Posted on 10/20/2015 8:47:48 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
It is a simple and undeniable fact that the American national-security apparatus failed on September 11, 2001. How do we know? Because al-Qaeda succeeded in carrying out the bloodiest, most devastating attack on American soil in our nations history. The military, law enforcement, and intelligence assets tasked with preventing just such an attack failed. The political leaders who ultimately determine our national defense priorities failed. To state this rather obvious fact doesnt make one a truther. It does not in any way imply that George W. Bush or any other American politician was complicit in the attacks or didnt do the best he could with the information at hand. A leader can care deeply, seek with his whole heart to protect Americans, and still fail. After all, the enemy always gets a vote.
On September 11, George W. Bush failed. But the failure, of course, was not his alone. Two successive administrations failed to treat al-Qaeda as an enemy capable of inflicting catastrophic damage in Americas cities. Two successive administrations initiated and maintained policies that, quite obviously, failed to deter al-Qaeda, detect its specific plans, or locate its individual terrorists. Yes, there were ample warnings that al-Qaeda was a deadly foe the 1998 embassy bombings and the 2000 near-sinking of the U.S.S. Cole raised alarm bells throughout the national-security establishment but when the extent of the damage on September 11 surprised even Osama bin Laden, its safe to say that American leaders did not comprehend our true peril.
So when Donald Trump disputes Jeb Bushs characterization that his brother kept us safe, hes simply stating facts. The American civilian death toll to terrorism was higher under George W. Bush than for any American president before or since. George W. Bush no more kept us safe than Franklin Roosevelt kept America secure on December 7, 1941, when we suffered arguably our most catastrophic military defeat, losing most of the surface striking power of the U.S. Pacific fleet in one devastating surprise attack.
But its one thing for Trump to state facts, its another thing entirely for him to claim that he would have prevented the 9/11 attacks. On Fox News Sunday, he declared, I believe that if I were running things, I doubt those families would have I doubt that those people would have been in the country. Oh, really?
This statement is simply stunning. Hes asking Americans to believe that he would have brought a postSeptember 11 mindset to a nation that had not suffered a catastrophic foreign attack on the mainland since the War of 1812 and that he would have been able to draft, pass through Congress, and fully enforce a comprehensive new approach to immigration by the summer of 2001. Hes asking us to believe that he would have then caught the terrorists who had already been let in the country under the old immigration regime. Hes asking us to believe that his mere presence alone would have caused the State Department bureaucracy to suddenly become competent.
After all, in 2002, National Review obtained 15 of the 19 hijackers visa applications and discovered that none of them had been completed properly. None of them should have been approved. In other words, existing systems should have prevented the hijackers entry into the United States. They failed because people failed people living in a preSeptember 11 world who never imagined lower Manhattan shrouded in smoke and flames, with thousands of their fellow citizens dying in the ruin and the rubble.
The tragedy isnt that Donald Trump wasnt in charge in 2001 the tragedy is that we still havent learned from defeat, that we still dont adequately track visa overstays, that we still dont enforce our immigration laws, and that our border is still absurdly porous. The truly damaging critique of George W. Bush indeed, of both parties is that not only did our national-security establishment fail to protect us on September 11 but that it still hasnt learned the right lessons about immigration policy.
After September 11, President Bush did, in fact, keep us safe in part by pursuing an aggressive military strategy that put our troops front and center in the Middle East, striking terrorists where they live. He also implemented surveillance measures of extraordinary breadth and depth measures President Obama continued and expanded. But if we pull back from the Middle East, if we roll back our electronic surveillance, and if our border remains laughably insecure, then how will we defend our nation? Through magical thinking, happy thoughts, and festive Ramadan meals at the White House?
Yes, the Bush administration failed on September 11. No, theres no real evidence a President Trump would have fared any better. And neither of those statements should be the least bit controversial or relevant for the 2016 election. The real issue is far more practical: Which candidate is best equipped to drag the entire national-defense apparatus including (but not limited to) our immigration system into the postSeptember 11, post-ISIS reality? Which candidate is best equipped to learn from the undeniable mistakes of the past and change the unjustifiable foolishness of the present?
Trumps best argument is that hes learned from the past, but the past also teaches us that hubris can be just as deadly as incompetence. Lets change course, but lets not pretend that any leader can guarantee American security.
David French is an attorney, a staff writer at National Review, and a veteran of the Iraq War.
You live in a dream world. America is not a center right country. Urban America is socialist and California is as well. It’s not the demographics, its the citizens who make up a leftist working majority in national elections. America drifts further and further left because people like free stuff and they do not have the balls to confront dangerous foes or even acknowledge them. There is no way to reverse that left wing inertia.
A conservative may be elected in 2016 but no matter who it is the march to the left will continue inexorably.
“Here is a scary thought for Halloween...
Bush41-gave usBJ Clinton
Bush43-gave usBuraq Hussein Obama
Bush,Jeb-what will he give us????”
A one way ticket to h*ll.
Here is a scary thought for Halloween...
Bush41-gave usBJ Clinton
Bush43-gave usBuraq Hussein Obama
Bush,Jeb-what will he give us????
= = = = = =
NO BORDER WITH MEXICO!
SE HALBA ESPANOL?
When it comes to rubber-stamping visas for those unqualified hijackers and countless others foreignors, it was not "bureaucratic incompetence" but a deliberate government "immigration policy" begun under Clinton and not stopped by GWB.
After seeing that "immigration policy" - requiring bureaucrats to ignore the legal standards in place to screen foreigners coming to the US - advanced even further with 7 years under the Obama regime, I would think all FReepers would have wakened up to that fact!
National Review is in the tank of Jeb, Kasich, or any RINO will do. Don’t need to read anymore.
Look, your claim is statist nonsense. Bureaucrats are mindless morons who do things like approve incomplete visa applications on a daily basis. If you think Trump can cure bureaucracy you’re crazy. Put a private entity in charge of visa applications with strict accountability clauses in the contract and you can solve that problem. Otherwise you can’t.
Did Amazon fire you and you came here to troll?
Well, let's see.
Bush wants amnesty and open borders.
Trump wants to deport all illegals and secure the borders.
Next question.
well, bye.
:)
Who knows if Trump would have been able to head off 9/11? Trump did write and talk about major terrorism threats to this country before 9/11. He also named Bin Ladin as someone on the radar. He was critical before 9/11. Many Freepers were also critical of open borders, fearing who might come through unquestioned. I do think Trump has the right to be critical, it is not hindsight if you brought it up before the event and were ignored.
We should all realize how horrible it would have been with Gore or Kerry. President Bush was without a doubt a far, far better President than either of them would have been. I respect President Bush for what he did. I have been critical of him for not seeing the real threat sooner, and for the fact he never seemed to equate an open border with security.
I do not have a problem with Trump being critical of Bush, in light of the fact that Trump did try to warn of terrorism threats.
he never seemed to equate an open border with security.
Why would David French, or anyone else who really believes we haven’t learned anything from the immigration lapses that led to 9/11 trash a guy who obviously (and unlike the rest of the field of republican candidates save Cruz) is not beholden to the cheap labor lobby and who wants to finally do something to fix our ridiculous visa system?
Adios mo Fo!
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