Special
Report: The Day of the Attack Heroism was
everywhere
as the U.S.dealt with the
bloodiest day on its soil since the Civil War.
Inside the hijackings,the investigation and
the day the World Trade
Center came down
BY NANCY GIBBS
Wednesday, Sep. 12, 2001
If you want to humble an empire it makes sense to
maim its cathedrals. They are symbols of its
faith, and when they crumple and burn, it tells us
we are not so powerful and we can't be safe. The
Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, planted at
the base of Manhattan island with the Statue of
Liberty as their sentry, and the Pentagon, a
squat, concrete fort on the banks of the Potomac,
are the sanctuaries of money and power that our
enemies may imagine define us. But that assumes
our faith rests on what we can buy and build, and
that has never been America's true God.
On a normal day, we value heroism because it is
uncommon. On Sept. 11, we valued heroism because
it was everywhere. The fire fighters kept climbing
the stairs of the tallest buildings in town, even
as the steel moaned and the cracks spread in
zippers through the walls, to get to the people
trapped in the sky. We don't know yet how many of
them died, but once we know, as Mayor Rudy
Giuliani said, "it will be more than we can
bear." That sentiment was played out in
miniature in the streets, where fleeing victims
pulled the wounded to safety, and at every
hospital, where the lines to give blood looped
round and round the block. At the medical-supply
companies, which sent supplies without being
asked. At Verizon, where a worker threw on a New
York fire department jacket to go save people. And
then again and again all across the country, as
people checked on those they loved to find out if
they were safe and then looked for some way to
help.
This was the bloodiest day on American soil since
our Civil War, a modern Antietam played out in
real time, on fast-forward, and not with soldiers
but with secretaries, security guards, lawyers,
bankers, janitors. It was strange that a day of
war was a day we stood still. We couldn't
move--that must have been the whole idea--so we
had no choice but to watch. Every city cataloged
its targets; residents looked at their skylines,
wondering if they would be different in the
morning. The Sears Tower in Chicago was evacuated,
as were colleges and museums. Disney World shut
down, and Major League Baseball canceled its
games, and nuclear power plants went to top
security status; the Hoover Dam and the Mall of
America shut down, and Independence Hall in
Philadelphia, and Mount Rushmore. It was as though
someone had taken a huge brush and painted a
bull's-eye around every place Americans gather,
every icon we revere, every service we depend on,
and vowed to take them out or shut them down, or
force us to do it ourselves.
Terror works like a musical composition, so many
instruments, all in tune, playing perfectly
together to create their desired effect. Sorrow
and horror, and fear. The first plane is just to
get our attention. Then, once we are transfixed,
the second plane comes and repeats the theme until
the blinding coda of smoke and debris crumbles on
top of the rescue workers who have gone in to try
to save anyone who survived the opening movements.
And we watch, speechless, as the sirens, like some
awful choir, hour after hour let you know that it
is not over yet, wait, there's more.
It was, of course, a perfect day, 70[degrees] and
flawless skies, perfect for a nervous pilot who
has stolen a huge jet and intends to turn it into
a missile. It was a Boeing 767 from Boston,
American Airlines Flight 11 bound for Los Angeles
with 81 passengers, that first got the attention
of air traffic controllers. The plane took off at
7:59 a.m. and headed west, over the Adirondacks,
before taking a sudden turn south and diving down
toward the heart of New York City. Meanwhile
American Flight 757 had left Dulles; United Flight
175 left Boston at 7:58, and United Flight 93 left
Newark three minutes later, bound for San
Francisco. All climbed into beautiful clear skies,
all four planes on transcontinental flights, plump
with fuel, ripe to explode. "They couldn't
carry anything--other than an atom bomb--that
could be as bad as what they were flying,"
observed a veteran investigator.
The first plane hit the World Trade Center's north
tower at 8:45, ripping through the building's skin
and setting its upper floors ablaze. People
thought it was a sonic boom, or a construction
accident, or freak lightning on a lovely fall day;
at worst, a horrible airline accident, a plane
losing altitude, out of control, a pilot trying to
ditch in the river and missing. But as the
gruesome rains came--bits of plane, a tire, office
furniture, glass, a hand, a leg, whole bodies,
began falling all around--people in the streets
all stopped and looked, and fell silent. As the
smoke rose, the ash rained gently down, along with
a whole lost flock of paper shuffling down from
the sky to the street below, edges charred, plane
tickets and account statements and bills and
reports and volumes and volumes of unfinished
business floating down to earth.
Almost instantly, a distant wail of sirens came
from all directions, even as people poured from
the building, even as a second plane bore down on
lower Manhattan. Louis Garcia was among the first
medics on the scene. "There were people
running over to us burnt from head to toe. Their
hair was burned off. There were compound
fractures, arms and legs sticking out of the skin.
One guy had no hair left on his head." Of the
six patients in his first ambulance run, two died
on the way to St. Vincent's Hospital.
The survivors of the first plot to bring down the
Twin Towers, the botched attempt in 1993 that left
six dead, had a great advantage over their
colleagues. When the first explosion came, they
knew to get out. Others were paralyzed by the
noise, confused by the instructions. Consultant
Andy Perry still has the reflexes. He grabbed his
pal Nathan Shields from his office, and they began
to run down 46 flights. With each passing floor
more and more people joined the flow down the
steps. The lights stayed on, but the lower stairs
were filled with water from burst pipes and
sprinklers. "Everyone watch your step,"
people called out. "Be careful!" The
smell of jet fuel suffused the building. Hallways
collapsed, flames shot out of a men's room. By the
time they reached the lobby, they just wanted to
get out--but the streets didn't look any safer.
"It was chaos out there," Shields says.
"Finally we ran for it." They raced into
the street in time to see the second plane bearing
down. Even as they ran away, there were still
people standing around in the lobby waiting to be
told what to do. "There were no emergency
announcements--it just happened so quickly nobody
knew what was going on," says Perry.
