One of my all time favorite novels is Gilbert K. Chesterton´s "The man who was Thursday". In that amazing book the main character Gabriel Syme, was an anarchist. He defined himself as the artist of anarchy and the anarchist of art. He belonged to a band of anarchists that took the name of the days of the week to preserve their anonymity. One was monday, the other tuesday and so on. Our hero Syme happened to be thursday and that explained the title of the book.
This band of anarchists was led by Sunday, a very intelligent man. Sunday´s personality was highly paradoxical. For example, when he wanted to have a meeting with the whole of the band members, all the anarchist crusaders, his strategy was to meet in a very popular place and talk as if nothing was secret in their discussions. The more public was the place the safer was for their interests. The people who heard their plans about bombing the state never took them seriously. They just thought it was a bunch of crazy guys.
I was thinking about Sunday´s strategy because i think it reflects the strategy the terrorist attacks are following (with obvious differences, just as a litterary comparison).
Now attacks on strong nations are pursued by groups of men or women who are living in a state of normality in our cities. You can perhaps talk to them in the bus stop and perhaps never would imagine about their purposes. Apparently, they are well adapted citizens, but they keep a life in secret. A life that threatens other lifes.