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Thursday, September 8, 2016

Tomgram: Engelhardt, A 9/11 Retrospective: Washington's 15-Year Air War Bombs Away! Their Precision Weaponry and Ours

September 8, 2016
Tomgram: Engelhardt, A 9/11 Retrospective: Washington's 15-Year Air War Bombs Away!
Their Precision Weaponry and Ours
By Tom Engelhardt
On the morning of September 11, 2001, al-Qaeda launched its four-plane air force against the United States.  On board were its precision weapons: 19 suicidal hijackers.  One of those planes, thanks to the resistance of its passengers, crashed in a Pennsylvania field.  The other three hit their targets -- the two towers of the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. -- with the kind of “precision” we now associate with the laser-guided weaponry of the U.S. Air Force.
From its opening salvo, in other words, this conflict has been an air war. With its 75% success rate, al-Qaeda's 9/11 mission was a historic triumph, accurately striking three out of what assumedly were its four chosen targets.  (Though no one knows just where that plane in Pennsylvania was heading, undoubtedly it was either the Capitol or the White House to complete the taking out of the icons of American financial, military, and political power.)  In the process, almost 3,000 people who had no idea they were in the bombsights of an obscure movement on the other side of the planet were slaughtered.
It was a barbaric, if daring, plan and an atrocity of the first order.  Almost 15 years later, such suicidal acts with similar “precision” weaponry (though without the air power component) continue to be unleashed across the Greater Middle East, Africa, and sometimes elsewhere, taking a terrible toll -- from a soccer game in Iraq to a Kurdish wedding party in southeastern Turkey (where the “weapon” may have been a boy).
The effect of the September 11th attacks was stunning.  Though the phrase would have no resonance or meaning (other than in military circles) until the U.S. invasion of Iraq began a year and a half later, 9/11 qualifies as perhaps the most successful example of “shock and awe” imaginable.  The attack was promptly encapsulated in screaming headlines as the “Pearl Harbor of the Twenty-First Century” or a “New Day of Infamy,” and the images of those towers crumbling in New York at what was almost instantly called “Ground Zero” (as if the city had experienced a nuclear strike) were replayed again and again to a stunned world.  It was an experience that no one who lived through it was likely to forget.
Click here to read more of this dispatch. 
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176183/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_a_9_11_retrospective%3A_washington%27s_15-year_air_war/#more

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