kanelli wrote:However, the fact remains that a group of radical Islamists killed hundreds of people in the US, Madrid, and the UK. I keep hearing people criticising the US government for doing nothing about Al Qaeda when they bombed the US embassies in Africa.
Kanelli - the Madrid bombings weren't related to the US or UK ones - that's one example of hyping the threat, by linking disparate terrorist attacks to give the illusion that Al Qaeda is more powerful than it actually is.
Yes, Madrid was initially blamed on ETA by the Government - but that blame lasted about 24hrs (perhaps less) before being retracted. The majority of commentators and people in Spain did not believe in the ETA theory from outset and Al Qaeda was blamed up until the report was finally concluded - I think it was a year later?
Al Qaeda were responsible for the African consulate bombings, attacks on the WTC (9/11 and the previous one) - but pretty few others.
Most of the post-9/11 attacks or attempted attacks have been by wannabes or totally separate organisations (eg. Bali bombings, Turkey bombings etc). The US and UK administrations quickly make the link between these and Al Qaeda to justify the 'war on terror'.
The funniest one was to try and link Iraq to Al Qaeda when Bin Laden was a great outspoken critic of Saddam (and vice versa). The frightening thing is that even today many Americans (according to many polls), think that Iraq had something to do with 9/11 (sorry Dubai Girl)!
The irony is that Al Qaeda is definitely now in Iraq, whereas it was not before (the stories of training camps in the north has long been discredited).
Cheers,
Shafique