Bush overrules ‘war on terror’ rebranding

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When we read in The New Yorker this week that the phrase “war on terror” was being sidelined by the Bush administration in favor of the “global struggle against violent extremism,” it didn’t sound promising, branding-wise. The impetus for the change was surely sincere—a desire to shift the focus of the language from tactics to an ideology, to frame the conflict in less military terms, etc. But ditching that four-syllable phrase, and the equity it’s earned over four years, for a 13-syllable clunker? Whatever the merits, it didn’t seem like Bush’s style.

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