"This guy we were talking to saw at least 12
people jumping out of [the tower] because of the
fires. He was standing next to a guy who got hit
by shrapnel and was immediately killed."
Workers tore off their shirts to make bandages and
tourniquets for the wounded; others used bits of
clothing as masks to help them breathe. Whole
stretches of street were slick with blood, and up
and down the avenues you could hear the screams of
people plunging from the burning tower. People
watched in horror as a man tried to shimmy down
the outside of the tower. He made it about three
floors before flipping backward to the ground.
Architect Bob Shelton had his foot in a cast; he'd
broken it falling off a curb two weeks ago. He
heard the explosion of the first plane hitting the
north tower from his 56th-floor office in the
south tower. As he made his way down the
stairwell, his building came under attack as well.
"You could hear the building cracking. It
sounded like when you have a bunch of spaghetti,
and you break it in half to boil it." Shelton
knew that what he was hearing was bad. "It
was structural failure," Shelton says.
"Once a building like that is off center,
that's it." "There was no panic,"
he says of his escape down the stairs. "We
were working as a team, helping everyone along the
way. Someone carried my crutches, and I supported
myself on the railing."
Gilbert Richard Ramirez works for BlueCross
BlueShield on the 20th floor of the north tower.
After the explosion he ran to the windows and saw
the debris falling, and sheets of white building
material, and then something else. "There was
a body. It looked like a man's body, a full-size
man." The features were indistinguishable as
it fell: the body was black, apparently charred.
Someone pulled an emergency alarm switch, but
nothing happened. Someone else broke into the
emergency phone, but it was dead. People began to
say their prayers.
"Relax, we're going to get out of here,"
Ramirez said. "I was telling them, 'Breathe,
breathe, Christ is on our side, we're gonna get
out of here.'" He prodded everyone out the
door, herding stragglers. It was an eerie walk
down the smoky stairs, a path to safety that ran
through the suffering. They saw people who had
been badly burned. Their skin, he says, "was
like a grayish color, and it was like dripping, or
peeling, like the skin was peeling off their
body." One woman was screaming. "She
said she lost her friend, her friend went out the
window, a gust sucked her out." As they
descended, they were passed by fire fighters and
rescue workers, panting, pushing their way up the
stairs in their heavy boots and gear. "At
least 50 of them must have passed us," says
Ramirez. "I told them, 'Do a good job.'"
He pauses. "I saw those guys one time, but
they're not gonna be there again." When he
got outside to the street there were bodies
scattered on the ground, and then another came
plummeting, and another. "Every time I looked
up at the building, somebody was jumping from it.
Like from 107, Windows on the World. There was
one, and then another one. I couldn't understand
their jumping. I guess they couldn't see any
hope."
The terror triggered other reactions besides
heroism. Robert Falcon worked in the parking
garage at the towers: "When the blast shook
it went dark and we all went down, and I had a
flashlight and everyone was screaming at me.
People were ripping my shirt to try and get to my
flashlight, and they were crushing me. The whole
crowd was on top of me wanting the
flashlight."
Michael Otten, an assistant vice president at
Mizuho Capital Markets, was headed down the stairs
around the 46th floor when the announcement came
over the loudspeakers that the south tower was
secure, people could go back to their desks or
leave the building. He proceeded to the 44th
floor, an elevator-transfer floor. One elevator
loaded up and headed down, then came back empty,
so he and a crowd of others piled in. One man's
backpack kept the doors from closing. The seconds
ticked by. "We wanted to say something, but
the worst thing you can do is go against each
other, and just as I thought it was going to
close, it was about 9:00, 9:03, whenever it was
that the second plane crashed into the building.
The walls of the elevator caved in; they fell on a
couple people." Otten and others groped
through the dust to find a stairway, but the doors
were locked. Finally they found a clearer passage,
found a stairway they could get into and fled down
to the street.
Even as people streamed down the stairs, the
cracks were appearing in the walls as the building
shuddered and cringed. Steam pipes burst, and at
one point an elevator door burst open and a man
fell out, half burned alive, his skin hanging off.
People dragged him out of the elevator and helped
get him out of the building to the doctors below.
"If I had listened to the announcement,"
says survivor Joan Feldman, "I'd be dead
right now."
Felipe Oyola and his wife Adianes did listen to
the announcement. When Oyola heard the first
explosion in his office on the 81st floor of the
south tower, he raced down to the 78th floor to
find her. They met at the elevator bank; she was
terrified. But when the announcement came over the
loudspeaker that the tower was safe, they both
went back to work. Oyola was back on 81 when the
second plane arrived. "As soon as I went
upstairs, I looked out the window, and I see
falling debris and people. Then the office was on
top of me. I managed to escape, and I've been
looking for my wife ever since."
United Flight 175 left Boston at 7:58 a.m., headed
to Los Angeles. When it passed the
Massachusetts-Connecticut border, it made a
30-degree turn, and then an even sharper turn and
swooped down on Manhattan, between the buildings,
to impale the south tower at 9:06. This plane
seemed to hit lower and harder; maybe that's
because by now every camera in the city was
trained on the towers, and the crowds in the
street, refugees from the first explosion, were
there to see it. Desks and chairs and people were
sucked out the windows and rained down on the
streets below. Men and women, cops and fire
fighters watched and wept. As fire and debris
fell, cars blew up; the air smelled of smoke and
concrete, that smell that spits out of jackhammers
chewing up pavement. You could taste the air more
easily than you could breathe it.
P.S. 89 is an elementary school just up the
street; most of the families live and work in the
financial district, and when bedlam broke, mothers
and fathers ran toward the school, sweat pouring
off them, frantic to get to their kids. Some
people who didn't know if their spouse had
survived met up at school, because both parents
went straight to the kids. "I just wanted to
find my kids and my wife and get the hell off this
island," said one father. And together they
walked, he and his wife and young son and
daughter, 60 blocks or so up to Grand Central and
safety.
