From News Nation:
“Planners
break ground for new Gulf War memorial in DC”
(Scott C.
Stump, far left, President of the National Desert Storm Memorial Association,
Salem Abdullah, second from left, Kuwait ambassador to the United States, Gulf
War veterans, and invitees participate in a groundbreaking ceremony for the new
National Desert Storm and Desert Storm Memorial Thursday, July 14, 2022, on the
National Mall in Washington. The new memorial will honor those who served on
active duty in support of Operation Desert Storm or Operation Desert Shield.)
More than 30
years after a U.S.-led international military coalition expelled occupying
Iraqi troops from Kuwait, planners have broken ground on the long-simmering
plans for a Gulf War memorial. Hundreds gathered Thursday morning for a grounbreaking
ceremony at the corner of Constitution and 23rd streets, where the memorial
will be located. Organizers have pushed to create the memorial for years, after
the concept was approved by Congress in 2014. “We’re here because we all agree
that honoring these American warriors is a worthy cause,” said Sen. John
Boozman, R-Ark., who co-authored the legislation authorizing the memorial’s
construction. He called the conflict “an important moment in our nation’s
tradition of fighting tyranny.”
Scott Stump,
CEO of the memorial association, recalled years of “toil, struggle pain,
heartache, ups and downs,” with fundraising challenges and multiple design
revisions. “We were told that there weren’t enough organizations that were
interested in our message,” Stump said. When completed, Stump said he expects
the memorial to attract millions of visitors to a prime location near both the
Lincoln Memorial and Vietnam Veterans’ Memorial.
Known as the
National Desert Storm and Desert Shield Memorial, the monument will feature a
circular open-air design with features meant to evoke the sand dunes of the
desert battleground. Admiral Christopher Grady, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, called it a fitting tribute to the 299 U.S. soldiers who died during
the conflict. “It was those in uniform and all those who supported them that we
remember today,” he said.
Grady also
cited the Gulf War as a lasting example of international cooperation and
partnership among nations to defend Kuwait’s sovereignty. “This is one of our
competitive advantages — the friends that we have but others don’t,” he said. The
plan has come together with the active involvement of the Kuwaiti government,
which donated $10 million to the effort. “From the people of Kuwait to the
United States: thank you, thank you, thank you,” said long-serving Kuwaiti
ambassador Salem Al-Sabah on Thursday. Al-Sabah called the memorial “a token of
gratitude to the noble soldiers who helped liberate my country.”
^ It took the
US 59 years to build our National World War 2 Memorial in DC back in 2004 so
building the National Gulf War Memorial in DC 31 years after that War ended is
progress. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/planners-break-ground-for-new-gulf-war-memorial-in-dc/
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