Hidden Brain - Encore of Episode 13: Terrorism
Episode Date: June 14, 2016In the wake of the mass shooting in Orlando, we explore how groups such as the Islamic State explicitly try to capitalize on the grievances and individual frustrations of potential "recruits.&quo...t;
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A grim national record has been set in Orlando, Florida, the deadliest mass shooting in US history.
It's being investigated as an act of terrorism.
Every time there's a terrorist attack, we ask ourselves, what could motivate someone to commit
mass murder?
Although it's still early in the investigation, we know enough to say that this was an act
of terror and an act of hate.
Officials say 29-year-old Omar Matin called 911 to pledge allegiance to the Islamic state
during his rampage inside the Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando.
Was he motivated by religious fervor, by homophobia, by both?
I remember asking similar questions after the shooting in San Bernardino last year.
Many people first thought that a disgruntled employee was behind that attack. Later, we
learned the killers had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State.
The truth is, we may never fully understand. Some terrorists may be motivated
solely by religious fervor. Others might be cloaking personal grievances in the garb of
something grander. In fact, capitalizing on the personal frustrations of potential recruits
is an explicit strategy of the Islamic State, according to anthropologist Scott Atron,
who has studied the group.
The strategy of the Islamic State is quite simple
and very well spelled out.
We will find out who in our enemy populations have grievances,
have frustrated personal aspirations.
We will draw that out, and we will wed it to the story we have of how the world should change and why.
This week we're going to share an episode we ran some months ago about why young people turn to terrorism and mass murder.
Not all the ideas in this episode speak directly to the Orlando shooting, but they're instructive because they highlight the psychological processes that drive people to theatrical displays of brutality and violence.
We're going to use Atron's anthropological lens and studies on would-be suicide bombers
by an Israeli psychologist to explore the attraction of terrorist outfits in faraway
lands.
But even for those who never travel far from home,
there are striking psychological similarities between radicalization and what some experts call
self-radicalization. As we come to terms with the horror of what unfolded in Orlando,
you may want to think of this episode as a primer on some of the counterintuitive conclusion
social scientists are reaching as they study the nature of modern terrorism.
I got a call from the medical school in Cartoum the other day
where professor at the medical school said that her best students have just gone on
to found a medical unit for the Islamic State
and this was completely unexpected in what she'd do about it.
What should the school do about it?
This is Scott Atron.
He's an anthropologist who works at the University of Oxford,
the University of Michigan, and the French National Center for Scientific Research.
He has traveled to the front lines of war zones,
to cafes in Morocco and housing projects in the Paris suburbs.
He has spent many years trying to understand why people are drawn to join groups such as ISIS,
which is also known as the Islamic State.
As I get a call saying,
we you talk to us, our students,
we don't understand this,
they were our best students, our brightest students.
And they went off to establish a medical clinic.
We found out that with the Islamic State, their parents are hysterical.
We don't know what to tell them.
Can you tell us what's going on?
The students were of Sudanese ancestry and most had British passports.
They came from well to do families. They had promising careers ahead of them.
Families of the medical students were dumb struck.
The heartbroken sister of one student spoke to the daily male in Britain.
And we just want her home, we want her safe.
Her family love her more than anybody else in this world can.
Nobody in this world can love her more than we do.
My little sister, she's an A star student.
They're praying on young innocent girls and it's not right.
Atron said he told the teachers at the medical school,
the same thing he has been preaching for years to governments
and more recently at the United Nations.
I said, listen, I can't give you the solution.
The solution has to be for you to pay attention
to listen to what they're telling you.
I mean, obviously if you had listened to them and engaged with them,
you would have had indications of what was happening and you would have been you had listened to them and engaged with them, you would have had
indications of what was happening and you would have been able to talk to them. But like parents,
the older authorities again know nothing and again are preaching nonsense things like moderation
or this isn't true Islam or whatever baloney they're giving them today. And of course it
means nothing. Meaning, it is an effective. It's falling on deaf ears.
Atron believes these messages won't be effective because they fundamentally misunderstand
why the young medical students were drawn to the Islamic State.
The authorities painted the recruits as drawn to nihilism.
Atron thinks it has more to do with a twisted idealism.
The Islamic State revolution is a revolution. There really isn't much difference I see in the impulse or the impetus to the Islamic
State Revolution, then to the French Revolution, or to the Bolshevik Revolution, or to the
National Socialist Revolution, and it appeals to the same sorts of people.
Comparing the Islamic State to the French Revolution, or the Bolshevik Revolution, doesn't mean
it will succeed.
Lots of revolutions fail.
