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Mathematical Aspects of Terrorism Hazard
The following article, written for Catastrophe Risk
Management by Dr. Gordon Woo, catastrophe research consultant for RMS,
was first published in April 2002.
From ancient Babylonian times, when money lent for trading was forfeited
if the trader was mugged on his travels, the pursuit of commerce has
benefited from insurance against criminal activity. Financial protection
has long been provided against a battery of malevolent human actions:
from burglary and arson to hijacking, piracy, kidnapping and mugging.
Whatever the vagaries of human nature, criminal intent is one of the
more predictable traits, and many types of crime are sufficiently
frequent to generate substantial volumes of statistical data. Where past
loss data are available, an actuarial approach to fitting a loss curve
may be feasible. Natural catastrophes are notoriously low-frequency
high-severity events, the risk of which cannot be evaluated using
experience data alone. As such, mathematical models of the underlying
stochastic processes have been developed in order to quantify their
risk.
On a single day last September, al-Qaeda elevated
terrorism to the category of catastrophe risk. Just as the loss
experience from Hurricane Andrew and the Northridge earthquake could not
have been extrapolated from scanning a few decades of historical claims
data, so the multi-billion dollar loss from the World Trade Center
disaster was of a different order of magnitude from previous terrorism
losses, including the earlier truck bomb attack on the World Trade
Center in 1993. Unfortunately, whereas there exist physical laws which
allow the scaling of natural hazard events from small to large, such
laws do not exist for terrorism events. In the context of flood hazard
in the Netherlands, a leading Dutch mathematician, Laurence de Haan,
entitled a seminal paper, ‘Fighting the Arch-enemy with Mathematics’.
This begs the question: what mathematics can be used to fight terrorism?
Even if acts of terrorism are not governed by physical laws, they are
governed by strategies. The great Chinese master of the art of warfare,
Sun Tze, wrote in the first millennium B.C. that ‘what is of supreme
importance in war is to attack the enemy’s strategy’. An understanding
of terrorist strategy should be of value to counter-terrorist forces and
insurers alike.
The analysis of human conflict has a mathematical
guise called ‘game theory’. Much of the early work on game theory was
done during World War II, and intensive research was further undertaken
during the subsequent Cold War era. Popularization of the concepts of
game theory may be ascribed to Sylvia Nasar, whose book on the life of
the economics Nobel laureate John Nash was turned into an Oscar-winning
movie: ‘A Beautiful Mind’. During the early 1950’s, John Nash consulted
on strategy issues for the RAND corporation, which remains to this day
at the forefront of quantitative conflict research.
Although the study of recreational board games gave
rise to its name, game theory is the general study of mathematical
models of conflict between intelligent rational decision-makers.
Seasoned chess players may lose games on occasion to dumb irrational
players, but the most formidable opponents are both intelligent and
rational. As a London schoolboy, Omar Saeed Sheikh, the self-confessed
kidnapper of the Wall Street Journalist Daniel Pearl, was a champion at
chess. He later enrolled to study mathematics at the London School of
Economics. The threat posed by terrorists would be misjudged if their
intelligence and rationality were underestimated or insulted. The
national intelligence services should have learned this lesson. The
first female head of MI5, Stella Rimington, ignominiously recalls in her
autobiography how she heard about one of the most devastating IRA bomb
attacks on London, through watching CNN in New Zealand.
Terrorists may be intelligent, but rational also?
According to a dictionary definition, behaviour is rational if it is
endowed with reason. What this reason is, in the case of Islamic Jihad,
is explained lucidly in the book, ‘Milestones’ by Sayyid Qutb. The
Milestones to which the title refers are steps along the way to the
establishment of Islamic states. This is a Utopian political vision of a
god-fearing government with no barriers of race and class, and where
women are not exploited for their physical attractions to work as air
stewardesses. (This is Sayyid Qutb’s own prophetic example). Such a
vision was anathema to the secular Egyptian government of the 1950’s.
The book was banned, and its Egyptian author was executed. In writing a
book which espoused the virtues of martyrdom, Sayyid Qutb must have
reasoned that martyrdom was his own inevitable destiny. Through the
fluency of his pen and the style of his death, Sayyid Qutb has inspired
and motivated a generation of Islamic radicals, including Osama Bin
Laden himself.
