D-Day anniversary

Via Mrs. Arbel:

https://www.wsj.com/articles/eisenhower-returns-to-normandy-d-day-invasion-anniversary-37cea5b2

Two men, one noticeably older, are walking on a beach. They know they are being filmed, but because the camera is at a distance no one else in the vicinity seems aware.

As they walk a nun appears.

“Look,” the older man says to the younger. “Here comes a little nun, with a whole little . . .” The nun and a parade of children walk by, neither pausing nor taking note of the men.

“How do you do, sister?” the older man says. “How do you do?”

The nun and children keep walking.

The older man, Dwight D. Eisenhower, says to the younger man: “If the GIs of 20 years ago could have seen that, that would have been something, wouldn’t it?”

The younger man is Walter Cronkite. They are in Normandy, France, to film a 20th-anniversary commemoration of D-Day that will be broadcast on 22 networks in 19 countries. Cronkite is the top journalist at CBS News, but when the program airs he won’t receive top billing. The credits will proclaim that the reporters are “General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, with Walter Cronkite.” Eisenhower, as it is being broadcast, is more than three years removed from his second term as president.

The program is being filmed because, as the narrator puts it, “20 years ago, in this, our own time, the largest invasion in history assaulted Hitler’s European fortress.” On that day, “a battle was joined between the world of freedom and the world of tyranny.” The film, shot in black-and-white, is a remarkable artifact, seldom seen since that June 1964 broadcast.

Viewers hear a recording of Eisenhower’s message to D-Day troops: “Soldiers, sailors and airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force: You are about to embark on the great crusade toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you.”

Eisenhower now recalls how, at Southwick House on the coast of England, he decided the weather was sufficient to authorize the invasion. During those stormy days, it was a matter of making “the best of a bad bargain.”

Having made the call, “about 6 in the evening I went over to a field from which the American airborne started out. Now, I couldn’t go to all these fields, because there were many of them. But I did go into the 101st Division, and it was a very fine experience.” These were paratroopers.

“They were getting ready,” Eisenhower recalls. “And all camouflaged, their faces blackened and all this, and there they saw me. Of course they recognized me, and said, ‘Now, quit worrying, General. We’ll take care of this thing for you.’ ” A correspondent is said to have reported that when Eisenhower turned away from the paratroopers there was a tear in his eye.

[…]At the American cemetery nearby, the two men walk among the white crosses. Eisenhower says that on D-Day his son was graduating from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. On that day, he says, the men buried beneath the crosses came here “to storm these beaches, for one purpose only: not to gain anything for ourselves, not to fulfill any ambitions that America had for conquest, but just to preserve freedom.”

His son, Eisenhower says, has had a good and full life. “But these young boys, so many of them, over whose graves we have been treading, looking at, wondering and contemplating about their sacrifices—they were cut off in their prime.