This study examines terrorism as one of the most serious phenomena threatening state security, social stability, and international peace. It analyzes its causes, motives, and types through legal, political, social, and intellectual approaches. The study aims to identify the interrelated factors that contribute to the emergence and spread of terrorism, with particular focus on political, economic, personal, intellectual, and social motives, and their role in shaping terrorist behavior among individuals and groups. It also seeks to distinguish between different forms of terrorism, particularly state terrorism and terrorism committed by individuals and groups, in terms of the perpetrator, objectives, methods, and legal consequences. The study adopts the analytical method to deconstruct the phenomenon and clarify its elements, the descriptive method to present its concepts and forms, and the comparative method where necessary to examine international positions, conventions, and United Nations resolutions related to counterterrorism. The study concludes that terrorism cannot be explained by a single cause; rather, it is the result of a complex interaction among political exclusion, lack of social justice, poverty, unemployment, weak intellectual awareness, ideological extremism, and the impact of technological development in facilitating recruitment, financing, and the dissemination of extremist ideas. The study further concludes that security measures alone are insufficient to combat terrorism unless accompanied by political, developmental, and intellectual reforms that address the roots of the phenomenon and reduce its enabling environments. The study recommends adopting a comprehensive counterterrorism strategy based on promoting justice, achieving development, spreading awareness, drying up the sources of extremism, and strengthening international and regional cooperation in confronting this phenomenon.
Al-Khazraji et al. (Mon,) studied this question.