On
October 7, 2001 America Retaliates for the September 11 Attacks.
October 7, 2001
Archives, Newspaper Covers, Graphics, Maps
Major Speeches, Images, and International Reaction. Click on the
images for a larger image.
President
George W. Bush Speaks to
America After the Strikes Begin. Following is the text of the address made
from the Treaty Room in the White House
on October 7, 2001.
On
my orders, the United States military has begun strikes against
al-Qa'eda terrorist training camps and
military installations of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
These carefully targeted actions are designed to disrupt the use of
Afghanistan as a terrorist base of operations
and to attack the military capability of the Taliban regime.
We are joined in this operation by our staunch friend, Great Britain.
Other close friends, including Canada,
Australia, Germany and France, have pledged forces as the operation
unfolds.
More than 40 countries in the Middle East, Africa, Europe and across
Asia have granted air transit or landing
rights. Many more have shared intelligence. We are supported by the
collective will of the world.
More than two weeks ago, I gave Taliban leaders a series of clear and
specific demands: Close terrorist
training camps. Hand over leaders of the al-Qa'eda network, and return
all foreign nationals, including
American citizens unjustly detained in our country.
None of these demands were met. And now, the Taliban will pay a price.
By destroying camps and disrupting communications, we will make it more
difficult for the terror network to
train new recruits and coordinate their evil plans.
Initially, the terrorists may burrow deeper into caves and other
entrenched hiding places. Our military action
is also designed to clear the way for sustained, comprehensive and
relentless operations to drive them out and
bring them to justice.
At the same time, the oppressed people of Afghanistan will know the
generosity of America and our allies. As
we strike military targets, we will also drop food, medicine and
supplies to the starving and suffering men and
women and children of Afghanistan.
The United States of America is a friend to the Afghan people, and we
are the friends of almost a billion
worldwide who practice the Islamic faith.
The United States of America is an enemy of those who aid terrorists and
of the barbaric criminals who profane
a great religion by committing murder in its name.
This military action is a part of our campaign against terrorism,
another front in a war that has already been
joined through diplomacy, intelligence, the freezing of financial assets
and the arrests of known terrorists by
law enforcement agents in 38 countries.
Given the nature and reach of our enemies, we will win this conflict by
the patient accumulation of successes,
by meeting a series of challenges with determination and will and
purpose.
Today we focus on Afghanistan, but the battle is broader. Every nation
has a choice to make. In this conflict,
there is no neutral ground. If any government sponsors the outlaws and
killers of innocence, they have
become outlaws and murderers themselves. And they will take that lonely
path at their own peril.
I'm speaking to you today from the Treaty Room of the White House, a
place where American presidents have
worked for peace.
We're a peaceful nation. Yet, as we have learned, so suddenly and so
tragically, there can be no peace in a
world of sudden terror. In the face of today's new threat, the only way
to pursue peace is to pursue those who
threaten it.
We did not ask for this mission, but we will fulfill it.
The name of today's military operation is Enduring Freedom. We defend
not only our precious freedoms,
but also the freedom of people everywhere to live and raise their
children free from fear.
I know many Americans feel fear today. And our government is taking
strong precautions. All law enforcement
and intelligence agencies are working aggressively around America,
around the world and around the clock.
At my request, many governors have activated the National Guard to
strengthen airport security. We have
called up reserves to reinforce our military capability and strengthen
the protection of our homeland.
In the months ahead, our patience will be one of our strengths —
patience with the long waits that will result
from tighter security, patience and understanding that it will take time
to achieve our goals, patience in all the
sacrifices that may come.
Today, those sacrifices are being made by members of our armed forces
who now defend us so far from
home, and by their proud and worried families.
A commander in chief sends America's sons and daughters into battle in a
foreign land only after the greatest
care and a lot of prayer.
We ask a lot of those who wear our uniform. We ask them to leave their
loved ones, to travel great distances,
to risk injury, even to be prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice of
their lives.
They are dedicated. They are honorable. They represent the best of our
country, and we are grateful.
To all the men and women in our military, every sailor, every soldier,
every airman, every Coast Guardsman,
every Marine, I say this: Your mission is defined. The objectives are
clear. Your goal is just. You have my full
confidence, and you will have every tool you need to carry out your
duty.
I recently received a touching letter that says a lot about the state of
America in these difficult times, a letter
from a fourth-grade girl with a father in the military.
'As much as I don't want my dad to fight,' she wrote, 'I'm willing to
give him to you.'
This is a precious gift. The greatest she could give. This young girl
knows what America is all about.
Since Sept. 11, an entire generation of young Americans has gained new
understanding of the value of
freedom and its cost and duty and its sacrifice.
The battle is now joined on many fronts.
We will not waiver, we will not tire, we will not falter, and we will
not fail. Peace and freedom will prevail.
Thank you. May God continue to bless America.
'War Has Begun'
ISRAEL
The
World Reads the News of the October 7th
American Strikes in Special Coverage Newspapers. Click on the
images for a larger image.
USA & INTERNATIONAL NEWSPAPERS
Front Pages
UK Daily Papers
'Strikeback' INDIA
'War
Has Started' CUBA
'US
Strikes Back' SINGAPORE
'American
Attack
Has Begun' PALESTINE
'Attack' GERMANY
Atlanta Constitution
October 8, 2001
New York Times
October 8, 2001
Philadelphia
Daily News
October 8, 2001
NY Daily News
October 8, 2001
New York Post
October 8, 2001
San Jose
Mercury-News
October 8, 2001
Miami Herald
October 8, 2001
Washington Post
October 8, 2001
Seattle
Post-Intelligencer
October 8, 2001
Philadelphia Inquirer
October 8, 2001
El Nuevo - Miami
October 8, 2001
Folha De S. Paulo/Brazil
October 8, 2001
The Star
South Africa
October 8, 2001
La Repubblica
Italy
October 8, 2001
O Globo
Brazil
October 8, 2001
Telegraph - Australia
October 8, 2001
Scotsman-Scotland
October 8, 2001
The Sun - UK
October 8, 2001
Express - UK
October 7, 2001
Express - UK
October 8, 2001
International
Reaction to the October 7th American and British Strikes in Afghanistan.
