Where to put 9/11 in history?
NY Times, January 28, 2006
Op-Ed Contributor
Finding a Place for 9/11 in American History
By JOSEPH J. ELLIS
Amherst, Mass.
IN recent weeks, President Bush and his administration have mounted a spirited defense of his
Iraq policy, the Patriot Act and, especially, a program to wiretap civilians, often reaching back
into American history for precedents to justify these actions. It is clear that the president believes
that he is acting to protect the security of the American people. It is equally clear that both his
belief and the executive authority he claims to justify its use derive from the terrorist attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001.
A myriad of contested questions are obviously at issue here —— foreign policy questions about
the danger posed by Iraq, constitutional questions about the proper limits on executive authority,
even political questions about the president's motives in attacking Iraq. But all of those debates
are playing out under the shadow of Sept. 11 and the tremendous changes that it prompted in
both foreign and domestic policy.
Whether or not we can regard Sept. 11 as history, I would like to raise two historical questions
about the terrorist attacks of that horrific day. My goal is not to offer definitive answers but rather
to invite a serious debate about whether Sept. 11 deserves the historical significance it has
achieved.
My first question: where does Sept. 11 rank in the grand sweep of American history as a threat to
national security? By my calculations it does not make the top tier of the list, which requires the
threat to pose a serious challenge to the survival of the American republic.
Here is my version of the top tier: the War for Independence, where defeat meant no United
States of America; the War of 1812, when the national capital was burned to the ground; the Civil
War, which threatened the survival of the Union; World War II, which represented a totalitarian
threat to democracy and capitalism; the cold war, most specifically the Cuban missile crisis of
1962, which made nuclear annihilation a distinct possibility.
Sept. 11 does not rise to that level of threat because, while it places lives and lifestyles at risk, it
does not threaten the survival of the American republic, even though the terrorists would like us
to believe so.
My second question is this: What does history tell us about our earlier responses to traumatic
events?
My list of precedents for the Patriot Act and government wiretapping of American citizens would
include the Alien and Sedition Acts in 1798, which allowed the federal government to close
newspapers and deport foreigners during the "quasi-war" with France; the denial of habeas corpus
during the Civil War, which permitted the pre-emptive arrest of suspected Southern sympathizers;
the Red Scare of 1919, which emboldened the attorney general to round up leftist critics in the
wake of the Russian Revolution; the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II,
which was justified on the grounds that their ancestry made them potential threats to national
security; the McCarthy scare of the early 1950's, which used cold war anxieties to pursue a witch
hunt against putative Communists in government, universities and the film industry.
In retrospect, none of these domestic responses to perceived national security threats looks
justifiable. Every history textbook I know describes them as lamentable, excessive, even
embarrassing. Some very distinguished American presidents, including John Adams, Abraham
Lincoln and Franklin Roosevelt, succumbed to quite genuine and widespread popular fears. No
historian or biographer has argued that these were their finest hours.
What Patrick Henry once called "the lamp of experience" needs to be brought into the shadowy
space in which we have all been living since Sept. 11. My tentative conclusion is that the light it
sheds exposes the ghosts and goblins of our traumatized imaginations. It is completely
understandable that those who lost loved ones on that date will carry emotional scars for the
remainder of their lives. But it defies reason and experience to make Sept. 11 the defining
influence on our foreign and domestic policy. History suggests that we have faced greater
challenges and triumphed, and that overreaction is a greater danger than complacency.
Joseph J. Ellis is a professor of history at Mount Holyoke College and the author, most recently,
of "His Excellency: George Washington."
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