SEMPER FI
This is an historic week in American military history.
This week commemorates the battles of Belleau Woods in the First World
War and the assault on the Beaches of Normandy in World War Two.
On June 1,
1918, the Battle of Belleau Woods in France was a dramatic moment that enshrined
the valor of the United States Marine Corps.
Badly outnumbered and badly supplied the Marines defeated a superior
German force preventing the capture of Paris.
Eighteen,
nineteen, and twenty-year-old Marines charged into Belleau woods with fixed
bayonets assaulting dug-in German machinegun emplacements
The battles
were so hard fought that Marines often found themselves in hand-to-hand
combat. The United States Marines fought
so fiercely that the Germans referred to them as Devil Dogs.
President
Biden is traveling to France to visit the cemeteries of the Americans lost in
the battles at Belleau Woods and Normandy.
In Juen 2018
a 100-year commemorative service was held at a cemetery in France to recognize
the United States Marines killed in World War 1 at the battle of Belleau Woods.
It was
raining the morning of the service and President Donald Trump decided not to
attend the ceremony.
According to
four people with first-hand knowledge, Trump rejected the visit because he
feared his hair would get soaked
Speaking to
senior staff members Trump said, “Why should I go to that cemetery?” “It’s filled with losers.”
Later Trump
said that the 1800 Marines killed at Belleau Woods were suckers for getting
killed.
Trump claimed he canceled his attendance at the last minute because the helicopter
couldn’t fly in the rain and the Secret Service wouldn’t drive him.
Of course,
neither was true. Helicopters regularly
fly in the rain. General Kelly and an American delegation attended the service
in Trump’s absence.
Semper Fi
Marines
the Ol’Buzzard
USN ret.
We're getting lots of media coverage here in Canada too about the 80th anniversary of D-Day. The Canadians landed at Juno Beach.
ReplyDeleteWWll, the last war for survival. All of the ones since have been for treasure, territory, or power.
ReplyDelete