Terrorism is at its heart a disputed term, as very few of those
labeled terrorists would ever use the label to describe themselves.
Terrorism has been with us for centuries and can be described as
being as old as civilisation itself. This article aims to cover
those events, groups and individuals that have contributed to or
shared striking similarities to what is commonly regarded today as
terrorism. As such the article covers a wide range of disparate
groups, with wide ranging political objectives from religious to
nationalistic to anarchistic.
Definition
- See also "Definition of
terrorism" for an indepth article on the various attempts
to define terrorism and the etymology of the word itself.
Ancient and medieval events and groups
Scholars dispute whether the roots of terrorism date back to the
Sicarii Zealots in the first
century, the Al-
Hashshashin in the
eleventh century and the
Narodnaya
Volya in 1878, or somewhere in between. The first-century
Zealots used "
propaganda of the
deed" by publicly murdering Jews who collaborated with Roman
rule. The Al-Hashshashin focused more on the assassination of
prominent political leaders, which is different from "propaganda of
the deed," because by killing a political leader one is primarily
enacting change directly (by eliminating the person whose policies
one disagrees with) rather than enacting change indirectly (by
committing some act to intimidate the enemy or make others rally
against the enemy).
Sicarii Zealots
In the 1st
century CE, the Jewish Zealots were a
primarily political group which rebelled against Roman rule in the
Iudaea
Province
.
According to the contemporary historian
Josephus, in 6 C.E.
Judas of Galilee led a small, more extreme
group of Zealots to found an offshoot which would later be known as
the
Sicarii, meaning "dagger men." Like the
Zealots, the Sicarii believed that paying tribute to Rome was a
violation of Jewish religious law. The Sicarii saw the Jewish high
priests of the day as collaborators with the Romans, and therefore
thought it permissible to use violence to remove them. Led by
Judas' grandson Menahem ben Jair, the Sicarii began agitation in
the late 50s, becoming prominent only in the 60s, when they began
to murder and kidnap to support their cause. Their efforts were
mainly directed not against the Romans, but against Jewish
“collaborators” such as priests of the temple, Sadducees,
Herodians, and other wealthy elites who had profited from working
with the Romans. According to Josephus, the Sicarii would hide
short daggers under their cloaks, mingle with crowds at the great
festivals, murder their victims, and then disappear into the crowd
during the ensuing panic. Their most successful assassination was
that of the high priest Jonathan.
Al-Hashshashin
In the 11th century CE, the
Hashshashin
(a.k.a. the Assassins) were an offshoot of the
Ismā'īlī sect of
Shia Muslims. Led by
Hassan-i Sabbah and opposed to
Fatimid rule, the Hashshashin militia seized Alamut
and other fortress strongholds across Persia in the late eleventh
century.
The Hashshashin did not have a large enough
army to challenge their enemies directly, so they assassinated city
governors and military commanders to curry favor among more
militarily powerful neighbors: they murdered Janah al-Dawla, ruler
of Homs
, to please Ridwan of
Aleppo; they killed Mawdud, Seljuk emir of Mosul
, as a favor
for the regent of Damascus
; they
attacked Crusader troops in 1126 as a means of cooperating with
Tughtigen of Damascus; and they assassinated Marquis Conrad of Montferrat, King of
Jerusalem, allegedly on orders from the King of
England.
The
Hashshashin carried out assassinations as retribution: Ibn Badi,
military commander in Aleppo
, had
executed Hashshashin leader Abu Tahrir and refused to provide the
group with a castle; Buri, ruler of Damascus,
had incited the mob killing of thousands of Hashshashin; Dahhak,
chief of Wadi al-Tayun, had attacked and defeated the Hashshashin
at Hasbayya in 1128. Sometimes the Hashshashin murdered to
seize a town (Khalaf of Afamiya, 1106) or to weaken the leadership
of their Fatamid enemies (Army commander Al-Afdal, 1121; Fatimid
Caliph
Al-Amir, 1130), but never as a means
to indirectly bring about political change by changing public
opinion towards their cause or striking fear into the
populace.
Modern events and groups
Early modern events and groups
Gunpowder Plot
In 1605 on
the 5th of November, a group of conspirators led by Guy Fawkes attempted to destroy the English
Parliament
on the State
Opening, by detonating a large quantity of gunpowder placed beneath the building. The
purpose of this plot was to implement a
coup by killing
King James I and the members of both
houses of
Parliament. The
conspirators planned to make one of the king's children a puppet
crown and then restore the
Catholic faith
to England. The plan was betrayed and thwarted. The conspirators'
intended act has been found to parallel the '9/11' attack on the
World Trade Center, though a violent attempted coup may not be an
act of terrorism. The event has become known as the
Gunpowder Plot and is annually commemorated
in Britain on
5 November with fireworks
displays and large bonfires.
Sons of Liberty
The
Sons of Liberty were a group in the
American colonies opposed to the Stamp
Act and later to British rule who committed several attacks,
most famous among them the Boston Tea Party
. The group was a
secret organization of
American patriots which
originated in the
Thirteen
Colonies prior to the
American
Revolution.
The British
authorities and their supporters, known as Loyalists, considered the
Sons of Liberty seditious rebels, referring to them as "Sons of
Violence" and "Sons of Iniquity." Patriots attacked the
apparatus and symbols of British authority and power such as the
property of the
gentry,
customs officers,
East India Company tea, and,
as the war approached, vocal supporters of
the
Crown.
19th century events and groups

McKinley shortly before his
assassination.
Prior to the 19th century terrorism had been associated with the
Reign of Terror in France where the
ruling
Jacobins sometimes referred to
themselves as terrorists. Modern scholars, however, do not consider
the Reign of Terror itself terrorism in part because it was carried
out by the French state.. It was during the 19th century that the
common meaning came into use, as terrorism came to be associated
with non-governmental groups.
Anarchists
were the most prominent group to be associated with terrorism
during the 19th century, with the emergence of militancy within
nationalist groups, developing over the
course of the century.
The disjointed attacks of various anarchist
groups led to the assassination of Russian
Tsars and US President
but had little real political impact.. In
mid-19th century Russia, the intelligentsia grew impatient with the
slow pace of Tsarist reforms and
anarchists like
Mikhail Bakunin maintained that progress was
impossible without destruction. With the development of
sufficiently powerful, stable, and affordable explosives, the gap
closed between the firepower of the state and the means available
to dissidents. Inspired by Bakunin and others,
Narodnaya Volya was founded in 1878, and
used bombs to kill state officials in an effort to incite state
retribution and mobilize the populace against the government.
Inspired by Narodnaya Volya, several nationalist groups in the
ailing Ottoman Empire began using propaganda of the deed and
terrorism in the 1890s, including the
Hunchakian Revolutionary
Party, the
Armenian Revolutionary
Federation, and the
Internal
Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO).
Dynamite, in particular, inspired American and
French anarchists, and it was central to their strategic thinking.
