France in the crosshairs of terror



Festivities in France to celebrate Bastille Day were brutally cut short when a truck careened through a packed crowd in the French Riviera town of Nice. The driver, identified as a French national of Tunisian origin, was shot dead by the police, but not before he had killed 84 people, leaving bodies, including those of children, strewn on the seaside walkway, the Promenade des Anglais. President François Hollande quickly termed it a terror attack, extended the ongoing state of emergency for three months and called for intensifying air strikes in Syria and Iraq. The attack is the third major one in France in less than 18 months, following last November’s siege of Paris that claimed 130 lives, and the January 2015 attack on the office of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo that left 12 persons dead. Although social media channels of the Islamic State were flooded with messages acknowledging the Nice attack, no group had officially taken responsibility for it in its immediate aftermath.
There are two broad lines of analysis that the attack calls for. The first is the tactical question of how to deal with the “lone wolf”, the solitary potential terrorist motivated by everything from bigotry and mental illness to a genuine belief in the ultra-violent, nihilistic philosophy of the IS. Lone wolves are committed to carrying out suicide missions and taking as many innocent lives as possible, sometimes drawing direct inspiration from the words of IS leaders. A case in point here is of IS spokesman Muhammad al-Adnani who has called upon the faithful to “run over [American and French disbelievers] with your car.” How can they be stopped in any part of the world? In the post-Mumbai attacks scenario, Indian intelligence agencies cannot afford to be complacent about this, even as a growing number of alleged IS sympathisers are reported in different parts of the country. Secondly, a question that countries such as France must ask themselves is a strategic one. For instance, how could the French leadership do more to re-examine the roots of the social alienation and economic misery that engulf so many among its almost five million Muslims and leave them vulnerable to radicalisation? Such introspection could potentially reset deep-seated ethno-religious dissonance and, over the longer term, take the edge off the recruitment drives of extremists lurking in the shadows of Syria, Iraq, and the Internet.


Important Words
1> Bastille -- was a fortress in paris
2> Careened --turn on its side for cleaning, or repair.
3> Strewn -- Scatter or spread untidily
4> Acknowledge --accept or admit
5> aftermath -- the consequences or after-effects of a significant unpleasent event
6> solitary -- done or existing alone
7> bigotry -- intolerance towards those who hold different opionions from oneself.
8> Nihilistic -- rejecting all religious and moral principles in the belief that life is meaningless.
9> Complacent -- showing smug or uncritical satisfaction with onself
10>Radicalization --It is a process by which an individual or group comes to  adopt increasingly extreme political, social, or religious  ideals and aspirations that reject or undermine the status quo or undermine contemporary ideas and expressions of freedom of choice.
11> Introspection -- the examination or observation of one's own mental and emotional processes.
12> Dissonance -- cacophony, disordance, lack of harmony among musical notes
13> Extremist -- A person holds extreme political or religious views.
14> Lone Wolf -- A person who prefers to act alone.
15> Alienation -- Isolation , detachment,estrangement
16> Engulf - flood, deluge, inundate

France in the crosshairs of terror France in the crosshairs of terror Reviewed by Vivek Kumar on 10:00:00 PM Rating: 5
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This post was written by: Vivek Kumar

I am Vivek Kumar founder of Study Wrath. I have been writing articles for more than 10 years. Software and Web developments are my professional and habitual stuffs, I would love to do these all my life. I am an internet geek... I waste a lot of my precious time in searching stuffs on the google..

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