Los Angeles Times

A new glimpse of Sept. 11

Previously unseen photos show leaders in the hours after the attacks

- By Natalie Schachar natalie.schachar@latimes.com

One image shows Vice President Dick Cheney watching his television, smoke and flames rising from the twin towers. In another, he stares straight ahead, his face reddened.

And a third shows Cheney and his wife, Lynne, exiting the Marine Two helicopter at a location not disclosed that day, now known to be Camp David.

All three images are part of a group of previously unseen photograph­s of President Bush, Cheney, national security advisor Condoleezz­a Rice and other White House staffers in the moments and hours after two planes crashed into the World Trade Center in New York, a third tore into the Pentagon and a fourth hurtled into an empty Pennsylvan­ia field on Sept. 11, 2001.

The images were released Friday in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n request received by the National Archives from Colette Neirouz Hanna of the Kirk Documentar­y Group.

“The emotion on the faces of everyone in that room that day really told the story about the gravity of what was happening and the decisions that were being made,” said David Bohrer, the White House photograph­er who shot the pictures.

When he first heard about the World Trade Center attack, Bohrer, who was in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, grabbed his cameras and ran to the vice president’s office in the West Wing, about 15 yards away.

As the Secret Service evacuated the vice president to a bunker beneath the White House, Bohrer shot continuous­ly. “I took pictures even as we were running through the White House,” said the former Times photograph­er.

In the bunker, known as the President’s Emergency Operations Center, he captured photo after photo of telling details. Soda cans, coffee cups and a tray of cookies sit in the middle of a table.

For the next 5 1⁄2 days, Bohrer stayed with the vice president in the bunker, Camp David and other locations. “I didn’t really get a chance to personally process it all and reflect on what truly happened until I finally did get home,” he said.

“I hope it allows everyone to be able to understand and visualize that terrible day in the lives of our leaders and the country.”

 ?? David Bohrer U.S. National Archives ?? CHENEY in the White House bunker. “The emotion on the faces of everyone ... really told the story about the gravity of what was happening,” says Bohrer.
David Bohrer U.S. National Archives CHENEY in the White House bunker. “The emotion on the faces of everyone ... really told the story about the gravity of what was happening,” says Bohrer.
 ?? U.S. National Archives ?? WITH HIS WIFE, Lynne, the vice president exits Marine Two at Camp David, a location that was undisclose­d at the time.
U.S. National Archives WITH HIS WIFE, Lynne, the vice president exits Marine Two at Camp David, a location that was undisclose­d at the time.
 ?? David Bohrer U.S. National Archives ?? VICE PRESIDENT Dick Cheney watches news coverage. White House photograph­er David Bohrer ran to Cheney’s office when he heard about the attacks.
David Bohrer U.S. National Archives VICE PRESIDENT Dick Cheney watches news coverage. White House photograph­er David Bohrer ran to Cheney’s office when he heard about the attacks.

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