8/30/2011

In an August 30, 2011, interview with Matt Lauer on Today, when former Vice President Dick Cheney was asked “if the decision to invade Iraq was still the right one given all the costs, he said, ‘Oh sure. I don’t think it damaged our reputation around the world. I just don’t believe that.’ He added, ‘It was sound policy that dealt with a very serious problem and that eliminated Saddam Hussein.’ ”

 – Peter Baker, Days of Fire, Page 647

8/31/2011

“The independent Commission on Wartime Contracting estimated in August [31, 2011] that at least $31 billion has been lost to waste and fraud in Iraq and Afghanistan, adding that the total could be as high as $60 billion. It studied not just reconstruction spending, but $206 billion for the logistical support of coalition forces and the performance of security functions. The commission found that from 10 to 20 percent of the $206 billion in spending was wasted, while fraud accounted for the loss of another 5 to 9 percent.”

 – Pauline Jelinek, “Afghanistan, Iraq Crime Increasing, According to New Report,” Associated Press, Oct. 29, 2011

9/1/2011

Aljazeera.com created an interactive chart titled “September 11: Counting the costs to America” online: “$5 trillion, and counting: Osama bin Laden spoke often of a strategy of ‘economic warfare’ against the United States, a low-level war aimed at bankrupting the world’s economic superpower.
A decade after the 9/11 attacks, it’s hard to argue that bin Laden’s strategy was ineffective.
The attacks themselves, according to the September 11 commission, cost Al Qaeda between $400,000 and $500,000 to execute.
They have cost America, by our estimate, more than $5 trillion – a ‘return on investment’ of 10,000,000 to one.”

 – Gregg Carlstrom, “Interactive: How much did 9/11 cost the US? The attacks, which cost perhaps $400,000 to execute, will cost the United States more than $5 trillion.,” Aljazeera.com, Sept. 1, 2011

9/1/2011

Aljazeera.com created an interactive chart titled “September 11: Counting the costs to America” online: “Military: $1.73 trillion
By far the largest share of America’s post-9/11 spending has been military-related.
More than half of this category, of course, is the cost of America’s ongoing wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. It is impossible to calculate the human cost of these wars, so the figures presented here focus solely on the Defense Department’s expenditures.
This category also includes large increases to the Pentagon’s baseline budget; State Department and aid spending in the two theatres of war; and the cost of providing health care for injured soldiers.”

 – Gregg Carlstrom, “Interactive: How much did 9/11 cost the US? The attacks, which cost perhaps $400,000 to execute, will cost the United States more than $5 trillion.,” Aljazeera.com, Sept. 1, 2011

9/1/2011

Aljazeera.com created an interactive chart titled “September 11: Counting the costs to America” online: “Economy: $278 billion
The economic cost of 9/11 was significant, and also difficult to measure.
Many of these items require proving a negative: How many people decided not to fly because of 9/11? How many fewer tourists visited New York? Several academic studies have explored these issues, though, and the figures presented here represent their best estimates.
The worst economic damage, of course, happened in New York City. Valuable office space was destroyed; neighbouring properties were damaged; tens of thousands of people were unable to work for days or weeks; and thousands of rescue workers could face long-term health problems.”

 – Gregg Carlstrom, “Interactive: How much did 9/11 cost the US? The attacks, which cost perhaps $400,000 to execute, will cost the United States more than $5 trillion.,” Aljazeera.com, Sept. 1, 2011

9/1/2011

Aljazeera.com created an interactive chart titled “September 11: Counting the costs to America” online: “Domestic: $540 billion
Domestic security spending – the ‘homeland security industry’ – has snowballed since 9/11.
This category is mostly driven by growth in the intelligence community and the Homeland Security Department; both of their budgets have roughly doubled in the decade since 9/11.
State and local governments have also spent billions on homeland security, much of it on expensive technology with questionable value for local communities.
One example, reported in the Los Angeles Times last month: Keith County, Nebraska, population 8,370, spent more than $40,000 on ‘a Zodiac boat with side-scan sonar’ to repel an imagined Al Qaeda ski boat attack.”

 – Gregg Carlstrom, “Interactive: How much did 9/11 cost the US? The attacks, which cost perhaps $400,000 to execute, will cost the United States more than $5 trillion.,” Aljazeera.com, Sept. 1, 2011

9/1/2011

Aljazeera.com created an interactive chart titled “September 11: Counting the costs to America” online: “Debt: $983 billion
The US government is heavily in debt, meaning Washington has borrowed trillions of dollars to finance its spending on wars and homeland security.
This category accounts for the interest on those debts related to 9/11 – war and homeland security spending, in other words.
The treasury has already paid about $183 billion in interest on its debts, according to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office. That figure will climb to nearly $1 trillion by the end of the decade, according to a study by Brown University.
Higher levels of public debt could also potentially mean higher interest rates for private and corporate borrowers in the United States, but those calculations are speculative and thus omitted here.”

 – Gregg Carlstrom, “Interactive: How much did 9/11 cost the US? The attacks, which cost perhaps $400,000 to execute, will cost the United States more than $5 trillion.,” Aljazeera.com, Sept. 1, 2011

9/1/2011

Aljazeera.com created an interactive chart titled “September 11: Counting the costs to America” online: “Future Military: $1.38 trillion
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will continue to be a drain on US taxpayers long after the last troops have been withdrawn.
More than 50,000 Americans have been wounded in those two wars; some of them will need medical care and disability insurance for decades to come. Those costs could near $1 trillion over the next 40 years, according to US government estimates.
And, of course, that final withdrawal hasn’t happened yet. Thousands of US troops could potentially remain in Iraq after 2011; as for Afghanistan, NATO leaders have said no serious drawdown will begin before 2014.”

 – Gregg Carlstrom, “Interactive: How much did 9/11 cost the US? The attacks, which cost perhaps $400,000 to execute, will cost the United States more than $5 trillion.,” Aljazeera.com, Sept. 1, 2011

9/1/2011

“More than 18,000 people are suffering from illnesses linked to the dust from the attacks on New York’s World Trade Center on 11 September 2001.
The figure comes from the US government’s monitoring and treatment programme for 9/11 emergency workers, volunteers and local residents.
The most common afflictions are respiratory problems including asthma and sinusitis, but muscular and intestinal conditions are reported as well.
The senior US official managing the health legacy of the attacks warns that early deaths are possible among the survivors.”
– David Shukman, “Toxic dust legacy of 9/11 plagues thousands of people,” BBC.com, 9/1/2011

9/7/2011

“According to the Costs of War research project by Brown University’s Watson Institute for International Studies, the U.S. also spent $1.3 trillion on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan before counting interest on the war debt and health care for veterans. Analysts are putting the total price of the wars abroad at closer to $2.6 trillion.”

 – Mike O’Brien, “From Airport Pat-downs to Deadly Attacks in Iraq, the $3 Trillion Cost of Keeping Americans Safe Since 9/11,” Daily Mail, Sep. 7, 2011

9/8/2011

“A Lloyd’s insurance syndicate has begun a landmark legal case [filed on September 8, 2011] against Saudi Arabia, accusing the kingdom of indirectly funding al-Qa’ida and demanding the repayment of £136m it paid out to victims of the 9/11 attacks. The Brighton-based Lloyd’s 3500 syndicate, which paid $215m compensation to companies and individuals involved, alleges that the oil-rich Middle Eastern superpower bears primary responsibility for the atrocity because al-Qa’ida was supported by banks and charities acting as ‘agents and alter egos’ for the Saudi state. The detailed case, which names a number of prominent Saudi charities as well as a leading member of the al-Saud royal family, will cause embarrassment to the Saudi government, which has long denied claims that Osama bin Laden’s organisation received official financial and practical support from his native country.” [Editor’s note: The lawsuit was withdrawn without prejudice on September 19, 2011.]

 – Cahal Milmo, “Lloyd’s Insurer Sues Saudi Arabia for ‘funding 9/11 attacks,'” The Independent, Sep. 19, 2011

9/8/2011

“[A]ccording to the Pentagon’s bomb squad, the average cost of an IED [improvised explosive device] is just a few hundred bucks, pocket change to a well-funded insurgency. Worse, over time, the average cost of the cheapo IEDs have dropped from $1,125 in 2006 to $265 in 2009.”

 – Spencer Ackerman, “$265 Bomb, $300 Billion War: The Economics of the 9/11 Era’s Signature Weapon,” Wired, Sep. 22, 2010

9/8/2011

“[T]he number of IEDs [improvised explosive devices] in Afghanistan has mushroomed: from 1,952 in 2006 to 5,616 in 2009. All told, since the Afghanistan war began, homemade bombs have killed 719 U.S. troops and wounded 7,448.”

 – Spencer Ackerman, “$265 Bomb, $300 Billion War: The Economics of the 9/11 Era’s Signature Weapon,” Wired, Sep. 22, 2010

9/8/2011

“Al Qaeda spent roughly half a million dollars to destroy the World Trade Center and cripple the Pentagon. What has been the cost to the United States? In a survey of estimates by The New York Times, the answer is $3.3 trillion, …”

 – Shan Carter and Amanda Cox, “One 9/11 Tally: $3.3 Trillion,” NYT.com, Sept. 8, 2011

9/8/2011

“The terrorists who crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001 spent an estimated $400,000 to $500,000 to kill nearly 3,000 people. The total costs of the attack for U.S. companies and taxpayers are much more difficult to ascertain. The cost of losing so many human lives is incalculable. And the economic toll is difficult to tally, given the ongoing and indirect expense of war.
Here are a few of the 9/11 line items:
-$7 billion: Amount paid out through the 9/11 Victims Compensation Fund to the survivors of the 2,880 people killed and 2,680 injured in the attacks.
-$8.7 billion: Estimated lifetime potential earnings lost of the victims who perished in the World Trade Center towers.
-$500 million: Amount the city of New York paid in overtime compensation to clean up Ground Zero.
-$19.6 billion: The drop in U.S. airline revenue between 2001 and 2002.
-$5 billion: Direct government aid to U.S. airlines to cover losses incurred during three days of grounded flights immediately after 9/11 and sustained through the end of the year. The government also extended $10 billion in future loan guarantees.
-$21.8 billion: Cost to replace the buildings and infrastructure in New York destroyed in the attacks.
-$500 million: Cost to repair the Pentagon after the attack.
-$40 billion: Insured losses related to the 9/11 attacks, including property, business interruption, aviation, workers compensation, life and liability insurance.
-$192 million: Cost to run the NYPD’s counter-terrorism and intelligence activities for one year.
-$5 million: Amount the NYPD has earmarked from a Homeland Security grant to buy a high-speed, bullet-proof boat designed to respond to a suicide or live shooter attack in the city’s port area.
-$408 billion: Cost to operate the Department of Homeland Security since it was created in 2002.
-$80.1 billion: Civilian and military intelligence gathering costs in 2010 – more than double what was spent in 2001.
-$43 billion: Minimum cost of 10 years worth of U.S. airport security. Passengers cover roughly 40 percent each year through the passenger security tax of $2.50 per flight.
-$1.1 billion: Estimated price to modify and add stealth features to a fleet of 73 MH-60 Black Hawk helicopters, two of which are thought to have been used in the raid that killed Osama Bin Laden, according to Richard Aboulafia, an aviation analyst at the Teal Group Corporation.
-$1.3 trillion: Cost of the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan to date in 2011 dollars, according to Pentagon appropriations.
-$4 trillion: Total war costs through 2050, if you include veterans’ care, war-related foreign aid, and interest paid on Pentagon appropriations.”

