Monday, September 10, 2007

Was There Really a 9/11 Disaster?


USALC and CIA Station Chief, William Francis Buckley, 57, was kidnapped from Beirut, Lebanon on March 16, 1984 before being taken to Iran where he was brutally tortured and killed. He was held captive for 15 months before dying from the torture he had received. In 1991 his body, wrapped in blankets was dumped on a road near the Beirut airport. Mr. Buckley, we have not forgotten you.

To those who keep harping that our military response into Iraq (and even Afghanistan) was a mistake or immoral or an attempt by George Bush to grab their oil, please note that in six years:

1. there have been no further major terrorist attacks in the USA
2. there have been no further bombings of a U.S. embassy
3. there have been no further attacks on U.S. ships
4. there have been no further hijackings of U.S. airplanes
5. there have been no further kidnappings of U.S. officials
6. there have been no further murders of U.S. officials
7. there have been no further bombings of U.S. military barracks
8. scores of terrorist plots have been foiled including one to bring down 10 aircraft bound for the USA and one to bomb our military forces in Germany
9. hundreds of would-be terrorists, including Jose Padilla, Yaser Hamdi, Richard Reid, John Walker Lind, and Zacharias Mousawi, have been apprehended before they could carry out their plots to murder Americans
10. Libya and North Korea have given up the use of nuclear weapons
11. No disabled American in a wheelchair has been thrown into the sea.

This series of successes has been a great surprise to most Americans, and speaks well of President Bush’s initiatives and his management and of the Patriot Act and the surveillance programs put in place by the Bush Administration. The problem is, we are growing complaisant over the terrorist threats, but the Islamists haven’t yet abandoned their murderous plans.

The problem is, many Democrats would rather gain partisan advantage than protect the United States.

The Eye of the 9/11 Storm
By Victor Davis Hanson, September 06, 2007, RealClearPolitics

Another anniversary of 9/11 is near. It's been nearly six long years since a catastrophic attack on our shores, and we've understandably turned to infighting and second-guessing - about everything from Guantanamo to wiretaps.

But this six-year calm, unfortunately, has allowed some Americans to believe that "our war on terror" remedy is worse than the original Islamic terrorist disease.

We see this self-recrimination reflected in our current Hollywood fare, which dwells on the evil of American interventions overseas, largely ignoring the courage of our soldiers or the atrocities committed by jihadists. Our tell-all bestsellers, endless lawsuits and congressional investigations have deflected our 9/11-era furor away from the terrorists to ourselves.

All this tail-chasing comes only with the illusory thinking that the present lull is the same as perpetual peace. Have we forgotten that experts still insist that another strike will come, carried out by those already here or shortly to enter the United States?

Look back at jihadist near-misses in this country since 9/11 - along with a disturbing recent Pew poll that found one in four younger Muslim-Americans approve, at least in certain circumstances, of suicide bombing to "defend Islam" - and the dire predictions seem plausible.

Recall the jihadists arrested in Albany and near Buffalo, N.Y., or the recently uncovered plot to attack Fort Dix in New Jersey. Past foiled targets included the Sears Tower in Chicago, the Brooklyn Bridge, JFK Airport in New York and the New York Stock Exchange.

Some angry loners - mouthing jihadist propaganda or anti-American slogans - simply act on their own to try to kill Americans. Iranian-American college student Mohammed Reza Taheri-azar hit several University of North Carolina classmates with his car in March 2006. Last summer, Omeed Aziz Popal was arrested for a hit-and-run rampage in San Francisco. And Naveed Afzal Haq is charged with shooting several women last summer at a Jewish center in Seattle.

Recall also the American residents and citizens with direct connections to al-Qaida's terrorism network.

American Jose Padilla (aka Abdullah al-Muhajir) was just convicted by a jury of terrorist conspiracy. Khalid Abu-al-Dahab, a key al-Qaida recruiter, operated out of California's Silicon Valley. "Sheik" Omar Abdel Rahman advised Egyptian jihadists from his American jail cell - after his conviction for helping to plan the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. U.S. visitor and asylum-seeker Ramzi Yousef was convicted of the same crime. His partner, the indicted American citizen Abdul Rahman Yasin, fled to pre-war Iraq. Another American, Adam Gadahn, regularly narrates al-Qaida communiques.

Khalid Sheik Mohammed - mastermind of the 9/11 mass-murder and the Daniel Pearl decapitation - studied in North Carolina for a number of years. Egyptian-American and U.S. Army veteran Ali Mohamed helped plan the destruction of American embassies in East Africa. The convicted "20th-hijacker" Zacarias Moussaoui attended flight school in Oklahoma.

Two things seem clear here. One: There have been, and are now, plenty of Islamic terrorists and their helpers in the United States. And two: We are dangerously shortsighted about the ongoing threat they pose.

Meanwhile, Islamic-American organizations and sympathetic civil-liberties associations file lawsuits about supposed American security excesses and illiberal vigilance.

Last fall, for example, several imams were taken off a flight from Minneapolis when the group's erratic behavior scared fellow passengers. After the incident, one of the so-called "flying imams," Arizonan Omar Shahin, called for boycotts of the involved airline and legislation to stop supposed anti-Muslim profiling.

But the brazen Shahin, it turns out, is more than just a bullied Islamic scholar; he's also helped raise funds for an organization that the U.S. government has tied to Hamas
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Our experts are too often in denial or disarray. Former White House counterterrorism adviser Richard A. Clark, former CIA operative Michael Scheuer and former CIA director George Tenet now make widely publicized strident attacks on ongoing efforts to stop terrorists and level charges against others - and each other. They rarely talk with any humility, much less apprise us of what we can learn from their own failures to stop the 9/11 jihadists during their long tenures.

In short, six years of quiet at home since 9/11 have fooled some into thinking that terrorists pose little danger here - or that we may be doing far too much rather than too little to stop such killers. No matter that this past week a jihadist plot to destroy U.S. facilities in Germany was thwarted.

Others make the mistake of endlessly re-fighting the past six years - who let al-Qaida grow?; who "lost" Osama bin Laden?; who fouled up postwar Iraq? - instead of concentrating on the storm ahead.

Before 2001, the excuse for American complacence and in-fighting was naivete. But what will be the reason for the next successful strike against us by the jihadists?

More naivete - or is it simple hubris?

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

On Anniversary of September 11: "Lesson of World War II Forgotten," Warns Twelve-year-old Anthony in New American History Book

Anthony and the Magic Picture Frame: Award-Winning History Book Offers Moral Lessons for Today's Young Americans


The attack on U.S. soil on September 11, continuing acts of Islamic terrorism around the globe, the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, Al Qaeda's focus on Iraq, and the recent nuclear weapon threat posed by Iran are all related: the "beginning of World War III." That's the contention in one chapter of a new American history book, Anthony and the Magic Picture Frame, by Michael S. Class.

In the book, Anthony, the author's real-life son, time-travels into the great events of the 20th Century: Anthony meets the heroes of America's past. Advanced digital photography places Anthony in the cockpit of the Spirit of St. Louis with Charles Lindbergh, on the moon with Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, in the laboratories of Thomas Edison and Jonas Salk, and on Normandy beach on D-Day. Anthony meets Thomas Edison, Jonas Salk, FDR, Lou Gehrig, Charles Lindbergh, Audie Murphy, and many others. Historical accuracy rules every page of Anthony's adventure in time: Even Anthony’s conversations with America’s heroes are based on things they really said. The Web site, www.MagicPictureFrame.com, displays some of the book's amazing photographs.

"I designed the book to capture the interest of today's kids," says Class, "by turning American history into a time travel adventure. But, this is a history book with an important message for today's young Americans."

At the close of World War II, Anthony reflects on all that he has seen. "I felt a deep shame for humanity as a whole," he says, "but I couldn’t help thinking that all the horrors I had seen during this war were somehow connected - that the thirty-six million dead, the Death Camps in Europe, and the dropping of two atomic bombs were all part of the shameful price for not stopping evil early enough. It's a lesson that has been forgotten. In my time, evil is the cause of a new World War. And, once again, it's an evil that was ignored and allowed to grow stronger."

"Anthony is referring to the War on Terrorism," says Class. "The War on Terrorism pits the forces of freedom and democracy against the forces of radical Islamic tyranny. Anthony sees the new World War begin on 9/11 - the date the war came to America's shores, the date I decided to write the book, and the date that Anthony steps through the Magic Picture Frame and into America's past."

