Thursday, June 6, 2019

1600 Daily The White House • June 6, 2019 In Normandy, President Trump honors veterans 75 years after D-Day

1600 Daily
The White House • June 6, 2019

In Normandy, President Trump honors veterans 75 years after D-Day 


On June 6, 1944, a coalition of 160,000 American soldiers and other Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy, France—a moment that foretold the end of Nazi occupation in Europe and forever changed the course of history.

President Donald J. Trump spoke just yards from Omaha Beach at Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial this morning, paying tribute to the sacrifice these heroes made. “We are gathered here on Freedom’s Altar. On these shores, on these bluffs, on this day 75 years ago, 10,000 men shed their blood, and thousands sacrificed their lives, for their brothers, for their countries, and for the survival of liberty,” he said.

“They came here and saved freedom.”
 
This historic site is now the resting place for 9,388 American service members who gave their lives for our freedom. More than 170 World War II veterans attended today’s ceremony, including more than 60 who landed as part of the D-Day operation. French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Theresa May also spoke.

Pausing during his address, President Trump walked over and hugged one of the American veterans who joined him onstage. Private First Class Russell Pickett had been wounded in the first wave of soldiers that landed on Omaha Beach during D-Day. As he received treatment at a hospital in England, Private Pickett made it clear that his service wasn’t finished.

“I’m going to return,” Pickett said. Six days after D-Day, he rejoined his company. He would be gravely wounded twice more, including a third injury that caused him to lay unconscious for 12 days. He looked unlikely to survive.

“And, today, believe it or not, he has returned once more to these shores to be with his comrades,” President Trump said before embracing the 94-year-old veteran. “Private Pickett, you honor us all with your presence.”

Before concluding, President Trump gave a few lasting words of appreciation to the veterans of this Greatest Generation:
 
 The men behind me will tell you that they are just the lucky ones. As one of them recently put it, “All the heroes are buried here.” But we know what these men did. We knew how brave they were. They came here and saved freedom, and then, they went home and showed us all what freedom is all about.

The American sons and daughters who saw us to victory were no less extraordinary in peace. They built families. They built industries. They built a national culture that inspired the entire world. In the decades that followed, America defeated communism, secured civil rights, revolutionized science, launched a man to the Moon, and then kept on pushing to new frontiers. And, today, America is stronger than ever before.

Seven decades ago, the warriors of D-Day fought a sinister enemy who spoke of a thousand-year empire. In defeating that evil, they left a legacy that will last not only for a thousand years, but for all time—for as long as the soul knows of duty and honor; for as long as freedom keeps its hold on the human heart.

To the men who sit behind me, and to the boys who rest in the field before me, your example will never, ever grow old. Your legend will never tire. Your spirit—brave, unyielding, and true—will never die.

. . . And our children, and their children, will forever and always be free. 
 
 
Read President Trump’s full speech to veterans at Normandy.

More: Presidential Proclamation for the 75th Anniversary of D-Day

Photo of the Day

Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead
President Trump greets World War II veterans at the 75th Commemoration of D-Day at the Normandy American Cemetery | June 6, 2019

Statement from the Press Secretary Regarding the Signing of H.R. 2157 – Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Act, 2019

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement from the Press Secretary Regarding the Signing of H.R. 2157 – Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Act, 2019
 

Today, President Donald J. Trump signed into law H.R. 2157, the “Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Act of 2019.”  This critical bipartisan legislation provides $19.1 billion to help Americans recover from the catastrophic disasters that have struck the Nation in the past three years.  The Act includes $4.5 billion to the Department of Agriculture (USDA) for agricultural-related losses, emergency timber restoration, farmland repair, and watershed recovery work to help our great American farmers and ranchers.  It also provides $3.3 billion for the Corps of Engineers to repair damages caused by natural disasters, to invest in new flood and storm damage reduction projects, and to make the Nation more resilient to future natural disasters.  Additionally, the Department of Defense will receive $2.7 billion to repair and replace certain installations.  This bill also includes other critical funding, such as $1.6 billion to the Department of Transportation for the Federal Highway Administration’s Emergency Relief Program and additional resources for wildfire suppression activities conducted by the United States Forest Service.

President Trump is committed to securing funding for and improving the implementation of policies that mitigate the risk natural disasters pose to communities and make the Nation’s recovery from disasters vastly more effective.  The Administration looks forward to working with both chambers of Congress as rapidly as possible to address the equally vital Fiscal Year 2019 Emergency Supplemental Budget Request for southern border humanitarian needs. 