 – Lindsay Blakely, “The cost of 9/11 – in dollars,” CBSnews.com, Sept. 8, 2011

9/10/2011

“The anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has told his followers to stop attacking US troops in Iraq so as not to slow their withdrawal from the country. In a statement posted on his website, the Shia cleric tells his militias to halt attacks until the US withdrawal is finished at the end of the year as required under a security agreement between Washington and Baghdad. ‘Out of my desire to complete Iraq’s independence and to finish the withdrawal of the occupation forces from our holy lands, I am obliged to halt military operations of the honest Iraqi resistance until the withdrawal of the occupation forces is complete,’ al-Sadr said in the statement, posted on Saturday night [September 10, 2011]. …However, al-Sadr warned that ‘if the withdrawal doesn’t happen…the military operations will be resumed in a new and tougher way.’ ”

 – Lara Jakes, “Iraq Cleric to Followers: Stop Attacking US Troops,” Associated Press, Sep. 11, 2011

9/10/2011

“On September 10 [2011], the Haqqani [insurgent] network sent a suicide truck bomb packed full of explosives into a U.S. post in Wardak province, close to Kabul [Afghanistan]. It killed five Afghans and wounded seventy-seven American soldiers–the largest single casualty toll since the war began.”

 – Ahmed Rashid, Pakistan on the Brink, Page 180

9/11/2011

END: Although important events related to 9/11 will assuredly continue to surface, I believe that our coverage from 1947 through the tenth anniversary of 9/11 covered a substantial amount of the important information preceding and resulting from that catastrophic day. Therefore, we do not plan on adding additional sourced comments dated after Sep. 11, 2011, unless the comments are important and directly relevant.

 – Steven C. Markoff

9/11/2011

MarketWatch.com reported on the post-9/11 costs to the U.S. economy: “These costs can be seen in long lines at airports. They can be found in the budgets of private companies and government agencies that have spent vast sums to beef up security. They’re also evident in struggling industries such as tourism, whose representatives blame tougher rules for a lack of foreign visitors. … Care of veterans, for example, could add up to an additional $1 trillion over the next 40 years, the study estimated. And interest payments on the national debt could take decades to pay off. … Take airlines. Traffic plunged after Sept. 11 and several carriers failed, spurring the government to offer relief. While business has improved, most airlines continue to struggle. The industry has suffered its four worst years in modern history since the 2001 attack.”

 – Jeffry Bartash, “9/11 aftermath: Costs still permeate U.S. economy,” MarketWatch.com, Sept. 11, 2011

9/11/2011

“The [Pakistani] army continues to see terrorism merely as a latent threat and India as the more clear and present danger,’ said Lt. Gen. Mahmud Ali Durrani [on September 11, 2011], the former national security adviser to Prime Minister [Yousaf Raza] Gilani. ‘We have not grappled with the issue of extremism seriously–neither the public, nor the government nor army.’ “

 – Ahmed Rashid, Pakistan on the Brink, Page 65

11/17/2011

“The very last U.S. military base on Iraqi soil, Camp Adder, closed on November 17, 2011.”

 – Andrew Langley, Bush, Blair, and Iraq: Days of Decision, Page 50

12/15/2011

[I]t was not until December 2011 that the U.S. government declared that the [Iraq] war was oficially over.” [The 15th of the month for date sorting purpose only]

 – Andrew Langley, Bush, Blair, and Iraq: Days of Decision, Page 43

12/18/2011

“The last U.S. troops left Iraq on December 18 [2011] and crossed the border into Kuwait.”

 – Andrew Langley, Bush, Blair, and Iraq: Days of Decision, Page 43

12/25/2011

“We drew from sources including various news reports, The Brookings Institute’s Iraq Index, and the Costs of War Project to document money and blood spent on the Iraq war between 2003 and 2011. 
-189,000: Direct war deaths, which doesn’t include the hundreds of thousands more that died due to war-related hardships.
-4,488: U.S. service personnel killed directly.
-32,223: Troops injured (not including PTSD).
-134,000: Civilians killed directly.
-655,000: Persons who have died in Iraq since the invasion that would not have died if the invasion had not occurred.
-150: Reporters killed.
-2.8 million: Persons who remain either internally displaced or have fled the country.
-$1.7 trillion: Amount in war expenses spent by the U.S. Treasury Department as through Fiscal Year 2013.
-$5,000: Amount spent per second.
-$350,000: Cost to deploy one American military member.
-$490 billion: Amount in war benefits owed to war veterans.
-$7 trillion: Projected interest payments due by 2053 (because the war was paid for with borrowed money).
-$20 billion: Amount paid to KBR, contractor responsible for equipment and services.
-$3 billion: Amount of KBR payments Pentagon auditors considered “questionable.”
-$60 billion: Amount paid for reconstruction, (which was ruled largely a waste due to corruption and shoddy work.)
-$4 billion: Amount owed to the U.S. by Iraq before the invasion.
-1.6 million: Gallons of oil used by U.S. forces each day in Iraq (at $127.68 a barrel).
-$12 billion: Cost per month of the war by 2008.
-$7 billion: Amount owed to Iraq by the U.S. after the war (mostly due to fraud).
-$20 billion: Annual air conditioning cost.
Missing: $546 million in spare parts; 190,000 guns, including 110,000 AK-47s.
-40 percent: Increase in Iraqi oil production.
-$5 billion: Revenue from Iraqi oil in 2003.
-$85 billion: Revenue from Iraqi oil in 2011.
-$150 billion: Amount oil companies are expected to invest in oil development over the next decade.
-$75 billion: Approximate amount expected to go to American subcontracting companies, largest of all Halliburton.
-0: Nuclear Weapons of Mass Destruction found (though a bunch of chems were discovered).
Perhaps most importantly, this list doesn’t account for the emotional damage caused to service members and their families as well as the destruction to the homes, social fabric, and psyche of the Iraqi people.” [The 25th of the month used for date sorting purposes only.]

 – Michael B Kelley and Geoffrey Ingersoll, “The Staggering Cost of the Last Decade’s US War in Iraq – In Numbers,” BusinessInsider.com, June 20, 2014

6/7/2013

“The results from a new poll commissioned by the British media watchdog group MediaLens exposed a startling disconnect between the realities of the Iraq War and public perceptions of it: Namely, what the Iraqi death toll was. … These answers are, of course, way off the mark. Estimates of the death toll range from about 174,000 (Iraq Body Count, 3/19/13) to over a million (Opinion Business Research, cited in Congressional Research Service, 10/7/10). Even at the times of those U.S. polls, death estimates were far beyond the public’s estimates.”

– Rebecca Hellmich, “How Many Iraqis Died in the Iraq War?,” 6/7/2013

10/16/2013

“The survey responses point to around 405,000 deaths attributable to the war and occupation in Iraq from 2003 to 2011. At least another 56,000 deaths should be added to that total from households forced to flee Iraq, the study authors estimate. More than 60 percent of the excess deaths of men, women, and children reported from 2003 to 2011 were the direct result of shootings, bombings, airstrikes, or other violence, according to the study. The rest came indirectly, from stress-related heart attacks or ruined sanitation and hospitals.”

 – Dan Vergano, “Half-Million Iraqis Died in the War, New Study Says: Household survey records deaths from all war-related causes, 2003 to 2011.”, NationalGeographic.com, Oct. 16, 2013

10/16/2013

“About half a million people died in Iraq as a result of war-related causes between the US-led invasion in 2003 and mid-2011, an academic study suggests. … The study – by researchers from the University of Washington, Johns Hopkins University, Simon Fraser University and Mustansiriya University – covers March 2003 until June 2011, six months before the US withdrawal. … The study concludes that more than 60% of the estimated 461,000 excess deaths were directly attributable to violence, with the rest associated with the collapse of infrastructure and other indirect causes. These include the failures of health, sanitation, transportation, communication and other systems.”

– “Iraq study estimates war-related deaths at 461,000,” BBC.com, 10/16/2013

9/6/2015

“The 9/11 death and injury toll is still rising as this week’s 14th anniversary of the terrorist attacks approaches.
Nearly 21,000 people have filed eligibility claims with the September 11th Victims Compensation Fund as of Sept. 6, up more than 4,000 from this time last year, according to updated data that fund officials released Wednesday.”

 – Kevin McCoy, USAToday.com, “9/11 death and injury total still rising,” Sept. 9, 2015

11/16/2015

“In 2014, acts of terror cost the world $52.9 billion — roughly the size of Bulgaria’s entire annual gross domestic product — compared with $51.51 billion in the aftermath of Sept. 11, according to the latest annual Global Terrorism Index by the Institute for Economics and Peace, which has been collecting data since 1997.”

 – Sangwon Yoon and Andre Tartar, “The Global Economic Cost of Terrorism Is Now at Its Highest Since 9/11: Nearly 10 times as many killed in attacks than 15 years ago,” Bloomberg.com, Nov. 16, 2015

7/6/2016

“The Report of the Iraq Inquiry: Executive Summary – Report of a Committee of Privy Counsellors” Commissioned by the Prime Minister The Right Honourable Gordon Brown MP, and ordered by the UK House of Commons to be printed on July 6, 2016. It is also known as “The Chilcot Report” and “The Chilcot Inquiry” after Sir John Chilcot, chairman of The Iraq Inquiry committee at the time it was published.

 – Commissioned by the Prime Minister The Right Honourable Gordon Brown MP, “The Report of the Iraq Inquiry: Executive Summary,” IraqInquiry.org.uk, Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed on 7/6/2016

7/29/2016

After seeing the recent release of the 28 pages [actually 29 pages] from the 2002 Congressional Investigation Report,  that were held back by the Bush Administration – Simon Henderson wrote, “Now we know why the Bush administration wouldn’t let the public see the infamous 28 pages detailing Saudi Arabia’s connection to 9/11. Those pages from a 2002 congressional investigation into 9/11 were finally released [recently] and they are devastating. Investigators found strong evidence that some of the hijackers were in contact with, and received support and assistance from, individuals who may be connected to the Saudi government, including two Saudi intelligence officers. One of those men, Osama Basnan, received a significant amount of cash from a member of the Saudi royal family. When captured, al Qaida leader Abu Zubaydah had in his phone book the unlisted number of a company that managed the Colorado home of Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the then Saudi ambassador to the U.S. and a Bush family friend. The report also concluded that members of the royal family had been funneling money to Islamic extremists; my own reporting back in 2002 found that Saudi princes were paying off Osama bin Laden to cause trouble elsewhere but not in the kingdom. In response to the release of the report, the Saudis said there was no proof of any link to terrorists, and the matter is now finished.  No, it isn’t.” [Editor’s note: The 28 pages (actually 29 pages) were released on, or about July 16, 2016.]

