How 9/11 Bred a “War on Terror” from Hell
Today, as the 22nd anniversary of September 11, 2001 rolls around, the never-ending disaster the U.S. government launched in response to it -- known as “the war on terror” — has resulted in the deaths of nearly a million people and the “indirect deaths” of perhaps 3.5 million more. Today's piece, adapted from the introduction to Norman Solomon's remarkable new book
War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of its Military Machineis a gripping consideration of the way, in response to 9/11, the U.S. turned much of the planet into a global free-fire zone and what that "war on terror" has meant for the rest of us. Don't miss this one!
From TomDispatch this morning: The response to 9/11 as a
repetition-compulsion disorder -- Norman Solomon, "How 9/11 Bred a War
on Terror from Hell, America's response to 9/11 in the Lens of History"
https://tomdispatch.com/how-9-11-bred-a-war-on-terror-from-hell/
Norman Solomon begins his remarkable new TomDispatch piece this way:
"The day after the U.S. government began routinely bombing faraway
places, the lead editorial in the New York Times expressed
some gratification. Nearly four weeks had passed since 9/11, the
newspaper noted, and America had finally stepped up its 'counterattack
against terrorism' by launching airstrikes on al-Qaeda training camps
and Taliban military targets in Afghanistan. 'It was a moment we have
expected ever since September 11,' the editorial said. 'The American
people, despite their grief and anger, have been patient as they waited
for action. Now that it has begun, they will support whatever efforts it
takes to carry out this mission properly.'”
"As the United States continued to drop bombs in Afghanistan, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s daily briefings catapulted him into a
stratosphere of national adulation. As the Washington Post’s
media reporter put it: 'Everyone is genuflecting before the Pentagon
powerhouse… America’s new rock star.' That winter, the host of NBC’s
Meet the Press, Tim Russert,
told
Rumsfeld: 'Sixty-nine years old and you’re America’s stud.'”
"The televised briefings that brought such adoration included claims
of deep-seated decency in what was by then already known as the Global
War on Terror. 'The targeting capabilities, and the care that goes
into targeting, to see that the precise targets are struck, and that
other targets are not struck, is as impressive as anything anyone
could see,' Rumsfeld asserted. And he added, 'The weapons that are
being used today have a degree of precision that no one ever dreamt
of.'
"Whatever their degree of precision, American weapons were, in fact,
killing a lot of Afghan civilians. The Project on Defense Alternatives
concluded that American air strikes had killed more than 1,000
civilians during the last three months of 2001. By mid-spring 2002,
the Guardian
reported
, 'as many as 20,000 Afghans may have lost their lives as an indirect
consequence of the U.S. intervention.'
"Eight weeks after the intensive bombing had begun, however, Rumsfeld
dismissed any concerns about casualties: 'We did not start this war. So
understand, responsibility for every single casualty in this war,
whether they’re innocent Afghans or innocent Americans, rests at the
feet of al-Qaeda and the Taliban.' In the aftermath of 9/11, the process
was fueling a kind of perpetual emotion machine without an off
switch.
"Under the 'war on terror' rubric, open-ended warfare was well
underway — 'as if terror were a state and not a technique,' as Joan
Didion wrote in 2003 (two months before the U.S. invasion of Iraq).
'We had seen, most importantly, the insistent use of September 11 to
justify the reconception of America’s correct role in the world as one
of initiating and waging virtually perpetual war.'"
In the rest of his piece, Solomon offers a memorable exploration of
how that war on terror was never supposed to end and, despite the
endless damage it caused, never really has.
How 9/11 Bred a “War on Terror” from Hell
America's Response to 9/11 in the Lens of History
[Today’s piece is adapted from the introduction to Norman Solomon’s bookWar
Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine(The
New Press, 2023).]
The day after the U.S. government began routinely bombing faraway places,
the lead editorial in the New York Times expressed some
gratification. Nearly four weeks had passed since 9/11, the newspaper
noted, and America had finally stepped up its “counterattack against
terrorism” by launching airstrikes on al-Qaeda training camps and Taliban
military targets in Afghanistan. “It was a moment we have expected ever
since September 11,” the
editorial
said. “The American people, despite their grief and anger, have been
patient as they waited for action. Now that it has begun, they will
support whatever efforts it takes to carry out this mission properly.”