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TEXT OF A LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT TO THE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND THE PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE

Office of the Press Secretary
TEXT OF A LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT
TO THE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
AND THE PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE



June 6, 2019


  
Dear Madam Speaker: (Dear Mr. President:)

In accordance with section 1204 of the Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Act, 2019 (H.R. 2157; the "Act"), I hereby designate as emergency requirements all funding (including the transfer of funds) so designated by the Congress in the Act pursuant to section 251(b)(2)(A) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, as outlined in the enclosed list of accounts.

The details of this action are set forth in the enclosed memorandum from the Acting Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
 
                             Sincerely,



                             DONALD J. TRUMP

 

On Thursday, June 6, 2019, the President signed into law:

Office of the Press Secretary

 

On Thursday, June 6, 2019, the President signed into law:

 

H.R. 2157, the "Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Act, 2019," which provides additional fiscal year 2019 emergency supplemental funding for natural disaster relief and recovery efforts.


June 6, 2019 NATIONAL DAY OF REMEMBRANCE OF THE 75TH ANNIVERSARY OF D-DAY - A PROCLAMATION BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Office of the Press Secretary
NATIONAL DAY OF REMEMBRANCE OF THE 75TH ANNIVERSARY OF D-DAY

- - - - - - -

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

A PROCLAMATION

 
    On June 6, 1944, D-Day, more than 130,000 American and Allied troops stormed the beaches of Normandy, France, and thousands more parachuted in behind enemy lines, on a mission to retake Europe from the control of Nazi Germany.  The night before the operation, the largest amphibious assault in the history of war, General Dwight D. Eisenhower issued a message to the Allied Expeditionary Force:  "The eyes of the world are upon you.  The hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you... We will accept nothing less than full victory."  Seventy-five years later, these words remind us of the magnitude of the day and of the heroism of the thousands who waded onto the beaches, parachuted into the countryside, and gave their all to change the course of history and to bring liberty to millions.

    On that fateful June morning, before dawn, paratroopers from the Army's 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, among others, fell in behind enemy lines.  Shortly thereafter, the first wave of American, British, and Canadian infantry divisions, which had crossed the English Channel in 7,000 vessels and landing craft, rushed forth onto the five beaches of the targeted 50-mile stretch of the French coastline, codenamed Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno, and Sword.

    Awaiting these brave men was a shoreline littered with anti-landing obstacles, landmines, bunkers, and strategically positioned machine-gun nests.  These defenses inflicted devastating losses on the Allied forces.  1,465 Americans perished on the beaches of Normandy that day.  On Omaha Beach 
‑‑  the bloodiest of the five ‑‑  the U.S. Army's 1st and 29th Infantry Divisions suffered horrific losses:  2,400 soldiers were killed or wounded by day's end.

    Secure in the nobility of their cause and driven by love of country, the heroes of D-Day pressed forward against the German onslaught.  Through their gallantry and dedication to duty, they overwhelmed the enemy and secured a beachhead that allowed wave after wave of infantry to push onto the continent.  By day's end, the D-Day forces had pried open Europe's northern door 
‑‑  so tightly sealed by the Nazis for years.  Through that door streamed the forces of liberation, which ultimately ended the war, ended the horrors of the Holocaust, ended the tyrannical Hitler regime, and laid the foundations of a peace that persists to this day.

    Today, we pause to remember and honor all of the brave soldiers, sailors, and airmen whose selfless sacrifices catalyzed the deliverance of oppressed people and secured freedom for decades to come.  May we always be true to the virtues and principles for which this D-Day generation 
‑‑  the Greatest Generation ‑‑  paid so dearly.  As we mark 75 years since the D-Day landings, we recognize that their legacy grows ever more meaningful with time.  The story of America will forever include the valor and sacrifice of the intrepid servicemen who took those beaches in northwest France on June 6, 1944.

    NOW, THEREFORE, I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim June 6, 2019, as a National Day of Remembrance of the 75th Anniversary of D-Day.  I call upon all Americans to observe this day with programs, ceremonies, and activities that honor those who fought and died so that men and women they had never met might know what it is to be free.

    IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this sixth day of June, in the year of our Lord two thousand nineteen, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-third.


                        DONALD J. TRUMP

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REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP AND PRESIDENT MACRON OF FRANCE BEFORE BILATERAL MEETING Prefecture of Calvados Caen, France

Office of the Press Secretary
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP
AND PRESIDENT MACRON OF FRANCE
BEFORE BILATERAL MEETING

Prefecture of Calvados
Caen, France
 

 
2:37 P.M. CEST

     PRESIDENT MACRON:  I will say a few words in English, and I will repeat them exactly what I say.  And I wanted first to thank you, President Donald Trump, for your presence here in this place.  And thanks to your country, your nation, and your veterans.

