Patterns of Global
Terrorism is a report published each year on or
before April 30 by the United States
Department of State
. The
Secretary of State is
required by
Congress to
produce detailed assessments about
- each foreign country in which acts of international terrorism occurred;
- the extent to which foreign countries are cooperating with the
U.S. in the apprehension, conviction, and punishment of
terrorists;
- the extent to which foreign countries are cooperating with the
U.S. in the prevention of further acts of terrorism; and
- activities of any terrorist group known to be responsible for
the kidnapping or death of an American citizen.
The exact definition of the requirements are in Title 22, Section
2656f of the
United States
Code.
The only complete print edition--indexed, updated, and supplemented
with maps and tables, 1985-2005--was published by
Berkshire Publishing Group in
2005.
[71777]
Summaries
| Year |
Acts |
Killed |
Wounded |
| 2004 |
NA |
NA |
NA |
| 2003 |
208 |
625 |
3646 |
| 2002 |
199 |
725 |
2013 |
| 2001 |
346 |
3547 |
1080 |
| 2000 |
423 |
405 |
791 |
| 1999 |
392 |
233 |
706 |
| 1998 |
273 |
741 |
5952 |
| 1997 |
304 |
221 |
693 |
| 1996 |
296 |
311 |
2652 |
| 1995 |
440 |
165 |
6291 |
Each report includes a short numerical summary. The table at right
summarizes the number of international terrorism acts reported each
year since 1995. The numbers of those killed or wounded from those
acts are also included in the table.
The following list consists of the report excerpts from which the
table is based. Note that some of the numbers are revised after
initial publication of the report, which causes some of the numbers
used in excerpted comparisons to differ from what was originally
reported.
- 2004: The report was no longer published to the public after its
methodology was challenged by the Bush-Cheney administration, amid
claims that it showed the highest amount of terror activity in its
nineteen year history. A new report was created, called the
Country Reports on
Terrorism, which detailed terrorism by region but offered no
statistics or chronology. In a press conference ([71778]), the State Department said 1,907 people had
been killed and 9,300 wounded in terrorist attacks, the highest
ever. A
chronology of terror events was released by the National
Counterterrorism Center
(which can be read here)
- 2003: There were 208 acts of international
terrorism in 2003, a slight increase from the most recently
published figure of 198 attacks in 2002, and a 42 % drop from the
level in 2001 of 355 attacks. 625 persons were killed in the
attacks of 2003, fewer than the 725 killed during 2002. 3646
persons were wounded in the attacks that occurred in 2003, a sharp
increase from 2013 persons wounded the year before. This increase
reflects the numerous indiscriminate attacks during 2003 on “soft
targets,” such as places of worship, hotels, and commercial
districts, intended to produce mass casualties.
- 2002: International terrorists conducted
199 attacks in 2002, a significant drop (44%) from the 355 attacks
recorded during 2001. 725 persons were killed in last year’s
attacks, far fewer than the 3,295 persons killed the previous year,
which included the thousands of fatalities resulting from the
September 11 attacks in New
York, Washington, and Pennsylvania. 2,013 persons were wounded
by terrorists in 2002, down from the 2,283 persons wounded the year
before.
- 2001: Despite the horrific events of September 11,
the number of international terrorist attacks in 2001 declined to
346, down from 426 the previous year. One hundred
seventy-eight of the attacks were bombings against a multinational
oil pipeline in Colombia
—
constituting 51 % of the year’s total number of attacks. In
2000, there were 152 pipeline bombings in Colombia, which accounted
for 40 % of the total. 3,547 persons were killed in international
terrorist attacks in 2001, the highest annual death toll from
terrorism ever recorded. Ninety percent of the fatalities occurred
in the September 11 attacks. The number of persons wounded in
terrorist attacks in 2001 was 1080, up from 796 wounded the
previous year. Violence in the Middle
East and South Asia also accounted for the increase in casualty
totals for 2001.
- 2000: There were 423 international
terrorist attacks in 2000, an increase of 8 % from the 392 attacks
recorded during 1999. The main reason for the increase was an
upsurge in the number of bombings of a multinational oil pipeline
in Colombia by two terrorist groups there. The pipeline was bombed
152 times, producing in the Latin American region the largest
increase in terrorist attacks from the previous year, from 121 to
193. The number of casualties caused by terrorists also increased
in 2000. During the year, 405 persons were killed and 791 were
wounded, up from the 1999 totals of 233 dead and 706 wounded.