International Newspaper Editorials & World Leaders Reaction. Click on the
strike images for a larger image.
Editorial
Excerpt from The Daily Star (Jordan) "One does not have to be a militant to be angered by the fact
that when the 'Israel Defense Forces' go on the offensive in the West
Bank or Gaza, they do so with American-built warplanes, helicopters,
bombs and missiles. Does this mean that reasonable people support the
wholesale slaughter of civilians? No. But it does challenge Washington
to prove bin Laden wrong by demonstrating its earnest desire to address
the issues listed above and honoring its pledge that it has no intention
of making war on Islam."
Tomahawk Missile
Editorial
Excerpt from The Guardian (United Kingdom) "From the moment that the terrorists first struck nearly four
weeks ago, it has been clear that a just response to that attack was
likely to involve some form of military action by the United States. Now
that moment has come and only a fool will not feel some fear. Tony Blair
last night called it a moment of utmost gravity for the world. ... the
most dangerous since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962."
USS Carl Vinson
Editorial
Excerpt from Iran News "The scale of the U.S. attack on the already devastated Afghan
cities is clear now, but the duration and the scope of the military
campaign is still unclear. ... It would be understandable if
Washington's military attack is based only on the principle of eye for
an eye. But if, as President Bush insists, the aim is to eradicate
terrorism and bring peace to all corners of the world, then an eye for
eye is not the right principle to follow."
USS Enterprise
Editorial
Excerpt from The Times of India "If New Delhi is increasingly suspicious of being left out of
the loop in the US-led global war on terrorism, then British prime
minister Tony Blair’s goodwill hunting mission to the subcontinent
will have done little to soothe the nerves. "
F18 Air Strikes
Editorial
Excerpt from the Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) "Mr. Bush and his principal ally, Britain's Tony Blair, deserve
credit for pulling this uneasy, diverse coalition together. In his early
months as President, Mr. Bush alarmed many friends of the United States
by his tendency to take unilateral decisions and then expect them to
agree. This time around, he and his aides have been at great pains to
consult not just close allies, but also other influential governments,
including some that have traditionally been deeply suspicious of US
methods and motives. As a result, the Taliban and its dangerous guests
are largely isolated."
"None
of the leaders involved in this action want war. None of our nations
want it. We are a peaceful people.
But we know that sometimes, to safeguard peace, we have to fight.
Britain has learned that lesson many
times before in our history. We only do it if the cause is just."
-- British Prime Minister Tony Blair
"We regret that diplomatic efforts to convince Taliban
leadership to respond to the international demands did
not succeed ... Pakistan did whatever it could to convince the Taliban
leadership of the gravity of the situation
and take the right decisions in the interest of the Afghan people. We
also hope that the operations will end
soon and a concerted international effort will be undertaken to promote
national reconciliation and help
Afghanistan with economic reconstruction." -- Pakistani
government statement
"We see in the United States the leader of this campaign, and
we shall not do anything that may frustrate or
endanger the campaign itself ... We feel part and parcel of this
campaign, and, if it should be asked,
everything will be considered, seriously and positively." -- Israeli
Defense Minister Shimon Peres,
speaking in an interview for CNN's Larry King Live.
"These brutal attacks are as horrendous, terrorist acts as any in
the world. America has always chosen the
military approach .. the Afghans will rise against the new
colonialist." -- Taliban Ambassador to Pakistan
Abdul Salam Zaeef
The attacks "were carried out without regard to world public
opinion and particularly the Islamic countries.
These attacks will result in loss of life among civilians, and,
therefore, they are not acceptable." -- Iranian
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi
"What America did today is that it had targeted a country and
people who are among the poorest in the world.
Anybody would condemn this attack, not because it's coming from America
or because it's against Muslims and
a Muslim country -- but because it was done outside the framework of
international law and because America
didn't present a convincing proof against those it accuses of
terrorism." -- Iraqi government statement
"The fight against terrorism is a fight that is complex, difficult
and that has to be played on several fronts. It is
not just a military fight ... for this action facing us, the French are
united ... We are all united." -- French
President Jacques Chirac
We are part of
an unprecedented coalition of nations that has come together to fight
the threat of terrorism
... Canada will be part of this coalition every step of the way."
-- Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien
Graphics
& Maps of the Strike Targets in Afghanistan on October 7, 2001.
Click on the images for a larger image.
Read
a daily timeline of all
events occurring after the
September 11 attack.
Read
the entire text
of Osama bin Laden's
Oct. 7th TV Broadcast.
CONTENTS
- September11News.com
September
11, 2001 Terrorist
Attacks on America
Complete News Archives of September 11, 2001 and the Years That
Followed
News,
Images, Photographs,
Headlines, Newspapers, Timelines,
Mysteries, and History
May
God bless
the many souls who lost their lives,
on September
11,
2001, at
the World Trade Center,
the Pentagon, and on airline flights 11, 175, 77, & 93.
The courage and sacrifice shown by the FDNY firefighters, the NYC
Police, and
other NYC EMS will never be forgotten. History will remember
9/11/2001.