1Fall of communism (1989)
The Berlin Wall, which divided a city into a communist
east  and a non-communist west, was the most tangible
symbol of a Cold War  that divided the whole world. When it
came down, it was proof that the  war was over —
and that the communists who built the wall had lost. 
 
  
       
         Carmen Taylor, AP
 29/11 terrorist attacks (2001) 
Islamic extremists turned four commercial
jetliners into  weapons of mass murder,
obliterating two of the USA’s
biggest office  towers and punching a hole in its
military headquarters. The attacks  killed nearly 3,000 people,
led to wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and  ushered in
unprecedented national security measures.
      3Iraq war (2003-)
It was a war in two acts. First came a conventional
conflict  in which the United States and its allies quickly
rolled over the forces  of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
Then came a protracted struggle  against an insurgency
that frustrated Americans like no war since  Vietnam.
  
               4Hurricane Katrina (2005)
The costliest hurricane in U.S. history flooded
New Orleans,  scattered its residents and devastated the
Mississippi and Alabama  coastline. More than 1,700.
people were killed. 
  
       
         Eric Draper, AP
 5O.J. Simpson (1994-95)
After Simpson’s ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson,
and her friend  Ronald Goldman were murdered,
the former football star was named a  suspect and the
case became a national obsession. Simpson,
riding in a  white Ford Bronco, led police on a nationally
televised slow-speed  chase. His criminal trial
ended in a controversial acquittal.
  
             62000 presidential election
Election Day 2000 was just the beginning of a
five-week  struggle to decide who had won.
It came down to a 5-4 vote by the  Supreme Court that ended
a Florida recount and put Republican George W.  Bush
in the White House over Democrat Al Gore.  
  
             7Clinton impeachment (1998-99)
The revelation of Bill Clinton’s affair with White House  intern
Monica Lewinsky crippled his presidency.
He first denied anything  improper with “that woman, Miss Lewinsky,
” then admitted he’d had a  “wrong” relationship
with her. The House impeached him on charges of  perjury
and obstruction of justice; the Senate acquitted him. 
  
            8Afghanistan invasion (2001)
After the 9/11 attacks, President Bush vowed:
“The people who  knocked these buildings down will hear
all of us soon.”  He made good  on his promise.
In the first stage of the “war on terrorism,” U.S.-led  forces
toppled the Taliban regime that had harbored the
al-Qaeda  plotters. But terrorist Osama bin Laden has
eluded capture.
  
             9Oklahoma City bombing (1995) 
Homegrown terrorism struck the heartland.
The truck bomb that  destroyed the Murrah Federal Building
was the work of Army veterans  Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols,
who sympathized with the violently  anti-federal
militia movement. The blast killed 168 people and injured  nearly 700.
  
            10Chernobyl disaster (1986)
Science fiction had warned of such an accident.
At Chernobyl,  fiction became fact when a
Ukrainian nuclear power plant exploded,  sending radioactive
fallout over Europe. More than 330,000 people
had to  be resettled.
  
      
         George Kochaniec, (Denver) Rocky Mountain News/AP
 11Columbine massacre (1999)
Most Americans once assumed their kids
were safe at school.  Then came the shootings at
Columbine High School near Denver.  Eric  Harris and
Dylan Klebold killed 12 students and a teacher,
then  committed suicide. It was a precursor to 2007’s
massacre at Virginia  Tech, where 33 people died.
  
       
         Jerome Delay, AP
 12Death of Diana (1997)
“The people’s princess” was a complex
personification of  glamour, innocence and tragedy.
Her death in a Paris car crash evoked  extraordinary
public expressions of grief; her funeral at Westminster
Abbey drew more than a million mourners and a
worldwide television  audience.
  
          
         Roslan Rahman, AFP
 13Asian tsunami (2004)
The peace of Christmas was shattered by tragedy
on the other  side of the world.
A Dec. 26 earthquake — among the largest ever
recorded — triggered a devastating Indian Ocean tsunami.
Nearly 230,000  were killed or reported missing,
and global relief efforts topped $6  billion.
  
