First
100 Days
December
20, 2001
The
Global War on Terrorism
The
First 100 Days
"We
are supported by the collective will of the world."
President
George W. Bush
The
Coalition Information Centers
Washington,
U.S.A
London,
U.K.
Islamabad,
Pakistan
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY 3
THE
TRAGEDY OF SEPTEMBER 11 5
THE
AL QAEDA VISION FOR THE WORLD 6
DIPLOMACY
8
TERRORIST
FINANCES 10
THE
MILITARY CAMPAIGN 12
LAW
ENFORCEMENT 14
HUMANITARIAN
RELIEF 17
RESPECTING
ISLAM 20
HOMELAND
SECURITY 22
THE
SURVIVORS OF SEPTEMBER 11 24
Executive
Summary
"The
attack took place on American soil, but it was an attack on the heart and
soul of the civilized world. And the world has come together to fight a
new and different war, the first, and we hope the only one, of the 21st
century. A war against all those who seek to export terror, and a war against
those governments that support or shelter them."
-President
George W. Bush, 10/11/01
On
September 11, terrorists attacked freedom.
The
world has responded with an unprecedented coalition against international
terrorism. In the first 100 days of the war, President George W. Bush increased
America’s homeland security and built a worldwide coalition that:
Began
to destroy al-Qaeda’s grip on Afghanistan by driving the Taliban from power.
Disrupted
al-Qaeda’s global operations and terrorist financing networks.
Destroyed
al-Qaeda terrorist training camps.
Helped
the innocent people of Afghanistan recover from the Taliban’s reign of
terror.
Helped
Afghans put aside long-standing differences to form a new interim government
that represents all Afghans – including women.
President
Bush is implementing a comprehensive and visionary foreign policy against
international terrorism. The President’s policy puts the world on notice
that any nation that harbors or supports terrorism will be regarded as
a hostile regime.
Diplomacy.
President Bush has built a worldwide coalition against terrorism. More
than 80 countries suffered losses on September 11; 136 countries have offered
a diverse range of military assistance; 46 multilateral organizations have
declared their support; and with U.S. leadership and international support,
Afghans are putting aside long-standing ethnic and political differences
to form a new and representative government.
Terrorist
Finances. The President fired the first shot in the war on terrorism with
the stroke of his pen to seize terrorist financial assets and disrupt their
fundraising pipelines. The world financial community is moving to starve
the terrorists of their financial support. 196 countries support the financial
war on terror; 142 countries have acted to freeze terrorist assets; in
the U.S. alone, the assets of 153 known terrorists, terrorist organizations,
and terrorist financial centers have been frozen; and major terrorist financial
networks have been closed down.
The
Military Campaign. Operation Enduring Freedom began on October 7, 2001,
and enjoys the support of countries from the United Kingdom to Australia
to Japan. The Taliban have been forced to surrender major cities. The military
has destroyed 11 terrorist training camps and 39 Taliban command and control
sites. And al-Qaeda terrorists have been captured, killed or are on the
run.
Law
Enforcement. The U.S. has led a global dragnet to help bring terrorists
to justice and help prevent future terrorist acts, creating the Foreign
Terrorist Tracking Task Force to prevent terrorists from entering the U.S.;
arresting and indicting known terrorists; increasing the global sharing
of law enforcement information; and implementing tough new anti-terrorism
laws.
Humanitarian.
As Afghanistan’s largest humanitarian donor, the U.S. has increased its
aid to the Afghan people by providing $187 million in aid since October
alone, including food, shelter, blankets, and medical supplies. The President
also launched the America’s Fund for Afghan Children that has already raised
more than $1.5 million for the children of Afghanistan. As the harsh Afghan
winter approaches, the U.S. commitment to the Afghan people is saving lives.
Homeland
Security. President Bush has taken steps to help protect America against
further terrorist attacks, providing $20 billion for homeland security;
strengthening intelligence efforts; creating the Office of Homeland Security
and the Homeland Security Council; implementing tough new airline security
measures; and taking steps to protect America’s mail.
Helping
the Survivors of September 11. The American people have responded with
overwhelming compassion for the families of the victims of September 11,
donating at least $1.3 billion to charities.
Respecting
Islam. Almost immediately after the attacks the President took steps to
protect Muslim-Americans from hate crimes. The President also held a series
of events, including hosting the first-ever White House Iftar and an Eid
event at the end of Ramadan; the President visited the Islamic Center;
and the President created the "Friendship Through Education" initiative
to bring American and Muslim children closer together.
