September 11, six years later
I woke on September 11, 2001 to the news of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and the loss of UA Flight 93 in Pennsylvania.
I went in to work that morning, but nobody was getting any work done, and I couldn't concentrate, so I went home again.
While watching the news coverage, I wrote and emailed a letter to the San Jose Mercury News and several nationally-recognized newspapers. I don't actually know if my letter was printed anywhere else, but the Mercury News contacted me later that day and printed it as a guest editorial in a special edition published on September 12.
Last year, over on Blogspot, I published the editorial as the Mercury News printed it.
That version was lightly edited, mostly for length. There were some significant points omitted, but I can't complain. It was an honor to be selected for inclusion in the Mercury News' coverage of the tragedy.
This year, I'd like to publish the original letter. Although there are minor changes I'd make in hindsight, this version is just as I sent it on September 11.
The United States has long pursued a policy of preventing terrorist attacks by watching terrorist organizations and intercepting their agents before they can act. With some notable exceptions, such as the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center and the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, this policy has been highly effective. Many other attacks have been successfully prevented.
This policy, for better or worse, is likely to be another casualty of today's attacks. The United States will now adopt the policy many of our allies follow of suppressing terrorism through direct action against suspected terrorists. We should expect to see a broad range of our police and military assets acting against suspected terrorist organizations, their facilities, and their leaders.
These actions will certainly compromise our ordinary desire to respect the rights of those suspected of criminal acts. We are likely to relax our standards of probable cause, evidence, reasonable doubt, and punishment. Our actions, in short, will follow military standards, not civilian standards.
We must accept the necessity of a military response, because today's attacks were acts of war against the United States. At the same time, we must not allow our country to fall into two traps: we must not act against foreign governments, and we must continue to respect the rights of all persons who do not represent an immediate threat to this country.
Nevertheless, there are steps we must take immediately here at home. We must take all necessary steps to secure the commercial aviation industry. Tom Clancy warned us in his book Debt of Honor of the potential for using commercial jet aircraft as weapons. We, and our allies, must consider assigning armed air marshals to every flight operating near US cities and strategic US assets overseas. We must have a way to distinguish between aircraft having ordinary in-flight emergencies and those that may have been diverted by terrorists-- and we must be willing to prevent a diverted airplane from reaching its target.
We must also reestablish a national civil defense capability. We chose not to implement an effective civil defense during the Cold War, preferring instead to rely on the policy of deterrence to prevent a full-scale nuclear war. No such war took place, and no such war is now possible. Instead, we face a threat that cannot be deterred. Only a civil defense program can protect the civilian population against this new threat. There must be well-supplied shelters in every neighborhood, proof against chemical and biological attacks. A civil defense program is also our only viable response to non-strategic nuclear attacks delivered by ships or civilian aircraft. We can't prevent such an attack, but we can be much better prepared to respond to one.
The United States also needs a strategic defense. Today's attacks were terrible, but we have other enemies who may one day gain access to strategic nuclear weapons that could cause tragedies a thousand times larger. We can, and we must, deploy a system to intercept such weapons, even if the system is not perfect.
It has long been apparent to military experts that our country is highly vulnerable to large-scale terrorist attacks. Today's attacks show that at least one terrorist organization was also aware of this vulnerability. Every terrorist in the world has now learned the same lesson. Fortunately, so have the rest of us. We must accept that our world has changed, and take the steps necessary to protect ourselves without losing sight of the democratic principles that distinguish us from the cowardly murderers who committed these despicable acts.
As I said on the Blogspot post:
Today, I would only add that when I said "we must not act against foreign governments" I was referring to legitimate governments that posed no direct threat to the US. On Sept. 11, like most people, I didn't understand the nature of the Taliban government in Afghanistan; today, I consider it to have been a terrorist organization and a legitimate target of U.S. military action.
Otherwise I think these comments are as valid today as they were six years ago.
Peter N. Glaskowsky is a technology analyst for The Envisioneering Group. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.





Know your enemy
The art of war, then, is governed by five constant factors, to be taken into account in one's deliberations, when seeking to determine the conditions obtaining in the field.
These are: (1) The Moral Law; (2) Heaven; (3) Earth; (4) The Commander; (5) Method and discipline.
The Moral Law causes the people to be in complete accord with their ruler, so that they will follow him regardless of their lives, undismayed by any danger. We have the Moral LAW THEY DON'T They think they do.
Heaven signifies night and day, cold and heat, times and seasons.
Earth comprises distances, great and small; danger and security; open ground and narrow passes; the chances of life and death. These are the battle grounds of IRAQ and IRAN.
The Commander stands for the virtues of wisdom, sincerely, benevolence, courage and strictness. We have these commanders support them.
By method and discipline are to be understood the marshaling of the army in its proper subdivisions, the graduations of rank among the officers, the maintenance of roads by which supplies may reach the army, and the control of military expenditure.
These are the things that some in congress do not understand. They need to remember they too were targets of the 9/11 attacks, but thanks to the Lord Almighty they were spared. Ladies and Gentlemen of the Congress and you to Pelosi these great men and women of our military and emergency services lay thier lives on the line everyday for people like you!
We remember the fallen brothers of the 341 FDNY on this day six years later, may we always be ever vigilant.
We will never forget!
- September 11, six years later
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by JSN2849
September 11, 2007 11:00 AM PDT
- I have no reason to question anything about this article, short of its actual veracity - but only then solely on account of the astounding amount of level-headed good sense it shows, not least in hindsight, when it claims to be written at a time when so many people were so obviously extremely emotional.
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Reply to this comment
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- Thanks, I guess
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by Peter N. Glaskowsky
September 11, 2007 2:37 PM PDT
- As for my "veracity", the piece was actually published in the San Jose Mercury News on September 12, 2001, so please do not call that into question.
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(3 Comments)The first observation is obviously that since no follow-up attack has yet been successful - well in the US, at least. The same, alas, can not be said for Bali, Madrid or London.
My only slight qualm is in whether or not I detect an slight isolationist sub-text.
I still think there are lessons from surely the most successful asymmetrical conflict - Northern Ireland (UN security council member, industrialised nation and nuclear power confronted by a minority insurgent movement within its own territorial boundaries). In the end, if you genuinely want to stop the killing, the only resolution is to face up to the grievances and actually sort them out. In the context of politico/Islamicist guerilla movements such as Al Quaida this means sorting out Palestine, and bringing peaceful transitions to democracy in states such as Saudi Arabia, Syria, Algeria, Pakistan, etc. Many will see these as a defeat and 'giving in'. Perhaps, but are they not also ultimately the right things to do? The same people will also say we are 'encouraging terrorism' but, in the meantime, surely there is also no other long-term means of discouraging or preventing further attacks and mass loss of innocent life?
I don't know what you mean by the paragraph about follow-up attacks. There's a "that since" in there suggesting a line of argument that appears to have no conclusion.
I am an "isolationist" only in the sense that I think US military power should only be used to protect the US. I think the use of that power against the Taliban in Afghanistan was justified on that basis. In retrospect it's clear that conquering Iraq did not enhance our security, but these decisions can't be made in retrospect. It seems very likely that President Bush saw what he wanted to see to justify the war, but I wasn't there, and I can't be sure about that.
Commercially, I am strongly opposed to isolationism. I favor the greatest possible degree of foreign trade, immigration, etc. on the basis that these things make us stronger while simultaneously making the world safer.
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