Overview: Terrorism in 2014



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BACKGROUND REPORT Overview: Terrorism in In, more than 16,800 terrorist attacks took place worldwide, causing more than 43,500 deaths and more than 40,900 injuries, including perpetrator casualties. More than 11,800 people were taken hostage in terrorist attacks in. This report provides a brief overview of patterns of terrorism in, highlighting trends from the Global Terrorism Database (GTD). 1 SUMMARY The total number of attacks each month ranged from a minimum of 1,137 in December to a maximum of 1,729 in July. The total number of fatalities caused by terrorist attacks worldwide ranged from 2,280 in January to 6,287 in June. Worldwide patterns of terrorism in were heavily influenced by conflicts in key locations. Although terrorist attacks took place in 99 countries, nearly half of all attacks (47%) took place in Iraq, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. Likewise, more than half (60%) of all fatalities took place in Iraq, Nigeria, and Afghanistan. Terrorist Attacks and Worldwide by Month, 7000 6000 Attacks 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 In addition, worldwide trends in casualties caused by terrorist attacks reveal several noteworthy developments. First, nearly one quarter (24%) of all fatalities that resulted from terrorist attacks in were perpetrator fatalities. This is by far the highest proportion of perpetrator fatalities recorded in the GTD, compared to an annual average of 5 percent of all fatalities between 1970 and 2013. Second, 28 attacks in caused more than 100 total fatalities, compared to an average of 3.7 such mass-fatality attacks each year between 1970 and 2013. Several of the most active perpetrator organizations, including the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), al- Shabaab, Boko Haram, and al-qa ida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) experienced extreme increases in frequency and lethality of terrorist attacks in. New perpetrator organizations including the Donetsk People s Republic and the Luhansk People s Republic emerged in Ukraine, carrying out hundreds of deadly attacks against both combatant and non-combatant targets. Finally, patterns of terrorism in were marked by a dramatic increase in the number of hostages taken 11,821--more than four times as many as the annual average from 1970 to 2013. The analysis below describes these trends in greater detail. 1 For additional information on the inclusion criteria and data collection methodology for the Global Terrorism Database, please see the GTD Codebook.

LOCATION Global trends in the frequency and characteristics of terrorist attacks have the potential to obscure diverse regional patterns. The table below shows the 20 countries that experienced the most terrorist attacks in, along with details about the casualties of terrorism in these locations and the changes they saw between 2013 and. Note that percent change statistics should be interpreted with caution, particularly for certain locations such as Ukraine, Israel, and Bangladesh that experienced few or no attacks or fatalities in 2013, rendering the percent change statistic extremely large or incalculable. Perpetrator Country Attacks % Perpetrator Attacks Iraq 3925 13076 13% 38% 86% 248% Pakistan 2146 2409 22% 3% 16% 34% Afghanistan 1820 5411 46% 26% 46% 106% Ukraine 889 1396 30% 17680% 139500% 42300% Somalia 862 1582 27% 158% 145% 171% India 859 488 12% 24% 4% 82% Yemen 760 1349 23% 79% 116% 183% Libya 729 690 6% 149% 196% 207% Nigeria 713 7774 20% 107% 286% 241% Philippines 597 472 33% 8% 9% 212% Thailand 423 192 6% 11% 24% 31% Egypt 346 338 22% 9% 39% 85% Syria 2 326 3301 27% 17% 112% 908% Israel 293 49 33% 692% 2350% Colombia 230 143 11% 56% 6% 167% Lebanon 204 115 13% 69% 39% 57% Sudan 157 546 40% 241% 148% 76% West Bank / Gaza Strip 135 67 30% 111% 458% 233% Bangladesh 129 37 5% 7% 270% Kenya 115 315 8% 46% 53% 39% Consistent with patterns from 2013 and 2012, Iraq, Pakistan, and Afghanistan experienced the most terrorist attacks by a wide margin. However, while the frequency and lethality of terrorism increased in Iraq and Afghanistan in, in Pakistan both the number of terrorist attacks (-3%) and the total number of fatalities (-16%) decreased. 2 Given the limitations of media coverage in Syria, the data presented here are conservative estimates of terrorism in Syria. Consistent with START s practice of including in the GTD only those attacks that have been verified by at least one well-regarded source, these statistics represent those incidents that were reported by independent news outlets.

