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AP
Photo
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| President
Bush addresses the nation from the Oval Office of the White
House in Washington, after the terrorist attacks at the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon. Bush said "Freedom itself has
been attacked this morning by a faceless coward." |
By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer |
WASHINGTON -
President Bush and congressional leaders sought to calm a shaken nation and show
the government was functioning and determined after Tuesday's deadly terrorist
attacks. From the Oval Office, Bush pledged to "find those responsible and bring
them to justice."
As fires still
smoldered at the Pentagon less than a mile away, Bush told the nation, "Our way
of life, our very freedom, came under attack" when highjacked planes destroyed
the World Trade Center in New York and severely damaged the Pentagon.
Administration
officials and members of Congress said early evidence pointed to suspected
fugitive terrorist Osama bin Laden, who has been sheltered in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan's hardline Taliban rulers denied such suggestions.
A senior
administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, cited "strong
information" implicating bin Laden. The official said Bush is considering a wide
range of military options targeting bin Laden and, perhaps, Afghanistan.
Retaliation is not
imminent, but Bush is determined to act as swiftly as possible, the official
said.
"The pictures of
airplanes flying into buildings, fires burning, huge structures collapsing have
filled us with disbelief, terrible sadness and a quiet, unyielding anger," Bush
said in his Oval Office address.
Thousands died in
the attacks, he said.
"We will make no
distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor
them," Bush said without elaboration.
As the president
spoke, military police in combat fatigues guarded streets in the center of
Washington and patrolled in armored vehicles. Major thoroughfares that normally
have a steady flow of cars were almost empty.
Bush began the day
in Florida. For security reasons, he was taken to air bases in Louisiana and
Nebraska before returning to Washington at dusk.
Bush and other top
administration officials and congressional leaders of both parties presented a
united front in the face of what Attorney General John Ashcroft called "one of
the greatest tragedies ever witnessed on our soil."
Across the Potomac
at the Pentagon, which was still partly ablaze, Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld said, "The Pentagon is functioning. It will be in business tomorrow."
Officials said the number of dead and wounded could exceed 100.
"Make no mistake
about it, your armed forces are ready," said Gen. Henry H. Shelton, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
House Speaker
Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., standing at twilight with dozens of other lawmakers on
the steps of the Capitol, said it was still not clear who was responsible "but
we have our suspicions."
"And when that is
justified ... we will act. We will stand with this president ... and we will
stand as Americans together throughout this time."
The lawmakers then
sang, "God Bless America."
The plane that hit
the Pentagon tore through at least three of the rings of the five-ring Pentagon,
hitting Navy and Army portions of the building, according to Rep. Ike Skelton,
D-Mo., senior Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee.
"Pieces of the
airplane were all over. I can't see how there would be anything left of the
people on the plane, given the crash site, with the fireball and all," Skelton
said after a briefing at the Pentagon.
Other lawmakers
were briefed by law enforcement officials late Tuesday said that knives seemed
to be the weapons by the hijackers in three of the four planes, based on cell
phone calls.
Rep. Allen Boyd,
D-Fla., said law enforcement officials estimated three to five terrorists were
on each plane.
The fourth hijacked
plane crashed in rural Pennsylvania about 80 miles southeast of Pittsburgh,
after making a U-turn toward Washington.
U.S. officials said
the Secret Service told the White House the plane may have been headed for the
presidential retreat in Camp David in the Maryland mountains near the
Pennsylvania border.
Hastert and other
top congressional leaders were taken to the safety of a government bunker in
Virginia's Blue Ridge Mountains, about 75 miles west of Washington. Once the
military and the Secret Service issued a green light, the congressional leaders
and the president headed back to town.
"None of us will
ever forget this day," a solemn Bush said in his Oval Office address, which
lasted about five minutes.
Among foreign
leaders expressing support and sympathy was Russian President Vladimir Putin,
U.S. officials said. Putin sent Bush "a powerfully friendly communication," said
one official.
Israel offered a
special emergency force designed to deal with the aftermath of a terrorist
attack. The unit includes doctors, special technicians and trained dogs. But the
administration did not take Israel up on the offer immediately, said Israeli
Embassy spokesman Mark Regev.
Earlier, Bush told
his national security advisers in a telephone conference, according to spokesman
Ari Fleischer, "We will find these people and they will suffer the consequences
of taking on this nation. We will do what it takes. No one is going to diminish
the spirit of this country."
Explosions were
heard Tuesday night near Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, but U.S. officials
denied any responsibility. "In no way is the U.S. government connected,"
Rumsfeld said.
Meanwhile, Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R-Utah., senior Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee,
suggested U.S. officials had knowledge of an interception of a telephone
conversation with two affiliates of bin Laden "who acknowledged a couple of
targets were hit."
In an interview
with The Associated Press, he declined to be more specific about the nature of
the interception.
Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said the federal government was making
emergency medical supplies available in both New York and Washington, and
sending "disaster mortuary response teams" to both scenes.
The government
ordered all civilian air traffic halted until noon Wednesday, at the earliest,
after directing all planes in the air to land after the attacks.
Roads leading out
of Washington became clogged with commuters as the government sent home all
nonessential workers. Inbound lanes on bridges leading into Washington were
closed. Workers traveling out of the city over the Potomac River could see dark
plumes of smoke still rising from the Pentagon.
States of emergency
were declared in the District of Columbia and in neighboring Maryland and
Virginia.
The White House was
evacuated, as had other top federal buildings, including the Capitol, the State
Department and the Central Intelligence Agency.
Bush was in
Sarasota promoting his education program at the time of the attacks. He took
part in telephone conferences with his national security team during the day,
and called New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani from his plane.
Cheney remained in
a nearly deserted White House, in a secure basement bunker, with a few other top
aides, including National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice.
Black-uniformed
Secret Service agents with machine guns patrolled the White House grounds.
Fighter jets circled over the city.
Bush ordered the
nation's military to "high-alert status."
Rumsfeld, in his
Pentagon office when a jetliner blasted a gaping hole in the west side of the
building, rushed to the scene and helped injured co-workers before seeking the
security of a basement command center.
The plane took out
a huge section of one of the Pentagon's five sides, sending up plumes of black
acrid smoke and hampering rescue efforts.
At the first
reports of attacks on New York's World Trade Center, Bush told his school
audience that "we've had a national tragedy" and said he had to hurry back to
Washington.
However, he first
went to the air base in Louisiana, then to Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska,
headquarters of the U.S. Strategic Command. Military fighter jets escorted the
presidential aircraft.
Several lawmakers
compared the attacks to the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that brought
the United States into World War II.
The tragedy reached
inside the Justice Department, where Solicitor General Theodore Olson learned
his wife was aboard the American Airlines jetliner that crashed into the
Pentagon.
Barbara Olson, a
former congressional staffer and Republican activist, was headed to Los Angeles
and called her husband as her plane was being hijacked, officials said.
Responding to
criticism of the intelligence community for failing to predict the attacks, CIA
spokesman Mark Mansfield said, "The CIA has worked diligently and relentlessly
to try to counter terrorism."
"Our resources are
being devoted to determining who was responsible for these horrendous attacks,"
Mansfield said.
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