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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper looks at the effects of 9/11. Causes are examined as well. U.S. policy is discussed as a contributing factor.
Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA608911.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
as a "post 9/11" one. There is "before" and "after" and since the attack, the world is thought not to be the same. Perhaps a comparable terrorist attack in terms
of numbers affected was the 5,500 (Dyer, 1996, p.13B) people injured in a poison-gas attack on a Tokyo subway system in 1995. Still, 9/11 resonates with the American people and
nothing comparable had come before that attack, or since. Another way to look at it is that 9/11 was inevitable. It was an incident that cropped up as a result
of a variety of factors, inclusive of U.S. public policy. Many things would contribute to the rise of Al Qaeda and to suggest that everything was fine prior to the
incident is to be disingenuous. After all, the World Trade Center had been bombed before. By fluffing off such incidents, and not examining the proliferation of terrorism under wraps, the
worst thing that might have happened, did. It occurred in September 11, 2001, but there are socio-political factors that are aligned with the event. It was not merely a surprise
occurrence, but a response to what was the status quo. Things have changed since 9/11, but they have not changed all that much. At least, the political landscape is the
same. First, it is important to examine how and why 9/11 came about. What proliferated the rise of Al Qaeda? Might U.S. public policy contributed? The rise of al-Qaeda has
been seen in recent times, as its most significant attack was in 2001. However, the roots of the organization is aligned with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan ("Al-Qaeda," 2006). It
was at that time that Muslim fighters, who were not Afghani, fought with a group funded by the United States and Pakistan ("Al-Qaeda," 2006). What happened was that Osama
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