TERROR: POLITICAL WEAPON, SOCIAL INFECTION, DEHUMANISER
Terror or terrorism is the indiscriminate use of threats and violence for political purposes. It is perhaps the simplest strategy that a powerless or weak group or organization fighting an organized establishment is tempted to use. The nature of the organization of most terror groups, their support structures, and their objectives often constrain them, forcing them to operate:
- within a tight inner circle,
- with a great deal of fanaticism,
- with limited and thinly spread manpower,
- with light and limited materials or weapons,
- And with a clearly defined objective to bring down their opponents.
Perpetrators
of terror with a clearly defined political objective are usually men
who are highly committed to a cause, but have little or no regard for
the nature of its realization. These are people who stretch the notion
of the phrase “Tragic Necessity” to the utmost, pitting their causes
against humanity.
Terror
is a powerful political weapon with a far-reaching social effect. And the recoil effect of an act of terrorism is unpredictable.
As
a political weapon, terror might appear to be the most potent option by
frustrated but committed advocates of a cause that has been sidelined,
snubbed and denigrated; or by a cause whose activities and members have
been suppressed, repressed and decimated by its opponents, the
establishment or the government. These advocates of terror often see
themselves and their ideas as potential victims of annihilation at a
time that they think they lack the means to openly resist. How far the organization embraces the methods of terror determines the degree of its
dehumanization.
Terror
fully embraced is more sinister, threatening, and sustainable if it has a
base from which to recruit, train, regroup and replenish. The unacceptability of terror hinges the most on its social effects. And it
can be very far-reaching indeed.
The
use of violence and threats by a movement against a free, democratic,
liberal, progressive and humane society to intimidate or coerce it,
always backfires, with the movement losing its humaneness and purpose in
the process. Society in all its strata rejects the movement tainted by terror even if its cause promises to advance the wellbeing of the people. It was the case with the German group Baader-Meinhof, The
Italian Red Brigade, The Japanese Red Army, and FARC-EP of Colombia today. Even the Shining Path of Peru lost its purpose and folded because of the country’s democratization and liberalization. And attacks by the
Basque groups ETA (Euzkadi ta Askatasuna) only go to denigrate the genuine grievances of the Basque people. The list is inexhaustible.
Acts
of terror by a group or country against a foreign state, especially a
free and democratic one always has the opposite effect of uniting
and mobilizing the state that is being terrorized. It makes the
victimized state to appreciate its humane values all the more, while
enabling it to plug the loopholes that make it susceptible to acts of
terrorism. The Irish Republican Army (IRA) actually got weakened in its
fight against the British because of that. Palestinian Movements tainted
their genuine cause with terrorist acts against Israel. Even the
Separatist Chechen Movement is ruining its case with attacks against
Russian civilians. The Lockerbie bombing, The 1994 Argentina bombing by
suspected Iranian agents only strengthen the victimized countries. Above
all, the country or group that accepts the use of terror even against
the civilian population of the country they are against, ultimately ends
up dehumanizing its own society. That is because a policy of hate that
justifies the killing of non-combatants, women and children always turns
out to be xenophobic and full of lies; and it feeds on hypocrisy,
brainwashing, ideological extremism or religious fanaticism, which are
all shortcomings that will ultimately lead to the demise of the
propagators of terrorism and the breakdown of progressive human values
in their own societies.
With
a base, terror suddenly unleashed against an unpopular, oppressive,
repressive, discriminatory, detached and elitist regime or government
has an initial paralyzing effect on society in that it infuses fear,
doubt and a sense of vulnerability into the minds of the oppressive
class, while at the same time it stirs the common people into believing
that the system they too are against could be brought down. The
unleashed terror destroys the confidence the custodians of the repressive system had before, especially in their conviction that they
could get away with all their actions against those opposing them. The
oligarchy suddenly becomes chaotic in their procedures, planning and
execution of their strategies. The offensive nature of their rule
becomes defensive all of a sudden without due preparations. The army and
security forces, the administration, and the other agencies and organs
enforcing the repression, oppression, fraud, corruption, discrimination
and violence become momentarily immobilized in the initial phases of
terrorism. With the terrorists striking at every possible target and
with casualties rolling in, the custodians of the dictatorial system
start questioning the justification of their policies, the prize they
are willing to pay to stay in power and the chances they have in
sustaining assaults from the terrorists. The foot soldiers of the regime
(security agencies and intelligence services) that are the shields of
the system or regime but not its benefactors, but who trace most of
their origins from the majority of the people, start wondering why they
have to bear the brunt of the anger against the system when they are not
really responsible for it. Why would a patriotic corporal, inspector,
captain, lieutenant, colonel, commissioner, or general; why would someone
who truly loves his country, wishes for its redemption, and aspires for a
better role in defending his nation, risk his life and the future of
his loved ones by standing against the fire aimed at a corrupt,
undemocratic, discriminatory, and anti-people system and regime, while
the leadership and its clique (the oligarchy) continue to swim in
affluence and security? Why would these security forces risk their lives
to maintain people in power who do not truly appreciate their worth?
