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Sunday, September 11, 2011

Live Video: World Trade Center collapse

9/11 September 11 2001 World Trade Center collapse footage

 


9/11 RARE FOOTAGE 2ND PLANE HITTING


Live TV Footage/Coverage of 9/11 (Second Plane hit, Collapse of Towers) World Trade Center




9/11 September 11 2001 World Trade Center collapse footage


Video from - http://www.youtube.com/

9/11: Then and Now

(Left) A jet airliner is lined up on one of the World Trade Center towers in New York. (Right) A fireball explodes from one of the World Trade Center towers after a jet airliner crashed into the building in New York. AP Photo/Carmen Taylor.


(Left) New Yorkers walk over the Brooklyn Bridge on their way to work, April 7, 1980, during the transit strike. (Right) People flee the scene of the attacks on the World Trade center on September 11, 2001. AP Photo/Carlos Rene Perez (left), Mark Lennihan (right).


(Left) The Brooklyn Bridge is seen spanning over New York's East River, with the twin towers of the World Trade Center in the background, June 12, 1990. (Right) Smoke rises behind the Brooklyn Bridge over the East River, and frames the skyline of Manhattan, minus the World Trade towers, the day after hijacked airplanes crashed into both buildings causing their collapse. AP Photo/Marty Lederhandler (left), Kathy Willens (right).




(Left) Daniel Goodwin ("Spider Man") climbs the sheer face of the North Tower of the World Trade Center in Manhattan, New York City on May 30, 1983. (Right) Smoke pours out of the World Trade Center after an air plane struck the buildings on Tuesday morning, September 11, 2001. AP Photo/ Suzane Vlamis (left), Gulnara Samoilova (right).




Cleanup and recovery efforts continue in this overall view at the site of the World Trade Center disaster. AP Photo/ Unknown (left), Louis Lanzano (right).



(Left) This general view shows the World Trade Center twin towers as construction continues on the buildings at Church Street between Vesey and Liberty Streets in lower Manhattan, New York City, on Jun 13, 1970. (Right) This photo taken by the New York City Police Department shows smoke and ash engulfing the area around the World Trade Center in New York. AP Photo/ Marty Lederhandler (left), Greg Semendinger (right).



(Left) New York's Empire State Building is illuminated at sunset in the colors of the British flag in honor of Princess Diana Thursday, Sept. 4, 1997. (Right) In a horrific sequence of destruction, terrorists crashed two planes into the World Trade Center causing the twin 110-story towers to collapse on September 11, 2001. AP Photo/ Michael Schmelling (left), Marty Lederhandler (right).



(Left) The Statue of Liberty and the New York skyline frame warships and smaller craft for Operation Sail in this helicopter view on Saturday, July 3, 1976. (Right) Thick smoke billows into the sky from the area behind the Statue of Liberty, lower left, where the World Trade Center towers stood, on Tuesday, September 11, 2001. The towers collapsed after terrorists crashed two planes into them. AP Photo/ ETA (left), Daniel Hulshizer (right).



(Left) Medical and emergency workers, who are standing in front of the Millennium Hilton, look towards where the World Trade Center towers used to be, after a terrorist attack on the twin towers of lower Manhattan. (Right) Pedestrians pass the Hilton Hotel on Church St. in lower Manhattan, Aug. 4, 2011, in New York. AP Photos/Mark Lennihan.



(Left) The World Trade Center destruction is shown in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks in New York. (Right) The tower known as Four World Trade Center is under construction in lower Manhattan, Aug. 9, 2011 in New York. AP Photos/Mark Lennihan.



(Left) Firefighters work beneath the destroyed mullions, the vertical struts which once faced the soaring outer walls of the World Trade Center towers, after a terrorist attack on the twin towers of lower Manhattan. (Right) The tower known as Four World Trade Center is under construction in lower Manhattan, Aug. 4, 2011 in New York. AP Photo/ Mark Lennihan.



(Left) People covered in dust walk over debris near the World Trade Center in New York. (Right) Pedestrians walk near the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan, Aug. 8, 2011 in New York. AP Photo/ Gulnara Samilova (left), Mark Lennihan (right).



