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The Lessons of 9/11: Still Unlearned-We are still what Osama bin Laden called a “weak horse.”
Frontpagemagazine ^ | Sep 9, 2022 | Bruce Thornton

Posted on 09/09/2022 6:22:24 AM PDT by SJackson

Twenty-one years have passed since the worst terrorist attack ever on American soil, and our foreign policy establishment and ruling elite still have not learned the lessons of that horrendous carnage. The Romans thought even fools could learn from experience, but our credentialed mavens can’t break free of their institutional orthodoxy and narratives. As a consequence, our foreign policy and international relations continue to put our national security at risk.

This misinterpretation of modern Islam’s traditional resistance to infidel hegemony began with the Iranian Revolution, the first of subsequent jihadist attacks on the U.S. that culminated on 9/11. The West filtered that religious revolution through the old ideas of anticolonialism and national self-determination encoded in the Versailles settlement. Barack Obama, in his cringing flattery of Islam during his 2009 Cairo speech, recycled this stale received wisdom, blaming “tensions” between Islam and the West on “colonialism that denied rights and opportunities to many Muslims, and a Cold War in which Muslim-majority countries were too often treated as proxies without regard to their own aspirations.”

This ahistorical orthodoxy had been explicitly rejected 30 years earlier by the Ayatollah Khomeini, who proclaimed the traditional Islamic universalist goals of the Iranian Revolution: “We shall export our revolution to the world. Until the cry ‘There is no god but Allah’ resounds throughout the world, there will be jihad.” Nor was Khomeini an outlier among Muslims. Hassan al Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood in 1928, similarly said that his designs for transforming Egypt into an Islamic state ruled by sharia law would be a “springboard for universal expansion ‘until the entire world will chant the name of the Prophet.’”

This sacred ambition was also the purpose of al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden, whose terrorism was a front in the cosmic battle, as he put it, between “two separate camps––one of faith, where is no hypocrisy, and one of infidelity.” The struggle, he added later, could never be resolved short of absolute victory, for “it is one of creed.” His declaration of war against the U.S likewise was traditional Islamic practice, as historian Efraim Karsh points out: “Declaring a holy war against the infidel has been a standard practice of countless imperial rulers and aspirants since the rise of Islam. Nor does bin Laden’s perception of jihad as a predominantly military effort to facilitate the creation of the worldwide Islamic umma differ in any way from traditional Islamic thinking.”

For example, the late-14th century writer Ibn Khaldun, one of the greatest Islamic historians and philosophers, wrote in the Muqaddimah, “In the Muslim community, the holy war is a religious duty, because of the universalism of the Muslim mission and the obligation to convert everybody to Islam either by persuasion or by force.” Despite this long tradition codified in the Koran, Hadith, and writers like Khaldun, our State Department continues to follow the “nothing to do with Islam” canard in their thinking about jihadist terror.

Oblivious to this traditional religious imperative, during the Nineties the Clinton administration didn’t take seriously enough the string of al Qaeda’s anti-American rhetoric he backed up with violent attacks on our military and diplomatic personnel. Instead, the Clinton team treated them as criminal matters, or heretical distortions of Islam by renegade Muslims, rather than as salvos in a jihad that climaxed in 9/11.

On the other hand, the George Bush administration, after its swift punishment of the Taliban in Afghanistan and Saddam Hussein in Iraq, changed the goals of those conflicts into a misguided, naïve effort to democratize peoples whose creed and its supreme law, Koranic-based sharia, are incompatible with liberal democracy and its cargo of religious tolerance, sex equality, unalienable rights, and separation of church and state. The latter was particularly myopic, given that, as Karsh writes, Islam “was inextricably linked with the creation of a world empire and its universalism was inherently imperialist. It did not distinguish between temporal and religious powers.” Muhammad could thus “cloak his political ambitions with a religious aura.”

