Farah Pandith
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Soft power for an age of shifting terrorism threats
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Over the past several years, the United States has belatedly undertaken a shift in its counterterrorism posture from prioritising international threats to dangers emerging at home. The 6 January riot at the US Capitol provided perhaps the most painful evidence that the terrorist threat to the US homeland is now almost entirely made in America. Motivating ideologies are diverse – from white supremacists to ‘jihadists’ – but America’s terrorists today are almost all emerging from the country’s own communities, not from abroad. This reality will require a new counterterrorism strategy. During its twenty-year ‘War on Terror’, the United States largely ignored soft power opportunities, choosing to mostly respond to violent extremist threats militarily – with the inadequacy of the approach highlighted by defeat in Afghanistan. The threats of today and tomorrow require a comprehensive community-driven effort to build inoculation and resilience to ideologies of hate and extremism. In ‘Soft power for an age of shifting terrorism threats’, Farah Pandith and Jacob Ware present an aggressive but realistic five-point plan for countering the array of terrorism threats now facing the United States. Combining foreign and domestic policy tools, the strategy aims to empower everyday Americans in the fight against hatred and extremism, restore international alliances, and entice new stakeholders to contribute to the battle.

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