Among the 20 countries that experienced the most terrorist attacks in, three were not among the top 20 in 2013. Most notably, while Ukraine experienced relatively few terrorist attacks in 2013, a growing conflict in the region involved hundreds of terrorist attacks in. Violent attacks in Ukraine in primarily targeted the military (55%), private citizens and property (15%), government buildings and personnel (6%), police (5%), businesses (4%), transportation infrastructure (4%), and journalists and media targets (4%). These attacks resulted in more than 1,300 fatalities, including more than 400 perpetrator fatalities, and nearly 300 passengers who were killed when members of the Donetsk People s Republic purportedly launched a surface-to-air missile at a Malaysia Airlines commercial flight. In addition, both Israel and Sudan experienced very large relative increases in number and lethality of terrorist attacks between 2013 and. In Israel, one-third (33%) of all fatalities from terrorist attacks were perpetrator fatalities, and 61 percent of all fatalities were caused by attacks targeting the military. The most active perpetrator organizations in Israel were Hamas (51%), Ansar Bayt al-maqdis (10%), and Palestinian Islamic Jihad (9%). In Sudan, violence primarily targeted private citizens and property (39%) and refugee camps (15%), and military targets (7%). Nearly two-thirds (65%) of the attacks in Sudan were attributed to the Janjaweed militia. A particularly large proportion (40%) of the fatalities caused by terrorist attacks in Sudan were perpetrator fatalities. This is in part due to a single attack in which members of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement- North attacked Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in Alatmur, resulting in the deaths of more than 100 assailants. Countries that were ranked among those with the most terrorist attacks in 2013, but not in include Russia (which saw a 68% decrease in attacks and a 55% decrease in fatalities), Nepal (93% decrease in attacks; 100% decrease in fatalities), and the United Kingdom (25% decrease in attacks; 100% decrease in fatalities. CASUALTIES Several new trends emerged with respect to casualties of terrorist attacks in. In particular, the proportion of total fatalities that were perpetrator fatalities (24%) is the highest recorded since collection of the GTD began in 1970. Perpetrator fatalities are a result of several different scenarios: suicide attacks in which the perpetrators intend to kill themselves; accidental deaths of perpetrators killed while attempting to carry out an attack; or attacks, targeting either combatants or non-combatants, in which security forces respond and a clash ensues. In, 39 percent of the attacks in which perpetrators were killed were suicide attacks, Year compared to 51 percent in 2013 and 42 percent in 2012. Of the remaining attacks, 45 percent targeted the military, and 30 percent targeted police. Among countries that experienced at least 50 fatalities from terrorist attacks in, those with the highest proportion of perpetrator fatalities were Uganda (77% of 98 fatalities), Cameroon (73% of 788 fatalities), China (50% of 322 fatalities), and Afghanistan (46% of 5,411 fatalities). A second trend regarding casualties in pertains to the frequency of extreme mass-fatality terrorist attacks. Worldwide, the number of attacks involving more than 100 fatalities increased to 28, from three in 2013. These attacks took place in Nigeria (9 attacks), Iraq (7), Syria (4), Cameroon (3), Ukraine (2), South Sudan (1), Sudan (1), and Pakistan (1). The most common perpetrator organizations were Boko Haram (11 attacks) and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL; 11). Combined, these 28 attacks caused more than 7,300 fatalities (17% of all fatalities worldwide throughout ), including more than 2,000 perpetrator fatalities (20% of all perpetrator fatalities worldwide throughout ). Percentage of 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Perpetrator, 1970

Number of Attacks 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Terrorist Attacks Causing More Than 100, 1970 Several attacks in were the deadliest attacks in recent history. For example, in June, ISIL claimed responsibility for an attack in which assailants seized a prison in Badush, Iraq, and killed 670 Shi a prisoners, while freeing Sunni prisoners. Also in June, members of ISIL abducted and killed at least 1,500 Iraqi soldiers at Camp Speicher in Tikrit, Iraq. In August, ISIL assailants attacked Yazidi civilians in Sinjar, Iraq, killing at least 500 and abducting 300 others, many of whom were ultimately released in 2015. Year PERPETRATORS Perpetrator Organization Attacks Attacks Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) / AQI 1263 9596 179% 411% Taliban 1038 4194 34% 53% Al Shabaab 865 1783 170% 141% Boko Haram 493 7112 111% 311% Donetsk People's Republic 325 1005 New People's Army (NPA) 291 190 36% 22% Al Qa`ida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) 285 889 99% 140% Communist Party of India Maoist / Maoists 324 204 52% 1% Tehrik i Taliban Pakistan (TTP) 179 974 13% 30% Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) 163 88 54% 19% Huthis 134 234 538% 284% Luhansk People's Republic 110 173 Baloch Republican Army (BRA) 103 52 312% 79% Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement (BIFM) 88 98 31% 72% Al Nusrah Front 82 838 82% 19% Communist Party of India Maoist (CPI Maoist) 70 88 49% 1% Hamas (Islamic Resistance Movement) 66 71 6500% 3450% Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) 61 21 190% 50% National Liberation Army of Colombia (ELN) 60 57 200% 50% Ansar Bayt al Maqdis (Ansar Jerusalem) 60 157 329% 214%

