radical cell
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A small, clandestine operational unit within a terrorist organization, typically consisting of a very limited number of members (e.g., three to five). Its structure is designed for secrecy, where members of one cell often have no knowledge of the members or leadership of other, adjacent cells.
Usage
This term is used specifically in the context of counter-terrorism, security studies, and political discourse to describe the fundamental, compartmentalized building block of a terrorist network. - The intelligence agency successfully infiltrated a radical cell planning an attack. - Security was breached because a member of one radical cell was identified and interrogated.
Advanced Usage
- "to dismantle/disrupt a radical cell": Refers to the action of law enforcement or intelligence agencies rendering a terrorist cell inoperative.
- The joint operation aimed to dismantle the radical cell before it could acquire weapons.
Variants and Related Words
- Terrorist cell (n): A more general synonym, often used interchangeably with "radical cell."
- Sleeper cell (n): A specific type of clandestine cell that remains dormant or inactive for a long period before being activated.
- Operational security (n): The practice of maintaining secrecy, which is the primary reason for the cell structure.
Synonyms
- Terrorist cell
- Clandestine unit
- Combat cell (in specific militant contexts)
Related Phrases
- Cell structure (n): The organizational model using independent, compartmentalized cells.
- The network's cell structure made it difficult for authorities to map its full extent.
Noun
- a cell of terrorists (usually 3 to 5 members)
- to insure operational security the members of adjacent terrorist cells usually don't know each other or the identity of their leadership