Inspired by Bakunin and others,
Narodnaya Volya was founded in 1878, and
used dynamite-packed bombs to kill state officials in an effort to
incite state retribution and mobilize the populace against the
government. Inspired by Narodnaya Volya, several nationalist groups
in the ailing Ottoman Empire began using propaganda of the deed and
violence against public figures in the 1890s, including the
Hunchakian Revolutionary
Party, the
Armenian Revolutionary
Federation, and the
Internal
Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO).
John Brown, abolitionist
John Brown (1800 - 1859)
was an
abolitionist who advocated armed
opposition to
slavery. He committed several
attacks between 1856 and 1859, and was also involved in the
illegal smuggling of slaves.
His most
famous attack was in 1859 on the armory at Harpers
Ferry
. Local forces soon recaptured the fort and
Brown, trying and executing him for
treason.
His death made him a martyr to the abolitionist cause, one of the
origins of the
American Civil War, and a hero to the
Union forces that fought in
it.
Ku Klux Klan
In 1865,
The original Ku Klux Klan (KKK) was
created after the end of the American
Civil War on December 24 1865, by six educated, middle-class
Confederate veterans
from Pulaski
, Tennessee
. Although a founder of the group boasted
that the Klan was a nationwide organization of 550,000 men and that
he could muster 40,000 Klansmen within five days' notice, as a
secret or "
invisible" group,
it had no membership rosters, no chapters, and no local officers.
It was difficult for observers to judge its actual membership. It
had created a sensation by the dramatic nature of its masked forays
and because of its many murders. The Klan has advocated what is
generally perceived as
white
supremacy,
anti-Semitism,
racism,
anti-Catholicism,
homophobia, and
nativism. The group has often used
terrorism, violence and acts of intimidation such as
cross burning to oppress
African Americans and other groups., From
its creation to the present day, it has at times wielded much
political influence and has also generated great fear among African
Americans and their supporters.
At one time the KKK controlled the
governments of Tennessee
, Indiana
, Oklahoma
, and Oregon
, in addition
to some of the Southern U.S. legislatures.
Irish Republican Brotherhood
In 1867
the Irish Republican
Brotherhood, a revolutionary Irish nationalist group with
support from Irish-Americans ,
carried out attacks in England
.
These are considered the first acts of "
republican terrorism", which became a
recurrent feature of
British and
Irish history. The
Fenians are considered the precursor of the
Irish Republican Army.
Narodnaya Volya
From 1878 to 1883,
Narodnaya Volya (
Народная
Воля in
Russian, known as
People’s Will in
English)
was a group founded in Russia in 1878. Inspired by
Sergei Nechayev and by Italian revolutionary
Carlo Pisacane (author of the
“propaganda of the deed” theory), the group assassinated prominent
political figures with shootings and bombings in an effort to spark
a revolutionary overthrow of Russia’s Tsarist regime. On March 13,
1881, the group assassinated Russia’s Tsar
Alexander II. The assassination of
the Tsar failed to spark the expected revolution and the ensuing
crackdown by Russian authorities brought the group to an end.
Narodnaya Volya developed certain ideas that were to become the
hallmark of subsequent terrorism in many countries: they believed
in the targeted killing of the 'leaders of oppression' and they
were convinced that the developing technologies of the age -
symbolized by bombs and bullets - enabled them to strike directly
and discriminately.
Armenian Revolutionary Federation
- 1890-1897
The
Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (in Armenian
Dashnaktsuthium,
or “The Federation”) was a nationalist revolutionary movement
founded in Tiflis (Russian Transcaucasia) in 1890. It was founded
by
Christopher Mikaelian, and
many of its members had been part of
Narodnaya Volya or the
Hunchakian Revolutionary
Party. The group published newsletters, smuggled arms, and
hijacked buildings because it sought—like the Hunchacks—to bring
about the European intervention that could force the Ottoman Empire
to surrender control of the Armenian territories. On August 24,
1896, 17-year old group member Babken Suni led twenty-six Dashnaks
in
capturing the Imperial
Ottoman Bank in Constantinople. They demanded that an Armenian
state be created and threatened to blow the bank up. The ensuing
crackdown by the Ottoman government destroyed the group.
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization
From 1893 to 1903, the
Internal
Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) was a nationalist
revolutionary movement founded in the Ottoman-controlled Macedonian
territories in 1893. It was founded by Hristo Tatarchev, who was
inspired by Narodnaya Volya. The group sought to coerce the Ottoman
government into creating a Macedonian nation. To do this, the IMRO
assassinated prominent political figures (as Narodnaya Volya had)
and tried to provoke uprisings (just like the Hunchakian
Revolutionary Party). On July 20, 1903, the group incited the
Ilinden uprising in the Ottoman villayet of Monastir. As part of
the uprising, the IMRO declared the town’s independence and sent
demands to the European Powers that Macedonia be freed. The demands
were ignored and the 27,000 rebels in the town were crushed by
Turkish troops two months later. The group then split into two
factions: one in favor of uniting the future nation of Macedonia to
Bulgaria and one against such a plan. The pro-Bulgaria faction had
effectively turned into a tool of the Bulgarian government by
1912.
Parisian anarchists in the 1890s
In 1893,
Auguste Vaillant, a French
anarchist, threw a bomb in the French Chamber of Deputies. No one was
seriously hurt, but he was executed. In 1894, a struggling
intellectual called
Émile
Henry sought to avenge Vaillant's death, by throwing his own
bomb into a Paris cafe. He was caught and guillotined.
20th century events and groups
Following the example of the
Irish
Republican Army's campaign against the British in the 1910s,
the
Zionist groups
Hagannah,
Irgun and
Lehi fought the British throughout the 1930s in
the then mandate of Palestine, with the aim of creating an Israeli
state. Like the IRA and the Zionist groups, Egypt’s
Muslim Brotherhood used bombings and
assassinations in an attempt to free its country from British
control.
Early 20th century events and groups
Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand
On June
28 of 1914, Archduke
Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, and his wife,
Sophie, Duchess of
Hohenberg, were shot and killed in Sarajevo
, capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina
, by Gavrilo Princip,
one of a group of six assassins. The murders produced
widespread shock across Europe.
The Austro-Hungarian Empire presented to
Serbia
a list of
demands which became known as the July
Ultimatum. Included were demands aimed at ending the
funding and operation of organizations which arguably had provided
support for the assassination, and demands that Serbia suppress
"
propaganda" against Austria-Hungary in
Serbia, even by private persons. Some have claimed that the
ultimatum was designed to create a
casus
belli to enable Austria-Hungary to invade Serbia. After
receiving a telegram of support from Russia, Serbia mobilized its
army and replied that it would agree to and partially accept some
of the demands but that it would reject the rest. Austria-Hungary
rejected Serbia's conditional acceptance and broke off diplomatic
relations. Austria-Hungary soon declared war and this set into
motion a series of events which led to
World
War I.