(Left) Pedestrians flee the area of the World Trade Center as the center's south tower collapses following a terrorist attack on the New York landmark. (Right) The skyscraper known as One World Trade Center is under construction in lower Manhattan, Aug. 4, 2011 in New York. AP Photos/ Mark Lennihan.



(Left) The south tower starts to collapse as smoke billows from both buildings of the World Trade Center in New York. (Right) The skyscraper known as One World Trade Center rises in the lower Manhattan skyline, Aug. 4, 2011 in New York. AP Photo/ Jim Collins (left), Mark Lennihan (right).






 (Left) Smoke rises into the sky following the collapse of World Trade Center Towers in New York. (Right) The skyscraper known as One World Trade Center rises in lower Manhattan, Aug. 10, 2011 in New York. AP Photo/ Suzanne Plunkett (left), Mark Lennihan (right).



News from - http://in.news.yahoo.com/9-11--then-and-now.html

9/ 11 and the end of US hegemony

In 2001, USA was doing pretty good. A dastardly attack and ten years later, things have surely changed and the flux has not yet died.

On the dawn of 9/ 11 in 2001, the United States of America was riding high. It had a surplus budget, oil prices were low, the economy was doing fairly well and the country's armed forces were in their barracks.

But by the time the sun had set, it was clear that the country would never be the same again. Ten years later we know just how much it has changed. It has spent more than two trillion dollars in wars that show no signs of ending. Its economy is adrift and its people tired and confused.

The road that America set off on in the wake of the attack on the Twin Towers was not unexpected; very quickly, its armed forces overwhelmed the Taliban, and the Al Qaeda lost its sanctuaries in Afghanistan.

But then, inexplicably it veered off and attacked Saddam Hussein and overthrew his regime. This is when the US lost the moral high ground and many felt that it was American power that had now gone rogue.

The tragedy of 9/ 11 was not responsible for the global financial crisis of 2008. But the meltdown has powerfully reinforced the trend that the world is witnessing the end of American hegemony.

The markers are the milestones of the past decade - China overtaking Germany to become the biggest exporter, leading the world in the consumption of virtually everything, and overtaking the US to become the biggest market for cars.

On the other hand, the US appears to be stagnating. Its politics is gridlocked and somewhat unreal. One party insists that the gaping deficit be fought with even more tax cuts, while the other proposes schemes that expand healthcare and the deficit, without noticing that the big challenge for most Americans is to hold down jobs and get a roof back over their heads.

News from - http://news.in.msn.com/national/article.aspx?cp-documentid=5428419&page=0

Post-9/11 battle not over: Tony Blair

Tony Blair, the international statesman most closely tied to the response to the Sept. 11 attacks, believes the decade-long struggle to contain the threat from Islamic extremism is far from over, despite the killing of al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden.

battle not over: Tony Blair
The former British prime minister, who famously vowed to stand "shoulder to shoulder" with the United States and took a leading role in the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq in the face of domestic unease, told The Associated Press that potent threats still persist -- including in nations swept by the revolutions of the Arab Spring.

"It's completely wrong," to think the struggle to defeat extremist ideology is won, Blair said in an interview. "We shouldn't be under any doubt about this at all. Unfortunately, as I say, this ideology is far broader than the methods of al-Qaida."

"You look at Lebanon, for example and how Hezbollah have taken control there, you look at the activities of Hamas. Yemen I'm afraid, it's a long way off being resolved," Blair said. "Even in a country like Pakistan, with some strong institutions by the way, that it's still an issue, so the struggle is by no means over, but it's the right struggle to be engaged in."

Blair also expressed concern over the uprisings which have shaken the Middle East and North Africa, insisting that the West must act as "players and not spectators" to help democracy flourish from the Arab Spring.

"We've got a long way to go because some of the people getting rid of these regimes don't necessarily want the same thing as others getting rid of them," Blair said, questioning the possible role of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt's future.

"These people will need our help and support in transitioning to proper democracy," Blair said. "That isn't just about the freedom to vote in and out your government, it's about freedom of the media, freedom of expression, freedom of religion, about open markets -- and there's a long way to go on that I fear."
With the hunt on for Moammar Gadhafi, Blair acknowledged his horror over the Libyan's repression of his people, even as he defended his own instrumental role in returning Gadhafi to the international fold -- a deal sealed with a handshake in a 2004 meeting inside a tent.

