9/11
Hunting for Osama: By the numbers
From death tolls to budget tallies, some key statistics in a decade defined by bin Laden
- 23: Number of years since Osama bin Laden co-founded al-Qaida in 1988 (BBC timeline)
- 3,460: Approximate number of people killed in the 9/11 attacks in New York, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C., including firefighters and paramedics (New York Magazine/Guardian)
- 20: Percentage of Americans who knew someone “hurt or killed” at the World Trade Center (New York Magazine)
- 422,000: Estimated number of New Yorkers with symptoms of PTSD post-9/11 (New York Magazine)
- 26: Number of days after 9/11 that the U.S. started bombing Afghanistan (Guardian)
- 1,566: U.S. military fatalities in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Uzbekistan since the beginning of Operation Enduring Freedom (iCasualties.org)
- 100,598 – 109,895: Recorded civilian deaths in Iraq since 2003 (Iraq Body Count)*
- $300 million: Cost, per day, of the Afghan war (AFP)
- $1.3 trillion: Approximate total cost of “wars, extra security measures, and veterans’ health care” since Sept. 11, 2001 (March 2011 Congressional Research Service via Salon)
- 97,000: Approximate number of troops currently serving in Afghanistan (AFP)
- One-third: Rough proportion of respondents to a 2006 USA Today/Gallup poll who said they thought U.S. Muslims were sympathetic to al-Qaida (USA Today)
- One-half: Proportion of Arab-American adults who showed symptoms of clinical depression in a 2006 survey conducted by Yale psychologist Mona Amer (the average proportion in a race-blind group is one-fifth) (USA Today)
- Almost 116: Number of months between 9/11 attacks and death of Osama bin Laden
*Official civilian death counts are not kept for Iraq or Afghanistan. Iraq Body Count tallies only civilian deaths reported in the English-language media and select translated sources, or confirmed through “careful review and integration of hospital, morgue, NGO and official figures” — and is thus considered by many to significantly underestimate the true figure.
Reader note : We’ll update this digest throughout the day. Submit your own figures for inclusion in the Comments section.
Emma Mustich is a Salon contributor. Follow her on Twitter: @emustich. More Emma Mustich.
Hiding 9/11′s last secrets
The military tribunal for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed means the American people will never know what drove him to terror
(Credit: Reuters//Brennan Linsley) After a Navy SEAL team killed Osama bin Laden at his Pakistan hideout a year ago this week, it flew his body to the Arabian Sea, weighted it down, and slid it silently off an aircraft carrier into the watery depths.
For many Americans, the secret raid provided a measure of revenge and catharsis for the strikes of Sept. 11, 2001. But it didn’t provide the kind of justice and official reckoning that the country needs to gain real closure. Now the government has a chance to achieve that through a full, fair and open trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four co-defendants, so the world can finally see the evidence against him as the true architect of the attacks on New York and Washington. The trial kickoff — an arraignment for the men — is scheduled for this Saturday at the U.S.-run detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Continue Reading CloseJosh Meyer is the author, with Terry McDermott, of the new book, "The Hunt for KSM: Inside the Pursuit and Takedown of the Real 9/11 Mastermind, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.’’ More Josh Meyer.
Marky Mark saves the universe!
The "Contraband" star suggests he could have stopped 9/11 -- and inspires a genius viral art explosion online SLIDE SHOW
(Credit: quickmeme.com) Mark Wahlberg’s insensitive comments about 9/11 have sparked incredulity everywhere from Twitter to the cover of the New York Post. Earlier this week, in an interview with Men’s Journal, the actor seemed to confuse himself with Chuck Norris:
Continue Reading CloseEmma Mustich is a Salon contributor. Follow her on Twitter: @emustich. More Emma Mustich.
An “incredibly close” screening
A preview of “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close” turns into group therapy for post-9/11 New Yorkers
A movie that asks are we ready to talk about 9/11? I knew all those years of sitting in darkened theaters on sunny afternoons, awash in movies new and old, stale popcorn and gallons of diet soda, would pay off some day. For one, there was the woman I met in 1975 at the late, lamented Carnegie Hall Cinema during a Mel Brooks double feature. She came and sat next to me when a guy kept bothering her during “Blazing Saddles” and we wound up dating — until she lit out for a career in the hinterlands, acting in summer stock.
But as lovely as she was, that’s not the payoff I mean. All that time reading about and watching movies didn’t just prepare me for romance, or Jeopardy and Trivial Pursuit, if it comes to that. (Quick—the address of Charles Foster Kane’s love nest with Susan Alexander? 185 West 74th Street.)
Continue Reading CloseMichael Winship is senior writing fellow at Demos and a senior writer of the new series, Moyers & Company, airing on public television. More Michael Winship.
How the feds fueled the militarization of police
Billions in post-9/11 taxpayer dollars have paid for combat-style gear on display in the Occupy crackdowns
Police in riot gear move to a location at the port facilities in Longview, Wash., Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2011. (Credit: AP/Don Ryan) The militarization of America’s metropolitan police forces was on full display in recent months as police from Los Angeles to New York cracked down on Occupy protests, decked out in full SWAT gear and occasionally using strange pieces of military hardware.
Less well known is that police forces in small towns and far-flung cities have also been stocking up on heavy equipment in the years since Sept. 11, 2001.
Continue Reading CloseJustin Elliott is a reporter for ProPublica. You can follow him on Twitter @ElliottJustin More Justin Elliott.
“Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close”: Post-9/11 trauma, made cute and dull
The sentimental bestseller "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close" becomes a dreary Tom Hanks-Sandra Bullock weeper
Thomas Horn and Tom Hanks in "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close" A few weeks ago I wrote a largely negative review of Kenneth Lonergan’s long-delayed “Margaret,” a sprawling and ambitious attempt at weaving a multi-character cinematic tapestry about life in post-9/11 New York. I stand by every word, but I also understand why a group of critics and cinephiles have campaigned to get “Margaret” on the awards-season radar screen, in the face of Fox Searchlight’s evident decision to abandon it on the curb like a stillborn hamster. “Margaret” is coming back to New York’s Cinema Village this weekend, and if you’re in the neighborhood and want to see a flawed, big-hearted, intermittently marvelous and maddening epic about the legacy of 9/11, go check it out. You certainly won’t find any such grand emotions in “Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close,” which renders Jonathan Safran Foer’s best-selling 2005 novel into unconvincing Hollywood mush.
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