Welcome to the Post-Post-9/11 Era
But a few remnants of post-9/11 foreign and domestic policy still need to be thrown out.

A year ago, the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan was underway after 20 years of war. In February, we marked a year since President Joe Biden's announcement that the U.S. would no longer support "offensive operations" by the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen's civil war, and come December, we'll hit the one-year anniversary of the (most recent version of the) end of the U.S. combat mission in Iraq.
But those milestones don't tell the whole story. A year ago, I worried in a post at The Week that U.S. intervention in Afghanistan wouldn't meaningfully end when our troops left Afghan soil. Even without a residual force, "over the horizon" strikes—like the one that killed Al Qaeda leader Ayman Al-Zawahiri in July—could continue apace. But so far, it appears my worry was largely misplaced. Data from Airwars, which tracks U.S. strikes using independent reports as well as official acknowledgments, shows the Biden administration has dramatically wound down the drone war and other airstrikes, not only in Afghanistan but across the greater Middle East.
Then there's the new intelligence assessment which came out this week. It reflects the consensus of the U.S. intelligence community and indicates that Al Qaeda "has not reconstituted its presence in Afghanistan" in the 12 months since American forces left. Indeed, there are "fewer than a dozen al Qaeda 'core members'" left in Afghanistan, CNN reported. The terrorist organization that perpetrated the 9/11 attacks no longer has "a capability to launch attacks against the U.S. or its interests abroad from Afghanistan."
And though the 2024 presidential race isn't underway quite yet, it's curious to note how absent counterterrorism and its associated wars are from the nascent contest. This is not simply the short shrift that foreign policy is habitually issued for these events; former President Donald Trump, for example, talked about wars and terrorism and murdering terrorists' innocent family members regularly during his 2016 campaign. But now, as a Washington Post analysis of his recent rally themes suggests, those topics are rarely on his radar. Biden, meanwhile, has been remarkably quiet about his own achievement in decimating the drone war.
Taken together, this all feels like a significant shift. At the risk of jinxing things, it seems like we may have come to the end of the post-9/11 era of American foreign policy. My entire political life has taken place in the shadow of 9/11 and the excesses of Washington's response to the horrors of that day, so I make this suggestion with caution. Still, it seems as though we may be at the start of something new, with new challenges to address and, of course, new warnings against hubris, inhumanity, and imprudence to issue.
But the old era, if indeed on its way out, is not quite gone yet. The authorizations for use of military force (AUMFs) which initiated the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan—and were later stretched to provide implausible legal cover for a host of other military interventions Congress never directly approved—remain in force. These should be formally repealed so that Biden and future presidents alike must clear at least the hurdle of a vote in our usually feckless Congress if they want to expand the U.S. military presence in the Middle East again.
Relatedly, Biden's more stringent rules for approving drone strikes are an improvement over the loose approach of the Trump administration and the higher civilian casualty counts it helped produce. But those rules aren't law. They're executive guidance that can be immediately altered by the next president—which could well be Trump or another Republican with a similarly nonchalant mindset about bombing children and innocent civilians. While his party has a majority in both houses of Congress, Biden should seek to codify a more careful approach in actual law.
He should also more fully end Washington's forever wars and forever semi-wars, copying the complete withdrawal from Afghanistan in Iraq, Somalia, Syria, Yemen, and the many African countries with U.S. boots on the ground. Though Biden ended the combat mission in Iraq, a residual U.S. force of several thousand is still there in an advise-and-assist role; hundreds of U.S. troops are likewise still working in Somalia and Syria; and the Yemen policy shift is not as sweeping as Biden's obfuscatory rhetoric made it sound. All of these are points of small but needless risk that could lead to reescalation, and in Yemen, U.S. involvement continues to facilitate a criminal coalition intervention which has contributed considerably to the most acute humanitarian crisis on the planet.
Finally, leaving the post-9/11 era behind should include domestic policy updates, too, because the war on terror was never just limited to foreign policy. In February, we learned the CIA has conducted National Security Administration–style warrantless mass surveillance, including of Americans, in the name of fighting terror, and since then…nothing happened? We never even got all the details on what this unconstitutional spying entailed. Also overdue for serious reform (if not total abolition) is the Transportation Security Administration, which continues to be a cruel and demonstrated incompetent imposition on Americans' privacy rights. It's security theater justified by a wildly unrealistic risk assessment, and it should follow other vestiges of the post-9/11 era out the door.
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Then there's the new intelligence assessment
What did it say about Biden?
What makes you think it did?
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Came back negative.
They're executive guidance that can be immediately altered by the next president—which could well be Trump or another Republican with a similarly nonchalant mindset about bombing children and innocent civilians.
No mention of Obama's bombing of children and innocent civilians?
That was the dude who decided it was ok to put American citizens on the assassination list. It's not much of a stretch to call that extrajudicial capital punishment.
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It's not any kind of a stretch at all, because that's exactly what it was. Murdering the unindicted 16 year old son of the American citizen you extrajudicially assassinated was a nice encore too. I hope this disgusting cunt's two children get murdered in front of her. All nice and Jesus-like.
Didn't one of Brandon's first strikes catch some humanitarian and his family with a bunch of water bottles?
Yes.
Some poor guy and his 7 or 8 kids
Look, no reason to talk about the guy that was between Bush and Trump. His name shouldn't be uttered, because his legacy is untouchable you racist.
