:''For the British newspaper and Marxist organization see
Militant tendency. For the newspaper of the US
Socialist Workers Party see
The Militant.''
The word 'militant' has come to refer to any individual or party displaying serious comment or engaged in aggressive physical or verbal combat, usually for a cause. Journalists often use ''militant'' as a neutral term for soldiers who do not belong to an established government
military organization. Typically, a ''militant'' engages in
violence as part of a claimed struggle against oppression, but the word is sometimes used to describe anyone with strongly held views (e.g. militant Christian, militant atheist).
Popular usage sometimes sees "militants" as synonymous with
terrorists. The term "militant state" colloquially refers to a state which holds an aggressive posture in support of an
ideology or cause. In
French and
Philippine English the term "militant" retains a more moderate meaning of "activist" which it formerly had in most other varieties of English.
Characteristics of militancy
Persons described as ''militants'' -- either individuals or groups (composed of citizens) -- have usually enrolled and trained for
service in a particular cause. Militants may fill their ranks either by
enlistment or by conscription. The term usually implies aggressive and vigorous power. Some militant views have an inherent implication of intolerance. The work and support of militants commonly occurs within the limits of international law, humanity, and
civil disobedience.
The term ''militant'' can describe those who aggressively and violently promote a political philosophy in the name of a movement (and sometimes have an extreme solution for their goal). Sample goals of modern militants may include establishing
dictatorships or establishing a single
world government. The various movements that seek to apply militancy as a solution, or who use militancy to rationalize their solutions for issues in the modern world seldom share common tactics. Traits shared by many militants include:
# employing force or violence directly, either in offence or in defense
# justifying the use of force using the ideological rhetoric of their particular group
A ''militant view'' sometimes constitutes an extremist's position. A person or group in a psychologically ''militant state'' expresses a physically aggressive posture while in support of an
ideology or of a cause.
Potential legal restrictions
One could argue that those resisting a foreign military occupation do not merit the label ''terrorists'' because their acts of political violence against the military targets of a foreign occupier do not violate
international law. Protocol 1 of the
Geneva Conventions gives lawful combatant status to those engaging in armed conflicts against alien (or foreign)
occupation,
colonial domination and
racist régimes. Non-uniformed
guerrillas also gain combatant status if they carry
arms openly during
military operations. Protocol 1 does not legitimise attacks on
civilians by militants who fall into these categories, however.
The concept is spelled out in the major
UN General Assembly Resolution on terrorism (42/159, December 7, 1987). which condemns international terrorism and outlines measures to combat the
crime, with one proviso: "that nothing in the present resolution could in any way prejudice the right to self-determination, freedom and independence, as derived from the
Charter of the United Nations, of peoples forcibly deprived of that right..., particularly peoples under colonial and racist regimes and foreign occupation or other forms of colonial domination, nor...the right of these peoples to struggle to this end and to seek and receive support [in accordance with the Charter and other principles of international law]." The Resolution passed 153-2,
US and
Israel opposed,
Honduras alone abstaining.
Etymology of the word
The word ''militant'' comes from the
15th Century Latin "''militare''" meaning "to serve as a
soldier". The related modern concept of the
militia as a defensive
organization against invaders grew out of the Anglo-Saxon "fyrd". In times of crisis, the
militiaman left his
civilian duties and became a soldier until the emergency was over, when he returned to his
civilian status.
Mass media usage of the word
The
mass media often uses the term "''militant''" in the context of
terrorism. Journalists often apply the term ''militant'' to movements using
terrorism as a tactic. The mass media also has repeatedly called terrorist organizations ''militant groups'' or ''radical militants''. The terms often serve to avoid placing the label ''
terrorism'' on individuals or groups who have not actually committed violent acts.
Newspapers, magazines, and other information sources may deem ''militant'' a neutral term, whereas ''terrorist'' conventionally indicates disapproval of the behavior of the individual or organization so labeled, regardless of the motivations for such behavior. ''Militant'', other times, can refer to any individual engaged in
warfare, a fight,
combat, or generally serving as a
soldier.
