VETERANS MEMORIAL
By Maj. Gen.
Jerry R. Curry (Ret'd)
CurryforAmerica.com
Leadership matters. Can you imagine our current
President smeared with dirt and blood climbing up
out of a foxhole with bullets whizzing around him
and mortar rounds exploding all over the
battlefield, and shouting above the sound of the
detonations, “What’s wrong with you men? Do you want
to live forever? Get out of those foxholes and
follow me. We’re going to charge this hill and kill
every enemy SOB on top of it.” That is real
leadership, the kind we teach the young men and
women who volunteer to hazard their lives in the
service of their country.
When
the President learned that our nation’s World War II
Veterans were being barricaded out of their own
memorial on the National Mall, he should have had
the Secret Service drive him down to where they were
assembled, picked up the nearest barricade and torn
it down himself. He should have dismissed the Park
Rangers who were blockading the pathway to the
memorial and sent them back to their barracks. Then
he should have ushered the veterans inside, and
taken the time to shake hands with each of them as
they entered that hallowed place.
When
he got back to the White House he should have, by
Presidential Order, declared all war memorials and
national parks nationwide open for America’s
citizens to visit and enjoy. It takes more time,
money and Park Rangers to close the memorials and
national parks across America and keep them closed,
than it does to open them and keep them open. If
there really is a shortage of Park Rangers, the Boy
Scouts could find volunteers and assign some Eagle
Scouts the task of keeping the memorials and parks
open. They would be more than happy to do it.
The
job of the President was to find a way to open the
memorials and parks for all Americans and to keep
them open, but especially for our veterans. As the
Commander-in-Chief he should have brushed aside all
the obvious political pettiness and stupidity on
display at the WW II Memorial and seen to it that
America’s veterans were treated with the respect
they have earned and deserve. He missed a great
opportunity to show his personal appreciation for
their sacrifices and to exercise real presidential
leadership in honoring both the nation and its
veterans.
What
was the message the WW II Vets were trying to send
to the President and to the Congress? To paraphrase
President Reagan it was, “Tear down these
barricades. You have no right to keep us from
visiting our own memorials, the ones we paid for
with our blood and lives.
How
do we know that the White House approved keeping the
WW II Vets out of visiting their own memorial? We
know because according to the press, the National
Park Service Director, Jonathan Jarvis, telephoned
the White House several times to coordinate keeping
the Veterans out of the memorial. He also
coordinated his actions with the Office of the
Secretary of the Department of the Interior.
Why
did the President permit the WW II Memorial to be
closed in the first place? There is no way of
knowing except that he doesn’t seem to like the
military very much and seems unconstrained in
actions that belittle and weaken the military, such
as drastically reducing the military’s budget, or
his administration’s comparing our veterans who
return home from fighting the nation’s war
in the middle
east to terrorists.
Actions such as these cannot endear the
Commander-in-Chief to our armed forces who everyday
risk their lives in the service of their country. In
fact, they do just the opposite.
If
things continue on as they are, at some time in the
future there will be a complete breakdown in trust
and leadership between the President and the
nation’s armed forces. Leadership matters.