Terrorism in Southeast Asia: Implications for South AsiaPapers presented at the International Workshop on International Terrorism in Southeast Asia and its Likely Implications for South Asia, held at New Delhi, 28-29 April 2004. |
Contents
ISSUES | 1 |
Can terrorism be vanquished? | 8 |
Strategic context of terrorism | 14 |
fears and reality | 24 |
Jihadi terrorism | 33 |
Terrorism in Southeast Asia | 46 |
LashkareTaiba | 61 |
In the Gulf | 68 |
Islamist ideology | 165 |
Lessons from Malaysia and Indonesia | 171 |
India | 181 |
Philippines | 188 |
Indonesia | 196 |
Malaysia | 202 |
Thailand | 216 |
Australia | 237 |
Conclusions | 75 |
HizbutTahrir | 96 |
Maoists | 109 |
Jemaah Islamiyah | 123 |
Singapore | 159 |
Turkey | 243 |
Profile of a Connector | 249 |
List of Contributors | 265 |
Common terms and phrases
Abdul Abu Bakar Bashir Abu Sayyaf Aceh activities Afghan Afghanistan Al Qaeda American Army arrested ASEAN Asian attacks Australia Azhar Bali Bangladesh bombings cells Central Centre Communist Party conflict cooperation counter-terrorism countries Delhi emerged extremist forces global globalisation Hambali Hizb Hizb-ut-Tahrir HuJI ideology India Indonesia insurgent intelligence international terrorism involved Iraq Islamic Islamist Jakarta Jammu and Kashmir Jemaah Islamiyah jihad jihadi terrorism jihadi terrorist Karachi Lashkar leaders leadership linkages linked madrasas Malaysia Mantiqi Maoist March Megawati Middle East MILF militant military Mohammad movement Mujahideen Muslim Myanmar Nepal NSCT nuclear October operations Pakistan Patangia Pattani Philippines political problem Qaeda radical recruits region religious role Saudi Arabia separatist September 11 Sheikh Singapore South Asia Southeast Asia Southern Philippines Southern Thailand Soviet Taliban targets terrorist terrorist groups terrorist organisations Thai threat transnational United violence war on terror weapons