During the Clinton administration, the United States could not fight international terrorism. After the tragedy of September 11, Mr. Osama bin Laden recurred the bells of the continental North American, reminding Americans of his presence and fatal injuries. Even after the US was bombed in Sudan and Afghanistan in 1998, Bin Laden kept silence - attacks on believers in the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, and attempts to deter international terrorism by the Clinton administration .
It is similarly painful that the United States has not taken action to suppress Israeli genocide against Palestinians so far (this is the failure of all the presidential government). Under the guidance of the Hillary Clinton administration, the United States is expected to provide greater freedom for Israel and provide more support to the Israeli government in providing advanced weapons systems. In short, Hillary will continue sanctioning the massive eradication of Israeli Palestinians.
Under the Clinton administration, the NATO allies in the United States tried to persuade the Clinton administration to intervene in the civil war of Boston and Herzegovina for many years through multilateral means. After America finally reached an agreement in 1995, he actually decided the military intervention provision which supports the Dayton agreement (Stewart and Shepard, 2002). In addition, the Clinton administration intervened under the auspices of a Somali military agency from 1992 to 1993, but after American soldiers were murdered in Somalia they retreated unilaterally. In addition, despite international pressure, when the genocide of Rwanda and other atrocities occurred, the United States sank down and did little to do anything. Similarly, the Klothon government in Kosovo refused to intervene to boycott the United Nations Security Council but instead acted through another multilateral organization, NATO.
Libya has long been a major goal of the United States on the issue of international terrorism. In 1992 and 1993, the United States succeeded in overthrowing the series of sanctions imposed by the UN Security Council against the Libyan government. In 1988 Pan American Flight 103 flight exploded in Scotland. Libya raised concerns about the absence of a divorce treaty with the United States or the UK and the possibility of unfair trials. Libya and the United States reached a compromise agreement in 1999 to deliver suspects to the Netherlands for a trial by a Scottish judge; the UN sanctions were suspended, but the unilateral sanctions of the United States continued I will