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Tag: World War II

  • As world marks International Holocaust Remembrance Day, concern over

    As the world marked International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Tuesday, experts warned that a flood of “AI slop” is threatening efforts to preserve the memory of Nazi crimes and the millions of Jewish people killed during World War II. 

    Images seen by the AFP news agency include an emaciated and apparently blind man standing in the snow at the Nazi concentration camp Flossenbuerg, and a viral image of a little girl with curly hair on a tricycle falsely presented as a 13-year-old Berliner who died at the Auschwitz extermination camp.

    Such content — whether produced as clickbait for commercial gain or for political motives — has proliferated over the past year, distorting the history of Nazi Germany’s murder of six million European Jews during World War II.

    A person walks through the field of stelae at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe on the International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust, Jan. 27, 2026. 

    Christoph Soeder/picture alliance/Getty


    Early examples emerged in the spring of 2025, but by the end of the year, “AI slop” on the subject “was being shown very frequently,” historian Iris Groschek told AFP.

    On some sites, examples of such content were being posted once per minute, said Groschek, who works at Holocaust memorial sites in Hamburg, including the Neuengamme concentration camp.

    With the exponential advances in AI, “the phenomenon is growing,” Jens-Christian Wagner, director of the foundation that manages the Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora memorials, told AFP.

    Several Holocaust memorials and commemorative associations this month issued an open letter warning about the rising quantity of this “entirely fabricated” content.

    Some of them are churned out by content farms that exploit “the emotional impact of the Holocaust to achieve maximum reach with minimal effort,” it said.

    The picture supposedly from Flossenbuerg camp falls into this category, as it was shown on a page claiming to share, “true, human stories from the darkest chapters of the past.”

    But the memorials warned that fake content was also being created, “specifically to dilute historical facts, shift victim and perpetrator roles, or spread revisionist narratives.”

    Official Holocaust Remembrance Day Commemoration Ceremony In The Senate

    A man watches during a commemoration of the Official Day of Remembrance of the Holocaust and the Prevention of Crimes against Humanity in the Spanish Senate, Jan. 27, 2026, in Madrid.

    Europa Press News


    Wagner points, for example, to images of seemingly “well-fed prisoners, meant to suggest that conditions in concentration camps weren’t really that bad.”

    The Frankfurt-based Anne Frank Educational Center has warned of a “flood” of AI-generated content and propaganda “in which the Holocaust is denied or trivialized, with its victims ridiculed.”

    By distorting history, AI-generated images have “very concrete consequences for how people perceive the Nazi era,” said Groschek.

    The results of trivializing or denying the Holocaust have been seen in the attitudes of some younger visitors to the camps, particularly from “rural parts of eastern Germany … in which far-right thinking has become dominant,” said Wagner.

    In their open letter, the memorials called on social media platforms to “proactively combat AI content that distorts history” and to “exclude accounts that disseminate such content from all monetisation programs.”

    “The challenge for society as a whole is to develop ethical and historically responsible standards for this technology,” they said, adding: “Platform operators have a particular responsibility in this regard.”

    German Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer said in a statement to AFP: “I support the memorials’ call to clearly label AI-generated images and remove them when necessary.”

    He said that making money from such imagery should be prevented.

    “This is a matter of respect for the millions of people who were killed and persecuted under the Nazis’ reign of terror,” he said, reminding the platforms that they have obligations under the EU’s Digital Services Act.

    Groschek said none of the American social media companies had responded to the memorials’ letter, including Meta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram.

    TikTok responded by saying it wanted to exclude the accounts in question from monetization and implement, “automated verification,” according to Groschek.

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  • The origins of the U.S.-Greenland military relationship

    President Trump maintains that the U.S. needs Greenland for American and NATO security, but many defense experts point out that a 1951 treaty already allows the U.S. to keep a consistent military presence on the island. CBS News’ Lindsey Reiser explains.

