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Obama Abandoning 'War On Terror' Catchphrase

LOLITA C. BALDOR   01/31/09 10:21 AM ET   AP

Barack Obama

WASHINGTON — The "War on Terror" is losing the war of words.

The catchphrase burned into the American lexicon hours after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, is fading away, slowly if not deliberately being replaced by a new administration bent on repairing the U.S. image among Muslim nations.

Since taking office less than two weeks ago, President Barack Obama has talked broadly of the "enduring struggle against terrorism and extremism." Another time it was an "ongoing struggle."

He has pledged to "go after" extremists and "win this fight." There even was an oblique reference to a "twilight struggle" as the U.S. relentlessly pursues those who threaten the country.

But only once since his Jan. 20 inauguration has Obama publicly strung those three words together into the explosive phrase that coalesced the country during its most terrifying time and eventually came to define the Bush administration.

Speaking at the State Department on Jan. 22, Obama told his diplomatic corps, "We are confronted by extraordinary, complex and interconnected global challenges: war on terror, sectarian division and the spread of deadly technology. We did not ask for the burden that history has asked us to bear, but Americans will bear it. We must bear it."

During the past seven years, the "War Against Terror" or "War on Terror" came to represent everything the U.S. military was doing in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as the broader effort against extremists elsewhere or those seen as aiding militants aimed at destroying the West.

Ultimately and perhaps inadvertently, however, the phrase "became associated in the minds of many people outside the Unites States and particularly in places where the countries are largely Islamic and Arab, as being anti-Islam and anti-Arab," said Anthony Cordesman, a national security analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.

Now, he said, there is a sense that the U.S. should be talking more about specific extremist groups _ ones that are recognized as militants in the Arab world and that are viewed as threats not just to America or the West, but also within the countries they operate.

The thinking has evolved, he said, to focus on avoiding the kind of rhetoric "which could imply that this was a struggle against a religion or a culture."

Obama has made it clear in his first days in office that he is courting the Muslim community and making what is at least a symbolic shift away from the previous administration's often more combative tone.

He chose an Arab network for his first televised interview, declaring that "Americans are not your enemy." Before his first full week in office ended, he named former Sen. George J. Mitchell as his special envoy for the Middle East and sent him to the region for talks with leaders.

According to the White House, Obama is intent on repairing America's image in the eyes of the Islamic world and addressing issues such as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, unrest in Pakistan and India, Arab-Israeli peace talks and tensions with Iran.

Using language is one way to help effect that change, said Wayne Fields, professor of English and American culture studies at Washington University in St. Louis.

"One of the contrasts between the two administrations is the care with which Obama uses language. He thinks about the subtle implications," said Fields, an expert on presidential rhetoric. The Bush administration "didn't set out deliberately to do things that were offensive but they liked to do things that showed how strong they were, and to use language almost in an aggressive sense."

Obama, he said, understands that language and conversation must be worked at and that it's "not just a series of sound bites."

White House officials say there has been no deliberate ban on the war-on-terror phrase. And it hasn't completely disappeared. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs has used the wording in briefings, and it's still in vogue among some in the Pentagon and State Department.

Asked about Obama's avoidance of the phrase, Gibbs said the president's language is "consistent with what he said in his inaugural address on the 20th. I'm not aware of any larger charges than that."

Juan Zarate, who served as the deputy national security adviser for combating terrorism during the Bush administration, said he has seen signs that the new White House is trying to subtly retool the words, if not the war.

"There's no question that they're looking very carefully at all issues related to how the war on terror is packaged, to include lexicon," said Zarate. "All of this is part of an attempt to see how they could at least frame a change in policy even if, at the end of the day, the actual war on terrorism doesn't change all that much."

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WASHINGTON — The "War on Terror" is losing the war of words. The catchphrase burned into the American lexicon hours after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, is fading away, slowly if not deliberate...
WASHINGTON — The "War on Terror" is losing the war of words. The catchphrase burned into the American lexicon hours after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, is fading away, slowly if not deliberate...
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gulopartisan
My micro-bio is still empty.
01:10 PM on 02/02/2009
"War on terror" was a chicken hawk wet dream from its inception. you can't have a war if there is no definable way to win. At least with the "war" on poverty, if everybody gets "unpoor," you win. Chicken hawks (how charming, that the Repugs managed to conflate both meanings) love "war," the ultimate in their lexicon of gutless violence.
01:02 PM on 02/02/2009
Lets not call anything a "war" that doesn't have a declaration of war from the United States Congress, the only body that can declare war.
11:15 AM on 02/02/2009
It is just so refreshing to have an intelligent, compassionate, caring president again. I am once again hopeful for our country.
08:37 AM on 02/02/2009
THANK GOD!!! I was freakin tired of everything G.W. Bush and especially tired of that phrase. Instead of the war on terror, he should be saying the "end of terrorism" like I've heard Obama say. Americans don't mind war, we HATE stupid war. Take it to Afghanistan where should have been in the first place. Afghanistan is a mosh pit den of evil terrorists and despair. I can't wait until Obama captures Osama (he will) and takes out Al Qaida. My friend Marsha is in the military and they are chomping at the bit to get into Afghanistan. Get 'em Obama!!
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BlueAsh
08:34 AM on 02/02/2009
Not a minute too soon!

