The 9/11 ‘overreaction’? Nonsense

By CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER   Friday, Sept. 9, 2011
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— The new conventional wisdom on 9/11: We have created a decade of fear. We overreacted to 9/11—al-Qaida turned out to be a paper tiger; there never was a second attack—thereby bankrupting the country, destroying our morale and sending us into national decline.

The secretary of defense says al-Qaida is on the verge of strategic defeat. True. But why? Al-Qaida did not spontaneously combust. Yet, in a decade Osama bin Laden went from the emir of radical Islam, jihadi hero after whom babies were named all over the Muslim world—to pathetic old recluse, almost incommunicado, watching shades of himself on a cheap TV in a bare room.

What turned the strong horse into the weak horse? Precisely the massive and unrelenting American War on Terror, a systematic worldwide campaign carried out with increasing sophistication, efficiency and lethality—now so cheaply denigrated as an “overreaction.” First came the Afghan campaign, once so universally supported that Democrats for years complained that President Bush was not investing enough blood and treasure there. Now, it is reduced to a talking point as one of the “two wars” that bankrupted us.

Yet Afghanistan was utterly indispensable in defeating the jihadis then and now. We think of Pakistan as the terrorist sanctuary. We fail to see that Afghanistan is our sanctuary, the base from which we have freedom of action to strike Jihad Central in Pakistan and the border regions.

Iraq, too, was decisive, though not in the way we intended. We no more chose it to be the central campaign in the crushing of al-Qaida than Eisenhower chose the Battle of the Bulge as the locus for the final destruction of the German war machine.

Al-Qaida, uninvited, came out to fight us in Iraq, and it was not just defeated but humiliated. The local population—Arab, Muslim, Sunni, under the supposed heel of the invader—joined the infidel and rose up against the jihadi in its midst. It was a singular defeat from which al-Qaida never recovered.

The other great achievement of the decade was the defensive anti-terror apparatus hastily constructed from scratch after 9/11 by President Bush, and then continued by President Obama. Continued why? Because it worked. It kept us safe—the warrantless wiretaps, the Patriot Act, extraordinary rendition, preventive detention and, yes, Guantanamo.

Perhaps, says the new conventional wisdom, but these exertions have bankrupted the country and led to our current mood of despair and decline.

Rubbish. The total costs of “the two wars” is $1.3 trillion. That’s less than 1/11th of the national debt, less than one year of Obama deficit spending. During the golden Eisenhower 1950s of robust economic growth averaging 5 percent annually, defense spending was 11 percent of GDP and 60 percent of the federal budget. Today, defense spending is 5 percent of GDP and 20 percent of the budget. So much for imperial overstretch.

Yes, we are approaching bankruptcy. But this has as much to do with the War on Terror as do sunspots. Looming insolvency comes not from our shrinking defense budget but from the explosion of entitlements. They devour nearly half the federal budget.

As for the Great Recession and financial collapse, you can attribute it to misguided federal policy pushing homeownership through risky subprime lending. To Fannie and Freddie. To greedy bankers, unscrupulous lenders, naive (and greedy) homebuyers. To computer-enabled derivatives so complicated and interwoven as to elude control.

But to the War on Terror? Nonsense.

9/11 was our Pearl Harbor. This time, however, the enemy had no home address. No Tokyo. Which is why today’s war could not be wrapped up in a mere four years. It was unconventional war by an unconventional enemy embedded within a worldwide religious community. Yet in a decade, we largely disarmed and defeated it, and developed—albeit through trial, error and tragic loss—the means to continue to pursue its remnants at rapidly decreasing cost. That is a historic achievement.

Our current difficulties and gloom are almost entirely economic in origin, the bitter fruit of misguided fiscal, regulatory and monetary policies that had nothing to do with 9/11. America’s current demoralization is not a result of the War on Terror. On the contrary. The denigration of the war on terror is the result of our current demoralization, of retroactively reading today’s malaise into the real—and successful—history of our 9/11 response.

Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for the Washington Post. His email address is letters@charleskrauthammer.com.

reader COMMENTS
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(8)
ATaxPayer2
Sep 13, 2011 at 8:48 p.m.
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War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength. --1984, George Orwell

SuperDave
Sep 10, 2011 at 11:26 a.m.
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@westorbust: The Y2K problem was real. The IT community fixed it. Yes, some media outlets over-hyped it, just like they hype everything else. That doesn't change the fact that it was real and it was fixed.

JustStoppingBy
Sep 9, 2011 at 3:30 p.m.
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westorbust, well said!

westorbust
Sep 9, 2011 at 3:03 p.m.
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What a load. Bin Laden and al Qaida were successful at one thing, bringing the US into protracted wars that help balloon the deficit, kill more Americans, cram unneeded Patriot Act laws down our throats, and spy on Americans (http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/05/...)

The "Patriot Act" has almost been exclusively used on drug convictions:
http://nymag.com/news/9-11/10th-annivers...
Over 1600 for drugs, 15 for terrorism.
Now Kruathammer thinks bankers were "greedy"? Lol. I thought that was the core of casino capitalism, what made America great, etc....?

Of course where we are now is much bigger than 9/11, but our response was a waste. It took Bin Laden 30 years to enact his terror plans on us, and it was perpetrated by Saudi's with box cutters.

Y2k was a non event, not because of IT professional working "tirelessly" to fix the problem. It mostly scaremongering on the part of 24 hour news channels with nothing else to report. What a joke.

SuperDave
Sep 9, 2011 at 9:41 a.m.
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This reminds me of Y2K all over again. IT professionals worked tirelessly (some for up to ten years!) to find and fix any problems that could occur once the year changed to 2000. Then the day finally came, problems were few, and many people said "the whole thing was made up - there wasn't a problem to begin with". These are the same kind of people who fail to see the results of the War on Terrorism.

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