BOP
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A Cold Shoulder for Cold-War Veterans - WSJ.com
This weekend, Americans will honor soldiers who fought the country's wars, from the Somme to Kandahar. In Manassas, Va., 30 miles from the nation's capital, a parade on Saturday will honor veterans of another big war: the one that never happened.
The Cold War, from 1945 to the Soviet Union's breakup in 1991, was all about avoiding total nuclear war. It turned hot in Korea and Vietnam and sparked conflicts from Lebanon to Grenada. But soldiers on duty between flare-ups didn't do battle. When the war that wasn't came to an end, they got no monuments, no victory medals.
Nor can they join the American Legion—which makes the parade of Cold War vets in Manassas a minor hot spot of its own.
Okay, here's where it gets dicey, and where I diverge from my fellow vets on this issue:
In 2006, Mr. Almquist, who lives in Illinois, complained to his then-senator, Barack Obama. Mr. Obama emailed back, calling a Cold War medal "appropriate," and hoping "that this impasse can be broken soon." It wasn't. Now the vets intend to ask him to create the medal by executive order.
I've had about enough of Obama circumventing the legislative process (as ineffective as it has become), just because he doesn't think he needs to follow the constitution. I'm equally sick of people who think it's a good idea.
This weekend, Americans will honor soldiers who fought the country's wars, from the Somme to Kandahar. In Manassas, Va., 30 miles from the nation's capital, a parade on Saturday will honor veterans of another big war: the one that never happened.
The Cold War, from 1945 to the Soviet Union's breakup in 1991, was all about avoiding total nuclear war. It turned hot in Korea and Vietnam and sparked conflicts from Lebanon to Grenada. But soldiers on duty between flare-ups didn't do battle. When the war that wasn't came to an end, they got no monuments, no victory medals.
Nor can they join the American Legion—which makes the parade of Cold War vets in Manassas a minor hot spot of its own.
Okay, here's where it gets dicey, and where I diverge from my fellow vets on this issue:
In 2006, Mr. Almquist, who lives in Illinois, complained to his then-senator, Barack Obama. Mr. Obama emailed back, calling a Cold War medal "appropriate," and hoping "that this impasse can be broken soon." It wasn't. Now the vets intend to ask him to create the medal by executive order.
I've had about enough of Obama circumventing the legislative process (as ineffective as it has become), just because he doesn't think he needs to follow the constitution. I'm equally sick of people who think it's a good idea.