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  • The Tragic, Never-Told Love Story of A Gilded Age–Era Romance

    After Teddy’s announcement, Flora spent several nights at Sagamore. That fall, she confided to Quentin’s sister Ethel that “Everything just hurts nearly all of the whole time. There is no one I can talk to who half understands. It is all so lonely.” Her parents knew that she suffered. Yet in the hundreds of condolence letters to Flora from friends and family and other correspondence from this time, there are none between Flora and her parents that mention Quentin or his family. Despite this, one of the more poignant bronzes her mother made at this time is of Flora, seated quietly in an armchair, the curve of her body and downcast expression manifesting her pensive mood.

    Flora and Teddy took solace in each other’s company. Teddy wrote to Flora that fall reminding her that “for as long as I live, I shall love you as if you were my own daughter.” During that time, Flora did some work for Teddy, who she called “the Colonel,” taking dictation and typing letters and other documents. In January 1919, Roosevelt died of an embolism. His death plunged Flora further into grief.

    After that, Flora lived for a time with Quentin’s half-sister, the fiercely independent Alice Roosevelt Longworth, in Washington, DC, volunteering at the Women’s Republican Committee in the office of former congressman Ruth McCormick. In the summer of 1919, Flora’s parents urged her to go to France with her aunt, Dorothy Whitney, who had lost her husband Willard Straight in the influenza pandemic.

    There the women visited Chaméry, where Quentin was buried. Flora’s grief came flooding back. Paris, though, lit up with post-war joie de vivre, was the perfect antidote. The women shopped on the rue de la Paix, heard Tosca at the Tuileries, and walked in the Bois. The days flew by until they sailed home from Southampton a month later. Flora felt a brimming lightness, her sprightly grin restored, a new swing in her step. Theodore Roosevelt was onto something when he wrote to his daughter-in-law Belle the summer before that “there is nothing to comfort Flora at the moment, but she is young. I most earnestly hope that time will be merciful to her and, in a few years, she will keep Quentin as only a memory of her golden youth…and that she will find happiness with another good and fine man.”

    Our American Cemetery guide escorts us along a sea of marble headstones to Quentin’s grave. He is buried next to his oldest brother, Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., who died of a heart attack in France at the end of World War II. Quentin is the only World War I pilot interred there, his remains moved in 1955 at the request of his family. Once we reach the grave, our guide attends to the noble task performed by volunteers for visiting family members and every year on the anniversary of D-Day. With a sponge, she rubs Omaha Beach sand over and into the incised letters on Quentin’s headstone. She carefully wipes off all but the sand impressed into the channels of his name, rank, unit, home state, and date of death, highlighting them. As a gentle fog rolls in from the Channel, bathing the cemetery in a soft haze, she plants two flags—one American, one French—on either side of the grave.

    The American Cemetery’s unsettling serenity reminds one that freedom comes with responsibility and at a tremendous cost. Appalled by the barbarity of battle evoked in the sites I visited around Normandy’s beaches, I left awed at the courage of Quentin and Flora, and all those caught up in the war’s unpredictable forces.

    Fiona Donovan

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  • 1,000-pound U.S.-made WWII bomb found in Belgrade construction site

    A 1,000-pound aerial bomb used by the United States and Allied forces during World War II was safely removed from a construction site in a central district of Serbia’s capital, Belgrade, on Sunday, police said.

    The U.S.-made AN-M44 bomb was used during air raids on German positions during the liberation of Belgrade from Nazi occupation in 1944.

    Ahead of the bomb’s removal, the site, which is near a residential area and a shopping mall, underwent detailed reconnaissance “to ensure safe conditions,” police said.

    Residents were also told to leave their homes if possible.

    After its removal, the bomb was taken to an army arms training ground about 110 miles from Belgrade, where it will be destroyed in the coming days.

    Unexploded bombs dating back to past wars have been discovered in Serbia and around the world in recent years.

    In September 2024, a century-old artillery shell weighing nearly 660 pounds was cleared from a construction site near the Serbian parliament in Belgrade.

