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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page discussion of the changes that have occurred since 9-11 in the U.S. and Spain in regard to terrorism. The contention is presented that the most eminent threat of terrorism that we are facing in the U.S. results more from our own counterterrorism activities than it does from the terrorists themselves. In Spain, however, terrorism seems to have intensified in regard to the threat of both biological weapons and bombs and other more traditional weapons of destruction. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPterrorismChangingThreat.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
however, has changed in its nature since the September 11, 2001 destruction of the World Trade Center and the subsequent attack on the Pentagon itself. In some respects, in
fact, it might be argued that the most eminent threat of terrorism that we are facing in the U.S. results more from our own counterterrorism activities than it does from
the terrorists themselves. In other countries, however, the threat of terrorism is more direct. Even there, however, the face of that threat has evolved. In Spain, for
example, that evolution seems to have intensified in regard to the threat of both biological weapons and bombs and other more traditional weapons of destruction.
The U.S. and Spain, like most countries, have faced the terrorist threat by stepping up their counterrerrorism activities. That move, however, has produced different results in each
of these countries. Spain has received significant terrorist blows since 9-11 but the U.S. has managed, so far at least, to prevent more direct attacks on our soil.
The March 11, 2004 bombing of four commuter trains in Madrid Spain alone took countless lives and deepened the dark legacy that Islam is currently leaving in its wake.
The changing face of terrorism in Spain is somewhat surprising given the Both Islamic culture and occidental culture have undergone significant evolution over the years and much of this evolution
can be attributed to the influences gained in the interaction between these cultures. Kogman-Appel (2002) observes, for example, that for the Jews of Spain in their earliest interactions with
Muslims it was in many ways easier for Jews to acculturate to Islam than it was for them to acculturate to Christianity. Because of the ease with which the
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