As the United States continued to drop bombs in Afghanistan, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s daily briefings catapulted him into a
stratosphere of
national adulation
. As the Washington Post’s media reporter
put it
: “Everyone is genuflecting before the Pentagon powerhouse… America’s new
rock star.” That winter, the host of NBC’s Meet the Press, Tim
Russert,
told
Rumsfeld: “Sixty-nine years old and you’re America’s stud.”
The televised briefings that brought such adoration included claims of
deep-seated decency in what was by then already known as the Global War on
Terror. “The targeting capabilities, and the care that goes into
targeting, to see that the precise targets are struck, and that other
targets are not struck, is as impressive as anything anyone could see,”
Rumsfeld
asserted
. And he added, “The weapons that are being used today have a degree of
precision that no one ever dreamt of.”
Whatever their degree of precision, American weapons were, in fact,
killing a lot of Afghan civilians. The Project on Defense Alternatives
concluded
that American air strikes had killed more than 1,000 civilians during the
last three months of 2001. By mid-spring 2002, the Guardian
reported
, “as many as 20,000 Afghans may have lost their lives as an indirect
consequence of the U.S. intervention.”
Eight weeks after the intensive bombing had begun, however, Rumsfeld
dismissed
any concerns about casualties: “We did not start this war. So understand,
responsibility for every single casualty in this war, whether they’re
innocent Afghans or innocent Americans, rests at the feet of al-Qaeda and
the Taliban.” In the aftermath of 9/11, the process was fueling a kind of
perpetual emotion machine without an off switch.
Under the “war on terror” rubric, open-ended warfare was well underway —
“as if terror were a state and not a technique,” as Joan Didion
wrote
in 2003 (two months before the U.S. invasion of Iraq). “We had seen, most
importantly, the insistent use of September 11 to justify the reconception
of America’s correct role in the world as one of initiating and waging
virtually perpetual war.”
In a single sentence, Didion had captured the essence of a quickly
calcified set of assumptions that few mainstream journalists were willing
to question. Those assumptions were catnip for the lions of the
military-industrial-intelligence complex. After all, the budgets at
“national security” agencies (both long-standing and newly created) had
begun to soar with similar vast outlays going to military contractors.
Worse yet, there was no end in sight as mission creep accelerated into a
dash for cash.
For the White House, the Pentagon, and Congress, the war on terror offered
a political license to kill and displace people on a large scale in at
least
eight countries
. The resulting carnage often
included civilians
. The dead and maimed had no names or faces that reached those who signed
the orders and appropriated the funds. And as the years went by, the point
seemed to be not winning that multicontinental war but continuing to wage
it, a means with no plausible end. Stopping, in fact, became essentially
unthinkable. No wonder Americans couldn’t be heard wondering aloud when
the “war on terror” would end. It wasn’t supposed to.
“I Mourn the Death of My Uncle…”
The first days after 9/11 foreshadowed what was to come. Media outlets
kept amplifying rationales for an aggressive military response, while the
traumatic events of September 11th were assumed to be just cause. When the
voices of shock and anguish from those who had lost loved ones endorsed
going to war, the message could be moving and motivating.
Meanwhile, President George W. Bush — with only a
single congressional negative vote
— fervently drove that war train, using religious symbolism to grease its
wheels. On September 14th, declaring that “we come before God to pray for
the missing and the dead, and for those who love them,” Bush delivered a
speech
at the Washington National Cathedral, claiming that “our responsibility to
history is already clear: to answer these attacks and rid the world of
evil. War has been waged against us by stealth and deceit and murder. This
nation is peaceful, but fierce when stirred to anger. This conflict was
begun on the timing and terms of others. It will end in a way, and at an
hour, of our choosing.”
President Bush cited a story exemplifying “our national character”:
“Inside the World Trade Center, one man who could have saved himself
stayed until the end at the side of his quadriplegic friend.”
