Abstract

This paper discusses the practices employed by various terrorist groups that operated in European countries between the years of 1968 and 2009. We focus on the deployment of the terrorist operations as presented in the RAND Database of Worldwide Terrorism Activities. In this context we elaborate on the tactics of the terrorist groups with the highest frequency of actions that operated in the European countries showing the highest rate of terrorist activity. Their targets, the weapons used and the consequences suffered as a result of their actions (both fatalities and injuries intended for the original targets, as well as any kind of collateral damage caused to third parties) are analyzed, in order to evaluate their ideological and -- perhaps - ethical standing. In particular, we look at the groups' targets as well as the tactics they used to achieve them, in a bid to explore whether there is a correlation between targeting of specific people or groups of people or other types of targets with certain international events - and if so, how these events influenced the actions of the terrorists. Within this line of thought, we also provide an outline of the political and ideological framework of the groups on focus in an effort to place them within the general historical and political context during their operational years. This is of great importance, as it enables us to run a comparison between terrorist groups that operated in different countries (albeit with similar aims) both from an ideological and operational viewpoint.

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