     This morning, we paid this tribute to their courage.  And I think it was a great moment to celebrate, and celebrate these people.

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  It was.

PRESIDENT MACRON:  And I think your presence here to celebrate them, and their presence, is, for me, the best evidence of this unbreakable links between our two nations.

     From the very beginning of the American nation and all over the different centenaries, I think this message they conveyed to us, and our main tribute, is precisely to protect freedom and democracy everywhere.  And this is why I'm always extremely happy to discuss with you in Washington, in Paris, or everywhere, in Caen today, because we work very closely together.  Our soldiers work very closely together in Sahel, in Iraq, in Syria.  Each time freedom and democracy is at stake, we work closely together and we will follow up.

     So, thanks for this friendship.  Thanks for what your country did for my country.  And thanks for what we will do together for both of us and the rest of the world.

     PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Thank you very much.  Well, thank you very much.  And I will say we've had great success working together, too -- whether it's the caliphate, or whether it was a couple of other things we did militarily.  And you know what I'm talking about.  And your military is excellent.  My people report back; they say it's absolutely excellent.  But they work very well together.

This was a very special day, and I want to thank you for inviting me.  This was something that was -- we read about it all our lives: Normandy.  And there was -- there are those that say it was the most important ever, not just at that time, but ever.  And to be a part of it and to have number 75 -- 75 years -- was very, very special.

So we very much appreciate it.  We met some great people today, some tremendous people.  Some very brave people.  And I look forward to coming back.  We'll be coming back.  Hopefully, over the years, we'll be coming back.  But it's a very special place.  It's an amazing place.  And it's somewhere -- when you think of those places of great importance, this is certainly one of the top.  In the eyes of some, it's the top because of what it meant in terms of the turnaround of a very, very bad situation.  That was the big turn.

So I really enjoyed it.  Seeing it firsthand was something.  And we're going to be now discussing, first of all, this beautiful place where we ended up.  I hope everybody can appreciate.  I'd love you to maybe tell some of the folks in the media just quick, like you did me, how it started with Napoleon.  It's a very interesting place that we're in.

And, as you know, France has many interesting places.  But we'll be discussing, to me, just as interesting as trade and military, and all sorts of things.  So we're going to spend a little time together.

And then I'll be going back probably tomorrow morning or tomorrow afternoon.  We've pretty much finished up.  We've had a very hectic schedule.  Most of you had been with us from the beginning, but it's been a beautiful schedule.

Got to know the Queen.  The Queen is a great woman, as you know.  And we had a very, very good talk with the United Kingdom and a lot of good talks on trade.  And you know what's going on over there.  It's a complex subject because of Brexit.  Nobody knows where it ends up, but I know it's going to end up very well.

And then we came here, and a lot of people are anxious to see what we're going to be doing together.  Because, as you know, we know what a lot of other people don’t know.  We're doing a lot together.  And the relationship between you and I, and also France and the United States, has been outstanding.  I don’t think it's ever been maybe as good.  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.  Thank you, Mr. President.

Q    Mr. President, what were the two of you talking about in the cemetery?  You looked animated at one point.  Then you turned away from us.  We were trying to read your lips.

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  I just -- you know, we were talking about the depth and the number of people killed.  You know, we had a -- they call them the "guides."  And they were guiding us.  They were telling us what happened and when.  And they talked about the first wave came in, and 92 percent of the people in the first wave were killed.  And then the second wave came in, and it was 80 percent were killed.  And then third wave and fourth wave.  And then, I guess, they said the sixth wave they broke through.  It's like a dam.  They broke through.

And it was so incredible and so fascinating.  And then you talk about bravery, but when you think 92 percent of the people were killed in the first wave.

So it kept going down, down, down, and then they break through.  And it's a lot of courage and a lot of heartbreak, but an incredible victory.  Just one of the most important victories, wouldn’t you say?  So you might want to respond.

     PRESIDENT MACRON:  No, I -- you’re perfectly right.  We had a lot of discussions indeed, and all these events were described.  And I think what is a very important thing, especially for our young generation, having shared this world with these actual heroes -- these veterans -- is that a lot of things probably we take for granted were precisely (inaudible), or protected by these guys.  And lot of these veterans -- and, I mean, I think you told it during the speech -- came back for the very first time after the war.  And they came here.  They took a lot of risks.  They put their life at risk for our country and for liberty.

     And I think, for our young generation in the U.S. and in France, it’s extremely important to see these veterans are -- as actual heroes -- are those precisely thanks to all these maneuvers and these actions allowed our country to be free.

     Q    In 2004, George W. Bush said here in Normandy, “We would do it again for our friends.”  Would you say that, too?

     PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Yeah, sure.  I would.

     Q    (Speaks French.)  (No translation provided.)

     PRESIDENT TRUMP:  I would certainly recommend that, definitely.  Look, this was a great, unifying situation.  There’s probably been -- seldom in history has there been anything like it.  But especially when you heard about the waves of people coming in -- knowing they were going to be killed, most of them -- it’s just an incredible thing.

And then the result was -- as many people died, the result was so important because it -- we have what we have today because of things like that.  And it’s very sad, but I would absolutely be right there.  I would be right there.

     We have a very good partnership.  We really have a -- "partnership," I guess, maybe is the best word.  They talk about "allies" and they talk about many different words you could use.  But we have a great partnership -- France and the U.S.

     Q    Mr. President, when will you decide whether to impose additional tariffs on China?

     PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Additional tariffs on China?

     Q    (Inaudible) that you were looking at $300 billion.

     PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Well, you mean when am I going to put the extra 325 billion dollars’ worth of tariffs?  I will make that decision, I would say, over the next two weeks -- probably right after the G20.  One way or the other, I’ll make that decision after the G20.  I’ll be meeting with President Xi, and we’ll see what happens.  But probably planning it sometime after G20.  Okay?  Thank you.

     PRESIDENT MACRON:  (Speaks French.)  (No translation provided.)

     Q    Do you support Brexit?  Is it a good way -- do you support Brexit?  Is it a good way to ensure Europe is at peace and strong?

     PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Well, that’s really going to be between the UK and the European Union.  And they’re working very hard.  I know they’re working very hard together.  It doesn’t seem to be working out, but, at some point, something will happen.  One way or the other, it’ll all work out.

     But I’m interested to find out how it happens also.  Very big will be who’s going to be the new prime minister over in the UK.  That’s going to be a very big thing.  That’s happening now.  So I think, before you can think in terms of Brexit for the next few weeks, you’re going to have to find out what happens -- who’s going to be the new leader.  And that’s a very interesting situation taking place.

     I found it to be a very -- sort of an amazing period of time, especially having spent so much time with the Queen, who I think is an incredible lady.  But I spent so much time, and, you know, there's a lot of question marks as to who's going to be leading.  And so it was very interesting talking to her, being with her for so many hours, actually.  For so many -- I feel I know her so well.  And she certainly knows me very well right now.  But we have a very good relationship also with the United Kingdom.  But it'll all work out.

      Q     Mr. President, you two leaders have had differences over Iran in the past.  Do those differences remain?  And will you be talking about them today?

      PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Well, I don’t think we have differences over Iran.  I don’t think that the President wants to see nuclear weapons, and neither do I.  And that’s what it's all about.  He doesn’t want to see them having nuclear weapons, and I don’t want to see them having nuclear weapons.  And they won't have nuclear weapons.  With that being said, you know, let's see what happens with Iran.

But when I became President -- it's hard to believe two and a half years ago; now more -- Iran was a true state of terror.  They still are, but they were undisputed champions of terror, and that’s a bad thing.  And we had 14 different locations where they were fighting (inaudible), between Yemen and Syria, but many other locations and many other battle sites.

And it was all about Iran.  They were behind every one of them.  They're not doing that anymore.  They're doing very poorly as a nation.  They're failing as a nation.  And I don’t want them to fail as a nation.  They can -- we can turn that around very quickly.

But the sanctions have been extraordinary how powerful they've been, and other things.  I understand they want to talk.  And if they want to talk, that’s fine.  We'll talk.  But the one thing that they can't have is they can't have nuclear weapons.  And I think the President of France would agree with that very strongly.  I think that he would agree that they cannot have nuclear weapons.

PRESIDENT MACRON:  I think we do share the same objectives on Iran.  What do we want to do?  First, you want to be sure they don't get nuclear weapon.  I mean, we had an instrument until 2025.  We want to go further and have full certainty on the long run.  Second, we want to reduce ballistic activity.  And third, we want to contain the regional activity.

I mean, these three approaches -- these three objectives are important.  We have, as well, a fourth common objective: peace in the region.  So, we have to deliver together these four objectives.

