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A suicide bombing is a bomb attack on people or property, committed by a person who knows the explosion will cause his or her own death (see suicide). Historically the term has been used by Western media as far back as World War II in reference to the actions of Japanese kamikaze piolots but in modern times is associated almost exclusively with the actions of muslims involving Middle East turmoil.
Many muslims regard the term suicide bombing as a pejorative term or propaganda. In the Muslim world such actions are often referred to as human bombings or martyrdom operations.
Since 2002, the Bush administration has used the term homicide bombing, but it has not gained widespread currency.
Suicide bombings have taken various forms.
History shows numerous examples of soldiers and others that have resorted to suicide attacks out of sudden desperation, to prevent capture or to relieve a pinned-down unit, often by simply detonating a grenade or other explosive device while holding it near enemy troops.
During the Crusades, the Knights Templar destroyed one of their own ships, killing 140 Christians in order to kill ten times as many Muslims. Another early example of suicide bombing occurred during the Belgian Revolution, when the Netherlands Lt. Jan van Speijk detonated his own ship in the harbour of Antwerp to prevent being captured by Belgians. In World War II, kamikaze pilots acted as "human missiles" by flying their planes, heavily loaded with explosives, directly into enemy warships. After World War II, Viet Minh "death volunteers" were used against the French colonial army.
In the Middle East, hundreds of suicide bombings have been undertaken in the last few decades, primarily by Arab men and youths. During the Al-Aqsa Intifada, Palestinian suicide bombers have attempted to kill Israelis. They strap themselves with powerful explosives (and sometimes shrapnelShrapnel in the strict sense, is shot deliberately included in a landmine or shell intended to be scattered by the explosion. The pellets in the Claymore mine used by the United States meet this definition. More loosely, the term is used to refer to any f) and seek out a civilian target -- often city buses crowded with people at rush hour -- or a military target. If the suicide bombing is successful, the bomber usually kills a number of people, due to the enclosed locations he or she usually seeks out.
The Tamil TigersThe Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), also known as the Tamil Tigers or the Ellalan Force is a Tamil guerrilla organization operating in Sri Lanka. Founded in 1976, it is one of the many such organisations that seek to establish an independent stat have committed 240+ suicide bombings since 1980 [1].
Often there is a religious element involved, besides other motives such as politics or blackmail: many suicide bombers believe that they will attain an otherworldly reward for their sacrifice. Those who send suicide bombers on missions cultivate the belief that suicide bombers are martyrs. Interestingly, Palestinian television has aired a number of music videos and announcements that promote eternal reward for suicide that kills Jews http://www.pmw.org.il/tv%20part1.html . Besides the religious aspect, there is also a simple cost-benefit analysis that motivates suicide bombing. Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-ZawahiriAyman al-Zawahiri (in Arabic, ) (born June 19, 1951) is a prominent member of the al-Qaeda group and formerly the head of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad paramilitary organization. Al-Zawahiri is a physician by trade. He speaks Arabic, French, and some English expresses the point clearly: "the method of martyrdom operation [is] the most successful way of inflicting damage against the opponent and the least costly to the mujahidin in terms of casualties."[2]
Military historians classify suicide bombing as a form of armed violence, belonging to the tactics of asymmetric warfare -- suicide bombings are only common when one side in a violent conflict lacks the means for effective "conventional" attacks. However in the situation of many suicide bombings, the attacks are carried out against civilians rather than military targets, causing the tactic to lose any legitimacy as a military means in the eyes of many.