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Is the Islamic terrorism threat overblown?

(RNS) After a car bomb detonated on Wall Street one minute past the noon
lunch hour killing 38 people, federal investigators came up with a
possible link to an overseas group.

Islamic terrorists?

Al-Qaida?

No, Italian anarchists.

The year was 1920, and in those days anarchists were the equivalent
of today's terrorists, waging acts of mass destruction against Western
capitalism.

Charles Kurzman, a professor of sociology at the University of North
Carolina, thinks the wave of 20th century anarchist violence bears a
resemblance to the Islamic terrorism of the 21st century in one sense:

Neither resulted in a spiraling escalation of violence.

"In many ways," said Kurzman, "Islamic terrorism is simply the
latest form of transnational revolutionary violence to grab global
attention."

Put another way: This too shall pass.

While mindful of the pain and suffering terrorism has caused,
Kurzman has written a book challenging the dominant narrative that
worldwide terrorism is out of control.

In "The Missing Martyrs: Why There Are So Few Muslim Terrorists,"
Kurzman argues that Islamic terrorism has accounted for a miniscule
number of murders compared with violent death tolls from other causes.

In the United States, for example, fewer than 40 people died at the
hands of terrorists in the 10 years since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

That compares with about 140,000 other murders during the same time.

The bad news, said Kurzman, is that Islamic terrorists really are
out to kill Americans. The good news is there are very few of them. In
fact, of the less than 40 killed at the hands of terrorists over the
past decade, none were tied directly to al-Qaida. These include the 2002
Beltway sniper attacks, in which 10 people were killed in the
Washington, D.C., area, and the 2009 Fort Hood shootings in which U.S.
Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan killed 14 people.

That count does not include the many failed terrorist bombings
united by a common theme: Incompetence. Had these plots, such as the
bungled 2010 Times Square car bomb, succeeded, the death toll would have
been much higher.

The truth is, said Kurzman, the more terrorists kill, the less
popular they become. That does not mean the world is safe from
terrorism, and Kurzman cautions America may well see another horrific
terrorist attack.

It does mean the U.S. government should examine the evidence and
ratchet down the discourse, he said. That goes for the Muslim
radicalization hearings held by Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., as well as
presidential candidate Herman Cain's statements that he would require
Muslim government appointees to take a loyalty oath.

"The narrative right now is that Islamic terrorism is either no
threat at all, or it's a pandemic throughout the community," said
Alejandro Beutel, government and policy analyst for the Muslim Public
Affairs Council. "Charles Kurzman's very scholarly approach to the issue
is something we want to move toward. There is a threat out there, but
it's a tiny minority of individuals."

What, then, of the supposed sympathy for terrorist acts among
Pakistanis or Palestinians, among whom Osama bin Laden has been a
popular figure?

Borrowing a term from author Tom Wolfe, who coined the phrase
"radical chic," Kurzman calls it "radical sheik," playing on the Arab
word for leader. It's an expression of resistance against Western
imperialism, a kind of giving the finger to power and authority, not an
actual vote of confidence for terrorism.

A sociologist of revolutions, who has spent a large part of his
academic career studying the 1979 Iranian Revolution, Kurzman is now
active with the Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland Security. The
center is a think tank consisting of experts from Duke University and
the University of North Carolina. He was the principal author of a
recent study that showed the number of U.S.-instigated terrorist
incidents dropped by more than half in 2010.

Several years ago, Kurzman started taking Arabic courses so he could
better read al-Qaida propaganda and digital bulletin board discussions
by young Muslims.

He knows his argument that there are few Muslim terrorists is
counter-intuitive, even provocative, but the Harvard and Berkeley
trained professor is convinced it's a necessary corrective.

"It may be a hard sell to ask people to calm down," said Kurzman.

"It doesn't make as compelling a read as scary stories and imminent
threats of hidden dangers."

But there's one thing he hates to see even more: A backlash against
Muslims on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of Sept. 11.

"I'm not saying terrorism is insignificant, or that I have no
feelings for people who have lost loved ones due to terrorism," he said.

"But I think we should also look at the days when nothing happens. This
is a story about something that did not occur."

Yonat Shimron

Yonat Shimron is a senior editor at Religion News Service.

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