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Obama at Omaha - D-Day @65

Remarks of President Barack Obama
65th Anniversary of D-Day
Saturday, June 6th, 2009
Omaha Beach, Normandy, France

Good afternoon. Thank you President Sarkozy, Prime Minister Brown, Prime Minister Harper, and Prince Charles for being here today. Thank you to our Secretary of Veterans Affairs, General Eric Shinseki for making the trip out here to join us. Thanks also to Susan Eisenhower, whose grandfather began this mission sixty-five years ago with a simple charge: “Ok, let’s go.” And to a World War II veteran who returned home from this war to serve a proud and distinguished career as a United States Senator and national leader: Bob Dole.

I am not the first American president to come and mark this anniversary, and I likely will not be the last. It is an event that has long brought to this coast both heads of state and grateful citizens; veterans and their loved ones; the liberated and their liberators. It has been written about and spoken of and depicted in countless books and films and speeches. And long after our time on this Earth has passed, one word will still bring forth the pride and awe of men and women who will never meet the heroes who sit before us: D-Day.

Why is this? Of all the battles in all the wars across the span of human history, why does this day hold such a revered place in our memory? What is it about the struggle that took place on these sands behind me that brings us back here to remember year after year after year?

Part of it, I think, is the size of the odds that weighed against success. For three centuries, no invader had ever been able to cross the English Channel into Normandy . And it had never been more difficult than in 1944.

That was the year that Hitler ordered his top field marshal to fortify the Atlantic Wall against a seaborne invasion. From the tip of Norway to southern France , the Nazis lined steep cliffs with machine guns and artillery. Low-lying areas were flooded to block passage. Sharpened poles awaited paratroopers. Mines were laid on the beaches and beneath the water. And by the time of the invasion, half a million Germans waited for the Allies along the coast between Holland and Northern France .

At dawn on June 6th, the Allies came. The best chance for victory had been for the British Royal Air Corps to take out the guns on the cliffs while airborne divisions parachuted behind enemy lines. But all did not go according to plan. Paratroopers landed miles from their mark, while the fog and the clouds prevented Allied planes from destroying the guns on the cliffs. So when the ships landed here at Omaha , an unimaginable hell rained down on the men inside. Many never made it out of the boats.

And yet, despite all of this, one by one, the Allied forces made their way to shore – here, and at Utah and Juno; Gold and Sword. They were American, British, and Canadian. Soon, the paratroopers found each other and fought their way back. The Rangers scaled the cliffs. And by the end of the day, against all odds, the ground on which we stand was free once more.

The sheer improbability of this victory is part of what makes D-Day so memorable. It also arises from the clarity of purpose with which this war was waged.

We live in a world of competing beliefs and claims about what is true. It is a world of varied religions and cultures and forms of government. In such a world, it is rare for a struggle to emerge that speaks to something universal about humanity.

The Second World War did that. No man who shed blood or lost a brother would say that war is good. But all know that this war was essential. For what we faced in Nazi totalitarianism was not just a battle of competing interests. It was a competing vision of humanity. Nazi ideology sought to subjugate, humiliate, and exterminate. It perpetrated murder on a massive scale, fueled by a hatred of those who were deemed different and therefore inferior. It was evil.

The nations and leaders that joined together to defeat Hitler’s Reich were not perfect. We had made our share of mistakes, and had not always agreed with one another on every issue. But whatever God we prayed to, whatever our differences, we knew that the evil we faced had to be stopped. Citizens of all faiths and no faith came to believe that we could not remain as bystanders to the savage perpetration of death and destruction. And so we joined and sent our sons to fight and often die so that men and women they never met might know what it is to be free.

In America , it was an endeavor that inspired a nation to action. A President who asked his country to pray on D-Day also asked its citizens to serve and sacrifice to make the invasion possible. On farms and in factories, millions of men and women worked three shifts a day, month after month, year after year. Trucks and tanks came from plants in Michigan and Indiana ; New York and Illinois . Bombers and fighter planes rolled off assembly lines in Ohio and Kansas , where my grandmother did her part as an inspector. Shipyards on both coasts produced the largest fleet in history, including the landing craft from New Orleans that eventually made it here to Omaha .

But despite all the years of planning and preparation; despite the inspiration of our leaders, the skill of our generals, the strength of our firepower and the unyielding support from our home front, the outcome of the entire struggle would ultimately rest on the success of one day in June.

Lyndon Johnson once said that there are certain moments when “…history and fate meet at a single time in a single place to shape a turning point in man’s unending search for freedom.”

