Biden visits all three attack sites on 20th anniversary of 9/11
		
		 
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		 [September 13, 2021] 
		By Jeff Mason and Trevor Hunnicutt 
		 
		SHANKSVILLE, Pa./ ARLINGTON, Va. (Reuters) 
		-President Joe Biden commemorated the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 
		attacks on the United States on Saturday with visits to each of the 
		sites where hijacked planes crashed in 2001, honoring the victims of the 
		devastating assault. 
		 
		In the first of his wordless tributes, Biden stood in somber silence 
		with former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton at the New York 
		City site where planes brought down the World Trade Center's twin 
		towers.  
		 
		The three leaders, flanked by Jill Biden, Michelle Obama and Hillary 
		Clinton, shared a moment of silence with the crowd at 8:46 a.m. EDT to 
		mark the time that the first plane hit, heads bowed. They listened as 
		relatives read the names of those who died. 
		 
		The Bidens then flew to Shanksville, Pennsylvania, before heading back 
		to the Washington area to visit the Pentagon memorial.  
		 
		Nearly 3,000 people died in the attacks in New York, at the Pentagon in 
		Arlington, Virginia, and in Pennsylvania, where passengers on United 
		Airlines Flight 93 overcame the hijackers and the plane crashed in a 
		field, preventing another target from being hit.  
		 
		Biden did not 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. 
		
		
		  
		
		"The core of who we are is not divided," Biden said Saturday during a 
		visit to a fire station after the Shanksville ceremony. 
		 
		In New York, on a clear, beautiful day similar to the weather 20 years 
		ago, the New York Police Department pipes and drums band played "Hard 
		Times Come Again No More," an American folk song from the 1850s. Bruce 
		Springsteen, playing an acoustic guitar, sang "I'll See You in My 
		Dreams." 
		 
		Rudy Giuliani, mayor of New York at the time of the attacks, attended 
		the ceremony. Former President Donald Trump, a New York native, did not.
		 
		 
		In Shanksville, the Bidens participated in a wreath-laying ceremony at 
		the Flight 93 National Memorial where names of the dead are etched on a 
		white marble wall. 
		 
		The passengers who stormed the cockpit had stepped up in a crisis, Biden 
		told reporters later. "That's genuine heroism," he said. He praised a 
		speech given in Shanksville earlier in the day by former President 
		George W. Bush, the Republican who had been in office less than a year 
		when the hijacked planes changed the country, and the world. 
		 
		In a rare public address, Bush warned https://www.reuters.com/world/us/george-w-bush-calls-out-threat-domestic-terrorism-911-anniversary-2021-09-11 
		of the threat from domestic terrorism. He recalled how Americans came 
		together after the attacks and urged a spirit of greater unity amid 
		growing political division in the country. 
		 
		Bush also urged a common front against violent extremists both domestic 
		and foreign, saying "they are children of the same foul spirit, and it 
		is our continuing duty to confront them." 
		 
		Biden's last visit of the day was to the Pentagon, the symbol of U.S. 
		military might that was pierced by another of the planes used as 
		missiles that day. 
		 
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			President Joe Biden commemorated the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 
			11 attacks on the United States on Saturday with visits to each of 
			the sites where hijacked planes crashed in 2001, honoring the 
			victims of the devastating assault.  
            
			
			  
            The Bidens, Vice President Kamala Harris and second 
			gentleman Doug Emhoff touched a memorial wreath at the site where a 
			series of benches have been erected representing each of the 184 
			victims. They put their hands on their hearts, with Biden raising 
			his in a salute, while "Taps" played. 
			 
			UNITY UNRAVELED 
			 
			The anniversary comes shortly after the end of the U.S.-led war in 
			Afghanistan that Bush launched 20 years ago to root out the al Qaeda 
			militant group that carried out the 9/11 attacks.  
			 
			Biden's withdrawal of U.S. troops in August, months after a deadline 
			set by his Republican predecessor Trump, and the resulting rapid 
			fall of the country https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/taliban-interim-government-agrees-let-foreigners-leave-afghanistan-2021-09-09 
			to the Taliban has drawn criticism from members of both political 
			parties. 
			 
			Trump, a divisive figure who did not attend any formal Sept. 11 
			tribute, appeared instead at a friendly police precinct near his 
			Manhattan home.  
			 
			In stark contrast to the messages of unity, the former president 
			criticized Biden over the Afghanistan withdrawal, repeated his false 
			claim of 2020 election fraud and hinted he may take another run at 
			the White House.  
			 
			U.S. presidents often travel to one of the three sites on the 9/11 
			anniversary but it is unusual to go to all three on the same day.
			 
			 
			In his video address, Biden noted https://www.reuters.com/world/us/biden-calls-unity-nation-marks-20th-anniversary-911-2021-09-10 
			the heroism that was seen in the days following the attacks 20 years 
			ago. "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 took 
			office in late January, but the country remains deeply split 
			politically. 
			 
			Last month, many families of 9/11 victims asked Biden to skip 
			20-year memorial events unless he declassified documents they 
			contend will show Saudi Arabian leaders supported the attacks. Last 
			week, the president ordered the Department of Justice to review 
			documents from the FBI probe into the attacks for declassification 
			and release. 
			 
			(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner 
			and Doina Chiacu in Washington; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and 
			Jonathan Oatis) 
            
			 
            
			  
			  
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