Threat Analyst Ken Abramowitz is author of “The Multifront War”
Editor: Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld, President, American Center for Democracy (ACD)
See the sources for this article and more research in the Additional Reading section
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
Twenty-two years ago, America was attacked by the Islamist terrorist organization al Qaeda. The 19 perpetrators,16 of whom were Saudis, hijacked four passenger planes and crashed two into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, killing 2,750 innocent people, as well as 343 firefighters and 71 law enforcement officers, who tried rescuing the victims. The third plane crashed into the Pentagon just outside Washington DC, killing 185 people, and the fourth plane crashed in rural Pennsylvania, killing 40. Since then, more than 71,000 first responders, clean-up crews, and neighbors have been plagued with medical and psychological disorders. More than 300 of them have died in the years since 9/11. Direct and indirect costs exceeded $100 billion.
In response, President George W. Bush, armed with nearly $100 billion allocation from Congress, set out to fight Islamic terror worldwide. He ordered the attack of al Qaeda bases and their Taliban hosts in Afghanistan. In 2013, American soldiers invaded Iraq to destroy its weapons of mass destruction and remove Saddam Hussein from power. These two wars cost the lives of 6,800 American soldiers (2,300 soldiers died in Afghanistan and 4,500 in Iraq), and the US spent at least $2.5 trillion fighting radical Islamists in Afghanistan and an estimated $8 trillion for its overall war on global Islamist terrorism. Today, 2,500 American soldiers still remain in Iraq to help maintain the peace, although neighboring Iran now essentially controls the country.
In 2011, under the Obama Administration, American soldiers finally found al Qaeda’s leader, Osama Bin Laden, hiding in plain sight in his compound in Pakistan and killed him. In the meantime, an al Qaeda offshoot, the Islamist State (ISIS) tried to fill the void in eastern Syria and western Iraq. ISIS recruited 40,000 terrorists who attacked in the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe. President Trump’s 2017 initiative seemed to have ended most of these attacks.So, how are we doing 22 years later? A fair assessment of the situation would give the US government a “D minus”. Since it misjudged the situation, its policies and strategies failed to solve the problem. The US refrained from characterizing the enemy properly and avoided identifying the ideology that drives them. Despite ISIS terrorist attacks in European countries, they also have avoided identifying the doctrine behind ISIS. The US and its allies seemingly decided to keep their heads in the sand, hoping radical Islamism would disappear. However, radical Islamism or Political Islam’s two main elements – physical terror and cultural terror, also known as stealth jihad – have not disappeared. In the past twenty-two years, while we focused on physical terror but did not address cultural terror – the underlying ideology of physical terror – Islamist terrorism has remained a threat.
On August 30, 2022, twenty-one years later, none of this was considered by President Joe Biden, who ordered the US armed forces’ disgraceful retreat from Afghanistan.
So now, with millions of illegal migrants, many of whom are “refugees” from Islamist terror-ridden countries, flooding the US, and with more than one million “gotaways” among them, who may be potential terrorists, we at Save the West are worried. We encourage all Americans to remember 9/11 and demand that the Federal government fulfill its obligation, as required by the Constitution, to protect the US borders and defend our national security.
ADDITIONAL READING:
How many people were killed in the September 11 attacks? – Britannica.com
Congress authorizes war funds and sends bill to Bush – Reuters.com
Operation Iraqi Freedom – History,Navy.mil
The true cost of 20 years of war may actually top $8 trillion -Fortune.com
Biden claims Afghanistan withdrawal ‘extraordinary success’ in address to nation – NYPost.com
8 Facts About Osama bin Laden’s Final Hideout – History.com
How many IS foreign fighters are left in Iraq and Syria? – BBC News