D-Day was such a moment. One newspaper noted that “we have come to the hour for which we were born.” Had the Allies failed here, Hitler’s occupation of this continent might have continued indefinitely. Instead, victory here secured a foothold in France . It opened a path to Berlin . And it made possible the achievements that followed the liberation of Europe : the Marshall Plan, the NATO alliance, and the shared prosperity and security that flowed from each.

It was unknowable then, but so much of the progress that would define the twentieth century, on both sides of the Atlantic, came down to the battle for a slice of beach only six miles long and two miles wide.

More particularly, it came down to the men who landed here – those who now rest in this place for eternity, and those who are with us today. Perhaps more than any other reason, you, the veterans of that landing, are why we still remember what happened on D-Day. You are why we come back.

For you remind us that in the end, human destiny is not determined by forces beyond our control. You remind us that our future is not shaped by mere chance or circumstance. Our history has always been the sum total of the choices made and the actions taken by each individual man or woman. It has always been up to us.

You could have done what Hitler believed you would do when you arrived here. In the face of a merciless assault from these cliffs, you could have idled the boats offshore. Amid a barrage of tracer bullets that lit the night sky, you could have stayed in those planes. You could have hid in the hedgerows or waited behind the sea wall. You could have done only what was necessary to ensure your own survival.

But that’s not what you did. That’s not the story you told on D-Day. Your story was written by men like Zane Schlemmer of the 82nd Airborne, who parachuted into a dark marsh, far from his objective and his men. Lost and alone, he still managed to fight his way through the gunfire and help liberate the town in which he landed – a town where a street now bears his name.

It’s a story written by men like Anthony Ruggiero an Army Ranger who saw half the men on his landing craft drown when it was hit by shellfire just a thousand yards off this beach. He spent three hours in freezing water, and was one of only 90 Rangers to survive out of the 225 who were sent to scale the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc

And it’s a story written by so many who are no longer with us, like Carlton Barrett. Private Barrett was only supposed to serve as a guide for the 1st Infantry Division, but he instead became one of its heroes. After wading ashore in neck-deep water, he returned to the water again and again to save his wounded and drowning comrades. And under the heaviest possible enemy fire, he actually carried them to safety. He carried them in his own arms.

This is the story of the Allied victory. It is the legend of units like Easy Company and the All-American 82nd. It is the tale of the British people, whose courage during the Blitz forced Hitler to call off the invasion of England; the Canadians, who came even though they were never attacked; the Russians, who sustained some of the war’s heaviest casualties on the Eastern front; and all those French men and women who would rather have died resisting tyranny than lived within its grasp.

It is the memories that have been passed on to so many of us about the service or sacrifice of a friend or relative. For me, it is my grandfather, Stanley Dunham, who arrived on this beach six weeks after D-Day and marched across Europe in Patton’s Army. And it is my great uncle who was part of the first American division to reach and liberate a Nazi concentration camp. His name is Charles Payne, and I am so proud that he is here with us today.

I know this trip doesn’t get any easier as the years pass, but for those of you who make it, there’s nothing that could keep you away. One such veteran, a man named Jim Norene [Nor EEN], was a member of the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne. Last night, after visiting this cemetery for one last time, he passed away in his sleep. Jim was gravely ill when he left his home, and he knew that he might not return. But just as he did sixty-five years ago, he came anyway. May he now rest in peace with the boys he once bled with, and may his family always find solace in the heroism he showed here.

In the end, Jim Norene came back to Normandy for the same reason we all come back. He came for the reason articulated by Howard Huebner [HUBE ner], another former paratrooper who’s here with us today. When asked why he made the trip, Howard said, “It’s important that we tell our stories. It doesn’t have to be something big…just a little story about what happened – so people don’t forget.”

So people don’t forget.

Friends and veterans, what we cannot forget – what we must not forget – is that D-Day was a time and a place where the bravery and selflessness of a few was able to change the course of an entire century. At an hour of maximum danger, amid the bleakest of circumstances, men who thought themselves ordinary found it within themselves to do the extraordinary. They fought for their moms and sweethearts back home, for the fellow warriors they came to know as brothers. And they fought out of a simple sense of duty – a duty sustained by the same ideals for which their countrymen had fought and bled for over two centuries.