The first crash had changed everything; the second
changed it again. Anyone who thought the first was
an accident now knew better. This was not some
awful, isolated episode, not Oklahoma City, not
even the first World Trade Center bombing. Now
this felt like a war, and the system responded
accordingly; the emergency plans came out of the
drawers and clicked one by one into place. The
city buckled, the traffic stopped, the bridges and
tunnels were shut down at 9:35 as warnings tumbled
one after another; the Empire State Building was
evacuated, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the
United Nations. First the New York airports were
closed, then Washington's, and then the whole
country was grounded for the first time in
history.
At the moment the second plane was slamming into
the south tower, President Bush was being
introduced to the second-graders of Emma E. Booker
Elementary in Sarasota, Fla. When he arrived at
the school he had been whisked into a holding
room: National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice
needed to speak to him. But he soon appeared in
the classroom and listened appreciatively as the
children went through their reading drill. As he
was getting ready to pose for pictures with the
teachers and kids, chief of staff Andy Card
entered the room, walked over to the President and
whispered in his right ear. The President's face
became visibly tense and serious. He nodded. Card
left and for several minutes the President seemed
distracted and somber, but then he resumed his
interaction with the class. "Really good
readers, whew!" he told them. "These
must be sixth-graders!"
Meanwhile, in the room where Bush was scheduled to
give his remarks, about 200 people, including
local officials, school personnel and students,
waited under the hot lights. Word of the crash
began to circulate; reporters called their
editors, but details were sparse--until someone
remembered there was a TV in a nearby office. The
President finally entered, about 35 minutes late,
and made his brief comments. "This is a
difficult time for America," he began. He
ordered a massive investigation to "hunt down
the folks who committed this act." Meanwhile
the bomb dogs took a few extra passes through Air
Force One, and an extra fighter escort was added.
But the President too was going to have trouble
getting home.
Even as the President spoke, the second front
opened. Having hit the country's financial and
cultural heart, the killers went for its political
and military muscles. David Marra, 23, an
information-technology specialist, had turned his
BMW off an I-395 exit to the highway just west of
the Pentagon when he saw an American Airlines jet
swooping in, its wings wobbly, looking like it was
going to slam right into the Pentagon: "It
was 50 ft. off the deck when he came in. It
sounded like the pilot had the throttle completely
floored. The plane rolled left and then rolled
right. Then he caught an edge of his wing on the
ground." There is a helicopter pad right in
front of the side of the Pentagon. The wing
touched there, then the plane cartwheeled into the
building.
Two minutes later, a "credible threat"
forced the evacuation of the White House, and
eventually State and Justice and all the federal
office buildings. Secret Service officers had
automatic weapons drawn as they patrolled
Lafayette Park, across from the White House.
Police-car radios crackled with reports that rogue
airplanes had been spotted over the White House.
The planes turned out to be harmless civilian
aircraft that air-traffic controllers at National
Airport were scrambling to help land so they could
clear the air space over the nation's capital.
But that was not all; there was a third front as
well. At 9:58 the Westmoreland County
emergency-operations center, 35 miles southeast of
Pittsburgh, received a frantic cell-phone call
from a man who said he was locked in the rest room
aboard United Flight 93. Glenn Cramer, the
dispatch supervisor, said the man was distraught
and kept repeating, "We are being hijacked!
We are being hijacked!" He also said this was
not a hoax, and that the plane "was going
down." Said Cramer: "He heard some sort
of explosion and saw white smoke coming from the
plane. Then we lost contact with him."
The flight had taken off at 8:01 from Newark,
N.J., bound for San Francisco. But as it passed
south of Cleveland, Ohio, it took a sudden,
violent left turn and headed inexplicably back
into Pennsylvania. As the 757 and its 38
passengers and seven crew members blew past
Pittsburgh, air-traffic controllers tried
frantically to raise the crew via radio. There was
no response.
Forty miles further down the new flight path, in
rural Somerset County, Terry Butler, 40, was
pulling the radiator from a gray 1992 Dodge
Caravan at the junkyard where he works. He had
been watching the news and knew all flights were
supposed to be grounded. He was stunned when he
looked up in the sky and saw Flight 93 cutting
through the lingering morning fog. "It was
moving like you wouldn't believe," he said.
The rogue plane soared over woodland, cattle
pastures and cornfields until it passed over Kelly
Leverknight's home. She too was watching the news.
Her husband, on his regular tour of duty with the
Air National Guard's 167th Airlift Wing in
Martinsburg, W.Va., had just called to reassure
his wife that his base was still operating
normally when she heard the plane rush by.
"It was headed toward the school," she
said, the school where her three children were.
Had Flight 93 stayed aloft a few seconds longer,
it would have plowed into Shanksville-Stonycreek
School and its 501 students, grades K through 12.
Instead, at 10:06 a.m., the plane smashed into a
reclaimed section of an old coal strip mine. The
largest pieces of the plane still extant are
barely bigger than a telephone book. "I just
keep thinking--two miles," said elementary
principal Rosemarie Tipton. "There but for
the grace of God--two miles."
CIA Director George Tenet was having a leisurely
breakfast with his mentor, former Senator David
Boren, at the St. Regis Hotel, when he got the
news. Their omelettes had just arrived when
Tenet's security detail descended with a cell
phone. "Give me the quick summary,"
Tenet said calmly into the phone. He listened a
few moments, and then told Boren: "The World
Trade Center has been hit. We're pretty sure it
wasn't an accident. It looks like a terrorist
act." He then got back to the phone, named a
dozen people he wanted summoned to the CIA
situation room. "Assemble them in 15
minutes," he said. "I should almost be
there by then."
Vice President Dick Cheney was in his West Wing
office when the Secret Service burst in,
physically hurrying him out of the room. "We
have to move; we're moving now, Sir; we're
moving," the agents said as they took him to
a bunker on the White House grounds. Once there,
with members of the National Security staff and
Administration officials, they told Cheney that a
plane was headed for the White House. Mrs. Cheney
and Laura Bush were brought in as well. Staff
members in the Old Executive Office Building,
across the street from the White House, were
huddled in front of their TV screens when they
heard from TV reporters that they were being
evacuated. Then the tape loop began. "The
building is being evacuated. Please walk to the
nearest exit." "The looks were
stone-faced," a staff member to the Vice
President said. "They were just
zombies," said another.
Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont was heading to
the Supreme Court Building to speak to a group of
appellate judges. He had already heard the news
from New York City. As he walked into the court
building, he heard a muffled boom outside. It was
the plane attacking the Pentagon. "I've got
to tell you before we start there's some horrible,
horrible news coming in," Leahy told the
roomful of judges. By the time he was leaving the
building, there were already 20 cops surrounding
it. As he neared the Russell Senate Office
Building, a Capitol policeman walked up:
"Senator, I don't know if you want to go back
to your office," he warned. "They're
evacuating the buildings." "I've
got a lot of staff still working there,"
Leahy snapped. "I'm not going to leave them
in the building."
Washington was supposed to have contingency plans
for disasters like this, but the chaos on the
streets was clear evidence that plans still needed
work. By 10:45 a.m. the downtown streets around
the Capitol, government buildings and White House
were laced with cars pointing in every direction,
unable to move. A security officer for one of the
buildings sat on a park bench. He had been locked
out of his building, so he didn't have a clue if
the senior officials inside were out and in a safe
place. "I'm not surprised at this," he
said. "We aren't prepared. We were supposed
to have a plan to evacuate our Cabinet officer to
a place 50 miles out, but none of that has been
done." Capitol police were slow to move as
well. There was no increased security, no
heightened alert around the Capitol for fully half
an hour after the New York attack. Senate minority
leader Trent Lott was drafting a press release to
condemn the attack when he looked outside his
window and saw black smoke billowing up from
across the Potomac. He didn't wait for an
evacuation order. He gathered up his top staff and
security detail and headed out of the Capitol,
shocked to find that tourists were still walking
into the building while he was fleeing it.
Senator Robert Byrd, the Senate's president pro
tempore and fourth in line to the presidency, was
put in a chauffeured car and driven to a safe
house, as were Speaker Dennis Hastert and other
congressional leaders. There were rumors flying
that the fourth plane, the one that went down in
Pennsylvania, had been headed for the Capitol or
Camp David. The safe houses are scattered
throughout the Washington, northern Virginia and
southern Maryland area. The Secret Service has
similar safe houses where they can take the Vice
President and other top Administration officials
as well. They are homes, offices, in some cases
even fire stations, that have secure phones so
that the leaders can still communicate.
By 11 a.m., the streets in Washington were
gridlocked with people trying to get out. In a
place that doesn't tend to carpool, co-workers had
stuffed themselves into available vehicles. Both
the 14th Street Bridge and Arlington Memorial
Bridge, leading to Virginia and past the Pentagon,
had been closed, as were the airports and Union
Station. On the corner of Constitution Avenue and
14th Street, day-care workers from the Ronald
Reagan Building clutched frightened toddlers into
a tight bunch. Hysteria was gripping the city:
senior generals at the Pentagon phoned children
and other relatives, warning them not to drink tap
water for the next 36 hours. They feared
reservoirs might be poisoned.
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan was flying back to the
U.S. from Switzerland when his airliner was
ordered to turn back. He reached vice chairman
Roger Ferguson by phone as soon as he could, and
Ferguson coordinated contacts with Reserve banks
and Governors both in Washington and around the
country. The goal: to make sure U.S. banks would
keep functioning.
Meanwhile, the mood on board Air Force One could
not have been more tense. Bush was in his office
in the front of the plane, on the phone with
Cheney, National Security Adviser Rice, FBI
director Robert Mueller and the First Lady. Cheney
told him that law-enforcement and security
agencies believed the White House and Air Force
One were both targets. Bush, the Vice President
insisted, should head to a safe military base as
soon as possible. White House staff members, Air
Force flight attendants and Secret Service agents
all were subdued and shaken. One agent sadly
reported that the Secret Service field office in
New York City, with its 200 agents, was located in
the World Trade Center. The plane's TV monitors
were tuned in to local news broadcasts; Bush was
watching as the second tower collapsed. About 45
minutes after takeoff, a decision was made to fly
to Offut Air Force Base in Nebraska, site of the
nation's nuclear command and one of the most
secure military installations in the country. But
Bush and his aides didn't want to wait that long
before the President could make a public
statement. Secret Service officials and military
advisers in Washington consulted a map and chose a
spot for Bush to make a brief touchdown: Barksdale
Air Force Base, outside of Shreveport, La. In
Bush's airborne office, aides milled about while
Bush spoke on the phone. "That's what we're
paid for, boys," he said. "We're gonna
take care of this. We're going to find out who did
this. They're not going to like me as
President." The handful of reporters aboard
were told not to use their cell phones--and not
even to turn them on--because the signals might
allow someone to identify the plane's location.
Air Force One landed at Barksdale at 11:45 a.m.,
with fighter jets hovering beside each wing
throughout the descent. The perimeter was
surrounded by Air Force personnel in full combat
gear: green fatigues, flak jackets, helmets, M-16s
at the ready. The small motorcade traveled to
Building 245. A sign on the glass windows of
several doors, in large black type, read DEFCON
DELTA. That is the highest possible state of
military alert. Bush made his second remarks at
12:36 from a windowless conference room, in front
of two American flags dragged together by Air
Force privates. "Freedom itself was attacked
this morning by a faceless coward," he began,
then spoke for two minutes before leaving the
room.
In New York, the chaos was only beginning. Convoys
of police vehicles raced downtown toward the cloud
of smoke at the end of the avenues. The streets
and parks filled with people, heads turned like
sunflowers, all gazing south, at the clouds that
were on the ground instead of in the sky, at the
fighter jets streaking down the Hudson River. The
aircraft carriers U.S.S. John F. Kennedy and
U.S.S. George Washington, along with seven other
warships, took up positions off the East Coast.