One thing is for sure, if half of what they've done to Trump was done to the anointed one we'd probably already be in a civil war. After Trump, the whole birth certificate thing looks almost quaint by comparison. Amazingly, he left office without a single impeachment.
Remember all the bad stuff dems do only becomes bad if Republicans do the same thing
No need to worry then. The Republicans don't have the balls to fight back.
Or that Trump negotiated the end of the Afghanistan conflict, then Joe "never underestimate his ability to fuck things up" Biden decided to delay it by 6 months so he could have a 9/11 photo op and ended up getting thousands of Aghans and 13 American soldiers killed before putting the cherry on top of the parfait by blowing up a truck full of children carting potable water and then claimed for months that they were dirty terrorists smuggling bomb making materials.
I had the same question.
Remember how Obama scrambled in October 2012 to write “rules” for drone strikes when he thought he might lose to Mitt Romney, and then dropped the “rules” after he won reelection?
Got a snide comment about that cavalier disregard for children, Bonnie?
We still have to take off our shoes and get a good groping at the airport.
For some of us, that's a feature, not a bug.
The biggest development of the post-post-9/11 era is the largescale migration of the early 2000s neocons to the Democratic Party. Off the top of my head here's an incomplete list of Bush Administration officials and pro-war media personalities who switched sides:
David "Axis of Evil" Frum
Jeffrey "Iraq / Al Qaeda Connection" Goldberg
Colin Powell (RIP)
Max Boot
Jennifer Rubin
Tom Nichols
Bill Kristol (KMW's old boss)
Rick Wilson and the rest of the Lincoln Project
Nicole Wallace
Matthew Dowd
I'm happy to be on the same side as these fine people as long as they oppose Drumpf.
#TheIraqWarMightHaveBeenBad
#(ButBorderEnforcementIsWorse)
Liz soon to be added to the list.
If Bill Kristol persuades Cheney to be Sarah Palin's running mate, the Bulwark Moose Party is on its way to the White House.
I guess I must have Rip van Winkled for a couple of decades. How, exactly, has government gotten any less overbearing since 9-11? How has spending decreased? How has occupational licensing decreased? How has government or society gotten any less politically correct? How has Big Brother faded away?
O on line 2, says "heard women & children were gettin' droned. nobody called?"
Post-9/11 Era is the Always-Covid-All-The-Time Era.
also kinda conveniently forgetting the Audi full of children right before the sloppy withdrawal
His fault. Biden wouldn't have droned him if he was driving an EV.
Great, so can we kill of the TSA? And the regs that require a photo i.d. to open a bank account? And return to allowing people to fish in the reservoirs that are part of the NYC water supply? Shall I go on?
The cowards won!
At least the TSA idiots in front of the wall don't have guns.
The IRS does. And there is literally an army of them.
In 2022 Representative Matt Gaetz of Florida introduced a bill to disarm the IRS after the agency had drawn public attention for a $700,000 purchase of ammunition.
The official British history gives an estimated figure of 156,115 men landed on D-Day. This comprised 57,500 Americans and 75,215 British and Canadians from the sea and 15,500 Americans and 7,900 British from the air. Ellis, Allen & Warhurst 2004, pp. 521–533.
You're looking at the wrong numbers. How many Germans were facing them?
You know who else was looking at some wrong numbers that day!
It's amazing for being an octogenarian with a perpetually flaccid micro chode just how much of Biden's cock has wound up in Reason editors' assholes and throats. Jesus fucking Christ what a joke.
It would put an enormously huge grin on my chin if Bonnie Kristian contracted HIV from being gang raped and died agonizingly slowly in hospice care being denied treatment and pain medication just like the hundreds of political prisoners under old "careful Joe Biden". Give her a little taste of what those dirty brown children who had the audacity to be driving around in a car with water jugs felt like before old peacenik Joe Biden blew them to smithereens as his final act of salvific mercy to the world. Fuck you, cunt. Die slow. Spoiler alert: You and Joe Joe aren't gonna be meeting Jeebus when you die either. Lmfao.
Get rid of the AUMF. Get rid of the Patriot Act. (And while we're on it, perhaps get rid of AEDPA and RICO.)
We still have plenty of resources to combat asymmetrical warfare.
Hey Bonnie,
The link to the CIA report from February 404’ed. Do you have an original copy or updated link? Did they remove it after publication of this article?
Inquiring minds want to know… 😉
“In February, we learned the CIA has conducted National Security Administration–style warrantless mass surveillance, including of Americans”
So after praising Biden for ending foreign entanglements and making snide comments about Republicans not caring about their children, you throw out this little detail?
Remind me: who was president when we learned about the NSA spying on Americans?
Now if we would just discard the whole "REAL ID" boondoggle. It's been over 2 decades since the event that motivated REAL ID. The requirement has been delayed into the future. After 21 years, it's evident that there is no real need for REAL ID. Let's junk it.
"...a few remnants need to be thrown out"? Let's throw out the whole thing, the deep state, the shallow state, the belief in being governed by force, threats, fraud. Why not? It's all that stands in our way to achieve a free country.
Why is everything I've read over the last 15+ years about Presidential politics? It's what makes our country stoopid. Thanks, Reason, of reminding us of how Washington revolves around Evil continually.