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@USArmy We owe them a debt that can never be repaid.
The best we may ever hope is to honor their legacy by being the kind of Americans worthy of their sacrifice.
#AmericasTeam
We owe them a debt that can never be repaid.
The best we may ever hope is to honor their legacy by being the kind of Americans worthy of their sacrifice.
#AmericasTeam
This Day in History: 5 June 1944 – “Alright, let’s go.”
In the early hours of 5 June 1944, inside a dimly lit room at Southwick House near Portsmouth, the fate of Europe hung on a weather forecast. For days, storms had battered the Channel, threatening to derail the most ambitious military operation ever attempted. The Allied invasion of Nazi‑occupied France, Operation Overlord, was poised on a knife‑edge.
At 04:15, the key figures gathered: General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Admiral Bertram Ramsay, Air Chief Marshal Arthur Tedder, Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, and the man whose judgement mattered most that morning, meteorologist James Stagg.
Stagg delivered the news with quiet urgency: the storm would ease, briefly, on 6 June. A narrow, fragile window, but a window nonetheless.
Debate flickered around the table. Some feared catastrophic losses, especially among the airborne divisions. Others argued that delay would hand the Germans precious time. Eisenhower listened, pacing, weighing the lives of thousands against the chance to liberate a continent.
Then he stopped, turned back to his commanders, and spoke the words that set history in motion:
“Alright… let’s go.”
Within hours, Admiral Ramsay’s vast armada, nearly 7,000 vessels, began slipping out of English ports. By nightfall, paratroopers were boarding their aircraft. And before dawn on 6 June, the first Allied troops were crossing the Channel toward Normandy.
Lest We Forget.
Examples of what our graduates are committed to.
They lead America’s very best into the most challenging and dangerous situations.
Commitment is cool.
Join our team, the greatest team the world has known.
#AmericasTeam#GoArmy#CommitmentIsCool#KeepAttacking
D-Day in Color: The Filthy Thirteen Prepare for Normandy 🇺🇸
U.S. paratroopers of the 101st Airborne prepare for the Normandy invasion with war paint, heavy gear, and final briefings before boarding their C-47 aircraft.
Featuring the legendary “Filthy Thirteen” of the 506th PIR, with their signature Mohawks, face paint, and fearless reputation before jumping into occupied France.
On, Brave Old Army Team! Fight on to Victory! We sit down w/ @BKKnightNation and preview the 2026 @ArmyWP_Football Team! Now on YouTube, Amazon, Apple & Spotify! Hit Subscribe, Smash the Hype button & Follow on X! #GoArmy#G5Hive#CollegeFootball https://t.co/LiLWHVVuBG
🚨#ArmyFootball Commitment Alert🚨
Black Knights lock down defensive commitment from CB Jaeden
"Come Inside https://t.co/FLfCjr5Sc9 For The Latest Dose Of Recruiting News, Analysis, Highlights & Updates”
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