The main legacy of 9/11 has been less anything that
terrorists have done to us than what we have done to ourselves, and to others,
in response. On balance the legacy has not been beneficial
In thinking about the
significance and consequences, a decade and a half later, of the terrorist
attacks known as 9/11, it is best to begin with what the attacks did not
mean—despite what voluminous commentary ever since the event might lead one to
believe.
The attacks did not mark a major change in
security threats faced by the United States or anyone else. Americans were not
suddenly more in danger on September 12, 2001 than they had been on September
10, even though the reactions of many Americans would suggest that they were.
Nor was one spectacular, lethal, and lucky shot to be equated with a larger
threat that can be thought of in strategic terms, or with sudden revelation of
such a threat. Those whose job was to assess such things, including those in
U.S. officialdom, had communicated prior to 9/11 their
clear understanding of the strategic threat represented by Bin
Ladin's variety of international terrorism.
September 2001 did not mark the advent of
a substantially greater vulnerability of the U.S. homeland, and certainly not
an existential one. The techniques involved were not at all comparable in that
regard to the introduction of the long-range bomber and the intercontinental
ballistic missile.
Nor did September 2001 mark the beginning of serious counterterrorist efforts
by the United States, notwithstanding the larger amount of resources thrown at
the problem in the wake of 9/11. There was a lot of counterterrorism going on
before, especially in the 1980s and continuing into the 1990s. The available
tools and elements of counterterrorism have remained essentially unchanged from
those earlier periods, apart from a few technological developments such as
those involving unmanned aerial vehicles.
The biggest changes brought about by 9/11
instead involved public perceptions and emotions, and consequently the
political treatment of subjects that those perceptions and emotions involved.
The politics riding on public fears have been far more consequential than any
external reality about what terrorist groups are up to. And much of the public
perceptions have been inaccurate, as indicated by the way those perceptions
about terrorist threats changed from September 10 to September 12.
Even the public perceptions about
terrorism have not been a one-way progression. There has been some of the same
swinging of the pendulum of public preferences as seen after previous major
terrorist incidents. Although the swing after 9/11 was substantially higher
than usual, we have already seen some of the pendulum's return in the opposite
direction. Some measures taken and quietly accepted by Congressional overseers
in the name of counterterrorism in the earliest years after 9/11, including
bulk collection of electronic data by government agencies and torture of
captives, later became subjects of controversy or condemnation.
The shock effect of 9/11 suddenly made the
American public much more militant and more willing than before to assume costs
and take risks in the name of national security. This was an emotional
response, little diverted or contained by more sober calculation of what really
would enhance national security, and with little attention to how some could
exploit the emotions for other purposes.
The single most consequential result of all of this was
the launching in 2003 of the war in Iraq. Although Iraq had nothing to do with
9/11, the surge in public militancy made it politically possible for the first
time for neoconservatives to implement this longstanding item on their agenda.
The damage, including to matters related to U.S. national security, has been
vast, including trillions in expenditures, the igniting of a continuing civil
war in a major Middle Eastern state, the stoking of region-wide sectarian
conflict, and—as far as terrorism is concerned—giving birth to the group now
known as ISIS.
U.S. military intervention in Afghanistan was another
legacy of 9/11, of course. Unlike Iraq, it was related to 9/11 with regard to
Al Qaeda's presence in Afghanistan under the Taliban. But years ago, the
intervention morphed from a counterterrorism operation into more of a
nation-building operation. And now it has become America's longest war.
Concepts offered by the intelligentsia, and not just
emotions felt by the public, have been substantially affected by 9/11. After
much groping since the end of the Cold War for ways to characterize, in a
satisfyingly simple manner, both an era and a global U.S. mission, the fight
against terrorism finally seemed to fill the bill. The unfortunate “war on
terror” metaphor much affected policy discourse and thus policy itself.
Counterterrorism came to be thought of in chiefly military terms, and
conceiving of a war against a tactic meant a war without either geographic or
temporal limits.
The aforementioned responses and effects will have more
lasting consequences than the enhanced investigative powers, such as those in
the Patriot Act, that have received much attention. There is natural resistance
in American tradition and habits of thought to such enhancement. There is not
comparable resistance to fighting endlessly a foreign menace, even a menace
defined as a tactic.
The main legacy of 9/11 has been less anything that
terrorists have done to us than what we have done to ourselves, and to others,
in response. On balance the legacy has not been beneficial.
No comments:
Post a Comment