11_LeftWing - James JF Forest
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Transcript 11_LeftWing - James JF Forest
Left-Wing (often Marxist/Communist) Terrorist Groups
Cold War, Soviet commitment to spread of Communism
De-colonization conflicts, including:
French in Southeast Asia, Algeria
U.S. in Southeast Asia
British in East Africa
Successful revolutionary movements in Asia, Latin America, etc.
Mao Tse-tung and China in the 1940s
Ho Chi Minh and Vietnam in the 1950s, 1960s, & 1970s
Mao Tse-Tung
Fidel Castro and Cuba in the late 1950s/early 1960s
Latin American civil wars
South Africa, Palestinian territories, Northern Ireland conflicts
Modern European terrorism emerged in the 1960s as an extreme
reflection of left-wing activism
Wretched of the Earth (1961): Western powers have
dehumanized non-Western people by destroying their
cultures and replacing them with Western values
The masses suffer a perpetual identity crisis, forced to deny their heritage.
They can follow only one course of action: guerilla warfare revolution
(achieving freedom is inherently violent)
Terrorism had a specific purpose: to terrorize Westerners and their followers
into submission
Urban terror was to create mayhem, and all terrorism was to be excessively
brutal to communicate fear.
Fanon’s guerrilla model thus uses terrorism as a strategy and deviates from typical
guerrillas who try to build a military force
Argentine Marxist; traveled throughout Latin America and became convinced
that the region’s economic problems were caused by capitalism, neocolonialism and imperialism, with the only remedy being world revolution.
Published his lessons learned from success in Cuba (w/Castro) of ousting the
Batista regime
Foco theory of revolution:
“Vanguardism” by cadres of small, fast-moving paramilitary groups can provide a
focus for popular discontent against a sitting regime, and thereby lead a general
insurrection.
Popular forces can win a war against the army
Immediate Action: It is not necessary to wait until all conditions for making
revolution exist; the insurrection can create them
The countryside is the basic area for armed fighting; must mobilize and launch
attacks from rural areas
Authored Liberation of Brazil, and Mini-Manual of the Urban
Guerilla
Practical guides for terrorism
The basis of revolution is violence
All violence could be urban-based and controlled by a small group
of urban guerillas
Two phases of Urban Guerilla model: 1) violence, and 2) give that
violence meaning
The terror campaign must be accompanied by a mass movement of
revolutionary sympathizers, to provide peripheral support for
terrorists
A campaign of revolutionary terrorism in an urban setting can be
used to destabilize government power
A terrorist campaign will force the government to reveal that
repressive nature, thereby alienating the public
Governmental repression is the goal of terrorism at this stage.
Strategy: Armed violence against the capitalist state; Provoke
government into repressive response, antagonize population
Common Targets
Common Tactics
Symbolic targets
Policemen
Lawyers
Judges
University professors
Politicians
Union leaders
Industrialists
Military/security facilities
Armed robberies
Operations against the military
(snipers, planting mines, etc.)
Kidnapping (for attention and
coercive bargaining)
Selective assassination (snipers,
letter bombs, etc.)
Indiscriminate attacks in public
places
Lots o’ bombings . . .
Prominent role of academics, intellectual elites
Sendero Luminoso: University of San Cristobal de Huamanga (Abimael
Guzman)
Red Brigades: University of Trento (Renato Curcio, Mara Cagol)
Red Army Faction: Free University of Berlin (Andreas Baader, Ulrike Meinhof)
17 November: Athens Polytechnic
Common reasons for the decline of left-wing terror groups:
Intellectual elites who controlled the movement got older and lost their ability
to connect with increasingly younger student activist audiences.
Impatient leaders, members led to mistakes, counterproductive violence
Alienation of target audiences (instead of mobilization) undermined political
objectives
Left-wing movements became more specific, focusing not only on certain
political behavior, but on particular causes (e.g., ELF, ALF, Monkey Wrench Gang –
spiking trees, arson attacks, lumber mills, etc.)
Government actions and improved police tactics certainly contributed to the
decline of left-wing terrorism in the U.S. and Europe
Focused on fundamental, systemic change
• Groups influenced by revolutionaries in other countries
• Domestic, Marxist, some state support
• Armed violence against the capitalist state; provoke overreaction
Mao TseTung
Ernesto “Che” Geuvara
Frantz Fanon
Carlos Marighella
Mao: the guerilla should be likened to a fish in the sea - People’s War
Che: a small dedicated cadre of fighters can create the conditions for popular
revolution (cult of martyrs?)