The
Tragedy of September 11
"Every
one of the victims who died on September 11th was the most important person
on earth to somebody."
--President
George W. Bush, 12/11/01
On
September 11 the terrorists committed an act of war against the innocent.
The terrorists killed not only to end lives -- they killed to end our way
of life. Recently the terrorists said that we should forget the attacks
of September 11. The terrorists would like nothing more than to silence
the world’s vocal opposition to their frightening vision they hope to export
to every corner of the world.
The
world will never forget the innocent victims, and the brave heroes who
died attempting to save them. The world will never forget the survivors,
the devastated families and the grieving friends they left behind:
More
than 3,000 people died or remain missing following the attacks. They came
from more than 80 different nations, from many different races and religions.
343
firefighters and paramedics perished at the World Trade Center.
23
police officers and 37 Port Authority police officers died at the World
Trade Center.
Approximately
2,000 children lost a parent on September 11, including 146 children who
lost a parent in the Pentagon attacks.
One
business alone lost more than 700 employees, leaving at least 50 pregnant
widows.
On
December 11, more than 120 countries stood together to remember the three-month
anniversary of the terrorist attacks.
These
Nations & Areas Suffered Losses From the September 11 Attacks
Antigua
& Barbuda - Argentina - Australia - Austria - Bangladesh - Barbados
-
Belarus
- Belgium - Belize - Bolivia - Brazil - Canada - Chile - China - Colombia
- Czech Republic - Dominica - Dominican Republic - Ecuador - Egypt - El
Salvador - Ethiopia - France - The Gambia - Germany - Ghana - Greece -
Grenada - Guatemala - Guyana - Haiti - Honduras - Hong Kong - India - Indonesia
- Ireland - Israel - Italy - Jamaica - Japan - Jordan - Kazakhstan - Kenya
- Lebanon - Liberia - Lithuania - Malaysia - Mexico - The Netherlands -
New Zealand - Nicaragua - Nigeria - Pakistan - Panama - Paraguay - Peru
- Philippines - Poland - Portugal - Romania - Russia - South Africa - South
Korea - Spain - Sri Lanka - St. Kitts & Nevis - St. Lucia - St. Vincent
& the Grenadines - Sweden - Switzerland - Taiwan - Thailand - Togo
- Trinidad & Tobago - Turkey - Ukraine - United Kingdom - United States
of America - Uruguay - Uzbekistan - Venezuela - Yemen - Yugoslavia - Zimbabwe |
The
al-Qaeda Vision for the World
"…we
calculated in advance the number of casualties from the enemy, who would
be killed based on the position of the tower. We calculated that the floors
that would be hit would be three or four floors. I was the most optimistic
of them all...due to my experience in this field, I was thinking that the
fire from the gas in the plane would melt the iron structure of the building
and collapse the area where the plane hit and all the floors above it only.
This is all that we had hoped for."
--bin
Laden
"This
new enemy seeks to destroy our freedom and impose its views. We value life;
the terrorists ruthlessly destroy it. We value education; the terrorists
do not believe women should be educated or should have health care, or
should leave their homes. We value the right to speak our minds; for the
terrorists, free expression can be grounds for execution. We respect people
of all faiths and welcome the free practice of religion; our enemy wants
to dictate how to think and how to worship even to their fellow Muslims."
--President
George W. Bush, 11/8/01
Al-Qaeda
is a movement defined by hatred. They hate progress, and freedom, and choice,
and culture, and music, and laughter, and women, and Christians, and Jews,
and all Muslims who reject their distorted doctrines. They love and worship
only one thing, and that is power -- power they use without mercy to kill
the innocent.
In
Afghanistan, we have seen al-Qaeda's vision for the world. The leadership
of al-Qaeda had great influence in Afghanistan and was supported by the
Taliban regime. Afghanistan's people have been brutalized -- many are starving
and many have fled. Women were not allowed to attend school. A person could
be jailed for owning a television. Religion could be practiced only as
their leaders dictated. A man could be jailed in Afghanistan if his beard
was not long enough.
The
al-Qaeda terrorists believe it is acceptable to steal food meant for starving,
innocent families. The al-Qaeda philosophy says it is acceptable to use
innocent people as human shields for their military operations. The al-Qaeda
philosophy says it is acceptable to oppress women and doom them to a lifetime
of poverty.
