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DATE=4/8/2000 TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT TITLE=TERRORISM OUTLOOK NUMBER=5-46102 BYLINE=ED WARNER DATELINE=WASHINGTON CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Terrorism is clearly a threat, but can the threat be exaggerated? At a recent Washington conference, two analysts said it can be and that this is exactly what the terrorists want. Their goal is to terrorize. Ours, say the analysts, is not to let them get away with it. V-O-A's Ed Warner reports. TEXT: Terrorist groups present more of a challenge than ever. Those that have survived have profited from the experience. They are better financed and organized, sometimes equipped with computers, internet web sites and television stations. They have become skilled propagandists, matching word for word the governments they oppose. That is terrorism today, said Bruce Hoffman, director of Rand, a leading research organization, who was speaking at a conference held by the Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Washington. But he added that paradoxically, terrorism appears to be in decline. Counter-terrorism has been effective, he said, and at least for the time being, terrorists have chosen not to act. Usually rational, their aim is to achieve a political purpose. But for the moment, they do not seem to have one in mind. Yet there are more fears of terrorism than ever before, says Mr. Hoffman, and particularly of the use of weapons of mass destruction -- nuclear, chemical, biological. Why this discrepancy? asks Mr. Hoffman: /// Hoffman Act /// One has to ask whether the lull in conventional terrorism does not produce a preoccupation or a fascination with extreme forms of hypothetical terrorism. Terrorism always sells news; it is good media copy. When the news is slow for many media outlets, that can be manipulated by both terrorists and by governments. This is a way to fill the void. /// End Act /// Exaggerating the terrorist threat may play into the terrorists' hands, says Mr. Hoffman. After all, their goal is to instill fear. Why make it easy for them by going along with this? /// Hoffman Act /// If they are incapable of carrying out terrorist attacks at this time, if they have been stymied by the security forces, thwarted by good intelligence -- as I would argue Osama Bin Laden has been for the past 20 months -- would it not benefit them to play the W-M-D [EDS: weapons of mass destruction] card, to make all sorts of utterances or whispers about using biological or chemical terrorism as a means to get into the press, which they have repeatedly succeeded in doing? In other words, they are able to attract attention to themselves and their causes to inflate their own power. /// End Act /// We should not confuse rhetoric with reality, says Mr. Hoffman, nor assume total victory is possible. While the fight against terrorism can never be relaxed, it also can never be won. No society -- not even a harsh totalitarian one -- can completely eliminate the threat. Unrealistic expectations can lead to military actions that gain more support for the terrorists. Terrorists blend into the larger society, said Magnus Ranstorp, deputy director of the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. He cited the example of Hamas, the hard-line Palestinian group opposed to the peace process. /// Ranstorp Act /// I usually try to dispel the myth that Hamas is some dark creature hanging in a corner plotting and planning to strike at every time. Hamas cuts horizontally and vertically through Palestinian society. It is part of Palestinian society. The major activity Hamas is engaged in is on the social and political front. And sometimes of course, they do engage in violence -- terrorist activity. /// End Act /// Mr. Ranstorp noted that a top official in the Palestinian Authority has a brother who is a leading member of Hamas. He added that the Palestinian Authority has a firm grip on Hamas and can unleash it if peace talks with Israel fail. Then terrorism once again would serve a clear political purpose. (signed) NEB/EW/JP 08-Apr-2000 11:15 AM EDT (08-Apr-2000 1515 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .