Today marks the 81st anniversary of the Imperial Japanese Navy's attack on the U.S. Navy's base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
Below is Pearl Harbor as it appeared on October 30, 1941.
Below is a photo taken by a Japanese pilot 38 days later on December 7 during the torpedo attack on Battleship Row, visible on the far side of Ford Island.
There were almost 4000 casualties that day, including 2400 dead.
The attack led to a war effort that included 16,000,000 American men and women in uniform. The National WWII Museum in New Orleans reports that only 167,000 of these veterans survive. Soon, the relics, memorials and ceremony will be all that is left to testify to America's greatest generation at war. If we are to survive, we need to remember them now and in the future for what they did to crush evil in the world.
USS Arizona Memorial, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, 2004 |
Today the youngest surviving veteran of Pearl Harbor would be 98 years old. Many of them can no longer travel and according the officials only one or two will attend the ceremony along with perhaps thirty World War II veterans.
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