Treatment
of Women & Children. First Lady Laura Bush led a worldwide initiative
to highlight the Taliban’s oppression of women. Before the Taliban, women
played a key role in society. Then came al-Qaeda and their destruction
of the Afghan family. The al-Qaeda-controlled Taliban regime especially
targeted Afghan women and children, taking away their basic freedoms, splintering
their families, putting their lives at risk, and relegating them to poverty.
For example, the Taliban forbade the schooling for girls over the age of
eight; shut down the women’s university; banned women from working (stripping
a society in desperate need of trained professionals of half its assets);
restricted access to medical care for women; brutally enforced a restrictive
dress code; forbade women from moving about their communities freely; and
beat women for laughing out loud. The First Lady led a worldwide initiative
to highlight the Taliban’s oppression of women which helped lead to representation
of women in the new interim government.
Targeting
Civilians. Al Qaeda and the Taliban regime have targeted civilians by literally
using them as human shields for their military activities. For example,
the November 6 Washington Post reports that the Taliban actually placed
military assets in mosques and across the street from hospitals and innocent
people’s homes. Taliban commanders have also hijacked humanitarian aid
facilities for military purposes. A senior officer told the Washington
Post, "Whole villages are being used as human shields by the Taliban to
protect their large stockpiles of ammunition and weapons hidden in nearby
caves."
Humanitarian
Crimes. The al-Qaeda and Taliban contribution to the starving Afghan people
has been a deliberate and systematic campaign to disrupt the efforts of
international relief agencies to deliver desperately needed food and medical
supplies to the Afghan people. For example, the Taliban seized control
of two U.N. World Food Program (WFP) warehouses, one in Kabul, and one
in Kandahar, containing more than half the World Food Program's wheat supply
for Afghanistan. The WFP in Kandahar had been feeding 150,000 Afghans a
month before the Taliban seizure. The Taliban are also actually hijacking
humanitarian convoys for military purposes. The November 6 Washington Post
reports, "A truck in a convoy purportedly on a humanitarian mission to
deliver food tipped over, and crates of tank and mortar shells could be
seen spilling to the ground underneath a thin layer of flour."
Al
Qaeda & the Drug Trade. Osama bin Laden and his organization finance
many of their terrorist activities through the drug trade. In fact, on
October 25, 2001, The Herald (Glasgow) reported, "Osama bin Laden financed
the development of a highly-addictive liquid heroin which he named ‘The
tears of Allah’ as part of his multi-pronged terrorist campaign to destabilise
western society. . . One source said yesterday: ‘It should be called the
Devil's Brew rather than Allah's tears. It is a one-way ticket to addiction
and death.’" The United Nations has also weighed in on the Taliban and
al Qaeda connection to the drug trade. According to a U.N. Committee of
Experts report on Resolution 1333 (May 2001), "Funds raised from the production
and trading of opium and heroin are used by the Taliban to buy arms and
other war materiel, and to finance the training of terrorists and support
the operations of extremists in neighbouring countries and beyond."
Diplomacy
"The
message to every country is, there will be a campaign against terrorist
activity, a worldwide campaign. And there is an outpouring of support for
such a campaign. Freedom-loving people understand that terrorism knows
no borders, that terrorists will strike in order to bring fear, to try
to change the behavior of countries that love liberty. And we will not
let them do that."
--President
George W. Bush, 9/19/01
Since
September 11, President Bush and Secretary of State Colin Powell have built
a worldwide coalition for the war against terrorism. The coalition is stronger
than ever and continues to grow.
Since
September 11, President Bush has met with leaders from at least 51 different
countries to help build support for the war against terrorism.
136
countries have offered a range of military assistance.
The
U.S. has received 46 multilateral declarations of support from organizations.
The
U.N. General Assembly and Security Council condemned the attacks on September
12.
NATO,
OAS and ANZUS (Australia, New Zealand and the U.S.) quickly invoked their
treaty obligations to support the United States. Our NATO allies are assisting
directly in the defense of American territory.
142
countries have issued orders freezing the assets of suspected terrorists
and organizations.
89
countries have granted over-flight authority for U.S. military aircraft.
76
countries have granted landing rights for U.S. military aircraft.
23
countries have agreed to host U.S. forces involved in offensive operations.
Through
intelligence cooperation with many nations, we are acquiring evidence against
those responsible for the attacks of September 11 and we are better able
to prevent future attacks.
With
U.S. leadership and with international support, Afghans have put aside
long-standing ethnic and political differences to form a new interim government,
naming a president and 29 ministers with portfolio. The new government
will also include women, who have been oppressed by the Taliban regime.
On
December 11, more than 120 nations around the world answered President
Bush’s call to reject terrorism and commemorate the victims of the September
11 attacks by holding remembrance ceremonies.
The
United States and several other allies have reopened embassies in Kabul.
The
President was joined by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan on November 11
for a memorial service honoring the citizens of all the countries killed
in the World Trade enter.
Terrorist
Finances
"We
put the world's financial institutions on notice: if you do business with
terrorists, if you support them or sponsor them, you will not do business
with the United States of America."
--President
George W. Bush, 11/7/01
Terrorists
need money to carry out their evil deeds. The President’s first strike
in the war against terror was not with a gun or a missile – the President’s
first strike was with his pen as he took action to freeze terrorist finances
and disrupt their pipelines for raising and moving money in the future.
The
world's financial institutions have been put on notice -- if you support,
sponsor, or do business with terrorists, you will not do business with
the United States. Denying terrorists access to funds is a very real success
in the war on terrorism. Since September 11, the United States and its
allies in the war on terrorism have been winning the war on the financial
front:
President
Bush launched the first offensive in the war on terrorism on September
23 by signing an Executive Order freezing the U.S.-based assets of those
individuals and organizations involved with terrorism.
196
countries and jurisdictions have expressed their support for the financial
war on terror.
142
countries have issued orders freezing terrorist assets, and others have
requested U.S. help in improving their legal and regulatory systems so
they can more effectively block terrorist funds.
The
assets of at least 153 known terrorists, terrorist organizations, and terrorist
financial centers have now been frozen in the U.S. financial system.
Since
September 11, the U.S. has blocked more than $33 million in assets of terrorist
organizations. Other nations have also blocked another $33 million.
On
November 7, the U.S. and its allies closed down operations of two major
financial networks – al-Barakaat and al-Taqwa – both of which were used
by al-Qaeda and Osama Bin Laden as sources of income and mechanisms to
transfer funds.
On
December 4, President Bush froze the assets of a U.S.-based foundation
– The Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development -- that has been
funneling money to the terrorist organization Hamas.
The
U.S. government created three new organizations -- the Foreign Terrorist
Asset Tracking Center (FTAT), Operation Green Quest and the Terrorist Financing
Task Force. These new organizations will help facilitate information sharing
between intelligence and law enforcement agencies and encourage other countries
to identify, disrupt, and defeat terrorist financing networks.
International
organizations are key partners in the war on financial terrorism. On September
28, the United Nations Security Council passed resolution 1373 that requires
all nations to keep their financial systems free of terrorist funds.
The
Financial Action Task Force -- a 29-nation group promoting policies to
combat money laundering -- adopted strict new standards to deny terrorist
access to the world financial system.
The
G-20 and IMF member countries have agreed to make public the list of terrorists
whose assets are subject to freezing, and the amount of assets frozen.
The
Military Campaign
"I
said to the Taliban, turn them over, destroy the camps, free people you're
unjustly holding. I said, you've got time to do it. But they didn't listen.
They didn't respond, and now they're paying a price. They are learning
that anyone who strikes America will hear from our military, and they're
not going to like what they hear. In choosing their enemy, the evildoers
and those who harbor them have chosen their fate."
--President
George W. Bush, 10/17/01
Operation
Enduring Freedom, the military phase, began October 7, 2001. Since then,
coalition forces have liberated the Afghan people from the repressive and
violent Taliban regime. As President Bush and Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld have said, this is a different kind of war against a different
kind of enemy. The enemy is not a nation -- the enemy is terrorist networks
that threaten the way of life of all peaceful people.
The
war against terrorism is the first war of the 21st Century -- and it requires
a 21st Century military strategy. Secretary Rumsfeld has worked with our
coalition allies and the courageous men and women of the U.S. military
to craft a cutting-edge military strategy that minimizes civilian casualties,
partners with local forces, and brings destruction to the oppressive Taliban
who supported the al-Qaeda terrorist network.
The
coalition has achieved broad military success while putting fewer than
3,000 U.S. ground troops on the ground in Afghanistan. And Secretary Rumsfeld
and the U.S. military have also shown a lightning quick ability to adapt
to a distant, harsh and ever-changing battlefield. In some cases, U.S.
troops are conquering terrorists by welding together 21st Century technology
with 19th Century tactics. Troops have chased terrorists on horseback while
using mobile phones and global positioning systems to pinpoint targets
for the Air Force. Bombers today use 21st Century targeting technology,
and laser-guided and GPS guided smart bombs to destroy specific targets,
including centuries-old caves used as terrorist headquarters.
