Categories
Perspectives

What does the Turkish offensive in Syria mean for counter terrorism?

You gotta feel for the Kurds, history’s version of ‘always a bridesmaid, never a bride’.  Oft described as the world’s largest ethnic group without a country to call their own, the Kurds have come ever so close on several occasions.  They were kinda promised autonomy following the breakup of the Ottoman Empire in the post […]

Categories
Perspectives

A mother’s dilemma – and society’s

I am a parent and that means I worry about my kids.  Not that I have any real reason to do so since my three are all grown up, on their own, doing well and appear for all intents and purposes to be well-adjusted, functioning human beings (thanks in no small part to their mother!).  […]

Categories
Perspectives

Is there such a thing as too much security to thwart terrorism?

I have a confession to make: I hate going through a metal detector whenever I attend an Ottawa Senators’ hockey game.  It isn’t that it takes too long (it doesn’t), or that the staff are mean (they are actually quite nice, very Canadian), or even that sometimes the line backs up out the door and […]

Categories
Perspectives

A good decision by the Crown to appeal a terrorism guilty verdict reversal

One of the more ‘interesting’ terrorism cases to develop in Canada over the past few years is that of John Nuttall and Amanda Korody, two converts to Islam who planted pressure cooker bombs on the grounds of the BC Legislature in Victoria on Canada Day 2013 with a view to punishing average Canadians for their […]

Categories
Perspectives

Making stuff up is not helping, people

I learned a new word this week: swatting.  This phenomenon describes  when someone calls in a fake crisis to get local law enforcement involved and often entails sending out the SWAT team (hence the name_ to an address to prevent a murder or resolve a hostage situation.  This very thing happened to a Calgary woman […]

Categories
Perspectives

How hard should countries act to repatriate their nationals who fought with terrorist groups?

When I was in high school the movie Midnight Express came out (yes, I am THAT old).  This was a film adaptation of the true story of Billy Hayes, an American arrested and jailed in the early 1970s for trying to smuggle hashish out of Turkey.  The movie portrayed Mr. Hayes as the poor American […]

Categories
Perspectives

Innocence vs guilt in terrorism cases

Shakespeare must have had a lot against lawyers.  It was the great English playwright after all who had a character in Henry IV Part 2 say “the first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers’.  There has been a lot of debate over what this quote means – in any event it has stood […]

Categories
Perspectives

We need to ignore most jihadi propaganda

This piece appeared in The Hill Times on January 3, 2018 http://www.hilltimes.com/2018/01/03/need-ignore-jihadi-propaganda/129769 In the lead up to New Year’s a lot of people were very nervous that festivities would be interrupted by a terrorist attack.  To be fair, the fear was not completely unfounded as at last year’s celebration in Turkey a gunmen opened fire in […]

Categories
Perspectives

Care needed in declaring victory over terrorism

It stands to reason that senior officials, be they civilian leaders or military officers, want to provide the public with good news.  Whether it is to gain votes or to instill pride in a country’s armed forces, these individuals see the benefit of telling the (voting) population that success is at hand or that whatever […]

Categories
Perspectives

The role of social media in violent radicalisation

I read the other day that the widely-held belief that we lose 70% of our body’s heat through our head on a cold day is a myth.  I am probably not the only one who was long assured that this maxim was true and hence wore a toque (that is Canadian for a knitted hat […]