Fanon: political violence is a necessary instrument of liberation
Marighella: urban violence will “systematically inflict damage on the authorities…
(and)…the people who dominate …and exercise power”
Action Directe (France)
Sendero Luminoso (Peru)
17 November (Greece)
Weather Underground (United States)
Tupamaros (Uruguay)
Japanese Red Army
Red Army Faction (Germany)
Red Brigades (Italy)
Mujahedin-e-Khalq (Iran)
Popular Revolutionary Army (Mexico)
Nepal Insurgents (Maoists)
United Freedom Front (United States)
25 April Movement (Portugal)
Revolutionary Movement of Tupac Amaru (Peru)
Irish Nationalist Liberation Army (IRSP militants)
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Colombia)
May 19 Communist Organization (United States)
Evan Mecham Eco-Terrorist International Conspiracy (United States)
Others . . .
West German leftist group founded in 1968 and active until
1998; most core members were university students, led by
Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof
Lots of bombings and armed assaults against police, U.S.
military personnel and journalists
Assassinated several important individuals, including
Germany’s Supreme Court President Gunter von Drenkman
(1974)
Airplane Hijackings and Kidnappings (e.g., Hans Martin
Schleyer) not for ransom but to coerce release of group
members from prison
Italian Marxist-Leninist terrorist group founded in Milan in
1970 and active until the late 1980s
Much larger than RAF (up to 1,500 by the end of 1970s)
Centralized structure with at least 6 local “columns” (cells
or branches)
Mostly bombings, kidnappings to demand ransoms and the
release of its comrades from prison
Aldo Moro, former Prime Minister
U.S. General James Dozier, Deputy Chief of Staff at NATO’s Southern
European land forces
French group, established in 1979; active less than 10
years
Major bombings,
1982 attack on the World Bank European Headquarters
1984 attack on the European Space Agency
1985 attack at the officers’ club at the Rhein-Main U.S. Air
Force Base
Assassinations
French General Rene Audran (1985)
George Besse, the Chairman of Reneault (1986)
U.S. group; extreme militant splinter of Students for a
Democratic Society (anti-Vietnam War movement on
college & university campuses)
Originally called “Weathermen” but later changed their
name to The Weather Underground Organization (WUO)
Robberies, jailbreaks and nearly two dozen bombings
throughout the early and mid-1970s
New York City Police (1970)
National Guard Armory (1970)
U.S. Senate buiding (1971)
Pentagon (1972)
U.S. State Department (1975)
La Violencia, the 1948-1958 Colombian civil war
1964, FARC launched as armed wing of Colombian Communist
Party
1960s and 1970s, collected revolutionary taxes from
landowners and peasants to raise money
Imposed taxes on narco-traffickers in exchange for the use of
land for cultivation, labs, landing strips
Manufactured own military equipment and weapons, including
mortars and landmines
Today its violent activities revolve much more around the fight
to maintain control over part of Colombia’s drug trade
Maoist group established in 1969 as militant outgrowth of
the Peruvian Communist movement
Occupied villages, established revolutionary governments,
and trained members in guerilla strategy and the use of
firearms and explosives
Car bombings, kidnappings and political assassinations;
attacked the U.S. Embassy, Peruvian political officials,
schools, police stations, middle class neighborhoods, and
Lima’s banking center
Imposed “taxes” on businesses and individuals in occupied
villages; Became increasingly involved in the Peruvian
cocaine trade in the Upper Huallaga Valley
aka “Naxalites”, established 2004
Seeks complete overhaul of the Indian government in order
to establish a Communist society
Imposition of “taxes” on villages and village officials
Estimated over 10,000 fighters
World’s #1 kidnapping group in 2010
Ideological resonance among poor, rural indigenous
communities in northeast India
Communist Party of Nepal
Purbo Banglar Communist Party of Bangladesh
(PBCP)
Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN)
Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN)
Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN)
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)
Japanese Red Army
Irish National Liberation Army
For more, see:
Global Terrorism Database Profiles
http://www.start.umd.edu/start/data_collections/tops/
National Counterterrorism Center Profiles
http://www.nctc.gov/site/profiles/index.html
Most left-wing groups failed to achieve their objectives
Some transformed into legitimate participants in the official
political processes of their countries
Others moved away from emphasis on left-wing Marxist
ideology and more toward criminal objectives