Trump honors fallen and families in Memorial Day address

ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — President Donald Trump on Monday expressed the  nation’s “boundless” gratitude for the ultimate sacrifice paid by  Americans defending the United States, dedicating his first Memorial Day  address as commander in chief to a top Cabinet secretary and two other  families who lost loved ones.

Participating in the somber, annual observance at Arlington National  Cemetery, Trump recounted the stories of Green Beret Capt. Andrew D.  Byers of Colorado Springs and Christopher D. Horton of the Oklahoma  National Guard as Byers’ tearful parents and Horton’s emotional widow  looked on.

Trump also singled out for special mention Homeland Security  Secretary John Kelly, a retired Marine four-star general whose son,  Marine 2nd Lt. Robert M. Kelly, was killed in November 2010 after he  stepped on a land mine while on patrol in southern Afghanistan.

To all Gold Star families, Trump said of their lost service members:  “They each had their own names, their own stories, their own beautiful  dreams. But they were all angels sent to us by God and they all share  one title in common and that is the title of hero, real heroes.”

“Though they were here only a brief time before God called them home, their legacy will endure forever,” Trump said.

Horton, a sniper sent to Afghanistan in 2011, died in a gun battle  with the Taliban near the Pakistan border three months into his  deployment. Byers was on his third combat tour and, Trump said, ran  through smoke and a hail of bullets to rescue an Afghan soldier when he  was killed last November.

Secretary Kelly’s other son, Johnny, is getting ready for his fifth  military deployment. A son-in-law, Jake, is a wounded warrior.

Full Story on WOODTV8


Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content