This a point.  This is a point.  And all the other debates are about technicalities.  In order to build that, you need to start a negotiation, and I think the words pronounced by President Trump is that they are very important.  We need to open a new negotiation in order to build and to get these four objectives.

Thank you.

PRESIDENT TRUMP:  Thank you very much.

 
                            END              2:52 P.M. CEST

 

West Wing Reads ‘You’re the Pride of Our Nation,’ President Trump Tells Veterans on 75th D-Day Anniversary in Normandy

West Wing Reads

‘You’re the Pride of Our Nation,’ President Trump Tells Veterans on 75th D-Day Anniversary in Normandy


“President Donald Trump extolled U.S. veterans gathered in Normandy on the 75th anniversary of D-Day as the ‘pride of our nation’ in a reverential address Thursday,” John Fritze and David Jackson report for USA Today.

“The president, who leaned over to embrace one of the World War II veterans who shared the stage at the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial, heaped praise on the troops who stormed Omaha and other beaches on the French coast, battling through heavy German fire to claim a beachhead and turn the course of World War II.”

“‘We are gathered here on Freedom's Altar,’ Trump said within view of both Omaha beach and the cemetery where 9,388 American military dead are buried.”

Click here to read more.
In The Hill, Peggy Grande—Ronald Reagan’s former executive assistant—writes that President Trump struck the right balance between showing respect and projecting strength on his first official State Visit to the United Kingdom. “President Trump and first lady Melania Trump represent all of us when they step on foreign soil . . . Seeing the genuine warmth between President Trump and Queen Elizabeth, the latest state visit was an overwhelming success.”
“Pennsylvania’s economy has just reached another remarkable milestone — and it didn’t happen by accident,” CNN commentator David Urban writes in Morning Call. “The state’s unemployment rate has dropped to 3.8 percent in April — the lowest level since 1976 — and total employment has reached an all-time high of more than 6.2 million . . . There’s no doubt that Pennsylvania’s economy is thriving like never before.”
“On Wednesday, the Department of Health and Human Services announced it would end the use of human fetal tissue from elective abortions for medical research,” Mary Vought writes in the Washington Examiner. “For over 25 years, Congress has allowed the National Institutes of Health to dole out what now amounts to more than $100 million each year to researchers who utilize the fetal tissue of aborted babies. There is little to show for this money.”

REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP ON THE 75TH COMMEMORATION OF D-DAY Normandy American Cemetery Colleville-sur-Mer, France

Office of the Press Secretary
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP
ON THE 75TH COMMEMORATION OF D-DAY

Normandy American Cemetery
Colleville-sur-Mer, France


 
12:07 P.M. CEST

THE PRESIDENT:  President Macron, Mrs. Macron, and the people of France; to the First Lady of the United States and members of the United States Congress; to distinguished guests, veterans, and my fellow Americans:

We are gathered here on Freedom’s Altar.  On these shores, on these bluffs, on this day 75 years ago, 10,000 men shed their blood, and thousands sacrificed their lives, for their brothers, for their countries, and for the survival of liberty.

Today, we remember those who fell, and we honor all who fought right 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.  You're the pride of our nation.  You are the glory of our republic.  And we thank you from the bottom of our hearts.  (Applause.)

Here with you are over 60 veterans who landed on D-Day.  Our debt to you is everlasting.  Today, we express our undying gratitude.

When you were young, these men enlisted their lives in a Great Crusade -- one of the greatest of all times.  Their mission is the story of an epic battle and the ferocious, eternal struggle between good and evil.

On the 6th of June, 1944, they joined a liberation force of awesome power and breathtaking scale.  After months of planning, the Allies had chosen this ancient coastline to mount their campaign to vanquish the wicked tyranny of the Nazi empire from the face of the Earth.

The battle began in the skies above us.  In those first tense midnight hours, 1,000 aircraft roared overhead with 17,000 Allied airborne troops preparing to leap into the darkness beyond these trees.

Then came dawn.  The enemy who had occupied these heights saw the largest naval armada in the history of the world.  Just a few miles offshore were 7,000 vessels bearing 130,000 warriors.  They were the citizens of free and independent nations, united by their duty to their compatriots and to millions yet unborn.

There were the British, whose nobility and fortitude saw them through the worst of Dunkirk and the London Blitz.  The full violence of Nazi fury was no match for the full grandeur of British pride.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

There were the Canadians, whose robust sense of honor and loyalty compelled them to take up arms alongside Britain from the very, very beginning.

