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-- 作者:xiongyy -- 发布时间:2015-9-7 15:43:52 -- fear nike free run 3 γυναικεια , A history of terrorism requires a very specific definition to
avoid a never-ending summary of every violent act ever recorded. The
brief nike free run ελλαδα ,
objective definition proposed by Dr. Boaz Ganor, an Israeli political scientist
and deputy dean of the Lauder School of Government and Diplomacy at the
Interdiciplinary Center Herzliya, works well for this purpose:terrorism is the
intentional use of, or threat to use violence against civilians or against
civilian targets, in order to attain politician aims. This avoids subjective
interpretation based on the perpetrator\'s motivations, tactics, and civilian
versus military status. When we discuss terrorism in the 21st century, however,
we must include weapons of mass destruction, and broaden the defintion slightly
to include indiscriminate targets, since many of the weapons and tactics of
modern terrorism are capable of killing huge numbers of people at once.
Additionally, some forms of modern terror, such as cyberterrorism, do not fall
neatly under the rubric of "violence", at least in their initial employment,
although in this increasingly computerized world, viruses and database
intrusions could ultimately lead to deaths. How real are the threats of WMD
terrorism? What new or highly mutated forms of terrorist activities might lie
ahead? And more to the point, how can countries hope to counter such violence,
when one of the key components of "successful" terrorism is the element of
suprise? If you have ever seen photos of ordinary household germs and dust mites
under an electron microscope, magnify your visceral and immediate recoil by
ten-fold and you have a fair idea of how most people think about biological
weapons. Terrorism feeds on fear nike
free run 3 γυναικεια , and one thing people fear is fighting
something likely invisible, insidious, and irreversible. Certain chemicals (and
radioactive fallout) meet this description as well, but many do not. Biological
pathogens, however, seem especially frightening to people perhaps because they
seem, to the lay person, the easiest to disseminate and, unlike with other
weapons, can be passed from one person to the next, expanding an attack well
beyond the original point of deployment, using such contagious diseases as small
pox, ebola, AIDS, or plauge. Adding to this is the reality that the first
responders are not members of law enforcement or the military, but members of
the public health sytem: doctors, EMTS, firefighters, and other civilians.
Consider some staggering facts. According to a report issued by the World Health
Organization in 1999, "Over the next hour alone nike
free run 2 τιμη , 1,500 people will die from an infectious disease-
over half of them are children under five. Of the rest, most will be working-age
adults-many of them breadwinners and parents. Both are vital age groups that
countries can ill afford to lose." That adds up to 13.1 million people a year.
Perhaps more frightening still, just six infections diseases account for more
than 90 percent of those deaths: pneumonia, tuberculosis, diarrheal diseases,
malaria, measles, and HIVAIDS. (WHO,p.2,1999) Improper use of antibiotics, as
well as increased virulence and human tolerance due to the natural mutation
process, have led to highly resilient strains of pneumonia, tuberculosis,
cholera and malaria. Considering that accidental and naturally occurring
outbreaks can cost so many millions of lives, it\'s not difficult to imagine the
effect deliberately mutated and weaponized strains of biological pathogens would
have around the world. Armies and individuals have employed biological weapons
throughout recorded history. Many of the earliest recorded instances involve
poisoning food and water supplies. During the BC 6th century, Assyrians poisoned
enemey wells with rye ergot, a fungal parasite that causes hallucinations and
brain damage. Solon of Athens poisoned Krissa\'s water supplied with hellebore, a
narcotic that can also cause heart attacks. Ancient armies routinely infected
tossed rotting animals into the enemies; water supply; in the 12th century
Barborassa used the bodies of his own dead soldiers. Contaminating food and
water supplies is not the only-time honored form of bioterrorism. Spreading
infection and disease using conventional weapons and everyday objects has a long
history as well. As far back as BC 400, archers poisoned their arrows by dipping
them into decomposing bodies or in blood mixed with feces. During the Second
Macedonian War nike
free run 2 γυναικεια , in a crude but effective precursor to
missiles with biological warheads, Hannibal won the naval battle of Eurymedon by
launching pots of venomous snakes onto the decks of the Pregamon ships. In 1346,
when many of the Tatar soldiers attacking the Crimean port of Kaffa were dying
of bubonic plauge, their leader, DeMussis, capulated the diseased corpses into
the city. When the infected Geonese defenders fled, precipitating the Black
Plauge epidemics that killed enemies with wine mixed with blood of lepers. Two
hundred years later another Spaniard, Franciso Pizarro, tried to speed along his
invasion of South America by distributing clothing infected with smallpox.
British forces tried the same tactic in the French and Indian War. In the early
part of the Civil War, a Confederate surgeon tried to infect the Union army with
clothes carrying yellow fever, while his compatriots were tossing dead animals
into wells as they retreated. At this time, the U.S. Government, concerned that
its Union soldiers were far less experienced in military matters thatn were
their Confederate counterparts, paid German lawyer Franz Lieber to prepare a
code laying out the accepted principles of warfare. The articles in the
resulting document,"Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United
States in the Field," became part of General Order No. 100, issued April 24,
1863. One key article read as follows: "The use of poison in any m"
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