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- <text id=90TT2122>
- <title>
- Aug. 13, 1990: Europe:Don't Count Them Out
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 13, 1990 Iraq On The March
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 26
- EUROPE
- Don't Count Them Out
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>On the decline from their bloody peaks of a decade ago,
- terrorist groups are still inflicting a deadly toll
- </p>
- <p> In a swiftly changing Europe, the decline of terrorism from
- its bloody peaks of more than a decade ago would seem
- inevitable. Extremist ideologies are fading, after all, so
- recruiting militants to fight for anachronistic or lost causes
- ought to be growing more and more difficult. Besides, notes
- Paul Wilkinson, director of the Research Institute for the
- Study of Conflict and Terrorism in London, "it is no longer
- fashionable for young people on the left to see terrorism as
- glamorous and romantic. It's regarded as a futile gesture." Yet
- the virus is proving surprisingly resistant.
- </p>
- <p> In Britain last week the outlawed Irish Republican Army, as
- part of its stepped-up campaign beyond the borders of Northern
- Ireland, assassinated Ian Gow, a friend of Prime Minister
- Margaret Thatcher and a Conservative Member of Parliament, with
- a bomb that wrecked his Montego car in the driveway of his
- home. Three days earlier in West Germany, the Red Army Faction
- almost succeeded in killing Hans Neusel, State Secretary of the
- Interior Ministry and Bonn's top antiterrorist expert, in a
- similar attempt. The actions demonstrated that while their
- numbers may be dwindling, both the I.R.A. and the R.A.F. do not
- need popular support, or even broadly based groups of
- sympathizers, to remain murderously effective.
- </p>
- <p> Across Europe no terrorist group matches the I.R.A. in its
- ability to sustain a campaign of deadly violence. Although the
- level of I.R.A. attacks today is only 20% of that of the 1970s,
- some 200 to 300 I.R.A. Provisionals are still striking at
- targets in Ulster, Britain and beyond in an effort to sway
- public opinion. Backed by 2,000 supporters who furnish hideouts
- and surveillance, the Provisionals are using a wide variety of
- weapons--automatic rifles, pistols, letter bombs and mortars,
- as well as the terrorist's special, the Czechoslovak-made
- plastic explosive Semtex.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, a Roman Catholic nun was killed along with
- three Ulster policemen in a land mine explosion in County
- Armagh. Four days earlier a bomb exploded at the London Stock
- Exchange, causing considerable damage. In June eight people
- were wounded when a similar device went off in the Carlton
- Club, a Conservative Party bastion near London's St. James's
- Palace. In May two Australian lawyers were gunned down in the
- town square in Roermond, in the Netherlands, apparently mistaken
- for off-duty British soldiers.
- </p>
- <p> The I.R.A.'s biggest score, though, was Gow, 53, Thatcher's
- parliamentary private secretary during her first four years in
- office and a passionate defender of Britain's constitutional
- ties to Northern Ireland. Although Gow's name was on a hit list
- of some 100 persons, the M.P. continued to give his address and
- number in the phone book. Under the cover of darkness, police
- deduced, a 4 1/2-lb. Semtex charge was attached to the bottom
- of Gow's auto while it was parked outside his 16th century home
- in the village of Hankham, in Sussex, 60 miles from London. The
- bomb exploded seconds after Gow got behind the wheel to drive
- to call on a constituent.
- </p>
- <p> By comparison with the I.R.A., which thanks to Libya's
- Muammar Gaddafi remains well armed, West Germany's Red Army
- Faction is modestly equipped. The group's ranks are divided,
- and it is demoralized by the loss of the sanctuary that was
- offered to terrorists until a year ago by the Communist regimes
- of Eastern Europe. Still, the R.A.F.'s hard-core leadership of
- 15 to 20 people retains considerable destructive force. Over
- the past five years the R.A.F., a successor to the feared
- Baader-Meinhof gang, has attempted to assassinate six leading
- West German figures--and succeeded four times. Eight months
- ago, the group killed Deutsche Bank chief executive Alfred
- Herrhausen, a personal adviser to Chancellor Helmut Kohl, by
- exploding a bomb along a street as Herrhausen's armored
- Mercedes-Benz 500SE limousine passed by. Antiterrorist expert
- Neusel escaped that fate only because his chauffeur was on
- holiday: Neusel was driving and the blast ripped through the
- passenger side of his BMW.
- </p>
- <p> The prospect of a united Germany may be fueling the R.A.F.'s
- latest violence. A five-page letter to the press following the
- attack on Neusel decried the emergence of a "greater Germany
- pursuing the same goals and imperial plans as Nazi Fascism."
- The apparent anti-unification campaign follows the arrests of
- 10 R.A.F. operatives in East Germany in June. Three were
- released on legal technicalities, but six have been handed over
- to West German authorities, and one is in an East German
- prison. At a press conference in East Berlin, Interior Minister
- Peter-Michael Diestel confirmed that well-known terrorists
- like the notorious Carlos (real name: Ilyich Ramirez Sanchez)
- and Abu Daoud, a leader of the Palestinian terrorist group
- Black September, were frequent visitors to East Germany under
- the ousted regime of Erich Honecker.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the flare-ups in Britain and West Germany, experts
- believe the threat of homegrown terrorism in Western Europe is
- receding. In Italy the Red Brigades, once a veritable scourge,
- have not mounted an attack in more than two years. In France,
- Action Directe, a far-left extremist movement, appears to have
- been crushed. Experts warn, however, that a new menace may be
- looming: the ethnic and religious conflicts springing out of
- the dissolution of the Soviet empire could give rise to a new
- strain of the terrorist virus. The Soviets appear to be so
- worried about that possibility that they are sending two retired
- KGB generals to London this autumn to attend a conference on
- terrorism.
- </p>
- <p>By Frederick Painton. Reported by Anne Constable/London and Rhea
- Schoenthal/Bonn.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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