
In this week's Autopsy, we dissect Obama's May 1st 2011 announcement of the killing of Osama bin Laden. On the surface, a moment of closure. Underneath, a masterclass in how the Western Bubble sustains itself even when the person delivering the message is intelligent, measured, and personally decent.
The problem is not Obama the man. It is the logic he inherited and chose to continue. Hunting down the perpetrators of 9/11 was a defensible objective with a clear endpoint. Declaring war on terror, an ideology rather than an organisation, is a commitment with no boundaries, no measurable success, and no exit. By 2011 that distinction should have been obvious. Instead, Obama doubled down.
We also examine what the speech reveals about America's relationship with war itself. A country that has not experienced violence on its mainland since 1812 approaches armed conflict with a set of assumptions that no European, Middle Eastern, or Asian country shares. War is noble. Soldiers are heroes. The costs are abstract. That disconnect does not just shape public opinion. It shapes foreign policy, and the results have been catastrophic, for the United States as much as for the countries on the receiving end.
The killing of Osama bin Laden was the moment to draw a line. Instead it became a comma.
This podcast is an individual project between us, Dario Hasenstab and Balder Hageraats. We are supported by our producer Stefani Obradovic from Western Bubble Insights & Strategy. If you would like to get in touch with us, write us an email at [email protected].
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