For one who resolutely believes Sayyid Qutb in the
promise of paradise open to martyrs, the commitment of a suicidal act of
violence to further the cause of Islamic statehood is rational. But the
preparedness, even willingness, of Islamic militants to become martyrs
itself opens up new strategies in the analysis of the conflict between
terrorist and counter-terrorist forces. These new strategies offer fresh
game theory insights into terrorism hazard. Consider the grenade game,
which is one of the standard illustrations of game theory. This game
involves two players A and B. First, player A chooses between giving
player B $1000 or nothing. Secondly, player B observes player A’s move,
and then chooses whether or not to explode a grenade that will kill both
players. Suppose that player B threatens to explode the grenade unless
player A pays the $1000. In the conventional analysis of this game, if
player A believed the threat, his best response is to pay the $1000.
However, since this threat involves an act of suicide, the threat by
player B is regarded as not credible.
Another game theory paradigm is the timing of firing
in a duel. If two protagonists, each armed with a pistol with a single
bullet, walk towards each other, at what point should one fire? The
later one fires, the more sure of hitting the target, but the greater
the chance of being hit oneself. In the conventional game theory
analysis of this contest, the payoff, if a duelist succeeds in hitting
his opponent, is + 1, and the payoff, if he is hit by his opponent, is
–1. However, if paradise is the payoff for martyrdom, then an Islamic
militant would wish to be maximally sure of hitting the target, and
would tend to fire later. Taking sufficient time to achieve mission
success is a trait of al-Qaeda. The patience and diligence with which
al-Qaeda operations are planned reflect underlying fundamentalist belief
in the high payoff of a suicide mission.
In 1994, Algerian terrorists planned to fly a jet
into the Eiffel tower in Paris. Unbeknown to both MI5 and CIA, as early
as 1995, dissident Afghan waiters in London were soliciting American
signatories on applications for flight training in USA. The planning for
September 11 had begun at least seven years earlier. Faced with the
contrasting prospects of paradise, if they succeeded, or prison, if they
failed, the leaders of the suicide hijack mission were rational in
taking meticulous care over every detail of their planning.
Not just the preparation time, but also the swarm
attack is a feature of al-Qaeda strategy which is comprehensible in game
theory terms. In an al-Qaeda training manual, found in an apartment in
Manchester, England, missions are listed as including the destruction of
embassies, urban bridges, and centres of vital economic interest. If one
specific class of target is selected for attack, (e.g. embassies,
bridges, ports, etc.), defences would inevitably be strengthened after a
strike, making a second attempt more difficult. Already this has
happened with US airport security. Hence an opportunist terrorist
strategy would be to launch a simultaneous attack on many individual
targets within the same class, so stretching homeland defence. Al-Qaeda
have managed to synchronize surprise attacks on US embassies and
landmark buildings. In conventional military strategy, the casualty rate
resulting from such simultaneous attacks might be prohibitive. The
strategist, Sun Tze, argued against using troops like a swarm of ants; a
strategy bound to lead to high casualties.
The social insect metaphor is intriguing for a
terrorist network such as al-Qaeda, prepared to launch martyrdom
missions. Astonishing levels of spatial swarm intelligence are
achievable by colonies of ants, which can fulfill their programmed
functions without the need for central instruction. If terrorists
depended heavily on communication with a command hub, swarm attacks
might be quite susceptible to counter-intelligence. However,
participants may operate essentially individually, and may not be
stationed together in any one locality. Instead, they may form emergent
virtual cells, the members of which would be dispersed over the world,
communicating via the internet to plan an attack.
The lessons for insurers from this strategic analysis
reinforce those which might be drawn from the historical record of
terrorism. Aggregate urban exposures need to be tightly controlled, as
do exposures to specific classes of property or infrastructure, which
might be specially targeted. Catastrophe loss correlated over a wide
geographical area is not just a signature of a natural disaster; it can
result from synchronized terrorist attacks. This would be alarming
enough if they were attacks using explosives or missiles. If they were
to be multiple attacks using weapons of mass destruction, such as
nuclear devices, salvation might depend on the presence of a genius,
such as imagined in the movie, ‘A Beautiful Mind’, with powers of
discerning obscure messages of prior intelligence.
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