This mistake by Bush’s foreign policy team was in part the fruit of the wrong lessons taken from the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, which arrogantly encouraged the primacy of the Western liberal “rules-based internal order” as the master political paradigm for the whole world. And this hubristic mentality persisted all the way to Joe Biden’s skedaddle from Afghanistan last year, where the U.S. had sponsored seminars on women’s liberation for Afghan males.

The next lesson still unlearned is the Western penchant for prizing materialist causes, including our own original sins of imperialism and colonialism, for the dysfunctions of other countries. This habit is often a sort of implied ethnocentrism that reinforces Western superiority by denying other cultures any agency for pursuing their own goals and distinct motivations. Hence after 9/11 all sorts of excuses for jihadist violence were proposed: from the lack of democratic freedoms and economic development, to young males’ lack of access to women and, of course, the colonialist depredations of the West against the Muslim world.

Yet this ethnocentric condescending dismissal of a civilization that for a 1000 years dominated the West––and still occupies half the old Roman Empire––is ahistorical and insulting to Muslim. In fact, Efraim Karsh observes, “Twentieth-Century Middle Eastern history is essentially the culmination of long-standing indigenous trends, passions, and patterns of behavior rather than an externally imposed dictate. Great-power influences, however potent, have played a secondary role, constituting neither the primary force behind the region’s political development nor the main cause of its notorious volatility. Even at the weakest point in their modern history, during the First World War and in its immediate wake, Middle Eastern actors were not hapless victims of predatory imperial powers but active participants in the restructuring of their region.”

And how absurd is it for the West to parade its guilt over colonialism and imperialism before a civilization that created one of history’s greatest colonial empires, and whose descendants to this day still occupy large tracts of territory once part of the Christian West? As Karsh reminds us, from the beginning Muslim armies “acted in a typically imperialist fashion . . . subjugating indigenous populations, colonizing their lands, and expropriating their wealth and labor.”

Moreover, whereas the Western colonial powers abandoned colonialism and continue to provide aid to their ex-colonies, Muslims still inhabit and rule most of the territories they conquered centuries ago: all of North Africa, Syria, Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, and Turkey had been Greco-Roman and Judeo-Christian, i.e. proto-Western, for as long as nearly 3000 years before Islam even existed.

Nor is this ancient history: Muslim Turkey still occupies Northern Cyprus, which it invaded and has illegally occupied and colonized since 1974, ethnically cleansing Greek Cypriots; destroying, looting, and vandalizing more than 550 churches; and refusing to this day to inform the Greeks about the fate of over 2000 of their compatriots who disappeared during the invasion. Bullying Israel over its “occupation” of the lands their ancestors inhabited 3000 years ago reveals the West’s shameful sacrifice of history and justice in order to pursue its own economic and ideological interests.

Finally, our ignorance of history and self-loathing global virtue-signaling have done nothing but communicate our weakness and civilizational failure of nerve. And this is another ignored lesson of 9/11. The attack was the consequence of our serial appeasement of jihadism, and our sorry history of retreats from Saigon, Beirut, and Mogadishu, that damaged our prestige and convinced Osama bin Laden that we are a “weak horse”––just as our shameful abandonment of Afghanistan last year and groveling negotiations with Iran’s theocrats have paved the way for a jihadist regime to acquire weapons of mass destruction.

And when they do, the dangerous world that threatens us will be the most important unlearned lesson of 9/11.


TOPICS: Editorial; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 911; neverforget

1 posted on 09/09/2022 6:22:24 AM PDT by SJackson
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To: SJackson

Yes and we are much weaker now…next big wave of terror is on the way no doubt…hopefully not nuclear…


2 posted on 09/09/2022 6:26:24 AM PDT by TnTnTn
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To: SJackson

The Lessons of 9/11 was merely a chapter of the main lesson plan of 12/7/41. The country forgot.


