freediver wrote on Apr 25
th, 2014 at 11:51am:
Quote:Slight difference - I didn't say that Tim McVeigh had "widespread" support amongst non-muslims.
Islamic terrorists have enough support to pull of 9/11. How many Muslims do you think were involved behind the scenes in orchestrating it? 10? 100? 1000? 10000? A bit different from Tim McVeigh don't you think? Perhaps even a bigger threat?
Depends. If your measurement of terrorism is the number of deaths, Timothy McVeigh is well up there.
Most orchestrated suicide bombings in places like Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, etc, actually cause minimal damage and death when compared to military strikes, conventional bombings and what we optimistically term, "troop surges" in civilian populations.
Their horror of terrorism comes in the randomness of the attack. This is its strength - a strength known by guerrilla fighters from Geronimo to Mao Tse Tung.
The scale of September 11 was not the number of deaths, but the sheer audacity of an attack on the centre of global trade. As everybody knows, the 3000 odd deaths on September 11 pails.in comparison to any single US bombing campaign in history, "surgical strikes" or not, for "good" reasons or not.
The scale of September 11 was purely symbolic. A beautiful day, two jumbo jets flying into twin towers, people jumping from the windows. Most importantly, it was symbolic because of
where it struck: the very centre of the world.
We’ve been watching war in real time since TV news got the lightweight cameras to film it. We’ve watched death close up on the nightly news in Vietnam, tthe Faulklands, the Gulf Wars and the Balkans. Such death is always impossible to empathise with - how can you feel for hundreds of thousands of civilian "casualties"? Such death is so far from home.
But on September 11, I saw people crying at the senseless death and destruction. It shocked us. Many didn’t turn up for work. September 11 was a strike on
us.No one shed a tear when the US innvaded Panama in the late 1980s, fire bombed the barios and took out tens of thousands of the world’s poorest shanty dwellers in one afternoon. Actually, no one knew. The news only reported the invasion when the US got Norreiga in cuffs.
Such is the power of terrorism. It makes the news, it’s random.and unexpected, and it stops business. Car bombings in Iraq mean bugger all - the "real" terrorism has to strike at our existence.