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- Trump insults Mueller and Pelosi at U.S. military cemetery in France
- The Legacy of the Tiananmen Square Massacre in China
- What the Heck Is This Funky Ford F-150 Raptor Test Mule?
- Boeing delayed fix of defective 737 MAX warning light for three years: U.S. lawmakers
- Women who have abortions deserve to be 'punished' with prison sentence, says Republican
- New report reveals ISIS scheme to send terrorists into US through border with Mexico
- Father's Day 2019: Paganism, roses and how the campaign to celebrate dads was won
- 'We changed the world': Now in their 90s, WWII veterans gather in Normandy for D-Day anniversary
- The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere
- New York police commissioner apologizes for Stonewall raid in 1969
- Dominican Republic hotel says Del. woman wanted $2.2 million before going public with brutal attack story
- Norway mediation effort in Venezuela's crisis slows
- West Point incident: ‘Major emergency response’ to deadly accident at training camp
- The German killer nurse who took himself for God
- Earthquake, flood, hurricane: Google Maps adds tools to help you navigate a crisis
- Facebook to cut off Huawei to comply with US sanctions
- UPDATE 1-Ford expected to announce closure of Welsh engine factory- source
- D-Day commemorations: Prince Charles says this was 'probably last chance to pay everlasting respect' to veterans
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- Joe Biden beats Donald Trump in Texas poll as he breaks from Democratic party line on abortion
- World War II D-Day: Five things to know on the 75th anniversary of the Normandy landings
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Trump insults Mueller and Pelosi at U.S. military cemetery in France Posted: 06 Jun 2019 08:54 AM PDT |
The Legacy of the Tiananmen Square Massacre in China Posted: 06 Jun 2019 02:42 AM PDT |
What the Heck Is This Funky Ford F-150 Raptor Test Mule? Posted: 06 Jun 2019 02:00 PM PDT |
Boeing delayed fix of defective 737 MAX warning light for three years: U.S. lawmakers Posted: 07 Jun 2019 11:53 AM PDT Boeing Co learned that a cockpit warning light on its 737 MAX jetliner was defective in 2017 but decided to defer fixing it until 2020, U.S. lawmakers said on Friday. The defective warning light alerts pilots when two sensors that measure the angle between the airflow and the wing disagree. Faulty "angle of attack" data is suspected of playing a role in two deadly crashes involving Boeing's best-selling 737 MAX in Indonesia in October and in Ethiopia in March. |
Women who have abortions deserve to be 'punished' with prison sentence, says Republican Posted: 07 Jun 2019 06:03 AM PDT A Texas Republican has said women who have abortions should "absolutely" be punished and deserve to go to prison for having their pregnancy terminated.Representative Ron Wright, who was elected in 2018, responds to questions about whether or not women who induce their own abortions should be punished with jail in a video released by abortion access advocacy group Reproaction.The politician says: "Of course, because they just killed a baby".When the interviewer asks if he is concerned women could be sent to prison for having abortions, he says: "As far as I'm concerned, they committed murder".This comes after Texas proposed a law that would criminalise abortions and make it possible for women to receive the death penalty for having an abortion.The legislation, which would criminalise both women who have abortions and doctors who carry them out, stipulates that state and local government officials should enforce the bill "regardless of any contrary federal law, executive order, or court decision".It would allow no exceptions for abortions in cases of rape, incest or when the health of the mother is at risk. But the bill appeared to have failed back in April and is currently pending in committee. Texas anti-abortion legislators filed almost 40 bills – legislation that would breach the constitutionally protected rights to safe, legal abortion care – during the state's most recent legislative session, according to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).Drucilla Tigner, of ACLU Texas, said: "These breadcrumb anti-abortion bills are no random coincidence; they are part of a concerted and strategic effort to stigmatise and delegitimise reproductive healthcare with the ultimate goal of outlawing abortion outright at the federal level". Mr Wright's comments come in the wake of growing numbers of US states introducing bills that attempt to ban women from having abortions – with legislation to restrict abortion rights having been introduced in 16 states this year.A new law mandating a near total ban on abortion was signed into law by the governor in Alabama last month. Under the law, doctors would face 10 years in prison for attempting to terminate a pregnancy and 99 years for carrying out the procedure. The abortion ban, which has been branded a "death sentence for women", would even criminalise performing abortions in cases of rape and incest. Alabama Governor Kay Ivey said the new law might be "unenforceable" due to Roe v Wade \- the landmark Supreme Court decision that legalised abortion nationwide in 1973 - but said the new law was passed with the aim of challenging that decision.Anti-abortion activists hope legislation banning abortion being introduced across America will ultimately cause the US Supreme Court to reverse Roe vs Wade. Abortion rights campaigners have raised concerns the new conservative justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh – both Trump appointees – sitting on the court could tip the balance against abortion rights. |
New report reveals ISIS scheme to send terrorists into US through border with Mexico Posted: 07 Jun 2019 02:34 AM PDT |
Father's Day 2019: Paganism, roses and how the campaign to celebrate dads was won Posted: 07 Jun 2019 03:56 AM PDT Father's Day, the official calendar date to honour our wonderful dads and celebrate fatherhood, is fast approaching. Recognised each June, the day sees children around the world present their dads with cards and gifts as a thank you for all they do. But when did the first observance of Father's Day take place and who helped establish the annual celebration of paternal figures? From the history behind the celebration, to the more recent commercialisation, here is everything you need to know about Father's Day. When is Father's Day 2019? Father's Day is held every year on the third Sunday of June; this year Father's Day falls on Sunday, June 16 in the UK. Typically, fathers are showered with cards and presents on Father's Day, with some families celebrating together by going on days out. Younger children also tend to make handmade gifts for their fathers at school and extracurricular clubs, including drawings, paintings or cards. As society and family structures have changed, some people now celebrate their stepfathers on Father's Day. In recent years there have been calls for a Stepfather's Day, however no such day has been officially discussed or introduced. Father's Day falls on June 16 this year Credit: E+ The history of Father's Day The first events in recognition of fatherhood took place in the US and followed Anna Jarvis' first celebration of Mother's Day in 1908, as well as the earlier observations of Mothering Sunday in the UK. Grace Golden Clayton, from Fairmont, West Virginia, was the woman behind the first event to celebrate fathers in 1908. Just over a year prior to this event, the Monongah Mining Disaster took place in December 1907, with the explosion killing 361 men. Of these fatalities, 250 were fathers. In honour of the one thousand children who lost their fathers, Clayton encouraged her pastor, Rev. Robert Thomas Webb, to hold a service at the Williams Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church South. Clayton missed her own father terribly, after he passed away in 1896, so she chose to honour the lives lost on July 5, 1908, the closest date to his birthday. While Clayton was responsible for the first recognition of fatherhood and the paternal bond, her work didn't directly encourage the creation of Father's Day. The memorial service was never promoted outside the town of Fairmont and the service was overshadowed by the significant Independence Day celebrations held a day beforehand. Yet the idea was also picked up on in the following year, when Sonora Smart Dodd started her quest to honour fathers in the same way as mothers. Dodd, born in Arkansas in 1882, was one of six children and at the age of seven, she moved to Washington with her family. When she was 16 years old, her mother, Ellen Victoria Cheek Smart, died after giving birth to her sixth child, leaving her father, William Jackson Smart, a farmer and Civil War veteran, as a single parent. After listening to a Mother's Day sermon at the Central Methodist Episcopal Church in 1909, Dodd felt that fathers deserved equal recognition. With the local YMCA and the Ministerial Association of Spokane, Dodd began a campaign to have the day officially recognised. The first such 'Father's Day' was held at the YMCA in Spokane on June 19, 1910, with a number of towns and cities across America later following suit. Support for Father's Day quickly increased throughout the US and in 1924 President Calvin Coolidge pressured state governments to mark the celebration. President Lyndon Johnson issued the first presidential proclamation honouring fathers in 1966, making the third Sunday in June Father's Day. Six years later President Richard Nixon signed it into law, establishing the day as a national holiday – though in the UK it does not enjoy this status. The move came after a campaign by a number of public figures, including Senator Margaret Chase Smith, who in 1957 wrote to Congress: "Either we honour both our parents, mother and father, or let us desist from honouring either one. "But to single out just one of our two parents and omit the other is the most grievous insult imaginable." Dodd's message later spread to other countries across the globe and it is thought that Britain began celebrating Father's Day after World War II. Today, the celebration of fathers has become an important commercial event for high street shops and online retailers, with promotions for the best gifts and cards appearing in the build up to the day each year. Father's Day around the world While in the UK fathers can expect, at best, breakfast in bed and handmade card and, at worst, the day to be completely ignored, elsewhere the festival is done a little differently. In Germany, Father's Day is called Vatertag with it also being referred to as Männertag, which means men's day. The celebration falls on the Thursday 40 days after Easter. In certain regions it is traditional for groups of men to go into the woods with a wagon of beer, wines and meats. Heavy drinking is common and, according to official statistics, traffic-related accidents spike on this day. In Australia, Father's Day falls on the first Sunday of September, which is their first Sunday of Spring, while in Croatia, they observe Roman Catholic tradition and celebrate fathers on March 19, Saint Joseph's Day. In China, Father's Day used to be celebrated on August 8 as the Chinese for eight is "ba", while a colloquial word for father is "ba-ba" – so the eighth day of the eighth month sounds similar to "daddy". The day has since been moved to the third Sunday of June, in line with the UK and US. In France, the day was introduced in 1949 for commercial reasons by lighter manufacturer Flaminaire. Inspired by the US' day of celebration, they created a new advert with the slogan 'Nos papas nous l'ont dit, pour la fête des pères, ils désirent tous un Flaminaire' ('Our fathers told us, for father's day, they all want a Flaminaire'). Three years later an official decree was made to recognise the day. Most countries celebrate Father's Day on the third Sunday in June including the UK, USA, Mexico, Ireland, France, Greece, China and Japan. However not all countries celebrate it then. In Brazil, Father's Day falls on the second Sunday of August and this day was chosen in honour of Saint Joachim, the patron saint of fathers. According to Catholic, Anglican and Orthodox traditions, Joachim was the father of Mary, the mother of Jesus. The ultimate films on fatherhood Father's Day tales and traditions Some pagans suggest that Father's Day is closely linked to the Pagan Sun worship, because the sun is thought to be the father of the universe and the celebration of dads falls closely to the summer solstice. Roses are the official flower of Father's Day, with people previously wearing them to church on this date. While this tradition is rarely seen today, sons and daughters used to wear either a red rose in admiration of a living father or a white rose in memory of a deceased father. Sonora Smart Dodd, the founder of Father's Day, selected this flower and it is said that during the early celebrations, she handed out roses to home-bound fathers, while on a horse-drawn carriage ride around the city. Father's Day gifts and presents From cutesy cards, socks and ties to luxurious watches and fantastic car experiences, Britons present their paternal figures with an array of unique gifts on Father's Day. But, demand for the perfect Father's Day present has led to the increasing commercialisation of the day, with retailers competing to offer the best gifts and consumers heading to their high street shops and online retailers. According to MuchNeeded, Father's Day is a popular shopping day in both the UK and US, with 75 per cent of men expected to celebrate the occasion this year. While Britons and Americans spend a significant amount on Father's Day each year, on average it only accounts for half the spending around Mother's Day. Is it Father's Day, Fathers' Day or Fathers Day? Ah, the age old question. The answer? Many say Father's Day is the correct version. Mother's Day (which has the apostrophe before the 's') set the precedent while Father's Day was still gaining popularity. Anna Jarvis trademarked the term 'Mother's Day' – with the apostrophe before the 's' – in 1912, saying the word should 'be a singular possessive, for each family to honour its own mother, not a plural possessive commemorating all mothers in the world'. President Woodrow Wilson used this spelling when he formalised Mother's Day in 1914; this means the correct version of the word is spelled with the apostrophe before the 's'. Father's Day has followed suit, with cards on both sides of the pond including the apostrophe in the same place. |
Posted: 06 Jun 2019 06:43 AM PDT |
The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Posted: 06 Jun 2019 01:13 PM PDT |
New York police commissioner apologizes for Stonewall raid in 1969 Posted: 06 Jun 2019 11:29 AM PDT The New York Police Department on Thursday apologized for the first time for the raid on the Stonewall Inn gay bar 50 years ago and anti-gay laws of the time that gave rise to the modern LGBT rights movement, describing them as discriminatory and oppressive. Gay rights advocates welcomed the apology, which they had sought from the NYPD for years. |
Posted: 06 Jun 2019 09:47 AM PDT |
Norway mediation effort in Venezuela's crisis slows Posted: 07 Jun 2019 03:33 PM PDT Venezuelan leader Juan Guaidó said Friday that the opposition's demand for presidential elections is not negotiable, slowing mediation efforts by Norway aimed at resolving Venezuela's political crisis. "A new meeting isn't planned at the moment, we can get what we've proposed on the agenda" Guaidó said at an event in the central city of Valencia, dismissing earlier comments from Russia's foreign ministry that a third round of exploratory talks with representatives of Nicolás Maduro would take place next week. |
West Point incident: ‘Major emergency response’ to deadly accident at training camp Posted: 06 Jun 2019 07:26 AM PDT At least one West Point cadet has died and multiple others were injured after a vehicle overturned at the military academy's summer training camp, according to reports. Officials announced a "major emergency response" was underway near the prestigious military academy in New York after the tactical vehicle overturned at approximately 6:45 am local time. The light medium tactical vehicle rolled during a training exercise on a dirt road, said Christopher Ophardt, an Army lieutenant colonel. The extent of injuries and other details were not immediately clear. The cadets and two soldiers involved in the incident were sent to local hospitals, according to reports. The military academy first provided alerts of the incident on Twitter, saying there was "an accident in the vicinity the Camp Natural Bridge training site."The military facilities are reportedly used throughout the summers for "vigorous military training" in things like "advanced individual soldier skills."According to a statement on the West Point website, ""Training is conducted in combined arms operations, introducing the cadets to the combat, combat support and combat service support branches of the US."State troopers and other officials were headed to the scene of the incident as reports indicated nearly two dozen cadets were involved.NBC New York's helicopter flying above the scene spotted the vehicle in thick brush, "its undercarriage and wheels facing the sky." West Point is located nearly 60 miles outside of New York City on the Hudson River. |