The Easter Rising and the Irish Republican Army

Michael Collins, IRA leader
On April
24, 1916, members of the Irish
Volunteers, led by Patrick Pearse
joined the smaller Irish Citizen
Army of James Connolly to seize
the Dublin
General Post Office
and several other buildings and proclaim an Irish
Republic independent of Britain. The action, which came to
be known as the
Easter Rising or
Easter Rebellion, was a failure militarily, but it turned into a
success for
physical
force Irish republicanism after the British government had the
leaders of the uprising executed by firing squad, thereby making
them into celebrated Irish heroes.
From 1916 to 1923, the Irish Volunteers joined forces with the
Irish Citizen Army to form the beginnings of the
Irish Republican Army (IRA).
Michael Collins helped found the IRA in
Dublin
shortly
after the Easter Rising. They
carried out coordinated attacks on over 300 police stations in a
single day, as part of their campaign to establish an independent
Irish state. On November 21, 1920, the IRA carried out an attack
which came to be known as Bloody Sunday, publicly killing a dozen
police officers and simultaneously burning down the Liverpool docks
and warehouses. After two years of street fighting between the IRA,
the
Royal Irish
Constabulary, the
Black and Tans
and the British
Auxiliaries,
London agreed to a 1921 Anglo-Irish treaty that gave Dublin
authority over an independent Irish nation which encompassed 26 of
the island's 32 counties.
Collins
and the IRA's tactics were an inspiration to other groups, such as
those in Israel
. The
IRA also served as an inspiration for the British who emulated and
improved upon the IRA's tactics during the Second World War..
Irgun
From 1931 to 1948,
Irgun was a clandestine
militant
Zionist group. They splintered off
from
Hagannah in 1931 and operated in
Palestine until 1948. The group
was founded by Avraham Tehomi (Irgun leader from 1931 to 1937), who
was inspired by
Ze'ev Jabotinsky
and his theory that only Jewish armed force would ensure the
establishment of a Jewish state. The group was a non-socialist,
more aggressive alternative to Hagannah. It sought to reduce the
threat of Arab attacks on Jewish settlements by launching
retaliatory attacks. These tactics, including bombing a crowded
Arab market, are considered some of the first examples of terrorism
against civilians. The Irgun also sought to bring to an end the
British mandatory rule by assassinating police and capturing
British government buildings and arms. Like the Hagannah, the Irgun
also sabotaged British railways in Palestine, in addition to
smuggling
Jews into Palestine . This occurred
mainly between 1945 and 1947. Their goal was to force the British
to relax policies restricting Jewish immigration and, ultimately,
to force them to withdraw, creating the opportunity to create a
Jewish state in Palestine as quickly as possible. Their most famous
attack was the 1946 bombing of the King David Hotel, the British
Military headquarters in Jerusalem. Ninety-one people, both
soldiers and civilians, were killed. After the creation of Israel
two years later, Menachem Begin (Irgun leader from 1943 to 1948)
transformed the group into the political party
Herut, which later became part of
Likud.
Lehi
From 1940 to 1948,
Lehi (
Lohameni
Herut Yisrael, a.k.a. “Freedom Fighters for Israel,” a.k.a.
Stern Gang) was a
revisionist
Zionist group. They splintered off from the
Irgun in 1940. When the Irgun made a truce with the
British in 1940,
Abraham Stern led
disaffected Irgun members to break off and form Lehi. Like People’s
Will, Lehi used the tactics of assassinating prominent politicians.
On November 6, 1944, Lehi assassinated
Lord
Moyne, the British Minister of State for the Middle East.
The assassination caused a massive stir among the
Hagannah, Irgun, and Lehi, with Hagannah
sympathizing with the British and launching
a massive man-hunt against the other two
splinter groups. After the founding of the Israeli state in 1948,
Lehi was formally dissolved and its members were integrated into
the newly formed
Israeli Defense
Forces.
Yitzhak Shamir and his
fellow underground fighters greatly admired the
Irish Republicans and sought to emulate
their anti-British struggle. Shamir himself took the nickname
"Michael" after
Michael
Collins.
Muslim Brotherhood
In 1928,
the Muslim Brotherhood was
founded as a nationalist group in British-controlled Egypt
. Its
leader,
Hassan al-Banna, founded the
Muslim Brotherhood as both a social-welfare organization and a
political-activist movement. In the late 1940s the Muslim
Brotherhood began carrying out attacks on British soldiers and
police stations, and assassinations of prominent politicians. In
1948, the Muslim Brotherhood assassinated Egyptian Prime Minister
Nuqrashi. Egypt’s British-friendly government was overthrown in the
military coup of 1952, but shortly thereafter the Muslim
Brotherhood had to go underground in the face of a massive
crackdown. IN the contemporary era, the Muslim Brotherhood is still
operating in modern day Egypt.
World War II events and groups
The vast array of
guerilla, partisan, and
resistance movements that were organised and supplied by the
Allies during
World War II used tactics
that can be considered terrorist in nature. The British
Special Operations Executive
(SOE) successfully conducted operations in every theatre of the war
and provided an invaluable contribution to allied victory. On the
eve of D-Day it organised with the French resistance the complete
destruction of the rail and communication infrastructure of western
France perhaps the largest coordinated attack of its kind in
history . The SOE drew its inspiration from the IRA,
Colin Gubbins, a key leader within the SOE,
put to use the lessons he'd learned first hand in Ireland first to
establish a resistance army in waiting and then at the SOE. The SOE
effectively perfected modern terrorism, pioneering most of the
tactics, techniques and technologies that are the mainstays of
terrorism we know today. As the Nazis pushed East many disperate
bands of soviet partisans formed in the chaos after
operation Barbarossa, notable among
these was the Young Guard of Krasnodon.
Mid 20th century events and groups
After the end of
World War II, there
was a rise in
nationalist and
anti-colonial campaigns, and the European
empires collapsed. Many of the resistance groups of World War II
became nationalist groups.
The Viet Minh which
had previously fought against the Japanese
now fought against the returning French (and later the Americans), and elements of the Malayan resistance turned on their former
British allies and fought against them during the Malayan Emergency. In the 1950s,
for example, the
National Liberation
Front (FLN) in French-controlled Algeria, the
EOKA in British-controlled Cyprus, and the
ETA in Spain waged
guerilla and
open war against what they considered occupying forces.
In the 1960s, inspired by
Mao’s Chinese
revolution of 1949 and
Castro’s
Cuban revolution of 1959, national
independence movements in formerly colonized countries often fused
nationalist and
socialist impulses in the
1960s. This was the case with Spain's ETA, the
Front de Liberation du Quebec,
and the
Palestine
Liberation Organization .
In the 1970s,
leftist groups on
the rise in the 1970s Turkey’s
PKK, and
Armenian’s
ASALA. In Japan, Europe, and the
U.S., leftist student groups such as the
Japanese Red Army, the
German Red Army Faction, the
Italian Red Brigade, and the
American Weather
Underground sympathized with the
Third
World and sought to spark anti-capitalist revolutions with
bombings and assassinations. Nationalist groups such as the
Provisional IRA
and the
Tamil tigers also began
operations during this decade.
