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1 History 17C The American People, World War I to the Present 1
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Black Septembers 9/11 and After The Financial Meltdown of 2008
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3 Themes: The attacks of September 11, 2001, inflicted major human, material, and psychic damage on the United States. They also led, indirectly, to a fundamental transformation in the US government’s relationship to the outside world and to US citizens and residents.
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4 While many, though by no means all, of those changes have been recently repealed, we will be living with their legacy for years to come. Themes:
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Similarly, the financial meltdown of 2008 altered the economic and political landscape in ways that will continue to shape the future of this country and the world. Themes:
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6 George W. Bush 2001-2009
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7 On foreign policy, Bush administration divided between pragmatists and hawks
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8 Secretary of State Colin Powell
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10 Vice President Richard Cheney
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11 Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
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12 Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz
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13 Hawks’ focus on Saddam Hussein 13
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14 September 11, 2001— al-Qa‘ida-sponsored hijackers flew planes into World Trade Center and Pentagon, killing about 3,000
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16 After 9/11 Taliban rejected US demand that they turn over bin Laden
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17 So Bush sent US forces to attack Taliban and al-Qa‘ida in Afghanistan
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18 Northern Alliance
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19 November-December 2001—Taliban were defeated
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20 Pro-US government, under Hamid Karzai, took power in Kabul
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21 But bin Laden escaped from Tora Bora into Pakistan
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22 Guantánamo Bay Detention Facility
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23 Guantánamo Bay Detention Facility
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24 Alberto Gonzales John Yoo
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25 “Extraordinary Rendition”
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26 By early 2002 Bush administration was shifting its focus from bin Laden to Saddam Hussein
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27 By early 2002 Bush administration was shifting its focus from bin Laden to Saddam Hussein
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28 Saddam Hussein and Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
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29 CIA rendering of Curveball’s claim 2000-2001—Iraqi defector Rafid Ahmad Alwan (aka “Curveball”) told German intelligence that Saddam Hussein had built mobile biological weapons labs
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30 2002—Under torture in Egyptian prison, Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi claimed that Iraq had provided al-Qa‘ida with training in chemical and biological weapons
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31 February 2003—Secretary of State Colin Powell repeated both Curveball’s and al-Libi’s claims at United Nations
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32 September 2002—Bush called on UN to pass resolution demanding that Iraq disarm itself of weapons of mass destruction
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33 October 2002—Supplied with misleading intelligence, Congress passed Iraq War Resolution CIA “White Paper” on Iraq and WMD
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34 November 2002—UN Security Council passed Resolution 1441, calling on Iraq to disarm itself of weapons of mass destruction, warning of “serious consequences” if it failed to do so
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35 Late 2002—UN inspectors started operating in Iraq
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36 December 2002-January 2003—US deployed more troops to Persian Gulf; France and Germany opposed use of force without subsequent UN resolution German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer
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37 Early 2003—UN weapons inspectors found no evidence of WMD programs but asked for more time to continue investigation Chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix
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38 March 2003—US, Britain, and “coalition of the willing” launched Iraq War without second UN resolution
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39 April 2003—Saddam Hussein regime fell; but US forces failed to provide adequate security, permitting widespread looting and violence
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41 Summer 2003—Iraqi Insurgency broke out
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December 2011—US troops withdrawn from Iraq
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October 13, 2008
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45 1933—Glass-Steagall Act Established Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) Limited banks’ ability to engage in speculative investment Henry Steagall Carter Glass
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46 1999—Gramm-Leach-Blily Act Repealed Glass-Steagall’s restrictions on speculative investment
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47 2000s—Rise of Mortgage- Backed Securities
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48 Housing Bubble
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49 2006-2007—Uh oh...
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50 Dilemma—“Systemic Risk” vs. “Moral Hazard Systemic Risk: If huge lending firms are allowed to fail, the entire financial system could collapse Moral Hazard: If the government starts bailing firms out, firms will have no incentive to behave responsibly Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
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51 March 2008—Federal government helped JP Morgan absorb failing Bear Stearns
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52 September 2008—Lehman Brothers teetered on collapse Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld
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53 Timothy Geithner President, New York Federal Reserve Bank
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56 Mid-September 2008—Bush administration proposed $700 billion emergency bailout of US financial industry President Bush with Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
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57 Mid-September 2008—Bush administration proposed $700 billion emergency bailout of US financial industry Early October—Congress approved bailout President Bush with Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
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