    Earlier that year, in April, a large bomb from the 1999 NATO bombing campaign was found in Nis, southern Serbia. 

    In 2021, a 530-pound World War II bomb was also removed from a construction site in a Belgrade suburb.

    Earlier this year, in January, more than 170 bombs from WWII were discovered underneath a children’s playground in northern England. Officials said they believe that more ordinances would be discovered in Wooler, Northumberland.

    In June, three unexploded U.S. WWII bombs were defused in Cologne, Germany. They were discovered during preparatory work for road construction.

    In Slovakia’s capital of Bratislava, a 500-pound WWII bomb was discovered during construction work in September, sparking widespread evacuations. A few weeks later, a U.S.-made bomb was defused in Hong Kong after it was discovered at a construction site in Quarry Bay, a bustling residential and business district on the west side of Hong Kong island. The bomb was nearly five feet long.

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  • The Game That Philadelphia Forgot at Griffith Stadium – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    EaglesUnique Columns

    Credit: WikiCommons

    Philadelphia’s organized sports — dating as far back as our own Civil War — have frequently been intertwined with American history.

    Our first professional ballpark (Recreation Field) was an outpost for Union Cavalry in the 1860s.


    On March 11th of 2020 , the Sixers beat the Pistons at the Wells Fargo Center 124–106, including a 30-point, 14-rebound performance by Joel Embiid just hours before Philly joined the rest of the world in a pandemic shutdown that would bring Philadelphia sports to a halt for the first time since those same 1860s.


    And on the day that an event propelled our nation into the Second World War eighty-four years ago ,  it was no different.


    On December 7th, 1941,  the Eagles were in Washington for a Divisional Game at Griffith Stadium in front of over 27,000 fans. Washington was 5–5 coming into the game — the Eagles were 2–7. 

    On this day,  it actually wasn’t the sequence of football events themselves during the last regular season game of 1941 that was so memorable. In fact,  it’s what happened off the field that made this game so forgettable. During the first quarter,  the stadium announcer began paging official Washington personnel to return to their offices. An ominous feeling spread across the stands. Pearl Harbor had been attacked , and America’s involvement in World War II would soon follow.

    Credit: WikiCommons

    World War II was a historic event for both our Eagles and for our nation. After winning seven games in both 1944 and 1945, the Eagles were ready to make a run for the Championship in 1947. After beating the Steelers in the playoffs, the Eagles rallied against the Chicago Cardinals but came up just short, losing 28–21. The following year — in a Philadelphia nor’easter — the Eagles would beat those Chicago Cardinals 7–0 to win their first NFL Championship. They would repeat in Los Angeles the following year, in 1949.

    That night, after the 20–14 win for the home team,  Washington players marched in front of the Japanese Embassy in DC. America would remember December 7th, 1941, forever. 


    But not for a forgotten Eagles, Washington Game.


    Tags: 1944 NFL Draft 1947 NFL Championship Bears Chicago Bears Chicago Cardinals Eagles Philadelphia Eagles Steve Van Buren Washington Washington Commanders World War II

    Categorized: Eagles Unique Columns

    Michael Thomas Leibrandt

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  • The Nuremberg Prosecutor | 60 Minutes Archive

    This week marks 80 years since the beginning of the Nuremberg trials. In 2017, Lesley Stahl first spoke to Ben Ferencz, who at the time was the last living Nuremberg prosecutor. Ferencz, who prosecuted Nazis for genocide and spent his life trying to deter war and war crimes, died in 2023 at the age of 103.

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  • Veterans honor those they served with at DC’s WW2 Memorial – WTOP News

    A group of veterans were among those on hand at the World War II Memorial in D.C. to lay a wreath in commemoration of Veterans Day.

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    Veterans honor those they served with at World War II Memorial

    The Nazis couldn’t stop them back then, and so the cold air and biting, constant wind blowing across the National Mall wasn’t going to stop them Tuesday.