- 1999: The number of persons killed or
wounded in international terrorist attacks during 1999 fell sharply
because of the absence of any attack causing mass casualties. In
1999, 233 persons were killed and 706 were wounded, as compared
with 741 persons killed and 5,952 wounded in 1998. The number of
terrorist attacks rose, however. During 1999, 392 international
terrorist attacks occurred, up 43 % from the 274 attacks recorded
the previous year. The number of attacks increased in every region
of the world except in the Middle East, where six fewer attacks
occurred.
- 1998: There were 273 international
terrorist attacks during 1998, a drop from the 304 attacks we
recorded the previous year and the lowest annual total since 1971.
The total number of persons killed or wounded in terrorist attacks,
however, was the highest on record: 741 persons died, and 5,952
persons suffered injuries.
- 1997: During 1997 there were 304 acts of
international terrorism, eight more than occurred during 1996, but
one of the lowest annual totals recorded since 1971. The number of
casualties remained large but did not approach the high levels
recorded during 1996. In 1997, 221 persons died and 693 were
wounded in international terrorist attacks as compared to 314 dead
and 2,912 wounded in 1996. Seven US citizens died and 21 were
wounded in 1997, as compared with 23 dead and 510 wounded the
previous year.
- 1996: During 1996 there were 296 acts of
international terrorism, the lowest annual total in 25 years and
144 fewer than in 1995. In contrast, the total number of casualties
was one of the highest ever recorded: 311 persons killed and 2,652
wounded. A
single bombing in Sri
Lanka
killed 90 persons and wounded more than 1,400
others.
- 1995: In most countries, the level of
international terrorism in 1995 continued the downward trend of
recent years, and there were fewer terrorist acts that caused
deaths last year than in the previous year. However, the total
number of international terrorist acts rose in 1995 from 322 to
440, largely because of a major increase in nonlethal terrorist
attacks against property in Germany
and in
Turkey
by the Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK). The total number of fatalities from
international terrorism worldwide declined from 314 in 1994 to 165
in 1995, but the number of persons wounded increased by a factor of
ten to 6,291 persons; 5,500 were injured in a gas attack in the Tokyo
subway system in March.
Problems with 2003 report
The 2003 report was released twice, in April and June 2004. The
release of the April 29th version led
Deputy Secretary of
State Richard
Armitage to say
- Terrorism continues to destroy the lives of people all over the
world; and this report we are releasing today, "Patterns of Global
Terrorism: 2003," documents the sad toll that such attacks took
last year. This report also details the steps the United States and
some 92 other nations took in 19 — or 2003 to fight back and to protect our peoples.
Indeed, you will find in these pages clear evidence that we are
prevailing in the fight.
On
June 10, 2004, a few
weeks after challenges from two professors (Alan Krueger of
Princeton
University
and David Laitin of
Stanford
University
) and Congressman Henry
Waxman, the State Department announced that the report
previously issued for 2003 was incomplete and
incorrect in part. The revisions issued twelve days later
included significant changes, including a doubling of the number of
killed and wounded mentioned in the April 2004 version. Here are
examples from the section "The Year in Review":
{| cellpadding="4"
! April 29 version
! June 22 version
|- valign=top
| There were 190 acts of international terrorism in 2003, a slight decrease from the 198 attacks that occurred in 2002, and a drop of 45 % from the level in 2001 of 346 attacks. The figure in 2003 represents the lowest annual total of international terrorist attacks since 1969.
| There were 208 acts of international terrorism in 2003, a slight increase from the most recently published figure of 198* attacks in 2002, and a 42 % drop from the level in 2001 of 355 attacks.
|- valign=top
| 307 persons were killed in the attacks of 2003, far fewer than the 725 killed during 2002.
| 625 persons were killed in the attacks of 2003, fewer than the 725 killed during 2002.
|- valign=top
| 1,593 persons were wounded in the attacks that occurred in 2003, down from 2,013 persons wounded the year before.
| 3646 persons were wounded in the attacks that occurred in 2003, a sharp increase from 2013 persons wounded the year before. This increase reflects the numerous indiscriminate attacks during 2003 on “soft targets,” such as places of worship, hotels, and commercial districts, intended to produce mass casualties.
|}
In November 2004, news leaked to the
Los Angeles Times about an internal
report from the State Department's Office of
Inspector General. The report found more
errors in the 2003 report, and concluded that even the June version
"cannot be viewed as reliable" because of questionable statistics
on terrorist attacks and casualties, as well as other issues. The
inspectors cited some short-term problems from the transition to
the government's new interagency
Terrorist Threat Integration
Center. These included gaps in
data
entry, inadequate oversight, and personnel issues. They also
cited a long-standing failure by the State Department,
CIA, and other agencies to use
consistent standards for the identification and classification of
terrorism-related events.
See also
External links
Maps of Patterns of Global Terrorism -
http://www.gl.iit.edu/govdocs/maps/maps.htm