Assassination as a method of
terrorism can be defined as the killing of an important or famous person as
opposed to a random shooting or killing. For the terrorist viable assassination
targets fall into 2 broad categories; firstly a target could be someone who
would attract a lot of media attention such as a monarch or political leader
here the murder is purely to attract media attention and heighten the fear of
terrorism and the fear that no one is safe. The second type of target for
assassination is of value as an opponent of the terrorist’s aims. This could be
a political rival such as a president, or part of the security services hunting
the terrorist group such as a police chief. Sometimes a victim can cover both
aspects such as the killing of Lord Louis Mountbatten by the IRA in Cork in
1979.
Assassination is one of the
oldest and simplest of terrorist methods; the word assassin entered the English
language after the crusades due to the Ismaili fedayeen cult of the assassins
that was founded by Hasan as Sabah in 1090 in the Lebanese mountains. This
Shi’ite sect was known as Hashishi or Hashishians due to its use of the drug of
the same name. They were a fundamentalist organisation who used murder and
assassination of political and religious rivals. Their dedication to their
cause was absolute and in a chilling taste of things to come they were willing
to die to reach their target. The Mongols finally destroyed the cult in 1256
after a series of sieges of the assassin’s mountain strongholds.
To the determined assassin who is
not concerned over their own safety no target is safe as American history shows
with the assassinations of Abraham Lincoln (1865), J.F.Kennedy (1963) and
Martin Luther King (1968). Assassination is not only a terrorist weapon but has
a mixed tracked record of use by governments, from the failed attempts on
Hitler’s life in WW2 to Israeli assassination of terrorists and members of
Yasser Arafat’s political faction Fatah. 1987 saw the assassination of Abu
Jihad the PLO’s military leader in Tunisia but 1997 saw two Israeli agents
arrested in Jordan trying to poison a leading member of Hamas. Use of
assassination remains a politically sensitive method of counterterrorism as it
is often seen as illegal and lowering you to the terrorists level and if
mistakes are made leads to the death of innocent people. As the cheapest and
simplest terrorist method it will remain in use by terrorist organisations but
with tightened security around important people it is becoming a less
attractive option.
Source: http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/concepts_assassination.html
Comment:
The current political landscape in Malaysia has all the ingredients for a political assassination against very important people is seems to be imminent. Whether intelligence and security agencies have anticipated and have taken necessary steps to prevent it is still unclear.
Comments