While
we’ve achieved a great deal of military success, much dangerous and difficult
work remains to be done before the war on terrorism is won. A few key military
successes thus far in the war on terrorism include:
In
just weeks the military essentially destroyed al-Qaeda’s grip on Afghanistan
by driving the Taliban from power.
Taliban
leaders have surrendered major cities to opposition forces, including Kandahar,
Kabul, Kunduz, and Mazar-e-Sharif.
The
military has destroyed at least 11 terrorist training camps and 39 Taliban
command and control sites. The Wall Street Journal reported on December
13 that as many as 50,000 terrorists from more than 50 countries may have
received training in al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan in recent years.
About
2.5 million humanitarian rations have been dropped to aid the people of
Afghanistan.
U.S.
Marines have established a military base at Kandahar airport.
Routes
are being blocked to try to prevent the escape of al-Qaeda and Taliban
members.
Senior
al-Qaeda and Taliban officials have either been captured or killed.
The
U.S. military rescued two American Christian aid workers who were being
held as prisoners by the Taliban.
Friendship
Bridge between Afghanistan and Uzbekistan was reopened to transport humanitarian
aid by land.
Minefields
and roads are being cleared to ensure delivery of aid and freedom of movement.
Leaflet
drops and radio broadcasts continue daily to convey our determination,
provide truthful information, and encourage the capture of Osama bin Laden.
The
military action in Afghanistan represents a global coalition effort. In
addition to the United States, military assets are being deployed from
many other nations, including the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, Czech
Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Poland, Russia and
Turkey.
Law
Enforcement
"Terrorists
try to operate in the shadows. They try to hide. But we're going to shine
the light of justice on them. We list their names, we publicize their pictures,
we rob them of their secrecy. Terrorism has a face, and today we expose
it for the world to see."
--President
George W. Bush, 10/10/01
The
U.S. is leading a global dragnet to help bring terrorists to justice and
help prevent future terrorist acts.
Prevention
and Investigation:
As
of December 17, 460 individuals were being detained by the INS. 116 individuals,
77 of whom are in custody, are facing federal criminal charges -- including
Zacarias Moussaoui who has been charged with conspiring with Osama bin
Laden and al-Qaeda to murder thousands of innocent people in New York,
Virginia and Pennsylvania.
The
Department of Justice (DOJ) created the new 22 "Most Wanted Terrorists"
list.
The
FBI created a national task force to centralize control and information
sharing resulting in hundreds of thousands of leads, over 500 searches,
thousands of interviews of witnesses, and numerous court-authorized surveillance
orders.
The
U.S. government has offered a reward of up to $25 million for information
leading directly to the apprehension or conviction of Osama bin Laden.
The
Treasury Department and the Department of Justice collaborated to freeze
the assets and accounts of 62 individuals and organizations connected with
two terrorist-supporting financial networks, the al-Taqua and the al-Barakaat,
and one organization funneling money to Hamas.
The
Department of State strengthened its "Rewards for Justice Program" which
authorizes the Secretary of State to offers rewards of more than $5 million
for information that prevents acts of international terrorism against the
United States. The State Department has also launched a series of Public
Service Announcements to educate the American public on the program.
Improved
information sharing between the law-enforcement and intelligence communities,
allowing nationwide search warrants for e-mail and subpoenas for payment
information, and to place those who access the Internet through cable companies
on the same footing as everyone else.
At
the Attorney General’s request, the State Department designated 39 entities
as terrorist organizations.
The
U.S. has forged new cooperative agreements with Canada to protect our common
borders and the economic prosperity they sustain.
Created
93 Anti-Terrorism Task Forces -- one in each U.S. Attorney's district --
to integrate the communications and activities of local, state and federal
law enforcement.
Created
the Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task Force to focus on preventing terrorists
from entering the country, and to locate and remove those who already have.
The
Department of Justice crafted a new reorganization plan -- Reorganization
and Mobilization of the Nation's Justice and Law Enforcement Resources
-- which is DOJ 's strategy for fiscal years 2001 to 2006 to help meet
the new anti-terrorism mission.
Reorganization
of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) to reform the agency's
structure by separating its service and enforcement functions. Fulfills
President Bush's pledge to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of
the nation's immigration system.
