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Fourteen years later and do you even believe it? Did we actually live it? Are we still living it? And how improbable is that?
Fourteen years of wars, interventions, assassinations, torture, kidnappings, black sites, the growth of the American national security state to monumental proportions, and the spread of Islamic extremism across much of the Greater Middle East and Africa. Fourteen years of astronomical expense, bombing campaigns galore, and a military-first foreign policy of
repeated defeats, disappointments, and disasters. Fourteen years of a
culture of fear in America, of endless alarms and warnings, as well as dire predictions of terrorist attacks. Fourteen years of the burial of American democracy (or rather its recreation as a billionaire's playground and a source of spectacle and entertainment but not governance). Fourteen years of the spread of secrecy, the
classification of every document in sight, the
fierce prosecution of whistleblowers, and a
faith-based urge to keep Americans "secure" by leaving them in the dark about what their government is doing. Fourteen years of the
demobilization of the citizenry. Fourteen years of the rise of the
warrior corporation, the transformation of war and intelligence gathering into profit-making activities, and the flocking of countless private contractors to the Pentagon, the
NSA, the
CIA, and too many
other parts of the national security state to keep track of. Fourteen years of our wars coming home in the form of
PTSD, the
militarization of the police, and the spread of war-zone technology like
drones and
stingrays to the "homeland." Fourteen years of that un-American word "homeland." Fourteen years of the expansion of surveillance of every kind and of the development of a
global surveillance system whose reach -- from
foreign leaders to tribal groups in the
backlands of the planet -- would have stunned those running the totalitarian states of the twentieth century. Fourteen years of the financial starvation of America's
infrastructure and still
not a single mile of high-speed rail built anywhere in the country. Fourteen years in which to launch Afghan War 2.0, Iraq Wars 2.0 and 3.0, and Syria War 1.0. Fourteen years, that is, of the improbable made probable.
Fourteen years later, thanks a heap, Osama bin Laden. With a
small number of supporters,
$400,000-$500,000, and 19 suicidal hijackers, most of them Saudis, you pulled off a geopolitical magic trick of the first order. Think of it as
wizardry from the theater of darkness. In the process, you did "change everything" or at least enough of everything to matter. Or rather, you goaded us into doing what you had neither the resources nor the ability to do. So let's give credit where it's due. Psychologically speaking, the 9/11 attacks represented precision targeting of a kind American leaders would only dream of in the years to follow. I have no idea how, but you clearly understood us so much better than we understood you or, for that matter, ourselves. You knew just which buttons of ours to push so that we would essentially carry out the rest of your plan for you. While you sat back and waited in Abbottabad, we followed the blueprints for your dreams and desires as if you had planned it and, in the process, made the world a significantly different (and significantly grimmer) place.
Fourteen years later, we don't even grasp what we did.
Comment: Assad is absolutely right. The reason people are fleeing Syria, Libya, and other Middle Eastern countries is because of terrorists like ISIS. Unfortunately, the West has not only shown very little desire to truly stop those groups but they're also likely helping to support them.
See also: Syria's Bashar al-Assad: Why the Anglo-American Axis cannot overthrow his government