    A group of World War II veterans were among those on hand at the World War II Memorial to lay a wreath in commemoration of Veterans Day.

    Standing up at 100 years old was Col. Frank Cohn, who was born in Germany and fled the Nazis as a teenager. Years later, he returned to fight them in World War II as a member of the U.S. Army.

    “It’s a remembrance of all the people who didn’t get through the war, the ones who were killed,” Cohn said. “We have to … memorialize them, because they did everything to even give their lives to the freedom that we wanted, and this is what’s important. We got the freedom, and we should keep it, and everybody got to help keeping it too.”

    He said those who weren’t veterans, but were taking the time to honor one, are living up to the spirit of the day.

    “I think it’s wonderful that they do this, not because of us, but because of the way we have our country,” Cohn said. “It’s ours, and we’re not gonna let it go.”

    Fighting for the spirit of America was also a theme touched on by Patrick McCourt, a living history volunteer for the National Park Service.

    “Memorial Day, we’re honoring the dead. But these guys, they served, and they’re not dead,” he said. “They came back. And, they’re the ones that can tell us the stories and give us a sense of what they did and what those deceased on Memorial Day, who we honor, also did.”

    He said the importance of those stories carry on today.

    “It’s very important that we know about what happened in our history,” McCourt said. “I think we would not be in this situation if everyone in the United States knew the history and lived by the history.”

    It’s estimated there are less than 50,000 living veterans of World War II. Those who are alive are closing in on 100 years old, if they haven’t hit that mark yet, the way Cohn and other veterans of that war who were at the memorial have.

    “When the world was in peril, you came home and built a better nation,” said Jane Droppa, chair of the Friends of the World War II Memorial. “Your legacy continues to inspire us to be worthy of the freedom you defended.”

    Alex Kershaw, the resident historian for the Friends of the World War II Memorial, told those who gathered about how important it is to celebrate soldiers “who served a cause greater than themselves” on battlefields in Europe and the Pacific.

    “Eighty years after the most impactful war ever fought came to an end, we thank them and veterans of all wars for serving this great nation, for protecting us and our freedoms,” Kershaw said.

    One of the veterans in attendance for the Veterans Day event at the World War II Memorial was Col. Frank Cohn, who was born in Germany and fled the Nazis as a teenager.
    (WTOP/John Domen)

    WTOP/John Domen

    A group of veterans gathered at the World War II Memorial on Nov. 11, 2025, to commemorate Veterans Day.
    (WTOP/John Domen)

    WTOP/John Domen

    Patrick McCourt, a living history volunteer for the National Park Service, salutes military veterans.
    Patrick McCourt, a living history volunteer for the National Park Service, salutes military veterans.
    (WTOP/John Domen)

    WTOP/John Domen

    Alex Kershaw, the resident historian for the Friends of the World War II Memorial, told those who gathered about how important it is to celebrate soldiers.
    Alex Kershaw, the resident historian for the Friends of the World War II Memorial, told those who gathered about how important it is to celebrate soldiers.
    (WTOP/John Domen)

    WTOP/John Domen

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  • Opinion | Evangelical Support for Israel Is About More Than Theology

    Tucker Carlson calls it a ‘heresy,’ but it’s rooted in a belief that freedom and faith are inseparable.

    Ralph Reed

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  • Donald Trump sued over east wing demolition

    President Donald Trump is facing legal action over the demolition of the White House’s East Wing, part of a $300 million plan to build a new ballroom on the executive grounds.

    A Virginia couple, Charles and Judith Voorhees, filed an emergency motion in federal court on October 23 seeking to halt the project, alleging that it violates multiple federal preservation and planning laws.

    Newsweek contacted the White House and attorneys for the couple for comment via email outside of normal office hours on Friday.

    Why It Matters

    The fight over Trump’s demolition project goes beyond a construction dispute—it’s a test of presidential power, public ownership, and historic preservation.

    The Voorhees lawsuit seeking to halt the project argues that Trump bypassed laws meant to protect national landmarks and public transparency.

