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Honor 6-6-1944

sunsagleaming

Legendary Poster
World War II, June 6, 1944

The Battle of Normandy was fought during World War II in the summer of 1944, between the Allied nations and German forces occupying Western Europe. More than 60 years later, the Normandy Invasion, or D-Day, remains the largest seaborne invasion in history, involving nearly three million troops crossing the English Channel from England to Normandy in occupied France.​
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Twelve Allied nations provided fighting units that participated in the invasion, including Australia, Canada, Belgium, France, Czechoslovakia, Greece, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Operation Overlord was the codename for the Allied invasion of northwest Europe. The assault phase, or the establishment of a secure foothold, was known as Operation Neptune. Operation Neptune began on D-Day (June 1, 1944) and ended on June 30, when the Allies had established a firm foothold in Normandy. Operation Overlord also began on D-Day, and continued until Allied forces crossed the River Seine on August 19.
The battle began months before the invasion, when Allied bombers began to pound the Normandy coast and farther south, to destroy transportation links, and disrupt the German army's build-up of their military strength. More than 300 planes dropped 13,000 bombs over Normandy in advance of the invasion. Six parachute regiments, with more than 13,000 men, also went ahead to cut railroad lines, blow up bridges, and seize landing fields. Gliders also brough in men, light artillery, jeeps, and small tanks.
There has been some confusion regarding the meaning of the “D” in D-Day. The most likely explanation is offered by the U.S. Army in their published manuals. The Army began to use the codes “H-hour” and “D-Day” during World War I, to indicate the time or date of an operation’s beginning. So the “D” may simply refer to the “day” of invasion.
With the invasion of Normandy, General Dwight D. Eisenhower faced a task of magnitude and hazards never before attempted. He would have to move his forces 100 miles across the English Channel and storm a heavily fortified coastline. His enemy was the weapon-and-tank-superior German army commanded by Erwin Rommel, one of the most brilliant generals of the war. Less than 15 percent of the Allied forces coming aboard the ships had ever seen combat.
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An invading army had not crossed the unpredictable and dangerous English Channel since 1688. Once the massive Allied force set out, there was no turning back. The Allies boasted a 5,000-vessel armada that stretched as far as the eye could see, transporting both men and vehicles across the channel to the French beaches. In addition, the Allies had 4,000 smaller landing craft and more than 11,000 aircraft.
By nightfall on June 6, more than 9,000 Allied soldiers were dead or wounded, but more than 100,000 had made it ashore and secured French coastal villages. Within weeks, supplies were being unloaded at Utah and Omaha beachheads at the rate of more than 20,000 tons per day. By June 11, more than 326,000 troops, 55,000 vehicles, and 105,000 tons of supplies had been landed on the beaches. By June 30, the Allies had established a firm foothold in Normandy. Allied forces crossed the River Seine on August 19.
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Military intelligence was an important part of the Normandy invasion. British and American cryptographers working in London deciphered coded messages that the German believed to be unbreakable. Messages could quite often be delivered to Eisenhower within two and a half hours of the time the Germans had sent it. In addition, reconnaissance teams took infrared pictures of Omaha Beach while avoiding German patrols.
There is no official casualty figure for D-Day. It is estimated that more than 425,000 Allied and German troops were killed, wounded, or went missing during the battle. That figure includes more than 209,000 Allied casualties. In addition to roughly 200,000 German troops killed or wounded, the Allies also captured 200,000 soldiers. Captured Germans were sent to American prisoner-of-war camps at the rate of 30,000 per month, from D-Day until Christmas 1944. Between 15,000 and 20,000 French civilians were killed during the battle.
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In the end, the invasion of Normandy succeeded in its objective by sheer force of numbers. By July 1944, some one million Allied troops, mostly American, British, and Canadian, were entrenched in Normandy. During the great invasion, the Allies assembled nearly three million men and stored 16 million tons of arms, munitions, and supplies in Britain.
The occupation of Normandy was crucial for the Western Allies to bring the war to the western border of Germany. If the Normandy invasion had not occurred, there could conceivably have been a complete possession of northern and western Europe by Soviet forces.

Off-site search results for "D-Day, the Battle of Normandy"...

D-Day, the Normandy Invasion, 6-25 June 1944
... Normandy Invasion The Invasion of Normandy Operation OVERLORD, the invasion of Normandy, is considered the decisive battle of the war in Western Europe. Before this battle the German Army still firmly occupied France and the Low Countries ...
http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq109-1.htm
Normandy Invasion -- The D-Day Landings, 6 June 1944
... Day" Landings on "Omaha" Beach; "D-Day" Landings at the Pointe du Hoc; and "D-Day" Landings on "Utah" Beach. For other pictures related to the invasion of Normandy, see: Normandy Invasion, June 1944 -- Overview and Special Image Selection. If ...
http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-eur/normandy/nor4.htm
American Merchant Marine on D-Day at Normandy
... Whales, Lobnitzes, Corncobs and Role of Tugs at Normandy Harbor on D-Day June 6, 1944 A Concrete Ship at D-Day 1944 and Why They Owe Me a Trip on the Queen Mary Ghost Ships at Normandy, SS Potter, blockship at Normandy beach, By Joseph ...
http://www.usmm.org/dday.html







 
"...everything that the Japanese were planning to do was known to the United States..." ARMY BOARD, 1944

President Roosevelt (FDR) provoked the attack, knew about it in advance and covered up his failure to warn the Hawaiian commanders. FDR needed the attack to sucker Hitler to declare war, since the public and Congress were overwhelmingly against entering the war in Europe. It was his backdoor to war.


