After a French tragedy, an ugly fight in America
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An ugly week in politics turned the tragedy of Paris into a raging domestic quarrel as many of America's leaders struggled to prove they were equal to a terrifying moment.
An ugly week in politics turned the tragedy of Paris into a raging domestic quarrel as many of America's leaders struggled to prove they were equal to a terrifying moment.
ISIS'
multipronged shooting sprees and bombings returned the horrific threat
of an international terrorist rampage to a dominant place in U.S.
politics that it hasn't held since the fear-filled days after September
11, 2001.
Nerves in the United States were set on
edge by tales of horror filtering across the Atlantic, by bomb scares
aboard French airliners in North America and by blood-curdling ISIS videos warning that the next massacre could unfold over here.
But
as heavily armed police fanned out in New York City and Washington,
there was none of the unity of purpose that sustained the nation after
9/11. In fact, politicians on both sides of the aisle responded by
digging partisan divides even deeper as unpleasant controversies erupted
over America's role in the Middle East, over who was tough enough to
wage war and the plight of Syrian refugees.
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