The German killer nurse who took himself for God Posted: 06 Jun 2019 04:41 AM PDT The man believed to be post-war Germany's worst serial killer was known to colleagues as a "nice guy" who did little to arouse suspicion until well into his murder spree. A court in the northern city of Oldenburg sentenced Niels Hoegel, 42, a heavy-set, second-generation caregiver, to life for murdering 85 patients. Hoegel has admitted to injecting patients with drugs that cause heart failure or circulatory collapse so he could then try to revive them and, when successful, shine as a saviour before his medical peers and superiors. |
Earthquake, flood, hurricane: Google Maps adds tools to help you navigate a crisis Posted: 06 Jun 2019 10:18 AM PDT |
Facebook to cut off Huawei to comply with US sanctions Posted: 07 Jun 2019 12:59 PM PDT Facebook said Friday it would cut off Huawei from its popular social networking apps to comply with US sanctions, further isolating the Chinese tech giant considered a national security threat by Washington. The social media giant said it took the step after President Donald Trump's order barring Huawei from US technology exports over concerns that it works with Chinese intelligence. The California company said people with existing Huawei smartphones with Facebook apps will continue to be able to use and download app updates provided by Facebook. |
UPDATE 1-Ford expected to announce closure of Welsh engine factory- source Posted: 06 Jun 2019 12:55 AM PDT Ford is expected to announce on Thursday that it is closing its engine facility in Wales, a source told Reuters, putting at risk 1,700 jobs in what would be the latest blow to Britain's car industry. Ford is making cuts in several markets to turn around loss-making operations but has also repeatedly warned the British government that it needs free trade to be maintained with the European Union after Brexit, the terms of which remain unclear. Its Bridgend plant built around 20 percent of Britain's 2.7 million automotive engines last year but a contract to supply Jaguar Land Rover ends in 2020 leaving a run of its own Dragon petrol engines which are sent abroad to be fitted into vehicles. |
Posted: 06 Jun 2019 03:17 PM PDT Theresa May to veterans: 'The only thing I can say - thank you' Donald Trump whips up veterans in rousing speech Ceremony takes place at Arromanches in Normandy The definitive story of D-Day - by those who lived to tell the tale D-Day heroes set sail for Normandy on MV Boudicca in a blaze of glory Queen pays tribute to 'resilience of wartime generation - my generation' It was a celebration fit for heroes. The Prince of Wales poignantly said Thursday was "probably the last chance to pay everlasting respect" to the "remarkable" D-Day veterans who were commemorating the 75th anniversary of the landings in northern France. They came in their hundreds - by boat and even by parachute. They came to pay their respects to their fallen brothers. Britain's future King took part in a number of events around Normandy to mark the anniversary, and said: "I remember the last time we were there, I will never forget the determination that they still exude by being there. Being at the cemeteries and being at the commemorations. "They always remember their comrades and their friends and the people they had to leave behind. This country lost countless special people and we owe it to them and their families to go on commemorating this." Asked whether this 75th anniversary would be particularly poignant, he added: "It's probably the last chance to pay everlasting respect to these remarkable people who wanted above all to do their duty." D-Day 75 years on | Read more Earlier, Theresa May addressed the D-Day veterans at a commemoration ceremony in Ver-sur-Mer. Closing her emotionally-charged speech, she said: "Here in Normandy, the names of those British men and women who lost their lives will forever sit across The Channel from their homeland. "We'll always remember their courage and conviction. And to the veterans that are here today - I want to say the only two words I can: Thank you." The British Normandy Memorial, funded by the Normandy Memorial Trust, is being built on a hillside in Ver-sur-Mer, overlooking Gold Beach, one of the key sites for British troops during the Normandy Landings. A sculpture created by David Williams-Ellis was unveiled marking the beginning of construction for the memorial. D-Day 75th anniversary: The Portsmouth and Normandy celebrations, in pictures After the memorial inauguration, Mrs May, in one of her final official engagements as Conservative leader, joined veterans and the Prince of Wales at a cathedral service in Bayeux. The moving service saw veterans and religious leaders deliver speeches to honour those who made the "ultimate sacrifice" during the Second World War. Many veterans flocked to the town of Arromanches for a series of events, which included a fly by performed by the Red Arrows. Later, Defence Secretary Penny Mordaunt joined US Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe in laying wreaths on Juno Beach. The day began with a lone piper playing a lament on Port Winston signalling the minute the invasion began and the moment the first British soldier landed on Gold beach. Veterans then descended on the town square as part of a parade with Tobias Ellwood, the minister for Defence People and Veterans, and chief of Ministry of Defence general staff Mark Carleton-Smith among crowds. The day concluded with a fireworks show. Want the best of The Telegraph direct to your email and WhatsApp? Sign up to our free twice-daily Front Page newsletter and new audio briefings. 10:18PM Tomorrow's Telegraph front page The front page of tomorrow's Daily Telegraph: 'Only Boris can fight off Farage, poll finds' tomorrowspaperstodaypic.twitter.com/mfzR81IoWN— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) June 6, 2019 9:41PM While we wait for the fireworks You, the readers, have been sharing your memories of D-Day, and we have compiled them into this article, covering the build up to the allied push, the conflict itself, the home front, and the aftermath. It is compelling reading. 'It's a memory so clear, it's as if it were yesterday' - D-Day as told by Telegraph readers 9:20PM A touching tale from Sword Beach A six-year-old boy proudly wore his great-uncle's medals to Bayeux War Cemetery to mark 75 years since the D-Day landings. George Sayer, dressed in a suit and tie, visited the cemetery with 10 members of his family to "honour uncle George". Due to wearing the medals, he was allowed to join veterans who walked the half a mile from a service at Bayeux Cathedral to the cemetery. His great-uncle, who was also called George Sayer, was in one of the first landing craft on Sword Beach at about 7.35am on June 6, 1944. Mr Sayer planned to come to mark the anniversary at Bayeux with his family but passed away about 18 months ago, aged 93. Six-year-old George Sayer paying tribute to his great uncle, who landed on Sword Beach on D-Day Credit: Paul Grover Pat Sayer, George's Jnr's grandmother, said: "We decided to come as a family - there were 11 of us here today - to pay our respects and honour Uncle George. "Uncle George's son Kerry requested that little George wear his medals. "George was in one of the first landing craft on Sword Beach, at about 7.35am on June 6 1944. "He was in the Navy and was bringing troops over. He also spent time helping to build the Mulberry harbour at Arromanches." She added: "We took him back to Sword Beach once. It was a beautiful sunny day. I said to him, Look at the sea - how lovely and blue. "He said: 'All I can see is a red sea with arms and legs floating in it.' He didn't speak much about the war otherwise. "George says his great-uncle is his war hero. He knows all about D-Day and calls him his war hero." George's proud parents Jo, 46, and Adam Sayer, 49, from Chipping Ongar in Essex, looked on as he held hands with veteran John Quinn, 95, also known as Jack. Mr Quinn, a former Royal Marine from Lincolnshire, was awarded the Croix de Guerre with silver star and has a mention in despatches for his wartime service. He joined the Reserves in 1947 and remained on the active list until 1957. George's grandmother Mrs Sayer added: "The service was amazing. We're going to to to make going to it a yearly thing. "We just met John Quinn today. George talked to him about his great-uncle and told him that he was his war hero." Young George Sayer meets D-Day veteran John Quinn Credit: Jane Barlow / PA 8:54PM Some images from the Juno Beach commemoration Penny Mordaunt was among those to lay wreaths. R-L - US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Britain's Defence Secretary Penny Mordaunt and Dutch Defence Minister Ank Bijleveld attend an international ceremony on Juno Beach Credit: FRED TANNEAU/POOL/EPA-EFE/REX Six teenagers performed readings at the ceremony. This combination of 6 pictures shows (from Top left) A English teenager, a Canadian teenager, a Belgian teenager, a German teenager, a French teenager and a US teenager delivering a speech during an international ceremony on Juno Beach Credit: LOIC VENANCE / AFP The French and Canadian Prime Ministers embrace before the event. French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe (R) shakes hands with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Credit: FRED TANNEAU/POOL/EPA-EFE/REX 8:22PM The US President has posted his own highlight video Watch it here: DDay75thAnniversarypic.twitter.com/GIsoLML4NP— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 6, 2019 8:05PM From our reporters in Arromanches Phoebe Southworth and Steve Bird have been speaking to veterans at Arromanches. As a final mark of respect and thanks to the D-Day troops who helped free the Allies from the Nazi regime, Arromanches hosted a wreath-laying ceremony in the main square on Thursday afternoon. As bagpipes rang out, veterans stepped forward to pay tribute to the fallen by laying scores of small wreaths on a display table emblazoned with the colours of the Union flag and the French Tricolore. Arromanches provided its own wreath, which was said to be "on behalf of a grateful town and country". The Conservative MP Tobias Elwood and General the Lord Richard Dannatt, former head of the Army, also laid wreaths at the ceremony. The veterans left the service to rapturous applause and were played out by the song We'll Meet Again, as moving scenes from D-Day projected onto a huge screen. A flypast by the Red Devils sparked a marvelled sigh by the audience below, as the colours of French flag were imprinted in smoke on the sky for the finale. As veterans left the ceremony, strangers came forward to say 'thank you' and hug them. Penny Mordaunt was among those to chat to them about their experiences of D-Day. Crouched beside one veteran, she asked him what his medals were for. One little boy was so awestruck at meeting a hero of the Second World War that he didn't want to let go of the soldier's hand as he went past in a wheelchair. Bernard Kempster, 88, was among the veterans who joined the procession through the town to loud applause from the hundreds of well wishers lining the streets of Arromanches. The former corporal in the Intelligence Corps said he had been moved by the members of the public of all ages who had thanked him for his service. "Quite a lot of people have been clapping us and shaking hands with us. They have stopped me and said thank you very much. It's been a wonderful day." Veteran David Edwards enjoyed the ceremony, where he met Bev Mortley and Michelle Weeks Credit: Paul Grover 7:32PM Today's Telegraph leader column We must never forget the sacrifice of D-Day, or the cooperation that made it a triumph - The Telegraph View. We must never forget the sacrifice of D-Day, or the cooperation that made it a triumph 7:07PM Before we start... Read Robert Mendick's piece on Theresa May's speech, and the men she singled out as examples of everyday heroes. "They didn't boast. They didn't fuss. They served." Theresa May's moving tribute to the heroes of D-Day 6:56PM We are live from Civic Square for a concert starting soon French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are attending an international commemoration on Juno Beach. Follow it here. 6:37PM World leaders take to Twitter to pay their respects Theresa May, British Prime Minister It was humbling to meet veterans and hear their stories in Normandy today, after a very moving service at Bayeux Cemetery.DDay75pic.twitter.com/5XNRWT8Orl— Theresa May (@theresa_may) June 6, 2019 Justin Trudeau, from Canada 75 years ago today, 14,000 Canadians stormed Juno Beach to defend freedom, human rights, & democracy. On DDay75, we remember those who fought and gave their lives during the Second World War. https://t.co/uPV60Nv1gOpic.twitter.com/z7xP1gHIBV— Justin Trudeau (@JustinTrudeau) June 6, 2019 Emmanuel Macron, speaking directly to the veterans To you, veterans. pic.twitter.com/JpTX8aWJKY— Emmanuel Macron (@EmmanuelMacron) June 6, 2019 American President Donald Trump Today, we remember those who fell, and we honor all who fought, here in Normandy. They won back this ground for civilization. To more than 170 Veterans of the Second World War who join us today: You are among the very greatest Americans who will ever live! DDay75thAnniversarypic.twitter.com/n0uIVHlkRL— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 6, 2019 6:21PM The Telegraph speaks to American veterans Henry Samuel, in Colleville-sur-Mer has been speaking with American veterans. He writes: American D-Day veteran Jack Ewald, 94, from Suffolk Virginia gazed at the calm sea and sunlit Omaha beach below, which he said could not be more different than the atrocious conditions that faced Allied troops that day. "It's pristine now. It was so bad and pitiful that day. Now it's so beautiful," said, in full view of the beach he scaled under German machine gun fire 75 years ago. Mr Ewald came back in 2010 and he said he wouldn't have missed the 75th anniversary for the world. "It's given me more energy than I've had in a decade," he said. Some 4,400 Allied troops died on the first day of the landings, more than half at Omaha beach. Me Ewald was in the 115th infantry regiment. "I'm no hero, just a plain old guy like most of us," he said beside his granddaughter Megan Forbes, 34. "We didn't do anything special. We all protected each other. We knew we had to do it and we did it. There weren't no hero business about it." PFC Warren Goss, 94, landed with the first wave of soldiers on nearby Utah beach after a gruelling training programme in England and three days at sea. "Most people were seasick. We could hardly see land. The Germans could see us but we couldn't see them. We didn't know when a Higgins boat was hit it would sink and guys would drown, that we would be machine-gunned as soon as we opened up the front gate and the ramp," he recalled. "I jumped off the side. I had water up to my chest and had to bounce in, bounce in. My job was to lay down covering fire for the engineers so they could clear that beach. They blew up the beach wall and did a good job. Our job was to keep the Germans pinned down so they could work. He remained in Normandy for a month before fighting all the way over the eastern French border to Saarbrücken in Germany. The scene in Colleville-sur-Mer as soldiers walk on the beach during the D-Day celebrations Credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images 6:03PM Still to come this evening There is still plenty to look forward to tonight, with celebrations set to continue long into the evening. All times BST. 7pm - Concert in civic square 7.14pm - Low water 10pm - Fireworks display 5:38PM The Telegraph, 75 years ago We've dipped into the archives and found the Telegraph's front page from June 6, 1944. Here is is, along with today's front. Telegraph - June 6, 1944 There is an incredible amount of detail in this 4am edition of the paper. Well worth reading properly. The Telegraph, June 6, 1944 5:23PM 94-year-old delighted to take part Len Fox, the veteran who sang part of We'll Meet Again during the remembrance service in Arromanches, said it was a "delight" to take part. The 94-year-old, who lives in Norwich, landed in the town on D-Day with the 53rd Welsh Division as a dispatch rider. He said: "Being here for the