 – Simon Henderson, “The Saudis’ involvement in 9/11,” The Week, Vol 16, Issue 781, July 29, 2016

8/15/2016

“As of August 2016, the US has already appropriated, spent, or taken on obligations to spend more than $3.6 trillion in current dollars on the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria and on Homeland Security (2001 through fiscal year 2016). To this total should be added the approximately $65 billion in dedicated war spending the Department of Defense and State Department have requested for the next fiscal year, 2017, along with an additional nearly $32 billion requested for the Department of Homeland Security in 2017, and estimated spending on veterans in future years. When those are included, the total US budgetary cost of the wars reaches $4.79 trillion.” [The 15th of the month for date sorting purpose only]

 – Neta C. Crawford, “US Budgetary Costs of Wars through 2016: $4.79 Trillion and Counting Summary of Costs of the US Wars in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan and Pakistan and Homeland Security,” Watson Institute: International & Public Affairs, Brown University, Sept. 2016

9/8/2016

From CNN.com’s Sept. 11, 2001, timeline of attacks: “Economic Impact:
-$500,000 – Estimated amount of money it cost to plan and execute the 9/11 attacks.
-$123 billion – Estimated economic loss during the first 2-4 weeks after the World Trade Center towers collapsed in New York City, as well as decline in airline travel over next few years
-$60 billion – Estimated cost of the WTC site damage, including damage to surrounding buildings, infrastructure and subway facilities.
-$40 billion – Value of the emergency anti-terrorism package approved by the US Congress on September 14, 2001.
-$15 billion – Aid package passed by Congress to bail out the airlines.
-$9.3 billion – Insurance claims arising from the 9/11 attacks.
Cleanup at Ground Zero:
May 30, 2002 – Cleanup at Ground Zero officially ends.
-It took 3.1 million hours of labor to clean up 1.8 million tons of debris.
-The total cost of cleanup was $750 million.”

 – CNN Library, “September 11, 2001: Background and timeline of the attacks,” CNN.com, Sept. 8, 2016

9/11/2016

In a 2016 anniversary article on the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, World Trade Center collapse: “In 2011, the federal World Trade Center Health Program (WTCHP) was established. It has 75,000 registered members, 87% of whom worked on rescue, recovery and clean-up. The rest are New York residents or workers. A total of 1,140 registered members have died since the program was created in 2011, WTCHP spokeswoman Christy Spring said. … Causes of death are not recorded by the WTCHP. There is no central record for how many people died between 2001 and 2011 from illnesses linked to 9/11 fumes and debris, Spring said, nor any way of knowing exactly how many other people have died without any record of their illnesses having been caused by exposure near Ground Zero.”

 – Joanna Walters, “9/11 health crisis: death toll from illness nears number killed on day of attacks,” TheGuardian.com, Sept. 11, 2016

1/19/2017

“Batches of newly disclosed documents [stamped “Salim v. Mitchell – United States Bates Stamp #001949, 12/20/2016] about the Central Intelligence Agency’s defunct torture program are providing new details about its practices of slamming terrorism suspects into walls, confining them in coffinlike boxes and subjecting them to waterboarding — as well as internal disputes over whether two psychologists who designed the program were competent.
The release of the newly available primary documents, which include information not discussed in a 500-page executive summary of the Senate Intelligence Committee’s investigation into the C.I.A. torture program that was released in 2014, comes at the same time as an urgent legal battle is unfolding over the potential fate of the still-classified, 6,700-page full version of that report.”

 – Sheri Fink, James Risen, and Charles Savage, “C.I.A. Torture Detailed in Newly Disclosed Documents,” The New York Times online, Jan 19, 2017

1/20/2017

“As Donald Trump assumes office today [1/20/2017], he inherits a targeted killing program that has been the cornerstone of U.S. counterterrorism strategy over the past eight years. On January 23, 2009, just three days into his presidency, President Obama authorized his first kinetic military action: two drone strikes, three hours apart, in Waziristan, Pakistan, that killed as many as twenty civilians. Two terms and 540 strikes later, Obama leaves the White House after having vastly expanding and normalizing the use of armed drones for counterterrorism and close air support operations in non-battlefield settings—namely Yemen, Pakistan, and Somalia.

President Obama deserves credit for even acknowledging the existence of the targeted killing program (something his predecessor did not do), and for increasing transparency into the internal processes that purportedly guided the authorization of drone strikes. However, many needed reforms were left undone—in large part because there was zero pressure from congressional members, who, with few exceptions, were the biggest cheerleaders of drone strikes.”

– Micah Zenko, “Obama’s Final Drone Strike,” cfr.or, January 20, 2017

2/22/2017

“A retired CIA officer has been taken into custody in Portugal and faces extradition to Italy within days to serve a four-year sentence for her role in the 2003 kidnapping of a radical Muslim cleric.
Sabrina De Sousa, 61, was among 23 Americans convicted in absentia in 2009 for the kidnapping of Egyptian-born cleric Hassan Osama Nasr, known as Abu Omar, as he walked to a mosque in Milan, Italy, on Feb. 17, 2003. He was taken to Egypt and later said he was tortured. He was imprisoned until 2007.”

 – Tom Kington, “Portugal detains ex-CIA officer for extradition to Italy for jail time in case of kidnapped Muslim cleric,” LATimes.com, Feb. 22, 2017

2/28/2017

“Counting the value of lives lost as well as property damage and lost production of goods and services, losses already exceed $100 billion. Including the loss in stock market wealth — the market’s own estimate arising from expectations of lower corporate profits and higher discount rates for economic volatility — the price tag approaches $2 trillion. 
Among the big-ticket items:
-The loss of four civilian aircraft valued at $385 million.
-The destruction of major buildings in the World Trade Center with a replacement cost of from $3 billion to $4.5 billion. 
-Damage to a portion of the Pentagon: up to $1 billion. 
-Cleanup costs: $1.3 billion. 
-Property and infrastructure damage: $10 billion to $13 billion. 
-Federal emergency funds (heightened airport security, sky marshals, government takeover of airport security, retrofitting aircraft with anti-terrorist devices, cost of operations in Afghanistan): $40 billion. 
-Direct job losses amounted to 83,000, with $17 billion in lost wages. 
-The amount of damaged or unrecoverable property hit $21.8 billion. 
-Losses to the city of New York (lost jobs, lost taxes, damage to infrastructure, cleaning): $95 billion.
-Losses to the insurance industry: $40 billion. 
-Loss of air traffic revenue: $10 billion. 
-Fall of global markets: incalculable.”
 – IAGS.org, “How much did the September 11 terrorist attack cost America?” IAGS.org [The Institute for the Analysis of Global Security,] Accessed on 2/28/2017

3/13/2018

“A Berlin-based civil rights group has filed a criminal complaint to the German authorities to issue an arrest warrant for [Gina] Haspel, over claims she oversaw the torture of terrorism suspects.

Following Haspel’s promotion to CIA deputy director last year [2017], the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) updated its legal briefing requesting her arrest. …

‘As head of the secret prison in Thailand, Gina Haspel followed each day of Abu Zubaydah’s torture from Aug. 4 to 23, 2002, and she alone had the responsibility to end this torture but failed to do so,’ reads the ECCHR submission to German authorities.

If the Senate Intelligence Committee approves the country’s first female CIA director, it’s not likely to be welcomed by women’s rights activists across the world.”

– Leela Jacinto, “Trump’s New CIA Chief Pick’s Torture Past Clouds Her Future,” france24.com, March 13, 2018

Editor’s note: The European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) using the principle of universal jurisdiction in Germany, filed the criminal complaint against Haspel with the German Federal Public Prosecutor (Generalbundesanwalt). It is a follow-up to an earlier complaint on the US torture program filed in Germany by ECCHR in December 2014. As of September 2022, the documents are under consideration by German prosecutors as part of a preliminary examination. See European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, “Germany: Criminal Complaint against CIA Director Gina Haspel,” ecchr.eu, accessed on September 2, 2022, for more information.

3/7/2019

“President Donald Trump has revoked a policy set by his predecessor requiring US intelligence officials to publish the number of civilians killed in drone strikes outside of war zones.

The 2016 executive order was brought in by then-President Barack Obama, who was under pressure to be more transparent.

Since the 9/11 terror attack, drone strikes have been increasingly used against terror and military targets. …

There have been 2,243 drone strikes in the first two years of the Trump presidency, compared with 1,878 in Mr Obama’s eight years in office.”

– BBC.com, “Trump Revokes Obama Rule on Reporting Drone Strike Deaths,” bbc.com, March 7, 2019

9/7/2019

“President Donald Trump tweeted Saturday [9/7/2019] that he canceled a secret meeting with Taliban leaders that was poised to be held at Camp David on Sunday [9/8/2019].

In a series of tweets, Trump cited the death of a US soldier in a recent Taliban attack as his reasoning and said he’s also canceling ongoing peace negotiations.

This came less than a week after his top negotiator in ongoing US-Taliban talks said a peace deal had been reached ‘in principle.’ The deal would see 5,400 US troops withdraw from five bases in Afghanistan within 135 days.

The withdrawal of any of the roughly 14,000 US troops in Afghanistan is up in the air as the longest war in US history drags on.”

– John Haltiwanger, “Trump Says He Invited Taliban Leaders to Camp David for a Secret Meeting, but Canceled Because of a Recent Attack That Killed a US Soldier,” businessinsider.com, September 7, 2019

10/16/2019

“A child has been killed in a US air strike in Afghanistan, the American military confirmed, in a rare admission of responsibility for civilian harm.

The US has, to our knowledge, so far admitted to killing only six civilians in strikes in 2019. The UN claims the number is much higher, with 430 deaths and injuries recorded in the first six months of the year.

In this incident, air support was called in when a joint US-Afghan ground operation came under fire in the Andar district in central Ghazni province on October 6 [2019]. US forces claim the air strike killed three Taliban fighters and a child, who was standing nearby.”

– Abbie Cheeseman, “Rare Admission of Guilt From US For Killing Afghan Child in Airstrike,” thebureauinvestigates.com, October 16, 2019

10/29/2019

“Almost 40 strikes hit Afghanistan every day in September [2019], new Pentagon figures show, working out as more than 1,100 over the month, a significant rise.

The number of US strikes has been increasing in recent months, but this latest jump is dramatic. There were 1,113 strikes in September compared with 810 strikes in August, and 537 in July.

It follows the collapse of US and Taliban peace negotiations in early September. The talks were suspended by President Donald Trump after the killing of a US soldier in Kabul.”

– Jessica Purkiss, “Almost 40 Strikes Every Day in Afghanistan Last Month,” thebureauinvestigates.com, October 29, 2019

1/1/2020

“Between 2010 and 2020 the Bureau [of Investigative Journalism] tracked US drone strikes and other covert actions in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen and Somalia. The comprehensive reporting on civilian deaths helped lead to greater official transparency on targeted killing, and provided the data needed to hold the White House to account.

