 9-11. Top U.S. officials on Friday marked the 20th anniversary of the September 11 hijacking attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people, the most lethal terrorist assault on U.S. soil ever. U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, U.S. Attorney General, Mary Garland, and FBI Director Christopher Ray led brief commemoration ceremonies in Washington and Virginia for their respective emergencies. That ahead of President Joe Biden's planned visit on Saturday to all three sides of the 9-11 attacks, New York City, the Pentagon, and the rural field in Pennsylvania. Biden on Friday ordered the Department of Justice to review documents from the FBI's probe into the attacks for declassification and release. Saudi Arabia has said it had no role in the hijacked plane attacks. Two decades after one of the darkest days in this nation's history, that memory is as strong as ever. We remember September 11th as if it were yesterday, and we remember every life lost. As the tragic loss of 13 brave American service members and nearly 200 Afghans in Kabul painfully reminds us, foreign terrorist groups like ISIS still seek to carry out.