3 posted on 09/09/2022 6:29:28 AM PDT by WKUHilltopper
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; Lent; GregB; ..
Middle East and terrorism, occasional political and Jewish issues Ping List. High Volume If you’d like to be on or off, please FR mail me.
4 posted on 09/09/2022 6:30:12 AM PDT by SJackson (nations that are barren of liberties are also barren of groceries, Louis Fisher)
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To: SJackson

Its 10 years since Benghazi ... Sept 12, 2012

Will there be an anniversary attack ???


5 posted on 09/09/2022 6:34:31 AM PDT by Tennessee Nana
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To: WKUHilltopper

It was clear this country had lost its will when mosques were open on 9/12/2001


6 posted on 09/09/2022 6:48:28 AM PDT by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: TnTnTn

It is just now coming out how compromised the Saud Government was in assisting the Hijackers on 9/11. I have no doubt that everyone in the intelligence agencies and the Administration knew of the Saudi complicity and covered up for them. Thanks again Cheney.


7 posted on 09/09/2022 6:48:49 AM PDT by silent majority rising ( )
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To: SJackson

Related thought: inside the US, I think the mushy political middle sees America First patriots as the weak horse, compared to the established liberal or RINO “horses”.

Until that changes, the USA is on a path from 9/11 to the Afghan exit debacle to who knows where, as the author describes.

Weakness is provocative.


8 posted on 09/09/2022 7:18:24 AM PDT by SiGeek
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To: SJackson; Lazamataz
Compare the reaction of the USA to the attack on Pearl Harbor and the reaction of the USA to the 9/11 attack.

When Ben Laden said that America is a weak horse he was not entirely mistaken.

What weakened the USA to that extent? The Decadence of Western Civilization.

This Decadence afflicted the US left, the Democrat Party, the establishment Republican Party, Hollywood, the Federal Government and its once impeccable agencies, the American education system from kindergarten to the once stellar universities, and of enormous importance the once truth seeking free press, converting it into a shameful propaganda machine.

This Decadence is an even greater threat to the USA now than it was in 2001.

The mighty USA could never be destroyed by a foreign enemy, but it can be destroyed from within, and the forces who seek to destroy the USA are determined and have had remarkable successes.

Can a nation reverse decadence and its destructive effects once it has set in--and restore itself to ascendancy?

Certainly there is a point of no return, but Donald Trump believed that his beloved USA had not yet reached that point. He believed it enough to risk everything--a considerable amount in his case--to bring the USA back from the brink of destruction and restore her to ascendancy. That's what MAGA--Make America Great Again--means.

Those who oppose MAGA oppose making America great again--bringing America back from the brink of destruction and restoring her to ascendancy.

Who will win this Manichaean struggle between good and evil, which is in fact the battle for the soul of America?

Time will tell.

9 posted on 09/09/2022 7:47:47 AM PDT by Savage Beast (Americans DESPISE the corrupt elites, their media toadies and their corruption of the US government!)
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To: Savage Beast

Food for thought.


10 posted on 09/09/2022 12:14:12 PM PDT by miserare ( Impeach Joe Biden!)
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To: Savage Beast

“This Decadence afflicted the US left, the Democrat Party, the establishment Republican Party, Hollywood, the Federal Government and its once impeccable agencies, the American education system from kindergarten to the once stellar universities, and of enormous importance the once truth seeking free press, converting it into a shameful propaganda machine.”

Need I mention those talking about The Endless War? Or the administration that signed off on the Doha (surrender) agreement?


11 posted on 09/09/2022 2:04:48 PM PDT by Valin
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To: SJackson

George Bush took a payoff from the Saudi’s.
How do you explain why he allowed the enemy to leave the USA within a few days by plane while stopping Americans from flying?


12 posted on 09/09/2022 4:57:39 PM PDT by minnesota_bound (Need more money to buy everything now)
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To: SJackson

And we’re destroying ourselves faster now than he ever could have.


13 posted on 09/09/2022 5:02:21 PM PDT by jughandle
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