Throughout the
Cold War, both sides made
extensive use of violent nationalist organizations to carry on a
war by proxy. For example, Soviet and Chinese military advisers
provided training and support to the
Viet
Cong during the
Vietnam War.
The US
funded groups such as the Contras in
Nicaragua
, while the Soviet Union provided aid to Nicaragua's
Sandinistas. Ironically, many 21st
century Islamic militants were
trained in the 1980s by the US and the UK to fight against the USSR
in Afghanistan
. Also during the Cold War, NATO
ran a
Europe-wide network called Operation
Gladio which committed false flag terrorism and would have
launched insurgent attacks in the event of a Soviet invasion of
Europe.
Front de Liberation National
From 1954 to 1962, the
Front de Liberation
National (FLN) was a nationalist group founded in
French-controlled Algeria in 1954. The group was actually a large
scale resistance movement against French occupation, and terrorism
was only one facet of its operations. The FLN leaders, inspired by
the Indochinese rebels who had made French troops withdraw from
their country, started out with support from Egypt’s President
Nasser. The FLN was one of the first ideological groups to use
compliance terror on a grand scale. The FLN would establish control
over a rural Algerian village and coerce the peasants of that
village to execute the loyalists among them. On the night of
October 31, 1954 the FLN attacked French military installations and
the homes of Algerian loyalists when it set off a coordinated wave
of seventy bombings and shootings that is now known as the
Toussaint attacks. Through the tactics of
coercion terrorism, the FLN gained significant support for a 1955
uprising against loyalists in Philipville. This uprising—and the
heavy-handed response of the French government—convinced many
Algerians to support the FLN and the independence movement. The FLN
eventually secured Algerian independence from France in 1962, and
transformed itself into Algeria’s ruling party.
Ethniki Organosis Kyprion Agoniston
From 1955
to 1959, the Greek National
Organization of Cypriot Fighters (Ethniki Organosis Kyprion
Agoniston, or EOKA) was a nationalist
group founded in British-controlled Cyprus
in
1955. Its founder,
George
Grivas, was covertly supported by the Greek government. The
group sought the expulsion of British troops from the island,
self-determination, and union with Greece. To achieve these ends,
EOKA carried out a four year spree of IRA style shootings of
British soldiers and police. EOKA also organized Hagannah style
attacks on civilians.
In December 1958 a cease-fire was declared
and in 1960 Cyprus achieved independence from the United
Kingdom
; however, the settlement explicitly denied the
possibility of a union between Cyprus and Greece
.
Euskadi Ta Askatasuna
From 1959 to the present, the
Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (or ETA
(
Basque for
"Basque Homeland and
Freedom" )) is an armed
Basque
nationalist separatist organization. Founded in 1959 in
response to General
Francisco
Franco's suppression of the Basque language and culture, ETA
evolved from an advocate of traditional cultural ways into an armed
revolutionary
Marxist group demanding Basque
independence. Many of ETA's victims are government officials. The
group's first known victim was a police chief who was killed in
1968. In 1973, ETA operatives killed Franco’s apparent successor,
Admiral Luis Carrero Blanco, by planting an underground bomb below
his habitual parking spot outside a Madrid church. In 1995, an ETA
car bomb almost killed Jose Maria Aznar, then the leader of the
conservative Popular Party, who later served as Spain’s prime
minister. The same year, investigators disrupted a plot to
assassinate King Juan Carlos. More recently, in March 2008, ETA
killed a former city councilman in northern Spain two days before
an election. In 2003, the Spanish Supreme Court banned the Batasuna
political party, which was considered the political arm of ETA, and
successive efforts by Spanish governments to negotiate with ETA
have failed.
Palestine Liberation Organization and factions
From 1959 to the present,
Fatah was organized
as a Palestinian nationalist group in 1959. The
Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) was organized as an umbrella organization
for secular Palestinian nationalist groups in 1964, and began armed
operations in 1965. The PLO's membership is made up of separate and
possibly contending paramilitary and political factions, the
largest of which are
Fatah,
PFLP, and
DFLP. Factions of the PLO
have advocated or carried out acts of terrorism. Fatah leader and
PLO Chairman
Yasser Arafat publicly
renounced terrorism in December 1988 on behalf of the PLO, but
Israel has stated it has proof that Arafat continued to sponsor
terrorism until his death in 2004.

Plaque in front of the Israeli
athletes' quarters commemorating the victims of the Munich
massacre.
Abu Iyad organized the Fatah splinter group
Black September in 1970. The
group is best known for seizing eleven Israeli athletes as hostages
at the September
1972 Summer
Olympics in Munich.
All the athletes and five Black September
operatives later died during a gun battle with the West German
police, in what was later known as the Munich massacre
. The
Popular Front for
the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) was founded in 1967 by
George Habash. On September 6, 1970
the group
hijacked three
international passenger planes, landing two of them in Jordan and
blowing up the third. Founded in 1968, the
Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine - General Command
(PFLP-GC) is presently led by
Abu
Nidal al-Ashqar. The
Democratic
Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP) was founded in
1969. The PFLP, DFLP, and PFLP-GC lost influence and resources with
the rise of
Hamas in the 1990s.
Front de Liberation du Quebec
From 1963
to 1971, the Front de
Liberation du Quebec (FLQ) was a Marxist nationalist group that
sought to create an independent, socialist Québec
.
Georges Schoeters, who founded the
group in 1963, had been inspired by
Che
Guevara and the FLN.
The group sought the overthrow of the Quebec
government, the independence of Quebec from Canada
, and the
establishment of a French-Canadian workers society. It
organized bombings, kidnappings, and assassinations against
politicians, soldiers, and civilians. On October 5, 1970, the FLQ
kidnapped
James Richard Cross,
the British Trade Commissioner. Shortly afterwards, on October 10,
group members kidnapped the Minister of Labor and Vice-Premier of
Québec,
Pierre Laporte, and killed
him a week later. The events of October 1970 contributed to the
loss of support for violent means to attain Québec independence,
and increased support for the political party, the Parti Québécois,
which took power in 1976.
Colombian and Peruvian paramilitary groups
Several paramilitary groups formed in
Colombia
in the 1960s and afterwards. In 1983 President
Fernando Belaúnde Terry
of Peru
describe
terrorist-type attacks against his nation's anti-narcotics
police. In the original context, narcoterrorism is
understood to mean the attempts of narcotics traffickers to
influence the policies of a government or a society through
violence and intimidation, and to hinder the enforcement of the law
and the administration of justice by the systematic threat or use
of such violence.
Pablo Escobar's
ruthless violence in his dealings with the Colombian and Peruvian
governments is probably one of the best known and best documented
examples of narcoterrorism.
