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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group

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To: c.hinton who wrote (240997)9/5/2007 12:07:18 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (2) of 281500
 
here's the whole abstract

Since 1993, attempts have been made to portray Palestinian-Arab perpetrators of suicide bombings as desperate individuals understandably coping with a difficult situation, in effect, transforming the attackers into victims, and thus diminishing the impact of one's revulsion at such attacks.

The use of the "bomber as victim" model has led others to similarly view, and incorrectly justify, the motivations behind Palestinian-Arab suicide bombers. Yet, in fact, individual psychopathology or personal feelings do not appear to play any significant role.

Unlike other groups that have used suicide as a political or military tool, only in the case of Palestinian-Arab terror has there been an attempt to personalize the perpetrator as a victim of uncontrollable psychological and motivational forces that forced such extreme behavior.

It is actually group dynamics that reinforces behavior within a Palestinian-Arab culture where suicide bombers are viewed as heroes whose faces are prominently displayed on public posters and where families of bombers are showered with both respect and financial reward.


THE PSYCHOLOGICAL FRAMEWORK
OF SUICIDE TERRORISM
Irwin J. Mansdorf
jcpa.org
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