This whole idea of "war on terror", while a feel-good phrase, has been poorly defined and taken on a very negative connotation. At a time when the US has engaged in unilateral wars, responsible for massive civilian deaths, and tainted by human rights abuses, "war on terror" comes across as hypocritical, hollow, and damning. I am glad it is going out the window along with the Bush policies and cronies.
08:28 AM on 02/02/2009
Thank you, Mr. President!

Ditch "War on Terror", "The Drug War" and can we please stop calling our country "the Homeland"? That sounds so Communistic or Nazi-ish. I'm getting close to 60 and I never ever heard America referred to as "The Homeland" until GWB came along. It sounds awful and I hate it.
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Hoosierbrad
I know it when I see it.
09:34 PM on 02/01/2009
It's about time! It's pretty hard to wage war on a tactic! Bush and his hyperbole have engaged in a "war" that cannot be won. Our war on terror has the same future as our "War on Drugs" first announced by President Nixon; how successful has that been! Until we recognize that we cannot control the minds of every little religious bigot in the world, we will be well on the way to realize that we cannot totally avoid the nuts of the world, we should take steps to protect ourselves and pull back from these confrontations in the part of the world that are not making us safer, in the long run, just a lot poorer. The Taliban rightly realize that they can wait us out, we will tire of conflict after 10 - 15 years, declare victory and come home. They will re-institute themselves in power and there will be NOTHING done, then. What will we have accomplished, but the bankruptcy of our country.
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05:16 PM on 02/01/2009
While we're at it, it's time to ditch "homeland" too.
06:39 PM on 02/01/2009
Yes, I agree. Using this word in a jingoistic phrase (i.e., "homeland security") was Bush's and the GOP's cynical attempt to exploit 9/11/2001 for nationalistic and xenophobic purposes.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
11:39 PM on 02/01/2009
And it would be very good riddance, too. About as charming a phrase as Lebensraum.
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SnapShots
Ignorance is not a virtue.
04:54 PM on 02/01/2009
Go BO. You're doin' it right.
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Norge
Rolf K. Artist, worker of metal, writer of poems
04:18 PM on 02/01/2009
Of course and it is about time to come back to common sense use of language. War in all its' forms is terror. Raw as all War is terrorizes all it comes in contact with. To terrorize is wars' first and formost perpose in the process of imobilizing what ever is perceived at the time to be the enemy.

Americas' so called war on terror can also be seen as Americas' fight with its' self to come through its' own imobility and terrified state of collective mind at the time America met its' greatest fear. Blowback.

America has come through its' greatest anguish.
04:01 PM on 02/01/2009
I'm also against The War on Guerilla Warfare. Plus, I am against The War on Asymetrical Warfare.
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MissKaren
02:41 PM on 02/01/2009
I prefer to see it as a kind of police action. Terror is criminal. Killing people in the dozens is committing murder by the dozens and making it a military issue is both wrong-headed and futile.
12:55 PM on 02/01/2009
it has always been a s t u p i d phrase that does more harm than it does good, you can't fight a war on a tactic and surprise surprise an entire region isn't too keen on being identified with a radical tactic, by golly who could have guessed that those kinds of broad strokes would alienate people.
09:17 AM on 02/01/2009
How about we drop the "war on drugs" catchphrase while we're at it?
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
11:14 AM on 02/01/2009
The War On Drugs is a policy umbrella that needs to be dismantled - not just a catchphrase.

However, I agree that we need to "end the War on Drugs." It is not only unwinnable, but also highly destructive of our own society.
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04:27 PM on 02/01/2009
Exactly right.
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StillAmused
Some mayo on that troll, please...
07:57 AM on 02/01/2009
Experienced a similar revulsion at the creation of the 'Der Fatherland Security' absurdity... ominous echoes of WWII Germany, and immediately evident as a massive political patronage program, methodical demolition of existing agencies with defined responsibilities and another jingoistic slogan in a literal war on the English language.

And, hey... how 'bout that all-star performance during the Katrina obscenity.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
11:15 AM on 02/01/2009
Another good post - I agree; thanks for posting.
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