These groups include the
Ejército de Liberación
Nacional (ELN), the
Fuerzas Armadas
Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC), and the
Autodefensas Unidas de
Colombia (AUC).
Originally created as leftist revolutionary groups (except for the
AUC), all have conducted numerous attacks on civilians and civilian
infrastructure, and are widely viewed in the West as terrorist
organizations.
Provisional IRA

IRA political poster from the
1980s.
From 1969 to 2005, the
Provisional Irish Republican
Army is an Irish nationalist movement founded in December 1969
when several militants including
Seán Mac Stíofáin broke off
from the
Official IRA and formed a new
organization. Led by Mac Stíofáin in the early 1970s and by a group
around
Gerry Adams since the late 1970s,
the Provisional IRA sought to create an all-island Irish state.
Between
1969 and 1997, during a period known as the
Troubles, the group conducted an armed campaign, including
bombings, gun attacks, assassinations
and even a mortar attack on 10 Downing
Street
. On July 21, 1972, in an attack later known
as
Bloody Friday, the group set off
twenty-two bombs, killing nine and injuring 130. On July 28, 2005,
the Provisional IRA Army Council announced an end to its armed
campaign. The IRA is believed to have been a major exporter of
terrorism selling arms and providing training to other groups such
as the FARC in Columbia and the PLO .
In the case of the
latter there has been a long held solidarity movement, which is
evident by the many murals around Belfast
.
The Jewish Defense League
From 1969
to the present, the Jewish Defense
League (JDL) was founded in 1969 by Rabbi Meir Kahane in New York City
, with its declared purpose the protection of Jews
from harassment and antisemitism. Federal
Bureau of Investigation
statistics show that, from 1980 to 1985, 15 attacks
were attempted in the U.S. by members of the JDL. The
National Consortium for the
Study of Terror and Responses to Terrorism states that, during
the JDL's first two decades of activity, it was an "active
terrorist organization.".
Kahane later founded the far-right Israeli
political party Kach, which was
banned from elections in Israel on the ground of racism. The
group's present-day website condemns all forms of
terrorism.
[353306]
People's Mujahedin of Iran
The PMOI or
Mujahedin-e Khalq, is
a socialist islamic group that has actively resisted the theocratic
rule of Iran since the revolution. The group was founded originally
to oppose the capitalism and what they perceived as western
exploitation of Iran under the Shah . The group would go on to be a
key part of his overthrow but was unable to capitalize on this in
the following power vacuum. The group is suspected of having a
membership of between 10,000 and 30,000. The group renounced
violence in 2001 but remains a proscribed terror organization in
Iran and the USA, The EU however has removed the group from its
terror list. The PMOI is accused of supporting other groups such as
the
Jundallah .
Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional
From 1974 to the present, the
Fuerzas Armadas de
Liberación Nacional (FALN, “Armed Forces of National
Liberation”) was a nationalist group founded in
Puerto Rico in 1974. Over the next decade, the
group used bombings and targeted killings of civilians and police
to try to create an independent Puerto Rico. On April 3, 1975, FALN
took responsibility for four nearly simultaneous bombings in New
York City, by leaving their Communique No. 4 for the Associated
Press at a phone booth.
The United States Federal
Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) classifies the FALN as a terrorist
organization.
Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia
From 1975
to 1986, the Armenian
Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) was founded
in 1975 in Beirut
during the
Lebanese Civil War by Hagop Tarakchian and Hagop Hagopian with the help of sympathetic
Palestinians. At the time, Turkey
was in
political turmoil, and Hagopian believed that the time was right to
avenge the Armenians who died during the Armenian Genocide and to force the Turkish
government to cede to them the territory of Wilsonian Armenia for the purpose of
unification with the existing Armenian SSR.
In its
most famous Esenboga airport
attack, on 7 August 1982, two ASALA rebels opened fire on
civilians in a waiting room at the Esenboga
International Airport
in Ankara
.
Altogether, nine people died and 82 were injured. By 1986, the
ASALA had virtually ceased all attacks.
Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan
From 1978 to the present, the
Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan
(
Kurdistan Workers Party)
was a nationalist movement founded in Turkey by
Abdullah Ocalan in 1978. Ocalan was inspired
by the
Maoist theory of
people's war--like Mao, Ocalan had a little
book outlining his views—and like the FLN he advocated the use of
compliance terror .
The group seeks to create an independent
Kurdish state that consists of parts of south-eastern Turkey,
north-eastern Iraq
,
north-eastern Syria
and
north-western Iran
.
Starting in 1984, the PKK transformed itself into a paramilitary
organisation and launched conventional attacks as well as bombings
against Turkish governmental installations. In 1999, Turkish
authorities captured Öcalan. He was tried in Turkey and sentenced
to life imprisonment. The PKK has since gone through a series of
name changes.
Red Army Faction
- Red Army Faction Founders
|
| Image:Ulrike Meinhof als junge Jo.jpg|Meinhof, worked as a journalist for the
monthly left-wing magazine konkret. |
|
From 1968
to 1998, the Red Army Faction was a
New Leftist group founded by Andreas
Baader and Ulrike Meinhof in
West
Germany
in 1968. Inspired by
Che Guevara,
Maoist
socialism, and the
Vietcong, the group
sought to raise awareness of the Vietnamese and Palestinian
independence movements through kidnappings, taking embassies
hostage, bank robberies, assassinations, bombings, and attacks on
US air bases. The group is best known for the “
German Autumn”.
The buildup of events to
German Autumn
began on April 7, when the RAF shot Federal Prosecutor
Siegfried Buback. This was followed on July
30, they shot Jurgen Ponto, then head of the Dresdner Bank in a
failed kidnapping attempt; and on September 5, they kidnapped Hanns
Martin Schleyer (former SS and one of the most powerful
industrialists in West Germany) and executed him four weeks later,
on October 19.
The hijacking of Lufthansa
aeroplane "Landshut
" by the PFLP is also consider to be part of the
German Autumn.
Weathermen
From 1969 to 1977, the
American Weather Underground
(a.k.a. the Weathermen) was an extremist faction of the leftist
Students for a Democratic Society organization. In 1969, the
Students for a Democratic Society organization collapsed and was
taken over by the Weathermen group. The Weathermen leaders,
inspired by the Maoist revolution, the
Black Panthers, and the
1968 student revolts in France, sought to
raise awareness of its revolutionary anti-capitalist and
anti-Vietnam War platform. It did this by destroying symbols of
government power in Hunchakian style.
On October 7, 1969,
the group held an anti-war demonstration in downtown Chicago and
blew up a statue dedicated to the police officers who died in the
1886 Haymarket
Riot
. Over the next five years, the Weathermen
bombed corporate offices, police stations, and DC
government sites such as the Pentagon. But after the end of the Vietnam
War in 1975, most of the group disbanded.