anniversary is my way of paying back a little to my comrades who didn't make it. "I wasn't a hero, I was a frightened 19-year-old. They were the brave heroes. "I think it has been a wonderful day and I loved signing in the service - it was very moving." Mr Fox also laid a wreath with his grand-daughter Sally Brooks. Len Fox, second from the left, sang part of We'll Meet Again at the Arromanches service Credit: Jonathan Brady/PA 5:09PM Meanwhile in Russia Georgina Stubbs, a Press Association reporter in St Petersburg, writes: Vladimir Putin has brushed off his lack of an invite to the commemorations marking the 75th anniversary of D-Day, saying he has "a lot business to do" in Russia. Speaking in St Petersburg on Thursday as world leaders gathered in Normandy to mark the occasion, Mr Putin said: "We do not invite everyone to every event, so why should I be necessarily invited somewhere? "Am I a person to be present at every event? I have a lot business to do here in Russia. "But if we are imagining conspiracy theories, maybe western leaders wanted to have their own chit chat before having some contact with us. "That doesn't really matter. What matters is the truth about the history and about this horrible tragedy that happened to humanity during the Second World War. "This is something we should always remember." Just five years ago Mr Putin attended the 70th D-Day anniversary commemorations but was notably absent from the events in Portsmouth on Wednesday and Normandy on Thursday. Speaking to the heads of international news agencies on the margins of the St Petersburg International Economic Forum, the Russian president said tributes must be paid to the heroes of the resistance in Germany and Europe, and to the young men who died on D-Day. Of those who crossed the English Channel on June 6 to storm the five French beaches, he added that they were the "real, true heroes", and this is "something we should remember". Russia was not involved in the D-Day campaign but was crucial in defeating the Nazis. Touching on this, Mr Putin drew attention to how the Allied invasion was the "second front", and emphasised that the first front was formed by the Russians. Valdimir Putin has been speaking about D-Day in St Petersburg today Credit: Alexei Nikolsky\\\TASS 4:58PM Macron now presenting green commando berets to young soldiers With the help of a veteran, Leon Gautier, one of three surviving French commandos from the Sword Beach push. Macron and Gautier arm in arm Credit: BBC Macron presents a young commando with his green beret Credit: BBC The Commando and Gautier shake hands and have a short conversation Credit: BBC 4:34PM Macron takes to the stage "June 6, D-Day. A day when history shifted. One of those dates when the destiny of France, Europe and the world was at stake. No need to tell you the year. 6th June was the sunset of Nazism. "Today, before us, there is an open horizon, clear peace. 75 years ago at the crack of dawn there were squadrons, the greatest fleet ever seem. The sands of the pearl beaches are luminous today but 75 years ago they were red with the blood of men. "Today, coming together in brotherhood, we pay homage. "Against all odds they made progress. After hours and hours of endless combat silence followed. "On the beaches of Sword, Juno, Omaha everyone was brothers in arms. In the following days, everything had to be defended and it all relied on a thread of courage. "France knows all that it owes to the soldiers of the landings. On June 6th 3,000 lost their lives. To those heroes thanks to whom we live freely, we realise their glory. "When the battle of Normandy was over, 21 commanders had given their lives. "All knew the risk of their mission. All accepted to carry it out. "Today, on this beach which is at the heart of the epic story, France bows for the lost veterans of D-Day. "Let us continue to embrace the freedom of spirit and courage. Long live the republic and long live France." French President Emmanuel Macron inspects troops in Normandy Credit: Damien MEYER / AFP 4:23PM President Macron in Colleville-Montgomery The French leader is at a service by Sword Beach, in Colleville-Montgomery. Watch it live here. 4:15PM Macron's apparent swipe at Trump The Telegraph's Henry Samuel, in Colleville-sur-Merhas been analysing Emmanuel Macron's speech, and the message he sent to US president Donald Trump. He writes: Emmanuel Macron has urged Donald Trump to stand up for "true" American values by backing multilateral institutions, including the EU, which he said symbolised the spirit of D-Day. "We must never stop working for the alliance of the free world," said Mr Macron. "That is what the US did by creating the UN then Nato. That is what the leaders of this continent did by creating the EU." This was, he said "the lesson of Colleville-sur-Mer". In an apparent swipe at Mr Trump's unilateralist "America first" policies, Mr Macron said: "American is never as great as when it fights for the freedom of others, when it remains faithful to the universal values of its founding fathers." D-Day was won because forces from Britain, Canada, the United States as well as the French resistance came together in the name of freedom, he added. "We must prove ourselves worthy of this heritage of peace that we have been bequeathed," said Mr Macron. He said being worthy of this "promise of Normandy" meant "never forgetting that free peoples can overcome all the challenges when they unite". This was at the "heart of the true United States," he said. Despite the apparent French barbs, the body language between the two leaders at Colleville was warm. Taking the podium, Mr Trump hailed the "unbreakable bond" between the US and France as he paid tribute to the D-Day veterans present. "You are among the very greatest Americans who will ever live," he told the huge crowd who frequently gave the veterans a standing ovation. "You are the pride of our nation, you are the glory of our republic and we thank you from the bottom of our hearts." "Today American embraces the French people and thanks you for honouring our beloved dead." Mr Trump conceded his relationship with Mr Macron has always been smooth but said: "It's been good sometimes and sometimes it hasn't been, but right now it's outstanding. So the relationship that we've had together has been really terrific and I appreciate it very much." US President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron shake hands this afternoon Credit: Ludovic MARIN / POOL / AFP 4:05PM The service draws to a close The Royal Air Force Battle of Britain Memorial Flight (BBMF) complete three flypasts, greeted each time to applause from the crowd below. Steve Bird, who is there, writes: The Conservative MP Tobias Elwood and General the Lord Richard Dannatt, former head of the Army, were among the VIP guests at the commemoration service in Arromanches. An RAF DC-3 Dakota and Spitfire made three raucous fly pasts to rapturous applause from the audience. The service ended with The Orange Liberation Band parading through the street. The veteran carrying regimental colours, including those of the Gloucestershire Regiment, Royal Signal Association and the Normandy Veterans Association, marched through the street to yet more applause. A pipe and drum band played Scotland the Brave leading another procession of veterans through the streets ended the afternoon's events. In around 15 minutes, we are expecting a parachute display by UK Red Devils and US Golden Knights. Planes fly over the service in Arromanches Credit: BBC 3:57PM A charming story from Arromanches Our Senior Reporter Steve Bird is in Arromanches and has met a 94-year-old veteran with a fascinating story. William Blount is one of the few D-Day veterans who can say he never ever set foot on the beaches of Normandy 75 years ago. However, the 94-year-old Royal Marine played a pivotal role in decimating the German war machine targeting British, Canadian and America troops storming the beaches. For exactly 100 days, the gunner loaded hundreds of shells into the 4.7 calibre gun aboard a Landing Craft Gun (LCG) vessel anchored just off Juno beach. "I never set foot ashore. Everyday I was putting shells into that gun, then the cordite before firing ashore," the former gunner said sat in his wheelchair in Arromanches this afternoon. He struggled to hear the heartfelt thanks from the many people queuing up in the Normandy town to ask for his autograph or wanting to shake him by the hand. "I've suffered from tinnitus ever since because of the sound of that gun firing. It made a lot of noise," he added. "But, it was worth it. We fired nearly every day at Caen. Eventually a Forward Observation Officer ashore told us, 'You just hit the Germa headquarters. Well done. Keep it up.' So we did." For years, Mr Blount kept his experiences aboard that vessel largely to himself. But, after his wife, Hazel, died 13 years ago aged 83, he began to open up about the reality of war to his son Keith, 64, and daughter, Jan, 67. "I watched two torpedoes go by our 180ft LCG," he said, posing for another photograph with a well wisher in the Normandy town. "There was nothing we could do. It was horrendous. We just had to watch and wait as it passed by." Mr Blount, from near Woking in Surrey, has returned now more than 13 times to the beaches he had only first seen through binoculars. His daughter, Jan Sturge, said: "Coming here is therapy for him. He never really used to open about it. But, that changed after mum died. He comes here to remember and show respect for the fallen." Mr Blount, who plans to live to 100 and return again to Arromanches, added: "It's great being here. The French are very good towards us veterans. I've got to know quite a few of them here. They always say it's nice to see me here." He recalled how when they eventually sailed the LCG back to Portsmouth it needed its gun replacing because it had become worn out during the onslaught. "We had fired that gun so much at Caen that when we returned to Portsmouth they asked, 'What the hell have you been doing with it?' We told them we did a good job with it at targeting the Germans." William Blount, centre, flanked by Gary and Jan Sturge Credit: Eddie Mulholland 3:49PM The service continues with the national anthems 'God Save the Queen' rings out, followed by a rousing operatic 'La Marseillaise' and a round of applause. There is now a blessing and a rendition of 'The White Cliffs of Dover'. Veterans and their families in Arromanches Credit: Jane Barlow/PA 3:42PM They now sing 'Eternal Father, Strong to Save The hymn written by William Whiting in 1860 tells of the dangers of the sea, and is often associated with the Navy, and is evoking strong emotions among those gathered in Arromanches. The lyrics are: 'Eternal Father, strong to save, Whose arm does bind the restless wave, Who bids the mighty ocean deep Its own appointed limits keep; O hear us when we cry to Thee For those in peril on the sea. 'O Savior, whose almighty word, The winds and waves submissive heard, Who walked upon the foaming deep, And calm amid the rage did sleep; O hear us when we cry to Thee For those in peril on the sea. 'O Holy Spirit, who did brood Upon the waters dark and rude, And bid their angry tumult cease, And give for wild confusion peace; O hear us when we cry to Thee For those in peril on the sea. 'O Trinity of love and pow'r, Your children shield in danger's hour; From rock and tempest, fire, and foe, Protect them where-so-e'er they go; Thus, evermore shall rise to Thee Glad hymns of praise from land and sea.' Veterans singing 'Eternal Father Strong to Save' Credit: BBC 3:33PM Watch the service live with The Telegraph We have a live stream here... 3:29PM Live from the service A minute's silence has taken place, and a bugler has played the last post. Now veterans are laying wreaths at the Arromanches service. Among the veterans in Arromanches is 93-year-old Harry Billinge, from St Austell in Cornwall. He is on a final pilgrimage to Normandy to see how thousands of pounds he raised is helping the construction of a national memorial honouring his fallen comrades. He handed over more than £10,000 to the Normandy Memorial Trust after relentlessly collecting donations in his local high street and Arromanches. As an 18-year-old Royal Engineer, he landed on Gold Beach at 6.30am on June 6 1944 as part of the first wave of troops. Mr Billinge said this was his "swansong" and he did not think he would return again, but he was eager to see the first foundation stones of the monument laid on Thursday morning before the service in Arromanches. Veterans lay wreaths at a sunny Arromanches Credit: BBC 3:09PM Prince Charles chats to veteran who met his own grandfather - George VI The Prince of Wales has chatted to D-Day veterans in France, including one who met his own grandfather, George VI. Alfred Hicks, an RAF sergeant during the Second World War, met Charles after the memorial ceremony marking the 75th anniversary of D-Day at the Commonwealth War Graves cemetery on Thursday. Mr Hicks was working with the Armed Forces Filming Unit when he was sent to document the Normandy invasion on June 6 1944. In the lead-up to the landings, the 94-year-old filmed the king inspecting preparations in Portsmouth. He said: "The prince said I got a chance he never got, I got to meet his grandfather," and described the king as "a lovely man, a really nice man". Prince Charles Credit: REX Mr Hicks, who landed at Sword Beach on the first day of the campaign, said: "I wanted to get off at the beach and film the others coming in, but they then took us to the front line, and then we had to walk all the way back, it took us 12 hours." Charles also met 93-year-old Gerard Robertson, who had an unusual experience when he arrived on Juno Beach aged 18. He trained with the Durham Light Infantry, but got separated from his colleagues after they landed on the beach on D-Day. Mr Robertson said: "We got off the boat and I couldn't find the company, and I never did find them. We ended up going up the beach with the Canadians. "The following morning, after we found a ditch to stay in overnight, we found another company, the Engineers." Mr Robertson ended up sticking with the Engineers for the rest of his military career, and joked: "The only reason I ended up with the Engineers was because I could fix a bicycle chain!" 2:41PM Arromanches square concert - what is coming up? British veterans will descend into the square in Arromanches for a series of informal events hosted by the local authority where there will be music from the Central Band of the Royal Air Force. The Band of the RAF Regiment and the Pipes and Drums of 19 Regiment Royal Artillery will provide support during the celebration events involving a Red Arrows flypast and Red Devils parachute display. Events in Arromanches will conclude with a firework display at 11.30pm. Here is the rundown of what to expect (all local times): 3.15pm - Veterans take their seats 3.20pm - Parade Steps Off into the square 3.45pm - Speech from a VIP veteran 4pm - Arromanches Mayor speech followed by exhortation by a Normandy veteran and a minute's silence 4.15pm - Wreath laying. 4.25pm - Service ends 4.50pm - Band of the Royal Air Force concert 5pm - The Royal Air Force Battle of Britain Memorial Flight (BBMF) complete three flypasts 5.20pm - Parachute display by UK Red Devils and US Golden Knights 5.35pm - Finale by RAF Regiment Band to include Vera Lynn – We'll Meet Again, The White Cliffs of Dover and Auld Lang Syne 5.50pm - Red Arrows flyby 8pm - Concert in civic square 8.14pm - Low water 11pm - Fireworks display 2:22PM Ceremony starts at Arromanches square Crowds of visitors have gathered in the square at Arromanches overlooking the beach for a service of remembrance. During the commemoration, wreaths will be laid by British veterans. The veterans were applauded by the crowd as they arrived. 2:09PM MP calls for giant forest spanning UK to honour D-Day An MP has called for a giant new forest to be "expanded across the United Kingdom" as a tribute to people who fought and died "for the freedom of this country". As the world marks the 75th anniversary of the D Day landings, Labour's Barry Sheerman (Huddersfield) said MPs should "think profoundly" about the young men and women who fought and lost their lives in the Second World War. He said a planned new forest in the North of England should be extended across the entire country. Barry Sheerman Credit: Chris McAndrew Speaking in the House of Commons, Mr Sheerman said: "As a fitting tribute, can we actually seriously look at something that I am passionate about, and that is the growth of trees to remember people, to remember their contribution? "There is going to be a new Northern Forest stretching all the way from Hull to Liverpool, 50 million trees. "Could we expand that across the United Kingdom as a real tribute to those people who fought for us in the war, many of whom died fighting for the freedom of this country?" Commons Leader Mel Stride replied: "We should seek whatever means we can to pay tribute to those who fought on our behalf in the Second World War. "You have referenced the planting of trees and I remember, as a young boy actually, Plant A Tree In '73, I think is what we were urged to do way back then. "I assume there are forests of these giant trees here today as a consequence of that particular initiative. "You referred to the great Northern Forest, which I think is an excellent and an imaginative approach." Mr Stride advised Mr Sheerman to bring the matter up at environment questions, which he said would be an "excellent opportunity" to bring up the idea with ministers. 