THE PRESIDENT: Today, millions of Americans mourned and
prayed, and tomorrow we go back to work. Today, people from
all walks of life gave thanks for the heroes; they mourn the dead; they
ask for God's good graces on the families who mourn, and tomorrow the
good people of America go back to their shops, their fields, American
factories, and go back to work.
Our nation was horrified, but it's not going to be terrorized. We're a
great nation. We're a nation of resolve. We're a
nation that can't be cowed by evil-doers. I've got great
faith in the American people. If the American people had seen what I
had seen in New York City, you'd have great faith,
too. You'd have faith in the hard work of the rescuers;
you'd have great faith because of the desire for people to do what's
right for America; you'd have great faith because of the compassion and
love that our fellow Americans are showing each other in times of
need.
I also have faith in our military. And we have got a job to
do - just like the farmers and ranchers and business owners and factory
workers have a job to do. My administration has a job to do,
and we're going to do it. We will rid the world of the
evil-doers. We will call together freedom loving people to
fight terrorism.
And on on this day of - on the Lord's Day, I say to my fellow
Americans, thank you for your prayers, thank you for your compassion,
thank you for your love for one another. And tomorrow when
you get back to work, work hard like you always have. But
we've been warned. We've been warned there are evil people
in this world. We've been warned so vividly - and we'll be
alert. Your government is alert. The governors
and mayors are alert that evil folks still lurk out there.
As I said yesterday, people have declared war on America, and they have
made a terrible mistake, because this is a fabulous
country. Our economy will come back. We'll still
be the best farmers and ranchers in the world. We're still
the most innovative entrepreneurs in the world. On this day
of faith, I've never had more faith in America than I have right now.
Q Mr.
President, are you worried this crisis might send us into a recession?
THE PRESIDENT: David, I understand that there are some
businesses that hurt as a result of this crisis. Obviously,
New York City hurts. Congress acted quickly. We
worked together, the White House and the Congress, to pass a
significant supplemental. A lot of that money was dedicated
to New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, as it should
be. People will be amazed at how quickly we rebuild New
York; how quickly people come together to really wipe away the rubble
and show the world that we're still the strongest nation in the world.
But I have great faith in the resiliency of the economy. And
no question about it, this incident affected our economy, but the
markets open tomorrow, people go back to work and we'll show the
world.
Q Mr.
President, do you believe Osama bin Laden's denial that he had anything
to do with this?
THE PRESIDENT: No question he is the prime
suspect. No question about that.
Q Mr.
President, can you describe your conversation with the President of
Pakistan and the specific comments he made to you? And, in addition to
that, do you see other - you've asked Saudi Arabia to help out, other
countries?
THE PRESIDENT: John, I will - obviously, I made a call to
the leader of Pakistan. We had a very good, open
conversation. And there is no question that he wants to
cooperate with the United States. I'm not at liberty to
detail specifically what we have asked him to do. In the
course of this conduct of this war against terrorism, I'll be asked a
lot, and members of my administration will be asked a lot of questions
about our strategies and tactics. And in order to protect
the lives of people that will be involved in different operations, I'm
not at liberty to talk about it and I won't talk about it.
But I can tell you that the response from Pakistan; Prime Minister
Vajpayee today, of India, Saudi Arabia, has been very positive and very
straightforward. They know what my intentions
are. They know my intentions are to find those who did this,
find those who encouraged them, find them who house them, find those
who comfort them, and bring them to justice.
I made that very clear. There is no doubt in anybody's mind
with whom I've had a conversation about the intent of the United
States. I gave them ample opportunity to say they were
uncomfortable with our goal. And the leaders you've asked about have
said they were comfortable. They said, we understand, Mr.
President, and we're with you.
Q Mr.
President, the Attorney General is going to ask for enhanced law
enforcement authority to surveil and - things to disrupt terrorism that
might be planned here in the United States. What will that
mean for the rights of Americans? What will that mean -
THE PRESIDENT: Terry, I ask you to talk to the Attorney
General about that subject. He'll be prepared to talk about
it publicly at some point in time. But what he is doing is,
he's reflecting what I said earlier in my statement, that we're facing
a new kind of enemy, somebody so barbaric that they would fly airplanes
into buildings full of innocent people. And, therefore, we have to be
on alert in America. We're a nation of law, a nation of
civil rights. We're also a nation under
attack. And the Attorney General will address that in a way
that I think the American people will understand.
We need to go back to work tomorrow and we will. But we need
to be alert to the fact that these evil-doers still
exist. We haven't seen this kind of barbarism in a long
period of time. No one could have conceivably imagined
suicide bombers burrowing into our society and then emerging all in the
same day to fly their aircraft - fly U.S. aircraft into buildings full
of innocent people - and show no remorse. This is a new kind
of -- a new kind of evil. And we
understand. And the American people are beginning to
understand. This crusade, this war on terrorism is going to
take a while. And the American people must be
patient. I'm going to be patient.
But I can assure the American people I am determined, I'm not going to
be distracted, I will keep my focus to make sure that not only are
these brought to justice, but anybody who's been associated will be
brought to justice. Those who harbor terrorists will be
brought to justice. It is time for us to win the first war
of the 21st century decisively, so that our children and our
grandchildren can live peacefully into the 21st century.
Q Mr.
President, you've declared we're at war and asked those who wear the
uniform to get ready. Should the American public also be
ready for the possibility of casualties in this war?
THE PRESIDENT: Patsy, the American people should know that
my administration is determined to find, to get them running and to
hunt them down, those who did this to America. Now, I want
to remind the American people that the prime suspect's organization is
in a lot of countries - it's a widespread organization based upon one
thing: terrorizing. They can't stand freedom;
they hate what America stands for. So this will be a long
campaign, a determined campaign - a campaign that will use the
resources of the United States to win.
They have roused a mighty giant. And make no mistake about
it: we're determined. Oh, there will be times
when people don't have this incident on their minds, I understand
that. There will be times down the road where citizens will
be concerned about other matters, and I completely understand
that. But this administration, along with those friends of
ours who are willing to stand with us all the way through will do what
it takes to rout terrorism out of the world.
Q Mr.
President, in your conversation with Pakistan's leader, was there any
request or demand you made of him that he failed to satisfy?
THE PRESIDENT: The leader of Pakistan has been very
cooperative. He has agreed with our requests to aid our
nation to hunt down, to find, to smoke out of their holes the terrorist
organization that is the prime suspect. And I am pleased
with his response. We will continue to work with Pakistan
and India. We will work with Russia. We will work
with the nations that one would have thought a couple of years ago
would have been impossible to work with - to bring people to justice.
But more than that, to win the war against terrorist activity.
The American people are used to a conflict where there was a beachhead
or a desert to cross or known military targets. That may
occur. But right now we're facing people who hit and
run. They hide in caves. We'll get them out.
The other day I said, not only will we find those who have affected
America, or who might affect America in the future, we'll also deal
with those who harbor them.
Q Mr.
President, would you confirm what the Vice President said this morning,
that at one point during this crisis you gave an order to shoot down
any civilian airliner that approached the Capitol? Was that a
difficult decision to make?
THE PRESIDENT: I gave our military the orders necessary to
protect Americans, do whatever it would take to protect
Americans. And of course that's difficult. Never
did anybody's thought process about how to protect America did we ever
think that the evil-doers would fly not one, but four commercial
aircraft into precious U.S. targets - never. And so,
obviously, when I was told what was taking place, when I was informed
that an unidentified aircraft was headed to the heart of the capital, I
was concerned. I wasn't concerned about my decision; I was
more concerned about the lives of innocent Americans. I had
realized there on the ground in Florida we were under
attack. But never did I dream we would have been under
attack this way.
That's why I say to the American people we've never seen this kind of
evil before. But the evil-doers have never seen the American
people in action before, either - and they're about to find out.