Pearl Harbor Ceremony Unites Survivors: 'I Come Back To Be With My Comrades'
PEARL HARBOR,
Hawaii — About 2,500 gathered at Pearl Harbor on Saturday to remember
those killed in the 1941 Japanese attack that launched the U.S. into World War
II.
The crowd observed
a moment of silence at 7:55 a.m., the minute the bombing began 72 years ago.
A vintage World War
II-era airplane — a 1944 North American SNJ-5B — flew overhead to break the
silence. The Hawaii Air National Guard has used its fighter jets and
helicopters to perform the flyover for many years, but federal budget cuts
prevented it from participating this year.
About 50 survivors
returned to Pearl Harbor for the ceremony.
"I come back
to be with my comrades — meet the ones who are still alive, and we're going
fast," said Delton Walling, who was assigned to the USS Pennsylvania at
the time of the attack.
The Navy and
National Park Service co-hosted the ceremony, which was open to the public.
Their theme for the event, "Sound the Alarm," explores how Americans
answered a call to duty in the wake of the attack.
The current U.S.
Pacific Fleet commander, Adm. Harry B. Harris Jr., said the U.S. remembers the
warning from those who survived.
"We remember
Pearl Harbor, we are vigilant, and we are ready to fight tonight and win,"
Harris said. "Not only are we poised to respond to the first notes of the
alarm bell, we are also doing everything possible to keep those alarms from sounding
in the first place."
Former U.S. Sen.
Max Cleland of Georgia will deliver the keynote address.
The Vietnam War
veteran is currently secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission,
which is responsible for managing overseas cemeteries for fallen American troops.
Later in the day,
Pearl Harbor survivors will join military and government officials in a parade
through Waikiki.
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