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US as the aggressor
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22/09/2001 10:20:42
 
 
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Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Title:
US as the aggressor
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00559639
Message ID:
00559639
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36
Do the latest reports in the UK press put the events in the US in a different light ?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/wtccrash/story/0,1300,556279,00.html

If the report is true, could it be viewed that the attacks were not terrorism, per se, but an act of self-defence ? In the event that the Afghan government (or any other, for that matter) had issued threats of unprovoked military action against the US, would it have been acceptable for the US to take action to weaken that government - including attacks against that countries military & financial centres ?

Is it reasonable for the Afghan government, having heard the threats to its country & seen the build-up of troops in the neighbouring region (ostensibly on a training exercise), to believe that it was under significant threat & justified in taking pre-emptive action ?

Does the report change the role of the US from that of victim, to that of aggressor ? Could a plausible scenario be that the US security, military and/or government were prepared to provoke a terrorist attack in response to threats on the Taliban & Afghanistan, in order to get public backing for military action to get Bin Laden ? Could that explain the "failure" of the security services - they wanted to allow a terrorist attack, unfortunately it was bigger than expected ?

I realise I am being provocative here, but in light of the report in one of our national newspapers that US officials were paving the way for military action in Afghanistan in July, it does give rise to many questions that need answering.
Len Speed
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