What 9/11 Wrought
The former editor of the New York Times considers the effects of the terrorist attacks on the 10th anniversary of the fateful day
- By Joseph Lelyveld
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
In more ways than one, such distancing has been a strategy. The primary point of the global war, after all, had been to pursue and engage terrorists or would-be terrorists as far as possible from our shores. After nearly ten years in Afghanistan and eight in Iraq, our war planners may say the world is better without the Taliban in Kabul or Saddam Hussein in Baghdad, but it’s the conclusions Afghans and Iraqis will draw that should count, after years of living with the possibility of sudden death or ghastly injury to themselves or their loved ones. That’s to acknowledge that many more Afghans and Iraqis have died in our war than Americans. Probably it could not have been otherwise, but that obvious calculation is one we seldom have the grace to make. We pride ourselves on our openness and plain speaking, but we have shown we can live with a high degree of ambiguity when it serves our interests; for instance, in our readiness to turn a blind eye to inimical efforts of our allies—a Saudi autocracy that pours untold millions into proselytizing campaigns and madrassas on behalf of militant Wahhabi Islam, and the Pakistani military, which allowed the worst examples of nuclear proliferation on record to be carried out on its watch, which still sponsors terrorist networks, including some that have clashed with our troops in Afghanistan, and which almost certainly harbored Osama bin Laden until he was hunted down this past May by Navy Seals in a garrison town about an hour’s drive from Islamabad. We need access to Saudi oil, just as we need Pakistani supply routes to Afghanistan and tacit permission to conduct drone attacks on terrorist enclaves on the frontier. These are matters that we, as a people, inevitably leave to hardheaded experts who are presumed to know our interests better than we do.
A skeptical journalist’s way of looking at the past decade leaves out much that might well be mentioned—the valor and sacrifice of our fighters, the round-the-clock vigilance and determination (not just the transgressions) of our thousands of anonymous counterterrorists, the alacrity with which President Bush reached out to Muslim Americans, his successor’s efforts to live up to his campaign pledges to get out of Iraq and turn the tide in Afghanistan. That said, if history permitted do-overs, is there anyone who would have gone into Iraq knowing what we now know about Saddam’s defunct programs to build weapons of mass destruction, let alone the level of our casualties, sheer cost or number of years it would take to wind up this exercise in projecting our power into the Arab world? True, under various rubrics, our leaders offered a “freedom agenda” to the region, but only a propagandist could imagine that their occasional speeches inspired the “Arab spring” when it burst forth this year.
As we enter the second decade of this struggle, we have gotten out of the habit of calling it a global war. But it goes on, not limited to Afghanistan and Iraq. How will we know when it’s over—when we can pass through airport security with our shoes on, when closing Guantánamo is not unthinkable, when the extraordinary security measures embodied in the renewed Patriot Act might be allowed to lapse? If, as some have suggested, we’ve created a “surveillance state,” can we rely on it to tell us when its “sell by” date has arrived? On the tenth anniversary of 9/11, it’s possible, at least, to hope that we’ll remember to ask such questions on the 20th.
Joseph Lelyveld, executive editor of the New York Times from 1994 to 2001, has written the Gandhi biography Great Soul.
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Comments (21)
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I was really impressed by this article. I strongly agree
Posted by Meghan Dunn on September 27,2012 | 04:28 AM
I was just a wee lad when this happened. I don't remember...but I know it was an impossible time for out country and I don't know what is has done.
Posted by Oh on September 26,2012 | 07:02 PM
The problem is not 9/11. The problem is the 9/11 decade. Before 9/11 I would have regarded the physics of skyscraper as beneath the notice of physicists. But since then when has the physics profession demanded to know the distributions of steel and concrete down the buildings and explained the importance of that information in analysing any supposed collapse from the top? Since 9/11 Science is History. Physicists should stop talking about Galileo unless they want to be accused of being hypocrites.
Posted by umbrarchist on January 29,2012 | 12:52 PM
Mr. Lelyveld suggests in retrospect we overreacted and overreached in our 9/11 response (“there has been no large-scale recurrence of the original outrage on our territory”) and that our civil liberties and individual rights have since been eroded and coarsened.
I would suggest Mr. Lelyveld’s progressive view is not shared by a commanding majority of U.S. citizenry who evidently feel it is/was better to be safe than sorry.
Sincerely,
R. Kane Rufe
Posted by RKRufe on October 5,2011 | 12:55 PM
As a subscriber to Smithsonian magazine for decades, I must ask myself if I have been naive and/or unatttentive. Since when is the Smithsonian a partisan promoter. Or, perhaps the Smithsonian editorial staff was just acting out of "profrssional courtesy" to an undserving author.
Posted by William G Geisert on September 20,2011 | 07:29 PM
Two things:
One, this article did not mention that the 9/11 attacks sparked the interfaith movement. Oh, sure, there had been interfaith programs before, but not on such a scale. In Eugene OR, interfaith prayer services have been ongoing since October 11, 2001.