Minimum Confirmed Strikes: 14,040

Total Killed: 8,858 – 16,901

Civilians Killed: 910 – 2,200

Children Killed: 283 – 454

The figures above are running totals of US actions and resulting deaths since the Bureau began recording data.”

– The Bureau of Investigative Journalism, “Drone Warfare,” thebureauinvestigates.com, accessed on August 30, 2022,

[The 1st of the month used for date sorting purposes only.]

1/1/2020

“The Authorisation for the Use of Military Force Act was drafted by the Bush White House in the week after the 9/11 attacks.

At its heart is a sixty-word sentence that gives the US president the power to ‘use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organisations, or persons’ that he or she determines was behind or helped the people who carried out the attacks. It was passed into law by Congress on September 16 [2001] with only one dissenting vote [Barbara Lee, D-Calif.].

The AUMF’s scope gave the president a free hand. It has no time or geographical limits; it technically allows the president to fight a perpetual global war. It also empowers the president to go after individuals as well as nation states. …

AUMF is so broad that it allows the President to target new enemies without the usual authorisation from Congress. The scope has grown from just the Taliban and al Qaeda – AUMF is now being used to justify strikes against groups that did not exist when al Qaeda attacked the World Trade Centre and Pentagon.”

– The Bureau of Investigative Journalism, “Legality of Drone Warfare,” thebureauinvestigates.com, accessed on August 30, 2022

[The 1st of the month used for date sorting purposes only.]

2/8/2020

In an online report by Brown University Watson Institute For International And Public Affairs’ The Costs of [post-9/11 wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the related violence in Pakistan and Syria] War Project, titled “Costs of War,”  “SUMMARY OF FINDINGS – Some of the Costs of War Project’s main findings include:

    • At least 800,000 people have died due to direct war violence, including armed forces on all sides of the conflicts, contractors, civilians, journalists, and humanitarian workers.

    • It is likely that many times more have died indirectly in these wars, due to malnutrition, damaged infrastructure, and environmental degradation.

    • Over 335,000 civilians have been killed in direct violence by all parties to these conflicts.

    • Over 7,000 US soldiers have died in the wars.

    • We do not know the full extent of how many US service members returning from these wars became injured or ill while deployed.

    • Many deaths and injuries among US contractors have not been reported as required by law, but it is likely that approximately 8,000 have been killed.

    • 21 million Afghan, Iraqi, Pakistani, and Syrian people are living as war refugees and internally displaced persons, in grossly inadequate conditions.

    • The US government is conducting counterterror activities in 80 countries, vastly expanding this war across the globe.

    • The wars have been accompanied by erosions in civil liberties and human rightsat home and abroad.

    • The human and economic costs of these wars will continue for decades with some costs, such as the financial costs of US veterans’ care, not peaking until mid-century.

    • US government funding of reconstruction efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan has totaled over $199 billion. Most of those funds have gone towards arming security forces in both countries. Much of the money allocated to humanitarian relief and rebuilding civil society has been lost to fraud, waste, and abuse.

    • The cost of the Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Syria wars totals about $6.4 trillion. This does not include future interest costs on borrowing for the wars, which will add an estimated $8 trillion in the next 40 years.

    • The ripple effects on the US economy have also been significant, including job loss and interest rate increases.

    • Both Iraq and Afghanistan continue to rank extremely low in global studies of political freedom.

    • Women in Iraq and Afghanistan are excluded from political power and experience high rates of unemployment and war widowhood.

    • Compelling alternatives to war were scarcely considered in the aftermath of 9/11 or in the discussion about war against Iraq. Some of those alternatives are still available to the US.”

– The Costs of War Project, “Costs of War,” online report, Brown University Watson Institute For International And Public Affairs, watson.brown.edu, accessed online February 8, 2020

2/29/2020

“Hours after the US and the Taliban signed a landmark agreement aimed at ending America’s war in Afghanistan, President Donald Trump said that he plans to start pulling troops out of Afghanistan immediately.

‘Everybody’s tired of war,’ Trump said at a White House press briefing Saturday afternoon [2/29/2020], adding that the 18-year conflict in Afghanistan, America’s longest-running war, has ‘been a particularly long and gruesome one.’

The US and the Taliban signed a conditional peace agreement Saturday morning.”

– Ryan Pickrell, “Trump Says Us Troops Will Start Leaving Afghanistan Immediately,” businessinsider.com, February 29, 2020

2/29/2020

“The US has agreed to begin withdrawing US troops from Afghanistan as long as the Taliban upholds its commitment to ‘not allow any of its members, other individuals or groups, including al-Qa’ida, to use the soil of Afghanistan to threaten the security of the United States and its allies.’

The accord states that the US will, assuming the Taliban lives up to its end of the deal, cut the number of American troops in Afghanistan to 8,600 in the first 135 days.

The US, as well as its allies and coalition partners, will withdraw all remaining forces from Afghanistan within 14 months.”

– Ryan Pickrell, “Trump Says Us Troops Will Start Leaving Afghanistan Immediately,” businessinsider.com, February 29, 2020

6/17/2021

“The U.S. House of Representatives moved Thursday [6/17/2021] to repeal a nearly two-decade-old war powers measure, marking what many lawmakers hope will be the beginning of the end of wide-ranging authorities given to the president after the 9/11 terror attacks. The vote was 268-161. The measure now heads to the Senate.

Democratic Rep. Barbara Lee of California — who in 2001 and 2002 voted against two war power measures passed in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks — was the sponsor of the repeal bill. The plan would end the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force, or AUMF, that greenlighted then-President George W. Bush’s plans to invade Iraq.

‘It’s been such a long time coming,’ Lee said ahead of Thursday’s vote. ‘It’s Congress’ responsibility to authorize the use of force, and that authorization cannot be blank checks that stay as authorizations for any administration to use the way they see fit.’ …

On Wednesday, the repeal drew the support of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., for the first time. ‘It will eliminate the danger of a future administration reaching back into the legal dustbin to use it as a justification for military adventurism,’ Schumer said.”

– Claudia Grisales, “In Historic, Bipartisan Move, House Votes To Repeal 2002 Iraq War Powers Resolution,” npr.org, June 17, 2021

8/16/2021

“The Taliban has declared the war in Afghanistan over, after its fighters swept into the capital, Kabul, and President Ashraf Ghani fled the country.

Victorious Taliban fighters patrolled the streets of Kabul on Monday [8/16/2021] as thousands of Afghans mobbed the city’s airport trying to flee the group’s feared hardline brand of rule. Scores of Afghans ran alongside a US military plane as it taxied on the runway and several clung to the side as the jet took off.”

– Zaheena Rasheed, Tamila Varshalomidze and Mersiha Gadzo, “Biden Defends Afghanistan Pullout Amid Airport Chaos,” aljazeera.com, August 16, 2021

8/24/2021

“Biden surrendered Afghanistan to terrorists and left thousands of Americans for dead by pulling out the Military before our citizens. Now we are learning that out of the 26,000 people who have been evacuated, only 4,000 are Americans. You can be sure the Taliban, who are now in complete control, didn’t allow the best and brightest to board these evacuation flights. Instead, we can only imagine how many thousands of terrorists have been airlifted out of Afghanistan and into neighborhoods around the world. What a terrible failure. NO VETTING. How many terrorists will Joe Biden bring to America? We don’t know!”

– Donald Trump, “Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America,” donaldjtrump.com, August 24, 2021

8/30/2021

“The image of Army Maj. Gen. Chris Donahue departing Afghanistan on Monday night [8/30/2021] will forever serve as a symbol of the end of a grueling, nearly two-decade war there.

Donahue, steely-eyed, in a helmet and fatigues and carrying a rifle, was photographed using night vision optics as he became the last American soldier to leave Afghanistan.”

– Elisha Fieldstadt, “The Last Soldier To Leave Afghanistan — Nicknamed ‘Flatliner’ — Was Uniquely Prepared for That Moment,” nbcnews.com, September 1, 2021

 

8/30/2021

“A U.S. military C-17 carried the last American troops out of Afghanistan on Monday [8/30/2021], marking the formal end of the longest war in U.S. history but leaving between 100 and 200 Americans and tens of thousands of America’s Afghan allies to face a future of uncertainty and danger.”

– Nancy A. Youssef and Gordon Lubold, “Last U.S. Troops Leave Afghanistan After Nearly 20 Years,” wsj.com, August 30, 2021

8/30/2021

“Although it was the longest military conflict in U.S. history, Afghanistan frequently was a forgotten war, overshadowed by the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the subsequent rise of the Islamic State extremist group.

In all, 2,461 U.S. troops were killed, including 13 in the past week, in a U.S. campaign that began Oct. 7, 2001, as an effort to topple the Taliban for harboring al Qaeda. The toll was far greater for Afghans: As many as 69,000 troops and police, and an estimated 47,000 civilians, according to researchers from Brown University’s Costs of War project.”

– Nancy A. Youssef and Gordon Lubold, “Last U.S. Troops Leave Afghanistan After Nearly 20 Years,” wsj.com, August 30, 2021

8/31/2021

“Last night [8/30/2021] in Kabul, the United States ended 20 years of war in Afghanistan — the longest war in American history. …

In April, I made the decision to end this war. As part of that decision, we set the date of August 31st for American troops to withdraw. The assumption was that more than 300,000 Afghan National Security Forces that we had trained over the past two decades and equipped would be a strong adversary in their civil wars with the Taliban.

That assumption — that the Afghan government would be able to hold on for a period of time beyond military drawdown — turned out not to be accurate.”

– Joe Biden via The White House Briefing Room, “Remarks by President Biden on the End of the War in Afghanistan,” whitehouse.gov, August 31, 2021

8/31/2021

“My predecessor, the former President, signed an agreement with the Taliban to remove U.S. troops by May the 1st [2021], just months after I was inaugurated. It included no requirement that the Taliban work out a cooperative governing arrangement with the Afghan government, but it did authorize the release of 5,000 prisoners last year, including some of the Taliban’s top war commanders, among those who just took control of Afghanistan.

And by the time I came to office, the Taliban was in its strongest military position since 2001, controlling or contesting nearly half of the country.”

– Joe Biden via The White House Briefing Room, “Remarks by President Biden on the End of the War in Afghanistan,” whitehouse.gov, August 31, 2021

8/31/2021

“We succeeded in what we set out to do in Afghanistan over a decade ago. Then we stayed for another decade. It was time to end this war.

This is a new world. The terror threat has metastasized across the world, well beyond Afghanistan. We face threats from al-Shabaab in Somalia; al Qaeda affiliates in Syria and the Arabian Peninsula; and ISIS attempting to create a caliphate in Syria and Iraq, and establishing affiliates across Africa and Asia.”

