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(FILES) This file photo taken on September 11, 2001 shows a hijacked commercial plane crashing into the World Trade Center in New York. The Twin Towers collapsed later on that day. September 11, 2016 marks the fifteenth anniversary of the event. / AFP / SETH MCALLISTER Image Credit: AFP

‘Never forget” is the often-repeated refrain when talking about the attacks of September 11, 2001, in the United States. Yet, it often seems an empty phrase brought out yearly for memorial services and invoked by politicians seeking to justify the latest round of new counter-terrorism measures. Despite the phrase perhaps being overused, the attacks themselves should never be forgotten as they marked a key turning point in modern history and has, arguably, led to the birth of a much more dangerous enemy in the form of Daesh (the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant).

Not since Pearl Harbor had the world’s only superpower been attacked within its domestic borders and what was so surprising was that the attacks were not carried out by another state, but by a then little-known terrorist group — Al Qaida.

The attacks were carried out by just 19 men who hijacked four domestic flights operating in the US and successfully flew two of those into the World Trade Center twin towers in New York, one into the Pentagon and the fourth only missed another target due to the heroic actions of the passengers and crew on board, who caused it to crash into a field in Pennsylvania. The actions of these few would turn 9/11 into a day that changed history by leading to two America-led invasions as part of the ‘Global War on Terrorism’ — Afghanistan and then Iraq.

While the Afghan campaign was initially successful and had the backing of the international community, the Iraq campaign led to a long-running insurgency and widespread sectarian violence in the country.

With the removal of former Iraq president Saddam Hussain and the de-Baathification of the Iraqi police and military units, the Americans and British forces both created a power vacuum and deposited hundreds of highly trained soldiers on to Iraqi streets. Many of these jobless individuals joined the growing insurgency, which was fighting against western occupation. While many different groups existed, one group in particular stood out — Al Qaida in Iraq (AQI). Originally founded in 1999, this group would go through a series of name and leadership changes as coalition attacks degraded its command and control structures.

Despite these losses, the continued presence of American and British troops in Iraq led many to join AQI and it rose into prominence and infamy as it carried out attacks against coalition troops and atrocities against the local population. This prominence allowed it to form the Mujahideen Shura Council in 2004 as an umbrella organisation encompassing all of the Sunni groups present in Iraq. Under the guidance of Abu Musab Al Zarqawi, the group became more and more sectarian. This eventually led to a split from the main body of Al Qaida and led to the renaming of the group as Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) in 2006.

The group effectively controlled most of Iraq and likely had a loose membership of 300,000 to 500,000 fighters and allied tribesmen who saw it as a means of protecting themselves from an ineffective Iraqi government and the growing power of Iranian-backed militias. Sectarian violence continued and the group survived attempts by American-British forces to dismantle it.

The Arab Spring then arrived and the Syrian civil war started. This provided an ideal opportunity for the group to expand across the border into Syria and enlarge its geographic footprint. Between 2011 and 2013, this is exactly what the group did, before declaring a worldwide “Caliphate” in June 2014 and changing its name to Daesh.

Daesh has since gone on to inspire nearly half a dozen attacks beyond the borders of Iraq and Syria, in both Europe and the Middle East. It is arguable that had 9/11 never happened then the specific circumstances that led to the formation of AQI would never have occurred and Daesh would not have been in existence today. Thus, we should never forget 9/11 — partly to remember and honour the victims, but also as a reminder that responding to terrorism with force can have far-reaching effects that are hard to predict.

Fortunately, we are unlikely to see a spectacular attack like 9/11 carried out again as Daesh appears to be focused on retaining the land it controls in Iraq and Syria. However, Daesh is more dangerous because of its ability to inspire those with little or no history of extremist violence to carry out low-level attacks, such as the one against Charlie Hebdo, in Bataclan and in Nice. The legacy of 9/11 is not just memorials to those who died, but an on-going struggle to detect, disrupt and neutralise plots inspired by Daesh.

— IANS

John Bahadur Lamb is a lecturer in Criminology and Security Studies at Birmingham City University.