1:39PM Meghan and Harry's D-Day tribute The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have posted their own tribute to the D-Day veterans. On their official Instagram account, they took an excerpt from Prince Harry's speech to the Chelsea pensioners earlier today. It said: "Don't ever underestimate the joy that you bring to everyone you meet. You represent something really quite special, you are special, and society will always recognise that. "That is an important part of your legacy....It's a community that focuses on supporting each other with kindness, respect and compassion, as well as reaching out to serve the wider community.... "On this 75th Anniversary of D-Day, I can comfortably speak for everyone when I say we are honoured to be in the presence of six Normandy Landing veterans." View this post on Instagram Today The Duke of Sussex visited the Royal Hospital Chelsea for the Founder's Day Parade, an annual event celebrating the founding of the veterans hospital in 1681 by King Charles II. The Founder's Day Parade is a day to celebrate 'The Chelsea Pensioners', the name for those veterans who live there, and an important reminder of the great debt we owe all whom have served their nation. More than 300 years on from its founding, @royalhospitalchelsea continues to provide exceptional care to soldiers in retirement. Today's visit also coincides with the 75th anniversary of D-Day. It was especially poignant for The Duke, who served in the British Army for ten years, to visit with and honour six veterans of the Normandy Landing living at the hospital. In his speech today His Royal Highness shared these words with the Chelsea Pensioners: Don't ever underestimate the joy that you bring to everyone you meet. You represent something really quite special, you are special, and society will always recognise that. That is an important part of your legacy....It's a community that focuses on supporting each other with kindness, respect and compassion, as well as reaching out to serve the wider community....On this 75th Anniversary of D-Day, I can comfortably speak for everyone when I say we are honoured to be in the presence of six Normandy Landing veterans. Over 300 British Army Veterans live @royalhospitalchelsea - veterans who fought in the Second World War, and other conflicts including Korea, Malaya, Borneo, Northern Ireland, South Atlantic and the first Gulf War. Her Majesty The Queen, The Prince of Wales, The Duke of Cambridge and other members of The Royal Family have joined events in the UK and France to commemorate the 75th anniversary of D-Day. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are proud to support serving and former members of the Armed Forces. Positive communities and the @royalhospitalchelsea model of care, is critical to help veterans both young and old to maintain positive mental health and wellbeing. Thank you for your service, and for the sacrifices you and your families have made. DDay75 A post shared by The Duke and Duchess of Sussex (@sussexroyal) on Jun 6, 2019 at 5:21am PDT 1:15PM Next stop - Arromanches Phoebe Southworth is in Arromanches for The Telegraph. This afternoon it will host a commemorative ceremony overlooking Gold Beach. It will feature music from the Central Band of the Royal Air Forces. There has been activity in the Normandy commune all day, and as the tide came in, so did an amphibious US military vehicle called The Flying Duckman, which parked up in the harbour with its Stars and Stripes flag swaying in the the breeze. The Somme Battlefield Pipe Band also filed through the centre of Arromanches wearing kilts playing traditional Scottish and Irish airs. Formed in 1989, the band aims to promote the music and history of the Scottish soldiers and their Regiments during their time in Northern France and the Somme Area in 1914/1918 and during the second World War. D-Day veteran Len Cox, of the 56th Brigade, 2nd Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment, is one of the poster boys of the D-Day anniversary and his war-time portrait appears on WWII heroes posters around Arromanches. Visitors walk in a street of Arromanches in Normandy Credit: AFP A fanatical singer and dancer, he gave an impromptu performance of some of his favourite songs to crowds vying for their pictures of him to be signed with his autograph following a military ceremony. He told The Telegraph: "In the early days I used to jitterbug. Have you ever heard of the move 'necking the chicken'? It's when the girl straddles the man with both legs and you bob your heads on either side of each other. "Nowadays I couldn't get down on my knees like I used to or I'd probably never get up!" He added: "Today is important because it's the 75th anniversary, which is very special. If it hasn't been for those men then we wouldn't be standing here today." 12:53PM 'My generation saved the world. And I won't forget any of them' This is Harry Billinge. He won't accept it, but he is a D-Day war hero. He told BBC Breakfast his story. Disclaimer: It might make you cry. "A mate of mine died in my arms." This is what happened to Harry on D-Day ������ pic.twitter.com/hN1hE7IVte— BBC Breakfast (@BBCBreakfast) June 6, 2019 12:51PM D-Day veteran weeps as he remembers fallen comrades Second World War veteran Jimmy Ockendon wept as he remembered those who lost their lives on D-Day during an emotional memorial service in Portsmouth. The 97-year-old wiped away tears during the commemoration at the Southsea D-Day Stone, which was attended by thousands of members of the public who paid their respects during a minute's silence. Royal British Legion standard bearers along with the Band of Her Majesty's Royal Marines and a platoon of Royal Marines Cadets escorted veterans as they marched along the seafront to reach the memorial stone. The service was conducted by Canon Bob White and featured the Portsmouth Cathedral Choir. D-Day veteran Jimmy Ockendon wipes away tears during service Credit: Andrew Matthews/PA Mr Ockendon said: "It was very emotional, the main person I was thinking of was my uncle who went on the Hood, his wife had died just beforehand and he left two young children and my father and mother adopted them. "I was also thinking of my father." As well as wearing his own service medals, Mr Ockendon, from Portsmouth, donned those of his father, Sergeant James Ockendon, who was awarded the Belgian Croix de Guerre and the Victoria Cross for his role in the First World War. Mr Ockendon, who was serving at the time of D-Day but not directly involved in the operation, said: "We were just off France and I heard on the Tannoy what was happening. "We didn't worry much in those days, we just got on with the job." Jimmy Ockendon lays a wreath at the D-Day stone in Southsea Credit: Andrew Matthews/PA Mr Ockendon, who attended with his wife Joyce, 84, attended the service after earlier this week naming a train The D-Day Story Portsmouth for South Western Railway in recognition of the 75th anniversary. The service was also attended by Portsmouth South Labour MP Stephen Morgan, whose grandfather James Kaminski landed on Juno Beach as part of the Normandy operation at the age of 17 while serving in the Royal Army Service Corps. Mr Morgan said: "He lied about his age and joined the Army four months early and his first major operation was landing on the beach. "One of my biggest regrets is not asking him enough about his story but he was quite reluctant because it was such a traumatic experience." He added: "Yesterday we saw Portsmouth can do these events brilliantly at an international level, with Her Majesty the Queen and 15 heads of state in our city, and today, yet again, we have demonstrated we can do these events locally. "This shows to me Portsmouth is a place for reflection, recollection and remembrance." 12:43PM Prince William tribute to those who made 'ultimate sacrifice' The Duke of Cambridge this morning paid tribute to the fallen at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire, spending time with veterans after pledging to remember "all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice", writes our Royal Correspondent Hannah Furness. As the Duke bent down on one knee to better hear elderly servicemen, Royal Navy veteran Victor Brunt, 94, joked: "I thought it was us who had to go on bended knee to you." Duke of Cambridge talks to veterans Credit: Peter Byrne/PA Prince William told him: "Not you guys. It's not a problem." John "Jack" Cannane, 95, of the Royal Electrical Engineers, told the Prince that he was under constant fire as he and his team tried to clear the stranded vehicles and landing craft so that the each wave could land. "It was carnage. But I was a young man, only 20 and at that age you don't really have any fear. Except of course the shock of seeing the bodies of young men on the beaches or floating in the water. "But you just keep thinking to yourself that it isn't going to be you. That's the only way you survive I think," he said. Earlier this morning, a solemn Duke paid tribute to the D-Day fallen by reading aloud the words of his great grandfather King George VI. His reading said: "Four years ago our nation and empire stood alone against an overwhelming enemy, with our backs to the wall. Now once more a supreme test has to be faced. "This time the challenge is not to fight to survive but to fight to win the final victory for the good cause. "At this historic moment surely not one of us is too busy, too young, or too old to play a part in a nation-wide, perchance a world-wide vigil of prayer as the great crusade sets forth." Prince William lays a wreath in the pouring rain Credit: Anthony Devlin/AFP The Duke, a former serving Army captain and RAF helicopter pilot, joined more than 20 D-Day veterans, and members of the public, at the service in Heroes' Square then laid a wreath at the Normandy Campaign Memorial. The service of Remembrance has been organised as part of The Royal British Legion's commemorative programme for D-Day 75, and will be led by the Honorary Arboretum Chaplains. Laying a wreath of poppies in the pouring rain, he left a message reading: "In memory of all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice. We will remember them. William." 12:31PM Duke of Sussex's moving speech to Chelsea pensioners Prince Harry, who is spending the morning with six D-Day veterans at the Royal Chelsea Hospital has delivered a speech in which he pays tributes both to their service and their everlasting sense of fun, Royal Correspondent Hannah Furness writes. Sharing his amusement at their "late night cricket in the hallways" and "synchronised buggy drills", he said: "I stand here before you to not only acknowledge the incredible contribution you have made to this nation but to acknowledge that you, my friends, are also seriously good fun to be around! "You will always stand out in your scarlet coats and white gloves, but to me, whether I see you at Westminster Abbey, the Chelsea Flower Show, Twickenham Stadium, or the pub, I notice that you are always smiling. "Don't ever underestimate the joy that you bring to everyone you meet. You represent something really quite special, you are special, and society will always recognise that. That is an important part of your legacy. "Here, I see a community that continues to value the importance of teamwork which military service in particular can teach you. "It's a community that focuses on supporting each other with kindness, respect and compassion, as well as reaching out to serve the wider community." The Duke of Sussex salutes the Chelsea pensioners Credit: Aaron Chown/Pa Marking the significance of today's anniversary, he said: "On this 75th Anniversary of D-Day, I can comfortably speak for everyone when I say we are honoured to be in the presence of six Normandy Landing veterans. "To all who are on parade today, I can only say that you are a constant reminder of the great debt we owe those who have served this nation. "You embody the fitting home that awaits them in the peace and tranquillity of the Royal Hospital, should they want it. "But more widely, wherever you are, your presence is a symbol of the sacrifices that have been made by all veterans to sustain the freedoms and democracy we value so deeply today. "Ladies and Gentleman, could I ask that those who are able to, please stand in recognition of our veterans. We stand together and remember those who have sacrificed their lives for our freedom. "And for you here today, who have served us so greatly and with such honour, I congratulate you on the smartness of your turnout and the steadiness of your bearing. I thank you for inviting me here today and I wish you all the health and happiness you so richly deserve." 12:27PM Commemorations continue in Britain A number of events are continuing in Britain away from the poignancy of northern France. Veterans are still milling around at Bayeux cemetery, paying their respects to those fellow comrades who were killed in battle. In London, the six inch guns aboard HMS Belfast were fired on the Thames to mark the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings. The six inch guns on board HMS Belfast in London are fired to mark the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings Credit: Yui Mok/PA 12:23PM Prince Charles and Camilla walk amongst graves The Prince of Wales and his wife the Duchess of Cornwall are walking around the cemetery in Bayeux, observing the graves of those who lost their lives during the Second World War. Prince Charles and Camilla walk amongst the graves Credit: BBC 12:12PM Service at Bayeux cemetery closes with anthems God Save The Queen is blasted out at the cemetery as D-Day veterans salute the memorial of their fallen comrades. This is followed by La Marseillaise. War heroes, immortalised with their gallantry medals glinting in the sunshine, then watch as the procession leaves. 11:58AM Wreaths being laid at Bayeux cemetery Theresa May is among those to lay a wreath in honour of those who lost their lives in Normandy. The Lord Is My Shepherd is then played out as the Normandy veterans are invited forward to lay wreaths for their fallen comrades. Normandy veterans lay their wreaths Credit: BBC 11:52AM The last post and two-minute silence Under blue skies, distinguished guests and veterans alike stood as the last post was played. They then observed a two-minute silence. Some D-Day heroes could be seen welling up as they looked out at the sea of graves that belong to their comrades. A wreath sits atop a stone memorial reading: "Their name liveth forever more." The Last Post was played by the Band and Bugles of The Rifles, followed by a two minutes silence. D-Day veteran Alan Harris then read: "When you go home, tell of us and say, for your tomorrow, we gave our today." 