Writing about terrorism is always fraught. It’s naturally emotive. Readers are suspicious, sometimes defensive, and often dogmatic. Public debates concerning terrorism so rarely get anywhere. They generate far more heat than light.
On that score, the recent tragedy in Oslo was no exception. Responses were swift and passionate. The fact that these attacks were carried out by a white Norwegian rather than the Muslim everyone expected meant the debate was different this time. People’s understanding of what terrorism was, and who could do it had been rocked. And in the struggle to make sense of it, certain themes kept emerging: the person who did this was mad; religion causes all the violence of the world; this person wasn’t a real terrorist, he was just a lone gunman and so on. Immediately I was struck by just how many wrong assumptions were being made, and how badly terrorism was understood, despite the fact we’ve been talking about it for a decade now.
Clearly, terrorism remains steeped in mythology. Frustratingly, so. I can understand that where it’s something unknown. But people have been studying it for decades now, and despite all the enduring mysteries, some myths have now well and truly been busted by researchers in the area. Here are a few of the most common
1. Terrorists are mad
I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve heard or read someone express this sentiment since the Norway attacks. At one level, it’s perfectly understandable, too. Terrorism definitely is abnormal behaviour. It seems to contradict every natural instinct we have to avoid killing members of our own species. And it seems to be the domain of fanatics who have extreme views of the world and minds that aren’t for turning.