They [terrorists] specifically prioritize civilian targets over military ones. — DingoJones
As Putin says sanctions are (acts of) "economic war".Are economic sanctions terrorism? — Agent Smith
“The threatened or actual use of illegal force and violence by a non-state actor to attain a political, economic, religious, or social goal through fear, coercion, or intimidation.”
targeted sanctions — Count Timothy von Icarus
Defining terrorism is a recurring problem in terrorism studies — Count Timothy von Icarus
Sanctions make the most sense when you're trying to erode a state's ability to wage war against another state. — Count Timothy von Icarus
As Putin says sanctions are (acts of) "economic war". — 180 Proof
If economic sanctions can prevent a(n) (erstwhile) superpower (Russia) from aggressive behavior, surely it's gotta work for smaller, less powerful countries, but the catch is it's never used on smaller countries - they're free to do as they please, wage war, commit atrocities, go ahead seems to be the message the US and Europe seems to be sending to them.
They specifically prioritize civilian targets over military ones. — DingoJones
Not sure how you got this. Smaller countries are often under much stricter sanctions, or a full embargo by the US and EU. Think Libya under Qaddafi, Syrian under Assad, Iran for decades, North Korea, Iraq under Saddam, Chile under Pinochet, Sudan for long periods, Cuba, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And what then is the target of economic sanctions? — EugeneW
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