11:42AM Theresa May gives reading from Book of Micah The Prime Minister is on stage giving a reading. Wearing a commemorative poppy on her blazer, she addresses the crowd with a section of the Book of Micah. As she does so, war aircraft pass overhead. Joe Shute, who is at the ceremony for The Telegraph, believes the flypast was mistimed: "Theresa May's address to the service was interrupted by what appeared to be a mistimed flypast overhead. "Before the Prime Minister reached the and of Micah 4:1-5 a spitfire and bomber in D Day black and white livery roared overhead momentarily drowning out the Prime Minister delivering perhaps the final speech of her official term." This is followed by the singing of the hymn Abide With Me before D-Day veteran Ray Lord then read: "They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old. "Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. "At the going down of the sun, and in the morning, we will remember them." 11:29AM D-Day veteran, 95, gives his account of landings War hero Frank Baugh, who trained at HMS Collingwood in Portsmouth, is delivering his speech at the cemetery in Bayeux. Our Senior Features Writer Joe Shute is watching the ceremony. Read his account below. Veteran Frank Baugh Credit: BBC During the ceremony at Bayeux Royal Navy signalman Frank Baugh addressed the crowd with his own painful memories of D Day. The 95-year-old was tasked with transporting 200 troops from 2nd Batallion King's Shropshire Light Infantry from Newhaven to Sword Beach. On the way they received a direct hit meaning the men had to bail out into four feet of water. "We were talking moments before but they were cut down by machine guns," he said. "They fell into the water floating face down and we couldn't get them out. That is my abiding memory and I cant forget it." 11:27AM Ceremony begins at Bayeux cemetery The Prince of Wales is among the guests at the cemetery in Bayeux where there are almost 400 unidentified graves. The Duchess of Cornwall and Prime Minister are also attending the cemetery service. The Royal Yeomanry and its band are providing a Guard of Honour and Royal Salute at the Bayeux Cemetery Service, with the Band of The Rifles in support. The road alongside the cemetery is Boulevard Fabian Ware, named after the founder of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Bayeux War Cemetery is the largest Commonwealth war cemetery of the Second World War in France. Both the cemetery and the memorial were designed by Philip Hepworth. The Latin inscription on the memorial recalls the Norman invasion of Britain in 1066 and reads: "We, once conquered by William, have now set free the Conqueror's native land." 11:20AM 'Last chance to pay everlasting respect to these remarkable people,' Charles says Our Royal Correspondent Hannah Furness has been keeping an eye on the royals at the D-Day events. Here are the thoughts of the Prince of Wales. In an interview with the BBC, the Prince of Wales has spoken of the deep significance of the 75th anniversary D-Day commemorations, saying it is "probably the last chance to pay everlasting respect to these remarkable people who wanted above all to do their duty". "I always think of people all around this country whose relations took part in D-Day and will be thinking so much about their grandfathers, fathers or great-grandfathers," he said. "I've been lucky enough to know so many of these veterans over my lifetime." After the 70th anniversary, the Prince commissioned a series of 12 portraits of veterans to capture their spirit for centuries to come. "I've always felt that it's absolutely key to try and have a record of people who have given so much to this country in one way or another," he said. Prince Charles Credit: REX "We looked at some of my old regiments, of which I'm colonel-in-chief and very proud to be, and those veterans were sitting for different artists. "They are very evocative. There were some wonderful figures in that who were chosen. I met them all and I'm thrilled that we have something that will mean their memory is immortalised along with so many others who died with them." Of the importance of the Normandy services, the Prince said: "I remember the last time we were there, I will never forget the determination that they still exude by being there. Being at the cemeteries and being at the commemorations. "They always remember their comrades and their friends and the people they had to leave behind. "This country lost countless special people and we owe it to them and their families to go on commemorating this." Asked whether this 75th anniversary would be particularly poignant, he added: "It's probably the last chance to pay everlasting respect to these remarkable people who wanted above all to do their duty." 11:15AM Donald Trump's rousing speech in Normandy The US president paid tribute to the "greatest Americans that have ever lived" and the "pride of the nation". Midway through his speech, he turned around and applauded the veterans sat behind him at Omaha Beach. Donald Trump applauds veterans The US veterans, in turn applauded their president. Mr Trump delivered a long address, recalling D-Day through the viewpoint of a number of veterans present. 11:02AM 'I'm no hero. Just a plain old guy,' US veteran says The Telegraph's France Correspondent Henry Samuel is at Omaha beach. Here is his take from the sandy beaches. Under brilliant blue skies, thousands have gathered for this morning's tribute to the fallen at Omaha beach. The sun and calm seas could not be more different than the atrocious conditions that faced Allied troops that day. "It's pristine now. It was so bad and pitiful that day. Now it's so beautiful," said American D-Day veteran Jack Ewald, 94, from Suffolk Virginia, in full of the beach he scaled under German machine gun fire 75 years ago. Mr Ewald came back in 2010 and he said he wouldn't have missed the 75th for the world. "It's given me more energy than I've had in a decade," he said. Some 4,400 Allied troops on the first day of the landings, more than half at Omaha beach. Mr Ewald was in company K, 115th infantry, 29th division. "I'm no hero, just a plain old guy like most of us," he said beside his granddaughter Megan Forbes, 34. "We didn't do anything special. We all protected each other. We knew we had to do it and we did it. There weren't no hero business about it." 10:54AM Hundreds cheer veterans as they parade to cemetery Our Senior Features Writer Joe Shute is in Bayeux, where hundreds of people have lined the streets to clap and cheer D-Day veterans as they parade from the cathedral service to the Commonwealth War Graves cemetery ahead of a memorial there later today. Veterans are waiting in Bayeux cemetery for the annual commemorative service to begin. Veterans at Bayeux cemetery Credit: Joe Shute Afterwards the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall as well as Prime Minister Theresa May will mingle with the war heroes. 10:48AM Prince Harry arrives at Chelsea pensioners parade The Duke of Sussex has arrived at the Royal Hospital Chelsea in London to review the Chelsea pensioners at the annual Founder's Day Parade. The parade commemorates King Charles II's founding of the institution in 1681. Founder's Day is also known as Oak Apple Day referring to the oak tree that Charles hid in to avoid being captured by Parliamentary forces after the Battle of Worcester in 1651. Harry, a former Army officer, arrived wearing his Blues and Royals frock coat and like all the pensioners and guests wore a sprig of oak leaves in honour of Charles. 10:48AM Prince William reads excerpt from King George VI speech At a commemoration service at the National Memorial Arboretum, the Duke of Cambridge delivered the D-Day address made by his great-grandfather King George VI in 1944. He said: "Four years ago our nation and empire stood alone against an overwhelming enemy, with our backs to the wall. "Now once more a supreme test has to be faced. "This time the challenge is not to fight to survive but to fight to win the final victory for the good cause. "At this historic moment surely not one of us is too busy, too young, or too old to play a part in a nationwide, perchance a world-wide vigil of prayer as the great crusade sets forth." 10:45AM D-Day veteran gives 4-minute interview live...without realising he's on TV In a lovely moment during yesterday's coverage, Simon McCoy was interviewing Eric Chardin in Portsmouth. He was just 19 when he landed in Normandy 75 years ago. In a poignant interview, he refused to call himself a hero or even "brave", saying: "you have to admit, one was scared". Wrapping up the interview, McCoy asks Mr Chardin if anybody has recently said thank you to him for his service. When the war hero says no, the BBC presenter responds: "Well can I, on behalf of everybody watching, just say thank you." Mr Chardin appears taken aback, and replies: "Well, thank you. Thank you for your courtesy." McCoy then thanks him again for the interview before beginning to turn to the camera when Mr Chardin interrupts, saying: "Have you finished?" He continues: "What will you do with it? Take a bit of it?" McCoy has to tell the veteran: "Well, we've just been live. I should have warned you about that." Cracking a smile, Mr Chardin says: "Oh, now you tell me!" Watch the video in full here: It was an honour to meet 94 year old D-Day veteran Eric Chardin in Portsmouth today, who was just 19 when he landed in Normandy 75 years ago. pic.twitter.com/0JbnIWBKP3— Simon McCoy (@BBCSimonMcCoy) June 5, 2019 10:31AM Jeeps driven on beaches on D-Day anniversary Our news reporter Phoebe Southworth is in Arromanches where the commemorations continue. Here is her take from the scene: Allan Ede, the president of the Invicta Military-Vehicle Preservation Society (IMPS), drove an army green open-top 1944 Ford Jeep in today's parade around the beach in Arromanches with his wife Sue. He told The Telegraph: "We have brought over 1,944 marked vehicles and 500 people to operate them on the ferry from Portsmouth and Dover ports. "Jeeps like the one I'm driving are off-road patrol and reconnaissance vehicles which were used for running senior officers around. They were essentially the car of the army." He added: "It is important to remember the sacrifices that everyone who fought here made. "In the same way we remember those who died fighting for their country in the First World War, we must also remember those who died in the Second World War. Jeeps driven on the beach Credit: Rex "We are aware that there are so few veterans left, just a handful now, and they love seeing our vehicles. "They say things like 'oh yes, I drove one of those from Normandy to Berlin'." Seven local police officers from the gendarmerie in Arromanches directed the Jeeps, tanks and amphibious military vehicles as they snaked their way around the shore, the drivers showcasing them to crowds of onlookers. Many took the opportunity to snap selfies behind the wheel of unmanned vehicles parked up on the beach. A harmonica player with a whistle around his neck, flanked by two guitarists and a man with a tambourine, set up camp at the entrance to the harbour. Crowds of music-lovers quickly formed a semi-circle around the band, called Herbie Blues, and clapped along to their country-style American songs. 9:58AM Sculpture is tribute to those who made 'ultimate sacrifice' Theresa May has paid tribute to those who made the ultimate sacrifice at an inauguration ceremony of a new British Normandy Memorial in France, 75 years on from D-Day. She joined French President Emmanuel Macron at the event in Ver-sur-Mer, Normandy, on one of her final official engagements as Conservative leader. They laid wreaths at the foundation stone for the new memorial, which will list the names of all 22,442 members of the British armed forces who died in the Normandy campaign in summer 1944 and overlooks Gold Beach, where many of the troops arrived on D-Day. Speaking at the service, Mrs May said: "It's incredibly moving to be here today, looking out over the beaches where one of the greatest battles for freedom this world has ever known took place. "And it is truly humbling to do so with the men who were there that day." Theresa May standing in front of the sculpture Credit: PA She continued: "Standing here as the waves wash quietly on to the shore below us, it is almost impossible to grasp the raw courage it must have taken that day to leap from the landing craft and into the surf despite the fury of battle. "If one day can be said to have determined the fate of generations to come in France, in Britain, in Europe and the world, that day was June 6 1944." The Prime Minister also paid tribute to those who made the ultimate sacrifice, saying: "They laid down their lives so that we might have a better life and build a better world." The sculpture was created by David Williams-Ellis to mark the beginning of construction for the memorial, funded by the Normandy Memorial Trust, which is expected to be completed within a year. David Woodrow, 95, from Norwich ahead of the Inauguration of the British Normandy Memorial site in Ver-sur-Mer Credit: PA Mr Clements was a petty officer in the Royal Navy on board the 900-tonne frigate HMS Mountsea, protecting the convoys approaching the landing beaches on D-Day from Nazi attacks. He helped drop depth charges at U-boats with "little success", including targeting one which had earlier sunk an Allied troop ship and was then destroyed by a Canadian vessel. Mr Clements, from Whitstable, said he was not scared at the time, despite heavy shelling. Now 98, he said it is "fantastic" that the memorial is being built. He said: "It should have been done long ago but it's never too late." 9:51AM Prince Charles and Theresa May take their leave As "World in Union" - the anthem for the Rugby World Cup, which takes place in Japan later this year - plays the guests out, The Prince of Wales and Theresa May leave Bayeux Cathedral. Here is Mrs May greeting Prince Charles - perhaps for the last time - outside the building. Theresa May greeting Prince Charles Credit: Chris Jackson 9:46AM Procession leaves cathedral Flags of the nations that took part in the struggles are hanging inside Bayeux Cathedral. The procession now leaves the stunning building after a moving service. 9:44AM Anthems ring out For the second time today, God Save The Queen and La Marseillaise are sung at the commemorative events. The anthems 9:43AM The blessing Cardinal Marc Ouellet reads the blessing. The blessing 9:40AM Bread of Heaven rings out The second hymn - Bread of Heaven - is sung by the gathered crowd. If you want to sing along, here are the words: Bread of Heaven 9:37AM The prayers The Venerable (Air Vice-Marshal) John R Ellis reads out the first prayer. Here is the full transcript: The prayers 9:35AM Two-minutes' silence The two-minute silence inside the Bayeux Cathedral was, as you'd expect, impeccably observed. Apart from the murmur of a baby at the back of the building, there was not a sound inside the cathedral. 9:32AM 'They shall not grow old' The Exhortation The exhortation is read out by the National Chairman of the British Legion Una Cleminson, followed by the last post and a two-minute silence. 9:30AM Theresa May's quick outfit change Theresa May arrived at Bayeux Cathedral with a new accessory. Wearing the same light jacket as she wore at Ver-sur-Mer, she arrived wearing an elaborate hat. Prime Minister Theresa May arrives Credit: PA 9:29AM John R Ellis tells of taking his father to Normandy beaches In a speech, he asks us to honour the D-Day veterans and those who had to make the ultimate sacrifice. He says he could not do their story justice. 9:24AM Extract from young person caught up in Nazi occupation We are now hearing an extract in French from a young person caught up in the Nazi occupation. It was a 15-year-old French boy. 9:18AM D-Day veteran reads 'Normandy' D-Day veteran Kenneth Hay reads from the poem Normandy, by Cyril Crain, who also took part in the Allied invasion. Mr Hay's reading began: "Come and stand in memory of men who fought and died. "They gave their lives in Normandy, remember them with pride." Crain landed at Juno Beach in June 1944, four days before his 21st birthday. He died in 2014, aged 91. Normandy The choir from Hereford Cathedral then perform. 9:17AM First reading - John 15:12:17 First reading 9:06AM Bayeux service begins The annual remembrance service has started inside Bayeux Cathedral. Although the event takes place every year, this year has added poignancy given it is the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings. The guests were played in by the Band of the RAF Regiment. Then, welcome speeches were read out by The Venerable (Air Vice-Marshal) John R Ellis, Monseigneur Jean-Claude Boulanger, and Cardinal Marc Ouellet. Defence Secretary Penny Mordaunt, First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon, and shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry are also attending the service of remembrance in Bayeux. At the start of the service, a message on behalf of Pope Francis was read by Cardinal Marc Ouellet. He said D-Day was "decisive in the fight against Nazi barbarism" and paid tribute to those who "joined the Army and gave their lives for freedom and peace". After the welcoming speeches, the guests sang the first hymn. 9:02AM The Bayeux service explained In this first town liberated by the allied forces, The Royal British Legion will hold a cathedral service attended by Their Royal Highnesses The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall and the Prime Minister. 32 Engineer Regiment will lead a triservice Guard of Honour at the Bayeux Cathedral service which will have musical Events on Thursday 6 June 8 support from the Band of the RAF Regiment. Bayeux Cathedral Credit: AFP The Catholic Notre-Dame de Bayeux Cathedral is dedicated to Our Lady of the Assumption. Its construction began during the Romanesque period and its dedication was celebrated on 14 July 1077. The famous Bayeux tapestry was regularly displayed there. 