Read All About Osamas Death With Wireless Internet

Read All About Osamas Death With Wireless Internet

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On May 1, 2011 almost 10 years after the brutal 9/11 attacks the United States government killed Osama Bin Laden. While no one assumed that Bin Laden being dead would instantly end organized terrorism springing from the Middle East, his death is a major symbolic event in the United States war on terror. He was a major target after the September 11th attacks, and the governments inability to capture him for almost a decade had gone from being a slight embarrassment to being almost completely forgotten about. The fact that Osama was still out there, probably in a fox hole bunker on the Pakistani border, had very little relevance to the fact that this country is in three simultaneous wars in the region, and still working hard to combat terrorist threats in the homeland.

But when President Obama came on television late that Sunday evening to announce that Bin Laden had been killed in a targeted fire fight operation with U.S. forces, all of the sudden the feelings about which people had learned to live with and ignore came rising to the surface. People gathered around their television sets, or streamed the video with their wireless Internet connections, to hear what the President had to say. For those who were not in New York City or D.C. on the day that the announcement was made, consider using wireless Internet to check out some of the video footage of the different celebrations that occurred in those two cities, where the most people died on September 11th. People gathered near Ground Zero the site of the fallen Twin Towers and in Times Square, and collected en masse outside of the Pentagon and the White House. The videos of the celebrators likely taken with 4G phone cameras show people singing, dancing, and cheering to celebrate his death.

For some people, however, the meaning of the death of Bin Laden was a more ambiguous affair. Of course if you knew someone who died in the terrorist attacks, you are probably happy to have one of the biggest faces of the anti-American Al Queda organization dead. But how much will this really affect the Islamic terrorist movement? Because Bin Laden has been on the run for the better half of the decade, he has not even been able to be the leader of Al Queda like he once was, and yet the group has carried on without him. More importantly, the organization itself is not a completely top-down structure: many of its soldiers act independently, and thus the death of their leader will not necessarily slow them down.

If you are interested in a more in-depth analysis of Bin Ladens death, rather than simply a celebration, then use your wireless Internet connection to read more about it. Newspapers like the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times will have more analytical coverage of the event. You can also wait until some magazine-style stories debut on wireless Internet to get real investigations into how it happened, what it means for national security, what it means for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and what it means for the future of terrorism.


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