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The fight against terrorism is no closer to success today than it was a decade ago when, in the wake of the September 11 terror attacks, President George W. Bush declared a Global War on Terrorism.
If there is one success story since 9/11, it has been the efforts to combat terror finance. If military action is sometimes akin to conducting surgery with an axe, efforts to dry up sources of funding are like wielding a scalpel.
Introduction
For a bankrupt country in the middle of hyperinflation, the discovery of a major diamond deposit in Zimbabwe in June 2006 should have been good news. Instead it has provided sustenance to a volatile and violent political elite that suppresses the majority. The power sharing/coalition government in Zimbabwe came into...
This volume sets the stage for a reasoned and robust discussion of the meaning of 9/11 and the law and policy of the war on terrorism.
Ten years ago, the events of September 11 stunned America. Devastating terrorist attacks forced the nation to fundamentally reassess American national security. Please join us for a discussion moderated by John Yoo. Contributors Andrew C. McCarthy, Richard A. Epstein, and others will speak on the panel.
Concern about civil liberties for the average American has risen sharply over the last decade since the 9/11 attacks. But Americans want government to err on the side of protecting them against possible terrorist attacks.
Ten years after 9/11, Americans fear there will be another attack. They also believe America is safer due to the government's efforts and that the initial decision to send troops to Iraq was the right one.