              14Persian Gulf War (1991)
After Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait and ignored a
deadline to  withdraw, a U.S.-led coalition invaded.
The ground battle was won in a  few days at the cost of
148 American lives. Tens of thousands of Iraqis  died.
Saddam was driven from oil-rich Kuwait but kept power at home.
  
        15Rodney King (1991-92)
The video was shocking: white Los Angeles police
officers  stood around a black man on the ground,
pummeling him. Rodney King was a  parolee who had kept
driving when police tried to pull him over.
The  acquittal of four officers on brutality charges sparked
riots that left  more than 50 people dead.
 
  
           16Branch Davidians (1993)
At least 80 members of the Branch Davidian sect
were killed  during a 51-day standoff outside Waco,
Texas. It began when federal  agents tried to arrest group leader
David Koresh for stockpiling guns  and explosives.
The compound exploded in flames after the FBI sprayed  tear
gas and the Davidians began shooting;
a federal investigation said  the Davidians started the fire.
 
  
       
         Bruce Weaver, AP
 17Challenger explosion (1986)
Christa McAuliff  was going to be the first teacher
in space.  But 73 seconds after launch,
the space shuttle blew apart, killing all  seven astronauts.
The TV images horrified the world. Disaster hit the
program again in 2003, when seven astronauts
died aboard the shuttle  Columbia.
 
  
        
         Jeff Widener, AP
 18Tiananmen Square (1989)
The spirit of China’s student-led pro-democracy
protests was  dramatized by one scene:
a lone man standing defiantly before a column  of tanks
in the heart of Beijing. But military force prevailed;
communist leaders crushed the protests, killing
hundreds, possibly  thousands.
 
  
             19Rwandan genocide (1994)
Neighbor killed neighbor, sometimes with a machete.
More than  500,000 people died in about 100 days in
government-orchestrated  violence that grew out of a civil war.
Despite news coverage, the  international community did not stop it.
         
  
               20Nelson Mandela (1990)
Rarely has anyone suffered so much and for so long with
so  little apparent bitterness.
The South African nationalist, spent 27  years in prison under the
white racist regime;
his release in 1990 was  the beginning of apartheid’s end. Later,
as president, he used his  position not for revenge, but reconciliation.
  
             21Iran-contra affair (1986-87)
The biggest scandal since Watergate dogged the last years
of  Ronald Reagan’s presidency.
Funds from secret U.S. arms sales to Iran  were diverted to finance a
Central American war run from the White  House.
The system was an attempt to circumvent Congress, which had cut
off aid to the contra rebels in Marxist Nicaragua. 
         
  
             22Beirut Marine barracks bombing (1983)
It was an early glimpse of what would become a recurrent  horror:
suicide bombings in the Middle East.
A truck bomb destroyed the  barracks, killing 241 U.S. servicemembers.
The troops had gone to Beirut  as peacekeepers; the bombing eventually
led to their departure.
         
  
          23Terri Schiavo. (2005)
In 1990, Schiavo suffered brain damage that left her in
a  persistent vegetative state.
Eight years later, her husband asked a  court to have a feeding
tube removed. Her parents objected,
touching off  a legal battle that culminated in a political and
media free-for-all.
The tube was removed in March 2005; Schiavo died 13 days later.
 
  
              24Gay marriage (2003)
Same-sex marriage took one step forward and
several steps  back.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s 2003
ruling that  granted homosexuals
the right to marry sparked a backlash. The next  year,
11 states passed bans on same-sex.
  
             25Pan Am Flight 103 (1988)
Explosives hidden in a suitcase destroyed a jet
over  Lockerbie, Scotland, killing 270 people.
Many of the 189 Americans  aboard were students or
military personnel coming home for Christmas.
A  former Libyan intelligence officer was convicted,
and Libya accepted  responsibility for the bombing.
  
          
Source: USA TODAY reporting and writing by Rick Hampson. Photo research by Kate Patterson, 
Evan Eile and Jud McCrehin USA TODAY. 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment