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We Three Jerks
Tuesday, 13 April 2004
Alternate History
Gregg Easterbrook imagines what the world would be like had the Bush administration launched an attack on Al-Qaeda and Afghanistan BEFORE 9/11:
Washington, April 9, 2004.
A hush fell over the city as George W. Bush today became the first president of the United States ever to be removed from office by impeachment. Meeting late into the night, the Senate unanimously voted to convict Bush following a trial on his bill of impeachment from the House.

Moments after being sworn in as the 44th president, Dick Cheney said that disgraced former national security adviser Condoleezza Rice would be turned over to the Hague for trial in the International Court of Justice as a war criminal. Cheney said Washington would "firmly resist" international demands that Bush be extradited for prosecution as well.

On August 7, 2001, Bush had ordered the United States military to stage an all-out attack on alleged terrorist camps in Afghanistan. Thousands of U.S. special forces units parachuted into this neutral country, while air strikes targeted the Afghan government and its supporting military. Pentagon units seized abandoned Soviet air bases throughout Afghanistan, while establishing support bases in nearby nations such as Uzbekistan. Simultaneously, FBI agents throughout the United States staged raids in which dozens of men accused of terrorism were taken prisoner.

Reaction was swift and furious. Florida Senator Bob Graham said Bush had "brought shame to the United States with his paranoid delusions about so-called terror networks." British Prime Minister Tony Blair accused the United States of "an inexcusable act of conquest in plain violation of international law." White House chief counterterrorism advisor Richard Clarke immediately resigned in protest of "a disgusting exercise in over-kill."

Read the whole thing.

Marc

Posted by thynkhard at 6:26 PM EDT
Post Comment | View Comments (3) | Permalink

Wednesday, 14 April 2004 - 2:17 AM EDT

Name: Sean


I don't get it. So the options were, in this guys opinion: A)Let the twin towers be hit or B)arrest the guys and go all out total war?

And here I am just wishing the Bush administration took the terrorist threat seriously when it counted...

Wednesday, 14 April 2004 - 9:08 AM EDT

Name: Tony

This whole 9/11 commission thing has really got me agitated. Isn't the fact that the terror attacks occured proof enough that we were unprepared for such attacks. The goal of this commission was to determine where the information breakdown occured and ensuring that it doesn't happen again. It has instead morphed into a political football, seeking to place blame somewhere, anywhere.

I would like to know what measures the Bush administration could have taken that would have prevented these attacks. The Easterbrook piece above outlines one, but not all, of the options the Bush administration could have taken. They could have armed pilots, began more thorough security at airports, or even arrested individuals that they had a hunch were involved in plotting destruction. But these things could never occur without just cause, and without a terror attack, the public would simply not allow such an incursion of personal liberties.

Richard Clarke himself, during his testimony to the committee, said that even if every thing he had suggested had been implemented the day after he suggested it, it still would have not prevented the attacks.

How can we portend to hold anybody responsible (other than the perpetrators themselves and those that aided them) for these attacks?

Thursday, 15 April 2004 - 1:20 AM EDT

Name: Marc

seeking to place blame somewhere, anywhere

I think this is where the Bushies slipped up. Who got fired after 9/11? What CIA or FBI bureaucrats were publicly humiliated and sacked? How about anyone from the FAA or the Department of Transportation?


Who is the scapegoat?. You either have to throw some poor bastard like Admiral Kimmel to the wolves, or get one of your own guys to jump on the grenade, as John Poindexter did for Reagan in the Iran-Contra affair. I know Bush is big on loyalty and solidarity, but come on, somebody has to take the fall.

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