The table above shows the 20 perpetrator organizations that carried out the most terrorist attacks in. ISIL and the Taliban were responsible for the most terrorist attacks in, with 28 percent of all attacks for which a perpetrator organization was identified. These organizations, along with Boko Haram, were also responsible for an increasingly disproportionate number of fatalities 59 percent of all fatalities caused by attacks in which a perpetrator organization was identified, compared to 46 percent in 2013. All of the top-ranked perpetrator organizations underwent substantial increases in terms of frequency of terrorist violence between 2013 and. Although responsible for relatively fewer attacks, Hamas was attributed responsibility for 66 attacks in, compared to only one in 2013. Only two organizations decreased the lethality of their terrorist activity: the Communist Party of India- Maoist (1% decrease in total fatalities) and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC; 19% decrease in total fatalities). While many of these organizations, including the New People s Army (NPA), FARC, and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) have been active for many years, if not decades, two new perpetrator organizations emerged in and immediately became highly active. The Donetsk People s Republic and the Luhansk People s Republic, both active in Ukraine, carried out bombings (38%), armed assaults (31%), kidnappings (15%), and facility/infrastructure attacks (9%) beginning in April. The Donetsk People s Republic was attributed responsibility for more than 1,000 total fatalities, including the deaths of nearly 300 passengers killed by a surface-to-air missile launched at a Malaysia Airlines commercial flight. HOSTAGES The past decade witnessed the continued, and at times rapid, increase in the number of terrorist attacks involving hostages or kidnap victims. From 1970 to 2004, there were on average 149 attacks per year that involved hostages. From 2005-, that number rose to an average of 485 hostage-taking events per year, a 225% increase. in particular was a watershed year for attacks involving hostages. There were more than 1,400 such incidents during the year, in which more than 11,800 people were kidnapped or held hostage. This represents a 121% increase in hostage-taking events between 2013 and, and a 253% increase in the total number of hostages during this time period. Despite the increase in the number of kidnappings and hostage taking events since 2005, the average fatality per attack of incidents involving hostages remained relatively stable between 2005 and 2013. This pattern changed significantly in, however, when the average number of individuals killed in attacks involving hostages rose to more than 7 per attack. This increase was driven by a number of mass-fatality events involving hostages that took place during the year, including the attack on Camp Speicher Iraq in June by members of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) that resulted in the deaths of more than 1,500 Iraqi soldiers. Per Incident 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Average Lethality of Attacks involving Hostages, 2005 (n=4,854) 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Lethality is unknown for 18.9% of attacks Year

Although hostage-taking and kidnapping events can end in a variety of ways, certain outcomes tend to be far more prevalent than others. From 2005 through, there were more than 4,800 terrorist attacks that involved hostages, 61 percent of which have known outcomes. Of those, the majority ended when the perpetrators of the attacks either released or killed the hostages. In fact, during the past decade, the rate at which hostages were either released or killed by their captors was nearly identical (1,118 incidents ended when the hostages were released, while 1,091 ended when the victims were killed). Combination outcomes incidents in which the hostages suffered a variety of fates (e.g. some were released while others were killed) were the next most common during this period (487 incidents). Outcomes of Hostage Taking Events, 2005 Attempted Rescue <1% Unknown 39% Hostage(s) escaped (not during rescue attempt) 1% Successful Rescue 4% Hostage(s) released by perpetrators 23% Combination 10% Hostage(s) killed (not during rescue attempt) 23% In comparison to other outcome types, operations to rescue hostages occurred fairly infrequently during the past decade. However, when attempted, it was far more common for rescue operations to be successful (201 incidents) than it was for them to be outright failures (10 incidents). Rescue operations that ended in the deaths of the hostages represent less than 1 percent of all known hostage outcomes since 2005. It was also comparatively rare during this period for hostages to escape from their captors (70 total incidents). The remaining 39 percent of incidents (1,862) involving hostages in the GTD for this period have unknown outcomes. These events are either still ongoing or their outcomes were not reported by the news media. ABOUT THIS REPORT This Background Report was funded through START by the Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate s Office of University Programs through Award Number 2012-ST-061- CS0001, CSTAB 3.1. The views and conclusions contained in this document are those of the author and should not be interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies, either expressed or implied, of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Erin Miller is the primary author of this report. Questions should be directed to eemiller@umd.edu. The data presented here are drawn from START s Global Terrorism Database (GTD) and reports from news media. The GTD contains information on more than 140,000 terrorist incidents that have occurred around the world since 1970. For more information about the GTD, visit www.start.umd.edu/gtd. The National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) is supported in part by the Science and Technology Directorate of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security through a Center of Excellence program based at the University of Maryland. START uses state of the art theories, methods and data from the social and behavioral sciences to improve understanding of the origins, dynamics and social and psychological impacts of terrorism. For more information, contact START at infostart@start.umd.edu or visit www.start.umd.edu.