Mullen on D-Day: Vets need not suffer alone
By Robert Burns - The Associated Press
Posted : Sunday Jun 6, 2010 17:04:15 EDT
BEDFORD, Va. — In a stirring tribute to the D-Day sacrifices of
American soldiers and their allies, the U.S. military’s top officer said
Sunday that World War II’s defining moment should remind all that
returning warriors need not “suffer in quiet desperation.”
Adm.
Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke in the
peaceful setting of this small town, which is said to have born the
heaviest share of American losses in the June 6, 1944, landings on the
beaches of Normandy. The National D-Day Memorial was established here in
2001 as a tribute to those who died in the invasion of German-occupied
Europe.
Mullen drew a parallel with the needs and aspirations of
the men and women returning from today’s battlefields, many with the
invisible psychological wounds of war.
“They, too, have seen and
done things we cannot know,” he said. “Their lives, too, are forever
changed. And just as previous generations of heroes did, they must
likewise adjust themselves to peace.”
Over much of his nearly
three years as Joint Chiefs chairman, Mullen has repeatedly implored the
government, as well as communities and volunteer organizations, to help
care for returning veterans, as well as families of the fallen. He has
called it an obligation that will face the nation for decades after the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have come to a close.
The memorial
tells the D-Day tale with details steeped in symbolism, including the
height of the triumphal arch inscribed “Overlord,” the code name for the
operation. The arch is 44 feet, 6 inches, high to commemorate the year
and month of the landings. Concrete was poured on the pedestrian walkway
to resemble waves on the beaches of Normandy.
On D-Day — 2½ years
after Japan’s bombing of Pearl Harbor brought the United States into
World War II — allied forces charged the shores of five beaches on
France’s northern coast. They faced entrenched German forces, land
mines, machine guns and heavy artillery.
About 215,000 allied
soldiers, and roughly as many Germans, were killed or wounded on D-Day
and in the ensuing three months before the allies took control at
Normandy, opening a path toward Paris that eventually took them to
Germany and victory over the Nazis.
At D-Day ceremonies last year
at Normandy, President Obama honored the dead and applauded what he
called the “sheer improbability” of the allies’ success in storming the
beaches of Normandy, scaling its cliffs and routing the German
defenders.
Congress chose Bedford as the D-Day memorial’s site
because it is said to have suffered the highest number of deaths on
D-Day of any American community, in proportion to its population, just
3,200 at the time. Nineteen Bedford natives in Company A of the 116th
Infantry Regiment were killed on D-Day.
Mullen noted that one
Bedford resident today is among the 88,000 U.S. troops in Iraq: Army
Sgt. Gordon Musgrove.
“Our young troops and their families today
still want the same things they looked forward to when they left,”
Mullen said. “A job, an education, a home and a better life for their
children. We must take care of them, reach out to them, seek to
understand them so they do not suffer in quiet desperation.”
Bedford,
nestled at the foot of the Blue Ridge mountains, has nearly doubled in
population since 1944. Alex Kershaw’s book “The Bedford Boys” recounted
the story of its unusually large losses on D-Day.
Mullen recalled
the anxiety that gripped Bedford 66 years ago as residents huddled
around radios for word of progress at Normandy.
“For the families
of Bedford and for families across our nation, the toughest part was the
waiting,” he said. Hours became days. Days became weeks.
“On July
17 as the Western Union teletype stirred in Green’s Drug Store,
condolence telegrams about the Bedford boys came in, wave upon wave,” he
said. “The wait was over and worry turned to heartbreak as family after
family learned their wait would last a lifetime.”
In today’s wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan there will be no D-Day, no decisive offensive
that brings the fighting to a conclusive end, Mullen said.
“And
yet, like the Bedford boys, we, our allies and our partners must keep
moving forward, even when we are crawling,” he said. “We must take risks
and keep pushing ahead. That was what the boys of Bedford taught us.
That is Normandy’s legacy.”