Is
Donald Trump the Second 9/11? Or Is He the
Third?
By Tom
Engelhardt
December 23, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- Here's the question at hand
-- and I guarantee you that you’ll read it
here first: Is Donald Trump the second or
even possibly the third 9/11? Because truly,
he has to be one or the other.
Let me explain,
and while I do, keep this in mind: as 2019
ends, thanks to Brexit and the victory of
Boris Johnson in Britain’s recent election,
the greatest previous imperial power on this
planet is clearly headed for the
sub-basement of history.
Meanwhile, that other superpower of the Cold
War era, the Soviet Union, now Russia,
remains a well-sauced Putinesca shadow of
its former self. And then, of course,
there’s the country that, not so long ago,
every major American politician but Donald
Trump proclaimed the most
exceptional,
indispensable
nation ever.
As it happens,
the United States -- if you didn’t catch the
reference above -- has been looking a bit
peaked lately itself. You can’t say that
it’s the end of the road for a land of such
wealth and
staggering military power,
enough to finish off several Earth-sized
planets. However, it’s clearly a country in
decline on a planet in the same condition
and its present leader,
Tariff Man,
however uniquely orange-faced he may be, is
just the symptom of the long path to hell in
a handbasket its leadership embarked on
almost three decades ago as the Cold War
ended.
Admittedly,
President Trump has proved to be the symptom
from hell. To give him full credit, he’s now
remarkably hard-at-tweet
dismantling
the various alliances, agreements, and
organizations that U.S. leaders had
assembled, since 1945, to make this country
the Great Britain (and beyond) of the second
half of the twentieth century and that’s an
accomplishment of the first order.
And keep in
mind the context for so much of this: it’s
happening in a country that may be
experiencing an unprecedented kind of
inequality. It’s producing billionaires at a
staggering clip with
just three men
already possessing wealth equivalent to that
of half the rest of the population; this,
mind you, at a moment when the globe's
26 richest people
reportedly are worth as much as half of
everyone else, or 3.8 billion people. And
this in a world in which, as the income of
that poorest half of humanity continues to
decline, the wealth of billionaires
increases
by $2.5 billion a day and a new billionaire
is minted every two days.
Had all of this
not already been so and had a
sense of decline
not been in the air, it’s inconceivable that
those heartland white Americans who had come
to feel themselves on the losing end of
developments in this country would have sent
a charlatan billionaire into the White House
to represent them (or at least to
give the finger
to the Washington establishment). And all
this on a planet that itself, in climate
terms, appears to be in unprecedented
decline.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Think of the above as part of what's come
down, metaphorically speaking, since those
towers in New York fell more than 18 years
ago.
Looking Back on 9/11
It’s in this
context that we should all look back on what
truly did come down that Tuesday morning in
September 2001, an all-American day of the
grimmest sort. That was, of course, the day
when this country was attacked by 19
suicidal hijackers, most of them Saudi,
using American commercial jets as their
four-plane air force.
They, in turn, were inspired by a man, Osama
bin Laden, and his organization, al-Qaeda,
part of a crew of radical Islamists that
Washington had backed years earlier in an
Afghan War against the Soviet Union. In
response to the events of that day -- though
it seems unimaginable now -- we could have
joined a world already in pain, one that had
experienced horrors largely unimaginable in
this country until that moment, in a kind of
global solidarity.
Instead,
responding to the destruction of those
towers in Manhattan and part of the
Pentagon, the Bush administration
essentially
launched a war
against much of the planet. They soon dubbed
it a “Global War on Terror,” or GWOT, and
key officials almost instantly claimed it
would have
more than 60 countries
(or terror groups in them) in its sights.
Eighteen years later, the U.S. is still at
war across a vast swath of the globe,
involved in conflict after conflict from the
Philippines
to
Afghanistan,
Iran and
Iraq to
northern Africa
and beyond. In
the process, that GWOT has produced
failed state
after failed state and terror group after
terror group, enough to make the original
al-Qaeda (still
going) look
like nothing at all. And of course, in all
these years, the U.S. military, hailed here
as “the finest fighting force that the world
has ever known” (and
similar formulations),
lacks a single decisive (or even modest)
victory. Meanwhile, everywhere, yet more
towers, real or metaphorical, continue to
fall; in fact,
whole cities
in the Middle East now lie in
rubble.
