"On September 11 2001, America felt its vulnerability even to threats that gather on the other side of the Earth. We resolved then, and we are resolved today, to confront every threat from any source that could bring sudden terror and suffering to America"
About this Quote
Then comes the hinge: “We resolved then, and we are resolved today.” It’s rhythmic, almost liturgical, engineered for repetition. The intent is to present policy as continuity with a sacred national moment, making dissent feel like backsliding on a vow. “We” is doing heavy lifting, bundling government decisions, public grief, and national identity into one collective actor.
The subtext is a doctrine of preemption without using the word. “Confront every threat from any source” sounds like prudence; it also implies a boundless battlefield. “Any source” quietly expands the target set from identifiable perpetrators to states, networks, ideologies, even suspicions. “Could bring sudden terror” lowers the evidentiary bar: not threats that will strike, but threats that might. That conditional is how extraordinary measures get normalized.
Context seals the rhetoric’s power. Post-9/11 America was primed for certainty, for moral clarity, for sentences that promised control over chaos. Bush offers that in absolute terms. The cost of the promise is embedded in its scale: if threats are everywhere, then confrontation can be anywhere too. This is the language that makes the “war on terror” feel less like a strategy and more like a permanent state of being.
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
|---|---|
| Source | George W. Bush, State of the Union Address, Jan 29, 2002 — transcript (contains passage on Sept. 11 vulnerability and resolving to confront threats from any source). |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Bush, George W. (2026, January 15). On September 11 2001, America felt its vulnerability even to threats that gather on the other side of the Earth. We resolved then, and we are resolved today, to confront every threat from any source that could bring sudden terror and suffering to America. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/on-september-11-2001-america-felt-its-137493/
Chicago Style
Bush, George W. "On September 11 2001, America felt its vulnerability even to threats that gather on the other side of the Earth. We resolved then, and we are resolved today, to confront every threat from any source that could bring sudden terror and suffering to America." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/on-september-11-2001-america-felt-its-137493/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"On September 11 2001, America felt its vulnerability even to threats that gather on the other side of the Earth. We resolved then, and we are resolved today, to confront every threat from any source that could bring sudden terror and suffering to America." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/on-september-11-2001-america-felt-its-137493/. Accessed 10 Feb. 2026.

