Hello and Welcome to The Manager’s Guide to Terrorism, Risk, and Insurance – Essential for Today’s Business. The authors are David J. Smith and Mark D. Silinsky. This is a Rothstein Publishing product. These are podcasts analyzing the intersection of today’s business practices and international terrorism. They are brought as a courtesy of Kensington Security Consulting, which brings education to national security. In the next several podcasts, we will broadly cover terrorism and its impact on businesses. Terrorism in Our Time Terrorism is part of your life. You see media reports about terrorist attacks on television and radio, and read about them in newspapers. As a businessperson, you try to make sense of the terrorist killings to better protect your company, your employees, your customers and clients, and your coworkers. Many of the attacks occur in distant lands, such as the Middle East. Increasingly, they occur in Western countries where American businesspersons operate and travel. In Europe, cartoonists are gunned down in Paris; concert-goers are murdered in nightclubs, cafes, fast-food restaurants, concert halls, and churches. Transit centers and airports, in Brussels and Istanbul, have become charnel houses. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) individuals were killed in a nightclub in Florida. Throughout 2016, attacks continued, and the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), also referred to as the Islamic State, has promised to attack more sites in the West. In Europe, this state of terror has become the new normal. Terrorism is becoming part of the national fabric in the US. Terrorist-related words may have entered your vocabulary. You have heard the term extremist or violent extremist in reference to terrorist acts. The term soft target may be familiar to you. It is a person or facility that is not well protected. In Brussels, Paris, Nice, and many other cities and towns, soft targets have been slaughtered in 2016. You may have noticed that terrorism is becoming increasingly lethal, sophisticated, and clever, particularly in the cyber world. Many attacks do not make the news because there are no sensational killings associated with them. Hackers try to disable controls on water control systems and dams; to poison water supplies in the US and Europe; and to collapse bridges and buildings. Some of the terrorism that threatens you and your business comes from determined men and women with assault weapons or homemade bombs. You probably remember the killing in San Bernardino in 2015 and the bombing attack in Brussels the following year. San Bernardino: The 200-year-old small city of San Bernardino is located in the hills of Southern California. It would appear to be an unlikely venue for a terrorist attack. The city bills itself as the first major town on Route 66 in California, coming from the east. A famous song invited Americans to “get your kicks on Route 66.” Many listened. San Bernardino was the gateway for millions of Americans beginning a new life in California, the Golden State. More recently, it was the home of a married couple with a baby girl. Their names were Syed Farook and Tafsheen Malik. Syed Farook was born in the US and adopted Islam passionately. He was a county food inspector who spent much of his free time in a local mosque, memorizing the Quran. He married Tafsheen Malik, a middle-class Pakistani woman. Few people outside their family knew how deep their hatred for the US really was. They were quiet neighbors. Their bottled-up anger exploded like a volcano on December 2, 2015. Earlier, the killers pledged allegiance to ISIL. They came to kill and fired up to 75 rounds from an assault rifle into a crowd celebrating at a Christmas party at Farook’s workplace. The husband and wife team killed 14 people who were completely caught off guard. Months earlier, some of these people had given Tafsheen a baby shower. After all, they were coworkers and friends. Brussels: Belgium has never had colonies in the Middle East. You might associate this small European country with treats like chocolate, beer, and waffles, as well as with Old Master painters. But in March 2016, its main airport turned into a site of violence. The reach of ISIL targeted Belgium because, in their words, "Crusader Belgium has not ceased to wage war on Islam.” Many Belgians did not see their country as part of the Crusades and had no idea that they were so hated. But Belgium had long been a hotbed of simmering radical Islamic extremism. The 2015 massacres in Paris were planned in an area of Brussels sometimes called "Little Morocco.” The attack on the satirical Charlie Hebdo magazine was plotted there, along with a foiled attack on a high-speed train between Brussels and Amsterdam. According to September 2014 statistics from Belgium’s Ministry of Interior, between 300 and 350 Belgians have gone to fight with ISIL in Iraq and Syria since 2012. As many as 50 ISIL ...
Más
Menos