Anthony travels back in time so that young readers can see their modern world in the light of the lessons of the past. Anthony compares the people and events of the past with the people and events of his own time. Class recommends the book for kids in Grade 6 to Grade 12, and "for adults who want to remember the truth and share it with their children."

"In the new World War," says Anthony in a comparison to World War II, "the forces of good clearly have the power to prevail over the forces of evil - it’s only the will to do what is necessary to win that is in doubt. People demand endless negotiation with the Hitlers of my time, limited responses to brutal attacks, and quick exits from the fields of battle. They seem to be angry that their daily routine has been disrupted, not that the foes of freedom are on the march. And the men and women who risk the supreme sacrifice to fight for what is right? They are less appreciated, and even mocked."

"It's not an easy book," says Class, "but our children are not living in an easy time. Anthony discusses the nature of good and evil, right and wrong, war and peace, what it means to be an American, honor and discipline, success and achievement, courage and destiny, marriage and family, God and purpose."

Class offers hope to his young readers. From his discussions with America's heroes, Anthony learns that "the purpose of life is to live a life of purpose, one person really can make a difference, and doing the right thing always matters."

Every chapter of the book carries that inspiring message. The chapter about Lindbergh’s flight is really about choosing one’s destiny. The story of Lou Gehrig is one of a virtuous life. The chapter about Thomas Edison is really about the benefits of hard work. The story of Apollo 11 is about wonder, taking risks, and courage. The story of Dr. Jonas Salk and the cure for polio is really about dedicating one’s life to a higher purpose. When Anthony meets his immigrant great-grandfather at Ellis Island in 1907, it’s really a story about what it means to be an American. Anthony’s observation of D-Day and the liberation of the death camps during the Holocaust is a testament to the reality of evil and the need to fight it.

A quote from British philosopher Edmund Burke opens the chapter on World War II and has particular relevance to modern times, says Class: "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."

Anthony and the Magic Picture Frame was named Outstanding Book of the Year by Independent Publisher (2006); awarded the Parent-to-Parent Adding Wisdom Award for Excellent Books (2007); is a celebrated winner of an iParenting Media Award for Excellent Products (2007), was named Reviewers Choice by Midwest Book Review (2006); and garnered Editor's Pick by Homefires: The Journal of Homeschooling Online (2006). Nationally syndicated talk-show host Michael Medved calls the book "entertaining and educational."

Anthony and the Magic Picture Frame helps parents and teachers: The book includes recommendations for 461 books, 595 movies, 217 songs, and 155 places to visit, all keyed to the subjects of each chapter. The recommendations are offered as an exciting addition to any formal history curriculum, and as a way for kids to experience the past. The author's Web site offers a fun final exam.

Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin says "parents and teachers will appreciate the inspiring message this unique history book holds for America's next generation. I recommend this book to all young Americans, may they take us to the stars and beyond."

Anthony and the Magic Picture Frame (hardcover, 225 pages, $25.00) is available at www.MagicPictureFrame.com, by calling toll-free 1-800-247-6553, at select bookstores, and on www.amazon.com.

Amazon link: www.magicpictureframe.com/buythebook.html

Watch the Magic Picture Frame video: http://www.magicpictureframe.com/home/watchthevideo.html

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Outlier said...

You totally misrepresent the facts regarding the effectiveness of US counter terrorist efforts since 9/11 and inflate the importance of of the few real examples where any progress has been made. In doing so you continue to support an administration that has no interest in capturing or stopping the real agents of Islamic extremism, but rather the continuation of lining their corporate puppeteers pockets - the darker forces of capitalism.

The same effective strategy exists to eliminate Muslim extremism today as it did before 9/11 - the precise elimination of radical Muslim leaders where ever they are found. The Israeli's have done a brilliant job of it for years and would do it for us if we allowed it. Not taking the opportunity of this Israeli resource only proves that it is not our intent to stop it. After all we needed something to replace the Soviet Union as the Industrial Military Complex's boggey man. Shame on you.

RussWilcox said...

Outlier's comments are typical of the conspiracy theorists who want us to think that Bush and Cheney are the ones who destroyed the Twin Towers so they could grab oil. I often wonder what happened to them in their formative years.