9/11: Honoring the Fallen
WATCH LIVE: WORLD TRADE CENTER MEMORIAL & READING OF NAMES
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After a decade of grief and recovery, nation remembers 9/11 
New York (CNN) — Thousands gathered Sunday morning at New York’s Ground Zero and stood still in silence, some crying as they listened to the names of victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks read aloud. “They were our neighbors, our friends, our wives, children and parents,” said New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who, along with President Barack Obama, helped lead the commemoration on the 10th anniversary of the attacks. A moment of silence spread across New York City at 8:46 a.m. — the time when American Airlines flight 11 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Houses of worship tolled their bells. After Obama read a psalm, 167 pairs of family members began reading the names of those who perished. The reading was interrupted by another moment of silence at 9:03 a.m. — the time when United Airlines Flight 175 struck the South Tower. Click Here to Read Full News Story
Paying tribute to the victims of 9/11 
(AP) Last Updated 10:33 a.m. ET NEW YORK — Moments of silence were observed in New York City Sunday on the tenth anniversary of the terror attacks that destroyed the World Trade Center and killed nearly 3,000 people. “Ten years have passed since a perfect blue sky morning turned into the blackest of nights. Since then, we have lived in sunshine, and in shadow,” said New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. “And although we can never ‘unsee’ what happened here … we can also see that children who lost their parents have grown into young adults, grandchildren have been born, and good works and public service have taken root to honor those we loved and lost.” Click Here to Read Full News Story
9/11, America Remembers: Ten Years Later 
(ABC) Family members of 9/11 victims paused six times this morning at the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and a field in Shanksville, Pa., listening as bells tolled to commemorate the moments when the four planes crashed and the two towers fell 10 years ago. The 9/11 memorials began in New York at 8:30 this morning at the World Trade Center, where President Obama and former President George W. Bush gathered with family members and first responders for the annual reading of the nearly 3,000 names of those killed. The presidents both recited readings to the crowd. Obama read Psalm 46, which starts, “God is our refuge and strength,” while Bush read a letter by Abraham Lincoln, saying, “the solemn pride that must be yours, to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.” Click Here to Read Full News Story

President George W. Bush Discusses 9/11 
DALLAS – A decade after the terrorist attacks that defined his presidency, George W. Bush told USA Today doesn’t regret any decisions he made after 9/11, including the war with Iraq and the use of controversial interrogation techniques that some considered torture.
Asked if he believes those polices – including the USA Patriot Act, which widened government access to Americans’ communications and records – prevented another attack, he said, “Yes, I do.”
“Some of the tactics could have been different” in Iraq after Saddam Hussein was deposed, Bush said in an interview with USA TODAY. “Same with Afghanistan, same with the terrorist surveillance program” that eavesdropped on suspected terrorists’ international communications.
Still, he said, objective historians will conclude his policies “were necessary in order to protect the country.” Bush said the events that led to the death of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in May began during his administration.
“The work that was done by intelligence communities during my presidency was part of putting together the puzzle that enabled us to see the full picture of how bin Laden was communicating and eventually where he was hiding,” he said. “It began the day after 9/11.”
Saturday, Bush and his wife, Laura, will lay a wreath at the Pentagon and speak at the dedication of the Shanksville, Pa., and memorial to Flight 93. Sunday, he’ll attend the New York 9/11 ceremony.
Bush said he is concerned the nation is “becoming isolationist” and will “grow weary to the point where we say it doesn’t matter” whether young democracies survive.
“Democracies, when they take hold, yield peace,” Bush said. The Middle East “is the part of the world that needs peace, and we’ll be successful – unless, of course, we quit,” he said. “My concern is that isolationist tendencies … cause America to retreat from the world.”
Except for his wedding and twin daughters’ birth, he said, 9/11 was “the most profound moment” of his life: “It will always be vivid.”
Bush also shared his thoughts on:
•What he remembers most about that day after he learned of the attacks in a Sarasota, Fla., second-grade classroom. “I, of course, remember (White House Chief of Staff Andy Card) whispering in my ear. I remember the faces of the children. … It was a moment of clarity because people were going to watch how I reacted, and I had enough experience with crises to understand that if you’re head of an organization, it’s important to project calm in the initial stages of a crisis.”
•His first thoughts. “The key thing that I tried to do was to say let’s gather facts so we know what’s happening. The problem that I faced – and the truth of the matter is, many in my administration faced – was during certain moments during the day, there was a fog of war, and the information flow was just really inaccurate. … We needed to take steps to make sure that the attack was a four-plane attack, not a 10-plane attack. We just didn’t know. … My mind eventually became focused on finding out who did it and seeking justice, but initially it was respond and prevent.”
•Watching on TV as thousands of Americans died. “There were moments when I said I’d like to be alone and just thinking through the ramifications and making sure that my thoughts were clear. I prayed for the victims. I prayed for our country. I would see people jump off buildings, and it just was horrific, but I was also determined to lead the country.”
•His televised remarks from Florida and Louisiana. “The first two statements were on the fly. I didn’t realize I had missed the mark. … I just did the best I could do given the circumstances, but obviously it wasn’t the best setting for a president to try to calm the nerves of the country. I wanted to speak from the Oval Office. I wasn’t going to address our nation from a bunker. It would have been a huge psychological victory for the people who attacked.”
•What he learned about himself. “The job of the president was to say here are the facts, here’s what we’re dealing with, and deal with them. Not to feel sorry for yourself, or not to say why did it happen under my watch? That’s not a leadership trait that is admirable. … I felt like I had the capacity to deal with the crisis, and you don’t know until it happens. When I look back on it, I don’t feel a sense of being overwhelmed.”
•Whether he wishes he had done anything differently. “Not that I can think of. I mean, I think the response, laying out tools so that future presidents can have a better chance to protect the country, it’s a legacy that I hope historians will say, ‘It’s a good legacy: He used tools that he thought were necessary and then he helped work with the Congress to codify them, so future presidents, if they so choose, can use those tools.’ “
•The night of 9/11, when an erroneous report of an incoming enemy aircraft prompted Secret Service agents to move him and Laura Bush from their bed to the White House’s underground bunker. “My mind was just churning over the events, the response, the information that had been given through a variety of National Security Council meetings. … And then just as I was kind of dozing off, (a Secret Service agent said) ‘Mr. President,’ and off we go. I had the T-shirt on and the running shorts and grabbed Laura, who didn’t have her contacts on, grabbed (dog) Barney. We must have been looking like a motley crew as we headed down. … It was almost surreal, these big pneumatic doors as you’re heading into the bowels of the White House, guys in black uniforms and guns.
“I didn’t want to sleep down there because I knew I needed to be rested for the next day, and the bed looked horrible. Harry Truman must have bought the bed. It was one of those pullouts with a metal bar in the middle. I was envisioning Laura and I kind of fighting for the soft space.” USA Today
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