Blair said "it was shocking and it's a profound shame" to see Gadhafi use violence against his own people in an attempt to cling to power.

But he said his Libya policy made the world a safer place.

"People saying 'don't you feel you shouldn't have dealt with Gadhafi now', of course we should deal with him, because we got him to change his policy on nuclear and chemical weapons, which was vitally important for the world security, and instead of sponsoring terrorism, they were cooperating in the fight against it," he said.

"The trouble is that the external policy change wasn't matched by the internal one," Blair said. "Then when he brutalizes his own people, then the action against him is completely justified."

Blair insisted that he had been right to join the U.S. in confronting the terrorism threat after 9/11, despite warnings from his own spy chief that combat overseas risked radicalizing a generation of Muslims at home.

"The fact that when we were prepared to stand up with America against this terrorism these people then want to target us more, that's not a reason for leaving the front-line and letting others do the fighting. That's not my view of life, I'm afraid," Blair told the AP in an interview.

Eliza Manningham-Buller, director of domestic intelligence agency MI5 between 2002 and 2007, has repeatedly claimed that Blair paid too little attention to warnings that the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq would fuel homegrown terrorism.

Four suicide bombers who killed 52 commuters in the July 2005 terrorist attacks on London's transit network -- the worst al-Qaida directed attacks on the U.K. -- cited the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan in their martyrdom videos.

"I'm afraid I don't take the view that if somebody is doing something wrong and you stand up to them, and they then decide to come after you, that that means you don't try to stop them doing it," Blair said in an interview last week.

The 58-year-old, now envoy to the Quartet of Middle East peacemakers, saw his decade-long leadership of Britain defined by his decision to side with U.S. President George W. Bush in the pursuit of Islamist extremists and rogue regimes.

He saw the wave of popularity that swept him to office in 1997 erode as Britain entered two divisive wars, curtailed civil liberties and battled with the courts -- and public opinion -- over how to handle terrorism suspects both in Britain, and overseas. Blair suffered ridicule from his critics, cast derisively as Bush's "poodle."

Though hundreds of thousands of British people marched against the decision to join the 2003 Iraq invasion, Blair later led his Labour Party to victory in a 2005 national election, winning with a reduced majority.

Allegations that Britain colluded in the mistreatment of terrorist suspects overseas in the frantic years after 9/11 are now being investigated by an independent inquiry. Foreign Secretary William Hague claims the study is necessary to "clear the stain from our reputation as a country."

Blair told the AP that mistakes were made in the years after the 2001 attacks, particularly in preparations for post-conflict security and reconstruction in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

"It would be an odd situation if you, with the benefit of hindsight, wouldn't have done things differently and better than they were done, and obviously there's a whole set of issues around planning and decisions that were taken in the immediate aftermath of both Afghanistan and Iraq," Blair said.

A two-year British inquiry into the Iraq war is scheduled to report within months on whether Blair's government overstated the case for invasion and failed to prepare for the task of nation building.

Blair acknowledged that immediately after 9/11, Britain and the U.S. had only a limited understanding of the threat posed by Islamic fundamentalism, and said he had never anticipated that troops would remain in Afghanistan a decade after they first deployed on a mission to oust the Taliban -- who had harbored al-Qaida leaders.

"I didn't think for a moment that we would still be engaged in an ongoing struggle 10 years later in Afghanistan," Blair said. "But I think that underscores the limitations of our knowledge at the time -- that this is actually, I'm afraid, a far deeper and broader movement than we understood."

Foreign troops will end their combat mission in Afghanistan in 2014, as leaders bet that local police and military forces can contain security threats and that political leaders can deliver a negotiated settlement with insurgents.

"Am I confident that it will be better after 2014? I think we're going have to carry on working at it," said Blair, who resigned as prime minister in June 2007.

As the 9/11 attacks took place, Blair was working alone in a hotel suite in Brighton, a southern England coastal resort, readying a speech to a rally of labor union leaders.

He never made those intended remarks, instead addressing the convention with a brief message of sympathy and a vow that there would be a robust response. The world's democracies would "eradicate this evil completely from our world," he told the hushed audience.

