9/11 Failure

Words: 765
Pages: 4

The fourth plane in the 9/11 attack may have failed in its mission, but the other objectives were still accomplished.The attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, by Al-Qaeda, was an unspeakable event. Thousands of lives were affected horribly. The event was profoundly sad, but it inspired people and organizations to act and protect the citizens of the United States. One of these organizations was the Central Intelligence Agency. The CIA had been acting to prevent the events of 9/11 and they worked to get justice for those who lost their lives in 9/11 after the crisis. One of their actions was to work with the United States military to capture and persecute the leader of Al-Qaeda, Osama Bin Laden. The CIA positively impacted the …show more content…
They were tasked with finding Osama Bin Laden for the military and convincing the Afghan rebel Northern Alliance to help the US military stage an attack on Osama Bin Laden’s sponsors, the Taliban. The CIA worked with Task Force Dagger, the US military unit meant to combat Al-Qaeda after they attacked the World Trade Center. They also worked with Task Force Dagger and they worked together to stop the Taliban from harboring the members of Al-Qaeda. The CIA had been in Afghanistan a few years working to dismantle the Taliban as it was a government that was sympathizing with terrorists who could hurt the United States interests. While Task Force Dagger was fighting the Taliban, the CIA was finding and interrogating any member of Al-Qaeda’s members they could find as to what Al-Qaeda’s agenda was, and where other members were positioned in Afghanistan and the United States (Rod Paschall). On May 2, 2011, Task Force Dagger and the CIA’s efforts came to fruition when the raid on a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan lead to Osama Bin Laden’s death (CNN.com). After the United States’ victory against Al-Qaeda, the CIA and Task Force Dagger still had much to do to remove the Taliban from their tyrannical …show more content…
The CIA’s second objective was to remove the Taliban from power if the government proved to be acting not out of a responsibility towards their citizens, but of only their unitary goals. The CIA had been working in Afghanistan two years prior to September 11, 2001, because they were trying to gain intelligence to determine if the Taliban was sponsoring terror groups, and they were gathering evidence that the Taliban was not acting out of the interests of its citizens but with unitary motives. Instead, they found vile acts by the government towards their citizens. “The Afghan government continued to expand its use of illegal militias, some of which were responsible for killings and assaults on civilians. Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) were also responsible for civilian casualties from indiscriminate aerial and mortar attacks”(www.hrw.org). The CIA also found that as time went on, “Both the Taliban and ANSF increasingly used schools for military purposes; such abuses, along with insecurity throughout the country, deprived many children, particularly girls, of access to