9:00AM Canadian tribute on Juno Beach Our reporter Steve Bird is in Courseulles-sur-Mer. Here is his report. In Courseulles-sur-Mer, hundreds of people attended a special ceremony to mark 75 years since Canadian troops became the first wave of allied forces to land on Juno beach 75 years ago. Houses and shops lining the streets leading to the seafront were adorned with British, Canadian, American and French flags. American World War II-style jeeps and motorbikes were driven into the ceremony to applause from some passers by. Bus loads of schoolchildren were also arriving to attend the event. 8:58AM Prince Charles and Camilla arrive at Beyeux The Prince of Wales and his wife the Duchess of Cornwall have arrived at Bayeux Cathedral for a service, which is due to start shortly. The Prince of Wales is wearing a number of military medals at the D-Day commemorative service. They include: the Queen's Service Order, New Zealand, the Canadian Forces decoration, the New Zealand commemorative medal, the long service good conduct medal, and medals marking the Queen's coronation and jubilees. Prince Charles arrives Credit: Sky News Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has also arrived. 8:56AM Summary of memorial unveiling Our Defence Correspondent Dominic Nicholls watched the ceremony at Ver-sur-Mer. Here is his take on the commemorations. Theresa May and Emmanuel Macron take a moment to look out to sea in Normandy Credit: PA As a calm tide lapped against what was Gold Beach on D-Day, Theresa May and Emmanuel Macron spoke at the inauguration of the Normandy Memorial. Theresa May said: "If one day can be said to have determined the fate of generations to come, in France, in Britain, in Europe and the world, that day was the sixth of June 1944". She paid tribute to "the greatest generation", saying its "unconquerable spirit shaped our post-war world. "They didn't boast, they didn't fuss, they served. They did their duty. And they laid down their lives so that we may have a better life and build a better world". Speaking in English, President Macron said "We owe our freedom to this. And whatever it takes we will never surrender. And whatever it takes we will always stand together. Because this is our common destiny". With a nod to Brexit, he continued in French: "Nothing can ever break ties that have been bound in bloodshed and shared values. The debates taking place today cannot affect the strength of our joint history and shared future." In a personal message to Theresa May, he said: "Leaders May come and go, but their achievements remain. The force of our friendship will outlast current events. "I believe that we can be proud of our actions at the bilateral level, and the causes we have defended at the international level." The Normandy Memorial cost £20million and was funded from LIBOR dunes levied against the banking sector. 8:52AM Theresa May's moving speech in full Here is the text of the speech delivered by Prime Minister Theresa May alongside French President Emmanuel Macron at the inauguration of the British Normandy Memorial. She said: "Thank you President Macron for your support to ensure a lasting monument to the service and sacrifice of those who fought in the Battle of Normandy - something which means so much to our veteran community and to the whole of the British nation. "It is incredibly moving to be here today, looking out across beaches where one of the greatest battles for freedom this world has ever known took place - and it is truly humbling to do so with the men who were there that day. "It is an honour for all of us to share this moment with you. "Standing here, as the waves wash quietly onto the shore, it's almost impossible to grasp the raw courage that it must have taken that day to leap out from landing craft and into the surf - despite the fury of battle. "No one could be certain what June 6 would bring. No one would know how this - the most ambitious - amphibious and airborne assault in all of human history, would turn out. "And, as the sun rose that morning, not one of the troops on the landing craft approaching these shores, not one of the pilots in the skies above, not one of the sailors at sea - knew whether they would still be alive when it set once again. "If one day can be said to have determined the fate of generations to come - in France, in Britain, in Europe and the world - that day was June 6, 1944. "More than 156,000 men landed on D-Day - of which 83,000 were from Britain and the Commonwealth. "Over a quarter million more supported operations from air and sea - while the French Resistance carried out extraordinary acts of bravery behind enemy lines. Many were terribly wounded. "And many more made the ultimate sacrifice that day and in the fierce fighting that followed, as together our allied nations sought to release Europe from the grip of fascism. Theresa May delivering her speech Credit: Reuters "Men like Lieutenant Den Brotheridge of the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry. Twenty-eight years old. Husband. Father-to-be. Thought to be the first Allied soldier to be killed in action after leading the charge over Pegasus Bridge. "Marine Commando Robert Casson of 46 Royal Marine Commando, who was killed on the approach to Juno Beach, three weeks before his brother Private Joseph Casson was also killed in Normandy. "And twins Robert and Charles Guy, 21, who both served in the RAF and were shot down and buried separately. Their names will now be reunited here. "These young men belonged to a very special generation, the greatest generation. "A generation whose unconquerable spirit shaped the post-war world. They didn't boast. They didn't fuss. They served. "And they laid down their lives so that we might have a better life and build a better world. "The memorial that will be built here will remind us of this. Of the service and sacrifice of those who fell under British Command in Normandy, of the price paid by French civilians - and of our duty, and our responsibility, to now carry the torch for freedom, for peace and for democracy. Theresa May closing her speech Credit: PA "I want to thank all those involved in this memorial. George Batts and the veterans who have campaigned so hard to make it happen. The people of Ver-sur-Mer, and Phillipe Onillon the town's mayor. "Here in Normandy, the names of those British men and women who gave their lives in defence of freedom, will forever sit opposite their homeland across the Channel. "Here in Normandy, we will always remember their courage, their commitment, their conviction. "And to our veterans, here in Normandy, I want to say the only words we can: thank you." 8:47AM 'Lest we forget,' says Nicola Sturgeon Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, who is attending commemorative events in Bayeux, tweeted: "Beautiful morning in Bayeux as we prepare to remember those who landed on the beaches 75 years ago today to liberate France and Europe from Nazi occupation." Beautiful morning in Bayeux as we prepare to remember those who landed on the beaches 75 years ago today to liberate France and Europe from Nazi occupation. DDay75LestWeForgetpic.twitter.com/RmUDsFf3em— Nicola Sturgeon (@NicolaSturgeon) June 6, 2019 8:34AM Touching 'au revoir' as Macron bids farewell to May There was a touching moment as Emmanuel Macron handed over to Theresa May between their speeches at Ver-sur-Mer. Prime Minister Theresa May and French President Emmanuel Macron Credit: Owen Humphreys/PA In his speech, the French President said: "Leaders may come and go but their achievements remain. The force of our friendship will outlast current events." Talking to Mrs May, he says: "It has been a pleasure to work alongside you," before the pair embraced. They didn't quite burst into a hug - but it was as close as it could be. 8:26AM Veterans arrive at Bayeux for remembrance service Veterans and their families are arriving for a service of remembrance at Bayeux Cathedral. They will be joined by Prime Minister Theresa May, and the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall for the commemoration marking 75 years since D-Day. Joe Shute is there for The Telegraph. He says: "Villages surrounding Bayeux have adorned flagpoles with images of fallen soldiers of the Normandy landings. "The flags of all the Allied countries who led the invasion are fluttering while Flanders poppies - that potent symbol of remembrance - are in bloom along the roadside verges." 8:25AM May and Macron leave service - next up, Bayeux As Theresa May and Emmanuel Macron leave Ver-sur-Mer, the next big event is at Bayeux Cathedral. Joe Shute reports from France. Today the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall will join veterans at the Royal British Legion service of remembrance at Bayeux Cathedral and neighbouring cemetery. They will be attended by Prime Minister Theresa May and the French President Emmanual Macron alongside150 veterans of the Normandy campaign. On June 7, 1945, Bayeux was the first French city to be liberated following the D Day invasion and the cemetery contains the graves of 4,144 Allied soldiers making it the largest in the region. The city was liberated by the 50th Northumbrian Division who had landed on Gold Beach. The men of the 50th Northumbrian are remembered on a plaque opposite the city cathedral. John Cornwall, 92, was a 17-year-old private with the North Gloucesteshire Regiment on the day and among the troops that helped seize the city. Like many of those to take part in the Normandy Landings he lied about his age in order to sign up. "When we arrived people were waving flags cheering and handing us drinks," he recalls. "The city was a big army depot for the Germans but they knew we were coming and mostly left it to us apart from a few snipers." Cornwall has numerous comrades buried in Bayeux as well as the surrounding cemeteries. "I have come every year for the last 40 years," he says. "It is always very emotional." 8:18AM Spectators gather on French shores among hundreds of military vehicles Our news reporter Phoebe Southworth is in Arrmomanches-les-Bains. Here is her report from the morning's proceedings. At 6.26am UK time this morning, the exact minute the first British troops landed on the beaches of Normandy in 1944, Lone Piper Major Trevor Macey-Lillie performed to crowds from on top of a concrete section on Mulberry Harbour in Arromanches-les-Bains. Spectators have gathered on the shores among hundreds of military vehicles bearing Union flags, which will be paraded across the shores and up through the harbour at 9.30am. Women wearing war-era style dress jived on the beach as live singers entertained the crowds with French and English tracks. 8:13AM Theresa May greets D-Day veterans The Prime Minister is now talking to D-Day veterans, shaking hands with them and sharing stories. Theresa May meeting the veterans Credit: BBC 8:05AM Macron and May lay wreath at first stone of memorial Theresa May and Emmanuel Macron have laid a wreath on the first stone of the Ver-sur-Mer memorial, which sits in front of a new statue of three D-Day soldiers. Laying of the wreath Credit: BBC La Marseillaise then rings out from a brass band, followed by God Save The Queen. Veterans then lay their own wreath and salute the statue. Seven British D-Day veterans were accompanied by four children, including Sir Winston Churchill's great-great grandson John Churchill, to lay flowers in front of a sculpture at the memorial depicting three British soldiers storming the beaches. It was created by David Williams-Ellis to mark the beginning of construction for the memorial, which is expected to be completed within a year. The ceremony concluded with a piped lament from Trooper Kurtis Rankin of The Royal Dragoon Guards. 8:02AM Mrs May closes her speech with 'thank you' to veterans The Prime Minister has closed her speech in Ver-sur-Mer. She said: "Here in Normandy, the names of those British men and women who lost their lives will forever sit across The Channel from their homeland. "We'll always remember their courage and conviction. "And to the veterans that are here today - I want to say the only two words I can: Thank you." 7:56AM Theresa May takes the stand Prime Minister says it is "humbling" to be in France today. Says it's "impossible to imagine the raw courage" it took for D-Day veterans to land on the beaches. "Thank you for your service and your sacrifice," she adds. Theresa May Credit: BBC Mrs May said the Battle of Normandy is "Something that means so much to the veterans' community and the British nation." She adds: "It's incredibly moving to be here today, looking out over the beaches where one of the greatest battles for freedom this world has ever known took place. "And it is truly humbling to do so with the men who were there that day. "It's an honour for all of us to share this moment with you." Mrs May continued: "Standing here as the waves wash quietly onto the shore below us, it is almost impossible to grasp the raw courage it must have taken that day to leap from the landing craft and into the surf despite the fury of battle... "If one day can be said to have determined the fate of generations to come in France, in Britain, in Europe and the world, that day was June 6, 1944." 7:54AM The Normandy Memorial statue The Normandy Memorial Trust's statue can be seen behind the speakers at Ver-sur-Mer. Later, the first stone of the future memorial will be laid, in the presence of veterans, British Prime Minister Theresa May and French Prime Minister Emmanuel Macron. Once fully built the British Normandy Memorial will record the names of those under British command who lost their lives in Normandy between the D-Day landings and 31 August 1944. Also honoured will be the tens of thousands of French citizens who lost their lives during the period. 7:49AM Macron takes the stand The French President is up to talk to the gathered crowd. Addressing the audience, President Macron said: "I am honoured to stand alongside Theresa May today to launch construction work for the British memorial at Ver-sur-Mer. "The British people have long dreamt of this memorial." He added: "This is where, 75 years ago, on June 6, 1944, almost 25,000 British soldiers landed in France to free the country from Nazi control. "This is where young men, many of whom had never set foot on French soil, landed at dawn under German fire, risking their lives while fighting their way up the beach, which was littered with obstacles and mines." Macron talking Credit: BBC He added: "It is time to remedy the fact that no memorial pays tribute to the United Kingdom's contribution to the Battle of Normandy." He said the monument would also be a symbol of the ties binding France and the UK. He said: "Nothing will break them. Nothing can ever break ties that have been bound in bloodshed and shared values. "The debates taking place today cannot affect the strength of our joint history and our shared future." President Macron assured Mrs May of his friendship, adding: "Leaders may come and go but their achievements remain. "The force of our friendship will outlast current events." Talking to Theresa May, he says: "It has been a pleasure to work alongside you," before the pair embrace. 7:48AM Solider's reading Private Liam Dawson is now giving a reading. His father and uncle were both in the Green Howards, a predecessor of the modern-day Yorkshire Regiment. The Green Howards were a key regiment during the D-Day invasion and Stanley Hollis of the Green Howards won the only VC of D-Day a short distance from the memorial site. Liam joined the British Army in 2017 at the age of eighteen. He joined 2nd Battalion the Yorkshire Regiment and has recently served overseas in Kabul, Afghanistan. 7:48AM Veterans watch on as readings are heard Several D-Day veterans are at Ver-sur-Mer to drink in the commemorations. D-Day veterans Credit: BBC 7:44AM Ceremony begins The ceremony has begun in France in Ver-sur-Mer. On 6 June 1944 the British 50th Infantry Division landed at Ver-sur-Mer as part of Operation Overlord. The commune of Ver-sur-Mer in Calvados is located along Gold Beach and is currently the town chosen to host the main British monument of the Normandy landings. 7:42AM Emmanuel Macron arrives And just like that - here he is. Emmanuel Macron and Theresa May Credit: BBC 7:41AM Slight delay in proceedings as we wait for Macron Theresa May is waiting at Ver-sur-Mer for her French counterpart ahead of today's D-Day commemorations. Today is the 75th anniversary of the landings. May waits Credit: BBC The British Prime Minister is ready and waiting in France. Emmanuel Macron is slightly behind schedule. 