SciTechResources.gov
Patterns of Global Terrorism http://www.state.gov/sffict/rls/pgtrpt/
The U.S. government remains one of the largest presences on the World Wide Web. There are many ways to access its Web sites, but SciTechResources.gov is one of the newest, most useful portals. Many of the sites listed will not be of interest to readers of this journal: Duckdata, for example, provides a detailed bibliographic database on the habits of American waterfowl. On the other hand, the site offers a reasonably swift way to find out what the U.S. government has on such subjects as global warming, biological warfare, and international water research, which is a very great deal indeed.
One of those oft-cited sources of statistics now conveniently on the Web, ""Patterns of Global Terrorism"" is archived on the State Department's site, which is extremely useful to a student of international affairs (see, for example, its collection of treaties). As is often the case with such reports, one may quibble with the definition of incidents and terrorist groups, but it provides a useful baseline for thinking about the problem overall."
Related
The global economy opens national borders to goods and people, legal and illegal. Narcotics, disease, illegal immigrants, and terrorists and their weapons: all enjoy easier passage than ever before. Fortifying the frontiers is no solution -- it would slow down trade and globalization. International companies and government regulators need to invest in new technologies to help border control keep pace with booming commerce. Then they must learn to cooperate with one another.
Fears of a "digital Pearl Harbor" -- a cyberattack against critical infrastructure -- have so preoccupied Western governments that they have neglected to recognize that terrorists actually use the Internet as a tool for organizing, recruiting, and fundraising. Their online activities offer a window onto their methods, ideas, and plans.
The United States may be an uncontested military superpower, but it remains defenseless against a new mode of attack: information warfare. As the military, the private sector, and Washington grow increasingly dependent on computers and information networks, they also grow more vulnerable to cyber-attack. Cyberspace is becoming the new front line of warfare, and private citizens are the new prime target. U.S. policymakers and technology entrepreneurs must wake up to this threat and build a wall of defense -- now.

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