1st Edition

US Counter-Terrorism Strategy and al-Qaeda Signalling and the Terrorist World-View

By Joshua A. Geltzer Copyright 2010
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book examines the communicative aspects and implications of US counter-terrorist policies towards al-Qaeda.

    Recent US counter-terrorist strategy has been largely based upon projecting certain perceptions of America as an actor to those drawn to al-Qaeda, and this book investigates in what ways, and to what extent, US officials believed that the signals sent by what America did and said could influence the behaviour of the terrorist and would-be terrorist. The study then draws on a growing understanding of that audience to analyse how those drawn to al-Qaeda were and, indeed, still are likely to be influenced by the perceptions of America that Washington's policies generated. The study's central argument is that, given al-Qaeda's unconventional strategy and the particularities of the world-view characterising those drawn to the group, America's counter-terrorist signalling proved largely counter-productive to America's objective of undermining al-Qaeda's strategic narrative, instead serving in many ways to validate it.

    Firstly, this book seeks to reveal the significant and largely unexplored role that signalling has played in US counter-terrorist policy towards al-Qaeda. Second, it tries to capture the objectives, strategy, tactics, ideology, and other defining features of the world-view characterising those drawn to al-Qaeda. Third, it strives to combine those two lines of inquiry by applying the al-Qaeda world-view to a critical analysis of the signals sent by US policies. Finally, the book aims to offer broad policy implications that demonstrate how an informed understanding of the world-view of those drawn to al-Qaeda can be employed to revise and refine American counter-terrorist signalling.

    This book will be of much interest to students of US foreign policy and public diplomacy, counter-terrorism, strategy and international security.

    Joshua Alexander Geltzer has a PhD in War Studies from Kings College London, and is currently a juris doctoral student at Yale Law School.

    1. Introduction: al-Qaeda as Audience  2. Communicators and Audiences  3. America’s Counter-Terrorist Communications  4. The al-Qaeda World-View  5. The View of the Audience  6. Conclusion: Understanding and Improving Communication  7. Appendix: Individuals Interviewed  8. References

    Biography

    Joshua Alexander Geltzer has a PhD in War Studies from Kings College London, and is currently a juris doctoral student at Yale Law School.

    "...as a breath-catching take on the problem of unexamined, ineffective, domestic-driven American signaling to terrorists, whether of the nascent Obama or entrenched Cheney type, Geltzer's work is very impressive." -- Steve Coll, The New Yorker