    At stake is whether a sitting president can unilaterally alter one of the country’s most symbolically important buildings, or whether the “People’s House” must remain subject to the same review and accountability standards that govern other federal projects.

    What To Know

    The Lawsuit And What It Alleges

    The filing, lodged in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, requests a temporary restraining order “to halt defendants’ destruction of the East Wing of the White House… without legally required approvals or reviews,” according to the plaintiffs’ application for injunctive relief.

    The defendants are listed as Trump, in his official capacity, and Jessica Brown, director of the National Park Service.

    Attorney Mark R. Denicore, who represents the Voorheeses, said he acted quickly to file the case. “I threw that together as fast as I could to try to get it filed as fast as I could,” Denicore told Politico on Thursday.

    He added that his clients “are just people, U.S. citizens, that don’t like their house being torn down without going through proper procedures.”

    The complaint argues that the administration began demolishing the East Wing without first submitting final plans to the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC) or consulting with the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation and the D.C. State Historic Preservation Office.

    It also cites an alleged failure to seek guidance from the Commission of Fine Arts, which traditionally reviews exterior changes to federal landmarks.

    What’s Happening At The White House

    Photographs published on Thursday showed the entire East Wing—long home to first ladies’ offices, state dinner planning and ceremonial events—had been reduced to rubble as part of Trump’s proposal to construct a ballroom nearly twice the size of the White House.

    Addressing questions about the president’s earlier remarks that his planned ballroom project would not affect the existing structure of the White House, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the administration had made clear from the start that the East Wing would need to be “modernized.” She added that “plans changed” after Trump consulted with architects and construction firms working on the project.

    The National Trust for Historic Preservation expressed concern in a letter sent Tuesday to the National Park Service and other agencies.

    “We respectfully urge the Administration and the National Park Service to pause demolition until plans for the proposed ballroom go through the legally required public review processes,” wrote Carol Quillen, the organization’s president and chief executive.

    Quillen said the planned 90,000-square-foot ballroom “will overwhelm the White House itself,” which spans about 55,000 square feet.

    The Project And Its Wider Implications

    The White House has framed Trump’s new ballroom as the latest in a long tradition of presidential renovations, comparing it to historic presidential expansions from Theodore Roosevelt’s West Wing to John F Kennedy’s Rose Garden and Harry Truman’s full reconstruction.

    Officials have likened it to past expansions such as the creation of the West Wing and reconstruction of the Executive Mansion. The East Wing, first built in 1902 and expanded during World War II, historically housed the first lady’s offices and the White House Social Office.

    The structure sits above the Presidential Emergency Operations Center, a Cold War-era bunker constructed in 1942.

    The White House has defended the project as both lawful and consistent with presidential authority. Trump has argued the White House needs a large entertaining space, criticizing the past practice of presidents hosting state dinners and other large events in tents on the South Lawn.

    “President Trump has full legal authority to modernize, renovate, and beautify the White House—just like all of his predecessors did,” White House spokesperson Davis Ingle told Politico.

    Leavitt also described public criticism as “fake outrage,” telling Fox News that “nearly every single president who has lived in this beautiful White House… has made modernizations and renovations of their own.”

    According to a July 31 White House press release, the ballroom will replace the “small, heavily changed, and reconstructed East Wing” with a larger facility capable of hosting 650 guests.

    The design, by Washington-based McCrery Architects, aims to match “the theme and architectural heritage” of the existing building, it added.

    The statement said the project would be privately funded through donations from “patriot donors” and completed before the end of Trump’s term. But the White House has not released a full list of the donors who have contributed to the project, raising ethical concerns and questions about conflicts of interest.

    Preservation experts note that the White House grounds are governed by multiple overlapping statutes, though the Executive Residence has historically been treated as exempt from some federal planning reviews.

    The National Park Service’s 2014 White House and President’s Park Foundation Document identifies the White House and its wings as “fundamental resources” whose design and integrity are central to the site’s national significance.

