Why al qaeda attacked the us on 9 11




















While the ability of these groups to flourish again in Afghanistan is still yet to be seen, the risk of it becoming a safe haven without a dominant US presence has risen substantially. Targeted killings are ongoing. There will be active resistance. The policy moving forward is a combination of diplomatic and developmental efforts, plus military intelligence. These wars are not going away. But if you see something that doesn't look right, click here to contact us!

Subscribe for fascinating stories connecting the past to the present. On September 11, —a clear, sunny, late summer day—al Qaeda terrorists aboard three hijacked passenger planes carried out coordinated suicide attacks against the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, D. The September 11 attacks struck the nation on a clear, late summer morning on the East Coast. One hijacked plane crashed in a field outside Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

On the morning of September 11, , the deadliest terrorist attack in U. On the morning of September 11, , 19 men hijacked four U. The hijackers deliberately crashed the planes into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and onto a field outside of Shortly after the Twin Towers fell on September 11, , the nation began to mourn, and around the country Americans began to commemorate the victims and demonstrate their patriotism. Some flew the American flag from their front porches and car antennas.

Others pinned it to Meanwhile, intense debate raged over how best to rebuild the World The coordinated terrorist attacks of September 11, unfolded at nightmarish speed.

Sixteen minutes later, a second jet hit the South Tower. At , an airliner hit the Pentagon. Within hours, Six minutes later, the first contingent of New York City firefighters—two ladder and two engine companies—had arrived at the stricken Live TV.

This Day In History. History Vault. American troops departed Afghanistan in August In the immediate aftermath of the attacks on 11 September, the Department of Defense and all of the branches of the Armed Forces began efforts to document the attacks.

The Navy Archives has received permission to release a portion of the oral histories to the public for the first time since they were recorded. The oral histories that have been authorized for release can be found at the link above.

The oral histories document the experiences of Navy personnel in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Rhode Island on the day of the attacks and in the days and weeks following. The oral histories in this collection offer overlapping and complementary perspectives. A clock, frozen at the time of impact, sat on a desk inside the Pentagon following the terrorist attack on 11 September Photo by Air Force Staff Sgt. Larry A. National Archives identifier, President George W.

Photo by Eric Draper. Courtesy of the George W. Bush Presidential Library. The black walkway is the Flight Path Walkway. The Flight Path Overlook is beyond the second set of walls. National Park Service photograph. Emergency response teams responded to the Pentagon following a terrorist attack on 11 September Photo by the FBI.

Smoke and flames in the Washington, DC, skyline in the aftermath of the terrorist attack on the Pentagon, 11 September Flight 93 impact crater with debris taken early in the investigation near Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

Department of Justice photograph. Hijackers deliberately flew civilian airliners into the buildings, killing themselves, the passengers, and thousands on the ground, 11 September Navy lieutenant dropped to one knee and placed flowers on a gravesite, while family, friends and coworkers of the victims of the 11 September terrorist attack on the Pentagon, look on during a memorial service at the Arlington National Cemetery, 11 September Heat damage from the fire after the attack on the Pentagon caused thermoplastic components to melt, warp, and keys to separate from the base of the laptop.

Additionally, heat formed an impression of a security strap on the exterior of the laptop and cracked the screen. Naval History and Heritage Command. Print Friendly. The Sextant. Social Media. Toggle left navigation Nav. Toggle navigation Menu. Toggle navigation. Navy Installations Historic Former U. That is primarily because the five defendants were all held in secret detention by the CIA and subjected to "enhanced interrogation techniques. That has led to arguments over evidence being contaminated by what happened at the so-called black sites.

The United States "organised and implemented a clearly defined programme to torture these men," says Nevin. Those methods provide plenty of scope for potential appeals against any convictions dragging on for years.

Nevin won't disclose details of what it's like to represent one of the world's most notorious defendants. He says initially his client was "deeply sceptical" of being represented by an American lawyer so there was a long process of getting to know each other.

When Mohammed was held in a top-secret part of the naval base the lawyers were put in a van with the windows blacked out and driven around for 45 minutes to disorient them, he says. But now his client is held in the less secret Camp 5. At meetings some family members will challenge lawyers like Nevin about representing defendants, but others will ask questions about how the process works. Another reason he believes the tribunal has dragged on is because it's a death penalty case and that raises the stakes.

Pellegrino delayed his retirement from the FBI by three years in the hope that Mohammed's military tribunal at Guantanamo, which he expects to testify at, would be completed. But the veteran special agent hit retirement age and has just left the bureau.

But it is what it is. Image source, Reuters. Image source, Getty Images. President Bush joins firefighters clearing rubble days after the attack. Who was Osama Bin Laden? Image source, Frank Pellegrino.



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