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The Warriors - The American
G.I.
From disparate roots but united by patriotic courage,
U.S. soldiers preserved freedom around the world
- by COLIN POWELL
As
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, I referred
to the men and women of the armed forces as "G.I.s." It
got me in trouble with some of my colleagues at the time.
Several years earlier, the Army had officially excised
the term as an unfavorable characterization derived from
the designation "government issue." Sailors and Marines
wanted to be known as sailors and Marines. Airmen,
notwithstanding their origins as a rib of the Army, wished
to be called simply airmen. Collectively, they were blandly
referred to as "service members." I persisted in
using G.I.s and found I was in good company. Newspapers
and television shows used it all the time. The most famous
and successful government education program was known
as the G.I. Bill, and it still uses that title for a newer
generation of veterans. When you added one of the most
common boy's names to it, you got G.I. Joe, and the name
of the most popular boy's toy ever, the G.I. Joe action
figure. And let's not forget G.I. Jane. G.I.
is a World War II term that two generations later continues
to conjure up the warmest and proudest memories of a noble
war that pitted pure good against pure evil - and good
triumphed.
The victors in that
war were the American G.I.s, the Willies and Joes, the
farmer from Iowa and the steelworker from Pittsburgh
who stepped off a landing craft into the hell of Omaha
Beach. The G.I. was the wisecracking kid Marine from
Brooklyn who clawed his way up a deadly hill on a Pacific
island. He was a black fighter pilot escorting white
bomber pilots over Italy and Germany, proving that skin
color had nothing to do with skill or courage. He was
a native Japanese-American infantryman released from
his own country's concentration camp to join the fight.
She was a nurse relieving the agony of a dying teenager.
He was a petty officer standing on the edge of a heaving
aircraft carrier with two signal paddles in his hands,
helping guide a dive-bomber pilot back onto the deck.
They were America. They reflected our diverse origins.
They were the embodiment of the American spirit of courage
and dedication. They were truly a "people's army," going
forth on a crusade to save democracy and freedom, to
defeat tyrants, to save oppressed peoples and to make
their families proud of them. They were the Private
Ryans, and they stood firm in the thin red line.
For most of those G.I.s, World War II was the adventure
of their lifetime. Nothing they would ever do in the
future would match their experiences as the warriors
of democracy, saving the world from its own insanity.
You can still see them in every Fourth of July color
guard, their gait faltering but ever proud. Their
forebears went by other names: doughboys, Yanks, buffalo
soldiers, Johnny Reb, Rough Riders. But "G.I." will
be forever lodged in the consciousness of our nation
to apply to them all.
The G.I. carried
the value system of the American people. The G.I.s were
the surest guarantee of America's commitment. For more
than 200 years, they answered the call to fight the
nation's battles. They never went forth as mercenaries
on the road to conquest. They went forth as reluctant
warriors, as citizen soldiers. They were as gentle
in victory as they were vicious in battle. I've had
survivors of Nazi concentration camps tell me of the
joy they experienced as the G.I.s liberated them: America
had arrived! I've had a wealthy Japanese businessman
come into my office and tell me what it was like for
him as a child in 1945 to await the arrival of the dreaded
American beasts, and instead meet a smiling G.I. who
gave him a Hershey bar. In thanks, the businessman
was donating a large sum of money to the USO.
After thanking him, I gave him as a souvenir a Hershey
bar I had autographed. He took it and began to cry.
The 20th century can be called many things, but it was
most certainly a century of war. The American G.I.s
helped defeat fascism and communism. They came
home in triumph from the ferocious battlefields of World
Wars I and II. In Korea and Vietnam they
fought just as bravely as any of their predecessors,
but no triumphant receptions awaited them at home.
They soldiered on through the twilight struggles of
the cold war and showed what they were capable of in
Desert Storm. The American people took them into their
hearts again.
In this century
hundreds of thousands of G.I.s died to bring to the
beginning of the 21st century the victory of democracy
as the ascendant political system on the face of the
earth. The G.I.s were willing to travel far away and
give their lives, if necessary, to secure the rights
and freedoms of others. Only a nation such as ours,
based on a firm moral foundation, could make such a
request of its citizens. And the G.I.s wanted nothing
more than to get the job done and then return home safely.
All they asked for in repayment from those they freed
was the opportunity to help them become part of the
world of democracy - and just enough land to bury their
fallen comrades, beneath simple white crosses and Stars
of David. The volunteer G.I.s of today stand watch
in Korea, the Persian Gulf, Europe and the dangerous
terrain of the Balkans. We must never see them as mere
hirelings, off in a corner of our society. They are
our best, and we owe them our full support and our sincerest
thanks. As this century closes, we look back to
identify the great leaders and personalities of
the past 100 years. We do so in a world still troubled,
but full of promise. That promise was gained by the
young men and women of America who fought and died for
freedom. Near the top of any listing of the most important
people of the 20th century must stand, in singular honor,
the American G.I.
General Colin Powell, former Chairman
of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, is now chairman of America's Promise
"It is the soldier, not the
reporter, who has given us freedom of the press.
It is the soldier, not the poet, who has given us the
freedom of speech. It is the soldier, not the campus
organizer, who has given us the freedom to demonstrate.
It is the soldier, who salutes the flag, who serves beneath
the flag, and whose coffin is draped by the flag, who
allows the protester to burn the flag."
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