Blair described to the AP how he felt calm and determined in the hours after the attacks, quickly concluding that strikes were a blow aimed at Western values, not just the U.S. Already, he understood the impact the events would have on his own political career.

"We have just got to sometimes try and recapture the emotion and the feeling of that moment," Blair said, recalling how he recognized there would be a need to rally other nations to show support for the U.S.

"At the time, the feeling I had was one of almost a strange sort of calm, in a sense of I know what is behind this and the world has changed from this moment," Blair said. "I didn't anticipate this coming in my premiership -- I had a huge and busy domestic agenda -- but nonetheless, we have to understand that the world is a different place from now on."

News from - http://news.in.msn.com/international/article.aspx?cp-documentid=5427202&page=0

New Jersey Muslim: From 9/11 detainee lawyer to judge

As the rubble of ground zero smoldered in the months after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, the investigation was just as hot across the Hudson River in New Jersey.

New Jersey Muslim

In this photo of July 26, 2011, New Jersey Superior Court Judge Sohail Mohammed raises his right hand as he is administered the oath of office by his mentor, retired Passaic County Assignment Judge Robert J. Passero, left, at Mohammed's ceremonial swearing in in Paterson, N.J. Mohammed represented many people rounded up in New Jersey in the post-9/11 dragnet. Along the way, he gained the respect and friendship of many top law enforcement officials for his efforts to build bridges between the Muslim community and law enforcement and to help defuse tensions in those incredibly tense days.

More than 1,100 Arabs and Muslims -- most of them from New York and northern New Jersey -- were rounded up and detained as the FBI feverishly searched for additional terrorists.

In few places was the spotlight as white-hot as in Paterson, where as many as six of the 9/11 hijackers lived or spent time in the weeks before the attacks. As agents went knocking on doors, asking questions about religious practices, finances and acquaintances, many Muslims were cowering on the other side, terrified of being thrown in jail for crimes they knew nothing about.

A young, soft-spoken Muslim immigration attorney named Sohail Mohammed represented many people rounded up in New Jersey in the post-9/11 dragnet. Along the way, he gained the respect and friendship of many top law enforcement officials for his efforts to build bridges between the Muslim community and law enforcement and to help defuse tensions in those incredibly tense days. He won over one official whose favor would prove crucial nearly a decade later: the U.S. attorney for New Jersey, Chris Christie.

Christie, now the state's governor and a darling of the Republican party, nominated Mohammed to a Superior Court judgeship. Mohammed was sworn into office last week, becoming New Jersey's second Muslim judge.
Mohammed, 47, says his religion has nothing to do with how he'll perform his new job.

"My faith, my ethnicity: that means nothing here," he said. "It's not an issue."

Not everyone agreed.

After Christie nominated Mohammed in January for the judgeship, the tough-talking, crime-busting former federal prosecutor found himself accused of cozying up to Islamic radicals. "Governor Christie's Dirty Islamist Ties," one of the kinder Internet headlines read.

Christie, whom GOP loyalists are now begging to run for president, stuck with Mohammed despite a vicious campaign by conservative bloggers who denounced Christie and raised fears that Mohammed would introduce Islamic Sharia law into the courts.

"Sohail Mohammed is an extraordinary American who is an outstanding lawyer who played an integral role post-9/11 in building bridges between the Muslim community and law enforcement," Christie said. "I was there; I saw it.

"Sharia law has nothing to do with this. It's crazy," Christie said. "This Sharia law business is crap; it's crazy and I'm tired of dealing with crazies. I'm happy he's willing to serve after all this baloney."

The fallout from the terror attacks was quick and extreme in Paterson, home to the nation's second-largest Arab-American community after Dearborn, Mich. Carloads of people descended on the city's Arab quarter, screaming obscenities and throwing things at veiled women on the sidewalk. Some radio hosts broadcast -- falsely -- that Arabs were dancing in the streets and on rooftops when the World Trade Center's towers fell.
Robert Passero, Passaic County's Superior Court assignment judge at the time, was feeling the pressure as well.

"They were recommending I close the courthouse because tempers were high," he said. "There were people from out of town riding through south Paterson making threats. It was very tense."