That man was Abe Zelmanowitz. Later that month, his nephew, Matthew Lasar,
responded
to the president’s tribute in a prophetic way:
“I mourn the death of my uncle, and I want his murderers brought to justice. But I am not making this statement to demand bloody vengeance… Afghanistan has more than a million homeless refugees. A U.S. military intervention could result in the starvation of tens of thousands of people. What I see coming are actions and policies that will cost many more innocent lives, and breed more terrorism, not less. I do not feel that my uncle’s compassionate, heroic sacrifice will be honored by what the U.S. appears poised to do.”
The president’s announced grandiose objectives were overwhelmingly backed
by the media, elected officials, and the bulk of the public. Typical was
this pledge
Bush made to a joint session of Congress six days after his sermon at the
National Cathedral: “Our war on terror begins with al-Qaeda, but it does
not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach
has been found, stopped, and defeated.”
Yet by late September, as the Pentagon’s assault plans became public
knowledge, a few bereaved Americans began
speaking out
in opposition. Phyllis and Orlando Rodriguez, whose son Greg had died in the
World Trade Center,
offered
this public appeal:
“We read enough of the news to sense that our government is heading in the direction of violent revenge, with the prospect of sons, daughters, parents, friends in distant lands dying, suffering, and nursing further grievances against us. It is not the way to go. It will not avenge our son’s death. Not in our son’s name. Our son died a victim of an inhuman ideology. Our actions should not serve the same purpose.”
Judy Keane, who lost her husband Richard at the World Trade Center,
similarly
told
an interviewer: “Bombing Afghanistan is just going to create more widows,
more homeless, fatherless children.”
And Iraq Came Next
While indescribable pain, rage, and fear set the U.S. cauldron to boil,
national leaders promised that their alchemy would bring unalloyed
security via a global war effort. It would become unceasing, one in which
the deaths and bereavement of equally innocent people, thanks to U.S.
military actions, would be utterly devalued.
In tandem with Washington’s top political leaders, the fourth estate was
integral to sustaining the grief-fueled adrenaline rush that made
launching a global war against terrorism seem like the only decent option,
with Afghanistan initially in the country’s gunsights and news outlets
filled with calls for retribution. Bush administration officials, however,
didn’t encourage any focus whatsoever on U.S. petro-ally Saudi Arabia, the
country from which 15 of the 19 September 11th hijackers came. (None were
Afghans.)
By the time the United States began its invasion of Afghanistan, 26 days
after 9/11, the assault could easily appear to be a fitting response to
popular demand. Hours after the Pentagon’s missiles began to explode in
that country, a
Gallup poll found
that “90 percent of Americans approve of the United States taking such
military action, while just 5 percent are opposed, and another 5 percent
are unsure.”
Such lopsided approval was a testament to how thoroughly the messaging for
a “war on terror” had taken hold. It would have then been little short of
heretical to predict that such retribution would cause many more innocent
people to die than in the 9/11 mass murder. During the years to come, the
foreseeable deaths of Afghan civilians would be downplayed, discounted, or
simply ignored as incidental “collateral damage” (a term that
Time
magazine
defined as
“meaning dead or wounded civilians who should have picked a safer
neighborhood”).
What had occurred on September 11th remained front and center. What began
happening to Afghans that October 7th would be relegated to, at most,
peripheral vision. Amid the righteous grief that had swallowed up the
United States, few words would have been less welcome or more relevant
than these from a
poem
by W.H. Auden: “Those to whom evil is done / Do evil in return.”
Even then, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq was already in the Pentagon’s crosshairs.
Testifying
before the Senate Armed Services Committee in September 2002, Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld didn’t miss a beat when Senator Mark Dayton questioned
the need to attack Iraq, asking, “What is compelling us to now make a
precipitous decision and take precipitous actions?”
Rumsfeld replied: “What’s different? What’s different is 3,000 people were
killed.”
In other words, the humanity of those who died on 9/11 would loom so large
that the fate of Iraqis would be rendered invisible.
