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Here’s how Trump is honoring the Iwo Jima 75th anniversary

President Donald J. Trump puts his hand over his heart during the 136th Coast Guard Academy commencement exercise in New London, Conn., May 17, 2017. (Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Patrick Kelley.)
February 19, 2020

President Donald Trump commemorated the 75th anniversary of the infamous Iwo Jima battle with a White House statement on Wednesday.

The full text of the statement is below:

In the long record of American heroism in combat, few episodes capture the indomitable will and the stouthearted spirit of the American warrior better than the triumphs on the island of Iwo Jima in early 1945.  Seventy-five years later, we pay tribute to the immeasurable sacrifice of those killed in action on Iwo Jima, and we honor the heroic efforts of all who took part in one of the most costly and significant battles in our country’s history.

By February 1945, despite American forces possessing aerial and naval supremacy, the Japanese forces at Iwo Jima were well dug-in and prepared to fight to the last man for the strategically important airfields on this small piece of land.  This was the first time in World War II that the Japanese were defending what they considered home soil.  For 5 weeks, our Marines and Navy sailors endured a harrowing trial by fire, fighting to secure this remote volcanic island from more than 20,000 determined Japanese soldiers.  Nearly 7,000 Americans died in the effort.

The fighting on Iwo Jima was some of the bloodiest and most costly in all of World War II, but it also gave rise to some of the greatest examples of patriotism and heroism in our Nation’s history, inspiring Admiral Chester Nimitz’s famous statement that “uncommon valor was a common virtue.”  Few images evoke as much emotion from the American soul as Joe Rosenthal’s photo of six Marines raising our Flag atop Mount Suribachi in the opening days of the battle.  In addition, 27 Medals of Honor—the highest honor given to members of the military—were awarded for actions of conspicuous gallantry during the battle.  Of these, 22 medals went to Marines, making up more than 25 percent of the total Medals of Honor awarded to Marines throughout the entirety of the war.

Among the heroes at Iwo Jima were non-combatants, like Rabbi Roland Gittelsohn.  In the days following the battle, Rabbi Gittelsohn delivered a powerful, stirring message at the Fifth Marine Division cemetery on Iwo Jima.  There, he stated, “Here lie officers and privates, blacks and whites, rich and poor together.  Here are Protestants, Catholics, and Jews together.  Here no man prefers another because of his color.”  For his service ministering to men in the thick of the combat zone, Rabbi Gittelsohn was awarded three service ribbons, and today his words resonate as a powerful testament to the founding principle of our Nation that liberty and democracy are the rights of all men and women of every race, religion, and creed.

On this anniversary, we honor those who answered the call of duty and ensured that the forces of freedom emerged victorious in that fateful battle.  As a Nation, we remain forever indebted to the Greatest Generation.

Iwo Jima remains one of the deadliest battles in U.S. history.

Nearly 70,000 troops and more than 450 ships deployed to the island.

The 36-day battle claimed the lives of nearly 7,000 U.S. Marines and 20,000 Japanese soldiers. Nearly 20,000 more American troops were injured.

Medals of Honor were awarded to 27 Marines and sailors, many of which were posthumous awards.

At his Colorado Springs rally on Thursday, President Trump will be meeting with retired Marine Corps Cpl. Don Whipple, a 94-year-old World War II veteran who fought in Iwo Jima, KDVR News reported.

Whipple will also meet with Vice President Mike Pence, and will travel to Washington D.C. next week to participate in ceremonies commemorating the battle’s 75th anniversary.