– Joe Biden via The White House Briefing Room, “Remarks by President Biden on the End of the War in Afghanistan,” whitehouse.gov, August 31, 2021

8/31/2021

“My fellow Americans, the war in Afghanistan is now over. I’m the fourth President who has faced the issue of whether and when to end this war. When I was running for President, I made a commitment to the American people that I would end this war.  And today, I’ve honored that commitment. It was time to be honest with the American people again. We no longer had a clear purpose in an open-ended mission in Afghanistan.

After 20 years of war in Afghanistan, I refused to send another generation of America’s sons and daughters to fight a war that should have ended long ago.

After more than $2 trillion spent in Afghanistan — a cost that researchers at Brown University estimated would be over $300 million a day for 20 years in Afghanistan — for two decades — yes, the American people should hear this: $300 million a day for two decades.

If you take the number of $1 trillion, as many say, that’s still $150 million a day for two decades.”

– Joe Biden via The White House Briefing Room, “Remarks by President Biden on the End of the War in Afghanistan,” whitehouse.gov, August 31, 2021

9/2/2021

“A British national admitted Thursday evening [9/2/2021] in a federal courtroom near the nation’s capital that he played a leadership role in an Islamic State scheme to torture, hold for ransom and eventually behead American hostages.

Alexanda Anon Kotey, 37, pleaded guilty to all eight counts against him at a plea hearing in U.S. District Court in Alexandria. The charges include hostage-taking resulting in death and providing material support to the Islamic State group from 2012 through 2015.

He admitted guilt in connection with the deaths of four American hostages — journalist James Foley, journalist Steven Sotloff and aid workers Peter Kassig and Kayla Mueller — as well as European and Japanese nationals who also were held captive. …

The plea deal sets a mandatory minimum sentence of life without parole. …

Kotey and [El Shafee] Elsheikh were captured in Syria in 2018 by the U.S.-supported Syrian Democratic Forces while trying to escape to Turkey.”

– Associated Press, “A Man Pleads Guilty in Islamic State Beheadings of U.S. Hostages,” npr.org, September 2, 2021

Editor’s note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

9/3/2021

“President Joe Biden on Friday [9/3/2021] directed the declassification of certain documents related to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, a supportive gesture to victims’ families who have long sought the records in hopes of implicating the Saudi government.

The order, coming little more than a week before the 20th anniversary of the attacks, is a significant moment in a yearslong tussle between the government and the families over what classified information about the run-up to the attacks could be made public. …

The order directs the Justice Department and other executive branch agencies to begin a declassification review, and requires that declassified documents be released over the next six months. …

Still, the practical impact of the executive order and any new documents it might yield was not immediately clear. Public documents released in the last two decades, including by the 9/11 Commission, have detailed numerous Saudi entanglements but have not proved government complicity.

A long-running lawsuit in federal court in New York aims to hold the Saudi government accountable and alleges that Saudi officials provided significant support to some of the hijackers before the attacks. The lawsuit took a major step forward this year with the questioning under oath of former Saudi officials, and family members have long regarded the disclosure of declassified documents as an important step in making their case.”

– News Wires, “Biden Orders Declassification of Documents Relating to September 11 Attacks,” france24.com, September 4, 2021

9/7/2021

“The Bush administration’s decision to respond militarily to 9/11 and to destroy al-Qaida and its Taliban host was justified and successful. But the decision to stay in Afghanistan and to try to build a functioning local government was America’s first major mistake in formulating its post-9/11 policy. …

The second and greater error was the decision to invade Iraq in 2003. We now know that the claim that Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was associated with al-Qaida was unfounded. We also know that he had no stockpile of weapons of mass destruction. The three principal decisionmakers, President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, were motivated in part by the sense that the military operation in Afghanistan was not a sufficient retaliation for the blow inflicted on the U.S. homeland.”

– Itamar Rabinovich, “Reflections on the Long-term Repercussions of September 11 for US Policy in the Middle East,” brookings.edu, Tuesday, September 7, 2021

9/7/2021

“As an act of terrorism, 9/11 was a resounding success. The U.S. responded by decimating al-Qaida, but the organization survived in a weakened form. The Syrian civil war and the weakness of the Iraqi state provided new opportunities. Three offshoots of al-Qaida — al-Qaida in Iraq, the Islamic State group (ISIS), and Jabhat al-Nusra — came to play major roles in the first two decades of the 21st century. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s group contributed to turning the U.S. occupation of Iraq into a quagmire and sharpening Sunni-Shia tensions in the country and region. ISIS used territorial control on both sides of the Iraqi-Syrian border to declare a caliphate and launch or inspire deadly terrorist attacks from the region to Europe to North America and the Indo-Pacific. A large international coalition built and led by the United States destroyed that ‘state,’ but as we have seen the jihadi group is still with us. And in Idlib province in Syria, a large contingent of Jabhat al-Nusra fighters controls a significant swath of land. Meanwhile, 20 years after 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanistan, a local branch of ISIS poses a significant terrorist threat, as its August 26 [2021] attack on Afghan civilians and U.S. troops at the airport in Kabul shows.”

– Itamar Rabinovich, “Reflections on the long-term repercussions of September 11 for US policy in the Middle East,” brookings.edu, Tuesday, September 7, 2021

9/11/2021

“The FBI on Saturday [9/11/2021] released the first document related to the 9/11 attacks since President Biden ordered the declassification of more records last week, unveiling a memo detailing ‘significant logistic support’ that two of the Saudi hijackers received in the U.S.

The document, which is heavily redacted, comes from the secret FBI investigation into 9/11 — dubbed ‘Operation Encore’ — which centered on the two hijackers who lived in San Diego and who may have assisted them. …

The declassification is part of a push by families of victims from 9/11 who are suing Saudi Arabia for money and demanding to know if the government provided aid to the hijackers. …

Jim Kreindler, court-appointed co-chair for the plaintiffs, said in a statement that the new document supports their case. ‘The findings and conclusions in this FBI investigation validate the arguments we have made in the litigation regarding the Saudi government’s responsibility for the 9/11 attacks. This document, together with the public evidence gathered to date, provides a blueprint for how al Qaeda operated inside the U.S. with the active, knowing support of the Saudi government.'”

– Catherine Herridge and Andres Triay, “FBI’s Investigation into 9/11: First Document Released Following Biden’s Promise to Declassify Materials,” cbsnews.com, September 12, 2021

10/7/2021

“The United States invaded in the weeks after 9/11, at the behest of George W. Bush, to dismantle and destroy the Al Qaeda terrorist group who’d attacked us. We sought something between justice and vengeance. Once Al Qaeda and its Taliban enablers had been defeated, the original mission accomplished, we stayed. Once Osama bin Laden was killed, in neighboring Pakistan, we stayed. We stayed and we stayed and we stayed.

We stayed for democracy at one point, human rights at another. To nation-build, if you believed in counterinsurgency, or to ‘mow the grass’—a euphemism for killing terrorists that admits doing so will produce more—if you favored counterterrorism.

Somewhere along the way, the war lost public interest and support. Those matter in a republic, though one could be forgiven for getting lulled into thinking otherwise the past twenty years. The war’s justification became the war’s existence itself, and that’s a twisted reason to keep killing people in the name of country, as well as risking the lives of our own.”

– Matt Gallagher, “Leaving Afghanistan Behind,” esquire.com, October 7, 2021

10/7/2021

David Petraeous, the former commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, interviewed by Matt Gallagher for Esquire, said about the U.S withdrawal from Afghanistan, “This is not going to end the endless war. It’s going to end our involvement in it … I fear that the endless war is actually going to get worse.” According to Gallagher, “He goes on to cite those fears, some of them prescient: An Afghan civil war. A refugee crisis. A safe haven for radical jihadism to flourish.”

– Matt Gallagher, “Leaving Afghanistan Behind,” esquire.com, October 7, 2021

10/7/2021

Nicholas Irving, former U.S. Army ranger, with three tours each in Iraq and Afghanistan, talking with Matt Gallagher for Esquire, said that he agrees with the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, “100 percent . . . . My stance is completely different than it was. What’s changed for me is nothing’s changed over there. We got bin Laden a long time ago. … It’s watching young guys go over there and do the same thing I was doing. The whole purpose of us going was so they wouldn’t have to.”

– Matt Gallagher, “Leaving Afghanistan Behind,” esquire.com, October 7, 2021

10/7/2021

“Farkhonda, twenty-four, was born southwest of the capital, in Ghazni, and as a toddler in early 2001 moved with her family to Kabul. … Farkhonda is part of a generation of young Afghans raised in a post-Taliban country, believing in the ideas of freedom and democracy they’ve learned from an early age. The American invasion didn’t bring only soldiers to Afghanistan, after all—it brought aid workers and entrepreneurs and teachers, too. … This is the flip side of the forever war, … one many Americans … tend not to consider when bandying about that term. For the vast majority of Farkhonda’s conscious existence, she’s lived in an open-ish society, where a young woman could study and work and dream. Was all of Afghanistan like this the past twenty years? No. But hers was.

Farkhonda says America’s withdrawal began to feel real ‘in the last three months. … The situation got tenser … and then the war spread everywhere. … It all happened so rapidly.’ She feels betrayed in particular by Ashraf Ghani, the democratically elected president whose flight from the country with a reported $169 million in cash birthed a denial and countless conspiracy theories …

Fear now reigns in Kabul, she says: ‘Almost every shop is closed, even the bakeries. You do not see a single woman on the streets.’ … I ask what she thinks will come next. ‘Honestly, I have no idea,’ she says. But she knows her objective. ‘Primarily, we have to get out of Afghanistan.’”

– Matt Gallagher, “Leaving Afghanistan Behind,” esquire.com, October 7, 2021

10/28/2021

“A suburban Baltimore high school graduate turned Al Qaeda courier, speaking to a military jury for the first time, gave a detailed account this week [around October 28, 2021] of the brutal forced feedings, crude waterboarding and other physical and sexual abuse he endured during his 2003 to 2006 detention in the C.I.A.’s overseas prison network. Appearing in open court, Majid Khan, 41, became the first former prisoner of the black sites to openly describe, anywhere, the violent and cruel ‘enhanced interrogation techniques’ that agents used to extract information and confessions from terrorism suspects.”

– Carol Rosenberg, “For First Time in Public, a Detainee Describes Torture at C.I.A. Black Sites,” NYTimes.com, Oct. 30, 2021

10/28/2021

“A suburban Baltimore high school graduate turned Al Qaeda courier, speaking to a military jury for the first time, gave a detailed account this week [around October 28, 2021] of the brutal forced feedings, crude waterboarding and other physical and sexual abuse he endured during his 2003 to 2006 detention in the C.I.A.’s overseas prison network….So, like other victims of torture, he said he manufactured tales that his captors wanted to hear: ‘I lied just to make the abuse stop.’ Mr. Khan offered the dark accounting Thursday [October 28, 2021] evening to a jury of eight U.S. military officers who on Friday deliberated for less than three hours and sentenced him to 26 years in prison, starting from his guilty plea in February 2012.”

