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D-Day: the 75th anniversary — 20 Comments

  1. I am an awful human being for saying so, but at this point, there are a lot of groups in this world which, if they were confronted by an existential threat, I would shrug and tell to go screw themselves. Depending on my mood, I might not even be that polite.

    I wouldn’t cross the street to help these people, much less put my life – or the lives of somebody else’s children – at risk.

  2. The enormity of D-Day at Normandy has captured the imagination and is symbolic of the bravery and sacrifice that occurred all across the world.

    Without resorting to hyperbole, President Trump summed it up accurately when he proclaimed that those who won those beaches preserved freedom and liberty for us all.**

    I wonder if any man can view the photos and the film of that day, and and not imagine himself there and wonder, “could I have done as well?”.

    ** It should not be hard to imagine the massive Soviet Red Army, armed and provisioned largely by the United States, eventually over running a Germany weakened by our air campaign. In such a case, without and allied force on the ground, it would naive to believe that it would have stopped at the western German borders. With a Soviet Empire entrenched and uncontested throughout Europe, stemming the tide of communism would have been problematic.

  3. One of the most compelling stories occurred a Pointe du Hoc. 190 members of the 2nd Ranger Battalion were tasked with scaling 100+ ft vertical cliff under intense fire to take out a German garrison and spike 5 artillery pieces. They were successful but after 2 days of continuous combat only 90 were still capable of fighting and ma

  4. Western Europe is living on borrowed time, they’re dead men walking. In the aggregate, W. European’s embrace of multiculturalism ensures that any criticism of W. Europe’s Muslim ‘migrants’ culture will be demonized. Aka Tommy Robinson with even Nigel Farage patently afraid to step on that landmine.

    As W. Europe becomes increasingly Islamized, accusations of Islamophobia will continue to deter any serious talk of external intervention.

    They’ve made their bed and are determined that future generations will be forced to lie in it.

  5. Excellent article, via Power Line.
    https://www.lawliberty.org/2019/06/06/remembering-the-great-crusade/

    As the final preparations for the invasion were made, Dwight Eisenhower demonstrated remarkable leadership and humility. Unlike his fascist counterparts, the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces welcomed criticism of the invasion from the generals and statesmen at a meeting at St. Paul’s School for Boys. He signaled this in his remarks:

    “I consider it to be the duty of anyone who sees a flaw in the plan not to hesitate to say so. I have no sympathy with anyone, whatever his station, who will not brook criticism. We are here to get the best possible results and you must make a really cooperative effort.”

    He was the leader of the armed forces of free-world democracies. He welcomed free and open debate to improve the invasion plan to save lives. He wanted the men on the ground to show those same virtues when the time came.

    Instead of retreating to solitude, Ike visited that night with the men of the 101st Airborne. He looked his men in the eye as he shook their hands and chatted with them. After wishing them luck, he saluted each of their planes as they took off for France.

    Eisenhower later described the selfless purpose of the invasion to Walter Cronkite. The general discussed the moral burden of command and the responsibility for his men that weighed down on him:

    “You knew many hundreds of boys were going to give their lives or be maimed forever. These men came here . . . to storm these beaches for one purpose only. Not to gain anything for ourselves, not to fulfill any ambitions that America had for conquest, but just to preserve freedom.”

    But there is a unifying theme to success along all the beaches during D-Day. Caddick-Adams quotes a postwar study by the 116th Infantry Regiment that neatly summed up the reasons for the successful invasion. It was due “largely to the initiative and aggressiveness of small unit leaders who made the best of a bad situation. Landing in most cases far off their assigned objectives, with large losses of men and equipment in the water, they had to improvise in order to cope with the strange fortifications to their front.” They were citizen-soldiers of a free society who were allowed to take the initiative and debate the best course of action as they fought together in small groups in pursuit of a common purpose.

    In other words, whatever the massive logistical build-up, extensive preparations, and impressive firepower of the Allies, the success of the invasion depended upon the individual soldiers. They had to overcome their fear and disorientation. They had to leave the apparent safety hiding behind a beach obstacle and run across the beach. They had to improvise with the weapons that were available to assault the seemingly impregnable concrete bunkers with small arms and hand grenades. Initiative and aggressiveness were the common denominators and key ingredients of the success of the citizen-soldiers who landed on the beaches of Normandy on June 6.

  6. I don’t want to minimize the deep sentiments expressed here and at the ceremonies – I’ve been to Normandy and felt them – but I noticed a couple of points in the newsreel of interest to military history buffs.

    Notice at 0:46 – 0:58 the naval guns are horizontal; that is, in direct fire, shooting at targets they can see on the beach. That’s close!

    Also, at 2:36 – 2:56, the bombs are falling more or less indiscriminately on French towns. Precision bombing for the U.S. Army Air Forces was defined as hitting within 1,000 feet of the target, but only 20% of bombs hit within that radius. Although precision has improved by orders of magnitude, it remains true that if the enemy is located in civilian areas, some civilian casualties are inevitable – a fact of which Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and others of that ilk, seem to be unaware.

  7. a fact of which Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and others of that ilk, seem to be unaware.

    No, they’re aware of it. They just don’t give a shit. They are PostModern Liberals. They want to tear down and destroy the West. They are a social cancer in the most literal sense of the term.

