The United States marked the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on Sept. 11 with solemn services to commemorate the victims of the deadliest terror strikes on U.S. soil, which changed the world forever.
Nearly 3,000 people were killed on Sept. 11, 2001 when 19 al-Qaeda suicide bombers hijacked four passenger jets, crashing them into the Twin Towers in New York, the Pentagon in Washington and a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
It was the first foreign attack on the U.S. mainland in almost two centuries and sparked U.S.-led invasions of Afghanistan (2001) and Iraq (2003, where war rages on more than a decade later).
Countries in the Middle East from Libya to Syria are engulfed in war, providing a fertile ground for al-Qaeda affiliates to breed, and Europe has been tormented by attacks inspired by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
The names of the dead were read out in a remembrance service at Ground Zero in New York on the site of the rebuilt World Trade Center, and President Barack Obama was to address a ceremony at the Pentagon.
“This weekend, we honor their memory once more. We stand with the survivors who still bear the scars of that day,” Obama said Sept. 10 in his weekly address.
The 15th anniversary comes with the United States in the midst of a divisive presidential campaign between Hillary Clinton, who was New York senator at the time of the attacks, and Manhattan tycoon Donald Trump.
Both candidates were expected to attend the New York ceremony.
Held at the Sept. 11 memorial, the service paused six times — to mark the moments when each of the two planes hit, when each tower fell, as well as the attack on the Pentagon and Flight 93 that crashed in Pennsylvania.
During the first moment of silence at 8:46 am, the time when American Airlines Flight 11 hit the north tower, houses of worship in New York tolled their bells.
“In the face of terrorism, how we respond matters,” Obama said in his weekly address.
“We cannot give in to those who would divide us. We cannot react in ways that erode the fabric of our society.”
George W. Bush, who was president at the time of the attacks, did not attend either ceremony in New York or Washington.
Instead, he was to go to church in Dallas, Texas and then attend the Dallas Cowboys home opener against the New York Giants, where he will take part in the ceremonial coin toss with two New York police officers who were at Ground Zero on 9/11.
The attacks killed 2,753 people in New York, 184 at the Pentagon and 40 on Flight 93 — which was headed toward the U.S. capital until passengers and crew staged a rebellion and the hijackers crashed it.