    What People Are Saying

    Donald Trump said on Thursday: “In order to do it properly, we had to take down the existing structure.”

    Hillary Clinton said on X on Monday: “It’s not his house. It’s your house. And he’s destroying it.”

    Sara C. Bronin, Freda H. Alverson Professor of Law at the George Washington University Law School, and former chair of the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, said: “There are other federal statutes requiring the administration to take certain steps before they act to do anything on White House grounds, if they had, they would have no doubt refrained from bulldozing our shared history.”

    What Happens Next

    It remains unclear whether the Voorhees lawsuit will gain traction. A federal judge in Washington, D.C., will decide whether to grant the temporary restraining order sought by the couple to halt the project, but no hearing date has been set in the case.

    The court ruling will determine whether the renovation continues and could set precedent on how much control a president has over altering the nation’s most historic residence.

    Federal courts generally require plaintiffs to show a specific, personal injury to establish standing—a high bar for citizens objecting to government property decisions since courts often dismiss cases brought by citizens without a direct stake.

    Even if the case proceeds, most of the East Wing has already been torn down, making a work stoppage largely symbolic.

    Oversight bodies such as the National Capital Planning Commission may still review the ballroom plans, but their authority over the Executive Residence is limited.

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  • Opinion | Ukraine is Starving Russia of Oil

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has labeled his military’s strikes on Russia’s oil infrastructure “the most effective sanctions.” Meanwhile, reports indicate that alongside urging Europe and India to halt purchases of Russian oil, Washington plans to share additional intelligence with Ukraine on Russian refineries, pipelines and other energy infrastructure.

    Most discussions about these “sanctions” have focused on their financial implications for Russia. Vladimir Putin relies heavily on corruption and patronage, with oil and gas serving as key revenue streams. Disrupting the flow could force Mr. Putin to choose between sustaining the war and maintaining the payouts to oligarchs and citizens that secure his political backing—though such an economic squeeze would take some time.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Michael Bohnert

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  • George Hardy, one of the last original Tuskegee Airmen, dies at 100:

    Lt. Col. George Hardy, one of the original Tuskegee Airmen who flew in World War II, has died at 100, the Tuskegee Airmen, Inc. National Office announced on Friday

    Hardy was 19 when he flew his first combat sortie over Europe, the office said. He was the youngest Red Tail fighter pilot to do so. He was stationed in Italy during World War II and completed 21 missions. 

    The Tuskegee Airmen were the first Black servicemembers to serve as pilots in the U.S. military. They served in the 99th Fighter Squadron and the 332nd Fighter Group, as well as in support roles. Only 13 documented original Tuskegee Airmen are still alive today, the office said. 

    “His legacy is one of courage, resilience, tremendous skill and dogged perseverance against racism, prejudice and other evils,” the office said. “We are forever grateful for his sacrifice and will hold dear to his memory.” 

    Today is a sad day for Tuskegee Airmen, Incorporated. We announce the passing of a true American hero.

    Lt. Col. George…

    Posted by Tuskegee Airmen, Inc. National Office on Friday, September 26, 2025

    Hardy was born in Philadelphia in 1925, the National WWII Museum said in a news release. His older brother was a member of the U.S. Navy. Hardy wanted to enlist, but his father refused to sign the necessary paperwork because of the racial barriers he feared Hardy would face, the museum said. 

    Hardy joined the U.S. Army Air Forces in 1944 and was deployed to Europe in early 1945. During missions, he often escorted heavy bombers, the museum said. In a 2014 interview with the museum, he recalled an incident where his plane was strafed by enemy fire. 

    Hardy also served in the Korean War and the Vietnam War, the Tuskegee Airmen, Inc. National Office said. The museum said he flew 45 combat missions in the Korean War and 70 during the Vietnam War. 

    When not overseas, Hardy earned a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and a master’s degree in systems engineering at the U.S. Air Force Institute of Technology, the National WWII Museum said. He worked with the Department of Defense on creating the first worldwide military telephone system. 

