Dave
Staff member
This is a spin-off of Matthias' "Never Forget" thread, which was mainly for remembrances of where you were and how you feel/felt about the attacks on the World Trade Center. It devolved somewhat due to Charlie's insistence on bringing the conversation around to the aftermath and how we as a country handled ourselves afterwards.
You all know me - I'm a former Marine and a staunch supporter of our armed forces and those who serve. But I agree with Charlie on this. Of course, I was also smart enough and sensitive enough to not chime in yesterday while the thread was going on. *cough* It's called tact, charlie, and it's not always a bad thing.
AAAAAAnyway, this thread is to discuss the political fallout of the 9/11 (or 11/9 if you are not United Statians) attacks and the wars which followed.
Here's my view: We had a worldwide backing and consensus that we needed to take action to bring those responsible to justice. Instead, we squandered any and all goodwill we had by invoking the "Axis of Evil" and attacking Iraq, even going so far as manufacturing "evidence" to back our claims of their involvement. Some of us were against the war (myself included), yet we gave the administration a lot of leeway because we thought they must have known something that we didn't. The administration used that goodwill to wage a personal war (vendetta) against a regime we set up in the first place, browbeat the dissenters with cries of "UNAMERICAN!!" and demonized critical thought. The press didn't help by jumping on the bandwagon of jingoistic rhetoric and not doing any actual questioning about what was going on. We wasted money, political capital and a great amount of lives - both American military and Iraqi civilians - to bring to justice someone who was not a threat to us in any way. The war in Iraq had nothing to do with our country's defense.
Afghanistan is another animal altogether. The war in Afghanistan is the right one and the one that should have been started from the beginning. It is what eventually led us to bin Ladin and is a (more) true war on terror. It is not perfect. There are too many civilians killed, but this is not always the fault of the soldiers. In fact, the tactics of the enemy include utilizing civilians in a war of physical confrontation and then the inevitable deaths of the same civilians being used as emotional ammunition in a war of the psychological nature.
The biggest issue is that by the time we went into Afghanistan we had already been at war for a great amount of time and the will and trust of the people had been so eroded that the real war on terror seemed more like a drag than any sort of action for justice. We lost the will of the world to believe what we had to say and the minds of our own nation who were fatigued by endless war with nothing to show for it.
Meanwhile, the newly-formed Homeland Security and Patriot Act were quickly and (not always) quietly stripping away our freedoms in the name of safety, yet had no discernible effect on actually curtailing any sort of terroristic activities from abroad.
In the end, while 9/11 was a tragedy that killed nearly 3,000 innocent victims, it is even more of a tragedy in that it has been used to strip our natives of their rights, allowed intrusive governmental oversight and (I posit) created an even larger group of militant radicals with a new and fresh hatred of the United States. We went from being a benevolent big brother to the world to a stick-swinging bully who doesn't care who gets hurt as long as we get our way.
I joined the Marine Corps to keep America safe and to guard her freedoms, yet 9/11 did more to harm the United States than an outright attack by a foreign force. It was more effective because they killed less people than we lose on our roads in a month, and we took that and did it to ourselves. They attacked us because they wanted to destroy our freedom. But they didn't take that away from us - we did that to ourselves.
You all know me - I'm a former Marine and a staunch supporter of our armed forces and those who serve. But I agree with Charlie on this. Of course, I was also smart enough and sensitive enough to not chime in yesterday while the thread was going on. *cough* It's called tact, charlie, and it's not always a bad thing.
AAAAAAnyway, this thread is to discuss the political fallout of the 9/11 (or 11/9 if you are not United Statians) attacks and the wars which followed.
Here's my view: We had a worldwide backing and consensus that we needed to take action to bring those responsible to justice. Instead, we squandered any and all goodwill we had by invoking the "Axis of Evil" and attacking Iraq, even going so far as manufacturing "evidence" to back our claims of their involvement. Some of us were against the war (myself included), yet we gave the administration a lot of leeway because we thought they must have known something that we didn't. The administration used that goodwill to wage a personal war (vendetta) against a regime we set up in the first place, browbeat the dissenters with cries of "UNAMERICAN!!" and demonized critical thought. The press didn't help by jumping on the bandwagon of jingoistic rhetoric and not doing any actual questioning about what was going on. We wasted money, political capital and a great amount of lives - both American military and Iraqi civilians - to bring to justice someone who was not a threat to us in any way. The war in Iraq had nothing to do with our country's defense.
Afghanistan is another animal altogether. The war in Afghanistan is the right one and the one that should have been started from the beginning. It is what eventually led us to bin Ladin and is a (more) true war on terror. It is not perfect. There are too many civilians killed, but this is not always the fault of the soldiers. In fact, the tactics of the enemy include utilizing civilians in a war of physical confrontation and then the inevitable deaths of the same civilians being used as emotional ammunition in a war of the psychological nature.
The biggest issue is that by the time we went into Afghanistan we had already been at war for a great amount of time and the will and trust of the people had been so eroded that the real war on terror seemed more like a drag than any sort of action for justice. We lost the will of the world to believe what we had to say and the minds of our own nation who were fatigued by endless war with nothing to show for it.
Meanwhile, the newly-formed Homeland Security and Patriot Act were quickly and (not always) quietly stripping away our freedoms in the name of safety, yet had no discernible effect on actually curtailing any sort of terroristic activities from abroad.
In the end, while 9/11 was a tragedy that killed nearly 3,000 innocent victims, it is even more of a tragedy in that it has been used to strip our natives of their rights, allowed intrusive governmental oversight and (I posit) created an even larger group of militant radicals with a new and fresh hatred of the United States. We went from being a benevolent big brother to the world to a stick-swinging bully who doesn't care who gets hurt as long as we get our way.
I joined the Marine Corps to keep America safe and to guard her freedoms, yet 9/11 did more to harm the United States than an outright attack by a foreign force. It was more effective because they killed less people than we lose on our roads in a month, and we took that and did it to ourselves. They attacked us because they wanted to destroy our freedom. But they didn't take that away from us - we did that to ourselves.