By Anthony Cordesman
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhYTSkUHhhQ48RUgd0POhygmBJNDC71FGqEyAGlZcR9MtoePy68hra50Z7KiP2FvD0bxYpNWmguDuRO_7CGNlupSAin8RkzqTbdoJL0F3Q21o2LWGftKTOinB11om4a2EpdoMB7GLI9DoA/s320/111.png)
There is no easy way to categorize the resulting patterns of violence, to measure their rise, or to set national security priorities. For more than a decade, the U.S. has focused on the threat of terrorism in Afghanistan and Iraq, but it has dealt increasingly with the expansion of the threat into North Africa, other parts of the Middle East, Sub-Saharan Africa, and the rest of the world. Key warfighting threats like the Islamic State and its affiliates, and the Taliban and Haqqani Network, are only a comparatively small part of the rising threat in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), Sub-Saharan Africa, and South Asia.
It is clear from the current trends in other regions that the threat of religious extremism may soon expand rapidly into the rest of Asia, and there are many other causes of terrorism in Africa, Europe, Latin America, the United States. Terrorism is often heavily driven by ideology, but it also is often a reaction to major shifts in population, ethnic and sectarian tensions, failed and corrupt governance, and the failure to broadly develop a given economy and offer employment and a future. No area is immune to the threat, and internal instability can drive terrorism anywhere in the world.