Italian Red Brigade
From 1970 to 1989, the
Italian Red
Brigade was a New Leftist group founded by
Renato Curcio in 1970. With PLO support, the
group sought to create a revolutionary state and to separate Italy
from the Western Alliance. On 16 March 1978, the Brigade kidnapped
former Prime Minister
Aldo Moro and
murdered him 56 days later. The murder of Moro began an all-out
assault against the Brigade by Italian law enforcement and security
forces. The murder of a popular political figure also drew
condemnation from Italian left-wing radicals and even from the
imprisoned ex-leaders of the Brigade. The Brigade lost most of its
social support and public opinion turned strongly against it. In
1984, the ailing Brigade split into two factions: the majority
faction of the Communist Combatant Party (Red Brigades-PCC) and the
minority of the Union of Combatant Communists (Red Brigades-UCC).
The members of these groups carried out a handful of assassinations
before almost all of them were arrested in 1989.
Japanese Red Army
From 1971 to 2001, the
Japanese Red
Army was a New Leftist group,.
It was founded by Fusako Shigenobu in Japan
in
1971. With support from the
PFLP, the
group murdered, hijacked a commercial Japanese aircraft, and
sabotaged a Shell oil refinery in Singapore in an attempt to
overthrow the Japanese government and start a world revolution. On
May 30, 1972,
Kōzō Okamoto
and other group members launched a machine gun and grenade attack
on Israel's Lod Airport in Tel Aviv, killing 26 people and injuring
80 others. Two of the three attackers then killed themselves with
grenades.
Tamil Tigers
From 1976
to 2009, the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam, (also called "LTTE" or Tamil Tigers) is
a militant Tamil nationalist political
and paramilitary organization based in northern Sri Lanka
. Since it was founded in 1976, it has
actively waged a secessionist
resistance campaign that seeks to create an independent Tamil state
in the northern and eastern regions of Sri Lanka
. This campaign has evolved into the
Sri Lankan Civil War, one of the
longest-running armed conflicts in
Asia. Since
its formation, the LTTE has been headed by its founder,
Velupillai Prabhakaran.
The group has carried
out a number of bombings, including a car bomb attack carried out
on April 21, 1987 at a bus terminal in Colombo
which killed 110 people. In 2009 the Sri
Lankan military launched a major military offensive against the
guerrilla wing of the movement and claimed that it had been
effectively destroyed upon completion of that operation, in which
most of the leadership of the group was killed.
Umkhonto we Sizwe
From 1961 to 1990 in South Africa,
Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) was the military
wing of the
African National
Congress. It was opposed to the racist
apartheid
policies of the
South African
government. MK launched its first
guerrilla attacks against government
installations on 16 December 1961. It was subsequently classified
as a terrorist organization by the South African government and was
banned. It waged a guerrilla campaign and was responsible for many
bombings. Its first leader was
Nelson
Mandela and he was tried and imprisoned for his involvement in
such acts. With the end of apartheid in South Africa, the Umkhonto
we Sizwe was incorporated into the South African armed
forces.
Contemporary era events and groups
In the contemporary era, the
Ku Klux Klan, the
Euskadi
Ta Askatasuna, the
Palestine Liberation Organization,
the
Jewish Defense League, the
Fuerzas Armadas de
Liberación Nacional, and the
Partiya Karkerên
Kurdistan still exist and are active in the present. Other
groups have also been formed and are presently conducting
operations.
Late 20th century events and groups
In the 1980s, religious groups that committed violent acts in
pursuit of their goals were increasing in number. Many of them drew
inspiration from Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, especially
Hezbollah. Other well-known Islamic groups
include
Hamas,
Egyptian Islamic Jihad, and
Al-Qaeda.
In the
1990s, acts of terrorism were attempted by Aum Shinrikyo and the bombing of
Oklahoma City’s Murrah Federal Building
was committed by Christian extremists.
Secular nationalist groups also carried out attacks, most famously
the Chechnyan separatists and the
Tamil
Tigers.
Hezbollah
Beginning in 1982,
Hezbollah (“Party of
God”) is an Islamist revolutionary movement founded in Lebanon
shortly after that country’s 1982
civil war. Inspired by
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and
the
Iranian revolution, the group
has sought an Islamic revolution in Lebanon, the destruction of the
State of Israel, and the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon.
Led by Sheikh Sayyed
Hassan
Nasrallah since 1992, the group has carried out kidnappings and
suicide bombings against the Israeli military.
Egyptian Islamic Jihad
Beginning in 1980,
Egyptian
Islamic Jihad (a.k.a.
Al-Gamaa
Al-Islamiyya) is a militant Egyptian
Islamist movement dedicated
to the overthrow of the Egyptian government and to the
establishment of an Islamic state
in its place. It is led by Omar Abdel-Rahman, who is accused of
participating in the World Trade Center 1993
bombings
. The group began as an umbrella organization
for militant student groups and was formed after the leadership of
the
Muslim Brotherhood renounced
violence in the 1970s. In 1981, the group assassinated Egyptian
president
Anwar Sadat.
On, November 17,
1997, the group carried out an attack on tourists at the Temple of
Hatshepsut (Deir el-Bahri
) in Luxor
, in which
a band of six men dressed in police uniforms machine-gunned 58
Japanese and European vacationers and four Egyptians, in what
became known as the Luxor massacre
.
Hamas
Beginning in 1987,
Hamas (
Ḥamās, an
acronym of حركة المقاومة الاسلامية
Ḥarakat al-Muqāwamat
al-Islāmiyyah, meaning "Islamic Resistance Movement") is an
Islamic Palestinian group. Hamas was created in
1987 by Sheikh
Ahmed Yassin,
Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi and
Mohammad Taha of the Palestinian wing of
Egypt's
Muslim Brotherhood at the
beginning of the
First Intifada, an
uprising against Israeli rule in the Palestinian Territories.
Between February and April 1988, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin raised several
million dollars from the Gulf states, which had withdrawn their
funding from Fatah following its official support of
Saddam Hussein during the first
Gulf War. Beginning in 1993, Hamas launched
numerous
suicide bombings against
Israel and, on March 27, 2002, it bombed the Netanya hotel, killing
30 and wounding 140. Hamas ceased the suicide attacks in 2005 and
renounced them in April, 2006. Hamas has also been responsible for
Israel-targeted rocket attacks,
IED attacks, and shootings, but
it reduced most of those operations in 2005 and 2006. Since June
2007, Hamas has governed the Gaza portion of the Palestinian
Territories.
Al-Qaeda
Beginning in 1988,
Al-Qaeda (Arabic:
القاعدة, meaning "The Base") is an international Sunni Islamist
extremist movement founded by
Osama bin
Laden in 1988 to end foreign influence in Muslim countries and
to create a new Islamic caliphate.
On October 12, 2000, Al-Qaeda carried out
the USS Cole
bombing
, suicide bombing of the U.S. Navy destroyer
USS Cole while it was harbored in the Yemeni port of Aden and
killed seventeen U.S. sailors.
