D-Day – latest: Veteran warns ‘UK on a knife edge’ as Biden says world ‘won’t surrender’ at 80th anniversary
Charles and Camilla are among those paying tribute to fallen soldiers alongside prime minister Rishi Sunak, French president Emmanuel Macron and US president Joe Biden
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The state of Britain’s military is leaving the UK “on a knife edge” facing the growing prospect of war, a D-Day veteran has warned on the 80th anniversary of the landings marking the start of Europe’s liberation from the Nazis.
King Charles, Joe Biden and Rishi Sunak were among those in attendance in Ver-sur-Mer, France, to pay tribute on Thursday to the sacrifice of those fallen soldiers 80 years ago.
The US president promised the 50 countries standing with Ukraine “will not walk away” or “surrender to the bullies”, as he addressed the crowds, adding: “Make no mistake the autocrats of the world are watching closely to see what happens in Ukraine ... To surrender to bullies, to bow down to dictators is simply unthinkable.”
He added: “History tells us freedom is not free. You want to know the price of freedom come here to Normandy to look.”
And Les Budding, a former Royal Marine who served on a landing craft charged with providing covering fire for the first wave of troops who stormed Sword Beach, warne: “For many, this is the most dangerous time we have lived through ... I am worried about the future.”
‘This is the most dangerous time many have lived through,’ warns D-Day veteran
Here is a picture of Les Budding, a D-Day veteran who warned on Thursday that he fears, “for many, this is the most dangerous time we have lived through”.
Final commemorative event runs an hour late
The last major commemorative event of the 80th anniversary of D-Day was running at least an hour late, with US president Joe Biden and his wife Jill Biden the last to arrive.
He quickly greeted some of the world leaders in the front row of the main stand and shared a few words with William before taking his seat.
The event began with contemporary black-and-white footage shown of D-Day and the following days, with bodies lying on the beaches and the wounded being tended.
UK ‘living on a knife edge’ in face of impending war, D-Day veteran fears
A former Royal Marine who served on a landing craft charged with providing covering fire for the first wave of troops who stormed Sword Beach on D-Day has warned that he believes the UK is “living on a knife edge” in the face of a coming war.
Les Budding, who turns 99 in July, told the BBC: “For many, this is the most dangerous time we have lived through. Another war is coming.”
“I am worried about the future,” he added. “I am concerned about what young people will have to face in the coming years. We are no longer the force we were. We are not prepared.”
“We’re living on a knife edge. People are living in cloud cuckoo land,” Mr Budding continued. “Other countries like Russia and North Korea have been building up their armed forces but we have been sitting back hoping they will see sense. But it’s not going to work.”
D-Day veteran says he became ‘a bit tearful’ during tribute
A D-Day veteran who paid tribute at the UK national commemorative event to a friend who saved his life, said he became a “bit tearful”.
Arthur Oborne, aged 100, recalled being shot in the lung three days after arriving on Gold Beach. His life was saved by his friend Walter Gummerson, who was killed the next day alongside the rest of his unit.
Mr Oborne, from Portishead, Somerset, told the crowd: “I wish I could tell him that I have never taken his sacrifice for granted and will always remember him and our friends. So Gummy, thank you my old friend.”
Afterwards he said: “I had no problems talking but it was a bit emotional, I was a bit upset and teary. I think everyone did well at the service, I was a bit apprehensive at the start but I wanted to speak.”
Voices: Lest our children forget, remember D-Day not just today, but every day
As world leaders join veterans in Normandy marking the 80th anniversary of the Allied campaign to liberate Europe, the valour of the past meets the virtue of the present – but it is clear that the forces of darkness that engulfed much of the continent in the 1930s are still alive, writes historian Anthony Seldon:
Lest our children forget, remember D-Day not just today, but every day
As world leaders join veterans in Normandy marking the 80th anniversary of the Allied campaign to liberate Europe, the valour of the past meets the virtue of the present – but it is clear that the forces of darkness that engulfed much of the continent in the 1930s are still alive, writes historian Anthony Seldon
Watch live: French President Macron leads ceremony marking 80th anniversary of D-Day
As the commemorative events continue in Normandy, watch French President Macron leading the ceremony to mark the 80th anniversary of D-Day live:
Joe and Jill Biden walk alongside Brigitte and Emmanuel Macron
Full story: Biden links defense of Ukraine to heroism of D-Day as he warns ‘dark forces’ have not faded: ‘We will not walk away’
Eighty years to the day British, American, and Canadian soldiers landed in France and began the fight to liberate Europe from Hitler, President Joe Biden told an audience of world leaders and veterans that their fight against Nazism is echoed in the fight against Russian aggression being waged by Ukrainian soldiers and their allies today.
Biden, who traveled to France on Tuesday for the anniversary of the allied invasion of Europe known as Operation Overlord, told the assembled veterans, that it was his “highest honor” to salute them, as he recalled how several of the individuals present on stage with him had contributed to the allied victory that day.
Biden links defense of Ukraine to D-Day heroism in anniversary speech
Biden’s defense of alliances was an implicit rebuke of Donald Trump’s isolationist worldview
Biden meets D-Day veterans in Normandy
Watch: Biden warns world 'will not surrender to bullies' as he commemorates 80th D-Day
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