03278cam a2200421 a 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019008004100036010001700077015001900094016001800113016001800131020002900149020003200178020001500210020001800225035007400243040002400317050001500341055001100356100009100367245004600458260005400504300002300558336002600581337002800607338002700635504005100662505020200713520154400915650001502459650003302474650001802507650002202525650002102547758015702568776013102725ocm39812131 OCoLC20241029113521.0980828s1999 mau b 001 0 eng  a 98042453  aGB99Z00042bnb7 a0071269352Uk7 a0119709972Uk a0674617908q(alk. paper) a9780674617902q(alk. paper) a0674003942 a9780674003941 a(OCoLC)39812131z(OCoLC)59379475z(OCoLC)491865656z(OCoLC)1022600982 bengcGAFCSC LIBRARY00aHV6431bS3 3aHV64311 aStern, Jessica,d1958-1https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJktt7HMdtkh9Q6QTPX8G314aThe ultimate terrorists /cJessica Stern. aCambridge, MA :bHarvard University Press,c1999. a214 pages ;c25 cm atextbtxt2rdacontent aunmediatedbn2rdamedia avolumebnc2rdacarrier aIncludes bibliographical references and index.0 aTerrorism today -- Definitions -- Trojan horses of the body -- Getting and using the weapons -- Who are the terrorists? -- The threat of loose nukes -- The state as terrorist -- What is to be done?1 a"As bad as they are, why aren't terrorists worse? With biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons at hand, they easily could be. And, as this chilling book suggests, they soon may well be. A former member of the National Security Council Staff, Jessica Stern guides us expertly through a post-Cold War world in which the threat of all-out nuclear war, devastating but highly unlikely, is being replaced by the less costly but much more imminent threat of terrorist attacks with weapons of mass destruction."--BOOK JACKET. "According to Stern, several factors increase the probability of a major incident. Most important is the emergence of a new breed of terrorists - violent night-wing extremists, apocalyptic groups, and millenarian cults, all less constrained than their predecessors by traditional ethics or political pressures. The dissemination of know-how about nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons in books and on the Internet heightens the risk. Stern also warns us of the risks posed by the weak states and atomized societies left in the Cold War's wake, including the dangers of theft and smuggling of nuclear and chemical materials from former Soviet facilities, and the risk that underpaid weapons experts will sell their expertise to state sponsors of terrorism or to the terrorists themselves."--BOOK JACKET. "But Stern also holds out hope for new technologies that might combat this trend, and for legal and political remedies that would improve public safety without compromising basic constitutional rights."--Jacket. 0aTerrorism. 0aWeapons of mass destruction. 0aBioterrorism. 0aChemical warfare. 0aNuclear warfare. ihas work:aThe ultimate terrorists (Text)1https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCGjXrY7KkqJBDVxQjBbrv34https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork08iOnline version:aStern, Jessica, 1958-tUltimate terrorists.dCambridge, MA : Harvard University Press, 1999w(OCoLC)654234064