That is the story of Normandy – but also the story of America . Of the minutemen who gathered on a green in Lexington ; of the Union boys from Maine who repelled a charge at Gettysburg ; of the men who gave their last full measure at Inchon and Khe San; of all the young men and women whose valor and goodness still carry forward this legacy of service and sacrifice. It is a story that has never come easy, but one that always gives us hope. For as we face down the hardships and struggles of our time, and arrive at that hour for which we were born, we cannot help but draw strength from those moments in history when the best among us were somehow able to swallow their fears and secure a beachhead on an unforgiving shore. To those men who achieved that victory sixty-five years ago, I thank you for your service. May God Bless you, and may God Bless the memory of all those who rest here. 
 
Note to the speechwriter:  The Royal Air Corps never existed in the form you suggest.  The Royal Flying Corps became the Royal Air Force in April, 1918.   The Royal Air Corps does exist these days, as a bunch of online gamers.

And while I know the President was giving shout-outs to people present at the event, I think three names were missing.  Carlton Barrett got a nod, but missing were Jimmie Monteith, Jr., John Pinder, Jr., and Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. 

Interesting, I just noticed that three of the four Medal of Honor recipients for D-Day are Juniors.

I'm picking nits.  It wasn't a bad speech, and a speech like that is never going to satisfy everybody.

Of all the D-Day speechifying, I think this is the one I like the best.

10 Comments

Are they gonna re-christen those sands: Obama Beach?
 
I swear to GOD, I didn't know of The PM's remarks earlier this morning, when I posted my first remarks.
 
Yanno, I was just gonna let that slide, unremarked, into obscurity, much as Mr. Brown may well soon.
 

Boq, I believe you...and as I listened to the PM's speech, he realized his gaffe and gave a nice recovery.  Since he had just said 'President Obama' just prior to saying 'Obam-Omaha beach,' I would give him a pass as a true slip of the tongue instead of Kerry's idiocy of being 'sent to Iraq' if you're dumb, and countless others.

We are going to be watching 'The Longest Day' later on, and remembering, even though we were born later, we were born in a nation that still stands vigilant.

Even though this is not Veteran's Day, I do thank the WWII generation for what they did...

 
Quite a Gaffe.  I'd have been mortified and he almost wavered when he discovered his slip in the next telling.  But it was a gaffe and we all make them.

I would rather the memory of the men of D-Day than that of a gaffe.  On that level the President's speech is good.
 
The President's knowledge of military history is a bit thin. (Of course, most people's is).  He, and the rest, seem to forget the desparate fighting and horrific sacrifice made several hundreds of miles east of Normandy.

If D-Day had failed, in all likelihood, Hitler's Reich would still have fallen.  It's just that the Red Army wouldn't have stopped at the Elbe.  The Iron Curtain would have stood at the Rhein, or possibly even on the Channel Coast.  How different would the second half of the 20th Century been then?
 
In addition to the Longest Day, we also watched Valkyrie.  While I wouldn't add it to the collection, the film deserves mention for several reasons:  1, Tom Cruise actually did a good job and didn't over romanticize Col. Stauffenberg. 2, This was just my personal opinion, since the attempt happened after D-Day, that Hitler's depression was worsening and his suicide several months later was confirmation of that and 3, it was 'pretty accurate' historically.  The acting was decent.

We are going to watch 'Saving Private Ryan' later on tonight.  We will allow the eldest CLU to stay up with us to watch it, as R-rated movies are usually not on the 'must see' list at Chez Engineer, and he needs to get a perspective that we think the film portrays quite well.

Also...in "Longest Day" there was a decent bit of dialogue that didn't make it to the subtitles, and in one scene, when the weather was described as bad, I think the actual word used was slang...bwahahaha.
 
I really haven't liked Tom Cruise since Risky Business.  He's just so full of himself, that it comes through everything he does.  For that reason, I haven't seen Valkyre yet.

Though I have to tell you, I was surprised about his spoofed interpretation in Tropic Thunder [WARNING: NSFW - Strong Language]
 
Jimmie Monteith jr's dad has a gret story if you've never read it... I know it by heart after living in the dormitory of the Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets that is named after him. Thank you to all of those who came before us and stood to defend our freedom.
 

I agree with you about 'Risky Business' and 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off' is right up there with it.
Brat packs.  I don't normally recommend films just because of personal opinion and what it is, but this one was decent.  The editing could have been better, but overall, not a bad version.  We stayed up 'til 3:30 am watching 'Saving Private Ryan.'  Eldest CLU was very sober...had tears in his eyes and made just one comment:  'They were kids, Pop.  Just kids not much older than me.'