The
Department of Justice launched the Responsible Cooperators Program. Justice
will provide immigration benefits to non-citizens who furnish information
to help apprehend terrorists or to stop terrorist attacks.
INS
arrested Mazen Al Najjar after he was ordered to be deported for violating
his visa, had established ties to terrorist organizations and held leadership
positions in the Islamic Concern Project and the World and Islam Studies
Enterprise.
Zayd
Hassan Abd Al-Latif Masud Al Safarini was arrested for his indictment in
1991 for the September 5, 1986, hijacking of Pan American World Airways
Flight 73, demonstrating DOJ’s commitment to track down terrorists no matter
how long it takes.
Civil
Rights:
The
President moved swiftly to protect Muslims from hate crimes and the Department
of Justice followed his lead by having their Civil Rights Division sponsor
community forums in Chicago, Illinois, and Dearborn, Michigan, on combating
ethnically motivated violence as a result of the September 11th terrorist
attacks.
Attorney
General John Ashcroft and AAG for Civil Rights Ralph F. Boyd, Jr. have
met with 29 prominent leaders from the Arab and Muslim American and Sikh
communities and underscored DOJ’s strong commitment to investigate and
prosecute violators of federal hate crime laws.
The
Department of Justice, the U.S. Equal Opportunity Commission and the Department
of Labor issued a joint statement against employment discrimination in
the aftermath of September 11.
Investigating
approximately 300 incidents involving violence, or threats of violence
against individuals perceived to be of Middle Eastern origin. Federal charges
have been brought in 6 cases, coordinating with local prosecutors in at
least ten instances where cases are being prosecuted locally.
Victim
Relief:
Provided
approximately $52 million in assistance to victims and their families and
$10 million in emergency assistance to the NYPD.
Humanitarian
Relief:
"Ultimately,
one of the best weapons, one of the truest weapons that we have against
terrorism is to show the world the true strength of character and kindness
of the American people. Americans are united in this fight against terrorism.
We're also united in our concern for the innocent people of Afghanistan."
President
George W. Bush, 10/11/01
The
humanitarian situation in Afghanistan remains dire. Millions face the threat
of starvation. 70% of the Afghan people and ½ of all Afghan children
are malnourished. Only 13% of the Afghan people have access to clean water.
Years
of civil war -- compounded by the rule of the Taliban and the worst drought
in 30 years -- have made matters worse. The Taliban were clearly more interested
in protecting al-Qaeda than feeding the starving, innocent people of Afghanistan.
Al-Qaeda and the Taliban have not only failed to provide security, food,
and shelter for the Afghan people, but they have also disrupted the efforts
of international relief agencies to deliver desperately needed food and
medical supplies to the Afghan people. Among other things, the Taliban
have seized and looted humanitarian supplies for themselves, and have harassed
and beaten Afghan and international aid workers.
The
typically harsh Afghan winter is arriving and the U.S., with its international
partners, is doing everything it can to help bring hope to the innocent
Afghans who have suffered under the brutal and oppressive al-Qaeda and
Taliban regime:
Even
before September 11, the U.S. was the leading humanitarian aid donor for
Afghanistan.
Last
fiscal year the U.S. provided $183 million of humanitarian assistance alone
to Afghanistan.
Since
the beginning of October alone, the U.S. has provided more than $187 million
in humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan.
On
October 10, USAID Administrator Natsios announced a five-point assistance
strategy for Afghanistan: reduce death rates; minimize population movements;
lower and then stabilize food prices; ensure that aid reaches those it
is intended for; and begin developmental relief programs.
As
of mid-December the international community, led by the U.S., has delivered
127,368 metric tons (MT) of food aid to Afghanistan, using, trucks, boats,
barges, aircraft, and thousands of people to overcome numerous logistical
and security obstacles. (For context, 52,000 MT of food will feed approximately
six million people for one month.)
Between
October 7 and December 13, the Department of Defense airdropped 2,423,700
Humanitarian Daily Rations (HDRs) to Afghans who could not be reached by
relief workers because of ongoing conflict. The entire operation cost approximately
$51 million.
The
President announced the creation of the America’s Fund for Afghan Children.
The President asked American children to send $1 dollar -- or whatever
they can afford -- to the Fund to help buy important humanitarian supplies.
America’s children have donated more than $1.5 million thus far to the
Fund. The first shipment of humanitarian goods purchased from this fund
left the U.S. for the Afghan children on Sunday, December 9.