Jim Gartenberg, 35, a commercial real estate
broker with an office on the 86th floor of 1 World
Trade Center, kept calling his wife Jill to let
her know he was O.K. but trapped. "He let us
know he was stuck," says Jill, who is
pregnant with their second child. "He called
several times until 10. Then nothing. He sounded
calm, except for when he told me how much he loved
me. He said, 'I don't know if I'll make it.' He
sounded like he knew it would be one of the last
times he would say he loved me." That was
right before the building turned to powder.
The tower's structural strength came largely from
the 244 steel girders that formed the perimeter of
each floor and bore most of the weight of all the
floors above. Steel starts to bend at
1000[degrees]. The floors above where the plane
hit--each floor weighing millions of pounds--were
resting on steel that was softening from the heat
of the burning jet fuel, softening until the
girders could no longer bear the load above.
"All that steel turns into spaghetti,"
explains retired ATF investigator Ronald Baughn.
"And then all of a sudden that structure is
untenable, and the weight starts bearing down on
floors that were not designed to hold that weight,
and you start having collapse." Each floor
drops onto the one below, the weight becoming
greater and greater, and eventually it all comes
down. "It didn't topple. It came straight
down. All floors are pancaking down, and there are
people on those floors."
The south tower collapsed at 10, fulfilling the
prophecy of eight years ago, when last the
terrorists tried to bring it down. The north tower
came down 29 minutes later, crushing itself like a
piston. "I know that the rescue people who
were helping us didn't get out of the
building," said security official Bill
Heitman, who worked on the 80th floor. "I
know they didn't make it." And he broke down
and sobbed. All that was left of the New York
skyline was a chalk cloud. The towers themselves
were reduced to jagged stumps; the atrium lobby
arches looked like a bombed out cathedral. "A
huge plume of smoke was chasing people, rushing
through those winding streets of lower
Manhattan," says Charlie Stuard, 37, an
Internet consultant who works downtown. "It
was chaos, a whiteout. That's when people really
started to panic. You could see it coming. A bunch
of us jumped over a rail, onto the pilings on the
East River, ready to jump in."
The streets filled with masked men and women,
cloth and clothing torn to tie across their noses
and mouths against the dense debris rain. Some
streets were eerily quiet. All trading had stopped
on Wall Street, so those canyons were empty, the
ash several inches thick and gray, the way snow
looks in New York almost before it hits the
ground. Sounds were both muffled and magnified,
echoing off buildings, softened by the smoke. You
could hear the chirping of the locator devices the
fire fighters wear, hear the whistle of the
respirators, see only the lights flashing red and
yellow through the haze.
Major Reginald Mebane, who heads security for one
of the state court buildings, organized a group of
about 10 officers. They grabbed some medical
equipment and hopped a court bus to help evacuate
people. But when one tower began to collapse, they
raced for cover inside Building Five of the Trade
Center complex. The smoke made it so dark they
could see only a few feet in front of them, even
with flashlights. They felt their way along the
walls and windows to get out. "The building
just blew," says Bill Faulkner, 53, a Vietnam
veteran who was part of the group. "I would
be dead if I hadn't jumped behind a pillar."
Another court officer, Ed Kennedy, who also hid
behind the pillar, says he grabbed the arm of a
woman in an effort to pull her behind the pillar
with him. But he didn't grab her fast enough.
Suddenly he realized he was holding just an arm.
It was only when a fireman broke the window in the
Borders bookstore that the men were able to
escape.
Fire fighters pushed people further back, back up
north. Mayor Giuliani took to the streets, walking
through the raining dust and ordering people to
evacuate the entire lower end of the island.
Medical teams performed triage on the
streetcorners of Tribeca, doling out medical
supplies and tending the walking wounded. Doctors,
nurses, EMTs, even lifeguards, were recruited to
help. Volunteers with the least training were
diverted to blood-donation centers or the dreaded
"black teams," where they would not be
called upon to save a life, just handle dead
bodies during triage. The color code: black for
dead, red for immediately life-threatening wounds,
yellow for serious, non-life threatening and green
for the walking wounded. Police and fire fighters
realized even as they worked that hundreds of
their colleagues, the first to respond, were dead.
Each looked as if someone had kicked him in the
stomach. A looter was arrested: he had two fire
department boots on his feet, and the cops looked
as if they were going to kill him.
The refugee march began at the base of the island
and wound up the highways as far as you could see,
tens of thousands of people with clothes dusted,
faces grimy, marching northward, away from the
battlefield. There was not a single smile on a
single face. But there was remarkably little panic
as well--more steel and ingenuity: Where am I
going to sleep tonight? How will I get home?
"They can't keep New Jersey closed
forever," a man said. Restaurant-supply
companies on the Bowery handed out wet towels. A
cement mixer drove toward the Queensboro Bridge
with dozens of laborers holding onto it, hitching
a ride out of town. Overcrowded buses, one after
another, shipped New York's workers north.
Ambulances, some covered with debris, sped past
them, ferrying the injured to the waiting
hospitals.
All over the city, people walked with radios
pinned to their ears. One man had the news on his
car radio turned up as close to 100 people
surrounded the car listening to the reports. Just
before noon, a radio commentator said,
"Inarguably, this is the worst day in the
history of New York City." No one argued.
Churches opened their sanctuaries for prayer
services. St. Bartholomew's offered water and
lemonade to everyone passing by. The noon Mass at
St. Patrick's was nearly full. "We pray as we
have never prayed before," said Monsignor
Ferry. "Remember the victims today. Forgive
them their sins, and bring them into the
light." Posted defiantly in every window of
one restaurant was the sign WE REFUSE TO GIVE IN
TO TERRORISM. CIBO IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS. GOD BLESS
AMERICA. A well-dressed man in a suit sat on a
bench in Central Park, his head bowed, his hands
clasped between his knees. A carousel of quiet
toys turned in the darkened windows of FAO
Schwarz.
There were no strangers in town anymore, only
sudden friends, sharing names, news and phones.
Lines formed, at least 20 people long, at all pay
phones, because cell phones were not working.
Should we go to work? Is the subway safe?
"Let's all have a good look at each
other," a passenger said to the others in her
car. "We may be our last memory." The
passengers stranded at La Guardia Airport asked
one another where exactly they were supposed to go
and how they were to get there. Bridges, tunnels
and ferries to Manhattan were not running.
Strangers were offering each other a place to wait
in Queens, giving advice on good diners in
Astoria. Limousine drivers offered to take
passengers to Boston for a price. A vendor
dispensed free bottles of water to travelers
waiting in the hot sun.
Dr. Ghoong Cheigh, a kidney specialist at New York
Presbyterian Hospital, was handed an "urgent
notice," along with other arriving staff:
"The disaster plan for New York Presbyterian
Hospital is currently in effect, and an emergency
command center has been established." All
elective surgeries were canceled, and any patient
well enough to be discharged was released to make
room for the incoming wounded. At Bellevue, the
city's largest trauma center, an extra burn unit
was set up in the emergency room. The night shift
was called in early. The psychiatric department
staff, the biggest in the world, was mobilized to
meet the survivors and families. "We actually
have too many doctors now," chief medical
officer Eric Manheimer reported in midafternoon.
"We thought we would have more
patients." By 5:40, only 159 patients had
been admitted--which suggested not how few had
been injured, but how few could be saved.
Security guards were turning all cars away from
New York Weill Cornell Medical Center, allowing
only emergency vehicles through. Around 10:40 a
taxi pulled up, bearing three women and a man.
Security tried to stop them, but a woman yelled,
"We have a woman in labor here!" The
guards waved them through.
At St. Vincent's Hospital in Greenwich Village
they were running out of Silvadene to treat burn
victims, and began raiding the local drug stores.
A hospital staff member wheeled around a grocery
cart with a sign on the side reading, WE NEED
CLOTHING DONATIONS. Within the hour, local
residents had brought dozens of shopping bags full
of blazers, shoes and pants, for patients whose
clothes had been burned off. Edward Cardinal Egan
led a team of priests to begin giving last rites.
At one point he emerged from the emergency room,
wearing blue hospital scrubs. His purple robes
peeked out at the collar, and over one of his blue
rubber gloves he had placed his enormous gold
cardinal's ring. He said, quite formally, "I
am amazed at the goodness of our police and our
fire fighters and our hospital people."
When English teacher Karen Kriegel heard the news,
she couldn't just stay in her downtown office; she
had to do something. So she printed up some
handmade signs that said GIVE BLOOD NOW,
photocopied them at a copy shop and headed for St.
Vincent's. As she started walking and handing out
flyers, 100 people started walking with her. When
they reached the hospital, the gurneys were
everywhere, and rolling desk chairs covered with
white sheets had been brought out to the pavement
to handle bodies. The chairs already looked like
ghosts.
Outside the N.Y. Blood Center, the line of
prospective donors stretched halfway down the
block, around the corner, all the way to 66th
Street and around that corner--more than a
thousand, all told. Type O donors, the universal
donors, were handed little yellow movie tickets
and asked to form a separate line. Eventually some
blood centers turned everyone else away, told them
to come back another day. "It's just
amazing," said nurse Anne Taylor, standing in
the donors' line. "There'll be a three- or
four-hour wait, and just look at all of these
people standing here. They can't scare us."
Bellevue hospital had so many donors, it ran out
of plastic bags.
The warlike mobilization was by no means left to
the stricken zones. At Chalkville Elementary
School near Birmingham, Ala., more than 700 calls
had been received from worried parents, many of
whom came at midmorning to pick up their children.
Churches and schools and civic groups all around
the country offered to help anyone stranded by the
grounding of the nation's planes. All over Los
Angeles, offices and government buildings were
shut down and surrounded by police: city hall, the
Federal Building in Westwood, even shopping malls.
At the Federal Building, armored rescue vehicles
and Ford cars ringed the entrances and exits, with
FBI staffers decked out in black and brandishing
MP5 assault rifles. Even Express Mail trucks were
searched by the FBI before they were allowed onto
the premises. Gas pipeline companies were beefing
up security at key transmission stations. Grand
Coulee Dam in central Washington State was locked
down. Gasoline stations around the country were
running out of gas as motorists rushed to top off
their tanks.
In Chicago, Steve Bernard was huddled around the
TV with colleagues on the 36th floor of Chicago's
Sears Tower, shortly after 8 a.m., watching the
smoke billowing from the World Trade Center after
the first attack. When the second plane hit,
bewilderment at a faraway spectacle turned into a
much more personal, creeping panic. The Chicago
staff of the Piper Jaffray investment firm
suddenly redirected their gazes toward the
windows, quietly searching for jets on their own
horizon. The 110-story Sears Tower, even taller
than the World Trade Center, is the tallest
building in the U.S.; a vulnerable target.
Bernard's wife called him and insisted he come
home. Within an hour, the building was evacuated.
Across the country, houses of all kinds of worship
filled with grieving Americans singing America the
Beautiful, wiping away streams of tears.
"Humanity came apart in lower Manhattan
today, and each of us is wounded. We mourn the
loss of our innocence," declared Rabbi Gary
Gerson at Oak Park Temple, a Reform Jewish
congregation outside Chicago. "Terror has
struck us, but it will not destroy us. Now we are
all Israelis," he added.
Indeed, there were many Americans who refused to
be intimidated by the tragedy, rightly or wrongly.
They were reassuring, if not necessarily
reasonable. The order to close the U.S. Courthouse
in Little Rock, Ark., came shortly before 10 a.m.,
and it was promptly heeded by everyone except a
solitary federal district judge. There sat Henry
Woods, age 83, his lined face framed by a mane of
white hair, beneath a replica of the seal of the
U.S. Around him, at his insistence, a jury and
lawyers carried on in a damage suit stemming from,
of all things, a 1999 American Airlines crash.