    Hardy retired from the Air Force in 1971. In his retirement, he became “a champion of the legacy” of the Tuskegee Airmen, the museum said. In 2007, the regiment received the Congressional Gold Medal. In 2024, Hardy accepted the National WWII Museum’s American Spirit Award on behalf of the group. The award is the institution’s highest honor and celebrated the airmen’s “accomplishments and patriotism in the face of discrimination.”  

    “When I think about the fellas who flew before me and with me at Tuskegee, and the fact that we did prove that we could do anything that anyone else could do and it’s paid off today,” Hardy said, when accepting the award. “It’s hard to believe that I’m here receiving this award—with them.” 

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  • Submersible discovers unexploded Nazi bombs teeming with marine life:

    Marine life is thriving on unexploded Nazi bombs sitting at the bottom of a German bay, a submersible has discovered, even capturing footage of starfishes creeping across a huge chunk of TNT.

    The discovery, which was revealed in a study published Thursday, was “one of those rare but remarkable eureka moments,” marine biologist Andrey Vedenin told AFP.

    The waters off Germany’s coast are estimated to be littered with 1.6 million tons of unexploded munitions left behind from both world wars.

    In October last year, a team of German scientists went to a previously uncharted dump site in the Baltic Sea’s Luebeck Bay and sent an unmanned submersible 20 meters down to the seafloor.

    They were surprised when footage from the sub revealed 10 Nazi-era cruise missiles. Then they were stunned when they saw animals covering the surface of the bombs.

    There were roughly 40,000 animals per square meter — mostly marine worms — living on the munitions, the scientists wrote in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

    This handout photograph provided by DeepSea Monitoring Group and taken on October 2024 with an unmanned submersible shows starfish (Asterias rubens) on top of a chunk of TNT, part of an unexploded Nazi-era cruise missile, at the bottom Luebeck Bay in the German waters of the Baltic Sea.

    ANDREY VEDENIN/DeepSea Monitoring Group/AFP via Getty Images


    “Despite the potential negative effects of the toxic munition compounds, published underwater images show dense populations of algae, hydroids, mussels, and other epifauna on the munition objects, including mines, torpedo heads, bombs, and wooden crates,” the study concludes.

    They also counted three species of fish, a crab, sea anemones, a jellyfish relative called hydroids and plenty of starfishes.

    While animals covered the hard casing of the bombs, they mostly avoided the yellow explosive material — except for one instance.

    The researchers were baffled to see that more than 40 starfishes had piled on to an exposed chunk of TNT.

    “It looked really weird,” said Vedenin, a scientist at Germany’s Carl von Ossietzky University and the study’s lead author.

    Exactly why the starfishes were there was unclear, but Vedenin theorized they could be eating bacterial film collecting on the corroding TNT.

    Life on deadly weapons

    The explosive chemicals are highly toxic, but the animals appeared to have found a way to live near it.

    Other than the death-wish starfishes, they did not seem to be behaving strangely.

    “The crabs were just sitting and picking something with their claws,” Vedenin said.

    To find out what kind of bombs they were dealing with, he went online and found a manual from the Nazi air force Luftwaffe describing how to handle and store V-1 flying bombs. The cruise missile exactly matched the 10 bombs from the footage.

    Vedenin said “there is some irony” in the discovery that these “things that are meant to kill everything are now attracting so much life.”

    Marine Life-Explosives

    This image provided by Andrey Vedenin shows sea creatures living on dumped World War II explosives in the Baltic Sea. 

    Andrey Vedenin / AP


    He compared it to how animals such as deer now thrive in radioactive areas abandoned by humans near the site of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

    Hard surfaces on the seafloor are important for marine life that want more than mud and sand.

    Animals once flocked to huge boulders that littered the Baltic Sea, however humans removed the stones to build infrastructure such as roads at the start of the 20th century.

