对恐怖组织的口头攻击增加了针对平民的暴力行为。

IF 2.2 Q2 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES PNAS nexus Pub Date : 2024-10-02 eCollection Date: 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae437
Iliyan Iliev, Nahrain Bet Younadam, Brandon J Kinne
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引用次数: 0

摘要

恐怖分子和其他跨国极端主义团体造成了数以千计的平民死亡。面对极端分子,各国政府主要依靠威胁、要求、谴责和其他形式的言语冲突。这些口头胁迫的努力对恐怖分子的行为有影响吗?本分析以伊拉克和叙利亚伊斯兰国(ISIS)为重点,该组织仍然是世界上最致命的恐怖组织,并对最近在巴格达、维也纳、喀布尔和俄罗斯发生的备受瞩目的袭击事件负有责任。我们使用贝叶斯结构向量自回归模型分析了 2014-2020 年期间 ISIS 与外国政府互动的每日事件数据。我们发现,由政府发起的言语冲突不仅未能威慑 ISIS,反而增加了 ISIS 袭击平民的频率。更多的实证分析,结合 ISIS 出版物和公开声明中的证据,表明这种影响是由感知到的信誉缺失造成的。极端分子利用恐怖袭击发出信号,表明他们有能力并愿意给平民目标造成痛苦。政府试图通过口头而非军事手段胁迫极端组织,这反映出政府低估了极端组织的能力和决心。为了巩固自己的声誉,极端分子会进一步对平民施暴,从而导致更严重的人道主义后果。我们将分析扩展到伊拉克基地组织和博科圣地组织,发现了类似的结果。
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Verbal attacks on terrorist groups increase violence against civilians.

Terrorists and other transnational extremist groups are responsible for thousands of civilian deaths. In confronting extremists, governments have relied heavily on threats, demands, denunciations, and other forms of verbal conflict. Do these efforts at verbal coercion have any effect on terrorist behavior? This analysis focuses on the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), which continues to be the world's deadliest terrorist group and was responsible for recent high-profile attacks in Baghdad, Vienna, Kabul, and Russia. We use Bayesian structural vector autoregression models to analyze daily event data on interactions between ISIS and foreign governments for the 2014-2020 period. We find that verbal conflict initiated by governments not only failed to deter ISIS but in fact increased the frequency of ISIS's attacks on civilians. Additional empirical analyses, combined with evidence from ISIS's publications and public statements, suggest that this effect resulted from a perceived credibility deficit. Extremists use terror attacks to signal that they have the capabilities and willingness to inflict pain and suffering on civilian targets. Government attempts to coerce extremist groups verbally, rather than militarily, reflect an underestimation of the group's capabilities and resolve. In an effort to solidify their reputations, extremists engage in further violence toward civilians, thus leading to worse humanitarian consequences. We extend the analysis to Al-Qaeda in Iraq and Boko Haram and find similar results.

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