The
answer to the above questions is simple. The defenders of the system
would fight the terrorists to the bitter end only if they are convinced
that the new order the terror organizations would bring with them would
be far worse than the current reality.
Still,
one cannot ignore the traumas in a society haunted by terror. Besides
its infusion of fear and doubt into the establishment, and its
destruction and immobilization of the tools of administration, terror as
a political weapon used in a society that is not free, has the powerful
effect of the polarizing it. The unleashing of terror opens a conflict
that:
- Pits the repressive oligarchy against the terror group, leaving the patriotic majority in the cold in their demands for democracy, freedom and liberalism.
- Finds the have and have-nots drawn further apart.
- Widens the gap between the ignorant and the enlightened.
- Sets the docility of the old against the vibrancy of the young in their quest for freedom, democracy, progress, and transparency.
- Finally brings the idealists against the realists, the pragmatists, the humanists, and the dogmatists.
The
use of terror in a genuine cause of freedom or liberation against the
oppressive rule of an unrepresentative establishment becomes susceptible
to blackmail, mistakes, and dehumanization. Even its limited use
without a clearly defined direction exposes the majority of the soldiers
and militants of the freedom or liberation struggle to the cruelest and
unusual punishments from the oppressive system or establishment. The
custodians of the system respond to the acts of terror with vile actions
or remedies of their own that is in effect state terrorism. Inhuman in
its content, the oppressive establishment nonetheless wins sympathy from
the general population and the world at large. The regime suspends
human rights; the regime goes further in its excuses and carries out
preventive arrests, vile tortures, subornation, extensive legal murders
(through questionable laws); and the regime executes cruel, vindictive,
discriminatory and the most unusual punishments against those who oppose
them, thereby bundling the terrorists together with the progressive
forces of the land that are advocating for liberty, freedom and/or
liberation. Having lost the last elements of its humaneness, reacting
out of proportion to the threat posed by the terrorists and the freedom
demanded by the majority of the people, the oppressive regime or the
unrepresentative system in power presses on with open state terrorism
through divide and rule by channeling its resources to stir deliberate
violence and internal strife. In its desperation, the oligarchy strikes
blindly and calculatingly in turns. The innocents find themselves being
hit more than opponents of the system by both the establishment and the
terror groups, with the terror groups finding themselves blamed for
everything. This social chaos degenerates into civil strife with clans
fighting against clans, tribes against tribes, religions against one
another, races drifting apart, and the different classes becoming irreconcilable. In this situation where terrorism against the state
loses its purpose, terrorism by the state prevails and saps the
oppressed and freedom-loving majority of whatever little strength they
might have left, forcing them to settle for any order the oligarchy can
restore. In this case, the terror group’s failure strengthens the
dictatorship in power, enabling the system to last longer, even though
it actually financed its state terrorism using the public treasury and
the sweat of the citizens.
A
candid evaluation would, however, reveal that despite the possible
glorification of terror by groups or people who feel cornered, the fact
that the specter of mistakes or unfortunate accidents looms high takes
away its efficacy. Where and who should be the targets? What is the
purpose or objective?
A
humane exponent of change who convinces himself that the use of terror
is tragic but necessary in a tormenting situation, risks corrupting his
soul in the process, especially if his action gets out of control. Even
the line that the use of terror should only seek to attract attention to the genuine cause of the unheard and neglected,
is basically faulty because the use of terror often or always ends up
as a boomerang. A genuine and popular cause tainted with terror that is
ill-organized, poorly-targeted, and not clearly defined; one that
strikes at the establishment and results in civilian casualties as well
finds itself open to sabotage and blackmail.
The
use of terror as a rule by genuine exponents of change is unacceptable.
It subjects the movement to defeat, especially if it becomes a weapon
of any duration. While a movement might be forgiven for using it as a
spark, the shout that would immobilize the system and set off the
avalanche, the effect of terror is corrosive against everyone and
everything that it touches. And any duration in its utilization would
blind the essence of the movement’s true purpose, taking out the
humanity embodied in struggles that involve freedom, liberation,
democracy, prosperity, and human harmony; and as a consequence, it would
open the ranks of the movement to blackmail and denigration. The most
moral of men, the sanest of freedom movements, the most dedicated of
revolutionaries and even humanists of all stripes end up losing their
purpose if they fail to consider the corrupting influence of terror,
even in its short-term use, and especially when they fancy the use of
terror as the rule or weapon of survival even against an inhuman
establishment. By using terror, they end up betraying the hopes and
aspirations of the struggling masses whose interest terror was first
invoked to safeguard.
