Chattanooga Times Free Press

ON THE ANNIVERSAR­Y OF 9/11, RADICAL PESSIMISM IS A MISTAKE

-

WASHINGTON — America looks back this week on 9/11 and its aftermath in Afghanista­n with a mood of deep pessimism. The Taliban victory in Kabul seemed to end not just a 20-year war, but an era in American life.

This bleak assessment was shared in retrospect­ive essays this week by two of journalism’s best commentato­rs. “After 9/11, the U.S. Got Almost Everything Wrong,” was the title of Garrett M. Graff’s piece in the Atlantic. “9/11 was a test. We failed.,” read the headline on Carlos Lozada’s account in The Post.

The consensus of these and many other appraisals, at once correct and incomplete, is that America went down the wrong road after the al-Qaida attacks. The country began with a rare unity of purpose, but this gradually dissipated — in part because of mistakes abroad and internal divisions. The flags displayed from nearly every house on 9/11 became the flags used as spears in the insurrecti­on of Jan. 6, 2021.

But radical pessimism is a mistake on this 9/11 anniversar­y. These two decades witnessed many American blunders but also lessons learned. Our military commanders discovered how to project power at relatively low cost, in Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n. Despite the Taliban’s triumph, Islamist radicalism has been gradually on the wane — in Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and a half-dozen other places.

What’s indisputab­ly true is that a cycle in U.S. history has ended. I don’t just mean the post-9/11 effort to remake the Middle East by force. A larger process has been at work over the past century, as the United States gradually replaced the European colonial powers and took up their burden. This post-post-colonial era is dead, thankfully. The American people won’t stand for it anymore, and neither will the rest of the world.

On this anniversar­y, we think of the endings of other modern wars, and the sense of exhaustion and uncertaint­y that followed. Certainly, that was true after World War I, where trench warfare destroyed not just millions of soldiers, but the confident, aristocrat-led culture that had sent them to battle.

World War II brought more optimism but also anguish about how the slaughter of 6 million Jews and tens of millions of others could have happened. As Louis Menand reminds us in his superb new cultural history, “The Free World,” the triumph of 1945 was accompanie­d by horror over Nazi and communist totalitari­anism’s assault on the individual. Post-1945 America was proud but also fearful.

With the Taliban back in Kabul just 20 years after 9/11, it’s tempting to see this story as inevitable. But it wasn’t.

We arrive at the present after a series of inflection points; accidents and choices that could have gone differentl­y. The lights “blinking red” about al-Qaida’s plot could have been seen; Osama bin Laden could have been killed as he escaped into the mountains at Tora Bora in 2001; President George W. Bush might have listened to warnings from former national security advisers Brent Scowcroft and Zbigniew Brzezinski not to invade Iraq in 2003; a different American proconsul in Baghdad than Paul Bremer might not have disbanded the Iraqi army. The list goes on.

A decade ago, thinking about the U.S. war in Afghanista­n, I came across a passage from “Paradise Lost” by the British poet John Milton: “Revenge, at first though sweet, bitter ere long back on itself recoils.” The language may be archaic, but after these 20 years, we know what it means.

 ??  ?? David Ignatius
David Ignatius

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States