xaoshaen wrote:Blowing up civilians is bad PR. It's either done as a terrorist act, the historic folly of which has been covered, or through extreme incompetence. The threat of dead civilians is a useful tool. Actual dead bodies are a public relations nightmare.
Common sense agrees with you, but the middle east and Islam have never been about sense. Continual strife and casualties are seen positively by the arab media, and why do we not see outright condemnation of this from the Sunni and Shi'ite religious leadership?
Dead bodies make news. People reading the news do not see the bodies, they see action against the infidels and their lapdogs! Power to Islam, we must join and help secure the holy lands!
When it happens nightly, the insurgency must be strong, and lo and behold the bandwagon people wish to be part of the crusade before its over.
Guerrilla warfare is type of warfare, not the goal of a campaign. A pure PR campaign does not encompass bombing mosques. You might as well call the IRA a PR organization by this criteria. The instant you remove any military consideration from their actions, the term 'insurgents' no longer applies: they become terrorists, pure and simple. Once you can legitimately be reduced to terrorists, this vastly improves the public image of your enemies. Given the current political climate, it becomes very difficult for your sponsor nations to support you, neutral nations can be pressured to denounce you, and the people most likely to continue to back you are the people with the exact same belief structure: the people who already support you.
Sure, you can call it guerrilla warfare, but from a military standpoint that is inaccurate.
Guerrilla Warfare is still warfare with the goal of aiding ones standing army to defeat the enemy. This is not true in relation to the current Al Qaeda insurgency in Iraq, which is why despite their somewhat similar tactics, I personally wouldn't call this Guerrilla warfare. It is a terrorist insurgency, solely. I doubt any military general would term it anything but that.
The insurgency is no more a guerrilla war than the IRA were. Terrorists do not equal Guerrillas. Suicide bombing foreginers are not local guerrillas.
Look at the sources for recruits. The use of the term 'insurgent' is slightly misleading, as it's connotes indigenous resistance.
Again this plays back into my PR point. Anyways, an insurgent is merely another term for an armed rebel. It doesn't have to be indigent, merely in opposition. George Soros is an insurgent to the US, and he certainly isn't a native.
So, you're claiming the terrorists' objective is to make the average Iranian hate the U.S.? To make liberal sheeple denounce Bush's foreign policy?
No, that's already done. Plus, Iran is a bad example as they are Shi'ite and as far from supporting any form of Wahabi extremist group as an Islamic regime can be.
The point is to garner support, cash, and bodies worldwide for their organization. What is the best way to accomplish a sale? You advertise. Al Qaeda has the best advertising in the Middle East right now, and the cost is a few bodies a week, which are easily bought from Palestinians, Sudanese, or other poor misled Muslims.
Really? A 'very effective campaign'? On what grounds? It's incredibly difficult to prosecute a campaign of any nature when you're dead. Without local shelter and support, dead is exactly how an insurgent force ends.
And yet the Al Qaeda insurgency is not weakining. The terrorist attacks are continuing and the pro insurgency and Osama writings and how poor the US is doing continues to stream from the media.
I don't know about you, but given the black eye the UK and the US governments are getting, despite running an almost flawless campaign to me is a sign of a very strong PR campaign.
We've heard that rhetoric before, and it didn't work out then either.
It won't work now, but these people, like those in the past feel they are 'right'. It's difficult to win against apathy. It's even harder against zealouts who feel they have the moral high ground