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Thank you!

3 min read

At many fancy banquets in Washington, D.C., it’s customary for the band to play the official songs of the Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard.

And it is the custom of audience members who’ve served with those branches of our military to stand at attention.

Each year, fewer and fewer do — and they’re older and grayer but visibly proud of their service. Today we honor veterans with a holiday meant to mark the end of that human meat grinder known as World War I. First celebrated in 1919 as Armistice Day, it now pays tribute to all who have served their country in uniform.

Veterans Day was changed in 1968 to the last Monday in October, but the move angered many veterans and others who thought the switch took away from the true meaning of the day. It was changed back to Nov. 11 in 1978 and has remained there ever since.

Last year, there were 21.2 million veterans in the United States, but their numbers, thanks to the fine grinding of the actuarial tables, are fast dwindling: 9.6 million of them are older than 65 and 1.8 million of them younger than 35.

Consider that, of the 16,112,566 men and women who served their country in World War II, only 1,711,000 are still alive.

It is a clear imbalance but not necessarily a bad one. We are fighting no great wars, and this administration is making only token efforts to get involved in small ones. We are, as much as we’ve ever been, a nation at peace, and we are willing to spend as much as the rest of the world combined to keep it that way.

But even as Veterans Day approached, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel was wheeling and dealing with Congress to ward off further budget cuts. He has complained that projected cutbacks of $1 trillion during the next decade will weaken the muscle and bone of military readiness.

The cutbacks have changed America’s longstanding strategy of being able to fight two large wars and one smaller one simultaneously. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno warns that if the Army continues to shrink, the military might not be able to deal with even one contingency.

Our country has often been taken by surprise and unprepared to find itself at war. But we have always risen to the occasion and in eye-opening ways.

The universal draft threw together Ivy Leaguers, farm boys, intellectuals and illiterates that the armed forces trained for battle in World War II. In four years, they helped to defeat two great military powers. Later troops, first as draftees and then volunteers, served on battlefields in Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Kuwait, Afghanistan and elsewhere — or strove to keep peace.

In honor of Veterans Day this week, we must remember thank our veterans — and we must nurture the generations that will take their place. One day, they too will stand tall when the band strikes up the service songs.

It’s important that we remember our veterans all year long, not just one or two days a year. That’s the least we can do for all the sacrifices they made on our behalf.

– Scripps Howard News Service

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