Instructions: Use this guide to test your knowledge. Cover the ANSWER column and
attempt to answer each question in your own words. The provided answers are concise
and designed to highlight the most critical information for examination success.
Section 1: Foundations of Terrorism
1. What is the most widely accepted academic definition of terrorism?
ANSWER ✓ Terrorism is the deliberate use or threat of violence by non-state actors to
instill fear and coerce a wider audience, beyond the immediate victims, for ideological,
political, or religious objectives.
2. Differentiate between "terrorism" and "insurgency."
ANSWER ✓ While both use violence, insurgency is a broader political-military struggle
for control of a population, often using guerrilla tactics. Terrorism is a tactic that can be
used within an insurgency to create fear and undermine authority.
3. What is the primary significance of the 1968 hijacking of El Al Flight 426 by the
PFLP?
ANSWER ✓ It marked the shift of terrorism onto a truly international stage,
demonstrating the power of symbolic targets and the use of international media to
broadcast a cause.
4. Define "asymmetrical conflict" in the context of terrorism.
ANSWER ✓ It is a conflict between belligerents of vastly different military power, where
the weaker party uses unconventional tactics, like terrorism, to offset the advantages of
the stronger party.
5. What is the core difference between a "terrorist group" and a "criminal
organization"?
ANSWER ✓ The primary motive: terrorist groups are ideologically or politically driven,
seeking political change, while criminal organizations are profit-driven, seeking financial
gain.
, 6. How does the concept of "propaganda of the deed" relate to modern terrorism?
ANSWER ✓ It is the philosophy that violent acts themselves are the most powerful form
of propaganda, inspiring sympathizers and terrifying opponents, a concept central to
modern terrorist media strategies.
7. What role does "terrorism as communication" play in a group's strategy?
ANSWER ✓ The violence is a message intended to signal capability, resolve, and the
high costs of ignoring the group's demands to multiple audiences (the public, the
government, potential supporters).
8. Name two key philosophical or historical precursors to modern terrorism.
ANSWER ✓ The Sicarii Zealots in ancient Judea and the Assassins (Nizari Ismailis) in the
medieval Middle East, both of whom used targeted killings to provoke fear and political
change.
9. What is the significance of the 1972 Munich Olympics attack?
ANSWER ✓ It was a watershed moment that demonstrated the global reach and media
spectacle of terrorism, fundamentally changing international security protocols for major
events.
10. Define "state-sponsored terrorism."
ANSWER ✓ It occurs when a sovereign state provides financial, logistical, training, or
safe-haven support to a terrorist group to advance its foreign policy goals while
maintaining plausible deniability.
Section 2: Ideologies & Motivations
11. What is the core objective of Salafi-Jihadist ideology?
ANSWER ✓ To establish a global caliphate governed by a strict interpretation of Sharia
law, achieved through violent jihad against perceived "apostate" regimes and their
Western supporters.
12. Differentiate between "left-wing" and "right-wing" terrorism.
ANSWER ✓ Left-wing terrorism seeks to overthrow capitalist systems and establish a
communist or anarchist state, often targeting corporate and government symbols.
, Right-wing terrorism seeks to overthrow liberal governments and establish a racially or
ethnically pure nation, often targeting minorities and immigrants.
13. What is "Eco-Terrorism" as practiced by groups like the ELF?
ANSWER ✓ The use of violence and property destruction against industries or entities
perceived to be harming the environment or animals, with the goal of causing economic
damage and raising awareness.
14. Define "Nationalist-Separatist Terrorism."
ANSWER ✓ Terrorism employed by a group seeking to achieve political independence
or autonomy for a specific ethnic, religious, or national community they claim to
represent (e.g., IRA, LTTE).
15. What is the "Leaderless Resistance" model, and which ideologies commonly
adopt it?
ANSWER ✓ A decentralized strategy where individuals or small cells operate
independently without a central command structure, making infiltration difficult. It is
common among right-wing and radical lone-wolf actors.
16. What is the primary grievance driving "Single-Issue Terrorism"?
ANSWER ✓ It is motivated by a singular, focused cause, such as opposition to abortion
(e.g., anti-abortion violence), animal testing, or environmental degradation, rather than a
comprehensive political ideology.
17. How do terrorist groups use historical narratives to legitimize their violence?
ANSWER ✓ They frame their struggle as a continuation of a historical conflict, casting
themselves as avengers of past grievances (e.g., Crusades, colonialism) to justify
contemporary violence.
18. What is the role of "utopianism" in terrorist ideologies?
ANSWER ✓ It promises a perfect, idealized future society (a caliphate, a racially pure
state, a classless society) that is used to justify any means, including extreme violence, to
achieve it.
19. What is "Narco-Terrorism"?