How 9/11 turned US into a fading global power
In its attempt to spread freedom, US midwifed worse terrorists than those it fought
I’ll always remember Sept. 11 as something that happened in the evening. At the time I was living in a town in northern India, and I watched the towers fall on a TV someone had dragged into the street. Because I was so far away, I’ll never know the terror people in New York and Washington felt on that day, the fear that more attacks were coming, that the epic disaster movies so popular during the bored ‘90s had come viciously to life.
But I’m pretty certain that amid all the apocalypticism of that time, most people felt confident in America’s endurance. Yes, al-Qaida had pulled off something spectacular. The scale of it made Osama bin Laden’s threat to US seem far greater than, in retrospect, it really was. Many people felt like a civilizational battle on par with World War II had commenced.
Damage to US was profound
America’s horror and distress, however, was tinged with dark excitement. Plenty of influential people seemed thrilled to shed their post-Cold War ennui, to feel the nation charged with new purpose. They thought themselves cleareyed but were in fact devastatingly naive.
The writer Christopher Hitchens, speaking in 2003, captured the spirit of the time. “Watching the towers fall in New York, with civilians incinerated on the planes and in the buildings,” he said, he felt something he didn’t grasp at first. “I am only slightly embarrassed to tell you that this was a feeling of exhilaration. ‘Here we are then,’ I was thinking, in a war to the finish between everything I love and everything I hate. Fine. We will win and they will lose.’” We didn’t win. The danger jihadi terrorism posed to our country, while serious, was never truly existential; al-Qaida fell apart shortly after its greatest triumph. Yet the damage Sept. 11 did to the US was more profound than even many pessimists anticipated.
The attacks, and our response to them, catalysed a period of decline that helped turn the US into the debased, half-crazed fading power we are today. America launched a bad-faith global crusade to instill democracy in the world and ended up with our own democracy in tatters.
Bin Laden didn’t build the trap that America fell into. We constructed it ourselves. For all the harm Sept. 11 did to America, it did not initially accomplish what Bin Laden intended it to. Nelly Lahoud, a senior fellow in New America’s International Security program, has analysed thousands of pages of Bin Laden’s internal communications, seized after Navy SEALs killed him in 2011. As she reported in a recent essay in Foreign Affairs, they were a chronicle of mistaken assumptions, disorganisation and disillusionment. Bin Laden, wrote Lahoud, “never anticipated that the US would go to war in response to the assault.” Instead, he expected that a huge anti-war movement would demand the withdrawal of American troops from Muslimmajority countries. He hated America but didn’t understand it at all.
“The 9/11 attack turned out to be a Pyrrhic victory for al-Qaida. The group shattered in the immediate aftermath of
We launched hubristic wars to remake the world and let ourselves be remade instead. We midwifed worse terrorists than those we set out to fight. We thought we knew what had been lost on Sept. 11. We had no idea.
the Taliban regime’s collapse, and most of its top leaders were either killed or captured,” Lahoud wrote. Those that survived went into hiding. America could have credibly declared itself the war’s winner at the end of 2001, sparing countless lives and our national honour.
Sowing more chaos
Instead, we remained in Afghanistan and invaded Iraq, where our war sowed chaos that would enable the rise of Daesh. In time Daesh, originally a spin-off of al-Qaida, came to eclipse the group founded by Bin Laden. Daesh’s indiscriminate brutality, especially against other Muslims, appalled an earlier generation of jihadists; some of al-Qaida’s original leadership ended up like many other ageing, disillusioned radicals, disgusted by the excesses of their progeny.
But this doesn’t mean Bin Laden failed. Today al-Qaida has reconstituted itself — it is now far larger than it was two decades ago. And the US in Sept. 2021 is in truly terrible shape. Twenty years ago we were credulous and blundering. Now we’re sour, suspicious and lacking in discernible ideals. “The advance of freedom is the calling of our time; it is the calling of our country,” George W. Bush said in 2003. But this epoch of aggressive jingoism, ethnic profiling, escalating paranoia, torture, secret prisons, broken soldiers, dead civilians and dashed imperial dreams have left freedom in retreat both globally and here at home.
Bush’s own political party has radicalised against democracy. Faith in human freedom has curdled into the petulant solipsism of the anti-vaxxers. Since 9/11, more Americans have been killed by farright terrorists than by jihadists.
You can’t draw a straight line between the twin towers falling and America entering a protracted nervous breakdown; the end of any empire has multiple causes. Now, as the 20th anniversary of Sept. 11 arrives with the Taliban back in power in Afghanistan, America is face to face with its defeat. In truth, the immediate collapse of the American-supported government probably saved many Afghan lives. If a Taliban victory was all but inevitable, as intelligence analysts apparently assumed, it’s probably better that it happened without a long siege of Kabul.
But the lack of a decent interval between America’s withdrawal and a Taliban takeover, besides being a tragedy for Afghans allied with us, revealed America’s longest war as worse than futile. We didn’t just lose to Taliban. We left them stronger than we found them.
The sheer waste of it all is staggering. Twenty years ago, American politicians and intellectuals, traumatised by an unprecedented act of mass murder and notso-secretly eager to see history revved up again, misunderstood what 9/11 represented. We inflated the stature of our enemies to match our need for retribution. We launched hubristic wars to remake the world and let ourselves be remade instead. We midwifed worse terrorists than those we set out to fight.
We thought we knew what had been lost on Sept. 11. We had no idea.