He was particularly impressed by the bombardment being thrown at the German defences by the big ships in the Channel. Even from several thousand feet up, the sight was chilling.
“All I could think,” he told us, “was how glad I wasn’t down there on the receiving end of that.”
The D-day beaches from the air |
Today international leaders have met again on those beaches to honour the men who fought and in many cases were injured or died there.
We are now so far from that time that none of the leaders present are of an age to have served at that time. But one in particular could have served in another war. Here’s what he told the British journalist Piers Morgan about why he didn’t go to Vietnam:
Well I was never a fan of that war. I'll be honest with you. I thought it was a terrible war.
So far so good. I frankly couldn’t disagree with him. It was a senseless war, in which huge numbers died for absolutely no benefit to anyone, either American or Vietnamese. I wouldn’t have wanted to serve there either.
But Donald Trump – for, as you guessed, it was he – didn’t stop there. He went on:
Nobody ever – you're talking about Vietnam at that time and nobody ever heard of the country.
He’s citing ignorance as the basis for not joining his country’s war in Vietnam? He’s saying that he didn’t object in principle to a “terrible war”, he just had no idea what it was about. And, indeed, he took no stand on principle at all.
Now I wasn't out in the streets marching. I wasn't saying, you know, I'm going to move to Canada, which a lot of people did. But no, I was not a fan of that war.
Not a fan? But not enough of an opponent to do anything about it?
The Illinois Democrat, Senator Tammy Duckworth, replied succinctly:
I don't know anyone who has served in uniform, especially in combat, who would say they are a fan of war. In fact, I opposed the Iraq war, but volunteered to go when my unit was deployed.
What price did she pay? She lost both legs in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan. In uniform.
Trump, on the other hand, swung himself a medical discharge from Vietnam, something which far poorer people, many no doubt far less well than he, didn’t have the means to obtain for themselves. It seems he was unfit to serve because of bone spurs on both his feet.
Now he’d like some reflected glory so he has travelled to Normandy to the celebrations of the 75th anniversary of D-day. He probably sincerely believes that, despite his proclaimed ignorance and his real duplicity, his presence is honouring the men who fought and suffered for his freedom.
I bet some of them had bone spurs.
It’s a shame I can’t ask my father for his opinion of these curious events. Although I don’t have much trouble imagining what he might have said.
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