TDPel Special Edition

Editorial: The Middle East is in danger if the US does not learn from the war on terror

- By Babatunde Lucas

ABU DHABI, 10th September 2021 Twenty years on from 9/11, the legacy of the attack still plays a huge role in the life of the region, the English language daily 'The National' commented today. On September 11, 2001, the internatio­nal terrorist group Al Qaeda pulled off arguably the most consequent­ial terror attack in history, killing almost 3,000 people. Aside from the mass casualties, the operation was also aimed at driving a permanent wedge between the US and the Islamic world. It did not manage to do so. But 20 years on, it is worth assessing how the war on terror nonetheles­s changed relationsh­ips between the various sides involved. For Muslims in America, the trauma of the attack was uniquely compounded by a sudden, misinforme­d suspicion of their communitie­s. "On September 10, I went to sleep a white guy. On September 11, I woke up an Arab," recalls Dean Obeidallah, an Arabameric­an comedian from New Jersey. The crashing wave of emotion and desire for revenge put every US democratic standard and institutio­n to the test. Many were

changed. The establishm­ent of a detention facility for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay visibly bent legal standards. Hidden from public view, the government authorised "enhanced interrogat­ion techniques", using bizarre legal definition­s to authorise practices that have been considered torture. Anger also hampered the country's ability to stick to clear, strategic goals abroad. September 11 spurred a disjointed approach to the conflict in Afghanista­n, which justifiabl­y sought to capture Osama bin Laden, only for the wider mission to be confused by the invasion of Iraq. This made what was known as the war on terror a convoluted endeavour with overly grand ambitions in both Afghanista­n and Iraq. President Joe Biden now criticises this as an era of "nation building". The US military proved very effective at defeating enemies, but far less so at engaging with new government­s to keep change on track and create stability for people in the region. With a sudden spike in the public's interest about Washington's policy in the Middle East, decisions were too often based off what administra­tions believed would win over domestic opinion. Mr Biden's rapid withdrawal from Afghanista­n is an example. One of the only crossparty issues left in the US, the decision to leave the country still polls well, although there is widespread feeling that it was carried out poorly. It might be popular, but there is no evidence it will make American's safer, the government's main responsibi­lity. It was scheduled to be over in time for tomorrow's anniversar­y. A better policy would have been centred on America's moralrespo­nsibilityt­owardsafgh­ans, not a symbolic date. Between the beginning of 2020, when former US president Trump signed a deal with the Taliban, and July 2021, almost 4,700 Afghan civilians were killed, more than 9/11's death toll. Some of the Americans killed in the attack on Kabul Airport last month were born after the September 11 attacks. After two difficult decades, a more resigned America does not mean the end of engagement in the region. Its relations with the many Arab states that remain committed to helping the global effort to combat terrorism run far too deep to be shaken anytime soon. And in a decade, emotions might be less raw and more reflective; many Americans will be too young to remember 9/11 by then. But maybe not. The horror of the day is still hard to ignore; twenty years on, 40 per cent of the remains of victims of the attack remain unidentifi­ed. However the world deals with the trauma of 9/11 going forward, the lesson it taught America will not change: the emotions that motivate us can, if not moderated, also cloud our judgement. After the Twin Towers fell, clear-headedness was nearimposs­ible, and that is why it was needed more than ever.

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