11 November 2009

What Americans Owe to Those Who Serve

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I read this editorial yesterday in hopes of finding inspiration for a Veteran's Day post. Instead, I found that Bob Greene was able to speak my feelings so well that it would be an injustice to do anything other than share his views with all of you.


By Bob Greene, CNN Contributor

Editor's Note
: CNN Contributor Bob Greene is a bestselling author whose new book is "Late Edition: A Love Story."

(CNN) -- The woman's Halloween costume featured a Third Reich motif.

This was last weekend in a sprawling bar-and-restaurant complex near U.S. 41 on the west coast of Florida. I had made the miscalculation of stopping by in pursuit of a quiet cheeseburger, not realizing that adults in trick-or-treat costumes were making the rounds on this sultry evening.

The woman (or the costume shop from where she had purchased her uniform) at least had the good sense to omit the actual swastikas, but that was the only bit of subtlety. The Heinrich Himmler high-fronted military cap, the boots, the swagger stick she kept slapping against her palm. . .some of the customers, playing along, did little comic goose steps as they passed her.

I looked up from my newspaper and tried to surmise if anyone was going to be offended enough by this odious display to leave. She beat them to it; she and her friends made a few quick passes through the aisles of the place, then returned to the night, ready to continue their revelry elsewhere.

Halloween in the United States is an increasingly odd holiday, no longer child's play, but on this evening I was thinking about another holiday, this one official, that is coming up this week: Veterans Day.

And, having unexpectedly encountered the woman in her getup, I found myself wondering what, six and seven decades ago, they would have made of it: what the 16 million Americans who served in the armed forces during World War II, who were sent across the ocean to defeat a brutal enemy, would have thought about this scene.

They're old men now, the soldiers who remain; many are frail and in ill health. It can be easy for us to forget that, when they were uprooted from their daily lives in the 1940s, no one knew what the history books would eventually say. No one knew the outcome. They were little more than kids, many of them; they were in effect told by our country:

Are you in school? You'll have to leave it. Have a new wife? You'll have to say goodbye to her. Working at a job you like? Tell your boss that you have to quit.

We need you to go halfway across the world, because we need you to save the world.

And they did it. Some 292,000 U.S. soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines were killed in battle during World War II; another 114,000 died from noncombat causes. Some 671,000 U.S. troops were injured, many of them grievously.

The uniforms they put on were not Halloween getups; neither were the uniforms of the enemies they confronted across the oceans. On their way to fight the war, it's a pretty fair guess that they were scared and lonely. They understood that there was no guarantee they would ever be coming home.

Each November we are asked to pause and honor them, which is, or should be, an honor in itself. After the events of the last week at Fort Hood in Texas, with their reminder of the sacrifices that the men and women of the military make for us, Veterans Day will hold special meaning this year.

This November also marks the second anniversary of the death, at age 92, of my friend Paul Tibbets, who I got to know extraordinarily well during the last years of his life. I'd like to say a few words about him here.

At the age of 29, out of all the men and women in the U.S. military, he was selected for a task of almost unfathomable importance. He was told to recruit, organize, supervise and command a group of soldiers and airmen who were to train in absolute secrecy. If he succeeded, he was told, then the war could be won.

Someone had started a terrible fight; he was asked to finish it.

He did. He got his unit ready. And on an August day in 1945, he flew a B-29 he had named for his mother, Enola Gay, to Japan, where he and his crew dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. It was the single most violent act in the history of mankind, and he carried it out without flinching because he believed, in the deepest part of his heart, one thing above all others:

He could end the long war. He could stop the killing. All of the American soldiers who were on their way to the shores of Japan for a land invasion could turn around and go home, could raise families, could live again in a world at peace.

He understood the controversy, and the anger, with which his mission would be received by some. He understood that there were people who would forever hate him. He and I talked about it many times before he died. After the war, he told me, President Harry Truman asked him if people were saying unpleasant things to him because of the bomb. Paul Tibbets told the president that, yes, some people indeed were.

And Truman said:

"You tell them that if they have anything to say, they should call me. I'm the one who sent you."

So it's November again. Veterans Day is upon us.

There is a quotation variously attributed to Winston Churchill or George Orwell. Regardless of our individual politics, regardless of our beliefs about the rightness or wrongness of a particular war, the words are worth reflecting upon anew this week:

"We sleep soundly in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm."

And so, to all who have served us, then, now, and in the future, a word of somber thanks, from those of us here at home.

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18 comments:

Schmoop said...

Here's to a meanigful Veterans Day to all. Cheers Dana!!

Anonymous said...

Thank you for your service trooper - hoo-ah!

we're doomed said...

Thank you for your service to our country, Dana.

Evil Twin's Wife said...

Thanks, Dana. :-)

Vixen said...

It was all excellently written except for his constant digs at Halloween and dressing up.... ???? I'm not sure I understand the correlation. I mean it's quite obvious his disdain for the holiday but I thought it was just interesting he kept bringing it up.

Anyway. The last quote is excellent. Thank you Dana for your service. Thank you to all that have given so much to make our country what it is today.

Real Live Lesbian said...

That brought tears to my eyes. I'd never even thought about what the guy that dropped the bomb might have had to deal with for the rest of his life.

Thanks to you and all who have served us.

Vinny "Bond" Marini said...

Dana...first off, thank you for your service and thank you to all the men and women who have served here and in Canada... May those who serve today be safe on this day.

I apologize for editorializing here Dana, but -

I am sorry matt-man you can not diss the holiday on your blog and then come over here and make some little gratuitous comment - that sucks dude.

Mike Golch said...

Dana,Thank you for your service.you posted a great posting.It shows why many men and women have served and in some cases offered their lives so that we have the freedoms that we have today.I came over from Real Live Lesbian's site to visit with you.God Bless the Veterans of the USA.

Mike Golch said...

I shold tell you that I have added yopu to my Google reader and to my blog reoll of Honor.

Jinxo56 said...

Dana,
Thank you for your service. I had 4 uncles who fought in W.W. 2. One of them was one was one of the mechanics who prepared the Enola Gay for its flight. My dad was a Marine who fought in Korea. I have the highest respect for all who have served.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your service, mama! I'm proud of what you did for our nation and what you do now in our community. hugs, hope. PS. OH!Left a freebie list on my blog for vets!

Anndi said...

Thank you for your service, and thank God for keeping you safe so you can now serve as a mom.

May all those who fight for freedom be kept under God's wing.

snugs said...

Awwwwww Dana, thanks for your service and also your honesty in bagwine :)

Al Penwasser said...

Thanks, Dana. This was a great editorial about ordinary people doing extraordinary things. I salute you!

Lu' said...

There are people who truly feel in their heart deep support for veterans and those serving now; GREAT. I am one who does appreciates their sacrafice both veterans and active service personel but just doesn't mention it much. Their losses are heart wrenching. Their history is the stuff shivers are made of but my day to day gets in the way. I don't think that makes me a bad person and there is nothing wrong at all with taking your pride in these people out for display even if you need be prompted to do so. If it is from the heart then it is all good.

rage said...

Thank you Dana for such a great post and for serving.

Anonymous said...

One Vet to another:
Thanks Dana

FMD

Doc said...

We can never even hope to repay the debt we owe to our veterans.