Jan Oberg: September 11 Twenty Years Later. What The US Should Have Done

Jan Oberg: September 11 Twenty Years Later. What The US Should Have Done

© Jan Oberg 2021

September 11, 2021

Can be read together with this article which contains all the documentation

When people ask me what I think of “9/11” my answer has always been: “I have not done any research on it myself but to me the official explanation leaves too many questions unanswered, such as:

1 • Why was the discussion only about who did it and how did they do it but never about why did someone do this? If you look at the fact that the objects of the attacks were the centers of the US/world’s financial, military and political power – and not just a train station or some infrastructure – you’d have a diagnostic indicator.

2 • Why did no US Airforce plane take off from St. Andrews Air Base? The standing mission of it is to keep the air space over Washington clean and shoot down anything that should not be there within 2-3 minutes?

3 • Why did the World Trade Center Building 7 collapse the way it did, nothing hitting it?

4 • The hole in Pentagon looked more like caused by a missile than a huge passenger plane to me.

5 • Why, according to CBS, was members of Bin Laden’s family the first/only to be evacuated and take off from a US airport on the 12th (or later, sources vary)?

6 • Why was no employee fired in consequence of the fact that no defence measures were taken on 9/11?

7 • Why was 9/11 immediately defined as an act of war and NATO’s “musketeer” paragraph activated when obviously it wasn’t – no military persons were involved, no weapons except box cutters used and no international border trespassed?

8 • Why was a comprehensive motive analysis never applied: Who could have an interest in doing this terrible act when seen in the light of what later transpired: the attack on Afghanistan when no Afghan person was involved in 9/11 and that attack marking the beginning of the Global War On Terror, GWOT – now in its 20th year and no end in sight?

9. It’s hard to believe that a huge operation such as this attack could have been planned and the people trained for it without anybody in intelligence, surveillance and security intercepting it (or the system has been incredibly inefficient).

10 • Why are so many people who have questioned the official story accused of being conspiracy theorists, a clearly derogatory term that serves to stifle further discussion? *)

The consequences

1 • GWOT – history’s most stupid war.
As mentioned, we have had to witness the incredibly counterproductive Global War On Terror that has only increased terrorism by a factor of 40 at the price of the lives and unspeakable suffering of millions of people in one country after the other. (Go to the Cost of War Project at Brown University and consult the Global Terror Index). And the end of that self-defeating war is nowhere to be seen.

2 • Human rights and freedom – “fearology”
In the name of protecting citizens, formally democratic governments have clamped down on human rights and freedoms which they used to be proud of championing vis-a-vis so-called authoritarian governments. When people are getting sufficiently frightened that a terrorist lurks around any corner, they willingly accept giving up their rights and freedoms as a price for such “protection.”

3 • The surveillance society
We have been forced to now live in a surveillance society. Anybody who remembers how easy it was to board a passenger plane before 9/11 and can compare that with today’s departures knows what it means. In the name of fighting terrorism, we citizens are checked, tracked and censored in all kinds of ways – in real life and online. Where do we not have surveillance cameras now? The West has gone down an Orwellian path towards the authoritarian surveillance state as a response to less than 3000 innocent people being killed.

4 • The United States is declining and will fall as the Evil Empire
This trend is caused by an incredibly low level of intellectualism in its foreign policy circles. The idea of starting a war on and occupation of Afghanistan was politically, militarily and morally wrong from Day One – the predictable end result seen on August 15, 2021. And the idea of fighting terrorism by killing terrorists was as anti-intellectual and wrongheaded as it would be to try to eradicate a disease by killing those who suffer from it.
Sadly, NATO members, allies and friends of the United States mindlessly followed suit without asking a single question. Global leadership in the GWOT has been a manifest disaster. And the world sees it.

Interesting too?  The Migrant Caravan - Walls and Fences must come down

5 • Trust has disappeared
The immensely important trust between citizens, institutions and government has decreased as markedly as tragically. Each of us is treated as potential terrorists and the open society has closed – codes, pins, face recognition and God knows what types of documentation is now needed to process the simplest everyday transactions such as picking up a parcel at the post office. Before 9/11, it was enough that I was a known face, now personal relations and trust is zero – or rather has been squeezed out. Any stranger, asylum seeker or person in trouble could be a terrorist in disguise, right?
A particularly serious loss of trust is that related to our media. After September 11, 2001, media censorship and self-censorship has increased tremendously. You’re now supposed to frame or cancel, omit aspects and expertise and ask only politically correct questions.

