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Obama’s appeal on the anniversary of 9/11: “don’t Let others divide us”

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Obama’s appeal on the anniversary of 9/11: “don’t Let others divide us”

Even 15 years later, the painful memory of the events of September 11. September 2001. The President of the United States is looking once more to the comforting words.

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In memory of the victims of September 11. September

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In memory of the victims of September 11. September

In New York and the capital Washington, D. C. the United States have been the victims of September 11. September 2001 thought. U.S. President Barack Obama honored the victims of the terrorist attacks and called on the Nation to unity. In a speech at the U.S. Department of defense, the Pentagon in Washington, one of the a stop to the terrorists ‘ goals 15 years ago, referred to the Obama on the progress made in the fight against Al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups.

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03:27

USA to honor 9/11 victims – Richard Walker, New York

Important not only a determined fight against Terror, but also that the United States reaffirmed their values. The Nation offered variety is not a weakness, but “was and will always be our greatest strength,” Obama said. “Don’t let others divide us.”

Previously, the U.S. had thought with a moment of silence in New York, the victims of the “9/11“ attacks. At the ceremony at Ground Zero, where the twin towers of the World Trade center stood, lease members and police officers after the names of the victims.

At the commemorative event for the 15th time. The anniversary of the attacks also took part in the U.S. presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. The Secretary of Homeland security Jeh Johnson said at the memorial ceremony, the United States today are better equipped than in 2001 against attack, as he on 11.September.

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The attacks of September 11. September 2001 on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon with hijacked passenger planes were historically unprecedented. And, until today, says Miodrag Soric. (11.09.2016)

US Ambassador: “The Pearl Harbor of my Generation”

The U.S. Ambassador to Germany, John B. Emerson, said in the Germany radio, the attacks 15 years ago, represented a turning point in the history of the United States. The attacks had been “a real shock” and at the same time, “a kind of Wake-up call,” said Emerson. “I think the 11. September, about the, what was for my parents ‘ Generation, Pearl Harbor is, for my Generation,” he introduced with a view of the Japanese air attack of 1941, had prompted the USA to enter the Second world war.

15. The anniversary of the attacks, has called Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu an international Front against the Islamists.”We stand together with our most important ally, the United States, and other partners in the fight against militant Islamists terror that spread throughout the world, fear, terror, and murder,” said Netanyahu during a Cabinet meeting in Jerusalem.

Even today, 75,000 people suffer from consequences of the attacks

Members of the Islamist terrorist network Al-Qaeda had on September 11. September 2001, passenger planes hijacked and the twin towers of the World Trade Center and in the Department of defense in Washington controlled. A fourth hijacked plane crashed in Pennsylvania in a field. Nearly 3000 people were killed by the attacks, most of them in New York. Today, about 75,000 people suffer physically and mentally to the consequences of the attacks. Including a large number of rescue forces, the local carcinogenic dust were inhaled. The alleged mastermind of the attacks, Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, was killed in a U.S. military operation in Pakistan in may 2011 killed.

mas/sti (afp, ap, dpa, rtr, deutschlandfunk.de)

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