But if Aatron is right, it does mean that it would be a big mistake to underestimate the draw of the Islamic state.
In one ISIS video, a young British man looks into the camera.
He has a status scope around his neck.
He leans in with an earnest expression.
All the people in England ask you again,
all the Muslims over there,
toqullah, leave the land of England and come to make it to here,
and we'll like to hear and endure it to Islam,
and help your brothers and sisters out here.
Allah, He there, there is a great cause being fought here,
and the caravan is leaving.
George Orwell, in his review of mine,
come back in 1939. I'm not crazy about that
Hitalariums, but this was a particularly insightful piece. He said, what is it
about Mr. Hitler that appeals? What is the essence of the problem? Look at our
societies, capitalist societies, offer their people, ease, avoidance of risk and pain, security, and short the
good life.
And what is the result?
Well, the Oxford Student Union, the cream of our intellectuals, votes they will never
fight again.
And Mr. Hitler, what is he offering his people? Glory?
Adventure?
Even death and destruction, but most of all transcendence and a feeling of self-sacrifice.
So Mr. Hitler has understood the essence of human beings.
Human beings need not just short working hours, and comfort, and security, and avoidance of pain, they need at least intermittently a feeling
of transcendence and self-sacrifice.
And so 80 million people now fall down at his feet.
And in fact, the German soldiers in World War II outfought on any measure the Allied soldiers,
be they Russian or American or Brits.
Scott Atron says he sees the same conviction among Islamic state fighters.
He was recently talking with Kurdish and Iraqi soldiers, a short distance from the front
lines in the battle with ISIS.
The Islamic state came in June of 2014 in about 80 trucks of four to five people at truck,
about 350 people, to free a prison by the ocean.
Because freeing prisoners gained your recruits.
They also massacred 600 Shia in that prison.
But the Iraqi army, trained by the United States, armed by the United States to the tune
of billions of dollars, simply ran away.
Now there was one unit on the Mahmour Front in a place called Karamedi, where we had a few
Iraqi soldiers embedded with the Peshmerga.
And the reason they stayed was because their families actually lived in villages close
by.
And I asked them, why is it that your fellow soldiers simply ran away or melted into the city?
And one said to me, they simply didn't want their heads cut off.
When we hear reports of beheadings or prisoners being set on fire, the Islamic states seemingly
in discriminant violence shock us, but the shock can keep us from seeing that such theatrical
displays of brutality actually serve psychological goals.
The spilling of blood, the brutality accomplish accomplishes two things, and usually has done that throughout
the human history and across cultures. First of all, it binds people together who are doing it,
and the second thing it does is it scares the hell out of enemies and fence-setters.
Coming up, we'll hear about a parent of a British medical student who left a promising career to join the Islamic State. Stay with us.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam. When British engineer Ahmad Mutana
realized his medical student son had left the family home in Cardiff in the
United Kingdom to join the Islamic State.
He was enraged.
Police came to his home and showed him a video of his son, Nasser, trying to recruit others
to join ISIS.
I feel sick and devastated that my son is caught up in this.
He told Daily Mail.
He was brought up to love and respect my country, which is Britain.
I am his father, and naturally I am worried about his safety while he is out there, but I am also worried about the evil messages
he is spreading in this video."
Muthana said he rid his house of photographs of NASA, saying,
It's a Muslim thing, you can do to make a living?
Atron thinks it's understandable that parents would express shock, disbelief, and anger.
But he thinks a more productive approach is to look at the young people drawn to terrorist
groups with a measure of empathy.
By empathizing, I mean listening to people, trying to understand where they're coming
from, why they believe what they do and act the way they do,
without necessarily sympathizing in the sense that you don't have to agree with them. In fact,
you may have to fight them, but it's always better to understand where they're coming from,
even in order to fight them.
Atron says his approach was inspired by the great anthropologist Margaret Mead and the dictum
of an ancient Roman playwright. In recent testimony that you provided at the United Nations,
you talked about something that you had learned from Margaret Meade,
whom you worked with in New York many years ago.
What exactly did Margaret Meade teach you?
Well, she taught me that anthropology is basically a response,
at least it was then. Basically a to a Terence's dictum, nothing human is alien to me.
Violent people, members of militant political groups and religious groups are people, just like everyone else.
I want to take you back to something you told me a second ago.
I just want to go back to this issue of empathizing versus sympathizing,
because when I look at the behavior of the Islamic state
and you sort of see this wanton disregard for human life,
the deliberate cruelty, the beheadings,
the rape, the enslavement of people,
it's hard to bring yourself to think about empathizing
with people who do this.
Yes, it is.
