an obvious truth…

Posted on Wednesday 21 February 2007


The Iraq Effect
By Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank

Indeed, though what we will call "The Iraq Effect" is a crucial matter for U.S. national security, we have found no statistical documentation of its existence and gravity, at least in the public domain. In this report, we have undertaken what we believe to be the first such study, using information from the world’s premier database on global terrorism…
 
Our study shows that the Iraq War has generated a stunning sevenfold increase in the yearly rate of fatal jihadist attacks, amounting to literally hundreds of additional terrorist attacks and thousands of civilian lives lost; even when terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan is excluded, fatal attacks in the rest of the world have increased by more than one-third.
 …
One measure of the impact of the Iraq War is the precipitous drop in public support for the United States in Muslim countries. Jordan, a key U.S. ally, saw popular approval for the United States drop from 25 percent in 2002 to 1 percent in 2003. In Lebanon during the same period, favorable views of the United States dropped from 30 percent to 15 percent, and in the world’s largest Muslim country, Indonesia, favorable views plummeted from 61 percent to 15 percent. Disliking the United States does not make you a terrorist, but clearly the pool of Muslims who dislike the United States has grown by hundreds of millions since the Iraq War began.
… 
Our study shows just how counterproductive the Iraq War has been to the war on terrorism. The most recent State Department report on global terrorism states that the goal of the United States is to identify, target, and prevent the spread of "jihadist groups focused on attacking the United States or its allies [and those groups that] view governments and leaders in the Muslim world as their primary targets." Yet, since the invasion of Iraq, attacks by such groups have risen more than sevenfold around the world. And though few Americans have been killed by jihadist terrorists in the past three years it is wishful thinking to believe that this will continue to be the case, given the continued determination of militant jihadists to target the country they see as their main enemy. We will be living with the consequences of the Iraq debacle for more than a decade.

Sometimes it takes numbers to prove things that are perfectly obvious. Al Gore did it with Global Warming in An Inconvenient Truth. In this article Peter Bergen and Paul Cruickshank, research fellows from the Center on Law and Security at the NYU School of Law, document another perfectly obvious truth. Our War on Terror has significantly escalated terrorist attacks, and will continue to do so for some time – intuitively obvious, now numerically proven.

Bush’s rhetoric is backwards. We’re not fighting terrorism, we’re causing it…

  1.  
    joyhollywood
    February 21, 2007 | 8:14 AM
     

    God help us all. I want to have this paper read on all the networks and then I want Nancy Pelosi to flip flip and start impeachment proceedings.

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