Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Biden to visit all three sites of 9/11 attacks

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

US President Joe Biden will visit all three 9/11 memorial sites to commemorat­e the 20th anniversar­y of the September 11, 2001 attacks and pay his respects to the nearly 3,000 people killed that day.

Biden will visit ground zero in New York City, the Pentagon and the memorial outside Shanksvill­e, Pennsylvan­ia, where United Flight 93 was forced down, the White House said on Saturday. He will be accompanie­d by first lady Jill Biden.

Vice-president Kamala Harris will travel to Shanksvill­e for a separate event before joining the president at the Pentagon, the White House said. Harris will travel with her spouse, Doug Emhoff.

Biden’s itinerary is similar to the one former president Barack Obama followed in 2011 on the 10th anniversar­y of the attacks. Obama’s visit to New York City coincided with the opening of a memorial at the site where the iconic World Trade Center towers once stood.

Next Saturday’s anniversar­y falls less than two weeks after the end of the nearly two-decade-long US war in Afghanista­n. The war was launched weeks after the 9/11 attacks to retaliate against the Al-qaeda plotters and the Taliban, who provided them safe haven.

Biden has found support from the public for ending the conflict but has faced sharp criticism, even from allies, for the chaotic evacuation of US troops and allied Afghans during the final two weeks of August.

Biden on Friday directed the declassifi­cation of certain documents related to the September 11 attacks in a gesture towards victims’ families who have long

WASHINGTON:

sought the records in hopes of implicatin­g the Saudi Arabian government.

The conflict between the government and the families over what classified informatio­n could be made public came into the open last month after many relatives, survivors and first responders said they would object to Biden’s participat­ion in 9/11 memorial events if the documents remained classified.

Iran tells America: Stop addiction to sanctions

Iran has urged the United States to stop its addiction to sanctions against the Islamic republic and accused Biden of following the same “dead end” policies as his predecesso­r Donald Trump.

Foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzade­h made his remarks a day after the US treasury announced financial sanctions against four Iranians accused of planning the kidnapping in the US of an American journalist of Iranian descent.

“Washington must understand that it has no other choice but to abandon its addiction to sanctions and show respect, both in its statements and in its behaviour, towards Iran,” Khatibzade­h said.

 ?? AP ?? Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden in Wilmington, US.
AP Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden in Wilmington, US.

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