A pattern I’ve seen in countries dealing with terrorism is that they try and kill or arrest all members of a terrorist organization. I’m trying to find an example where terrorist cells were destroyed by military force and I can’t find any- it seems the most successful endings are through diplomacy and humanitarian relief to the communities that are vulnerable to radicalization.

  • merde alors@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    define “winning”!

    keeping a relatively harmless tension with a weakened organization may be what a state may consider a “win”.

    why would ‘current rulers’ efface their source of propaganda for the next twenty elections?

    p.s. : would you consider the recent resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict an appropriate response to your question?

    • meep_launcherOP
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      10 months ago

      Actually you pinged on a good point - really it could come down to what the “counter terror” side defines as victory. One example that comes to me is the US in Afghanistan- we really didn’t have a solid definition for victory other than a vague “destroy al-Qaeda” so we ended up there for 20 years and every bomb we dropped just radicalized more people.

      For transparency, I wrote this question thinking about the Palestine Israel conflict. Israel’s stated objective is to completely destroy Hamas, but that feels oddly familiar

      As far as the Nagorno-Karabakh, I’m not familiar with that conflict, but I did a little peak and the news is saying it’s back up. :/