The 10th anniversary of the September 11 attacks in New York City and Washington has prompted reflection, mourning, and analysis across the nation. This page features a compilation of New Atlanticist posts and NATOSource entries from the Atlantic Council that examine how 9/11 redefined US foreign policy at the turn of the century, and continues to impact present and future policy-making.
We invite you visit NATOSource Twitter: @NATOSource, and our established Atlantic Council Twitter account: @AtlanticCouncil for updates.
New Atlanticist:
- The Reality of 9/11-Related Predictions of Cyber Attacks – Jason Healey
- Article 5 Ten Years On: Division or Unity? – Simona Kordosova
- Ten Years Later – Are Americans Better or Worse Off? – Harlan Ullman
- What 9/11 Has Wrought – Dov Zakheim
- U.S. Risks World-Leader Role, Chuck Hagel
- Why Ten Years On Britain is Less Secure, Julian Lindley-French
- Being NATO’s Secretary General on 9/11, Lord Robertson
- 9/11 Ten Years After, Ioan Mircea Pascu
- Paying the Consequences of 9/11 Overreach, Chuck Hagel
- Deterrence for the Post-9/11 Era, Barry Pavel & Matthew Kroenig
- The End of Twentieth-Century Warfare, Anne-Marie Slaughter
- Tragedy, Hope, and 9/11 Remembered, William Caldwell
- Ten Years After 9/11 – What Have We Learned?, Kurt Volker
NATOSource:
- Nearly 80 NATO troops wounded in attack in Afghanistan, Jorge Benitez
- Obama: US and allies have “put Al Qaeda on the path to defeat”, Jorge Benitez
- NATO Secretary General on impact of 9/11 on transatlantic alliance, Jorge Benitez