In reality, Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11.
Official claims
about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction would similarly prove to be
fabrications
, part of a post-9/11
pattern
of falsehoods used to justify aggression that made those who actually
lived in Iraq distinctly beside the point. As I shuttled between San
Francisco and Baghdad three times in the four months that preceded the
March 2003 invasion, I felt I was traveling between two far-flung planets,
one increasingly abuzz with debates about a coming war and the other just
hoping to survive.
When the Bush administration and the American military machine finally
launched that war, it would cause the deaths of perhaps 200,000 Iraqi
civilians, while “
several times
as many more have been killed as a reverberating effect” of that conflict,
according to the
meticulous estimates
of the Costs of War Project at Brown University. Unlike those killed on
9/11, the Iraqi dead were routinely off the American media radar screen,
as were the psychological traumas suffered by Iraqis and the decimation of
their country’s infrastructure. For U.S. soldiers and civilians
on contractor payrolls
, that war’s death toll would climb to
8,250
, while back home, media attention to the
ordeals of combat veterans
and their families would turn out to be fleeting at best.
Still, for the industrial part of the military-industrial-congressional
complex, the Iraq War would prove all too successful. That long
conflagration gave huge boosts to
profits for Pentagon contractors
while, propelled by the normalization of endless war, Defense Department
budgets kept spiking upward. And Iraq’s vast oil reserves, nationalized
and off-limits to Western companies before the invasion, would end up in
mega-corporate hands
like those of Shell, BP, Chevron, and ExxonMobil. Several years after the
invasion, some prominent Americans acknowledged that the war in Iraq was
largely for oil, including the former head of U.S. Central Command in
Iraq, General
John Abizaid
, former Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan
, and then-senator and future Defense Secretary
Chuck Hagel
.
The Never-Ending War on Terror
The “war on terror”
spread
to far corners of the globe. In September 2021, when President Biden
told
the U.N. General Assembly, “I stand here today, for the first time in 20
years, with the United States not at war,” the Costs of War Project
reported that U.S. “counterterrorism operations” were still underway in
85 countries
— including “air and drone strikes” and “on-the-ground combat,” as well
as “so-called ‘Section 127e’ programs in which U.S. special operations
forces plan and control partner force missions, military exercises in
preparation for or as part of counterterrorism missions, and operations to
train and assist foreign forces.”
Many of those expansive activities have been in Africa. As early as 2014, pathbreaking journalist Nick Turse reported for TomDispatch that the U.S. military was already averaging “far more than a mission a day on the continent, conducting operations with almost every African military force, in almost every African country, while building or building up camps, compounds, and ‘contingency security locations.’”
Since then, the U.S. government has expanded its often-secretive
interventions on that continent. In late August 2023, Turse
wrote
that “at least 15 U.S.-supported officers have been involved in 12 coups
in West Africa and the greater Sahel during the war on terror.” Despite
claiming
that it seeks to “promote regional security, stability, and prosperity,”
the U.S. Africa Command is often focused on such destabilizing missions.
With far fewer troops on the ground in combat and more reliance on air
power, the “war on terror” has evolved and diversified while rarely
sparking discord in American media echo chambers or on Capitol Hill. What
remains is the standard Manichean autopilot of American thought, operating
in sync with the structural affinity for war that’s built into the
military-industrial complex.
A pattern of regret — distinct from remorse — for the venture militarism
that failed to triumph in Afghanistan and Iraq does exist, but there is
little evidence that the underlying repetition-compulsion disorder has
been exorcised from the country’s foreign-policy leadership or mass media,
let alone its political economy. On the contrary, 22 years after 9/11, the
forces that have dragged the United States into war in so many countries
still retain enormous sway over foreign and military affairs. The warfare
state continues to rule.
Copyright 2023 Norman Solomon
____________________________________________________________
Norman Solomon is co-founder of RootsAction.org and executive director of
the Institute for Public Accuracy. His books include War Made Easy ,Made Love ,Got War , and most recently War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its
Military Machine (The New Press). He lives in the San Francisco area.
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