"Groups like al Qaeda, like ISIL, know that we will never be able -- they will never be able to defeat a nation as great and as strong as America," Obama said at a memorial service for 9/11 victims at the Pentagon.
"So, instead, they've tried to terrorise in the hopes that they can stoke enough fear that we turn on each other and that we change who we are or how we live," he said.
"Out of many, we are one. For we know that our diversity -- our patchwork heritage -- is not a weakness; it is still, and always will be, one of our greatest strengths. This is the America that was attacked that September morning. This is the America that we must remain true to," Obama said.
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"We run our fingers over the names in memorial benches here at the Pentagon. We walk the hallowed grounds of a Pennsylvania field. We look up at a gleaming tower that pierces the New York City skyline. But in the end, the most enduring memorial to those we lost is ensuring the America that we continue to be -- that we stay true to ourselves, that we stay true to what's best in us, that we do not let others divide us," said the US President, apparently referring to the Republican presidential campaign of Donald Trump.
A moment of silence was observed at 9:32 in remembrance those who perished in the Pentagon attack.
"Today, we return to the site of an attack motivated by barbarism and hate. An attack that rattled the world, that shook this mighty building, and that took 184 lives from us here at the Pentagon as well as thousands more in New York and Pennsylvania," Carter said in his address.
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