2010年1月3日星期日

The first anti-terrorism decade for the US

A 23-year-old Nigerian man called Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab intended to detonate a bomb on a flight heading to Detroit, US on Christmas day. Fortunately, it failed.

For the US, the first decade in 21st century is an anti-terrorism decade.

Beginning with “911” in 2001, ending with “Christmas bomb” in 2009, the US devoted much to anti-terrorism during this period. However, does it work?

Saddam Hussein does not have weapons of mass destruction. Al-Qaeda is still free to do whatever they want. What is most disappointing is that more and more people are dying because of the war resulted from America’s anti-terrorism declaration.

War could bring in peace, but there’s a high price to pay for it, such as people were dead, and houses were destroyed.

Is it necessary for the US to start wars under an anti-terrorism declaration?

In other words, is the boundary between justice and evil clear enough for America to lead the war, even despite whether they are fully prepared?

In general, the first anti-terrorism decade is unsuccessful, so where would the anti-terrorism move led by the US head to next decade?

1 条评论:

  1. My name is Jingjing too, and my blog is titled "On the way" as well. Nice to meet you.

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