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In Our View: War to End All Wars

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  • In Our View: War to End All Wars

    The Columbian, WA
    March 7 2008


    In Our View: War to End All Wars


    Friday, March 07, 2008


    A memorial in Vancouver's old Army barracks, two blocks south of the
    traffic circle at Fort Vancouver Way and East Evergreen Boulevard,
    lists 83 Clark County men who died in World War I, starting with
    Webster S. Albertson and ending with Gustave Young.



    On a national basis, however, WW I is `The war we forgot.'

    That's how Newsweek magazine recently described it in reporting on
    the death last month in Tampa, Fla., of Harry Landis, age 108. His
    death left only one American veteran of World War I still alive. On
    Thursday, that veteran, Frank Woodruff Buckles, 107, of Charles Town,
    W. Va., paid a visit to President Bush in the White House. (Story,
    Page A2.)
    Newsweek told the story of how little this country has done to
    memorialize the 112,000 Americans who died in the `War to End All
    Wars,' which the U.S. entered in April 1917, the war's third year.
    The war ended at 11 a.m. Nov. 11, 1918.

    Of course it wasn't the war to end all wars. Complicated in its
    alliances and grievances - and unnecessary relative to other wars, at
    least - World War I ignited geopolitical fires throughout Eastern
    Europe and beyond for decades. It led to a redrawn map of Europe,
    gave rise to Nazi Germany, created the still-raging controversy over
    Armenian genocide, set up the British occupation and renaming of
    today's Iraq, and more.

    World War I is the forgotten war because it was fought overseas
    before movie newsreels and radio were part of the American fabric. At
    this point, says Newsweek, a privately funded museum in Kansas City
    `is the only national institution with plans to commemorate the end
    of the `Doughboy' generation' after Buckles dies.

    Bush on Thursday told Buckles, `One way for me to honor the service
    of those who wear the uniform in the past and those who wear it today
    is to herald you, sir, and to thank you very much for your
    patriotism.'

    As combat veterans like Buckles know, and as stated on the title card
    of the 1930 movie `All Quiet on the Western Front,' based on the
    World War I book of the same name, `This story is neither an
    accusation nor a confession, and least of all an adventure, for death
    is not an adventure to those who stand face to face with it.'

    http://www.columbian.com/opinion/news/2008/0 3/03072008_In-Our-View-War-to-End-All-Wars.cfm
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