Deutsche Welle (English edition)

9/11, the 'war on terror' and the consequenc­es for the world

Twenty years ago terrorists challenged the world's only remaining superpower. In response, the United States declared a "war on terror." The world continues to struggle with the consequenc­es.

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Twenty years have passed since the September 11 attacks. At Ground Zero in New York, the towers of a new World Trade Center rise above the skyline, and there is a memorial to the nearly 3,000 victims of the attacks. The city has bounced back and now has more residents than in 2001. Until the pandemic, the economy was booming.

But nothing is how it was in the US, large parts of the Middle East, and Afghanista­n. The Taliban may be back, but when a terrorist attack recently killed some 170 Afghans and more than a dozen US soldiers during an evacuation operation at Kabul airport, it was the so-called "Islamic State" that claimed responsibi­lity. That organizati­on did not even exist 20 years ago when the "war on terror" began. Its emergence is closely linked to how the "war on terror" has been carried out.

"We know very well that the rise of IS was a direct result of the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003," Bernd Greiner says. In an interview with DW, the Hamburg historian explains that a large part of the initial IS fighters came from Saddam Hussein's old army. "It was disbanded by the United States from one moment to the next. That left hundreds of thousands of young men on the street with no prospects of employment. That kind of thing is humus for radicaliza­tion."

Beginning a war with box cutters

In 2001, al-Qaeda terrorists brought down the World Trade Center, a symbol of economic power, and attacked the Pentagon, the center of US military power. Those attacks traumatize­d the US. Using nothing more than box cutters, men directed by Saudi Arabian Osama bin Laden turned passenger planes into weapons. It was an unpreceden­ted humiliatio­n for a country that seemed at the zenith of its power. A dozen years after winning the Cold War following the collapse of the Soviet Union, the US seemed invincible.

After the attacks, the US was engulfed by national sorrow and had the solidarity of the entire world. Then came anger and retributio­n which found understand­ing. For the first time in NATO's history, its mutual defense clause was invoked. In a military operation legitimize­d by the UN Security Council as an act of self-defense, NATO allies overthrow the Taliban in Afghanista­n in a matter of months.

When then-President George W. Bush attacked Iraq in 2003, there was no longer any such legitimacy. There were false claims alone about Saddam Hussein's links to the September. 11 bombers and equally false claims that the Iraqi dictator was producing weapons of mass destructio­n.

The 'Indispensa­ble Nation' demonstrat­es its power

Many American politician­s saw an opportunit­y after September 11 to demonstrat­e that the US was the world's "indispensa­ble nation," says US historian Stephen Wertheim in an interview with DW. "They demonstrat­ed this 'indispensa­bility' by trying to remake an entire country and an entire region of the world."

Bernd Greiner sees another motive: "In its powerlessn­ess and impotence in the face of this type of asymmetric attack, the US wanted to demonstrat­e to the world, and especially to the Arab world that whoever messes with us in the future has forfeited his right to exist." The historian sees both wars as also being highly symbolic acts.

Supporting Greiner's thesis is the fact that just a few weeks after September 11, the White House instructed the Pentagon to draft scenarios for a war against Iraq. When Henry Kissinger was asked by George W. Bush's speechwrit­er Michael Gerson why he supported the Iraq war, he said, "Because Afghanista­n wasn't enough." America's radical opponents in the Muslim world wanted to humiliate the United States, "so we must humiliate them."

Almost 1 million war victims

The "war on terror" proclaimed by Bush became a liminal war. A war "that is not precisely defined, neither temporally nor geographic­ally. It is being waged globally," as Johannes Thimm, a US expert at the German Institute for Internatio­nal and Security Affairs defines it. The "Cost of War" project of Brown University says the US government is carrying out anti-terror measures in a total of 85 countries. Their team, consisting of more than 50 academics, legal experts, and human rights activists, calculated that in the "war on terror" a total of nearly 930,000 people have been killed directly as a result of combat operations, almost 400,000 of them civilians.

World public opinion reacted with shock in 2010 when WikiLeaks revealed the true face of the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n. And to the publicatio­n of the "Collateral Murder" video which documented the murder of civilians in Baghdad.

Damaged reputation

The reputation of the US was also damaged because it ignored the law of war. In an interview with DW, Thimm cites the official reintroduc­tion of torture under a different name. "There is also a reason why this is not called torture, but rather 'enhanced interrogat­ion techniques,' because torture is simply and unequivoca­lly prohibited by internatio­nal law."

Those violations include the detention of suspects for decades in completely lawless spaces, such as the US naval base at Guantanamo. And above all, the killing of terror suspects in drone attacks.

In an interview with DW, political scientist Julian Junk of the Hessian Foundation for Peace and Conflict Research states with regard to terrorist networks in

Europe and Germany "we can see that the extralegal methods in the 'War on Terror' have had a mobilizing effect on Salafist and jihadist groups."

An eight-trillion-dollar mistake?

According to the Cost of War, the 20-year "war on terror" has cost the US the unimaginab­le sum of $8 trillion. This could easily pay for current US President Joe Biden's infrastruc­ture program several times over. That is why US expert Bernd Greiner believes that "the US has massively damaged itself through these insane expenditur­es for the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n."

"There are so many other worthy ventures to which the United States could have directed its vast people and resources," says Wertheim, "instead of responding destructiv­ely to the September 11 attack."

This article has been translated from German.

 ??  ?? The 9/11 attacks had an impact on the world that can still be felt
The 9/11 attacks had an impact on the world that can still be felt

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