62 YEARS AGO TODAY WAS D-DAY – AMERICANS NOW ENCOURAGED TO VISIT
EUROPEAN BATTLEFIELD CEMETERIES AND MONUMENTS --
A federal agency can help with travel plans, authorize fee-free passports
for immediate family of the fallen, and more…
June 6, 2006
Media contract: Jeff Schrade (202)224-9093
(Washington, DC) On June 6, 1944, nearly 7,000 ships and landing craft
left the coast of England. Loaded with American, British and other troops,
they were on their way to France to help liberate Europe from Nazi
domination. Along the coast of Normandy, the American, British, Canadian,
free French, and other allies met stiff resistance from German troops who
had extensively fortified the shore area.
That invasion, code-named
Operation Overlord, is still the largest
seaborne invasion in history.
Now 62 years later, just back from Normandy and other battlefield
locations in Europe and North Africa, four U.S. Senators are encouraging
their colleagues and other Americans to visit American battlefield
cemeteries and monuments in Europe and elsewhere.
"Because of the bravery of the men and women who fought on D-Day and
onward, eventually almost three million troops were able to cross the
English Channel. But not all came back. Today, over 9,000 Americans are
still buried on French soil at Normandy. Others are buried elsewhere in
France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, and North Africa. Their final
resting locations stand as a monument to the commitment Americans have for
freedom for all mankind," said U.S. Sen. Larry Craig.
"I encourage all Americans to visit those cemeteries and pay their
respects to the fallen Americans who forever remain on-duty. We must never
forget them. The grounds of the cemeteries and memorial sites are maintained
to the utmost of perfection. Visiting them makes you proud to be an
American."
[To listen to Sen. Craig discuss his thoughts and experiences at Normandy
and elsewhere, click on
http://craig.senate.gov/podchat and then
click on June 6, 2006.]
As chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Craig
recently led a delegation of Senators from the committee to visit the
cemeteries and battlefield monuments located in Europe and in the North
African nation of Tunisia. With him were three other members of the
committee – Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), Johnny Isakson (R-GA) and Richard
Burr (R-NC).
"I have never seen the outpouring of love and respect for our country,
and for our servicemen, than I saw in the Netherlands, in Belgium, at
Belleau Wood outside of Paris and at the American Cemetery of Northern
Africa," Isakson said during a speech on the Senate floor Tuesday. "I
think it is appropriate for us to memorialize today what those of us who
traveled on this trip saw and inspire all members of the Senate and
hopefully all Americans at one point in their lives to travel to these
marvelous memorials."
At Normandy on D-Day in 1944, intense shelling of the beach from both
navy vessels and aerial bombardment was followed by hand-to-hand combat.
Some of the most intense fighting came at Pointe du Hoc, a location along
the French coast which rises more than 100 feet above the sea. There German
troops had placed concrete bunkers and hardened gun emplacements. In the
attack, U.S. Army Rangers used ladders, ropes and grappling hooks to scale
the cliff and take control of the position.
At the end of the 2-days of action, the landing force of 225 Americans at
that location was reduced to just 90 men who could still fight.
Today a monument erected by the French at Pointe du Hoc symbolizes a
razed dagger used by the Rangers. It stands in tribute to the Americans who
fought so gallantly there. (To see a picture of President Reagan speaking at
the monument in 1984, click:
HERE.)
"At each of the cemeteries we visited, I was able to locate the graves
of young soldiers from North Carolina and pay my respects. As I stood at the
foot of a fallen American soldier, I took a moment to reflect on the
ultimate sacrifice these soldiers have made so we can live in freedom,"
said Senator Burr. "Their service and sacrifice then is not unlike the
great sacrifice many Americans are making today in the war on terror."
At the end of both World War I and World II, families of servicemen and
women who had lost their lives abroad were given the option to have the
servicemembers’ remains returned home or buried in battlefield cemeteries in
Europe, North Africa, the South Pacific and elsewhere. The names of those
whose remains were never recovered are often etched on memorial walls near
where they fought.
"It was a sobering and thought provoking trip to see so many marble
Crosses and marble Stars of David in symmetrical rows. We know the histories
of World War I and World War II with so many casualties but until you
actually see the tombstones it is an abstraction," Sen. Specter said.
Help available
The American Battle Monuments Commission can provide visitors with the
best in-country routes and modes of travel to cemeteries or memorials, as
well as providing letters authorizing fee-free passports for members of the
immediate family traveling overseas to visit a grave or memorialization
site. The ABMC can also provide black and white photographs of headstones
and Tablets of the Missing on which the names of dead or missing are
engraved, and assist with arrangements for floral decorations placed at
graves and memorialization sites.
For more information about the services the ABMC provides, see:
http://www.abmc.gov
or call (703) 696-6900.
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