6 • The term terrorism now covers only small-group terrorism, not state terrorism
Before 9/11, the discourse on nuclear weapons contained the concept of “balance of terror”. That was logical because one element in all definitions of terrorism is to harm or kill innocent civilians to achieve a political goal. Nuclear weapons cannot be used without killing thousands or millions of innocent civilians and, therefore, nuclear weapons are terrorist weapons – mega-terrorist weapons.
This means that each and every contemporary nuclear weapons state bases itself on and embraces the essential component of the philosophy of terrorism. However, that term has been disappeared and “terrorism” is now used exclusively about small groups such as Al Quaeda, ISIS, etc. State terrorism has thereby been disappeared too. And this does not relate only to nuclear weapons. When millions of people have been wounded, killed or had their living conditions deliberately destroyed as in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria etc. because of US/NATO interventionism, it is evident that we can talk of state terrorist policies. So too when it comes to the long-term effects of tight economic sanctions. More people have been killed by 13 years of the sanctions on Iraq than by military violence.

There are surely other phenomena – all negative, destructive – that can be perceived as consequences of 9/11 and the response to it. But these will do here.

What should have been done?

The question hardly a handful have asked over 20 years! What should – and could – the US have done instead in the wake of the 9/11 attacks?

All you need to have is a little imagination: Imagine that the US had not had the military capacity to bomb and occupy thousands of kilometres away? Imagine a similar attack had taken place in Sweden, in proportion to the population size, it would mean 81 Swedes killed. What would a country like Sweden – or any other country lacking a global military capacity – have done in response to a 9/11?

1 • Asked the reasonable question: “Why us?” Researchers including experts on global affairs and terrorism would have been mobilised, domestically as well as globally (and of curse also analysed who did it and how).

2 • Asked the United Nations, the Security Council and various UN organisations to condemn the attack and deliberate on how all member states could help prevent attacks like this in the future.

3 • Such a country would have asked why its intelligence and defence system had not seen it coming and why those it cooperated with had conveyed no early warnings.

4 • It would have set up a state commission to investigate what happened and decided on what must be improved in its own policies, likely leading to expanding and upgrading its embassies, intelligence and police activity, border controls etc.

Interesting too?  Lying, cheating and stealing to kill

5 • It would have sought global cooperation about intelligence, early warning and research.

6 • If the perpetrators were identified, this country would seek cooperation with others in arresting them and bring them to justice – domestically or internationally. Depending on the circumstances, the arrest would likely be the only instance of the use of military force.

7 • Starting a global war on terror, in general, would never even have been discussed among its alternatives or policy choices.

Enough as an illustration! The US could have done something like that but didn’t.

In summary…

The US chose to handle 9/11 the militarist way it did because it could. Where boots go in, brains go out.

The degree to which the GWOT is out of proportion as a “response” to 9/11 – and thereby one serial violation of international law – is hardly ever mentioned.

There is of course no way you can meet such a challenge and succeed by employing a predominantly militarist approach and ignore every diagnosis. And there is no way you can avoid persistently to investigate causes if you want solutions: Why do some people become terrorists? – that is, try to understand terrorism as a social-psychological, cultural and political, albeit criminal, phonomenon.

The United States chose the overwhelmingly wrong “re-sponse” ignoring deliberately all the “Whys?” – including the possibility that 9/11 itself could be a re-action to US global policies. It chose not to understand where in a deeper social science sense terrorism may come from and chose to mis-use the terrible even – and the world’s sympathy – as a pretext to start a series of wars from which only one little but stunningly powerful group benefited namely the Military-Industrial-Media-Academic Complex, MIMAC, while the rest of h world have lost.

This MIMAC is, beyond doubt, the largest single reason the US is declining and will fall, sooner rather than later.

