Daily Express

‘Terrorists failed To make us live in fear’

- By Sam Lister Deputy Political Editor

BORIS Johnson has said the 9/11 terrorists failed in their mission to make the West live in fear as he led British tributes to the 2,977 victims of the atrocity 20 years on.

The Prime Minister added that the last two decades had proven that al-Qaeda did not lead “us to abandon our values” despite the continuing threat.

Some 67 Britons were among those who died when suicide attackers seized US passenger jets and crashed them into the World Trade Center’s twin towers in New York on September 11, 2001.

Mr Johnson said: “On a crystal clear morning, terrorists attacked the United States with the simple goal of killing or maiming as many human beings as possible.

“By inflicting such bloodshed in the world’s greatest democracy, they tried to destroy the faith of free peoples everywhere in the open societies, which terrorists despise and which we cherish.

“And it is precisely because of the openness and tolerance of the United States that people of almost every nationalit­y and religion were among the 2,977 murdered on that day, including 67 Britons, each of them a symbol of the eternal friendship between the United Kingdom and the United States.

Grief

“But while the terrorists imposed their burden of grief and suffering, and while the threat persists today, we can now say with the perspectiv­e of 20 years that they failed to shake our belief in freedom and democracy.

“They failed to drive our nations apart, or cause us to abandon our values, or to live in permanent fear.

“The fact that we are coming together today – in sorrow but also in faith and resolve – demonstrat­es the failure of terrorism and the strength of the bonds between us.” The al-Qaeda attacks led to the US invasion of Afghanista­n, backed by the UK, to crush the group.

Mr Johnson said the crisis in the nation after military forces withdrew last month has strengthen­ed the determinat­ion to “remember those who were taken from us”.

And to “cherish the survivors and those who still grieve and hold fast to our belief in liberty and democracy, which will always prevail over every foe”.

He sent the defiant message in a video recording that will be played at a memorial event in London’s Olympic Park, where a 9/11 statue forged from the twisted steel of Ground Zero is on display.

Osama Bin Laden’s terror group hijacked four planes and crashed them into landmark buildings in a coordinate­d attack.

The twin towers were hit first, followed by the western face of the Pentagon. Then the United Airlines Flight 93 crashed in a field in

Shanksvill­e, Pennsylvan­ia after passengers fought back. It is believed to have been destined for the Capitol Building inWashingt­on DC.

US President Joe Biden will attend memorials in New York and Pennsylvan­ia today as well as a service at the Pentagon, where a light installati­on is being staged to mark the anniversar­y. Services of remembranc­e are being held by embassies around the world.

Labour’s Jack Straw, foreign secretary at the time of the attacks, said lessons must be learnt from the invasion of Afghanista­n.

He said the motivation was for alQaeda and “its protectors”, the Taliban, to be “stopped from ever organising another 9/11 from a safe

US haven in Afghanista­n”. He told The House magazine: “I didn’t see this at the time, but the fundamenta­l mistake we made was to believe the Taliban was out as well as down.

“Military planners and historians will need to learn from our errors.

“The US will need the painful lesson – not for the first time – that it is hearts and minds which ultimately wins a peace, not firepower. And we will all have to swallow hard and deal with the Taliban unless and until that becomes impossible.

“Internatio­nal pressure, and aid, will both be necessary, not least if girls are to continue to be educated and women to work.”

Former prime minister Tony Blair said the internatio­nal community must be prepared to take action against the Taliban if it again becomes a terror base.

He said the allies had no choice but to invade after the Taliban refused to give up the al-Qaeda leadership who were responsibl­e.

“I don’t think if we’d left them alone after that or taken some counterter­rorism measures – sent some special forces in, tried to take out the leadership – I don’t think the movement would then have died or gone away.

“I think it is a genuine global, ideologica­l movement. They believe it and they are going to pursue it and in the end will only be defeated, not because they give up and go away, but because they have both the ideologica­l and security battle taken to them and in the end their own population­s turn against them and defeat them.”

 ??  ?? Race against time...firefighte­rs carry injured pal from carnage
Race against time...firefighte­rs carry injured pal from carnage
 ??  ?? Video message...Boris Johnson
Video message...Boris Johnson

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