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DATE=2/11/2000 TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT TITLE=TERRORISM TODAY NUMBER=5-45432 BYLINE=ED WARNER DATELINE=WASHINGTON CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: This past week's hijacking of the Afghan airliner points up the changing nature of terrorism, according to a recent conference (Thurs., Feb. 10) at the Brookings Institution in Washington. Participants said terrorism today is harder to understand because its motives are often unclear. But as V-O-A's Ed Warner reports, that makes it no less dangerous. TEXT: Better get used to terrorism, says Richard Haas, director of foreign policy studies at the Brookings Institution, a Washington research organization. It is here to stay: /// Haas Act /// Think of terrorism not as a problem to be solved, but as a condition to be managed and dealt with. It is now part of the fabric or structure of the post-cold war, globalized world we live in. We can beat it back, but it cannot be eliminated. /// End Act /// Contemporary terrorists do not always reveal their motives or even their objectives, says Paul Pillar, a former deputy chief of counter-intelligence for the Central Intelligence Agency. /// Pillar Act /// We see less of the measured use of terrorism, hostage taking and hijacking and so on to achieve some particular, precise political result - the release of comrades in prison or recognition of a group -- something of that nature. We have seen relatively more of the indiscriminate striking out, inflicting death and destruction simply because the terrorist hates his adversary or seeks revenge for perceived wrongs or is driven by some divine motive in the case of religious terrorists. /// End Act /// Mr. Pillar adds it is often not clear who is responsible for a terrorist act. Increasingly, it seems to be the work of a free lancer rather than someone working for a state. Today's rootless terrorist, he says, is harder to track as he shifts from one country to the next. U-S anti-terrorist policy may not be keeping up with this change, says Meghan O'Sullivan, research associate in foreign policy studies at Brookings. It continues to concentrate on state terrorism with ambiguous results. /// O'Sullivan Act /// Perhaps the best example of this frustrated policy would be Iran, where comprehensive American sanctions have had very modest success in changing the behavior of the regime or denying the resources, such as foreign exchange, needed to carry out this behavior when our European allies have continued to trade and invest in Iran. /// End Act /// Meghan O'Sullivan says U-S policy should distinguish more carefully among the varieties of terrorism and impose penalties that are appropriate. Sanctions work best when they are not unilateral but have international support. In an era of largely stateless terrorism, she says the United States should stop referring to "rogue regimes," as if some nations must be isolated and punished for actions that may not qualify as terrorism. (Signed) NEB/EW/ENE/JP 11-Feb-2000 10:55 AM EDT (11-Feb-2000 1555 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .