The Oldie magazine - September 2021 issue 404

Page 37

Letter from America

A tale of two atrocities

Twenty years after 9/11, the terrorist horrors are eclipsed by the pandemic edward kosner I was shaving before going to work that glistening morning 20 years ago, when my all-news radio station suddenly broke in to report that a small private plane had crashed into one of the 110-storey World Trade Center towers at the foot of Manhattan. I walked into the bedroom, turned on the TV – and witnessed an infamous moment in American history rivalling the firing on Fort Sumter that opened the Civil War, the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor that triggered World War II, and the assassinations of Abraham Lincoln in 1865 and John F Kennedy in 1963. It was no private plane, of course, but two jet liners commandeered by Saudi Arabian terrorists and turned into lethal missiles which levelled both towers, murdering 2,996 souls and maiming 6,000 others in the first attack on the continental homeland since the British burned the White House during the War of 1812. A third plane, probably heading for the White House or the US Capitol, plunged into the Pentagon, the headquarters of the American military. Courageous passengers on a fourth hijacked jet rushed the terrorists, and the plane crashed in a Pennsylvania field, killing everyone aboard. In the stunned aftermath, America experienced a unifying moment unmatched since the defeat of Nazi Germany and Japan a half-century before. Confident news seers proclaimed that American life would be marked for ever by an enduring sense of insecurity. Were they right? On September 11th 2001, I had other things on my mind. I was the editor-inchief of the New York Daily News. As I rode downtown to the News Building just three miles north of the steaming, reeking pit that became known as Ground Zero, I knew that publishing the next day’s paper would be the greatest test I’d ever faced in a journalism career that had begun 43 years earlier as a kid rewrite-man on the New York Post, barely a mile from what had been the iconic Trade Center towers.

The day after: the front page of the Daily News, edited by Edward Kosner

I had endless doubts. Could the staff even get to the newsroom? If they did, could we produce a paper by nightfall? If we managed to transmit the pages to the printing plant across the Hudson in New Jersey, would enough printers show up to run the presses? If they did print the million papers we planned, how could they be distributed with all the bridges and tunnels to and from Manhattan closed? Still, two things I was certain of. The front page had to be a picture of one of the planes approaching or hitting the towers. And the headline – the ‘wood’ in tabspeak – had to be ‘IT’S WAR’. The News reporters, columnists and photographers trooped into the office, many caked with ash from the rubble of the collapsed towers. Fired with adrenalin, over the next 12 hours we turned out an 80-page edition. All that was missing was that picture of a plane attacking the towers – and then, at the last minute, it showed up. The presses rolled, the Governor opened the George Washington Bridge for our delivery trucks and those million Daily News copies were snapped up by shaken readers. Now, two decades later, how accurate

did those cocksure predictions of the impact of 9/11 turn out to be? My headline, ‘IT’S WAR’, was certainly prescient – as I write, President Biden is withdrawing all but a handful of troops from Afghanistan, invaded by the US a month after the WTC attack. More than 2,300 Americans died in the war and nearly 20 times as many were wounded. The Iraq War started in 2003 and lasted eight and a half years, leaving more than 4,500 Americans dead and nearly 32,000 wounded. Combined, the two wars cost nearly $2 trillion and both could charitably be said to have ended in stalemate. For a time, 9/11 forged unity in America unmatched since the Second World War. But that ended in recriminations over President George W Bush’s invasion of Iraq, prompted by Saddam Hussein’s phantom weapons of mass destruction. Conflict over the Iraq War propelled the political rollercoaster that led to the election of America’s first (literally) African-American President. And many believe the backlash sparked by that unprecedented choice thrust the malign Donald Trump into the White House. The result is a nation so polarised that Washington often seems on the cusp of paralysis. And what of the facile notion that 9/11 for ever deprived Americans of their sense of security in a nation bound by two great oceans and two friendly neighbour nations? True or not, that’s irrelevant now. The great COVID-19 plague, which has cost more than 600,000 American lives so far and shut down the country for months, destroyed for ever any sense of personal safety anyone here – or around the world – may ever have had. In that sense, September 11th 2001 now looks smaller in the rear-view mirror than it first appeared. Besides the New York Daily News, Edward Kosner was the editor of Newsweek, New York magazine and Esquire The Oldie September 2021 37


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Articles inside

On the Road: Jenni Murray

4min
pages 86-88

Overlooked Britain: Kensal Green Cemetery Lucinda

6min
pages 82-84

Dervla Murphy at 90

6min
pages 80-81

Bird of the Month: Hobby

2min
page 79

Taking a Walk: Wordsworth’s

3min
page 85

Ask Virginia Ironside

5min
pages 98-100

Drink Bill Knott

5min
page 73

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 69-70

Film: The Last Letter from

3min
page 64

Harlem Shuffle, by Colson

4min
page 61

Music Richard Osborne

3min
page 67

History

3min
page 63

Being a Human, by Charles

4min
pages 59-60

Golden Oldies Imogen

3min
page 68

Television Roger Lewis

5min
page 66

Turning Point: A Year That Changed Charles Dickens and the World, by Robert Douglas- Fairhurst A N Wilson

3min
pages 57-58

Family Business: An Intimate History of John Lewis and the Partnership, by Victoria

5min
pages 53-54

Index, a History of the, by

5min
pages 55-56

Churchill’s Shadow, by Geoffrey Wheatcroft

3min
pages 49-50

The Sins of G K Chesterton by Richard Ingrams Dan

6min
pages 51-52

Readers’ Letters

6min
pages 44-46

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 43

Small World

5min
pages 38-40

Letter from America

4min
page 37

Country Mouse

4min
page 33

Postcards from the Edge

4min
pages 34-36

My grandfather, Chips

6min
pages 30-31

William Morris, Renaissance

5min
pages 28-29

Too much drinking at the Bar

4min
page 27

In praise of Dante, 700 years after his death A N Wilson

6min
pages 22-23

Town Mouse

4min
page 32

Media Matters

4min
pages 20-21

Why I write Jilly Cooper

3min
page 13

The last thatched cottages

4min
page 18

Diana’s first Ford Escort

4min
page 19

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10

The Old Un’s Notes

6min
pages 5-6

Bliss on Toast Prue Leith

2min
pages 7-8

My comedy lessons with Frankie Howerd Gary Files

9min
pages 14-17
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