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As the United States issued pledges to find the chief suspect behind the bombing, Osama bin Laden, dead or alive, there were some voices calling for widening the net of possible suspects. “Is Osama bin Laden the only person in the world who may want to bomb the World Trade Center? What about the extremist wings of the growing anti-globalization movement for whom the World Trade Center must be the very symbol of global imperialism?” asked columnist Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem in the independent Daily News (Sept. 19). “The response may satisfy the clamor for revenge, but it will not guarantee that more attacks will not follow. Defeating terrorism requires not military might alone. The United States must come to terms with the fact that there are many people in the world who hate what it stands for, and they are not only outside the United States.”
Writing in the opinion page of the government-owned Sunday Mail (Sept. 16), Elliot Mahende said the United States cannot put out fire with paraffin because the attacks show that global security does not lie with high-tech armaments but with justice and fair play. Mahende felt that the U.S. government should use might to seek justice in relations between Israelis and Palestinians, Europeans and Africans, Muslims and Christians, and between the developed and developing countries. “The political and diplomatic elements of [Colin] Powell’s approach should be about engaging the so-called terrorists and their backer in dialogue,” said Mahende. “Talk to them and have a hard look at their grievances. Bombing them to smithereens will not guarantee security because ideas and beliefs can withstand even nuclear blasts, and who knows...the terrorists may soon be attacking with tactical nuclear weapons.”
Talk peace and not war was the suggestion from the government-owned and Bulawayo-based The Chronicle. “The fact that the latest attacks occurred in spite of America’s military might and the advanced technology at its disposal points to the need to go back to basics—dialogue—to convince those behind international terrorism of the inhumanity of their approach,” The Chronicle said in its comment (Sept. 17). The million-dollar question is whether it will be the voice of the international community or its traumatized citizens that will stop George Bush from unleashing the dogs of war.![]()
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