7:34AM Theresa May has arrived The Prime Minister is waiting for Mr Macron at Ver-sur-Mer. 7:12AM Donald Trump: 'They did not know if they would grow old' DDay75thAnniversaryDDay75pic.twitter.com/BwfVEt7gTG— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 6, 2019 7:04AM How the D-Day landings forged the Special Relationship James Holland writes: To fully understand just how remarkable the achievement of D-Day and the Normandy campaign that followed was, it is worth casting the net back four years to that darkest hour, June 1940. Britain and France had declared war against Germany, confident that they had the resources, wealth, and global reach to stop Hitler and the tide of Nazism. For all Germany's grandstanding and military drum-beating, Hitler's Reich lay at the heart of Europe, with little access to the world's oceans, with neither a decent navy nor merchant navy and therefore lacked the resources needed to conduct a modern war. Britain's Royal Navy immediately imposed an economic blockade while France mobilised its vast army of millions. Britain and France, admittedly apprehensive, nonetheless expected to prevail. By June 1940, such hopes had been shattered. German shock and awe had delivered its Blitzkrieg, mighty France had crumbled and the forces of totalitarianism and nationalism were sweeping across. Read the full article. 6:55AM The Telegraph: 'We must never forget the sacrifice of D-Day' The invasion force was not only the greatest assembled in history but D-Day was an exceptional feat of arms, logistics and leadership that relied upon meticulous planning, phenomenal levels of secrecy and disinformation and the closest possible co-operation between Britain and her Allies, especially those from across the Atlantic. This emphasis on collaboration, without which D-Day could not have happened, has been to the fore once again in recent days with the state visit to the UK of Donald Trump. The US president is seen as an iconoclast when it comes to supporting the post-war global order and its multilateral institutions like the UN and Nato. President of the United States, Donald Trump reads from the 32nd U.S. President President Franklin D. Roosevelt's prayer to the US on stage during the D-Day Commemorations Credit: Getty Many European leaders will hope his presence at the D-Day commemorations will have modified his protectionist instincts, though the best way they can achieve that is to pay a greater share of the cost of their own defence. Read the full editorial. 6:44AM Lone piper heralds the moment when the invasion began Today's commemorations have kicked off with the tradition of a lone piper playing a lament on the remaining Mulberry Harbour in the Normandy town called Port Winston. Standing atop the structure, Pipe Major Trevor Macey-Lillie, of 19th Regiment Royal Artillery (The Scottish Gunners) performed Highland Laddie at 7.25am local time, signalling the minute the invasion began and the moment the first British soldier landed on Gold beach. Crowds gathered on the beach below him and lined the promenade, applauding his performance. Afterwards his performance on Arromanches beach, Pipe Major Macey-Lillie said: "That was nerve wracking to do but I feel very proud and it was a privilege to do it." Pipe Major Trevor Macey-Lillie of the Scots Royal artillery performs at Mulberry harbour Credit: Getty More than 300 veterans will be flocking to the town of Arromanches for a series of events on Wednesday to mark the 75th anniversary of D-Day. 6:17AM 'The morning of freedom' Just as in the UK, the D-Day anniversary featured on the front pages of many newspapers in France and Germany on Thursday. Le Figaro: The morning of freedom Le Parisien: We meet once again Aalener Nachrichten: Merkel and the 'gift of the story' Allgäuer Anzeigeblatt: A beach in June 5:53AM Dawn rises on 75th anniversary D-Day veterans and other people are marking exactly 75 years since the invasion of Normandy that helped change the course of the Second World War. As the sun rose on Thursday over Omaha Beach, about 100 people gathered at dawn on the edge of the waters that ran red here on June 6, 1944, the first of five code-named beaches where Allied forces came ashore to push the Nazis out of France. World War II reenactors stand looking out to sea on Omaha Beach, in Normandy, France, at dawn Credit: AP American Richard Clapp said it was sobering to admire the "beautiful sunrise" where Allied troops came ashore. Norwegian Sigrid Flaata drove from Oslo in a 1942 restored jeep to honour the soldiers who died on D-Day. Belgian Filip Van Hecke called his journey a "small effort to pay homage." 2:10AM Today's events It's an early start today as a host of ceremonies and events are due to take place to mark D-Day. All times BST. 06:25: A lone piper from 19th Regiment Royal Artillery will play on the Mulberry Harbour in Arromanches-les-Bains to mark 75 years to the minute since the first British soldier landed and the start of the amphibious invasion of Gold Beach. Lone Piper Major Trevor Macey-Lillie 19th Regiment RA (The Scottish Gunners) rehearses at the Mulberry Harbour Credit: Eddie Mulholland 07:30: Normandy Memorial inauguration ceremony at Ver-sur-Mer. A statue will be unveiled and the first stone of a memorial will be laid, in the presence of veterans, British Prime Minister Theresa May and her French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron. Once complete, the British Normandy Memorial will record the names of those under British command who lost their lives in Normandy between the D-Day landings and August 31 1944. Also honoured will be the tens of thousands of French citizens who lost their lives. 09:00: Bayeux Cathedral service. The Royal British Legion will hold a cathedral service attended by the Prince of Wales, the Duchess of Cornwall and the Prime Minister in the first town liberated by the allied forces. A tri-service guard of honour will be led by 32 Engineer Regiment. 11:00: Remembrance ceremony at Bayeux War Cemetery. The Royal Yeomanry and its band will provide a guard of honour and royal salute, with the Band of the Rifles in support. 13:15: Veteran parade and service in Arromanches, with music from the Central Band of the Royal Air Force, the Band of the RAF Regiment and the Pipes and Drums of 19 Regiment Royal Artillery. Events include a Red Arrows flypast and a Red Devils parachute display. 22.30: Concluding fireworks display. |
Markets Right Now: Stocks rise as rate cut looks more likely Posted: 07 Jun 2019 01:13 PM PDT |
Mexico offers to send national guard to southern border to stem migration - sources Posted: 06 Jun 2019 02:11 PM PDT In talks with the United States, Mexico has offered to send up to 6,000 members of its national guard to secure its southern border with Guatemala in order to contain migrant flows, according to two people with knowledge of the matter. The news was first reported by the Washington Post. Mexico has sent a delegation of officials to Washington to try to avert U.S. President Donald Trump's threats to impose import tariffs on Mexican goods if the country does not do more to halt the flow of migrants to the United States. |
Mystery Surrounds Stolen 1991 Ford Mustang GT Barn Find Posted: 06 Jun 2019 12:56 PM PDT A white 1991 Ford Mustang GT was literally found in a barn in rural western Missouri by the Missouri State Highway Patrol. The car was stolen in Overland Park back in 1993, its whereabouts unknown until now. On the police report, which was taken over 30 years ago by the Overland Park Police Department, the Mustang GT's owner is simply listed as "John R." with no indication of a last name. |
Romanticizing D-Day Ignores Thousands of Civilian Deaths Posted: 06 Jun 2019 02:22 AM PDT Ed Vebell via GettyIn 1979 I was a freshly minted college grad hitchhiking around Normandy, France, near the D-Day landing beaches. The 35th anniversary of the Allied invasion of France, D-Day, June 6, 1944, had just passed and the French people I met welcomed an American in their midst. I was about the same age as my father was when, as a soldier in the U.S. First Army, he had advanced through France and Belgium and on into Germany, to victory in World War II.Despite the many glasses of Calvados I didn't have to pay for at cafés in the towns where I stopped, at the time I couldn't have told my new French friends where my father had been during World War II. The same could be said for many of my friends back home. Our fathers didn't talk a lot about what they went through in the war. Thinking back to my travels around Normandy, one of the odd things was that there were so few other Americans there to mark a big D-Day anniversary. Tour companies and towns in England had advertised for former GIs to come back, but not many took up the offer. And France didn't lay out the red carpet for returning Allied invaders like it does today.D-Day Was The Largest And One Of The Bloodiest Invasions In HistoryOn D-Day plus 35 years, not one world leader showed up to mark the day. The biggest commemorative event took place at Pointe du Hoc, the promontory cliffs which U.S. Army Rangers heroically scaled to knock out German artillery positions between the Utah and Omaha landing beaches. The elderly General Omar Bradley, who led U.S. Army forces during preparation for the landings, Operation Neptune, and commanded the First Army for the invasion of Normandy, Overlord, rolled out by wheelchair. He made a few dedicatory remarks at the new Ranger Dagger monument at the site. A wreath-laying ceremony was also held at a Canadian cemetery outside Caen, and a small parade of World War II-vintage jeeps and other military vehicles and soldiers ran through the narrow streets of Bayeux. (You can watch the video from the events here.) American media coverage was equally sparse, just a photo of a frail-looking General Bradley with a caption on the front page of The New York Times. That was pretty much it.How things have changed. For the 75th anniversary of D-Day coming up, world leaders including President Donald Trump will have plenty to say while tens of thousands of Americans and others from what had once been the Allied nations will arrive in a second invasion that will overwhelm Normandy to a degree unseen in, well, 75 years. They're coming of course to show their gratitude for the bloody and heroic actions that day when the liberation of France and the final defeat of Nazi Germany began. They'll also be there to participate, if only by their presence on that hallowed ground, in a shared-sense mission and purpose, to celebrate what their fathers and grandfathers and great-grandfathers achieved there.But such nostalgia for D-Day and all it meant for ridding the world of the brutality of Nazism can mask the hidden costs of the liberation of Europe. Not thinking through fully what took place during the invasion of Normandy has led America to think of it as a model for other wars since seemingly intended to rid the world of other brutal, Hitler-like dictators.* * *The Missing Victims of D-Day* * *We think we know D-Day. The greatest sea invasion in history is the most studied battle in the history of warfare. It appears no detail of the run-up to D-Day, the day of battle, and the taking of Normandy over three months after D-Day, cannot be re-explored and retold. Just this month, at least three major new D-Day books have appeared. They include Alex Kershaw's very readable The First Wave, James Holland's lively, more British-centric and, at 720 pages, more comprehensive Normandy '44, and, at 1,072 pages heavier than some artillery shells, Peter Caddick-Adams' monumentally detailed Sand and Steel.We also think we have a good mental picture of the fighting that took place. The many documentaries and fictionalized movies and television series, including The Longest Day, Saving Private Ryan, and Band of Brothers, make D-Day also perhaps the most visually depicted battle in history.As a result of all these studies and depictions, we think we know what happened that made D-Day a success, we think we know how the Germans were driven out of Normandy, and we think we know who the heroes were and who the villains. However, those versions of D-Day often fail to account for the costs born not just by the warriors who fought there but by the civilians the Allies came ashore to liberate.Those histories and visualizations of D-Day show the Norman people almost only when they turned out to celebrate the arrival of their liberators. However, many of the liberated could not turn out and others had little enthusiasm to muster for the ouster of their German occupiers. Take a close look at the 1979 parade through Bayeux in that video. Most of the onlookers stand mute except for a wave here and there as their "liberators" drive past. They were perhaps expressing a profound awareness that not everything about their liberation was glorious.In preparation for the Allied invasion, Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower had redirected Allied strategic bombers and fighters previously used to attack German cities and industrial centers as flying artillery to soften the ground for the invasion of France. From the months prior to D-Day and throughout the struggle for the beachheads on, a steady air campaign rained bombs and strafing fire down on the landing zones and access routes leading to the beaches at Normandy, as well as strategic targets inland.Long before technology made more precise targeting possible, high altitude air raids and naval bombardments were intended to knock out railroads, bridges, fuel and munitions depots, and other strategic infrastructure. But they also blasted their surroundings. Very often they only hit their surroundings. As the Allies gained control of the skies, bombers could fly lower and during daylight hours, resulting in better accuracy. Even then, surveys done in the fall of 1944 showed that only 7 percent of all bombs dropped by the United States Eighth Air Force landed within 1,000 feet of their aim point. Knocking out a target required massed raids and saturation bombing campaigns involving hundreds of aircraft at a time. The results in Normandy were a bloody mess.Entire Norman and other nearby cities and towns were leveled. Le Mans, Rennes, Saint-Lô, Flers, Le Havre and other cities still filled with civilians were virtually annihilated. An estimated 11,000 to 19,000 Normans were killed during pre-invasion bombing. Eight hundred more French civilians were killed within two days of the D-Day invasion. Then came the Allied slog through Normandy.In particular, some have come to view British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery's order to bomb Caen, a city of 60,000 people, as a war crime and certainly tactically unnecessary. The pounding of Caen from air and sea obliterated almost three-quarters of the city—destruction comparable to what took place in the most devastated cities of Germany. The city's 500-year-old university ceased to exist. The rubble from what was once Caen was piled 20 feet deep. One journalist remarked about what he saw of the city after its liberation, "The very earth was reduced to its original dust."In the end, the bombing of Caen that caused by some estimates upwards of 3,000 civilian casualties and left 35,000 residents homeless actually hindered the Allies' advance.Thanks to such heedless destruction, French civilians suffered far worse casualties as a result of their liberation by the Allies than were inflicted by their Nazi German occupiers. The liberation of Normandy killed an additional 13,632 to 19,890 French civilians with thousands more seriously wounded. A total of 70,000 French civilians were killed by the Allies throughout the course of the war.In the 75 years since the liberation of France, when the civilian casualties are considered at all, they have most often been described as "collateral damage," that execrable, casual euphemism for war waged without consideration for its consequences for noncombatants.In my 1979 travels, I witnessed how much people in Normandy still remembered the brave young soldiers who ended their Nazi nightmare. However, they have not forgotten the awful price in blood and home they paid for their liberation. In the postwar world, French relations with Great Britain and the United States long remained strained in part because of what was done to make the invasion of Normandy a success. Following the end of the war, French Communists and nationalists gained power in part by blaming the Allies for their nation's suffering.There's a lesson there, but Americans taking justifiable pride in what Gen. Bradley in 1979 praised as "people prepared to do the impossible" often fail to heed it. In early April 2003, Vice President Dick Cheney, the principal architect of the Iraq War, made a very public visit to the National D-Day Museum (today known as the National World War II Museum) in New Orleans. That morning he gave a speech in which he made explicit comparison between the ongoing American invasion of Iraq and that of Normandy in 1944. He spoke of America soldiers who arrived in Europe where "a squad of GIs… brought the biggest smiles you ever saw to people's lips and joy to their hearts…. America had sent the best of her young men around the world, not to conquer, but to liberate, not to terrorize, but to help."He proclaimed that like D-Day, "Ladies and gentlemen, in the spring of 2003 the American people and a watching world are seeing another great generation. The citizens of Iraq, like so many oppressed peoples before them, are coming to know the kind of men and women that America sends forth to meet danger and to defend freedom."That comparison showed just how little Vice President Cheney cared about the complex realities of D-Day. We know that D-Day had a great and necessary purpose in the fight to rid the world of Hitler's evil. But we need to learn the lesson of D-Day that there are no "good" wars, even wars of liberation, and that collateral damage is in fact the destruction of human lives. The liberated will not forget their tragic losses, even if the victors do.We failed to understand that in Vietnam, in Afghanistan, and in Iraq. On the 75th anniversary of D-Day this June 6, let's honor, remember and pray for the heroes and fallen by learning the lesson that their experience and that of a liberated Normandy should have taught us.