as the would-be interested third. They are signaled that there is no reason to give up in the face of a seemingly superior foe, but rather that resistance is possible and can be successful. Effectively staged terrorist attacks then become symbols of the weakness and vulnerability of a militarily and economically superior power.
- Published
- 2002
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