The events set in motion by the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbour were among the more consequential events in the history of the world (Toland, 1982). The subsequent development of the atomic bomb and its use at Hiroshima and Nagasaki permanently changed the conditions under which men and women live (Selden and Selden, 1989) and provided a dramatic illustration of what human beings are capable of doing to each other (Lifton and Markusen, 1988). The immediate effects of the surprise attack on the United States (US) were traumatic as the nation entered a war for which it was not prepared. The long range-effects include the imprinting of the surprise attack in collective memories and a national determination by the US to never again be caught unprepared militarily (Neal, 2005). Both political leaders and journalists drew upon the memories of Pearl Harbour as they attempted to make sense out of the surprise terrorist attack of September 11, 2001 (9/11), and to mobilize the nation for an effective response
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