There were the fighting Poles, the tough Norwegians, and the intrepid Aussies.  There were the gallant French commandos, soon to be met by thousands of their brave countrymen ready to write a new chapter in the long history of French valor.  (Applause.)

And, finally, there were the Americans.  They came from the farms of a vast heartland, the streets of glowing cities, and the forges of mighty industrial towns.  Before the war, many had never ventured beyond their own community.  Now they had come to offer their lives half a world from home.

This beach, codenamed Omaha, was defended by the Nazis with monstrous firepower, thousands and thousands of mines and spikes driven into the sand, so deeply.  It was here that tens of thousands of the Americans came.

The GIs who boarded the landing craft that morning knew that they carried on their shoulders not just the pack of a soldier, but the fate of the world.  Colonel George Taylor, whose 16th Infantry Regiment would join in the first wave, was asked: What would happen if the Germans stopped right then and there, cold on the beach -- just stopped them?  What would happen?  This great American replied: “Why, the 18th Infantry is coming in right behind us.  The 26th Infantry will come on too.  Then there is the 2nd Infantry Division already afloat.  And the 9th Division.  And the 2nd Armored.  And the 3rd Armored.  And all the rest.  Maybe the 16th won’t make it, but someone will.”

One of those men in Taylor’s 16th Regiment was Army medic Ray Lambert.  Ray was only 23, but he had already earned three Purple Hearts and two Silver Stars fighting in North Africa and Sicily, where he and his brother Bill, no longer with us, served side by side.

In the early morning hours, the two brothers stood together on the deck of the USS Henrico, before boarding two separate Higgins landing craft.  “If I don’t make it,” Bill said, "please, please take care of my family.”  Ray asked his brother to do the same.

Of the 31 men on Ray’s landing craft, only Ray and 6 others made it to the beach.  There were only a few of them left.  They came to the sector right here below us.  “Easy Red” it was called.  Again and again, Ray ran back into the water.  He dragged out one man after another.  He was shot through the arm.  His leg was ripped open by shrapnel.  His back was broken.  He nearly drowned.

He had been on the beach for hours, bleeding and saving lives, when he finally lost consciousness.  He woke up the next day on a cot beside another badly wounded soldier.  He looked over and saw his brother Bill.  They made it.  They made it.  They made it.

At 98 years old, Ray is here with us today, with his fourth Purple Heart and his third Silver Star from Omaha.  (Applause.)  Ray, the free world salutes you.  (Applause.)  Thank you, Ray.  (Applause.)  

Nearly two hours in, unrelenting fire from these bluffs kept the Americans pinned down on the sand now red with our heroes’ blood.  Then, just a few hundred yards from where I'm standing, a breakthrough came.  The battle turned, and with it, history.

Down on the beach, Captain Joe Dawson, the son of a Texas preacher, led Company G through a minefield to a natural fold in the hillside, still here.  Just beyond this path to my right, Captain Dawson snuck beneath an enemy machine gun perch and tossed his grenades.  Soon, American troops were charging up “Dawson’s Draw.”  What a job he did.  What bravery he showed.

Lieutenant Spalding and the men from Company E moved on to crush the enemy strongpoint on the far side of this cemetery, and stop the slaughter on the beach below.  Countless more Americans poured out across this ground all over the countryside.  They joined fellow American warriors from Utah beach, and Allies from Juno, Sword, and Gold, along with the airborne and the French patriots.

Private First Class Russell Pickett, of the 29th Division’s famed 116th Infantry Regiment, had been wounded in the first wave that landed on Omaha Beach.  At a hospital in England, Private Pickett vowed to return to battle.  "I'm going to return," he said.  "I'm going to return."

Six days after D-Day, he rejoined his company.  Two thirds had been killed already; many had been wounded, within 15 minutes of the invasion.  They’d lost 19 just from small town of Bedford, Virginia, alone.  Before long, a grenade left Private Pickett again gravely wounded.  So badly wounded.  Again, he chose to return.  He didn’t care; he had to be here.

He was then wounded a third time, and laid unconscious for 12 days.  They thought he was gone.  They thought he had no chance.  Russell Pickett is the last known survivor of the legendary Company A.  And, today, believe it or not, he has returned once more to these shores to be with his comrades.  Private Pickett, you honor us all with your presence.  (Applause.)  Tough guy.  (Laughter.)

By the fourth week of August, Paris was liberated.  (Applause.)  Some who landed here pushed all the way to the center of Germany.  Some threw open the gates of Nazi concentration camps to liberate Jews who had suffered the bottomless horrors of the Holocaust.  And some warriors fell on other fields of battle, returning to rest on this soil for eternity.

