Posted on Jun 19, 2014
SSgt Andy Nguyen
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On Thursday, Kaine will introduce a resolution to mark this Veterans Day as an formal celebration for the youngest generation of war fighters.

The move doesn’t carry any money or mandates, but Kaine hopes if it passes the Senate it can act as a firing pistol for a host of nationwide celebrations honoring the military sacrifices of the last 13 years.

It’s not the first attempt for some type of post-Sept. 11 V-J Day, the surrender of Japan to end World War II. But it’s the first major push since the White House announced plans to end the combat phase of the war in Afghanistan at the end of this year, and slowly draw the remaining U.S. forces out of that country over the next two years.

Kaine acknowledged with troops still deployed in Afghanistan, critics will call a victory celebration this Nov. 11 premature. But he insists the moment is already overdue for the more than 2.5 million troops who have already come home from both wars.

“We’re already going to have a Veterans Day. This year, let’s make it a special one for those veterans,” he said.

The idea of a “welcome home” celebration for U.S. troops has been controversial in the past, both inside and outside the veterans community.

Some veterans groups pushed for a nationwide day of recognition in 2011, when U.S. forces withdrew completely from Iraq. City officials in St. Louis held the largest such celebration in January 2012, with thousands of spectators cheering on recently-returned veterans in a weekend parade.

In February 2012, the White House hosted a formal state dinner to honor the sacrifice of servicemembers in Iraq. Pentagon officials selected 78 Iraq veterans to attend the event, to act as stand-ins for the more than 1 million servicemembers who deployed to Iraq and the 4,475 killed in fighting there.

But Pentagon officials have resisted larger celebrations while American troops are still deployed in Afghanistan, saying it sends the wrong message to a nation still at war. They haven’t yet weighed in on Kaine’s plan.

Officials from Vietnam Veterans of America, Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion have signed on to Kaine’s idea. Richard Weidman, VVA’s policy director, said he hopes the move starts a national conversation about the wars and their after-effects, one that never really took place after the controversies of Vietnam.

“There’s more to making veterans whole than just government programs,” he said. “This is about really welcoming people back into civil society.”

In 2006 and 2007, Congress set aside $20 million in the annual defense budget bills for a national celebration to honor troops at the conclusion of Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The White House still holds the authority to organize such an event, but the money has long since been redirected to other priorities.

Veterans from the first Gulf War were welcomed home with a march down Broadway in June 1991, paid for through private donations. Weidman said the week surrounding Veterans Day 1979 was designated for marking the work of the Vietnam Veterans, providing an important — if understated — moment of pride for many of those warfighters.

Kaine said the resolution won’t conflict with ongoing work on care delay reforms at the Department of Veterans Affairs, the top priority issue for most veterans organizations at the moment. A national celebration, he argues, will complement those efforts, by raising public awareness of the challenges facing the returning troops.

Through June 18, 6,819 Americans have been killed and 52,037 have been wounded in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
Posted in these groups: Multinational force iraq emblem  mnf i   1 5 IraqAfghanistan AfghanistanWelcome home logo Welcome Home
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1SG Jeffrey Bergeron
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I think the Vetiam Vets need their welcome home. We as a country own them all many many welcome homes their never received.
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PV2 Senior Web Designer, Web Team Lead
PV2 (Join to see)
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My thoughts exactly 1SG Jeffrey Bergeron! We definitely owe the Vietnam Vets that much and more.
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SSG John Bacon
SSG John Bacon
10 y
Fort Campbell had a Welcome home for Vietnam Vets at hanger 3 back in 2009 and 2013 as part of the week of the Eagles http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4P2JSzjMpWI and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxILvBC9neY
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SSG(P) D. Wright Downs
SSG(P) D. Wright Downs
>1 y
That was nice. My husband was a spook and linguist and didn't get the MoR. The Vietnam veterans have done much for this generation of veterans. They have seen that no generation of veterans is shunned by another generation of veterans as they were treated by their fathers and uncles who were WWII vets and would not let them join the VFW---until they realized the organization would die without new blood. That was my generation. i saw so many people treated badly by their own family members. The men decided it would not happen to anyone else. It hasn't. We honor those who are our sons, daughters, grand sons and granddaughters who have gone off to these godforsaken unpopular, maybe even illegal wars, started out of vengeneance and lies...
God bless everyone who has worn the uniform and signed the blank check...people do not know what has happened to those who serve. People do not know what went down in the years of the Cold War. We who have served, served our country. Should we be thanked for doing our job? I don't know. I would like to see the Civilains march by us and salute while we sit in the shade of the grandstand--Why is it always the other way around?????
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CW5 Desk Officer
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I vote yes. I think something like an official welcome home is well deserved.
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MSG Wade Huffman
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I've been thinking about this one for a while and although I can normally take a side on a topic, I am truly torn on this one. I DO agree that there should be a welcome home for OIF, OEF veterans.. no doubt about that, it's the timing that I am having an issue with. We DO still have troops deployed in Afghanistan and we are sending more troops back to Iraq (ok.. NON COMBAT troops... right.. ) I just don't think it's time yet, I believe there are more to be deployed while we would be officially welcoming everyone home.
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SSG(P) D. Wright Downs
SSG(P) D. Wright Downs
>1 y
The veterans of Korea were not welcomed home. They were ignored. It would not have been so bad if the Vietnam vets had been ignored. That would have been acceptable. After all, they had done the job they were sent to do. Unfortunatly, they were spat on, called ‘baby killer,” and had a difficult time getting jobs. They were suffering from what was later identified as PTSD and the VA wouldn’t treat them. Everyone hung them out to swing in the throws of the word of Society. They felt better off homeless. They had a very high divorce rate but no one cared. There were no support mechanisms for them.

Yeh, welcome them home now…do you know how many have died from AO, suicides, battle wounds and scars, and the debilitating affects of age? Seems a bit like an after thought to think of them 50 years after the fact. But, that is just me and my thinking…too little too late for them and their families
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