The US response to 9/11 has created much more harm to the US itself and the world than anything that happened – whatever it was – on 9/11. Millions have come to suffer and died as a revenge for less than 3000 indeed tragic deaths. But how much have we cared to lots of other 3000 people perishing here and the around the world?

But if there were terrorists who wanted to destroy the United States on 9/11, the US itself certainly became their best helper.

Why has the world stood by so mindlessly and tragically when the Bush Administration chose such a disastrous policy when other policies would have been more moral and effective?

Perhaps one answer is that they did not have the intellectual capacity and the needed civil courage to oppose the false, immoral but very Western dichotomisation he promoted: You are either with us – US – or with the terrorists?

They should have been with the world.

Can be read together with this article which contains all the documentation

*) After this article was published, I came across an article by Ray McGovern – 27 years at CIA – “Plenty of Intelligence To Prevent 9/11”. I could add that and its shocking facts as point 11 above.

5 Responses to "Jan Oberg: September 11 Twenty Years Later. What The US Should Have Done"

  1. Pingback: ✅ TFF Miniblog, News & Notes 2021 - The Transnational

  2. Peter Seidelin Jessen   September 15, 2021 at 6:29 pm

    The US has always planned its wars. Its shadow government, supported by the MIMAC, continuously finds new ways of building up fear. The Americans were once again subjected to shock therapy. When US governments through the past twenty years have opposed solving the crime, it can only be because it is subject to strong economic interests. Weak presidents are being puppeted by the shadow government. The US justice system is a farce and to describe the US a democracy is the same as calling Danish agriculture sustainable.
    I agree, the MIMAC is destroying the US, and the world… and it can only go too slowly for people to recognize this.
    The mad men behind PNAC (Project for the New American Century) wanted world dominance. And 9/11 was the event that should make their dreams come true.
    Hitler and his mad men didn’t succeed. The US won’t either. But the shadow world government?

    Reply
  3. Gitte Hector   September 13, 2021 at 2:25 pm

    Thank you very much Jan!

    As always, your analysis is completely spot on.
    This is the discussion all we citizens of the world should be having.
    Our moral obligation as civilized citizens of the 21st Century is to stop the absolutely senseless and extremely expensive war on terror.
    As this article precisely points at, all that money and all that destruction has only caused the world to be a much more dangerous place, not to speak of the incredible loss of human lives that surpasses by far the lives that were sadly lost in New York on 9/11 2001. It also caused tens of millions to loose their homes and possessions, thereby triggering the largest refugee crisis in history. Despair and lost hopes and dreams have created even more terrorists, like a never ending downward spiral.
    Instead of death and destruction, these trillions of dollars could have done so much good to the world, if they had been used for peaceful means, fighting malnutrition, secure health systems that can cope with epidemics like Covid-19, contribute to the reversal of climate change, just to name a few worthy causes.

    It is overwhelming to witness so much brain death and brutal use of power in every sense. We – who are still capable of thinking clearly – must do all we can to contribute to a better world, to fight for solidary humanism, to show that there are better ways, doing our part. You, Jan, is for sure doing your part!

    Let us make Peace not War!

    Reply
    • JO   September 13, 2021 at 6:50 pm

      Dear Gitte – I am truly grateful and touched by your comment. I’ve always that that what I do is the task of any intellectual in the field. And that we must speak up – one of my mentors, Johan Galtung, always talks about Diagnosis – Prognosis AND Treatment. We are conflict doctors, but unfortunately, the fools on the hill do not even know that they need to know a few things about conflicts and peace. It’s like NATO’s S-G Stoltenberg who, no matter what stupid things US/NATO does use the mantra of Stability-Security-And-Peace. These guys have never read a book about peace and would not dare to. The peace discourse has disappeared from research, media and politics – and that will have boomeranging effects on the West. Thanks for sharing your very clear wisdom based on your experience and empathy and for taking the time to write it. Best, Jan

      Reply
  4. Pingback: TFF PressInfo # 638 – September 11: What the US should have done instead of starting history’s dumbest war – Jan Oberg

To promote dialogue, write your appreciation, disagreement, questions or add stuff/references that will help others learn more...

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.