Dan Murphy
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- Apr 20, 2000
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I read this at breakfast this AM, thought I would share, some good thoughts, IMO.......................
".........The USA is not safe from terror, nor will it ever be. But it is safer than it was.......Americans can hardly afford to be complacent, given the many ways the nation is still vulnerable. But for a moment and in deepest sympathy with Russia's horror we can appreciate how far we've come."
I agree.
<center>Russian tragedy turns minds to post-9/11 security at home </center>
Flash back three years to 9/11. Remember how the world stood with America in its grief over the terrorist attacks? Today, Americans are returning some of that emotional solidarity.
Hearts go out to Russia as it deals with the unspeakable slaughter of innocents that many are referring to as that country's 9/11.
The Russian terrorist tragedy just like ours three years ago is a global body blow.
Who, regardless of country, could not be outraged by the intentional targeting of schoolchildren? Or not share the wild grief over the hundreds of victims? It could as easily, many of us sense, have been us.
Or could it?
Some Russians, angry at their nation's vulnerability, are voicing envy at measures put in place here during the past three years.
The uncommon perspective is timely. As the 9/11 anniversary on Saturday approaches, the USA's continuing vulnerabilities are under a harsh spotlight.
The criticisms aren't new. Many of us can reel them off in our sleep: The U.S. Department of Homeland Security can be too unwieldy and inefficient. Improved airline security still has gaps. The Patriot Act giving law enforcement agencies more powers could turn the government into Big Brother. The color-coded alert system can be confusing, making people feel more scared than secure. And so on.
But Russia is now telegraphing something equally important: Nations, like human beings, can be so hard on themselves that they don't pause to take stock of achievements. The USA is not safe from terror, nor will it ever be. But it is safer than it was.
The contrast highlights just how badly Russia needs to get its act together. It has ignored multiple warnings to put effective protections in place, much like a person whose home is repeatedly robbed and vandalized, but settles for a junk security system.
Russian President Vladimir Putin is admitting as much. We did not understand the danger of the process that was emerging in our country, he said Sunday. That is quite an understatement after five years of escalating attacks by Chechen separatists. Just over the past two weeks, they have brought down two airliners and attacked a subway station.
Some Russians believe that an American-level preparedness could have averted the tragedy. Few Russian schools, unlike in the U.S., have basic security.
The forces that stormed the school under siege last week didn't have U.S.-style training and bungled the rescue. Russian authorities lied about the number of people held hostage hampering, among other things, the plans of emergency services. Security checks at airports across the country, even today, remain cursory.
Americans can hardly afford to be complacent, given the many ways the nation is still vulnerable. But for a moment and in deepest sympathy with Russia's horror we can appreciate how far we've come.
".........The USA is not safe from terror, nor will it ever be. But it is safer than it was.......Americans can hardly afford to be complacent, given the many ways the nation is still vulnerable. But for a moment and in deepest sympathy with Russia's horror we can appreciate how far we've come."
I agree.