Two, a great many of us are at risk for the backlash by the ignorant. For stories from the backlash, please see www.unheardvoicesof911.org.
Blessings,
Siri Kirpal Kaur Khalsa, founder of the Oneness Coalition
Posted by Siri Kirpal Kaur Khalsa on September 20,2011 | 05:53 PM
I am distressed that Smithsonian stoops to such biased political editorializing. Shame on the editors. I am chagrined that the magazine's mission apparently includes liberal political positioning. I don't need that because it is around 24/7 on TV, radio and in other print media. Because the Smithsonian belongs to all the American people, current politics and one-sided political viewpoints should be off limits.
The most offensive statement by Lelyveld is that quoted above by Shelli Mann--that the more privileged and better educated among us have no relationship with the thousands of service members killed or grieviously wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. What elitist drivel! Most Americans (regardless of privilege and education) do not directly know the thousands killed or injured on 9/11, but we still feel the loss and the grief of those who did.
Posted by Joanne Fenton on September 19,2011 | 05:53 PM
As a family member with both a son and husband serving in our military, I found this article very offensive. I believe that we have not been attacked since 9/11 because of the things we did!
I will not be renewing my Smithsonian Membership that expires this month. When I became a member, I believed that Smithsonian was not political and until this issue it has mostly held true. I am very disappointed.
Sincerely,
Lisa Chantiny
Posted by Lisa Chantiny on September 19,2011 | 05:20 PM
I congratulate the Smithsonian for this article. It reminds me that more than our country was attacked on 9/11. Our way of life and our ideals were attacked. The principles on which our country was founded were attacked. To the extent that WE were willing to stand by and see our ideals subverted, WE allowed the attackers to suceed.
Posted by Br Christopher Buck FSC on September 16,2011 | 05:59 PM
In the runup to 1/1/2000 I was working in high tech and part of a team getting computing systems at a financial company ready for the change of century. We worked steadily for two years changing old systems and anticipating scenarios where trading partners were lax in their own efforts. When the calendar rolled over, everything worked as planned; no problems. And then we heard the bystanders' chorus of "see, there was nothing to worry about", "the whole thing was overblown", etc. Of course, if we hadn't spent that effort over two years, there would have been a crash and the same people would have accused us of not doing our job.
And now come the terrorism "experts" telling us the same sort of thing about the aftermath of 9/11. Mr. Lelyveld wants us to bellieve that there is really no serious threat since there have not been any incidents on the scale of 9/11 since. This would be a good argument if the world operated on Mr. Lelyveld's ideology. Unfortunately, reality intrudes and this narrow minded polemic serves only to rally the ideological troops but is not a basis for any real world policy. Let us instead honor the thousands of people who have worked tirelessly (and thanklessly) for the past decade to prevent many major and minor incidents.
The New York Times long ago squandered its reputation because of editors like Mr. Lelyveld, but please don't let Smithsonian go down the same path.
Jerome Cohn
Haverhill, MA
Posted by Jerry Cohn on September 14,2011 | 02:37 PM
Joseph Lelyveld, congratulations for you article.
Posted by Luciana on September 12,2011 | 06:32 PM
In conjunction with this piece, I highly recommend George Packer's essay in the current (September 12) New Yorker titled "COMING APART After 9/11 transfixed America, the country's problems were left to rot".
Posted by H. Richard Penn on September 12,2011 | 01:55 PM
The 9/11 'backlash' that never came.
The news and entertainment media tend to invent a fictional world that justifies and elevates their counter-position to it. I am always suspicious of the journalistic habit of using "we" when referring to, presumably, a majority of Americans. For example, I do not believe that many Americans demanded that the U.S. launch two wars on the other side of the world.
Two things I remember most about the media coverage on 9/11 was of course, first, the sickening horror of the lead story. But I also remember the second story, the almost universal expectation that Americans, obviously white males, were going to go berserk and inflict some terrible "backlash," like perhaps running wildly, ax handles in hand, through Arab restaurants. As you would expect in a nation of hundreds of millions, reporters did manage to scrape up a few pathetic examples, but basically that terrible backlash never occurred.
And yet no one asked what that non-backlash told us about the media and others who always assume this default image of average Americans, that we are simmering with latent 'hate' and 'fear'--and whom does this false image serve?
We are not responsible when mass murderers attack us, but the dangers of such attacks and expanding police powers grow as long as the U.S. continues to be a vast borderless multicultural empire. Or to borrow from Yeats, “the center cannot hold.”
Posted by Thomas Andres on September 11,2011 | 05:37 PM
I, too, believe this is the best thing I've read/heard about the aftermath of 9/11. With journalistic integrity, he is critical of our country's response and he calls us and our leaders to a moral accountability worth pondering.
Posted by Jo Page on September 10,2011 | 06:05 PM
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