On
September 11, 2001, nineteen men affiliated with al-Qaeda hijacked four commercial passenger jet
airliners and crashed two of them into the World Trade
Center
in New York City and one into the Pentagon
. As a result of the attacks, both of the
World Trade Center's Twin Towers completely collapsed. Not
including the hijackers, nearly 3,000 people died during the
attacks.
Lockerbie bombing

Nose section of
Clipper Maid of
the Seas
In 1988,
Pan Am Flight 103 was the Pan American World Airways (Pan
Am) third daily scheduled transatlantic flight from London
's Heathrow
International Airport
to New
York
's John F. Kennedy International
Airport
. On December 21 1988 it was destroyed by a
Libyan
mid flight over the Scottish
town of Lockerbie
. The bombing was widely regarded as an
assault on a symbol of the United States
, and with 189 of the victims being Americans, it
stood as the deadliest attack against the United States until the
September 11 attacks. Pan Am filed for bankruptcy partly as
a result of the attack. On January 31, 2001, Libyan
Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi was
convicted by a panel of three Scottish judges of bombing the
flight. He was sentenced to 27 years in prison for the attack.
In 2002
Libya
offered financial compensation to the families of
the victims in exchange for the lifting of UN and U.S.
sanctions. In 2007 al-Megrahi was granted leave to appeal
his conviction, and in August 2009 was released on compassionate
grounds by the Scottish Executive due to his terminal cancer.
East Turkestan Liberation Organization
The ETLO is a Uyghur secessionist movement which wants independence
for the Chinese region of Xinjiang, and has engaged in both bombing
campaigns and armed attacks to achieve this goal .
Aum Shinrikyo
Between
1990 and 1995, Aum Shinrikyo, now
known as Aleph, was a Japanese
religious
group founded by Shoko
Asahara. Aum Shinrikyo started in 1984 as a yogic
meditation group, but it later transformed into a very different
organization. Seeking to "demonstrate charisma" to attract a larger
audience and to make the group more influential politically,
Asahara began issuing bold and controversial statements. In 1990,
Asahara and 24 other members stood for the General Elections for
the House of Representatives under the banner of Shinri-tō (Supreme
Truth Party). After none of them were voted in, the group began to
militarize. Between 1990 and 1995, the group attempted several
apparently unsuccessful acts of
biological terrorism using
botulin toxin and
anthrax spores.
On June 28, 1994, Aum Shinrikyo members released sarin gas from
several sites in the Kaichi Heights neighborhood of
Matsumoto, Japan, killing eight and
injuring 200 in what became known as the
Matsumoto incident. in the Kaichi Heights
neighborhood.
Seven months later, on March 20, 1995, Aum Shinrikyo members
released sarin gas in a co-ordinated attack on five trains in the
Tokyo subway system, killing 12 commuters and damaging the health
of about 5000 others in what became known as the
subway sarin incident
(地下鉄サリン事件, chikatetsu sarin jiken). In May 1995, Asahara and other
senior leaders were arrested and the group's membership rapidly
decreased.
Lashkar-e-Taiba
Beginning
in 1991, Lashkar-e-Taiba (
laškar-ĕ ṯayyiba; translated as Army of the
Righteous) is a militant organization currently based near
Lahore
, Pakistan
. Lashkar-e-Taiba members have carried out
major attacks against India
and its
objective is to introduce an Islamic state in South Asia and to "liberate" Muslims residing in
Indian administered Kashmir
.
Cave of the Patriarchs massacre

Flag of the Kach and Kahane
Chai.
In 1994,
Baruch Goldstein (December 9, 1956
– February 25, 1994), an American-born Israeli physician,
perpetrated the 1994 Cave of the Patriarchs
massacre in the city of Hebron
, in which
he shot and killed between 30 and 54 Muslim worshippers inside the
Ibrahimi
Mosque
(within the Cave of the Patriarchs
), and wounded another 125 to 150
victims. Goldstein was lynched and killed in the mosque.
Goldstein was a supporter of
Kach, an Israeli
political party founded by Rabbi
Meir
Kahane that advocated the expulsion of Arabs from Israel and
the Palestinian Territories. In the aftermath of the Goldstein
attack and Kach statements praising it, Kach was outlawed in
Israel.
Today, Kach and a
breakaway group, Kahane Chai, are
considered a terrorist
organisations by Israel
, Canada
, the
European Union, and the United States
.
Chechnyan separatists
Beginning
in 1994 and led by Shamil Basayev,
Chechnyan
separatists carried out several attacks from the
1994 until 2006. In the Budyonnovsk hospital hostage
crisis, Basayev-led separatists took over 1,000 civilians
hostage in a hospital in the southern
Russian city of Budyonnovsk
. When Russian special forces attempted to
free the hostages, 105 civilians and 25 Russian troops were killed.
In the
2002 Moscow theater hostage crisis
, 50 Chechnyan separatists took 850 hostages in a
Moscow theater, demanding the withdrawal of Russian forces from
Chechnya and an end to the Second
Chechen War. On September 1, 2004, in what became known
as the
Beslan school
hostage crisis, 32 Chechnyan separatists took 1,300 children
and adults hostage at Beslan’s School Number One. When Russian
authorities did not comply with the rebels’ demands that Russian
forces withdraw from Chechnya, 20 of the adult male hostages were
shot. After two days of stalled negotiations, Russian special
forces stormed the building. In the ensuing melee, approximately
300 hostages were killed, along with 19 Russian servicemen and all
but one of the rebels. Shamil Basayev is believed to have
participated in organizing the attack. Like Basayev’s hospital and
theater hijackings, the attack at the Beslan school was propaganda
of the deed.
Oklahoma City bombing
In 1995,
the Oklahoma
City bombing
was considered a terrorist act against the U.S. Government.
The
attack on April 19 1995 was aimed at the Alfred
P.
Murrah Federal Building
, a U.S. government office complex in downtown
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The attack claimed 168 lives and
left over 800 injured.
It may be questioned whether the bombing was a terrorist act or not
since the target was a government installation. But perhaps the
strongest argument against calling it a terrorist act is that the
actions of
Timothy McVeigh, who was
convicted and
executed for his
role in the bombing, seem to have been based more on a desire to
get his revenge on the government rather than on any real political
goal.
He
stated, "What the U.S. government did at Waco
and
Ruby
Ridge
was dirty. And I gave dirty back to them at
Oklahoma City,"
21st century terrorism
Major
terrorist events after the September 11, 2001 Attacks include the
Moscow
Theatre Siege
, the 2003
Istanbul bombings, the Madrid train bombings,
the Beslan school hostage
crisis, the 2005 London bombings
, the October 2005 New Delhi
bombings, and the 2008 Mumbai
Hotel Siege.
September 11 attacks
In 2001,
the September 11 attacks,
nineteen attackers affiliated with al-Qaeda
hijacked four commercial passenger jet airliners and crashed two of
them into the World
Trade Center
and one into the Pentagon
.