The top
officials of President George W. Bush’s
administration would, at the time, mistake
9/11 for a kind of upside-down stroke of
luck, the perfect excuse for launching
military operations, including invasions,
geared to the ultimate domination of the
planet (and its key oil supplies). Via
drones armed with missiles and bombs, they
would turn any president into an
assassin-in-chief.
They would, in the end, help
spread terror groups
in a fashion beyond imagining on September
12, 2001, while their never-ending wars
would
displace
vast numbers of innocent people, creating a
refugee crisis of a kind not seen since the
end of World War II when significant parts
of the planet stood in ruins. And all of
that, in turn, would help spark, on a global
scale, what came to be known as the “populist
right,” in
part thanks to the very refugees created by
that GWOT. The response to what came down on
9/11, in other words, would create its own
hell on Earth.
Who knew back
then? Not me, that’s for sure. Not when I
started what became TomDispatch 18
years ago, feeling, in the wake of 9/11 and
the invasion of Afghanistan, that something
was truly wrong with our world, that
something more than the World Trade Center
might be in the process of coming down
around all our ears. I can
still remember
the feeling in those weeks, as I saw the
mainstream media’s focus narrow drastically
amid nationwide self-congratulatory
celebrations of this country as the greatest
survivor, dominator, and victim on the
planet. I watched with trepidation as we
began to close down to the world, while
essentially attempting to take all the roles
in the global drama for ourselves except
greatest evil doer, which was, of course,
left to Osama bin Laden.
I
still remember thinking then that the
Vietnam years had been the worst and most
embattled in my lifetime, but that somehow
this -- whatever it turned out to be --
would be so much worse. And yet whatever I
was sensing, whatever I was imagining,
wouldn’t prove to be the half of it, not the
quarter of it.
If you had told
me then that we were heading for Donald
Trump’s version of American decline and a
corrupt global gilded age of unprecedented
proportions, one in which showmanship, scam,
and self-serving corruption would become the
essence of everything, while god knows what
kinds of nightmares -- like those
subprime mortgages
of the 2007 economic meltdown -- were
quietly piling up somewhere just beyond our
view, I would have thought you mad.
The
Second 9/11
All these years
later, it’s strange to feel something like
that moment recurring. Of course, in this
elongated Trumpian version of it, no obvious
equivalent to those towers in New York has
come down. And yet, over the three years of
The Donald’s presidency, can’t you just feel
that something has indeed been coming down,
even as the media’s coverage
once again narrowed,
this time not to a single
self-congratulatory story of greatness and
sadness, but to one strange man and his
doings.
If you think
about it, I suspect you can feel it, too.
Looking back to 2016, mightn’t you agree
that Donald Trump rather literally embodied
a second 9/11? He certainly was, after a
fashion, the hijacker-in-chief of that
moment, not sent by al-Qaeda, of course,
but... well, by whom? That is, indeed, the
question, isn't it? Whom exactly did he
represent? Not his famed “base,” those red-hatted
MAGA enthusiasts at his endless rallies who
felt they had gotten lost in the shuffle of
wealth and politics and corruption in this
country. Perhaps, of course, the al-Qaeda of
that moment was actually another kind of
terrorist crew entirely, the one-percenters
who had mistaken this country’s wealth for
their own and preferred a billionaire of any
sort in the White House for the first time
in history. Or maybe, as a presidential
hijacker first class, Donald Trump simply
represented himself and no one else at all.
Perhaps he was ready to bring a whole system
to its knees (just as he had once bankrupted
those
five casinos of his
in Atlantic City), as long as he could jump
ship in the nick of time with the loot.
On that first
9/11, those towers came down. The second
time around, the only thing that came down,
at least in the literal sense, was, of
course, The Donald himself. He famously
descended that
Trump Tower escalator
into the presidential race in June 2015,
promoting a
“great wall” (still
unbuilt
years later and now, like everything The
Donald touches, a
cesspool of corruption)
and getting rid of Mexican “rapists.”
