US President Joe Biden has invoked the memory of America’s united response to the September 11, 2001 attacks by Al Qaeda and vowed to “never give up” in the face of terrorist threats in a solemn commemoration at the Pentagon.
Mr Biden’s remarks about national unity on the 21st anniversary of the attacks on Sunday stood in contrast to his warnings in recent days about dangerous divisions in American society stoked by former Republican president Donald Trump.
“I hope we’ll remember that in the midst of these dark days, we dug deep. We cared for each other. And we came together,” Mr Biden said, as rain fell on troops standing behind him, flanking his Defence Secretary and top general.
Nearly 3,000 people died in the attacks when Al Qaeda hijackers flew planes into New York’s World Trade Center towers and into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, while a fourth plane crashed in Pennsylvania.
Passengers on United Airlines Flight 93 overcame the hijackers and that plane crashed in a field, preventing another target from being hit.
‘We will not rest’
The anniversary comes a year after Mr Biden ended the US-led war in Afghanistan, launched two decades ago to root out the Al Qaeda militant group that carried out the 9/11 attacks after plotting them from Afghanistan.
His chaotic withdrawal of US troops last year and the resulting rapid fall of the country to the Taliban drew criticism from members of both political parties.
But Mr Biden vowed that the fight against terrorism would continue.
“We will not rest. We’ll never forget. We’ll never give up,” he said.
Last month, he authorised a drone strike in Kabul that killed Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, an Egyptian surgeon who had a $US25 million ($36 million) bounty on his head and helped to coordinate the September 11 attacks.
The disclosure of Zawahiri’s presence in Kabul raised questions about the degree to which Al Qaeda is receiving sanctuary from the Taliban.
Biden vows to prevent similar attack
Military and intelligence officials had warned that a complete US withdrawal from Afghanistan could allow Al Qaeda as well as Islamic State to strengthen and, left unchecked, to eventually plot against the US.
Mr Biden and others argued that the threat from terrorism had spread throughout the world over the past 21 years, and that there were better ways to combat it than open-ended military deployments and war.
“Our commitment to prevent another attack on the United States is without end,” Mr Biden said.
The first lady, Jill Biden, attended a ceremony in Pennsylvania on Sunday morning, while Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, were at a memorial in New York City.
In New York, key moments, such as the times at which each tower of the World Trade Center fell, were marked with a moment of silence after the tolling of a bell.
Families of victims of the attacks have waited for years to see several of the people accused of planning and assisting the hijackers brought to trial and convicted.