– Carol Rosenberg, “For First Time in Public, a Detainee Describes Torture at C.I.A. Black Sites,” NYTimes.com, Oct. 30, 2021

10/28/2021

During an October 2021 hearing at Camp Justice, at the Guantánamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba: “…Majid Khan, 41, became the first former prisoner of the black sites to openly describe, anywhere, the violent and cruel ‘enhanced interrogation techniques’ that agents used to extract information and confessions from terrorism suspects…He expressed remorse for hurting people through his embrace of radical Islam and Al Qaeda, but also found a way around a labyrinth of U.S. intelligence classifications to realize a decade-long ambition to tell the world what U.S. agents had done to him….Mr. Khan gained attention with the release of a 2014 study of the C.I.A. program by the Senate Intelligence Committee that said, after he refused to eat, his captors ‘infused’ a purée of his lunch through his anus. The C.I.A. called it rectal refeeding. Mr. Khan called it rape.”

– Carol Rosenberg, “For First Time in Public, a Detainee Describes Torture at C.I.A. Black Sites,” NYTimes.com, Oct. 30, 2021

11/3/2021

“The FBI released hundreds of pages of newly declassified documents Wednesday [11/3/2021] about its long effort to explore connections between the Saudi government and the September 11th attacks, revealing the scope of a strenuous but ultimately fruitless investigation whose outcome many question to this day. …

Agents for years investigated support given to several of the hijackers upon their arrival in the U.S., focusing in particular on whether three Saudi nationals — including a Saudi Embassy official in Washington — had advance knowledge of the attacks.

Ultimately, investigators found insufficient evidence to charge any of the three with illegally supporting the hijackers, according to an FBI memo from May that closed out the probe and was among the more than 700 pages released Wednesday. The FBI noted in the memo that al Qaeda compartmentalized the roles within its major attacks and ‘did not make the attack plans known in advance to others’ for fear of word getting out.”

– CBS News, “FBI Releases Declassified Documents About Investigating Ties Between Saudi Government and Sept. 11 Attacks,” cbsnews.com, November 4, 2021

12/7/2021

“At the heart of the [Military] commissions’ problems is their original sin, torture. The United States chose to secretly detain and torture the men it now seeks to punish. From the beginning, justice was an afterthought. As a CIA interrogator told a detainee, “[you will] never go to court, because ‘we can never let the world know what I have done to you.’” When the cases did land in court (or military commission), the government was well aware of the consequences of the black-site and other Guantanamo abuse [in the wake of the September 11, 2001, attacks]. The chief prosecutor who was serving when the CIA’s so-called ‘high value detainees’ arrived at GTMO has since said, ‘Rather than bolstering the prosecution’s case, allegations of abuse required further investigation and might leave the prosecution in a weaker position.’ He was correct. Torture impacts and undermines every aspect of these prosecutions.”

– John G. Baker, “Testimony of John G. Baker, Brigadier General, United States Marine Corps, Chief Defense Counsel, Military Commissions Defense Organizations, Department of Defense Before the Senate Judiciary Committee,” judiciary.senate.gov, December 7, 2021

1/9/2022

“Two decades after the attacks of September 11, 2001, and the arrival of the first terrorism suspects at Guantánamo Bay on January 11, 2002, many Americans may not recall details of the systematic abuses carried out by the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and US military against hundreds if not thousands of Muslims detained as part of what President George W. Bush swiftly declared a global ‘War on Terror.’ Yet for many people in countries outside the United States, memories of the US government’s brutal treatment of detained Muslims remain potent. And some abuses continue, handing a recruitment card to Islamist armed groups and lowering the bar for treatment of terrorism suspects worldwide.”

– Letta Tayler and Elisa Epstein, “Legacy of the ‘Dark Side’- The Costs of Unlawful US Detentions and Interrogations Post-9/11,” hrw.org, January 9, 2022

1/9/2022

“With the participation of at least 54 governments, the CIA secretly and extrajudicially transferred at least 119 foreign Muslims from one foreign country to another for incommunicado detention and harsh interrogation at various CIA black sites. At least 39 of the men were subjected to ‘waterboarding,’ ‘walling,’ ‘rectal feeding’ – a form of rape – and other forms of torture. The US military also held thousands of foreign Muslim security detainees and prisoners-of-war – including some women and boys – at its detention centers abroad including Abu Ghraib in Iraq, Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, and its naval base at Guantánamo, and also subjected many to physical and psychological abuse.

As of January 6, 2022, the US was still detaining 39 of the nearly 800 men and boys it brought to Guantánamo from 2002 to 2008. Twenty-seven of those who remain have never been charged. Many lack adequate medical care and even access to their medical records, making the prison a living legacy of the rights violations spawned by 9/11. The military commission system created to prosecute suspects at Guantánamo is fundamentally flawed. As a result, the five prisoners accused of plotting the 9/11 attacks have yet to be brought to trial, depriving them of due process and the survivors and the families of the nearly 3,000 people who died in the attacks of their right to justice.”

– Letta Tayler and Elisa Epstein, “Legacy of the ‘Dark Side’- The Costs of Unlawful US Detentions and Interrogations Post-9/11,” hrw.org, January 9, 2022

1/9/2022

“No US government officials have been held accountable for creating, authorizing, or implementing the CIA’s secret detention and torture programs [following the September 11, 2001, attacks]. All but a heavily redacted summary of the landmark 2014 US Senate Intelligence Committee report on the covert CIA program (the ‘Torture Report’) remains classified. The portions that have been released make clear that the torture was as useless in producing actionable intelligence as it was brutal. …

Although such US detention-related counterterrorism violations have dramatically decreased, Washington has replaced capture with kill, conducting air strikes – often with armed drones that have killed thousands of civilians, including outside recognized battlefields. Its counterterrorism campaign has spread to 85 countries with scant transparency or oversight.”

– Letta Tayler and Elisa Epstein, “Legacy of the ‘Dark Side’- The Costs of Unlawful US Detentions and Interrogations Post-9/11,” hrw.org, January 9, 2022

3/15/2022

“Prosecutors have initiated discussions on a potential plea agreement to resolve the long-stalled case of five men held at the Guantanamo Bay detention center who have been charged with planning and providing assistance for the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The discussions … are a significant development in a case that has been mired in pre-trial litigation at the U.S. base in Cuba for nearly a decade ….

The five defendants were arraigned in May 2012 on war crimes charges that include murder, terrorism and hijacking for alleged roles planning and providing financial and logistical help in the plot that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.

The trial has bogged down largely over legal issues surrounding what evidence can be used against the men, who were held in clandestine CIA detention facilities and subjected to torture following their capture. It has also been repeatedly stalled by the pandemic and the logistical difficulties of trying five men, all with separate U.S.-based defense teams, on the difficult-to-reach base at the southeastern tip of Cuba.”

– Ben Fox, “Plea Discussions Launched in Stalled 9/11 Case at Guantanamo,” apnews.com, March 15, 2022

6/7/2022

“A U.S. woman pleaded guilty Tuesday [6/7/2022] to operating an all-female military group for ISIS in Syria.

Allison Fluke-Ekren, 42, who became the leader of the ISIS battalion known as Khatiba Nusaybah, taught women how to use AK-47s and explosive devices, according to the U.S. Justice Department. …

Fluke-Ekren, who used to live in Kansas, was part of ‘terrorism-related activities’ in Syria, Libya and Iraq between 2011 and 2019 …

In 2014, prosecutors said Fluke-Ekren told a witness about her desire to carry out an attack on U.S. soil. … ‘Fluke-Ekren further said that she considered any attack that did not kill a large number of individuals to be a waste of resources,’ according to prosecutors … [and] ‘that it was important to kill the ‘kuffar’ (disbelievers) and die as martyrs on behalf of ISIS in Syria.'”

– Shauneen Miranda, “A U.S. Woman Pleads Guilty To Leading an All-female ISIS Battalion,” npr.org, June 8, 2022

Editor’s note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

6/23/2022

“Gina Haspel, 15 years before President Trump nominated her and the US Senate confirmed her as CIA director, personally oversaw the waterboarding of alleged USS Cole bomber Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri at a black site prison in Thailand in 2002, according to recent testimony at a military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Waterboarding has been recognized as a war crime since World War II, when the US prosecuted Japanese soldiers for, among other charges, torturing American POWs with waterboarding. The confirmation by James Mitchell, one of two CIA contract psychologists who designed the agency’s infamous torture program [following the September 11, 2001, attacks], builds on documentation previously obtained by the National Security Archive that Haspel authored or authorized memos on al-Nashiri’s torture while she was chief of base at the prison from October through December of 2002. …

The testimony is crucial because the video evidence of torture was destroyed – by Haspel’s own orders. In 2005 after learning that the Washington Post was running a story on the agency’s black site prisons, Haspel, who was then the chief of staff to National Clandestine Service head Jose Rodriguez, drafted a cable authorizing the destruction of 92 videos of al-Nashiri and Abu Zubaydah being tortured. Rodriguez approved the memo and justified the destruction by telling then-CIA Director Porter Goss and others that ‘the heat from destoying [sic] is nothing compared to what it would be if the tapes ever got into the public domain.'”

– Lauren Harper, “Haspel Personally Observed CIA Waterboarding, Witness Testifies,” nsarchive.gwu.edu, June 23, 2022

7/31/2022

“Ayman al-Zawahiri, one of the perpetrators of the 9-11 attacks that killed almost 3,000 people in New York, at the Pentagon and in Pennsylvania, was killed by U.S. drone missiles in Afghanistan’s capital, President Joe Biden announced yesterday [8/1/2022].

Zawahiri was killed in an over-the-horizon operation in downtown Kabul, where he was residing as a guest of the Taliban. The house was struck by two Hellfire missiles in a precision, counterterrorism operation at 6:18 a.m. Kabul time on Sunday [7/31/2022]. Zawahiri was the only casualty. ‘We are confident through our intelligence sources and methods — including multiple streams of intelligence — that we killed Zawahiri and no other individuals,’ a senior administration official said. ‘His death deals a significant blow to al-Qaida and will degrade the group’s ability to operate, including against the U.S. homeland.'”

– Jim Garamone, “U.S. Drone Strike Kills al-Qaida Leader in Kabul,” defense.gov, August 2, 2022

8/17/2022

“The 9/11 Tribute Museum in Lower Manhattan closed on Aug. 17 [2022], just short of the 21st anniversary of the 2001 terrorist attacks. New York has lost a unique testimonial to the darkest day in its modern history. The community of survivors, first responders, family members and witnesses that built it is losing its second home.

The Tribute Museum has no connection with the vast official statement that is the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. ‘Tribute,’ as its close-knit team calls it, was founded by the September 11th Families’ Association. …

Over the first 13 years of its existence, the museum received more than five million visitors — nearly half tourists from 141 countries—and its guides gave more than 500,000 tours. Then Covid-19 struck. Pre-pandemic, Tribute averaged 300,000 visitors per year; in 2021 it had just 26,000. The museum had no endowment; it relied mainly on admission income, and it had last been in the black in 2016. So in March,… [the museum] announced that, unable to cover its $2.5 million operating budget and unsuccessful in its appeals to New York state officials and foundations, the museum would close without help — help that it never found. …

Tribute was a genuine expression of New York’s living history, born from the loss and the defiant pride of the ordinary people whose lives, like so many on that terrible day, were changed in extraordinary and lasting ways. Now it is gone.”