Before this place was consecrated to history, the land was owned by a French farmer, a member of the French resistance.  These were great people.  These were strong and tough people.  His terrified wife waited out D-Day in a nearby house, holding tight to their little baby girl.  The next day, a soldier appeared.  “I’m an American,” he said.  “I’m here to help.”  The French woman was overcome with emotion and cried.  Days later, she laid flowers on fresh American graves.

Today, her granddaughter, Stefanie, serves as a guide at this cemetery.  This week, Stefanie led 92-year-old Marian Wynn of California to see the grave of her brother Don for the very first time.

Marian and Stefanie are both with us today.  And we thank you for keeping alive the memories of our precious heroes.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  

9,388 young Americans rest beneath the white crosses and Stars of David arrayed on these beautiful grounds.  Each one has been adopted by a French family that thinks of him as their own.  They come from all over France to look after our boys.  They kneel.  They cry.  They pray.  They place flowers.  And they never forget.  Today, America embraces the French people and thanks you for honoring our beloved dead.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you.

To all of our friends and partners: Our cherished alliance was forged in the heat of battle, tested in the trials of war, and proven in the blessings of peace.  Our bond is unbreakable.

From across the Earth, Americans are drawn to this place as though it were a part of our very soul.  We come not only because of what they did here.  We come because of who they were.

They were young men with their entire lives before them.  They were husbands who said goodbye to their young brides and took their duty as their fate.  They were fathers who would never meet their infant sons and daughters because they had a job to do.  And with God as their witness, they were going to get it done.  They came wave after wave, without question, without hesitation, and without complaint.

More powerful than the strength of American arms was the strength of American hearts.

These men ran through the fires of hell moved by a force no weapon could destroy: the fierce patriotism of a free, proud, and sovereign people.  (Applause.)  They battled not for control and domination, but for liberty, democracy, and self-rule.

They pressed on for love in home and country -- the Main Streets, the schoolyards, the churches and neighbors, the families and communities that gave us men such as these.

They were sustained by the confidence that America can do anything because we are a noble nation, with a virtuous people, praying to a righteous God.

The exceptional might came from a truly exceptional spirit.  The abundance of courage came from an abundance of faith.  The great deeds of an Army came from the great depths of their love.

As they confronted their fate, the Americans and the Allies placed themselves into the palm of God’s hand.

The men behind me will tell you that they are just the lucky ones.  As one of them recently put it, “All the heroes are buried here.”  But we know what these men did.  We knew how brave they were.  They came here and saved freedom, and then, they went home and showed us all what freedom is all about.

The American sons and daughters who saw us to victory were no less extraordinary in peace.  They built families.  They built industries.  They built a national culture that inspired the entire world.  In the decades that followed, America defeated communism, secured civil rights, revolutionized science, launched a man to the moon, and then kept on pushing to new frontiers.  And, today, America is stronger than ever before.  (Applause.)

Seven decades ago, the warriors of D-Day fought a sinister enemy who spoke of a thousand-year empire.  In defeating that evil, they left a legacy that will last not only for a thousand years, but for all time -- for as long as the soul knows of duty and honor; for as long as freedom keeps its hold on the human heart.

To the men who sit behind me, and to the boys who rest in the field before me, your example will never, ever grow old.  (Applause.)  Your legend will never tire.  Your spirit -- brave, unyielding, and true -- will never die.

The blood that they spilled, the tears that they shed, the lives that they gave, the sacrifice that they made, did not just win a battle.  It did not just win a war.  Those who fought here won a future for our nation.  They won the survival of our civilization.  And they showed us the way to love, cherish, and defend our way of life for many centuries to come.

Today, as we stand together upon this sacred Earth, we pledge that our nations will forever be strong and united.  We will forever be together.  Our people will forever be bold.  Our hearts will forever be loyal.  And our children, and their children, will forever and always be free.

May God bless our great veterans.  May God bless our Allies.  May God bless the heroes of D-Day.  And may God bless America.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you very much.

                          END            12:34 P.M. CEST

REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP AND BEFORE AIR FORCE ONE DEPARTURE Shannon International Airport Shannon, Ireland

Office of the Press Secretary
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP
AND BEFORE AIR FORCE ONE DEPARTURE

Shannon International Airport
Shannon, Ireland



7:54 A.M. IST

     THE PRESIDENT:  So, we're going together to Normandy, and it's going to be something really special.  It looks like the weather is beautiful, but who knows; it changes fast.  I think it's going to be an incredible, special day in a very special and very important place.  So I look forward to that.

