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Edited on Thu Apr-20-06 10:03 PM by Jack Rabbit
President Gore immediately began working with US allies and the United Nations. When the Taliban demanded proof that Osama had planned the attacks, the President went on television with declassified documents which proved beyond any doubt to the entire world that the attacks were indeed the work of Osama and his lieutenants. The Taliban demanded more, which forced the hand of the President. The UN Security Council condemned Afghanistan by a unanimous vote and authorized the President and his allies to take any means necessary to clear Afghanistan of terrorist camps. After a brief bombing campaign, US, British, French, German, Pakistani and Indian troops along with troops from a half dozen Arab states, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan and Iran crossed into Afghanistan in December and captured Osama bin Laden, Khalid Mohammed, Aiman al-Zawahiri and other top members of the al Qaida network. The prisoners were tried in US court, convicted and sentenced to death. The invasion of Afghanistan so weakened the Taliban regime, which was never at its best terribly stable, that it soon toppled. The Taliban's leader, Mullah Omar, was hanged from a lamp post in Kabul by a group of Afghan women who fashioned the rope from discarded burqas.
President Gore concentrated on foreign policy for some time afterward, looking for ways to prevent future al Qaidas from breeding. Massive aid was provided to Arab countries, usually going around corrupt and oppressive regimes that were relics of the cold war. This also had the benefit of free and fair elections in Egypt, where Hosni Mubarak was ousted from power, a growing pro-democracy movement in Arabia that threatens to replace the House of Saud with a broad popular government and further reforms in Iran, loosening the Mullah's hold on power. President Gore also sponsored further peace talks at Camp David between Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and ailing Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. After considerable wrangling and pressure from the United States to both sides, the agreement was reached in which a Palestinian state was declared in the West Bank and Gaza, a land swap enacted that put the most populous Israeli settlements around Jerusalem inside Israeli territory and outlying settlements were dismantled. The peace between Israel and Palestine, although very delicate, removed a great festering sore from Middle East politics.
The Republicans, notably former Reagan and Bush administration officials and some intellectuals in a group known as the Project for the New American Century, criticized the President for not using the September 11 attacks to get tough on Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. Looking into the matter, President Gore could find no reason to believe that Saddam had anything to do with the September 11 attacks and soon found that it was doubtful that he had any weapons in quantities that could be shared with international terrorists. The clamor soon died down. In the meantime, Saddam, hoping for some goodwill from the west, captured and executed a small time terrorist operating in Iraq named Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who had been a minor annoyance to Saddam.
Nevertheless, Iraq became a serious trouble spot in the spring of 2005 when Saddam was assassinated and civil war broke out. While Shiites and Sunni Iraqis continue to kill each other daily, Kurdish Iraqis have declared independence and it seems that Kurdistan will be a permanent fixture on the world map.
On the domestic front, President Gore continued the Clinton policy of fiscal discipline and targeted tax cuts. A recession hit the US economy in 2000 was largely over by the spring of 2001 and Americans continued to enjoy the prosperity of the Clinton years.
In the election of 2004, President Gore was easily re-elected over the Republican candidate, Senator John McCain of Arizona. President Gore's personal life was free from the scandal that plagued his predecessor, so the Republicans had to run on real issues and did not do well doing so. The voters were tired of constant Republican harping on Clinton's personality long after it had become even more irrelevant than ever. The Democrats rode President Gore's coat tails to control of both houses of Congress in 2004.
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