The
government has provided more than $62 million in grants to support relief
activities in Afghanistan. The programs include supporting agriculture,
rehabilitating water resources, funding health services, repairing shelters,
and providing critical non-food items such as blankets, tents and kitchen
sets. Additional grants have funded UN coordination efforts and a radio
program to provide humanitarian and security information to Afghans in
their home languages.
USAID
has provided funding for wool blankets and quilts, shelter kits, plastic
sheeting and winterized tents. Further, USAID is distributing mattresses,
clothes, stoves, cooking sets, firewood, coal, lanterns and water containers.
The
government has provided medical kits and funds for health centers and mobile
clinics in Afghanistan and is sponsoring public heath education and programs
on hygiene, obstetrics, maternal and childcare, and malnutrition. USAID
is employing trained personnel to conduct educational outreach on basic
health and nutrition, especially to women. USAID is helping expectant mothers,
training local birth attendants and funding the distribution of vitamins
and the immunization of young children.
The
government has provided funds for rehabilitation and reconstruction in
the areas of housing, roads and bridges, wells and irrigation systems,
agriculture and food security, and initiating "food for work" and "food
for cash" initiatives.
USAID
has funded six airlifts of critical commodities to Afghanistan. The airlifts
have provided shelter materials, tents, health supplies and high-energy
food items for vulnerable people in Afghanistan.
The
State Department has provided $32,260,000 to relief agencies to assist
Afghan refugees in Pakistan, Iran and other neighboring countries. The
grants also provide funds to assist refugees attempting to return to their
homes in Afghanistan.
The
government has sent Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) personnel
to Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan to ensure that relief
efforts are effective and well coordinated.
Respecting
Islam
"The
Islam that we know is a faith devoted to the worship of one God, as revealed
through The Holy Qu’ran. It teaches the value and importance of charity,
mercy, and peace."
--President
George W. Bush, 11/15/01
The
United States is a nation of religious freedom, and the President has acted
to ensure that the world’s Muslims -- from Dearborn, Michigan to Kabul,
Afghanistan -- know that America appreciates and celebrates the rich traditions
of Islam:
At
the national prayer service following the September 11 attacks, the President
included religious leaders from many faiths, including an Imam from the
Islamic Society of North America. Subsequently the President hosted an
interfaith meeting on September 20 with leaders of different religious
denominations to pray jointly for the victims of the September 11 tragedies
and called for national reconciliation.
Soon
after the terrorist attacks, the President visited the Islamic Center of
Washington to meet with American Muslim leaders and deliver a message of
tolerance and solidarity. The President condemned unwarranted attacks on
Americans of Muslim faith, and urged Americans to show their support for
their Muslim friends.
President
Bush launched the "Friendship Through Education" initiative, encouraging
children in America and children in Muslim nations to connect through email,
letter writing, and different friendship and understanding projects. The
President wants this initiative to help youths from different societies
deepen their understanding of each others’ traditions and outlooks.
For
Ramadan, on November 19 President Bush hosted the first-ever Iftar -- or
breaking-of-the-fast -- dinner at the White House, which included the ambassadors
from nations with Muslim populations. The President also issued a warm
greeting to Muslims around America and around the world with a special
Ramadan message.
The
State Department asked U.S. embassies in Muslim countries to host Iftar
dinners and many members of his administration also held their own celebrations.
Secretary of State Colin Powell, Attorney General John Ashcroft, and Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz all participated in Iftar dinners.
On
December 17, President Bush hosted Muslim children at the White House in
honor of Eid al-Fitr, Islam’s most sacred holiday. He read an Eid book
to the children and hosted them for cookies and punch as well as delivering
a present to each child in the tradition of Eid. The President also issued
a taped Eid message and read an Eid greeting.
Secretary
of Energy Spencer Abraham recognized Americans for acts of compassion following
the September 11th attacks -- he honored, for example, a church that started
an escort service for Muslim women who wear the hijab, and a citizen who
created a fund to assist low-income Muslim victims of hate-inspired vandalism.
Secretary Abraham will also launch a series of public service announcements
further promoting tolerance.
Homeland
Security
"We
face a united, determined enemy. America is going to be prepared."
--President
George W. Bush, 10/8/01
President
Bush has taken action to help protect America against terrorist attacks.
