President Barack Obama speaks in the Brady Press Briefing at the White House in Washington, Friday, April 19, 2013, regarding the Boston Marathon bombing. |
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama pledged to seek answers for the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings and acknowledged that the capture of a second suspect ended a trying five days for his presidency and for the nation.
"All in all it's been a tough week," he said. "But we've seen the character of our country once more."
The
marathon blasts and the hunt for the suspects that both terrorized
Boston and captivated the country were the predominant worries at the
White House. But the capture of one suspect Friday, following the death
in a shootout of another, capped an extraordinary week in Boston,
Washington and elsewhere around the country.
A
massive explosion leveled a Texas fertilizer plant Wednesday, leaving
at least 14 people dead and 200 injured. On Tuesday, letters addressed
to Obama and to a U.S. senator were found to contain traces of poisonous
ricin. An Elvis impersonator was arrested and charged with threatening
the president's life.
"I'm confident that we
have the courage and the resilience and the sprit to overcome these
challenges and to go forward," Obama said late Friday at the White
House, just over an hour after law-enforcement officials apprehended
19-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev as a suspect in Monday's explosions at
Boston's venerable race.
Obama convened the
National Security Council midday Saturday for a 90-minute meeting to
discuss the investigation and ongoing counterterrorism efforts, the
White House said. Joining Obama in the White House Situation Room were
Attorney General Eric Holder, FBI Director Robert Mueller and CIA
Director John Brennan.
The White House said
Obama emphasized the need to keep gathering intelligence to answer
lingering questions about the terrorist attack.
Three
people were killed and more than 180 injured in the blasts. A
Massachusetts Institute of Technology policeman was killed and another
police officer was severely wounded during the manhunt.
Tsarnaev's
older brother, 26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was also wanted in the
bombings and died early Friday in an attempt to escape police. The two
men were identified by authorities and relatives as ethnic Chechens from
southern Russia who had been in the U.S. for about a decade.
Both Obama and Republicans used their weekly addresses to celebrate the resolve Americans demonstrated after the attack.
"The
world has witnessed one sure and steadfast truth: Americans refuse to
be terrorized," Obama said in his radio and Internet address released
Saturday. "Ultimately, that's what we'll remember from this week. That's
what will remain. Stories of heroism and kindness, resolve and
resilience, generosity and love."
In the
Republican address, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina praised the first
responders who ran toward danger and sacrificed their own safety to
assist victims.
"These amazing Americans, some
of whom charged through fences and barricades, put their own lives on
the line to help others," Scott said.
Both addresses were recorded before Friday evening's capture of the teenage suspect.
In
his remarks after the younger Tsarnaev brother was taken into custody,
Obama called him and his brother "terrorists" and said his capture
"closed an important chapter in this tragedy."
Still
he added: "Tonight there are still many unanswered questions, among
them why did young men who grew up and studied here as part of our
communities and our country resort to such violence? How did they plan
and carry out these attacks and did they receive any help."
"The
families of those killed so senselessly deserve answers, the wounded,
some of whom now have to learn to stand, walk and live again deserve
answers," he added.
His remarks came a few
hours after Obama spoke to Russian President Vladimir Putin to thank him
for what the White House described as close cooperation on
counter-terrorism, "including in the wake of the Boston attack." Putin
expressed condolences for the victims in Boston.
In
his comments to reporters late Friday Obama cautioned against a rush to
judgment about the motivations of the suspects and "certainly not about
entire groups of people."
"That's why we have investigations, that's why we relentlessly gather the facts, that's why we have courts," he said.
The
president also acknowledged the fertilizer plant disaster in West
Texas, which he describe as a "tightknit community in Texas devastated
by a terrible explosion."
"I want them to know that they are not forgotten," he said, pledging to provide resources to recover and rebuild.