The death penalty
The wrong answer for terrorists
Maintaining the death penalty for terrorism assumes that terrorism is an ordinary crime that can be addressed with standard law enforcement tools at the local level. In reality, terrorism requires a complex solution that integrates law enforcement with intelligence, defense, diplomacy, and foreign policy considerations. In that light, the death penalty for terrorism may not only be ineffective, it may even be counterproductive.
Executing terrorists creates martyrs and emboldens their followers
- Many terrorists design their brutal acts as suicide missions, believing that if they die for their cause they will become martyrs, emboldening their supporters or receiving great rewards in the afterlife. Executing terrorists who already hope to die only gives them what they want.
- Making martyrs out of terrorists actually helps recruit others to their brutal cause. Once executed, terrorists become legends and heroes in the minds of their followers, providing a new banner behind which to rally support and carry on the cause.
- Even Michael Mukasey, Attorney General under President George W. Bush, said he hoped those facing military trials for the September 11 attacks wouldn’t get the death penalty, because it would fulfill their desire to become martyrs. 2
Case in point: When self-proclaimed Al-Qaeda operations chief Khalid Shaikh Mohammed was told he could be put to death if convicted during proceedings at Guantanamo in 2008, he said "This is what I wish. I'm looking to be a martyr for a long time."1
The death penalty could impede U.S. efforts to fight terrorism
- Many of our European allies in the War on Terror have refused to extradite terrorist suspects to the U.S. because those nations oppose the death penalty. This prevents us from both prosecuting and questioning these suspects, making it harder to prevent future attacks.
- Terrorists who are executed take to their graves a goldmine of intelligence critical to our efforts to fight terrorism. Terrorists who may be reluctant to divulge information early on could provide invaluable intelligence later in life if they stay behind bars.
Given the complex web of implications, including extradition, intelligence gathering, relations with our allies, and other national security concerns, efforts to fight terrorism are likely to backfire when the death penalty is added into the mix.
Death Penalty Overview
Issues in Depth
Terrorism Newsline Articles
People are asking