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. 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Posted: 07 Jun 2019 09:00 AM PDT An American whose 2017 shooting of a giraffe and posing for a photograph with its body sparked international outcry, has said she was proud of hunting the animal, which she said was "delicious" to eat.Texan Tess Talley, 38, triggered anger last summer when she posted the images of her exploits during a hunting trip the year before in South Africa. "Prayers for my once in a lifetime dream hunt came true today," she wrote alongside the image. "Spotted this rare black giraffe bull and stalked him for quite awhile. I knew it was the one. He was over 18 years old, 4,000 lbs and was blessed to be able to get 2,000 lbs of meat from him."Ms Tallley has now further defended her actions, appearing on CBS to say hunters such as herself contribute to the long term preservation of animals by managing populations and funding wildlife conservation. She also said the elderly male giraffe, the skin of which she had made into cushion covers and a rifle case, was delicious to eat. "It's a hobby, it's something that I love to do. I am proud to hunt. And I am proud of that giraffe," she said, saying the shooting of the giraffe was part of a conversation hunt.When it was pointed out that she was clearly smiling in the images she posted with the animal, she said: "You do what you love to do. It's joy. If you don't love what you do, you're not gonna continue to do it."She said even though she enjoyed hunting, there was an element of remorse."Everybody thinks that the easiest part is pulling the trigger. And it's not," she said. "That's the hardest part. But you gain so much respect, and so much appreciation for that animal because you know what that animal is going through. They are put here for us. We harvest them, we eat them." In a statement, Kitty Block, president and CEO of the Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society International, said: "Trophy hunting of giraffe shows sheer and arrogant disregard for the imperilled status of an iconic species. "A 2015 estimate found that fewer than 100,000 giraffes remain in the wild in Africa, and our 2018 investigation revealed that nearly 4,000 giraffe-derived trophies were imported into the US over the last decade."She said giraffes were facing "a myriad of threats including poaching and habitat fragmentation".She added: "Their dire conservation status should not be further compounded by the horror of trophy hunters bent on killing them for senseless and gruesome trophies." |
'Tachtouch' returns to Lebanon after monkeying around in Israel Posted: 07 Jun 2019 07:56 AM PDT A Lebanese monkey who breached the border with Israel was returned to its owner Friday by United Nations peacekeepers after cavorting for more than a week in enemy territory. Tachtouch escaped late last month, prompting its owner Beatrice Mauger who runs a peace project in southern Lebanon to launch an appeal on Facebook. "We have captured the Lebanese monkey in good health," the Yodfat Monkey Forest in northern Israel said on Facebook late Thursday. |
Toronto airport is North America's 'global gateway' to the world: OAG Posted: 06 Jun 2019 02:27 AM PDT |
3 Americans die in same Dominican Republic resort within 5 days Posted: 05 Jun 2019 06:05 PM PDT |
The Latest: US will recognize expired Venezuelan passports Posted: 07 Jun 2019 02:01 PM PDT The Trump administration says it will recognize the validity of Venezuelan passports for five years beyond their printed expiration dates. The State Department announced Friday that the passports will be considered valid for visa applications and entry into the United States in recognition of a decision by the opposition-controlled National Assembly. Opposition leader Juan Guaidó recently signed a decree extending the lifespan of Venezuelan passports. |
Google flags U.S. national security risks from Huawei ban: FT Posted: 06 Jun 2019 09:40 PM PDT Google's move comes as the world's two top economies ratchet up tariffs in a battle over what U.S. officials call China's unfair trade practices. While the sanctions are expected to hurt Huawei in the short term, industry experts say it could force the company - and other Chinese firms - to become self-reliant by developing more home-grown technologies, hurting the dominance of American companies such as Google in the longer term. Google in particular is concerned it would not be allowed to update its Android operating system on Huawei smartphones, which it argues would prompt the Chinese company to develop its own version of the software, FT reported, citing people briefed on Google's lobbying efforts. |
UPDATE 1-Lynas touts its independence from China in push for rare earths growth Posted: 06 Jun 2019 09:12 AM PDT With China threatening to curb exports of rare earth minerals, Lynas Corp is making an aggressive push for fresh business across the globe and billing itself as the best option for its customers to tap diversified supplies of the specialized materials. While Australia-based Lynas cannot match China's rare earths processing capability, it is hoping that its role as the only rare earths miner and processor outside of China will help it forge new relationships and fuel expansion projects. China last month warned it may curb exports to the United States of rare earths, a group of 17 minerals used in a plethora of military equipment and high-tech consumer electronics. |
The Bose soundbar everyone goes nuts over is cheaper right now than it was on Black Friday Posted: 06 Jun 2019 06:03 AM PDT Bose's products are typically quite expensive, though they're worth every penny if you want sound quality that'll knock your socks off. Of course, that's why people get so excited when Bose's most popular speakers and headphones go on sale at a discount. It doesn't get much more popular than the Bose Solo 5 TV Sound System, which flew off the virtual store shelves by the thousands on Black Friday when it dropped from $250 to $199. Well guess what: it's even cheaper right now than it was on Black Friday. This terrific compact sound bar is down to just $179.99 right now on Amazon, which is an all-time low. We doubt this deal will last much longer, so hurry and grab one before it's too late!Here are the highlights from the product page: * Single sound bar provides better sound quality compared to your TV.The Solo 5 TV sound system is an easy solution, with advanced technologies that deliver the clear audio your TV can't. * Dialogue mode to make every word and detail stand out * Bluetooth connectivity to wirelessly stream music from any of your devices * One connection to your TV. Optical audio input (digital); Coaxial audio input (digital); 3.5 mm aux input (analog) * Universal remote controls TV, bass, Bluetooth connections and more * Speaker:2.6 H x 21.6 W x 3.4 D (3.73 lbs), Remote control:4.1 H x 1.6 W x 0.4 D (5 oz) |
Joe Biden beats Donald Trump in Texas poll as he breaks from Democratic party line on abortion Posted: 06 Jun 2019 11:36 AM PDT Joe Biden put clear water between himself and other Democrat presidential candidates on the issue of abortion as he pulled into a surprise poll lead over Donald Trump in the traditionally conservative state of Texas. He enraged pro-choice activists, and many senior Democrat colleagues, by confirming he was against the idea of the US government using taxpayers' money to fund abortion. Mr Biden's campaign confirmed he backs the Hyde amendment, a 40-year-old law banning federal funding for abortion other than in cases of incest, rape, or to save the life of the mother. The official position of the Democrat party, and every other Democrat presidential candidate, is that Hyde should be repealed. They argue the ban prevents the poorest women gaining access to abortions. Mr Biden has set out a clear strategy of trying to occupy the centre ground in 2020, distancing himself from all of the other two dozen Democrat presidential candidates. White House officials say the poll numbers will change once Mr Trump starts campaigning in earnest Credit: AP The former vice president led Mr Trump 48-44 in a a Quinnipiac University poll of voters in Texas, where victory in 2020 would virtually guarantee him the White House. Other polls gave Mr Biden 12-point leads over Mr Trump in the key "rust belt" state of Michigan, and the swing state of North Carolina. He also had a four-point lead in the usually Republican border state of Arizona. Mr Biden's stance was lambasted by fellow Democrat candidates Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Kamala Harris, in the biggest collective attack on him since he entered the race in April. Pro-choice activists called his position "unacceptable" and accused him of being an "out of touch white man." Karen Finney, an adviser to Hillary Clinton in 2016, said: "It's a very fine line he's trying to walk. There are just places where he is out of step with the party." A Trump campaign official said Mr Biden's stance was the same as that of the US president. Mr Biden, who is Catholic, has previously expressed his personal opposition to abortion, while supporting Roe v Wade, the landmark 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalised it. Mr Biden is the Democrat front-runner Credit: Bloomberg His position is one that could help Mr Biden to win Texas, usually the biggest Republican-voting state. Mr Trump won it by nine points in 2016, but that was the smallest margin of victory for a Republican since 1996. The Quinnipiac poll showed Mr Biden leading 55 per cent to Mr Trump's 33 per cent among Texas voters classifying themselves as "independent". Quinnipiac pollster Peter Brown said: "The numbers are good for Biden." Manny Garcia, executive director of the Texas Democratic Party, said the state would become the "focal point" of the 2020 campaign. He said: "This is our moment. We all know that once Texas goes blue the Republican path to the White House will be blocked." However, White House officials remained confident the poll numbers would change once Mr Trump begins campaigning in earnest. And, despite the early surge for Mr Biden, most Americans still believe Mr Trump will be re-elected. In a CNN poll 54 per cent said they expected the US president to win again in 2020, with only 41 per cent thinking he would not. |
World War II D-Day: Five things to know on the 75th anniversary of the Normandy landings Posted: 06 Jun 2019 05:30 AM PDT |
Putin says acting talent may not help Ukraine's new leader Posted: 07 Jun 2019 08:29 AM PDT Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday that Ukraine's new leader Volodymyr Zelensky may be a talented actor but his former television role as a fictional president does not automatically give him the skills to be a real one. "I don't know this person, I hope we meet some day," Putin said at an economic forum in Saint Petersburg when asked why he did not congratulate Zelensky on his inauguration day in May. |
Former Bengal faces assault charges in American Samoa Posted: 06 Jun 2019 02:48 PM PDT Former Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Jonathan Fanene faces charges he used a pipe, golf club and broom handle to assault his wife and his sister over allegations he had an extramarital affair while on a trip to Hawaii, according to court documents filed this week. Fanene has been charged in the district court of American Samoa with eight felonies, including kidnapping and assault, and five misdemeanors. Defense lawyer Marcellus Talaimalo Uiagalelei, who declined to comment to The Associated Press on Thursday, will decide then if Fanene continues with a preliminary hearing at the district court level or opts to have the case heard in the High Court of American Samoa. |
Democrats Have Picked the First Target of Their Sweeping Tech Antitrust Probe Posted: 06 Jun 2019 10:08 AM PDT |
Alaska Airlines responds to video showing worker throwing luggage Posted: 06 Jun 2019 02:35 PM PDT |
Toyota and Subaru Will Build Two Electric SUVs on a Jointly Developed EV Platform Posted: 06 Jun 2019 07:33 AM PDT |
Two women injured in UK homophobic attack "for refusing to kiss" Posted: 07 Jun 2019 07:25 AM PDT "As they sat on the top deck, they were approached by a group of four males who began to make lewd and homophobic comments to them," a police statement said. Melania Geymonat, 28, told BBC radio the men began harassing them when they discovered she and her girlfriend Chris were a couple. "They surrounded us and started saying really aggressive stuff, things about sexual positions, lesbians and claiming we could kiss so they could watch us," she said. |
China Issues 5G Licenses as Race to Build Networks Heats Up Posted: 05 Jun 2019 08:36 PM PDT The country's three state-owned wireless carriers and China Broadcasting Network Corp. were granted licences for full commercial deployment, according to state broadcaster CCTV. The operators, China Mobile Ltd., China Telecom Corp. and China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd., have been testing the technology in several cities including Beijing and Shenzhen. Full deployment of 5G networks in a country with almost 1.6 billion wireless phone subscriptions is expected to boost local companies designing gear for applications in autonomous driving, robotics, remote surveillance and virtual reality. |
Mexico Offers to Deploy 6,000 Troops to Guatemala Border to Stop Migration to U.S. Posted: 07 Jun 2019 05:37 AM PDT As part of ongoing negotiations to avoid the tariffs President Trump threatened last week, Mexican officials have offered to deploy 6,000 national guard troops to their border with Guatemala to stem the flow of Central American migrants traveling through Mexico to the U.S.The plan under consideration would also require that migrants seek refuge in the first country they arrive in after leaving home, according to the Washington Post. Guatemalan migrants, under the plan, would be required to seek refuge in Mexico while Salvadorans and Venezuelans would be required to remain in Guatemala.Any migrant that does make it to the U.S. border would be deported to the closest country of refuge.However, the Mexico delegation has reportedly made clear that the proposed concessions will not be implemented if the president moves forward with his threat to implement a 5 percent tariff on all Mexican goods entering the U.S.The Trump administration also plans to tighten asylum rules to raise the standard for "credible fear," which determines whether a migrant can remain in the U.S. while their claim is being adjudicated.The White House has said that the tariffs, which Mexican officials claim will hurt their ability to step up enforcement, will take effect on Monday if Mexico fails to take action to stem the overwhelming tide of Central American asylum-seekers arriving at the U.S. border.Mexican officials estimate that increased enforcement will reduce illegal-immigration levels to roughly 60,000 arrests per month, but the Trump administration has demanded a return to the rate that held in the opening months of the administration, which was roughly 20,000 arrests.There were 144,000 arrests at the border in April, a 32 percent increase from the previous month and the highest recorded number of arrests in 13 years, according to border patrol. |
Save on Apple Products for Every Type of Dad at Walmart Posted: 06 Jun 2019 10:19 AM PDT |
Biden faces stiff criticism from Democrats for skipping California convention Posted: 05 Jun 2019 10:02 PM PDT |
Posted: 06 Jun 2019 03:35 AM PDT Thousands of people and a handful of surviving U.S. D-Day veterans are gathered at the Normandy American Cemetery in France to honor thousands fallen in the pivotal invasion 75 years ago. French President Macron says, "France doesn't forget" your sacrifice. The political clock is ticking toward the 2020 election and that could limit how long House Speaker Nancy Pelosi can say yes or no on that question. |
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