Bush's rhetoric on the war in Iraq and the war on terror has little to do with the spirit of D-Day and everything to do with internalizing national myths
By Martin Kettle
THE OBSERVER , London
Saturday, Jun 05, 2004,Page 9
The 60th anniversary of D-Day promises moments of unique poignancy. By 2014, so it is generally understood, the ranks will be too thin and the survivors too frail for the veterans of 1944 to muster in France again. So this weekend will mark the last rallying of the liberators. And that means that never again will the leaders of the Western nations travel to the Normandy beaches to address them.
Please, let it be so. In saying this, I mean not one jot of disrespect for the fallen or their comrades. No, it's the commemoration -- not what it commemorates -- that is the problem. For, with the benefit of hindsight, the 50th anniversary celebrations of D-Day in 1994 were a well-intentioned disaster that has not done the world many favors.
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