Bin Laden’s ‘victory’ will come with the victory of Islam…it’s not over yet.
 
Bruce
 
 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/11/AR2006091100
880.html
 
Bin Laden's Victory
By Richard Cohen
Tuesday, September 12, 2006; A23
NEW YORK -- I hear Osama bin Laden laughing. I heard him all day on Sunday
and Monday as the mass murder of Sept. 11, 2001, was memorialized at the
Pentagon and in that field in Pennsylvania and especially here, where the
most people died and where countless cameras recorded it all for posterity
and an abiding, everlasting anger. He laughs, the madman does, whenever
George Bush says, as he has over and over, that America is "winning this war
on terror." Bin Laden knows better. He has already won.
It is not merely that bin Laden has not been captured or killed and that
videotapes keep coming out of his hideout like taunts. It is, rather, that
his initial strategy has borne fruit. It was always his intention to draw
the Americans into Afghanistan, where, as had been done to the Soviets, they
could be mauled by the fierce mujaheddin. He tried and failed when he blew
up the USS Cole off Aden at 11:15 a.m. on Oct. 12, 2000, killing 17 sailors
and crippling the ship. But he succeeded beyond his wildest expectations
when the United States responded to the Sept. 11 attacks by invading
Afghanistan and, in a beat, then going to war in Iraq. It remains mired in
both countries to this day.
>From bin Laden's standpoint, this has been a glorious victory, made
possible, it has to be said, by the totally unforeseen incompetence of the
Bush administration. It was so intent on going to war in Iraq that it would
not finish the job in Afghanistan. So, to bin Laden's absolute amazement --
I am guessing here -- the United States took on his enemy, the secular and
ungodly Saddam Hussein, whom bin Laden himself would gladly have murdered.
It has to be a wonderful thing when your enemy vanquishes your enemy.
On "Meet the Press" on Sunday, Dick Cheney said that if he had it to do all
over again, he would still go to war in Iraq -- "we'd do exactly the same
thing," he said. Why? Is the man incapable of learning from experience? We
now know from umpteen reports that there was no link between bin Laden and
Hussein. We now know, the Weekly Standard notwithstanding, that Mohamed Atta
did not meet in Prague with someone from Iraqi intelligence. We now know
that Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction and that the Iraq war --
which has cost America more than 2,500 lives, 20,000 casualties, the respect
of the world and billions of dollars -- is for naught. Talleyrand said of
the Bourbons that they forgot nothing and learned nothing. It will be said
of Cheney that he forgot everything and learned nothing.
How did bin Laden get so lucky? How did he get so fortunate in his choice of
enemies? The Bush administration not only validated his wildest dreams --
dreams that even some of his aides thought were unrealistic -- but went even
further. By using torture, by the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison, by employing
"extraordinary renditions" of suspects to countries where they could be
tortured, by insisting on going it almost alone in Iraq, by telling the
international community to shove it, by declaring a war for an idée fixe --
this fierce obsession with Hussein goes back a long way -- the United States
has made itself reviled in much of the world.
And here at home, here in the United States of America, it will be a long
time before lots of people trust their government again. Little wonder that
16 percent of respondents said in a recent poll that it was "very likely"
that the government played some role in the Sept. 11 attacks to justify a
war in the Middle East. This is a shocking figure, a measure not just of
irrational thinking but of the cost of the Bush administration's mauling of
the truth in its mad march to war. Bush has damaged his country more than
bin Laden ever could on his own.
I was here on Sept. 11, 2001 -- downtown when the twin towers collapsed. My
instantaneous reaction -- the thought that came to my mind as I heard the
sound of the buildings coming down -- was for revenge. I would, to this day,
kill Osama bin Laden with my own hands. But as much as I hate the man, I
have to recognize that from his vantage point, from his mountain fastness
somewhere on the Pakistan-Afghanistan frontier, he has won. What he had set
out to do, he has done. That is more than we can say.


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