FDR blinded the commanders at Pearl Harbor and set them up by -
  1. denying intelligence to Hawaii (HI)
  2. on Nov 27, misleading the commanders into thinking negotiations with Japan were continuing to prevent them from realizing the war was on
  3. having false information sent to HI about the location of the Japanese carrier fleet.
source
 
WWII was nothing but a war between imperialist countries just like the wars mafias, prison gangs or street gangs have against each other for control, greed, domination, money, and power
 
How did the U.S. get to D Day? uh,yeah it's relevant.

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your communist rhetoric is IRRELEVANT in a thread to honor FALLEN AMERICANS.

WWII was nothing but a war between imperialist countries just like the wars mafias have against each other for control, domination, money, and power

everyone knows what you think. wtf else? you gonna show some respect for the dead american soldiers that gave you your freedom to spew your rhetoric here?
 
^ your mistaken as many of those soldiers who were brainwashed and tricked into believing they were giving their lives for my freedom. Fact of the matter is they were pawns for the powers that be who were used to die for the freedom of the ruling class and wealthy elites that you nor I are a part of
 
As guests of Honor Flight Michigan, 40 World War II veterans traveled to Washington, D.C., on May 17, 2008, to visit the memorial built in their honor. Former soldiers Eddie Johnson (left) John Reiff (center) and John DeNardo wait with their Honor Flight guardians, Kim Stafford, Virginia Reiff, and Norm Van Sparr, respectively. The day trip allowed the group to visit the World War II Memorial, the Iwo Jima Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery. Defense Department photo by Samantha L. Quigley

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To thunderous applause and cheers, 40 World War II veterans arrived from Detroit at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport’s “A” Terminal on May 17. The group was ready to fulfill their dream of visiting the World War II Memorial, something none of them had done since its dedication in 2004.
“I like to think of my old buddies, which are mostly all gone by now,” said John DeNardo, an Army veteran who served from April 1943 to January 1946. “Most of them never got to see it, so I feel like I’m representing them here in a way.”
The resident of Clinton Township, Mich., said he was glad for the chance to see the memorial built in part by his contributions. But to make the trip, he had to draw on his experiences from the war: early reveille and a full day.
“I started at 4 o’clock this morning,” DeNardo said. “We’re going go to [Arlington National Cemetery], [and] they said if time allows, they’re going to drive us around.”
DeNardo said he didn’t think the visit would be too emotional, but he had a few tissues just in case. And that probably was a good thing.
“It makes us cry. It makes them cry,” said Rick Sage, who works with Honor Flight Michigan, the organization that made the trip possible. “You can’t go through this day and not be emotional.”
Honor Flight Michigan brought 414 World War II veterans to visit the memorial in 2007. Sage said the organization’s goal is 600 this year, and with 120 already having made the trip and an average of two flights a month, it seems attainable.
It all depends on funding, he said. All funds raised and donations received go into getting veterans to Washington.
“We’re all volunteers. We don’t get paid anything,” Sage said. “We’re just doing this because it’s the right thing to do for these guys.”
Even the right thing can come with challenges, though. Many World War II veterans are no longer mobile and require a wheelchair to get around. That means more of what the Honor Flight Network refers to as “guardians” to help move those who need wheelchairs. But that doesn’t discourage the volunteers.
“Logistically, it’s a nightmare,” Sage said. “But guess what? We’re going to devote one [future] flight all to wheelchair guys.”
In the end, the veterans’ reactions make it easy to forget any challenges, however.
“They think it’s just one of the best things they’ve ever seen,” Sage said. “Some of them get a little misty, [and] some of them don’t want to talk. It’s a very emotional time for them.”
Sadly, the national Honor Flight Network program, which began in Ohio in December 2004 and has chapters in 31 states, eventually will come to an end, Sage said.
“We have what they call a ’sunset clause’ in this program,” he said. “Whether you like it or not, it will come to an end, because the guys are going to be passing away or get too sick to travel.”
Some 1,500 to 2,000 World War II veterans die each day. The staggering numbers, and his work with World War II veterans who saw their dream of visiting the memorial slipping away, are what prompted Earl Morse, a physician’s assistant and retired Air Force captain, to start Honor Flight Network.
But until takes its final toll on “The Greatest Generation,” he said, Honor Flight Network will make sure as many World War II veterans as possible get to appreciate the memorial built to honor their sacrifices.

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your communist rhetoric is IRRELEVANT in a thread to honor FALLEN AMERICANS.



everyone knows what you think. wtf else? you gonna show some respect for the dead american soldiers that gave you your freedom to spew your rhetoric here?
you're having a laugh aren't you? when in the hell was freedom ever threaten?