Short-lived
Clearly targeted, purposeful and organized terror in the activities of
the ANC, SWAPO, ZANU-ZAPU and FRELIMO pushed the establishments in South
Africa, Namibia, South Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) and Mozambique respectively
to enter into a dialogue that brought the changes that enabled these
liberation movements to win power democratically in those countries. The
Islamic Salvation Front of Algeria lost its essence because of its
blind adoption of terror. Communism considered by some pundits to be the
most humane ideology in advocating for the economically and socially
deprived lost its humaneness as a political force because of its initial
embrace of terror. Lenin’s short-term use of red terror during the
Russian Civil War that followed the communist revolution was blown out
of proportion when Stalin made it a rule of the Soviet system and a
legacy that is haunting the communist ideology today. The examples of
the fallouts from the use of terror are inexhaustible. That is why
movements that are trying to advance humaneness should become
self-critical when their leaders start flirting with terrorism.
.
In
the case of Cameroon, the fact that the price for dislodging the system
is high does not mean that effective use of terror against the
establishment is the only option left. While it might appear attractive
to some opponents of the Biya regime and the anachronistic
French-imposed system as a whole, exponents of change should bear in
mind the fact that even the most effective use of terror against the
custodians of the system would likely denigrate the noble objectives of
the century-old Kamerunian struggle and cloud the realization of the
future New Cameroon.
True an effective use of terror against those in the oligarchy with blood in their hands will mortify the system. True it would open public debate and help to clearly identify the camps. And true it would indicate the seriousness of the forces advocating for a Cameroon that should have a place among the community of free, progressive, and civilize nations. But it would tear society apart and dehumanize it in the process, to an extent that its soul might even get more corrupted than it is at the moment. Mindful of the fact that some exponents of change who oppose the use of terror acknowledge the fact that its use would force the system to take the oppressed struggling masses seriously and make the establishment to understand that their opponents can create a perpetual nightmare by making terror the rule in their struggle, exponents of change should never consider the use of terror in their quest to found the New Cameroon that is free, democratic, united, liberal, progressive, prosperous and pluralistic.
True an effective use of terror against those in the oligarchy with blood in their hands will mortify the system. True it would open public debate and help to clearly identify the camps. And true it would indicate the seriousness of the forces advocating for a Cameroon that should have a place among the community of free, progressive, and civilize nations. But it would tear society apart and dehumanize it in the process, to an extent that its soul might even get more corrupted than it is at the moment. Mindful of the fact that some exponents of change who oppose the use of terror acknowledge the fact that its use would force the system to take the oppressed struggling masses seriously and make the establishment to understand that their opponents can create a perpetual nightmare by making terror the rule in their struggle, exponents of change should never consider the use of terror in their quest to found the New Cameroon that is free, democratic, united, liberal, progressive, prosperous and pluralistic.
The
war of reunification and independence that the UPC (Union of the
populations of Cameroon) was dragged into, following its prohibition and
its suppression by the French Trusteeship Administration in Cameroon in
1955, is a classic case. The limited use of terror by the popular
liberation movement against the French forces and the forces of Ahmadou
Ahidjo, the puppet France installed as president of Cameroon ― which
massacred the Cameroonian population ― as well as against those the UPC
considered traitors, was effectively used to give the movement a bad
name as a blood-thirsty terrorist group. Thanks to state terrorism, the
UPC was denigrated, repressed, crushed and most of its leaders were
killed, imprisoned or exiled by the Franco-Ahidjo alliance. It was a
campaign that went hand in hand with the blackmail and framing of the
movement while stigmatizing the UPC support base. It was so effective
that the strongly victimized Bamileke and Bassa populations are still
the target of stereotypes hatched by Jacques Foccart, the architect of
French control in Africa, who did an effective job in presenting the
UPC’s war of freedom or liberation in the 1960s as a post-1960 ethnic
revolt by the Bamileké and Bassa populations, thereby effectively
casting the country’s largest and most nationalistic ethnic group as a
national enemy of the rest of Cameroonian peoples, a stigma that still
haunts the country today. And men like Jean Forchive etc owed their rise
and prominence in the system to their successful use of state terrorism
against the UPC.
There is a strong faction in the current Biya regime that envisages the eternal survival of the system through the careful use of state terrorism against the patriotic majority who are being allowed to use their voices, but not their hands and feet, in a sham process that allows for multi-party politics in Cameroon but that prevents democracy from taking roots by denying the people the rights to choose through sham elections that make a mockery of democracy and freedom of choice.
In
a nutshell, an organization that uses terror against an establishment,
be it their home country or a foreign country, risks tainting itself
forever, corrupting its essence and plunging society into a process of
dehumanization that might take decades and even generations to overcome.
Janvier Tchouteu
November 08, 1997