US remembers 9/11 attacks
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Barack Obama, the
Obama on Friday attended a memorial service at the headquarters of the defence department in
"No turning of the season can diminish the pain and the loss of that day... No passage of time and no dark skies can ever dull the meaning of this moment," Obama said.
Almost 3,000 people were killed in the co-ordinated assaults by al-Qaeda.
The president said that maintaining a shared purpose to oppose "terrorism" would be the most effective way to stand against those who wish to strike the
"Let us renew our resolve against those who perpetrated this barbaric act and who plot against us still," he said.
"In defence of our nation, we will never waver."
Security scare
Obama's derfiant words were accompanied by a brief moment of alarm in the capital as authorities raised an alarm after spotting a suspicious boat on the
"We will never forget the rage and aching sadness we felt" |
Police and federal law officials denied media reports that shots had been fired during the incident.
"We are still gathering information of how this training event might have been misconstrued as an actual incident. We will conduct a thorough review of this incident," the Coast Guard said in a written statement.
Obama had earlier observed at the White House a moment of silence at 8:46am (1346GMT), the minute when the first of two hijacked passenger aircraft struck one of the two World Trade Centre towers on September 11, 2001.
About 500 people attended the Pentagon memorial service, including families of the victims and survivors of the Pentagon attack.
Attacks commemorated
Joseph Biden, the vice-president, laid a wreath at Ground Zero in
In a message to the city that was published on the front page of a daily newspaper, Obama said Americans were in solidarity with New Yorkers on the anniversary of the attacks.
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Thousands of people died in the attacks on the |
Obama's letter in the New York Daily News said that the attacks on the World Trade Centre "will be forever seared in the consciousness of our nation" and that "every year on this day, we are all New Yorkers."
"We will never forget the images of planes vanishing into buildings; of billowing smoke rolling down the streets of Manhattan; of photos hung by the families of the missing," he wrote.
"We will never forget the rage and aching sadness we felt. And we will never forget the feeling that we had lost something else: a sense of safety as we went about our daily lives."
The president said that the war in Afghanistan, which was undertaken weeks after the September 11 attacks and which has become increasingly unpopular among Americans, was an intrinsic part of his strategy "to take the fight to the extremists who attacked us on 9/11".
But he also said that the
The president is considering whether to send extra troops to
Carl Levin, a Democrat who chairs the senate's armed services committee, said on Thursday that the
Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera's senior political analyst, said: "The Democratic leadership in congress are not really encouraged to send more troops to
"Even right-wing media commentators are advocating redeployment of troops from the [centre of]
"There is less and less will among the
"General Petraeus [the commander of US Central Command] tells us that there are no more al-Qaeda in
Source: | Al Jazeera and agencies |
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