And that's why being an anthropologist often requires
a special commitment to that sort of empathy. In the conventional narrative of how young people
get recruited to groups such as ISIS, shadowy recruiters go and search of vulnerable people.
Atron and psychologist Aria and Marari think this isn't the way it usually happens.
In a study he has conducted in Israel among captured prisoners, Morari has interviewed
a number of would-be suicide bombers.
For various reasons, these recruits didn't carry out their missions.
Their equipment didn't work or they were caught before they could carry out an attack.
Morari finds religious extremism is rarely a central motivator for these young people.
He says most are driven
by the political goal of ending the Israeli occupation.
Now the political goals of Palestinian recruits fighting the Israeli occupation are different
than the political goals of ISIS recruits, but Marari's research shows there are underlying
similarities in the psychological appeal of these groups. As in the case of ISIS, many Palestinian recruits report they are
radicalized, not in mosques, but in university cafeterias.
Well, just imagine a young Palestinian 16, 17, 18, 20 years old. If it's with his friends
in the universities of the cafeteria, they are talking about yesterday's suicide attack that took place
in Jerusalem. And everybody is saying what the great thing, the guy that did it, how brave
he was, how patriotic, a hero. And one of the guys here, or perhaps more than one, is an important young man, marginal in his
own social circle.
But he wants to be recognized as somebody.
He wants to be appreciated.
So he says, hey, you know, I would also carry out this, so he's at a tech.
Someone over here is the boast, and word gets back to the commander of a group looking for recruits.
The commander sends for the young man.
This 17, 18, 19 years old, youngster stands in front of these elder commander revered,
famous admired commander and the commander has seen.
I heard that you were willing to carry out
a suicide attack.
They don't call it suicide, of course.
They call it a martyr, they don't mean it.
It's the truth.
Now, what would the other, that young guy say? No, I was just bragging. He says,
oh yes, of course, and he thinks, well, perhaps something will happen and they won't have
to carry it out eventually.
The single best predictor of whether someone gets involved in a terrorist organization
is that their friends and peers are also involved.
In the case of the medical students, waves of British Sudanese students have headed out
to Syria.
Akron told me that ISIS has explicitly laid out a path to gaining younger recruits from
around the world.
The strategy of the Islamic State is quite simple and very well spelled out.
And it is, first of all, take advantage wherever there is chaos in the world.
Create chaos wherever the enemy allows us to do. And how do we do that?
Well, in places like Europe, what we're going to do is attack tourist centers, cafes, theaters, stadiums. Why?
Because these types of places cannot possibly be defended.
There are just too many of them.
There are too few security agencies and law enforcement.
So it will terrorize the population
and cause the states against us to disperse
their resources in reckless ways that cannot possibly
help them in the end. Second, we will appeal to the youth,
the rebelliousness, the idealism, the adventure, the search for glory, the desire for change that
youth have. While the fools, they say, will preach moderation, wasatia, which is exactly what's been
happening. We will offer them something great.
And so what the Islamic State does,
and this explains why many of those people in Europe,
young people are coming,
and from many other countries in the world,
including the United States,
is we will find out who in our enemy populations
have grievances, have frustrated personal aspirations, have a need for something glorious, something that transcends themselves.
We will draw that out and we will wed it to the story we have of how the world should change and why.
Over and over, Atron says, he finds that foreign recruits to the Islamic State are often marginal members of their own societies,
people who feel like outsiders.
Again, the Islamic State's message, why they're so good at it, is they take each of these personal stories,
which will invest hundreds of hours in, and try to show why my personal frustration, your personal frustration,
at this moment in your life.
It's not because you couldn't get this job or you
failed in this or your team lost or whatever. The reason that happened, you see, is
because of this larger set of factors, of this larger world set of forces that
have been arrayed against you, of which this is just a trivial part and
forget about the trivial parts that affecting your life. Go now and deal with forces that have been arrayed against you, of which this is just a trivial part and forget
about the trivial parts that are affecting your life.
Go now and deal with the real causes of the unhappiness, not only of you, but of people
like you around the world, the oppressed.
When families of students who join the Islamic State appeal to them to come to their senses,
the pleas are often ineffective because the young people have
found the cause they think is greater than their parents, greater than their families,
greater even than themselves. You can see the same behavior among followers and other groups,
and not just terrorist organizations, even non-violent groups fighting for social justice.
What we find, and this is not just true for the Islamic State, this is true for people
who are willing to sacrifice their lives and kill others at the same time across the
board.
And it's also true for movements that are peaceful, but where the people who are driving
these movements are willing to shed their own blood.
For example, the civil rights movement or movements like Gandhi's movement in India, they are
committed to a set of values which are sacred.
That means values which are immune to trade-offs. For example, you would not change your children,
or your religion, probably, or your country for all the money in China.
And when you have these kinds of values which you will not trade off, and which are not subject to the standard constraints of material life, things that
occurred in the distant past or in distant places that are sacred are actually more important
than things in the here and now.
They're also oblivious to quantity.
It doesn't matter if I kill one or I attract one or a thousand or no one as long as my intention is good and righteous.
And once you lock into these values, they're immune to social pressures, they're not norms.
That is, even if you're best friends, your family, your loved ones are against you,
you will not see an exit strategy.
Scott Atron has conducted psychological experiments with captured Islamic State fighters on the battlefield.
We were in Kierkuk.
So there's a front there, mud walls that extend for a thousand kilometers and about every
kilometer there's a mud turret with about twenty fighters inside and that's where we were
working.
And we got a hold of some captured Islamic State fighters and we ran
these experiments. In one set of experiments, Atron evaluated how much a fighter had adopted the
identity of the group over all the other identities the person might have. Atron and his colleagues
found that when a fighter's identity fuses with the identity of the group, there is a psychological change
that occurs.
We have many identities.
We may be American, or Indian, or Red Sox fans, or Yankee fans, or lawyers, or doctors,
or whatever we are today or tomorrow, but they have only one identity, and they will
fight and die, not just for that group, but for every single individual in that group.
And once this happens, we also have other measures which show they develop a sense of invincibility
and actually perceive themselves their own bodies to be much bigger than they actually are
and they perceive the other group to be much weaker.
This idea has a lot of support elsewhere in the social sciences.
In some ways, being part of a group is a way of creating an immortal version of yourself.
When you remind people of their mortality, for example,
they express stronger support for the groups to which they belong.
You may die, but your identity in the group will outlive you.
I asked Atron and Marari about how they would apply what they have learned
to doing battle with the Islamic State.
I think it's very important if you want to fight effectively against a militant Islam
you have first of all to defeat it physically.
Despite what people say about hearts and minds, you know, in the Second World War there
was a Russian Soviet ambassador in London.
His name was Maiski, Ivan Mysky.
And once somebody asked Ambassador Mysky, what is the good psychological warfare talking about parts in mind?
What's a good psychological warfare?
And Mysky replied, a good psychological warfare is facts and figures, facts being victories and
figures being dead Germans.
And I think in a bit more moderate sense, this applies also to the current situation.
If you want to effectively fight ISIS, first of all, the
fit ISIS in the territory that it has occupied successfully. That's the first thing you
have to do. And I don't understand why the West hasn't done it yet.
Atron says psychological weapons might also be needed to fight ISIS. Preaching the
virtues of moderation isn't going to work.
They think things will work out and telling them,
again and again, this is in the true Islam.
That alone isn't going to do it.
You've got to get into their networks.
You've got to befriend them.
You've got to get the friends of, it's like smoking.
It's not showing them pictures of cancerous esophagy
that are going to stop people from smoking.
It's young people getting other young people to stop smoking.
Of course, there can be constraining laws and barriers to smoking,
but what will really stop them is if their friends have stopped.
Two brothers, Ibrahim and Muhammad Ajid, are thought to be among the British medical students
who left Sudan to join the Islamic State in Syria.
They left right before they were supposed to take their final exams in their last year
of medical school.
The last post on Muhammad's Facebook page is from December 30th, 2014.
Most of his posts are of funny videos, pictures of his brother
and friends, and soccer teams. Muhammad as 480 friends, likes cold play and the fresh
prince of Bel Air. Abraham has 546 friends. He likes Manchester United, Beyonce and Eminem,
and the TV shows, The Boondocks, and Everybody Hates Chris.
News reports show that recruits are not allowed to leave the Islamic State if they dislike
what they find when they get to Syria.
The disloyal are often executed.
The British medical students who left Sudan are in touch with their parents through social
media apps.
They offer few details of what they are doing except to say they are using their medical
training.
Sometimes they send texts which short audio messages.
To their waiting families, these messages feel terse and uninformed.
They don't sound like the young people they used to be.
Their parents say they sound different. Hidden Brain is produced by Karam Agar Kalasin, Max Nestrak, Maggie Pennman, Chris
Banderayf and Jenny Schmidt. Special thanks this week to Walter Ray Watson and Daniel
Schuchin. For more Hidden Brain, you can follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. You
can also listen to my work on your local public radio station.
If you liked this episode, consider giving us a review on iTunes or wherever you listen
to your podcasts.
It'll help others find the show.
I'm Shankar Vedantam and this is NPR.
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