Examples
Militants occur across the
political spectrum, including
white supremacists,
separatists,
abortion opponents, and
environmentalists. Examples of
left-wing,
right-wing, and
special interest militants include militant
reformers, militant
feminists, militant
animal rights advocates, and
anarchists. The phrase ''
militant Islam'' can suggest (excessively) violent and aggressive political activity by Islamic individuals, groups, movements, or governments. The phrase ''militant
atheist'' is usually used as a
pejorative by critics when discussing those people who are more outspoken than the general population on subjects which explicitly or implicitly promote
atheism[1]. Various secret societies are known to be militarists.
Some groups who identify themselves as militants include:
★
Red Brigades
★
National Liberation Army (Colombia)
★
Red Army Faction, also known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang
★
Movement 2 June
★
Japanese Red Army
★
Action Directe
★
ETA
★
Shining Path
★
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC)
★
Revolutionary Organization 17 November
★
Revolutionary People's Liberation Party-Front
★
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)
★
Abu Nidal Organization, also known as Fatah Revolutionary Council
★
Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA)
★
Animal Liberation Front
★
Black September
★
Provisional Irish Republican Army
★
Palestine Liberation Front
★
Weather Underground
★
Front de libération du Québec (FLQ)
★
Global Intifada
★
Invisible Party
★
Angry Brigade
See also
Compare and contrast these related articles:
★
Activist - individuals in intentional action to bring about social or political change.
★
Anarchists - Philosophy that opposes the existence of a State and favor voluntary relationships between individuals and communities.
★
Black Muslim - religious and political organization founded in the United States by Wallace Fard Muhammad in 1930 with a declared aim of "resurrecting" the spiritual, mental, social and economic condition of the black man and woman of America and the world.
★
Belligerent - one of a contracting parties in a conflict.
★
Black Panther Party - revolutionary Black nationalist organization in the United States that formed in the late 1960s
★
Church militant (Ecclesia Militans) - Christians who are living.
★
combat or fighting- purposeful conflict between one or more persons, often involving violence and intended to establish dominance over the opposition.
★
combatant - a soldier or guerrilla member who is waging war.
★
crusader - Warriors in a series of several military campaigns—usually sanctioned by the Papacy—that took place during the 11th through 13th century. Used contemporarily to describe people that attack Islam, whether perceived or real.
★
demonstrator - An individual who is publicly displaying the common opinion of an activist group, often economically, political, or socially, by gathering in a crowd, usually at a symbolic place or date, associated with that opinion.
★
extremist - term used to describe either ideas or actions thought by critics to be hyperbolic and unwarranted.
★
fundamentalism - anti-modernist movements in various religions.
★
guerrilla - small combat groups and the individual members of such groups operating with small, mobile and flexible combat groups called cells, without a front line.
★
Insurgent - an armed rebellion by any irregular armed force that rises up against an established authority, government, administration or occupation.
★
Islamofascist - controversial area which examines the parallels and intersections between various forms of neofascism and contemporary religions and religious movements.
★
Malcolm X - prominent black nationalist leaders born in the United States and advocated black pride and identity politics.
★
man-at-arms - medieval term for a soldier, almost always a professional.
★
mercenary - soldier who fights, or engages in warfare primarily for private gain, usually with little regard for ideological, national or political considerations.
★
military - any armed force, it generally refers to a permanent, professional force of soldiers or guerrillas.
★
Militant Islam - Used by Western political commentators to describe the ideologies of groups viewed as participating in Islamic terrorism.
★
Militant tendency - Trotskyist group within the UK Labour Party, accused of entryist tactics. They were most powerful during the 1970s and 1980s.
★
partisan - member of a lightly-equipped irregular military force formed to oppose control of an area by a foreign power or by an army of occupation.
★
protester - expresses relatively overt reaction to events or situations: sometimes in favour, more often opposed.
★
rebel - individuals who participate in rebellions
★
Reform Movement - kind of social movement that aims to make gradual change, or change in certain aspects of the society rather than rapid or fundamental changes.
★
rioter - people in crowds committing crimes or acts of violence
★
soldier - person who has enlisted with, or has been conscripted into, the armed forces of a sovereign country and has undergone training and received equipment to defend that country or its interests.
★
war - state of widespread conflict between states, organisations, or relatively large groups of people, which is characterised by the use of violent, physical force between combatants or upon civilians.
★
warrior - person habitually engaged in combat. In tribal societies, warriors often form a caste or class of their own.
★
zealot - An individual that is ''zealous on behalf of God''.
References
1. See The Twentieth-Century Darwin by Mark Steyn published in The Atlantic Monthly October 2004.