US REMEMBERS 9/11 VICTIMS
President Joe Biden leads the commemoration of 20th anniversary of terror attacks on United States that claimed nearly 3,000 lives |
President Joe Biden commemorated the 20th anniversary of the September 11 attacks on the United States yesterday by visiting each of the sites where hijacked planes crashed in 2001, honour ing the victims of the devastating assault.
Biden began the day in New York, where he attended a ceremony at the site where the World Trade Center’s twin towers once stood before planes struck the buildings and caused them to collapse.
The New York Police Department pipes and drums band played “Hard Times Come Again No More” a US folk song from the 1850s.
Across the Hudson River in New Jersey at another ceremony Bruce Springsteen, playing an acoustic guitar, sang “I’ll See You in My Dreams”.
Biden and former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama and the crowd held a moment of silence at 8:46 to mark the time that the first plane hit. Biden, head bowed, did not make remarks.
Nearly 3,000 people died in the attacks in New York, at the Pentagon and in Pennsylvania, where passengers on United Flight 93 overtook the hijackers and the plane crashed in a field, preventing another target from being hit.
In New York, relatives read a list of the people who died at the towers. Rudy Giuliani, who was the mayor of New York at the time of the attacks, attended the ceremony. Former President Donald Trump, a New York native, did not.
Biden will travel to Shanksville,
Pennsylvania, where former President George W. Bush, who led the country at the time, will make a rare public appearance.
Rapid fall
Finally Biden will return to the Washington area to visit the Pentagon, the symbol of US military might that was pierced by another of the planes that were used as missiles that day.
The anniversary comes shortly after the end of the US-led war in Afghanistan, launched some 20 years ago to root out Al Qaida, which carried out the 9/11 attacks.
Biden’s withdrawal of US troops in August, months after a deadline set by his Republican predecessor, Donald Trump, and the resulting rapid fall of the country to the Taliban has drawn criticism from members of both political parties.
Biden is not scheduled to deliver remarks at any of the sites. He released a video on Friday to express his condolences to the loved ones of the victims and highlight the national unity that resulted, at least initially, after 9/11. “It’s so hard. Whether it’s the first year or the 20th, children have grown up without parents and parents have suffered without children,” Biden said.
Biden and former Presidents Clinton and Obama and the crowd held a moment of silence at 8:46 to mark the time that the first plane hit.
National unity
The president noted the heroism that was seen in the days following the attacks.
“We also saw something all too rare: a true sense of national unity,” Biden said.
Biden, a Democrat, pledged to build up such unity after he came into office earlier this year, but the country remains deeply divided politically.
US presidents often travel to one of the three attack sites on the 9/11 anniversary but it is unusual to go to all three on the same day.