As a result of the attacks, both of the World Trade Center's Twin
Towers completely collapsed. Not including the hijackers, nearly
3,000 people died during the attacks, and the attacks prompted
drastic changes in United States foreign and domestic policy and
security protocol, and placed national security at the forefront of
American political dialogue. The
War on
Terrorism is the ongoing US military response to the attack,
which is now the focus of American security and foreign
policy.
Jundallah
Formed in 2003 the
Jundallah are Sunni
insurgent group from the Baloch region that have committed numerous
attacks within Iran, their stated goal is fighting for the rights
of the Sunni minority in Iran . The group rarely uses suicide
bombing instead using tactics similar to groups like the IRA such
as the
2007 Zahedan bombings .
In 2005 the group attempted to assassinate
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad this led to the
death of at least one of his bodyguards . Iran claims the group is
merely a front for or supported by a range of nations, particularly
the USA, UK, Saudia Arabia and Pakistan . Jundallah has received
aid from
Mujahedin-e Khalq
Organization. The group is also accused of involvement in
Narcotraffiking and the
poppy trade .
Table of non-state groups accused of terrorism
| NAME |
LOCATION |
FOUNDED |
CEASED ATTACKS |
FOUNDER |
SUBSEQUENT LEADERS |
TACTICS |
FAMOUS ATTACK |
INFLUENCED BY |
| Hashshashin |
Persia |
1090 |
1256 |
Hassan-i Sabbah |
|
assassinations |
|
|
| Narodnaya Volya |
Russian Empire |
1878 |
1883 |
|
|
bombings, assassinations |
Assassinated Tsar Alexander
II, 1881 |
|
| Hunchakian
Revolutionary Party |
Ottoman Empire |
1887 |
1896 |
Avetis Nazarbekian |
|
|
Destroyed Ottoman coat of arms, 1890 |
Narodnaya Volya |
| Armenian
Revolutionary Federation |
Ottoman Empire |
1890 |
1897 |
Christopher Mikaelian |
|
|
Held hostages at Ottoman Bank, 1896 |
Hunchakian
Revolutionary Party |
| Internal
Macedonian Revolutionary Organization |
Ottoman Empire |
1893 |
1903 |
Hristo Tatarchev |
|
|
Led Ilinden–Preobrazhenie
Uprising, 1903 |
Narodnaya Volya |
| Irish Republican Army |
Ireland |
1916 |
1923 |
|
Michael Collins |
|
Bloody Sunday, 1920 |
Irish Republican
Brotherhood; |
| Irgun |
Palestine |
1931 |
1948 |
Avraham Tehomi |
Menachem Begin |
bombings |
King David Hotel bombing , 1946 |
Irish Republican Army |
| Lehi |
Palestine |
1940 |
1948 |
Abraham Stern |
Yitzhak Shamir |
assassinations |
Lord Moyne assassination, 1944 |
Irish Republican Army |
| Muslim Brotherhood |
Egypt |
1928 |
|
Hassan al-Banna |
|
assassinations |
Assassinated former PM Mahmud Fahmi al-Nuqrashi, 1948 |
|
| Front de Liberation
National |
Algeria |
1954 |
1962 |
|
|
|
Toussaint Rouge attacks, 1954 |
Indochina rebels |
| EOKA |
Cyprus |
1955 |
1959 |
George Grivas |
|
|
|
|
| ETA |
Spain |
1959 |
|
|
|
bombings, assassinations |
Assassinated “President” Blanco, 1978 |
|
| Fatah |
Palestine |
1959 |
|
Yasser Arafat |
|
|
Munich Olympics massacre , 1972 |
Algerian rebels |
| PLO |
Palestine |
1964 |
|
|
Yasser Arafat |
|
|
|
| PFLP |
Palestine |
1967 |
|
|
|
|
Black September
skyjacking, 1970 |
Che Guevara |
| PFLP-GC |
Palestine |
1968 |
|
|
|
|
Hangglider shooting, 1970 |
|
| DFLP |
Palestine |
1969 |
|
|
|
|
Avivim school bus
massacre, 1970 |
|
| Front de Liberation du
Quebec |
Quebec |
1963 |
1971 |
Georges Schoeters |
|
bombings, kidnappings, assassinations |
October Crisis kidnappings,
1970 |
Che Guevara; the FLN |
| Provisional IRA |
Ireland |
1969 |
2005 |
Seán Mac
Stíofáin |
Gerry Adams |
bombings, assassinations |
Bloody Friday bombings,
1972 |
|
| FALN |
Puerto Rico |
1974 |
|
|
|
bombings |
Four NYC bombs, 1975 |
|
| ASALA |
Turkey |
1975 |
1986 |
Hagop Tarakchian |
|
|
Attack on Ankara airport, 1982 |
|
| PKK |
Turkey |
1978 |
|
Abdullah Ocalan |
|
|
Assassinated former Prime Minister Nihat
Erim, 1980 |
Mao; FLN |
| Red Army Faction |
Germany |
1968 |
1998 |
Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof |
|
|
German Autumn killings, 1977 |
Che Guevara; Mao;
Vietcong |
| Weathermen |
U.S.A. |
1969 |
1977 |
|
|
|
Chicago police statue bombing, 1969 |
Mao; Black
Panthers |
| Italian Red Brigade |
Italy |
1970 |
1989 |
Renato Curcio |
|
|
Assassinated former Prime Minister Aldo
Moro, 1978 |
|
| Japanese Red Army |
Japan |
1971 |
2001 |
Fusako Shigenobu |
|
|
Lod Airport Massacre, 1972 |
|
| Tamil Tigers |
Sri
Lanka |
1976 |
|
|
|
|
Columbus bus terminal bombing, 1987 |
|
| Hezbollah |
Lebanon |
1982 |
|
|
Hassan Nasrallah |
|
|
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini |
| Egyptian Islamic
Jihad |
Egypt |
1980 |
|
|
Omar Abdel-Rahman |
|
Luxor massacre , 1997 |
|
| Hamas |
Gaza |
1987 |
|
Sheikh Ahmed Yassin |
|
|
|
Muslim Brotherhood |
| Al-Qaeda |
Saudi Arabia |
1988 |
|
Osama bin Laden |
|
|
9/11 attacks, 2001 |
|
| East
Turkestan Liberation Organization |
China |
1990 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Aum Shinrikyo |
Japan |
1990 |
1995 |
Shoko Asahara |
|
|
Sarin gas
attack on the Tokyo subway, 1995 |
|
| Lashkar-e-Taiba |
Pakistan |
1991 |
|
|
|
|
Mumbai train bombings,
2006 and 2008 Mumbai attack. |
|
| Chechnyan Separatists |
Russia |
1994 |
|
|
Shamil Basayev |
|
Beslan school hostage
crisis, 2004 |
|
| Jundallah |
Iran |
2003 |
|
|
Abdolmalek Rigi |
|
Zahedan bombings,
2007 |
|
|
References