UnderAGreySky wrote:IMO you're missing the point; there is no doubt that a crime was committed and as Flagg says, that crime is murder.
Korto's statement seemed to infer that there was doubt that a crime was committed, due to the fact that the victim was a member of the armed forces. If I was mistaken, I apologise, if not the correction stands.
The question of terrorism is a trickier one; if the objective was to terrorise a populace then picking random innocent civilians would have been their priority and not running down a military service person (wearing a uniform?).
From what I've heard he was in civvies at the time. As for terrorising the population, terrorist organisations frequently target members of the armed forces as well as civilians, either to prevent them supporting the civil power, to try and provoke an attitude "if the military aren't safe how can we be?", or out of a delusion of being a military force themselves. See the Provos for example.
The grey area is whether they were trying to terrorise active military members into being cautious in non-combat environments. That's up in the air.
It's certainly a possibility.