– Dominic Green, “The 9/11 Tribute Museum: Loss Compounded,” wsj.com, August 31, 2022

8/19/2022

“British national El Shafee Elsheikh was sentenced to life in prison Friday for his role in an Islamic State scheme that took roughly two dozen Westerners hostage a decade ago. …

He is the most notorious and highest-ranking member of the Islamic State group to ever be convicted in a U.S. court, prosecutors said Friday [8/19/2022] at his sentencing hearing in U.S. District Court in Alexandria. …

The convictions revolved around the deaths of four American hostages: James Foley, Steven Sotloff, Peter Kassig, and Kayla Mueller. … They were among 26 hostages taken captive between 2012 and 2015, when the Islamic State group controlled large swaths of Iraq and Syria. …

His lawyer, Zachary Deubler, said Elsheikh will appeal his conviction. Elsheikh’s lawyers had argued that his confessions should have been ruled inadmissible because of alleged mistreatment after he was captured by Kurdish-led Syrian Defense Forces in 2018. …

‘The behavior of this defendant … can only be described as horrific, barbaric, brutal, callous and, of course, criminal,’ [Judge T.S.] Ellis said.”

– Associated Press, “An Islamic State Member Is Sentenced to Life in Prison in the Deaths of Hostages,” npr.org, August 19, 2022

Editor’s note: According to most historians of the Islamic State, “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

8/23/2022

“A study that assessed the brains of 99 World Trade Center (WTC) responders by using diffusion tractography, a 3-D imaging technique [using a combined MRI and PET scanner], showed that WTC responders with cognitive impairment (CI), a possible sign of dementia, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), have a different presentation of the white matter in their brains compared to responders with CI without PTSD. Led by researchers at Stony Brook University affiliated with the Stony Brook WTC Health and Wellness Program, the study suggests a specific form of dementia could be affecting WTC responders who also have PTSD. …

According to the authors … ‘Overall, the study supports the view that responders with CI have neurological changes consistent with neurodegenerative disease, but they are inconclusive as to the type of disease … Our findings do show that dementia due to PTSD is clearly different from non-PTSD dementia in this responder population.'”

– Emily Henderson, “Study Provides Evidence of New Form of Dementia Affecting WTC Responders,” news-medical.net, August 23, 2022

8/25/2022

“A medical program for survivors of the September 11 attacks is said to be ‘dangerously’ close to running out of funding and advocates are sounding the alarm and asking congress to step in.

The World Trade Center Health Program is short $3B and if Congress doesn’t plug that gap, advocates say people sick with 9/11-related illnesses will be at risk of losing their treatments.

‘We have countless responders and survivors that are on lifesaving medicine. Without the funds to pay for the prescription coverage, they’ll lose that,’ said Richard Alles, a retired FDNY Deputy Chief and the Director of 9/11 Community Affairs.

The healthcare program is not just for first responders like firefighters and police officers, it covers anyone who lived or worked south of Canal Street on 9/11 and for the year that followed, many of whom do not have health insurance.”

– Linda Schmidt, “Congress Called to Fund Medical Program for 9/11 Survivors,” fox5ny.com, August 25, 2022

8/26/2022

“Families of 9/11 victims are asking New York City Mayor Eric Adams to rescind approval of a Saudi-funded golf tournament scheduled to reportedly take place at a Donald Trump-owned golf course in New York in October. The Aramco Team Series women’s golf tournament in question is scheduled to take place in New York October 13-15 [2022]

9/11 families advocate Brett Eagleson said in a statement on Friday [8/26/2022] … ‘The fact that this news is breaking less than two weeks before 9/11 on the heels of the [Saudi-funded] LIV tournament in Bedminster [NJ] … It’s egregious, it’s in your face and its tone-deaf.’

Adams’ press secretary Fabien Levy told CNN, ‘While we disagree with the values of the Trump Organization, we cannot legally block their application.’ New York City officials also said that the tournament was agreed upon during former Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration and that the current administration cannot break the agreement. …

The allegations of Saudi government complicity with the attacks on September 11, 2001, have long been the subject of dispute in Washington. Fifteen of the 19 al Qaeda terrorists who hijacked four planes were Saudi nationals, but the Saudi government has denied any involvement in the attacks.

The 9/11 Commission established by Congress said in 2004 that it had found ‘no evidence that the Saudi government as an institution or senior Saudi officials individually funded’ al Qaeda.

Still, the victims’ families have pushed for further disclosures, and last year [2021], the FBI released a document that details its work to investigate the alleged logistical support that a Saudi consular official and a suspected Saudi intelligence agent in Los Angeles provided to at least two hijackers.”

– Artemis Moshtaghian, “Families of 9/11 Victims Asking NYC Mayor to Rescind Approval of Saudi-Funded Golf Tournament Reportedly to be Held at Trump Golf Course,” kten.com, August 29, 2022

8/26/2022

“A federal judge found that 9/11 families and other U.S. victims cannot recover billions of dollars from the Central Bank of Afghanistan to satisfy judgments against the Taliban. The report and recommendation, handed down by Magistrate Judge Sarah Netburn on Friday afternoon [8/26/2022], is a victory for Afghan civil society groups, which argued in an amicus brief filed by the Center for Constitutional Rights that the $3.5 billion in blocked assets belong to the people of Afghanistan and should be used to alleviate the devastating humanitarian crisis there.

At issue are $7.1 billion that the previous government of Afghanistan placed in the New York Federal Reserve. President Biden froze the funds after the Taliban takeover in August 2021, and, in February, he signed an executive order effectively allocating half for humanitarian relief in Afghanistan, leaving half subject to litigation. A group of 9/11 families that won a 2011 default judgment against those responsible for the attacks had filed a motion arguing that more than $2 billion should be turned over to them. American victims of a 2016 attack in Afghanistan had filed a separate motion seeking $138.4 million, and other victims made similar claims against the remainder of funds.”

– Center for Constitutional Rights, “Judge Agrees With Afghan Groups: 9/11 Families Cannot Claim Billions From Central Bank of Afghanistan,” ccrjustice.org, August 29, 2022

9/17/2022

“The number of New York City firefighters who died from 9/11 related illness in the two decades since terrorists flew hijacked planes into the World Trade Center has surpassed 300.

The New York City Fire Department’s Uniformed Firefighters Association announced the deaths of three additional firefighters who responded to Ground Zero over this weekend [September 17 – 18, 2022]. …

This comes as the World Trade Center Health Program, which provides medical monitoring and treatment of WTC-related health conditions for 9/11 responders and survivors, is reportedly running on a $3 billion deficit. …

The FDNY lost 343 members 21 years ago from the attack on the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.”

– Danielle Wallace, “NYC Firefighters Dead From 9/11 Related Illnesses Surpasses 300 as World Trade Health Fund Sits at $3B Deficit,” foxnews.com, September 20, 2022

9/26/2022

“On Sept. 26, 2022, Yusuf al Qaradawi died at age 96 in Qatar. The spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Qaradawi was the most well-known Muslim cleric in the West, infamous for his calls to murder Americans, Israelis, and others during the height of the Global War on Terror. Once called ‘the most popular and authoritative’ Sunni cleric in the world, Qaradawi’s death attracted little attention, at least as compared to his influence on world events. That reaction, perhaps even more than the death itself, is an important pronouncement: The post-9/11 era is over. …

‘Every person who has fought in these wars and left them,’ the war on terror veteran and writer Elliot Ackerman recently wrote, ‘has had to declare the war over for themselves.’ … There are no ticker-tape parades, and there will not be anything analogous to a ‘Victory in Europe’ day. The war against Islamist terrorism, while winding down, will no doubt continue.

But the forever war seems to have reached a turning point, leaving America searching to articulate its posture on the world stage. The muted attention given to Qaradawi’s death suggests the hateful cleric outlived the era he did so much to shape.”

– Sean Durns, “The End of the Post-9/11 Era,” washingtonexaminer.com, October 14, 2022

11/1/2022

A U.S. citizen was sentenced to 20 years in prison today [11/1/2022] in the Eastern District of Virginia for organizing and leading an all-female military battalion in Syria on behalf of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), a designated foreign terrorist organization.

According to court documents, Allison Fluke-Ekren, aka Allison Ekren, aka Umm Mohammed al-Amriki, and aka Umm Mohammed, 42, a former resident of Kansas, traveled overseas and, from in or about September 2011 through in or about May 2019, engaged in terrorist acts in multiple countries, including Syria, Libya and Iraq. Fluke-Ekren ultimately served as the leader and organizer of an ISIS military battalion, known as the Khatiba Nusaybah, where she trained women on the use of automatic firing AK-47 assault rifles, grenades and suicide belts. Over 100 women and young girls, some as young as 10 years old, received military training from Fluke-Ekren in Syria on behalf of ISIS.”

United States Department of Justice, “American Woman Who Led ISIS Battalion Sentenced to 20 Years,” justice.gov, November 1, 2022

Editor’s note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

11/8/2022

“A Pennsylvania man was sentenced yesterday [11/8/2022] to 208 months, more than 17 years, in federal prison, followed by a lifetime of supervised release, for attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, aka ISIS, a designated foreign terrorist organization.

Mustafa Mousab Alowemer, 24, of Pittsburgh, pleaded guilty in the Western District of Pennsylvania on Sept. 16, 2021 to one count of attempting to provide material support to ISIS in connection with his plan to attack a church in Pittsburgh.”

United States Department of Justice, “Man Sentenced to More Than 17 Years in Prison for Attempting to Provide Material Support to ISIS,” justice.gov, November 9, 2022

Editor’s note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

11/9/2022

“A rough transcript of a 2004 interview George W. Bush and Dick Cheney gave to a government commission investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks provides a glimpse of the former president’s and vice president’s views of the seminal event that defined their eight years in the White House.

The April 2004 interview with the bipartisan 9/11 commission, which took place in the Oval Office, included discussion of intelligence warnings before the attacks and the events that unfolded on the day of Sept. 11, according to the copy of the 31-page document. It also describes Mr. Bush acknowledging that Air Force One had poor communications while he was on the plane shortly after the attacks began—and Mr. Bush’s assertion that he gave Mr. Cheney the authority to shoot down commercial airliners that were unresponsive.

The newly declassified document was released to the public Wednesday [11/9/2022]. …

The interview wasn’t recorded, but a note taker was present. The document was authorized for public release by the Interagency Security Classification Appeals Panel, a body of representatives from various federal departments. It contains few redactions.”