The government is working around the clock to protect Americans. Among
many other steps:
The
President worked with Congress to provide $20 billion to promote homeland
security, including funds to upgrade intelligence and security, provide
recovery assistance to disaster sites, help victims’ families, increase
numbers of law enforcement personnel, provide health care for displaced
Americans, and purchase irradiation equipment to sanitize the mail.
The
President established the Office of Homeland Security -- under the diligent
guidance of Governor Tom Ridge -- and the Homeland Security Council to
coordinate, and implement the Executive Branch's efforts to detect, prevent,
protect against, respond to, and recover from terrorist attacks within
the United States.
The
President moved to implement tough new airline security standards that
tighten background checks for airline screeners and workers, dramatically
expands the federal air marshal program, creates strict new baggage security
requirements, and tightens security in all areas of airports.
The
President established an advisory committee for cyber security to ensure
that America’s key infrastructures are protected. The advisory committee
is a public/private partnership.
The
Administration has strengthened coordination between law enforcement agencies
of the U.S. and neighboring countries to address common threats while ensuring
the free flow of goods and people.
The
Food and Drug Administration has enhanced the food screening process of
imported foods.
The
Department of Health and Human Services created the Office of Public Health
Preparedness, to coordinate the national response to public health emergencies.
Public
health professionals provided antibiotics to more than 30,000 people to
protect against their possible exposure to anthrax.
HHS
increased the supply of drug caches around the country, added specific
use drugs, and began to increase the supply of small pox vaccine to 300
million.
The
President created a Presidential Task force to help Americans prepare in
their homes, neighborhoods, schools, and other public places from the consequences
of terrorist attacks.
The
Centers for Disease Control and the U.S. Postal Service provided guidelines
on how to handle mail that had potentially come into contact with anthrax.
EPA
has worked with water utilities, chemical, pesticide, petroleum and fertilizer
manufacturers to increase their vigilance and secure their resources against
an attack.
The
Survivors of September 11
"It
is said that adversity introduces us to ourselves. This is true of a nation
as well. In this trial, we have been reminded, and the world has seen,
that our fellow Americans are generous and kind, resourceful and brave.
We see our national character in rescuers working past exhaustion; in long
lines of blood donors; in thousands of citizens who have asked to work
and serve in any way possible."
--President's
Remarks at National Day of Prayer and Remembrance, 9/14/01
Every
one of the victims who died on September 11th was the most important person
on earth to somebody. The American people have responded to the tragedies
of September 11 with an unprecedented outpouring of support for their fellow
Americans who lost so much on September 11:
While
it is impossible to catalog every penny of contributions, at least $1.3
billion has been collected in aid for families of both civilian and uniformed
victims of the September 11th terrorist attacks.
There
are many relief organizations collecting aid to distribute to the families
of the thousands of victims from the September 11th terrorist attacks.
Examples include the Twin Towers Orphan fund, the Pentagon Assistance Fund,
the WTC School Fund, the Washington Redskins Relief Fund, the Dole-Clinton
Families of Freedom Scholarship Fund, and funds established by the United
Jewish Communities, Catholic Charities, the Burn Center at the Washington
Hospital Center, and many, many more.
The
American Red Cross has raised over $647.4 million and has distributed over
$217.7 million to the families of the victims of September 11th.
The
September 11th United Way Relief Fund has been working thoughtfully and
deliberately to distribute $143 million in cash and services to help rebuild
the lives of victims’ families and affected communities.
On
September 1, the entertainment industry came together in historic fashion
to raise funds and raise the spirits of all who have been touched by the
horrific tragedy that has struck America. Over $150 million was pledged
through the United Way September 11th Telethon Fund, "America: Tribute
to Heroes." By the end of the year, a total of $100 million in cash assistance
will have been delivered to victims families through the Telethon Fund
by the entertainment industry.
New
York City’s major human service organizations have joined forces under
an umbrella group called the 9/11 United Services Group. At the urging
of the New York State Attorney General, the group launched a confidential
database, which will serve as a central clearinghouse for information on
victims, survivors, financial needs, and the amounts of money and services
provided by charities. This database enables the different charities to
communicate with each other and track both the needs of the families of
victims as well as the amount of assistance they are receiving.
More
than 100 people with ties to the Sept. 11 terror attacks will carry the
Olympic torch as it makes its way to Salt Lake City for the Winter Games.
The torch will be passed at the Pentagon on Friday, December 21, 2001.
The
President announced www.libertyunites.org in the Rose Garden on September
18, 2001, and praised Americans for their outpouring of charitable relief
support in the wake of September 11th.
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