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Terrorism

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Are we safer now than we were immediately after 9/11, or have we just been lucky?

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Results so far:

Safer
37% 309 votes Total: 825 votes
Lucky
63% 516 votes
Safer

As a kid each time I descended those basement steps a monster was ready to grab my legs. The fears that gripped us as children came from our vivid imaginations. Then life's lessons taught us that monsters are not real; 9-11 changed all that.




Terrorist acts cannot be completely prevented; everyone has a different way of dealing with it.




1) Some people are in outright denial and they call 9-11 "inside job" and the airplanes flown by terrorist were a cover story. Of course these conspiracy advocates can't explain 1000 inconsistencies, like how a fire that burned hot enough to melt metal for two hours didn't ignite the explosives that they claim really brought down the towers.




2) Some people think America deserved it; these are the same type of depraved individuals who believe a rape victim in provocative clothes deserved it. Even if you don't agree with American policy, no one deserved to die.




3) Some think 9-11 was a long time ago and the risk of something like that happening again is minimal. Out memories are short and its hard to believe something so horrible will happen again. This is most likely the greatest risk we face.




4) Some think the risk is so great we should attack the terrorist first, before they strike again, regardless of the cost to innocent lives.




5) But most people realized since 9-11 that monsters do exist and our future is both bleak and certain. The majority of us have come to grips with the reality that America will be attacked again and sometimes the "bad guys" will win and innocent people will die.




And since most people are now more aware that we live in a world with where others hate us, being aware of that threat makes us safer. America is the remaining superpower and since 9-11 we have demonstrated to the world our resolve to not be a "sitting duck" again. The government has taken actions that make it more difficult to attack us. Our public buildings, transportation and financial systems are more hardened. Some of these changes force trade-offs like:




> Our desire for world peace was replaced with greater fear of foreigners and isolationism,

> Some of our personal freedom was sacrificed for public safety,

> And our perception that we were loved was shattered by the harsh realities that we live in a world where we are no longer safe.




The post 9-11 world strained our relations with each other and with other governments. Some of our committed allies are now more closely aligned with our former enemies than with us. In the cold war, the superpowers both knew the rules - "you destroy us and we destroy you" - mutual annihilation. In the terrorist war, if terrorist should get their hands on nuclear technology, to whom does America retaliate?




Have you noticed that some governments are not in favor of tough United Nations sanctions against Iran's nuclear aspirations? Are they crazy? Don't they realize where Iran's sympathies lie?




Certainly they are not crazy or stupid. Since America can't retaliate against a stateless terrorist, enabling a terrorist friendly supplier like Iran makes is a perfect way to threaten us. The real monster isn't the terrorist; it's the governments that use terrorist fanaticism to eliminate our superpower advantage.




Are we safer knowing these monsters exist? Yes, we are safer as long as we continue to minimize our risks and remember 9-11.

Learn more about this author, Dave Nocera.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.

Lucky

America is not safer today than it was immediately following the attacks of September 11th. While many Americans, as well as certain branches of America's government, may be more aware of security than they previously were, the steps our nation has taken during the past 6 years have set the stage for longterm security threats to America and its citizens at home and abroad.

Relative safety must be examined in terms of both our efficacy in defending against a security threat, and the existence of such threats.

Following the first Gulf War of 1991, the security threat to America increased greatly. While the threat was understood at high levels of government, America's ability to mount an effective defense was hampered by partisan bickering, bureaucratic red-tape, and frankly, near total disinterest in the topic by the American population at-large.

Simultaneou sly, anti-American and anti-Western sentiments grew pervasively, enabling Islamic fundamentalists to make easy inroads among poor, disaffected Muslim youth-especially in the Middle East, South Asia and Britain.

In 1993, when the World Trade Center was first bombed, Americans missed a critical opportunity to improve their security situation, either by improving actual defense, or by learning about the nature and origin of the threat, and perhaps acting strategically to decrease those threats.

By the time the events of 9/11 unfolded, 10 years had passed during which America had hardly defended against the security threat, and the existence of threats had greatly increased. Following that tragic day, the tendency of Americans to wonder "Why us?" underscored how dangerous the situation had become. Most Americans seemed to have completely forgotten the original WTC bombing, and to be woefully unaware of the atmosphere that had been developing outside the U.S. for many years.

Since 9/11, America has done much to ramp up domestic security and keep physical threats at bay. Although some of these efforts have arguably weakened core aspects of American democracy, they have likely helped to stop potential attacks on American soil. Substantive proof, however, is lacking, since the government has declined or refused to divulge almost any salient details of foiled plots.

During the same time, anti-American sentiment spread swiftly following the second Gulf War. The massive outpouring of global support for America in the wake of 9/11, and the near universal support for America's military campaign in Afghanistan, were squandered terribly as the U.S. became inextricably tangled in the Iraq debacle-a conflict for which there is virtually no remaining support, either domestically or in other nations.

It is this unparalleled dislike-even hatred-of America that is the greatest threat to our safety. America cannot realistically surround itself with a wall. Nor can it purge those within its borders, be they citizens or not, who wish harm to Americans. The only real way for Americans to enjoy longterm freedom and security is to seek to understand, and then to strategically reduce and eliminate, the causes of anti-Americanism.

Unf ortunately for Americans, it has been impossible to make progress in this direction, and for this, we have only ourselves to blame. Because influential members of the government and the media insist on presenting this approach in the context of a moral judgment on America, it is impossible to get down to the business of strategy. But strategic management of America's image has nothing to do with whether one agrees or disagrees with terrorists and extremists. In fact, it is absurd even to give such people a footing for dialog. But it is a terrible shame, and a failure of our innovative national spirit, that we cannot manage to craft a strategy that increases our critical understanding of the world beyond America, and improves the international standing of America to its former high level.

Until now, we have been lucky to escape another attack of mass-destruction. But experts seem to agree that it is a matter of "when," and not "if," another attack will occur. Luck eventually runs out.

Learn more about this author, Gen Hendrey.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.

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