From that
moment on, Donald Trump essentially hijacked
our world. I mean, try to tell me that, in
the years since, he hasn’t provided living
evidence that the greatest power in human
history, the one capable of destroying the
planet six different ways, has no brain, no
real coordination at all. It’s fogged in by
a
mushroom cloud
of largely senseless media coverage and,
though still the leading force on the
planet, in some rather literal fashion has
lost its mind.
No wonder it’s
almost impossible to tell what we’re
actually living through. Certainly, in a slo-mo
version of 9/11, Donald Trump has been
taking down the nation as we’ve known it.
Admittedly, unlike Bolivia, Iran, Iraq,
Lebanon, and other such places on this
increasingly unsettled planet of ours, true
civil strife has (yet) to break out here
(though individual mass shootings
certainly have).
Still, the president and some of his
supporters have
begun talking about,
even threatening, “civil war” for our
unsettled future.
On
the first 9/11, the greatest power in
history struck out at the planet. The second
time around, it seems to be preparing to
strike out at itself.
Was
11/9 the original 9/11?
Perhaps this is the time to bring up the
possibility that September 11, 2001, might
not really have been the first 9/11 and that
Donald Trump might actually be the third,
not the second 9/11.
In a sense, the
first 9/11 might really have been 11/9. I’m
thinking, of course, of
November 9, 1989,
the day the Berlin Wall, that symbol of the
Cold War, a divided Europe, and a deeply
divided world, suddenly began to be torn
down by East and West Germans. Believe me,
in our nation's capital, it was an event no
less unexpected or shocking than September
11, 2001. Until that moment, Washington’s
political class and the crew who ran the
national security state had continued to
imagine a future dominated by a never-ending
Cold War with the Soviet Union. The shock of
that moment is still hard to grasp.
Looked at a certain way, that November the
people had hijacked history and Washington’s
response to it would be no less monumentally
misplaced than to the 2001 moment. Once the
key officials of George H.W. Bush’s
administration had taken in what happened,
they essentially declared ultimate victory.
Over everything. For all time.
With the U.S.,
the last standing superpower, ultimately
victorious in a way never before imagined,
history itself seemed to be
at an end.
The future was ours, forever, and we had
every right to grab it for ourselves. The
world in which so many of us had grown up
was declared over and done with in a wave of
self-congratulatory backslapping in
Washington. The planet, it seemed, was now
our oyster and ours alone. (And if you want
to know how that turned out, just think of
Donald Trump in the White House and then
read Andrew Bacevich’s new book,
The Age of Illusions: How America
Squandered Its Cold War Victory.)
It’s in this context that Trump's could be
considered the third hijacking of our era.
Given his sense of self, his might even be
thought of not as the 1% hijacking moment,
but as the .000000001% moment.
And be
prepared: the next version of 9/11, however
defined, is guaranteed to make Osama bin
Laden and his 19 hijackers look like so many
pikers. Depending on what
tipping points
are reached and what happens after that on
our
rapidly warming
planet, so much could come down around
humanity’s ears. And if so, that moment in
2015 when Donald Trump rode an escalator
down into the presidential contest to the
tune of Neil Young’s “Rockin’
in the Free World”
will look very different -- because it will
be far clearer than it is even now that he
was carrying
a blowtorch
with him.
Tom
Engelhardt is a co-founder of the
American Empire Project
and the author of a history of the Cold War,
The End of Victory Culture.
He runs
TomDispatch.com
and is a fellow of the Type Media
Center. His sixth and latest book is
A Nation Unmade by War
(Dispatch Books).
Follow
TomDispatch
on
Twitter and
join us on
Facebook.
Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John
Feffer’s new dystopian novel (the second in
the Splinterlands series)
Frostlands,
Beverly Gologorsky's novel
Every Body Has a Story,
and Tom Engelhardt's
A Nation Unmade by War,
as well as Alfred McCoy's
In the Shadows of the American Century: The
Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power
and John Dower's
The Violent American Century: War and Terror
Since World War II.
Copyright 2019 Tom Engelhardt
Do you agree or
disagree? Post your comment here
|