Americas War on Terror Targets 76 Countries
By Tom Englehart
...Once upon a time in October 2001, to be exact Washington launched its war on terror. There was then just one country targeted, the very one where, a little more than a decade earlier, the United States had ended a long proxy war against the Soviet Union during which it had financed, armed, or backed an extreme set of Islamic fundamentalist groups, including a rich young Saudi by the name of Osama Bin Laden. By 2001, in the wake of that war, which helped send the Soviet Union down the path to implosion, Afghanistan was largely ruled by the Taliban. Bin Laden was there, too, with a relatively modest crew of cohorts. By early 2002, he had fled to Pakistan, leaving many of his companions dead and his organization, Al Qaeda, in a state of disarray. The Taliban, defeated, were pleading to be allowed to put down their arms and go back to their villages.
It was, it seemed, all over but the cheering and, of course, the planning for yet greater exploits across the region. The top officials in the administration of Pres. George W. Bush and Vice Pres. Dick Cheney were geopolitical dreamers of the first order who couldnt have had more expansive ideas about how to extend such success to as Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld indicated only days after the 9/11 attacks terror or insurgent groups in more than 60 countries. It was a point Bush would reemphasize nine months later in a triumphalist graduation speech at West Point. At that moment, the struggle they had quickly, if immodestly, dubbed the Global War on Terror was still a one-country affair.
They were, however, already deep into preparations to extend it in ways more radical and devastating than they could ever have imagined with the invasion and occupation of Saddam Husseins Iraq and the domination of the oil heartlands of the planet that they were sure would follow. So many years later, perhaps it wont surprise you as it probably wouldnt have surprised the hundreds of thousands of protesters who turned out in the streets of American cities and towns in early 2003 to oppose the invasion of Iraq that this was one of those stories to which the adage be careful what you wish for applies.
And its a tale thats not over yet. Not by a long shot. As a start, in the Trump era, the longest war in American history, the one in Afghanistan, is only getting longer. U.S. troop levels are on the rise. Air strikes are ramping up. The Taliban controls significant sections of the country. An Islamic State-branded terror group spreads ever more successfully in its eastern regions. There are, according to the latest report from the Pentagon, more than 20 terrorist or insurgent groups in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Think about that. Twenty groups. In other words, so many years later, the war on terror should be seen as an endless exercise in the use of multiplication tables and not just in Afghanistan either.
More than a decade and a half after an American president spoke of 60 or more countries as potential targets, thanks to the invaluable work of a single dedicated group, the Costs of War Project at Brown Universitys Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, we finally have a visual representation of the true extent of the war on terror.
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