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Islamist Groups in Afghanistan and the Strategic Choice of Violence

Sharifi, Arian

Islamist Groups in Afghanistan and the Strategic Choice of Violence / [Recurso electrónico] PDF .-- 1200 17th Street NW Washington, DC 20036 : United States Institute of Peace , 2016 .-- Recurso online, 4 p. .-- United States Institute of Peace . ;

Islamist groups behave much like all other social movement organizations when making strategic choices to contest the power of the state. The decision to use violence is most often the result of rational cost-benefit calculations rather than ideological fanaticism.

A group chooses violence as a strategy only when it is motivated and capable of doing so. Motivations and capabilities are in turn determined by three factors: relative access to political power; the nature of government repression; and its access to war-making resources.

In Afghanistan, the circumstances suggest a two-pronged reconciliation strategy: to simultaneously reduce safe havens and other support from outside Afghanistan and to increase opportunities for groups sympathetic to the Taliban to hold positions of political power.

Yihad Terrorismo

Afganistán