Passero had known Mohammed for years, taking an interest in him after the young man sat through one of his cases as a juror, then implausibly called the judge's office the following week to say he loved jury duty so much he wanted to do it again. Seeing the makings of a future lawyer, the judge encouraged Mohammed to go to law school, then mentored him along the way, even as Mohammed started a solo practice concentrating on immigration law.

Mohammed would get numerous calls each week from worried Muslims saying FBI agents had knocked on their doors and asked for personal information, including where they worshipped, the names of others who attended the mosque and whether they had ever declared bankruptcy.

"After 9/11 we wanted to forge a better relationship with the Muslim community, we wanted to understand them better, we wanted them to understand us better, explain our job, and that we are there to protect them, too," said Charles McKenna, an assistant U.S. attorney at the time and now head of New Jersey's Office of Homeland Security. "But we didn't have many entrees into that community. Through Sohail, we were able to go in and meet with a lot of the elders of the community. I think that community was a little afraid of the government at that time. A person with his gravitas gave us a foot in the door."

Mohammed undertook several initiatives that eased the mistrust and increased understanding between both sides.

He and other leaders of New Jersey's Muslim community met with FBI and other law enforcement agencies to educate them on Islam and Muslim culture. He helped arrange a job fair at a mosque in which the agencies recruited Muslims for law enforcement jobs. At the time, none of the more than 300 FBI agents assigned to New Jersey spoke Arabic.

Not long afterward, Mohammed and others offered to speak to law enforcement to explain Islam and Muslim culture. By all accounts, the sessions went well. They eventually were expanded beyond the FBI to other agencies, including the Joint Terrorism Task Force.

"It was a tough crowd, but you have to have understanding," Mohammed recalled. "When you are ignorant about something or someone, that brings fear. If you get to know someone and more about them, you remove that fear and we can see people for who they are."

Mohammed began noticing a trend in federal immigration court after Sept. 11: The FBI was clearing suspects -- or at least admitting it had lost interest in them as terror suspects -- long before the courts dealt with their cases. As a result, many were languishing in county jails for months because the court system was overwhelmed.

One was a 19-year-old gas station attendant in Ocean County who shared the same name as Taliban leader Mohamed Omar. He came to the FBI's attention when customers recalled a co-worker at the station who bore a resemblance to 9/11 hijacker Marwan al-Shehhi and told the agency they remembered someone pumping gas who might have been one of the terrorists.

He wasn't, but the resulting attention led to Omar's detention on charges he had violated his tourist visa by working in the U.S. In less than a week, an immigration judge ordered him deported to his native Egypt. But he remained in custody for nearly four months, with Sohail Mohammed appearing in court repeatedly and inquiring about the delay.


Mohammed became ingratiated to many in law enforcement over time, which he attributes to his willingness to consider an opposing viewpoint.

"Even when I was an attorney, I would tell my clients you have to look at this from the other side, too," he said. "There was a balancing test between civil liberties and national security. We need both. I think that's why I earned the respect of law enforcement because I always emphasized both. You are defending this country every time you are serving justice."

Christie said Mohammed was a willing partner in peace.

"When we reached out our hands, the person who most vigorously and most frequently grabbed it back was Sohail Mohammed," the governor said.

Mohammed's confirmation hearing before the state Senate included two hours of grilling, including inquires about Sharia, the Islamic legal code, jihad and Hamas -- questions few if any other state court judges have had to answer.

The current U.S. attorney for New Jersey, Paul Fishman, said those critics equated a Muslim-American's desire to serve his country to "an act of treachery."

"What is disturbing and revolting to me is the number of people who seem to believe that a Muslim has no place on the bench," he said. But proof to the contrary was all around during Mohammed's swearing-in ceremony.

"Sohail, take a good look around you," Fishman told him. "Look at who we are and why we are here -- lawyers, judges, doctors, accountants, engineers, homemakers, police, prosecutors, Muslims, Jews, Christians, Buddhists, probably even a few atheists, Palestinians and Israelis, Yankee fans and Met fans. That we all came is a testament to you. Years from now it will not be so notable that a Muslim serves on the Superior Court, and no one will ask if a nominee will follow Sharia law instead of American law."

News from - http://news.in.msn.com/international/article.aspx?cp-documentid=5425798&page=0