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d-22635House OversightOther

Narrative on U.S. interventions in the Arab world and post‑9/11 dynamics

The passage provides broad historical commentary without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable allegations linking powerful actors to misconduct. It lacks concrete leads for investigation Describes U.S. military actions in Afghanistan, Iraq, and broader Middle East post‑9/11. Mentions Arab public perception of American interventions. References the Arab Spring and its outcomes in Tuni

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #025018
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides broad historical commentary without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable allegations linking powerful actors to misconduct. It lacks concrete leads for investigation Describes U.S. military actions in Afghanistan, Iraq, and broader Middle East post‑9/11. Mentions Arab public perception of American interventions. References the Arab Spring and its outcomes in Tuni

Tags

us-foreign-policyarab-springmilitary-interventionpublic-perceptionmiddle-easthouse-oversight

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EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
22 The masters and preachers of terror had told their foot soldiers, and the great mass on the fence, that the Americans would make a run for it—as they had in Lebanon and Somalia, that they didn't have the stomach for a fight. The Arabs barely took notice when America struck the Taliban in Kabul. What was Afghanistan to them? It was a blighted and miserable land at a safe distance. But the American war, and the sense of righteous violation, soon hit the Arab world itself. Saddam Hussein may not have been the Arab idol he was a decade earlier, but he was still a favored son of that Arab nation, its self-appointed defender. The toppling of his regime, some 18 months or so after 9/11, had brought the war closer to the Arabs. The spectacle of the Iraqi despot flushed out of his spider hole by American soldiers was a lesson to the Arabs as to the falseness and futility of radicalism. It is said that "the east" is a land given to long memory, that there the past is never forgotten. But a decade on, the Arab world has little to say about 9/1 1—at least not directly. In the course of that Arab Spring, young people in Tunisia and Egypt brought down the dreaded dictators. And in Libya, there is the thrill of liberty, delivered, in part, by Western powers. In the slaughter-grounds of Syria, the rage is not directed against foreign demons, but against the cruel rulers who have robbed that population of a chance at a decent life. America held the line in the aftermath of 9/11. It wasn't brilliant at everything it attempted in Arab lands. But a chance was given the Arabs to come face to face, and truly for the first time, with the harvest of their own history. Now their world is what they make of it. Mr. Ajami is a senior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution and co-chair of the Working Group on Islamism and the International Order.

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