@ 09:00 PM
MAR 12 2007
@ 01:00 AM
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Many think the war on terror will end with a withdrawal from Iraq or a stable government in Afghanistan. While the world focuses on those two conflicts, the U.S. military is preparing to fight a war that may last for generations, a war that may never end.
“War On Terror” is a mislabel, for you cannot have a War on a Criminal Act, when it is looked at in this way it causes the number of those who will resort to these Criminal Devestating Actions to increase. For in Wars the numbers of Innocent Victims becomes Overwelming, leading to much more Hatreds on the part of those who survive, especially for those who would never have thought of committing to any Criminal Activity., they than become more willing to do anything they feel is needed in Retaliation and to Vent the Anger and Hatreds that grow within.
TERROR TIMELINE:
When did the War on Terror really start?
And when will it end?
1960s and 1970s: Disenfranchised Groups Lash Out
Tools of the modern terror trade take shape as poor, stateless and disenfranchised peoples begin to use hijackings, assassinations and kidnappings to achieve goals. The first hijacking of a U.S. aircraft occurs in 1961, when a Puerto Rican-born gunman forces a National Airlines plane to fly to Havana, Cuba, where he is given asylum.
Several U.S. diplomats are assassinated or kidnapped abroad during this period, beginning with the U.S. ambassador to Guatemala, who is murdered by a rebel faction in 1968.
Other notable events include the 1969 kidnapping of the U.S. ambassador to Brazil by a Marxist revolutionary group; the 1969 attack on the U.S. ambassador to Japan by a knife-wielding Japanese citizen; the 1973 kidnapping of the U.S. consul general in Mexico by members of the People's Revolutionary Armed Forces; and the 1973 assassination of the U.S. ambassador to Sudan and other diplomats at the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Khartoum by members of the "Black September" organization.
Widely known as the "War on Terror," the outgoing commander of the U.S. military's Central Command, Gen. John Abizaid, refers to it as "The Long War." Ted Koppel presents an in-depth special report on a war that may last longer than any in which the U.S. has been involved before.
The third chapter in this trilogy is something that the Pentagon calls "The Long War." And what they're really referring to is the battle against terrorism, which many of the leaders in the Pentagon now perceive as being an endless battle — one that may go on for 20 years, 30 years or more.
Koppel and his team of producers take viewers to Afghanistan, where the American military is fighting an increasingly powerful Taliban; to Djibouti, where the U.S. is building schools and digging wells; to Ethiopia, where the U.S. is training commandos while the war in next-door Somalia rages; and to North Carolina, where private military firm Blackwater USA is training military and civilian personnel for life on the front lines.
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