slightly off-track and very surprising to me, Ive often referred to my ex as being terrorist-like. Lachkar has went into quite a bit of coverage to link borderline personality with those who participate in terrorist organisations.
As someone with some actual experience in speaking to actual foreign terrorists, I would say most of them have easily diagnosed personality disorders that are evident within the first few conversations, especially among the lower ranks that are "recruited" rather than leaders. As you get to know them more intimately, even the ones who are higher-functioning and able to conceal their PDs eventually end up showing the signs when they are more comfortable with you. I'd say, without exaggerating, it's over half of those I met that have PDs.
Similarly, I've also seen the detailed progression of a person with a diagnosed PD (and another, undiagnosed PD rather evident) move from basically a suburban white Rust Belt dweller to...something that would shock anyone who wasn't attending Family Connections courses or registered on bpdfamily.com.
While the few examples in Hollywood tend to display Cluster A symptoms, I'd say Cluster A is the rarest subtype of terrorist to whom I've spoken; Cluster B (which includes BPD) is the most common, and Cluster C is just behind B.
If there are ten terrorists with PDs, I'd guess five with Cluster C, four with Cluster C, one with Cluster A.
A relatively high-profile individual once confided to me, in referencing the mental health woes of someone known to both of us, "But this is [region], we are all crazy here". He wasn't entirely correct since it wasn't the whole wartorn region, although obviously there are a high percentage even among civilians, but among those who identify as actual terrorists (not freedom fighters or militias)...yeah, I'd say at least the lowest ranks are all crazy, as well as many of the middle management.
Dragging this back on-topic, the Lachkar book made it to my shortlist since it isn't on my bookshelves yet - this is actually the first I'm hearing of it so far as I can recall. I like clinical books - even when they deviate from the mainstream; I have developed a distaste for "more of the Eggshells style" books.