Those high-class muscle men for capitalism were paid very well for their service.
 
So lemme get this straight. In America we celebrate cinco de mayo a mexican military victery over france. France? Beat'n on the french is like put'n a whoop'n on a child shoooot who cain't do that?

But a real victery like at Normandy against up to that time the greatest military power the world had ever known is overlooked and mocked by sum of these pimple faced high skewl nerds. What in tarnation???
 
So lemme get this straight. In America we celebrate cinco de mayo a mexican military victery over france. France? Beat'n on the french is like put'n a whoop'n on a child shoooot who cain't do that?

But a real victery like at Normandy against up to that time the greatest military power the world had ever known is overlooked and mocked by sum of these pimple faced high skewl nerds. What in tarnation???

Oh look it's Troof creating another new account. He complains non-stop about undocumented migrants breaking the rules yet this hypocrite breaks the forum rules by trolling here when he's not supposed becoz he's been banned [crazy]
 
^ your mistaken as many of those soldiers who were brainwashed and tricked into believing they were giving their lives for my freedom. Fact of the matter is they were pawns for the powers that be who were used to die for the freedom of the ruling class and wealthy elites that you nor I are a part of

who gives a fk ...really? they were soldiers and they went thru shit that you can't even possibly imagine.

you can hate on the "legalities" of the war or what is going on today for all you want i don't give 2 fks....but when you or anyone else starts hating on the soldiers that fought world war 2 or any war.....that's where my problem is.

becuz WE WON WORLD WAR 2 we can have this conversation right now.

don't you get it???
 
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As Berlin fell in the closing days of the War, Red Army photographer Yevgeny Khaldei gathered some soldiers and posed a shot of them hoisting the flag (called the Victory Banner) on the roof of the Reichstag building. The photo represented a historic moment, the defeat of Germany in a war that cost the Soviet Union tens of millions of lives
 
you're having a laugh aren't you? when in the hell was freedom ever threaten?

Those high-class muscle men for capitalism were paid very well for their service.


you have to be one of the dumbest mthrfkrs ever to be privelaged to be born in THIS COUNTRY!!! your feeble duped ass mind can't even comprehend how your life today would be different if we had not won world war @!!!!




So lemme get this straight. In America we celebrate cinco de mayo a mexican military victery over france. France? Beat'n on the french is like put'n a whoop'n on a child shoooot who cain't do that?

But a real victery like at Normandy against up to that time the greatest military power the world had ever known is overlooked and mocked by sum of these pimple faced high skewl nerds. What in tarnation???

i agreei agreei agreei agree
 
you have to be one of the dumbest mthrfkrs ever to be privelaged to be born in THIS COUNTRY!!! your feeble duped ass mind can't even comprehend how your life today would be different if we had not won world war @!!!!
Why don't try answering the question? When in the hell was freedom ever threaten?
 


^^^thats their "feeble" attempt at looking good after they got their communist asses handed to them.

this is ONE REASON WHY I AM SO GLAD WE WON THE WAR.....heres a pic of your idols. to bad none of your ancestors were in this heap of bones....that would have spared us another ignorant hating ass commy.

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A documentary film by a Latvian director that shows the Soviet Union helped Nazi Germany instigate the Holocaust. Furthermore, it?s a documentary about the Soviet crimes against humanity and its own people. More importantly, it underlines the similarity of Soviet and Nazi regimes and undisputed ways of how they helped and supported each other. It ends with a conclusion of how Europe lacks political will to fully condemn Communist crimes against humanity because ?this is not how the world works?. With Germany and Russia building gas pipelines together, it is difficult to imagine one being vocal against the other, and requiring e.g extradition of former Soviet KGB interrogators who tortured many people to death. They continue to live in Moscow as decorated veterans. The documentary ?The Soviet Story? is directed by Edvins Snore, who spent 10 years gathering information and two years filming in several countries. Among those interviewed in the film are Western and Russian historians, as well as survivors of the Soviet Gulag. This is not a pure documentary and not a pure scholarly work. It injects drama and cinematography that goes beyond what we usually see in documentaries.
 
Why don't try answering the question? When in the hell was freedom ever threaten?

my freedom today is threatened by mthrfkrs like yourself that idolize tyrannts from the soviet holocaust and roll out the red carpet for POWERFUL like minded mthrfkrs (not yourself of course)....to go against everything america stands for.

is that easier for you to comprehend...since you can't fathom how life today would be had the war not been won by the west???
 
So lemme get this straight. In America we celebrate cinco de mayo a mexican military victery over france. France? Beat'n on the french is like put'n a whoop'n on a child shoooot who cain't do that?

But a real victery like at Normandy against up to that time the greatest military power the world had ever known is overlooked and mocked by sum of these pimple faced high skewl nerds. What in tarnation???


Well give the Mexicans some credit, some of those french pastry chefs are pretty tough. Ha Ha Ha

How bad can getting pelted with cream puffs be?
 
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