The president’s plane made one more stop before finally heading home to Washington, D.C. It was at the U.S. Strategic Command located at Offutt Air Force Base (STRATCOM) in Omaha, Nebraska. Here, the president was taken to a secure command center where he was finally able to conduct a video conference meeting with his cabinet.
“The video conference call was an important call because it gave me the chance to talk to my national security team,” Bush told HISTORY. “It was along the lines of, you know, tough situation but we’ve got a team in place who can deal with it.”
This was when the president finally received a CIA report that identified al Qaeda operatives who had been on the four hijacked planes. Bush again demanded to return to the White House to deliver a message from the Oval Office. This time, he wasn’t taking no for an answer.
“I knew I needed to give an address to the nation that night and I damn sure wasn’t gonna give it from a bunker in Omaha, Nebraska. I said, ‘I’m coming home.’ And they said, ‘We recommend you not do so.’ And I said, ‘Fine, I’m coming.’”
As the president’s plane finally took off for Washington at 4:33 p.m., he received another CIA report suggesting that the day’s attacks were just the first of two waves—and that another one was coming. Thankfully, that would prove to be false. Air Force One arrived in Washington, D.C. at 6:44 p.m. At 8:30 p.m., Bush was finally able to address the nation from the White House.
It was a changed world—as he said in his address, “None of us will ever forget this day.”