
The War Against the West Has a Long Way to Go
On the 24th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks, Cliff May sits down with Amb. Edmund Fitton-Brown, former British ambassador to Yemen and UN terrorism monitor, now a senior fellow at FDD, to assess what we’ve learned — and failed to learn — about global jihad. From Hamas leaders living lavishly in Qatar, the Houthis’ missile attacks, al Qaeda’s quiet alliance with Tehran’s rulers, and the West’s waning influence in Africa to the Taliban’s return to Kabul and the UN’s support for Hamas, Cliff and Edmund warn that the Long War Against the West is far from a conclusion.
FDD's Foreign Podicy · FDD
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Show Notes
On the 24th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks, Cliff May sits down with Amb. Edmund Fitton-Brown, former British ambassador to Yemen and UN terrorism monitor, now a senior fellow at FDD, to assess what we’ve learned — and failed to learn — about global jihad.
From Hamas leaders living lavishly in Qatar, the Houthis’ missile attacks, al Qaeda’s quiet alliance with Tehran’s rulers, and the West’s waning influence in Africa to the Taliban’s return to Kabul and the UN’s support for Hamas, Cliff and Edmund warn that the Long War Against the West is far from a conclusion.