  8. That Eisenhower had taken the time to write of note of failure tells us of the risk involved.

    I remember my grandmother (born in 1903 and died in 1995) telling me how glued they all were to newspapers and radio throughout the war; but, especially as news of D-Day came through. And that so many houses in her neighborhood had a gold star in the front window.

    On another note, she told me that she was convinced that nearly half the “beef” that she bought during the war was actually horse meat. Since she grew up on a farm I imagine that she would have known.

    So, yep, that generation really truly gave a lot to us.

  9. I was struck by Eisenhower’s prepared statement accepting the blame if the invasion had failed.

    Considering how President Obama seemed to go out of his way to claim credit for the Bin Laden mission- if it had instead been a disaster, which it easily could have been, does anyone think that in a similar fashion, Obama would have issued a statement accepting the blame?

    A rhetorical question.

  10. Let us not forget, that at the same time as OPERATION OVERLORD, the USN was running OPERATION FORAGER, the liberation of Guam, and the taking of the Marianas. The 5th fleet set sail from Pearl on the 5th, to put 2 Marine and one Army divisions ashore, after sailing halfway across the Pacfic.

    The reaction of the Nihon Kaigun, the Japanese Fleet, resulted in the Great Marianas Turkey Shoot, where we sank the carriers TAIHO, HIYO and SHOKAKU, and shot down over 400 Japanese aircraft. Another 250 planes were lost with the carriers, when they sank.

    Taking the Marianas allowed us to turn Tinian into an airfield, that ENOLA GAY flew from.

  11. Heroes. Willing to fight, and die, for their country, for their brothers in arms, for their families and ways of lives.
    Willing to kill.

    Could Hitler’s bunker near Berlin really survive a early atomic bomb? One of the alternative histories would be NOT to invade, but wait for a year to get an A bomb to kill Hitler, and maybe a few million Germans nearby. But save the lives of the Americans who died instead.

    Truman was so absolutely right to bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki to end to war without invading Japan.

    Those “fighting for Democracy” did not win WW II with respect to gaining a democratic Poland after the war. Stalin was a bigger and worse tyrant, dictator, and megalomaniac than Hitler. Life for normal Russians was far worse under Stalin, before, during, and mostly after the War, than for normal non-targeted Germans, even those not Nazis; tho Hitler the efficient monster murdered 6 million Jews, plus another 4 million Gypsies, priests, and others who opposed the Nazis.

    It was right to ally with the inefficient monster Stalin to stop Hitler. But Stalin, our ally, was also a monster — Western Civ was allied to a monster to stop another monster. The lesser evil. Reality often forces such a choice, and choosing the lesser evil is better.

    “Modern” world geo-political history is hugely dominated by the results of WW II. Even today.

    D-Day should rightly be celebrated for saving “Western” Civ — tho also creating the hate for war that animates so many pacifists who are too silly to understand that their freedom to be pacifist depends on Westerners willing to kill bad guys in order save their freedom.

    The failure of Amnesty Int’l and HRW to more fully condemn Chi-comms and the Islamists for their barbarism remains a note of hypocrisy that stains them. “Human Rights” only exist in practice in the real world because of the real world actions of the USA.

  12. https://libertyunyielding.com/2019/06/06/75-years-from-d-day-gratitude-and-renewed-purpose/

    “I include his address also because Reagan’s characteristically uplifting, reassuring demeanor cues us to the good attitude we can aspire to in turmoil. So much of the turmoil we may perceive around us is fomented and even faked. It’s our choice whether to let it kill us, or renew in us the spirit of liberty and hope.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NSX7X4ynWKs&feature=youtu.be
    Trump hails D-Day veterans as among the greatest Americans

    https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-06-06/churchill-ike-epic-human-tragedy-first-wave-omaha
    includes a great anecdote (possibly apocryphal, but who cares?) and a link to the Atlantic article recommended at PowerLine

    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1960/11/first-wave-at-omaha-beach/303365/

    https://chicagoboyz.net/archives/59979.html
    Sgt. Mom reminds us …6 June 1944

    So this is one of those historic dates that seems to be slipping faster and faster out of sight, receding into a past at such a rate that we who were born afterwards, or long afterwards, can just barely see. But it was such an enormous, monumental enterprise – so longed looked for, so carefully planned and involved so many soldiers, sailors and airmen – of course the memory would linger long afterwards.

    Think of looking down from the air, at that great metal armada, spilling out from every harbor, every estuary along England’s coast. …
    Think of the planners and architects of this enormous undertaking, the briefers and the specialists in all sorts of arcane specialties, most of whom would never set foot on Gold, Juno, Sword, Omaha or Utah Beach. …

    Think of the people in country villages, and port towns, …knowing for a certainty that those men, those ships and those planes were heading towards France, and also knowing just as surely that many of them would not return.

    Think of the commanders, of Eisenhower and his subordinates, as the minutes ticked slowly down to H-Hour, considering all that was at stake, all the lives that they were putting into this grand effort, this gamble that Europe could be liberated through a force landing from the West. …

    Think on this day, and how the might of the Nazi Reich was cast down. …Think on this while there are still those alive who remember it at first hand.

  13. When I was growing up, every dad on my block had either served in the armed forces or worked in a defense plant, as had almost every male teacher in junior high and high school (there were many male teachers at those levels back then). That had a tremendous impact on my life. I don’t think another generation will ever have that experience, and I think the behavior of the millennials shows it.

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