"This looks like an intelligent jury to
me," Woods said, explaining his refusal to
grant a mistrial to the defense after getting word
of the disaster. "And I didn't want the
judicial system interrupted by a terrorist act, no
matter how horrible."
If people all over the country had a sense of
being suddenly at war--chat boards on Yahoo filled
up with people wanting to volunteer for military
service--it was with an enemy they could not see
and not easily touch.
Meanwhile the U.S. government reassembled and
mobilized. Secretary of State Colin Powell cut
short his trip to Latin America to return to the
U.S. By midafternoon, members of Congress were
calling on their leaders to summon a special
session, to show the world the government was up
and running. About half of the Senate convened in
a conference room at the Capitol Hill Police
Station to hear from their leaders--some to vent
their outrage at President Bush. Both Democrats
and Republicans wanted to know, Where is he? Why
isn't he here? Why isn't he in New York? Why isn't
he talking to the country? The answer: Bush had
been told by the Secret Service, the military and
the FBI that it was not yet safe to return to
Washington. Only 24 hours later, after absorbing a
wave of criticism for his delayed return, did
aides claim there had been "credible
evidence" that the White House and Air Force
One were targets.
Some Republicans on the Hill wanted to know why
Counsellor Karen Hughes was the highest government
official anyone saw on television all day, other
than Bush's brief, unsettling appearance in
Louisiana. They wanted to see Bush stride across
the South Lawn and show that this is not a country
that can be sent into hiding by cowards. "He
better have the speech of his life ready
tonight," sighed one Republican strategist.
Bush did return a few hours later, did stride
across the South Lawn and did deliver a reasonably
effective national address from the Oval Office.
But it wasn't until the following day that he
stepped up the intensity of his rhetoric and
declared the attacks "acts of war."
Tucked inside the shock and fury was dismay at the
performance of others whose job--perhaps
impossible--was to prevent this from happening.
There were quiet calls for the heads of CIA chief
Tenet and FAA boss Jane Garvey for allowing so
appalling a breach of security on their watch. And
there was an equal determination to find those who
were behind it.
Only God knows what kind of heroic acts took place
at 25,000 feet as passengers and crews contended
with four teams of highly trained enemy
terrorists. But it is clear that the hunt for the
culprits began way up in the sky, by the doomed
passengers and crews themselves, minutes before
the attacks took place. In their final goodbyes,
on brief and haunting calls from their cell
phones, the victims on board at least two of the
four planes whispered the number and even some of
the seat assignments of the terrorists. A flight
attendant on board American Flight 11 called her
airline's flight operations center in Dallas on a
special airlink line and reported that passengers
were being stabbed.
That gave investigators a heads-up that something
had gone terribly wrong, but there were plenty of
other clues. Even before the smoke had cleared, it
was obvious that the culprits knew their way
around a Boeing cockpit--and all the security
weaknesses in the U.S. civil aviation system. The
enemy had chosen the quietest day of the week for
the operation, when there would be fewer
passengers to subdue; they had boarded westbound
transcontinental flights--planes fully loaded with
fuel. They were armed with knives and box cutters,
had gained access to the cockpits and herded
everyone to the back of the plane. Once at the
controls, they had turned off at least one of the
aircraft's self-identifying beacons, known as
transponders, a move that renders the planes
somewhat less visible to air traffic controllers.
And each aircraft had gone through dramatic but
carefully executed course corrections, including a
stunning last maneuver by Flight 77. The pilot of
that plane came in low from south of the Pentagon,
and pulled a 270[degree] turn before slamming into
the west wall of the building.
And though everyone wanted to be prudent, there
weren't a lot of suspects to round up. Palestinian
terror groups are experienced at suicide missions,
but have never attempted an operation this large.
Groups with links to the Iranian government took
down the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia in 1996,
killing 19, but that target was a long way from
the U.S. Libya has lost its taste for terror, most
experts believe, and Iraq's Saddam Hussein has
always favored loud, brutish force over quiet
finesse. Besides, no group other than Osama bin
Laden's loose knit network of operatives in dozens
of countries worldwide has ever shown the will,
wallet or gall to attack the U.S. before. Bin
Laden is responsible for the attacks on U.S.
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Three weeks ago
when he told an Arab journalist he would mount an
unprecedented attack on the U.S. "This was
well funded and well planned," said Senator
Pat Roberts, who sits on the Senate Intelligence
Committee. "It took a lot of planning. The
weather had to be just so on the East Coast. They
used sophisticated tactics where they hijacked
planes, killed the crew, and they had to have
aviators or navigators who knew what they were
doing."
Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
gathered his senior aides in the State
Department's seventh-floor secure facility shortly
after 9 a.m. Tuesday for a videoconference with
the Administration's top national security aides.
National Security Adviser Rice and her top
counterterrorism coordinator Richard Clark were on
one screen, with FBI Director Mueller and his
senior aides, the CIA's counterterrorism director,
and FAA officials on others. Vice President Cheney
was supposed to be in on the teleconference, but
the Secret Service had already spirited him off to
a safehouse. "We knew we were in
trouble," says one official who was present.
"We've got suicide attacks here."
Rice stayed silent as the meeting progressed;
Clark did most of the talking. Finally at around
9:45 a.m., aides behind Mueller started murmuring
and whispering into his ear. Mueller interrupted
everyone. "The Pentagon has been hit by an
airplane," the FBI chief announced. All the
State Department officials turned their heads to
Armitage, who was running the building in Powell's
absence. "Let's increase security outside the
building," Armitage said calmly, seeming
unperturbed. Another aide piped up. "We
probably need to think about getting the hell out
of here," he said. Armitage decided to
evacuate, and an alternate command center was set
up at the Foreign Service Institute in Arlington,
Va. Senior State Department aides jumped in staff
cars to race to Arlington but immediately ran into
clogged traffic in Washington.
By Tuesday afternoon, the spooks were making
progress. Eavesdroppers at the supersecret
National Security Agency had picked up at least
two electronic intercepts indicating the
terrorists had ties to bin Laden. By nightfall,
less than 12 hours after the attacks, U.S.
officials told TIME that their sense that he was
involved had got closer to what one senior
official said was 90%. The next morning, U.S.
officials told TIME they have evidence that each
of the four terrorist teams had a certified pilot
with them; some of these pilots had flown for an
airline in Saudi Arabia and received pilot
training in the U.S. It's not yet clear whether
the pilots were trained in the U.S., or in Saudi
Arabia or both. Intelligence officials believe
each team had four to six persons. Some team
members, it is thought, crossed the Canadian
border to get into the U.S. Sources told TIME that
within the past few months, the FBI added to the
U.S. watch list two men whom the bureau believed
to be associated with one of the Islamic Jihad
terror groups. Through a screwup, the suspects
were lost. The two men appear to have been on the
American Airlines Flight 77, the plane that
crashed into the Pentagon, sources told TIME.
Boston appears to have been a central hub for the
operation; U.S. intelligence believes a bin Laden
cell in Florida was a support group helping with
the aviation aspects of the attack.
Intelligence officials poring over old reports
believe they got their first inkling of planning
for the attack last June, although at the time the
intelligence was too vague to indicate the scale
of the operation. In the summer U.S. embassies,
particularly those in the Middle East, were put on
heightened alert, as was the U.S. military in the
region. The CIA was getting vague reports "of
some kind of spectacular happenings" by
terrorists, said a U.S. intelligence official, but
the reports were vague as to timing. "A lot
of this reporting we had in the summer that gained
our attention and had us concerned, but wasn't
specific, could have been tied to this," said
a U.S. intelligence official.
Even had they known more, could officials ever
have contemplated the scale of this thing? The
blasts were so powerful that counterterrorism
teams have begun asking the airlines for fuel
loads on the plane; aviation experts have been
asked to calculate the explosive yield of each
blast--in kiloton terms. The reason? Washington
wants to see if the planes amounted to weapons of
mass destruction. "What we want people to
realize is they've crossed a line here," said
a U.S. intelligence official. In fact, some senior
Administration officials are considering drafting
a declaration of war, although the State
Department is leery since nobody knows precisely
who the war would be against.
By contrast, as the day unfolded, it looked
awfully easy to declare war on us. The attack was
the perfect mockery of the President's faith in
missile defense: What if the missile is an
American Airlines plane, and the pilot wants to
kill you? It was only eight years ago that a group
of zealots led by Ramzi Yousef tried to take the
towers down from the bottom, with a rented Ryder
truck full of homemade explosives. Their goal, as
an unsigned statement presented later at trial put
it, was no less than toppling "the towers
that constitute the pillars of their
civilization."
U.S. officials learned a great deal from that
attempt, notes retired ATF investigator Baughn.
But the terrorists also learned. "They
learned that they had to come at it from a
different attitude," Baughn says. "What
they've done today was the easiest thing they
could do. They didn't have to bring in any
explosives. They didn't have to put a group of
people together. They didn't have to go find a
safe house. They didn't have to go construct
anything. They didn't have to rent a truck. They
didn't have to load the truck. They didn't have to
drive it to some place. All they had to do was
hijack an airplane." They made it look so
easy, you wondered if the only reason the U.S. has
not seen a hijacking in 20 years was because
hardly anyone was trying. It's a wonder why not;
the Microsoft flight simulator and Fly! II--the
two most popular simulators for personal
computers--allow you to pretend to fly between the
World Trade Center towers, and into them. Anyone
looking to practice can buy the software off the
shelf.
At 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, with the Pentagon still in
flames, the congressional leadership, with a crowd
of Senators and Congressmen behind them, stood on
the Capitol steps. "When Americans suffer and
when people perpetrate acts against this country,
we as a Congress and as a government stand united,
and stand together," said an angry Dennis
Hastert, Speaker of the House, with Democrat Dick
Gephardt standing stony silent beside him. Both
parties "will stand shoulder to shoulder to
fight this evil," Hastert promised. He asked
everyone to bow their heads in a moment of
silence. Afterward the Congressmen and Senators,
Republicans hugging Democrats, broke out into a
chorus of God Bless America.
As patriotism swelled, the day threatened to loop
us into the kinds of barbaric blood feuds from
which we've always been able to stay away. So
people lashed out, getting angry at our not very
humble foreign policy, complaining about a culture
of ironic detachment that made us unmoved by a
threat that was very real. (Though in the
immediate aftermath of the attacks, pollsters
found that by a huge proportion, 80%, Americans
were ready to go to war, and prepared for the body
bags that go with it.)
Whatever the outcome, it was clear that some
things had changed forever. The attacks will
become a defining reference point for our culture
and imagination, a question of before and after,
safe and scarred. By 10:30 Tuesday morning, four
tourists from the Czech Republic were at the
Empire State building, buying up all the postcards
with pictures of the World Trade Center on them.
"Soon there will be no more of these cards
also," one explained.
When one world ended at 8:45 on Tuesday morning,
another was born, one we always trust in but never
see, in which normal people become fierce heroes
and everyone takes a test for which they haven't
studied. As President Bush said in his speech to
the nation, we are left with both a terrible
sadness and a quiet unyielding anger. He was
wrong, though, to talk of the steel of our
resolve. Steel, we now know, bends and melts; we
need to be made of something stronger than that
now--not excluding an unseasoned President new to
his job.
Do we now panic, or will we be brave? Once the
dump trucks and bulldozers have cleared away the
rubble and a thousand funeral Masses have been
said, once the streets are swept clean of ash and
glass and the stores and monuments and airports
reopen, once we have begun to explain this to our
children and to ourselves, what will we do? What
else but build new cathedrals, and if they are
bombed, build some more. Because the faith is in
the act of building, not the building itself, and
no amount of terror can keep us from scraping the
sky.
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