The Terrorism Index

Six months ago, we launched a groundbreaking new index that asked more than 100 of America's top foreign-policy hands if the United States was winning the war on terror. Their answer? No. Now, surveyed again today, this bipartisan group sees a world that continues to grow more dangerous and a U.S. national security strategy that is failing on several fronts. In the second FOREIGN POLICY/Center for American Progress Terrorism Index, these experts warn that not only is another attack imminent, but that the United States may be distracted from the threats that matter most.

... Americans are more skeptical than ever that the United States has effectively confronted the threat of terrorism. Barely half believe that their government has a plan to protect them from terrorism. Just six months ago, 55 percent of Americans approved of the way the war on terror was being handled. Today, that number is just 43 percent--lower than at practically any point since the 9/11 attacks. Full Story »

Posted by Kaizar Campwala

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Review

Allan Edwards
4.8
by Allan Edwards - Oct. 1, 2008

It is a shame that the general public seems more interested in the details of Nicole Smith's demise than in the evidence of experts who are trying to inform the nation about the disaster about to happen in Iran. If only the experts could use spin doctors for their press releases as does the Bush administration, perhaps the publc might take more notice of what is about to happen to our nation. But then using spin doctors rather than simply presenting truthful evidence is Machiavellian, a quality which has characterized Bush politics for his entire career and one to which experts and professionals will not stoop.

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Allan's Rating

Overall
4.8

Very good
from 13 answers
Quality
4.7
Facts
5.0
Fairness
5.0
Information
5.0
Sourcing
4.0
Style
4.0
Accuracy
4.0
Balance
5.0
Context
5.0
Popularity
5.0
Recommendation
5.0
Credibility
5.0
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