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Obama hails 'sheer improbability' of D-Day victory
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 06 - 06 - 2009


President Barack Obama honored
the valiant dead and the «sheer improbability» of their
D-Day victory, commemorating Saturday's 65th anniversary of
the decisive invasion even as he remakes two wars and tries
to thwart potential nuclear threats in Iran and North
Korea, AP reported.
The young U.S. commander in chief, speaking at the
American cemetery after the leaders of France, Canada and
Britain, held up the sacrifices of D-Day veterans and their
«unimaginable hell» as a lesson for modern times.
«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,» he said.
«At an hour of maximum danger, amid the bleakest of
circumstances, men who thought themselves ordinary found it
within themselves to do the extraordinary.»
Obama opened the emotional day by meeting with French
President Nicolas Sarkozy in the nearby picturesque village
of Caen. Their wives met separately at the elegant French
Prefecture.
Appearing with Sarkozy before reporters, Obama displayed
growing impatience with North Korea and what he called its
«extraordinarily provocative» nuclear and ballistic
missile tests. He suggested that the North is testing
international patience as diplomacy has failed to persuade
the reclusive communist government to abandon its nuclear
weapons program.
«Diplomacy has to involve the other side engaging in a
serious way in trying to solve problems,» he said. «We
are going to take a very hard look at how we move forward
on these issues, and I don't think that there should be an
assumption that we will simply continue down a path in
which North Korea is constantly destabilizing the region
and we just react in the same ways.»
Obama also took on Iran, suspected by the West of seeking
to build its first nuclear bomb, an accusation Tehran
denies. The president has said military action remains on
the table, but has offered to change U.S. policy and engage
in talks with Tehran. He said Saturday, though, it must be
«tough diplomacy.»
«We can't afford a nuclear arms race in the Middle
East,» Obama warned. Sarkozy said he worries about
«insane statements» by Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad.
At the same time, Obama is directing wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan _ seeking to end the first and stepping up U.S.
engagement in the second. Both have lasted longer than the
U.S. involvement in World War II.
This D-Day anniversary assumed special significance
because veterans of the battle are reaching their 80s and
90s and their numbers are dwindling. One American veteran,
Jim Norene, who fought with the 101st Airborne Division,
came back for Saturday's ceremony, but died in his sleep
Friday night.
«Jim was gravely ill when he left his home, and he knew
that he might not return,» Obama said. «But just as he
did 65 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.»
Joined by Sarkozy, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown,
and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Obama stopped
first at the gray granite visitors center and then at an
overlook where the leaders talked at length with two D-Day
veterans waiting at the top of the once-bloody bluffs.
The sunny sky, crashing waves, lush vegetation and
pleasant breezes created a scene of seaside tranquility at
the spot one D-Day veteran recalled as mostly «darkness
and confusion.»
«I lost a lot of pals on D-Day,» said Norman Coleman of
Manchester, England. He marked the day by visiting several
other burial grounds scattered around the region, where
soldiers were buried as they fell in pitched battles over
12 decisive weeks.
Julien Marchand, a 40-year-old carpenter, spontaneously
embraced Coleman in an outburst of gratitude on the streets
of Caen, nearly knocking over the elderly veteran. «Thank
you, thank you, merci,» Marchand exclaimed.
The ceremony at Omaha Beach, on what is technically U.S.
soil at Colleville-sur-Mer, took place under an American
flag flying from a metal pole hundreds of feet high. The
crowd of thousands spread far back from the leaders'
platform and colonnade engraved with these words: «This
embattled shore, portal of freedom, is forever hallowed by
the ideals, the valor and the sacrifice.»
With clusters of young people sprinkled among the graying
heads and wheelchairs, the audience spilled down the path
that cut between some of the nearly 10,000 perfectly
aligned white crosses that mark the graves of U.S. dead.
French adolescent girls whispered excitedly about the
chance to see Obama.
Issac Phillips, 84, recalled having little idea what he
was getting into in the dark early morning hours of June 6,
1944, as a private in the U.S. 22nd Infantry regiment who
crossed the English Channel and landed at nearby Utah
Beach.
«The water was cold, the boat was going like this» _ his
arms spiked up and down _ «and some of them fell in the
water. We are all close together and we can't move very
much at all. They say if you stay close together, you don't
get seasick. You get seasick anyway.»
Allied forces charged the shores of five beaches on
France's northern coast, facing German land mines, machine
guns and heavy artillery. Some 215,000 Allied soldiers, and
roughly as many Germans, were killed or wounded during
D-Day and the ensuing three months before the Allies
captured Normandy, opening a path toward Paris that
eventually took them to Germany and victory over the Nazis.
«You remind us that our future is not shaped by mere
chance or circumstance,» Obama said to the gathered
veterans during a 16-minute address. «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.»
A 21-gun salute lent an acrid smell to the air that grew
grayer and chillier as the ceremony ended. Taps played. A
12-plane flyover of French, British and American jets
boomed above.
There was a personal side to the wartime memories for
Obama. He mentioned his grandfather, Stanley Dunham, who
came ashore at Omaha Beach six weeks after D-Day. Dunham's
older brother, Ralph, hit Omaha on D-Day plus four. Another
great uncle, Charles Payne, helped liberate a satellite
prison of the Buchenwald concentration camp in 1945 and
accompanied Obama on his tour of Buchenwald on Friday, as
well as to Normandy.
After the ceremony, Obama and his wife, Michelle, returned
to Paris to reunite with their daughters, Sasha and Malia,
for a family evening in the City of Light. They planned
sightseeing on Sunday before Obama returns to Washington
from his trip, which also took him to Saudi Arabia and
Egypt. The first lady and the girls planned to remain in
France until at least Monday.


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