- We Must Destroy the Ideas That Led 9/11, suggested Bret Stephens in his column in The Wall Street Journal. Not only was the 9/11 plot hatched there, he writes, but it was also the place that allowed the idea to be "imagined" by Al Qaeda. Stephens is quick to add that the entire "imaginative" groundwork for Sept. 11 was laid after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan. "So imagine the sorts of notions that would take root in the minds of jihadists—and the possibilities that would open up to them—if the U.S. was to withdraw from Afghanistan in its own turn," he adds. If we lose our nerve in Afghanistan, Stephens warns that another 9/11 is imminent as he ends with a rather threatening note - "The consequence will be ashes flying again in our own streets, something to remember on the eve of another 9/11 anniversary."
- There Is Only One September Issue, suggested the editorial page editors of the Chicago Tribune. "None of us should forget how that lawless country tolerated the
development of one particularly heinous terror plot. It came to
fruition eight years ago this week, on the 11th of the month," said its editorial which was published last week.
- We Leave, We Fail Them, warns Richard Cohen who insists that the those who killed Americans on Sept. 11 ought to pay for their deeds. "Revenge also suggests a proper concern for the dead. The people who died on Sept. 11, 2001, cannot simply be dismissed, erased," he says. Cohen ends with a dramatic "sorry" to the victims of Sept. 11. "When we go -- if we go -- we will have to acknowledge that we have
broken our vow not only to Afghans who have supported us -- the
Taliban, unlike us, will get its revenge -- but also with the dead of
Sept. 11, 2001. We meant well," he writes.
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