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U.S. President George W. Bush, his hand over his heart,
appeared to fight back tears as the national anthem played and
America’s week of remembrance began.
“Our emotions run deep, but our resolve runs deeper,”
first lady Laura Bush said from her husband’s side at Monday
night’s taping of “Concert for America 2002” at the John F.
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The NBC-TV production
will be broadcast Wednesday on the first anniversary of the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that killed more than 3,000 people
in New York City, Washington and Pennsylvania.
“One year ago, we were attacked because of who we are and
what we believe. But out of the evil done that day has come
good,” the president said at the finale of the show featuring
Josh Groban, Placido Domingo and others.
For Bush, the concert began a week of ceremonies and
speeches reflecting on the attacks and reinforcing the war
against terror.
Bush was conferring with Portuguese Prime Minister Jose
Manuel Durao Barosso yesterday about expanding the anti-terror
war into Iraq. Later, at the Embassy of Afghanistan, he was to
celebrate that country’s post-Sept. 11 liberation from the
Taliban regime that harbored Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida
terrorists.
Bush is making a pilgrimage Wednesday from the Pentagon
to the southwestern Pennsylvania field where United Airlines
Flight 93 crashed and, finally, to New York’s Ground Zero, the
excavated pit where the World Trade Center once stood.
That night, he will address the nation from Ellis Island,
with the Statue of Liberty as his backdrop, setting aside any
discussion of Iraq and highlighting America’s “moral calling,
our higher purpose as the beacon of liberty and freedom for
people around the world,” White House press secretary Ari
Fleischer said.
Bush said his most painful memories remain those from his
visit to Ground Zero just days after the attacks, when he met
with hundreds of the victims’ family members.
“There was a lot of bloodlust,” Bush recalled for a “60
Minutes II” program being broadcast Wednesday.
“People were, you know, pointing their big old hands at
me saying, ‘Don’t you ever forget this, Mr. President. Don’t
let us down.” (SD-Agencies)
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