     As you know, Mexico was in yesterday.  They're coming back this morning, in Washington.  They'll be meeting at the White House.  I think a lot of progress was made yesterday, but we have to make a lot of progress.  Mexico has been making, for many, many years, hundreds of mill- -- of billions of dollars.  They've been making an absolute fortune on the United States.  They have to step up, and they have to step up to the plate, and perhaps they will.  We're going to see.  They can solve the problem.

     The Democrats -- Congress has been a disaster.  They won't change.  They won't do anything.  They want free immigration -- immigration to pour into our country.  They don’t care who it is.  They don’t care what kind of a record they have.  It doesn’t make any difference.  They're not going to be changing anything.  We go to them, we say, "Let's fix the immigration laws."  They just want it to do badly.  The worse it does, the happier they are.

So that's the way it is, and, I guess, that's the way it'll be until after the election.  It's a disgrace.  Because, frankly, we could solve this problem so easy if the Democrats in Congress were willing to make some changes, but they're not.  And that's the way it is.  They want to just ride it out.  They want to have a real bad time.  They don’t care about crime.  They don’t care about drugs pouring into our country.  They couldn’t care less.  It's all politics.  It's a vicious business.  So that's the way it is.

     But we're having a great talk with Mexico.  We'll see what happens.  But something pretty dramatic could happen.  We've told Mexico the tariffs go on.  And I mean it, too.  And I'm very happy with it.  And lot of people, senators included, they have no idea what they're talking about when it comes to tariffs.  They have no -- absolutely no idea.

When you have the money, when you have the product, when you have the thing that everybody wants, you're in a position to do very well with tariffs, and that's where we are.  We're the piggybank.  The United States is the piggybank.  It has all the money that others want to take from us, but they're not taking it so easy anymore.  It's a lot different.

     Our talks with China -- a lot of interesting things are happening.  We'll see what happens.  In the meantime, we're getting 25 percent on $250 billion, and I can go up another at least $300 billion.  And I'll do that at the right time.

But I think China wants to make a deal badly.  I think Mexico wants to make a deal badly.  And I'm going to Normandy.

Thank you.  Thank you, everybody.

                          END                 7:58 A.M. IST
 

West Wing Reads Congress Needs to Back America’s Workers and Approve Trump’s Trade Deal



West Wing Reads

Congress Needs to Back America’s Workers and Approve Trump’s Trade Deal


“In 1993, very few Americans had a cellphone, and no one had ever heard of buying a book on Amazon”—and yet that year marked “the last time Congress meaningfully debated trade between our two North American partners,” Sen. Mike Braun (R-IN) writes in The Daily Caller.

That is why President Donald J. Trump recently renegotiated NAFTA, a trade agreement that’s woefully out of date. “House Democrats have spent decades fundraising against NAFTA,” Sen. Braun writes. Now “they have an opportunity to replace it with a better agreement — one that includes a minimum wage for Mexican auto workers and provisions to protect American jobs from unfairly traded Chinese products.”

Click here to read more.
“President Trump on Wednesday joined other world leaders and the royal family in a ceremony in Portsmouth, England, to commemorate the upcoming 75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion,” Brett Samuels reports in The Hill. “Hundreds of people -- including military officials and World War II veterans -- gathered at an amphitheater just across the English Channel from where the Allied invasion took place on June 6, 1944. Trump took the stage to read an excerpt from a prayer that then-President Franklin Roosevelt delivered to the nation on the radio on the eve of the invasion.”
“President Trump and first lady Melania Trump hosted a dinner for Prince Charles and Duchess of Cornwall Camilla Parker Bowles on Tuesday night at Winfield House, a mansion in London which is the official residence of the United States ambassador to the United Kingdom,” Talia Kaplan reports for Fox News. “Earlier Tuesday, Trump and the first lady toured the Churchill War Rooms with the prime minister and her husband. British leaders used the bunkers to plot strategy during World War II.”
“The new tariffs on Mexico announced by President Trump are a win for the United States,” former Gov. Jan Brewer (R-AZ) writes in The Hill. “Mexico has the ability to significantly alleviate the humanitarian and national security crisis on the southern border by strictly enforcing its own strong immigration laws to prevent ‘caravans’ of illegal immigrants from traversing its territory on their way to the United States. With Democrats obstructing his every move to limit the flow of crime and drugs over our border, President Trump is taking every measure to address the crisis on his own, hopefully resulting in Mexico becoming a part of the solution.”