General Haines and men of the First Armored Division:
I want to express on behalf
of the people of the United States our great appreciation to you for your
past service and most especially your present actions during the difficult
period of the last 4 or 5 weeks.
Regardless of how persistent
our diplomacy may be in activities stretching all around the globe, in
the final analysis it rests upon the power of the United States, and that
power rests upon the will and courage of our citizens and upon you here
in this field. The United States is the guarantor of the independence of
dozens of countries stretching around the world. And the reason that we
are able to guarantee the freedom of those countries and to maintain that
guarantee and make it good is because of you and your comrades in arms
on a dozen different forts and posts, on ships at sea, planes in the air,
all of you. And there are a million of your comrades in uniform outside
of the United States who are also part of the keystone of the arch of freedom
throughout the globe.
So I come here today to express
our thanks to you. The cause of freedom and your work are intimately intertwined.
The danger is certainly not past, but we will continue to live in crisis
and danger certainly through this decade. Therefore, we will continue to
call upon your services in the future as we have during the past days.
I want to express our thanks to you.
Many years ago, according to
the story, there was found in a sentry box in Gibraltar a poem which said:
God and the soldier, all men adoreThis country does not forget God or the soldier. Upon both we now depend. Thank you.
In time of danger and not before.
When the danger is passed and all things righted,
God is forgotten and the soldier slighted.