Saturday, August 09, 2008

10th anniversary of East African embassy bombings

This essay is part of an occasional feature on this blog that presents compelling stories from elsewhere in the world, particularly Africa, that are little reported in the American media. It's part of my campaign to get people to realize there is a lot going on in the world outside the US, IsraelStine, Iraq, North Korea and Iran.

Yesterday, there were commemorations in East Africa to mark the 10th anniversary of the bombings of the American embassies in Nairobi, Kenya and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

My father was driving me to the bank that morning when US National Public Radio broke the story of the bombings. I remember being worried because I knew a friend of mine and her mother were visiting Kenya at the time. Apparently, they had been in the embassy for some reason left something like half an hour before the attacks. She said they were so close that they heard the explosion from their taxi but had no idea what it was until later on.

This was effectively the first al-Qaeda attack on US interests; though it's important to remember that of the hundreds who died, almost all were Africans. US President Bill Clinton responded by flexing American military muscle and bombing an aspirin factory in Sudan. It was yet another example of US military action abroad being based puffed up machismo and the desire to 'do something' rather than rational decision making and the desire to do something that actually made sense.

Some regional press accounts on the anniversary...

-The East African Standard had some first hand accounts of what happened in Nairobi on that day.


-The Kenyan Nation has a photo essay.

-The Nation also mentions how the present Kenyan government has promised more vigilance in dealing with potential terrorism.

-Tanzania's Daily News has an account of the ceremony in Dar es Salaam.

2 comments:

semi234 said...

This was effectively the first al-Qaeda attack on US interests; though it's important to remember that of the hundreds who died...

I get the gyst of what you're saying but you're forgetting Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia in 1994 & the first World Trade Center bombing in 1991(?)

Brian said...

FYI Khobar Towers was '96 and 1st WTC was '93. I actually had thought of Khobar Towers but the group that pulled it and WTC '93 off may have been an al-Qaeda-like group but I don't think it was al-Qaeda per se (not that the group is particularly well-defined).