Studyspark Study Document

Ethnic Strife and Historic Imperialism Term Paper

Pages:4 (1191 words)

Sources:6

Subject:Government

Topic:Imperialism

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#70126554


The faith allows for stoning of people, torture of women and the suicide bombings that the world has grown accustomed to suffering (Hoagland, 2001).

Islamic fundamentalist believe that their faith instructs them to seek out and destroy Americans. They also believe that if they are suicide bombers they will be rewarded in heaven ten fold. As America continues to fight against the human rights violations that Persian Gulf nations continue to support, the fundamentalists believe it is their calling and duty to act against American interests. They want American interests out of their area and they will do what it takes to get it done including acts of terrorism.

As the world watched in wonder the Soviet Union collapsed. It dismantled its government, it started over and it began to rebuild as a democracy after many years of being in a cold war with the United States.

For some the dismantling of the Soviet Union represented freedom but for many it meant uncertainty and fear about what was to come. Fear, uncertainty and confusion are all elements that can contribute to terrorism. When the Soviet Union, thought to be one of the three strongest bodies on earth collapsed it created a groundwork for terrorist groups to not only eye the Soviet Union as a place to attack but also to realize that with the strife and stress the Soviet Union was experiencing it would not be difficult to extract nuclear materials for the purpose of terrorism elsewhere in the world (nuclear terrorism (http://www.ucsusa.org/global_security/nuclear_terrorism/).

If one wants to measure the threat that this poses one only has to realize that if "a terrorist group exploded just one nuclear weapon, hundreds of thousands of people could die. Because there is no effective protection against a nuclear blast, the only real solution is to prevent terrorists from obtaining nuclear bomb materials or weapons in the first place (nuclear terrorism (http://www.ucsusa.org/global_security/nuclear_terrorism/)."

While the potential for nuclear weapons attainment is small in most nations, the Soviet Union spent many years in a nuclear arms race with America, therefore when it decided to dismantle itself it had a large quantity of supplies and nuclear components stockpiled.

Russia and the United States possess enormous stockpiles of military HEU. In addition, thousands of so-called tactical nuclear weapons -- many of which are quite small and do not have electronic locks to prevent their unauthorized use -- are stored in Russia, some in poorly secured locations. In addition, the United States maintains some 150 tactical nuclear weapons in Europe as part of NATO forces, and stores roughly 1,000 such weapons within its own borders (nuclear terrorism (http://www.ucsusa.org/global_security/nuclear_terrorism/)."

The global threat with regard to terrorist activities since the collapse of the Soviet Union cannot be understated as the world moves forward to disarm terrorists.

Terrorist groups can steal the supplies or they can approach desperate Soviet Union politicians or people who have access to the supplies and make purchases that will later be used to commit acts of terrorism. The collapse of the Soviet Union has created a hot bed of possibilities for terrorists around the world.

References

Farrar, L.L., Jr.(2003) Aggression vs. apathy: the limits of nationalism during the Balkan wars, 1912-1913. East European Quarterly

Hoagland, Jim (2001) Mysteries in the Persian Gulf. The Washington Post

Novotny, Patrick (1999) the Post-Cold War Era, the Persian Gulf War, and the Peace and Justice Movement in the 1990s. Social Justice nuclear terrorism (Accessed 5-17-07)

http://www.ucsusa.org/global_security/nuclear_terrorism


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Farrar, L.L., Jr.(2003) Aggression vs. apathy: the limits of nationalism during the Balkan wars, 1912-1913. East European Quarterly

Hoagland, Jim (2001) Mysteries in the Persian Gulf. The Washington Post

Novotny, Patrick (1999) the Post-Cold War Era, the Persian Gulf War, and the Peace and Justice Movement in the 1990s. Social Justice nuclear terrorism (Accessed 5-17-07)

http://www.ucsusa.org/global_security/nuclear_terrorism

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Korean History, Culture, and Society

Pages: 10 (3140 words) Sources: 3 Subject: History - Asian Document: #23080999

academic and popular discourse on East Asia, Korea has a long, strong, and unique history. The culture of Korea has evolved over the last several millennia to become one of the world's most distinctive, homogenous, and intact. Being surrounded by large and ambitious neighbors has caused Korea to have a troubled history, evident in the most recent generations with the division between North and South. The division between North

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".