NEW YORK: America marked the 20th anniversary of 9/11 Saturday with the khidmat ceremony which was given a visibility by withdrawal of chaotic troops recently from Afghanistan and returned to Taliban power.
Hearnamed heart warning will be revealed in each of the three sites where 19 Al-Qaeda hijackers – most of Saudi Arabia – aircraft that fall, attack the hearts of culture, finance and politics of the United States and change the world forever.
Warning came with US troops finally left Afghanistan, but a national dispute – and for President Joe Biden, political hazard – overshadded all the sense of closure.
In a video posted on a birthday night, Biden urged Americans to show unity, “our greatest strength.” “For me, that’s the main lesson of September 11.
That’s the most vulnerable, in the encouragement and pull all that makes us humans, in battle for the American soul, unity is our biggest strength,” Biden said in a six-minute message from the White House.
At Ground Zero New York, where two water pools are now standing where the twin towers are accustomed, relatives will read the names of nearly 3,000 people killed, in a four-hour service starting at 8:30 a.m.
(1230 GMT).
The six moment of silence will be observed, in accordance with the age of two World Trade Center towers being beaten, and fall, and the Pentagon’s moments were attacked and flew 93 fell.
Monica Iken-Murphy, who lost her 37-year-old husband Michael Iken at the World Trade Center, said this would be a “increasing” warning for many Americans.
But for him, because for many other victims, his pain never faltered.
“I feel like it just happened,” he told AFP.
All generations have grown since the morning of September 11, 2001.
In temporary founders, Al-Qaeda Osama bin Laden has been hunted and killed.
The new towering sky scraper has increased in Manhattan, replacing the twin tower.
And less than two weeks ago, the last US army flew from Kabul airport, ending what was called “forever war.” But the Taliban who had been protected by bin Laden again ruled Afghanistan, the powerful US military insulted.
In Guantanamo Bay, accused of 9/11 Mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other men continued to wait for the court, nine years after the accusation was submitted.
Even the complete story of how the attack took place secretly.
Only last week did Biden to release a secret document from the FBI investigation for the next six months.
At Ground Zero, 2,753 people, from all over the world, killed in the initial explosion, jumped to their deaths, or only disappeared in Inferno from the tower which collapsed.
At the Pentagon, a plane tore the fiery hole on the side of the superpower military center, killing 184 people on the ground and on the ground.
And in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, the third wave of hijackers crashed into the fields after passengers fight, send United 93 down before reaching the target in question – the possibility of building US Capitol in Washington.
Biden and Jill Biden’s first mother will stop at each of these places on Saturday to “respect and remember the lives lost,” the White House said.
In the video address Friday night, Biden urged Americans to unite when they pondered the tragedy.
“Unity does not mean we have to believe the same thing, but we must have a respect and faith that is fundamental to each other and in this country,” said Biden.
The President has planned for this to be a very important day in his presidency that is almost eight months old.
However, instead of leading a moment, Biden will cross an angry country about the evacuation of a messy kabul, which includes 13 US troops killed by a suicide bomber, and stung by the realization of failure and a wider defeat.
For relatives of victims, birthdays, as usual, are about maintaining the memories of the people they love live.
“It’s like Pearl Harbor,” said Frank Siller, my brother Firefighter Stephen died at the World Trade Center.
“People who don’t live don’t have the same feeling about it like those who are still alive.
But America never forgets about Pearl Harbor and America will never forget about 9/11.”