– Dustin Volz and Warren P. Strobel, “US Releases 9/11 Commission Interview with George W. Bush, Dick Cheney,” wsj.com, November 9, 2022

11/18/2022

“A Danish woman evacuated from a Syrian detention camp last year was sentenced on Friday [11/18/2022] to three years in prison by a Danish court for aiding Islamic State militants and illegally travelling to and residing in conflict zones,…

The 35-year-old woman travelled to Syria with her husband in 2013. When trying to escape Islamic State’s so-called caliphate in 2018 with the help of human traffickers, they were captured by Kurdish forces, who sent her to the al-Roj detention camp in Kurdish-held territory in northeastern Syria due to their association with Islamic State. … The woman was separated from her husband during the escape attempt, and it is unclear what happened to him.

The woman pleaded guilty to aiding Islamic State by working as a housewife and to illegally travelling to and residing in a conflict area, her lawyer told Reuters. The woman accepted the three-year sentence.”

– Reuters, “Danish Woman Evacuated From Syrian Camps Sentenced for Aiding Islamic State,” reuters.com, November 18, 2022

Editor’s note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

11/24/2022

“An unusual terrorism case in Chicago came to a close Thursday [11/24/2022] when a federal judge handed a seven-and-a-half-year prison sentence to a former DePaul University student who tried to aid the Islamic State with a computer script.

Before he was sentenced, Thomas Osadzinski, 23, told U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman that, ‘I failed everyone, and I failed myself.’ …

The judge also gave Osadzinski 10 years of supervised release.

Osadzinski’s prosecution was believed to be the first of its kind when it began three years ago – a terrorism case brought against a U.S.-based defendant involving computer code. …

Prosecutors said Osadzinski designed a process that uses a computer script to make Islamic State propaganda more conveniently accessed and disseminated by users on the social media platform Telegram.

Defense attorney Joshua Herman argued at trial that Osadzinski acted independently. He said … ‘there must be coordination with’ or direction from, the Islamic State to find Osadzinski guilty. But Assistant U.S. Attorney Melody Wells argued there was ‘nothing independent about this.’ She told jurors Osadzinski had been responding to Islamic State propaganda, which urged supporters to ‘strive patiently in the digital arena.’

In the end, the jury convicted Osadzinski of attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State after a trial that featured roughly two weeks of evidence.”

– Sun-Times Media Wire, “Former Depaul Student Sentenced for Trying To Help Islamic State With Computer Program,” abc7chicago.com, November 18, 2022

Editor’s note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

12/20/2022

“Congress will not consider additional funding for the World Trade Center Health Program, which has helped thousands of first responders access medical treatment for exposure to toxic debris after the September 11 terror attacks.

Since 2010, the program has helped fund the treatment of respiratory illness for first responders who were exposed to toxic debris from 9/11. …

The program covers the lifespan of all people exposed, including responders and survivors of the attack on the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, the Shanksville crash site.

While the program was reauthorized in 2015 and extended through 2090 with bipartisan support, it is estimated to be too cash-strapped to take on any new claims after October 2024.”

– J.D. Allen, “Funding for 9/11 Health Program Is Left Out of Federal Omnibus Bill,” wshu.org, December 20, 2022

12/21/2022

“A last-second deal in the massive government funding bill will add $1 billion to the World Trade Center health program and buy several years before it runs into a budget crunch,…

Supporters and advocates had hoped to pass a $3.6 billion measure authored by Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., that would have permanently plugged the hole and covered military personnel who are ill from responding to the Pentagon attack in 2001. The health program is facing a $3 billion deficit over the next decade.

The 9/11 health fund money was unexpectedly left out of the original version of the $1.7 trillion spending, prompting outrage from advocates and New York lawmakers.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell blocked that at the behest of several of his members, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told the Daily News. …

Late Wednesday, Gillibrand and Schumer took a deal to get $1 billion to at least shore up the program. The money is being added as an amendment and will have to be voted on, but is expected to pass easily with McConnell’s support.

The move sparked both relief and anger. On one hand, the $1 billion probably pushes the worst problems for the health program until 2027. On the other, a stopgap like that does not fix the underlying formula used to fund the program, which helped cause the deficit.”

Michael McAuliff, “Congressional Negotiators Agree to Add $1 Billion for 9/11 Health Fund in End-of-Year Spending Bill,” news.yahoo.com, December 21, 2022

12/24/2022

“$1 billion has been set aside in the 2023 federal spending bill for the World Trade Center Health Program, which provides health benefits to 9/11 first responders and survivors.

This new funding will enable it to continue providing uninterrupted service until at least 2027. …

The World Trade Center Health Program was established by the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of 2010.

In 2015, the plan was reauthorized until 2090.”

– CBS New York Team, “2023 Federal Spending Bill Includes $1 Billion for World Trade Center Health Program,” cbsnews.com, December 24, 2022

1/4/2023

“More than two decades after the deadly Sept. 11, 2001, attack, the Fairness for 9/11 Families Act will compensate nearly 6,000 spouses and children the $2.7 billion they are owed.

In December [2022], the Fairness for 9/11 Families Act was passed by the Senate and Congress.

Last week, it was signed into law by President Joe Biden.

The Fairness for 9/11 Families Act includes a funding source for the lump-sum catch-up payments — totaling $2.7 billion — for the thousands of spouses and family members in the United States Victims of State Sponsored Terrorism Fund (USVSST). …

Direct family members of first responders who perished on Sept. 11, 2001, had been barred from receiving money owed to them from the USVSST and have been tirelessly advocating to right the wrong. …

Created in 2015, the USVSST is meant to provide compensation to American hostages and their families, as well as families of those who died on Sept.11. However, because some families received money from the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund (VCF), they were precluded from receiving additional funds from the USVSST. …

Congress corrected this injustice in 2019, through the United States Victims of State Sponsored Terrorism Fund Clarification Act.”

– Kristin F. Dalton, “Biden Signs Bill Compensating 6K Families of 9/11 Victims with 2.7 Billion, From Fund They Were Previously Barred From,” silive.com, January 4, 2023

1/31/2023

A Michigan man was convicted by a federal jury today [1/31/2023]  in the Eastern District of Michigan on charges of providing, attempting to provide, and conspiring to provide material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), a designated foreign terrorist organization, in connection with his support for ISIS in Syria from 2015-2018. He was also convicted of receiving military-type training from ISIS while in Syria.

Ibraheem Izzy Musaibli, 32, of Dearborn, was convicted after a nine-day trial conducted before U.S. District Judge David M. Lawson in Detroit. The jury deliberated for approximately four hours before returning the guilty verdict. …

Evidence provided during the trial established that Musaibli, originally born in Dearborn, moved to Yemen in April 2015. From Yemen, he traveled to Syria in the fall of 2015 where he attended an ISIS-run religious training camp before undergoing military training where he learned to shoot, carry and otherwise handle a machine gun. Upon graduation from the ISIS military training camp, Musaibli swore allegiance to ISIS and its leader and remained with ISIS for over two and half years. Musaibli was eventually captured by Syrian Democratic Forces in 2018 and turned over to the FBI and flown back to the United States to face terrorism related charges.

Musaibli faces a maximum penalty of 50 years in prison when he is sentenced. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.”

– United States Department of Justice, “Michigan Man Convicted of Charges of Providing Material Support to ISIS,” justice.gov, January 31, 2023

Editor’s notes:

  • Musaibli was sentenced to 14 years imprisonment on June 15, 2023 with five years credit for time served. See The Associated Press, “Michigan Man Gets 14 Years in Prison for Fighting for Islamic State,” nbcnews.com, June 16, 2023

  • According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

2/1/2023

“A Dayton-area man will spend 10 years in prison after police said he tried to go overseas, to join the terrorist group ISIS.

Twenty-three-year-old Naser Almadaoji, from Beavercreek, was sentenced on Wednesday [2/1/2023].

According to court documents, Almadaoji purchased a plane ticket for travel on Oct. 24, 2018, and was arrested after checking in and obtaining his boarding pass.

Almadaoji intended to travel to Astana, Kazakhstan, where he planned to be smuggled into Afghanistan so that he could join and receive military training from ISIS- Khorasan (ISIS-K) in support of both that terrorist group and ISIS, those documents state. …

He pleaded guilty in 2021, right before he was scheduled to go on trial.

‘Almadaoji was not just an ideological supporter of terrorism, he attempted to train to fight, assassinate, kidnap and kill, in hopes of employing violence in America on behalf of ISIS,’ U.S. Attorney Kenneth L. Parker said in a statement.”

– WLWT Digital Staff, “Ohio Man Sentenced to Prison for Attempting to Join ISIS,” wlwt.com, February 2, 2023

Editor’s Note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

2/3/2023

“James Bradley, aka Abdullah, 21, of the Bronx, New York, and Arwa Muthana, 30, of Hoover, Alabama, were sentenced to 11 years in prison followed by 10 years of supervised release and nine years in prison followed by 10 years of supervised release, respectively, for attempting to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS).

In September 2022, Bradley and Muthana pleaded guilty to attempting to provide material support to ISIS before U.S. District Judge Paul A. Engelmayer. According to court documents, Bradley and Muthana are ISIS supporters who sought to travel to the Middle East to join and fight for ISIS. Bradley expressed violent extremist views since at least 2019, including his desire to support ISIS by traveling overseas to join the group or committing a terrorist attack in the United States.”

– The United States Department of Justice, “ New York Man and Woman Sentenced for Attempting to Provide Material Support to ISIS,” justice.gov, February 3, 2023

Editor’s Note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.

2/7/2023

“A federal jury yesterday [2/7/2023] convicted Ruslan Maratovich Asainov, 46, a U.S. citizen and former resident of Bay Ridge, New York, of all five counts of an indictment charging him with conspiracy to provide material support to ISIS; providing material support to ISIS in the form of personnel, training, expert advice and assistance; receipt of military-type training from ISIS; and obstruction of justice. The jury also found that the defendant’s provision of material support to ISIS resulted in the death of one or more persons. The verdict followed a two-week trial before U.S. District Judge Nicholas G. Garaufis.

‘Mr. Asainov, a US citizen, traveled abroad to kill and train others to kill on behalf of ISIS. Now, he is being held accountable,’ said Assistant Attorney General for National Security Matthew G. Olsen. …

‘As proven at trial, Asainov was a member of ISIS who was so committed to the terrorist organization’s evil cause that he abandoned his young family here in Brooklyn, New York, to make an extraordinary journey to the battlefield in Syria where he became a lethal sniper and trained many others to kill their adversaries, and even after being captured still pledged his allegiance to ISIS’ murderous path,’ said U.S. Attorney Breon Peace for the Eastern District of New York. ‘There is no place in a civilized world for the defendant’s bloody campaign of death and destruction [Peace continued].'”

– United States Department of Justice, “American Citizen Convicted of Providing Material Support to ISIS that Resulted in Death and Related Offenses,” justice.gov, February 8, 2023

Editor’s Note: According to most historians of the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh), “the group emerged out of al-Qaeda in Iraq as a response to the U.S. invasion in 2003.” See Hassan Hassan, “The True Origins of ISIS,” theatlantic.com, November 30, 2018, for more information.