    So when the Nazi bombs are eventually cleared from the bay, the researchers called for more stones — or concrete structures — to be put in place to continue supporting the sea life.

    The scientists also plan to return to the spot next month to set up a time-lapse camera to watch what the starfishes do next.

    Marine life also thriving in shipwrecks

    It’s the latest example of wildlife flourishing in polluted sites. Previous research has shown shipwrecks and former weapons complexes teeming with biodiversity.  

    Studies like these are a testament to how nature takes advantage of human leftovers, flipping the script to survive, said marine conservation biologist David Johnston with Duke University. He recently mapped sunken World War I ships that have become habitats for wildlife along the Potomac River in Maryland.

    “I think it’s a really cool testimony to the strength of life,” Johnston told the Associated Press.

    A 2023 paper published in BioScience found that shipwrecks provide important ecological resources for a wide variety of organisms, from tiny microbes to large marine creatures.

    “Small fish and mobile crustaceans often find shelter in the crevices of the sunken material, and larger baitfish and predators use shipwrecks as feeding grounds and rest stops as they swim from one place to another,” according to NOAA, which helped conduct the study. 

    This year, a cargo ship lying at the bottom of the sea off the Belgian coast has been filled with a stash of rare flat oysters in a bid to help boost other marine species.  

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • American WWII bomb found buried in Hong Kong, thousands evacuated

    A large U.S.-made bomb left over from World War II was defused on Saturday after it was discovered at a construction site, police said.

    Thousands of people were evacuated from their homes after a 1,000-pound bomb was found by construction workers in Quarry Bay, a bustling residential and business district on the west side of Hong Kong island. The bomb was nearly five feet long.

    The shell of a bomb is seen after a disposal operation on Sept. 20, 2025, in Hong Kong.

    Chen Ziyan/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images


    “We have confirmed this object to be a bomb dating back to World War II,” said Andy Chan Tin-Chu, a police official, speaking to reporters ahead of the operation. He said that because of “the exceptionally high risks associated with its disposal,” approximately 1,900 households involving 6,000 individuals were “urged to evacuate swiftly.”

    The operation to deactivate the bomb began late Friday and lasted until around 11:30 a.m. Saturday. No one was injured in the operation.

    Bombs left over from World War II are discovered from time to time in Hong Kong and across Europe.

    Thousands Evacuated In Hong Kong After Discovery Of Large WWII-era Bomb

    The entrance and exit of Quarry Bay Station adjacent to the bomb disposal site were temporarily closed on Sept. 20, 2025, in Hong Kong.

    Hou Yu/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images


    The city was occupied by Japanese forces during the war, when it became a base for the Japanese military and shipping. The United States, along with other Allied forces, targeted Hong Kong in air raids to disrupt Japanese supply lines and infrastructure.

    WWII bombs found recently

    Bombs from the war have triggered evacuations and emergency measures around the globe in recent months.

    Earlier this month, a 500-pound bomb was discovered in Slovakia’s capital during construction work, prompting evacuations.

    In August, large parts of Dresden, Germany, were evacuated so experts could defuse an unexploded World War II bomb found during clearance work for a collapsed bridge.

    In June, over 20,000 people were evacuated from Cologne after three unexploded U.S. bombs from the war were found. City authorities said that the discovered unexploded ordnances were two American 20-ton bombs and one American 10-ton bomb, each with impact fuses.

    In March, a World War II bomb was found near the tracks of Paris’ Gare du Nord station. In February, more than 170 bombs were found near a children’s playground in northern England. And in October 2024, a World War II bomb exploded at a Japanese airport. 

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  • 100-year-old World War II vet jumps out of plane

    A World War II veteran recently took to the sky to show everyone that age is just a number. Last week, Jimmy Hernandez jumped out of a plane on his 100th birthday.“I’ve been waiting for a long time for this,” Hernandez said.Hernandez first wanted to skydive when he was 96, but his family talked him out of it.”I was like, really,” son Mark Hernandez asked, “Is that what he just said? I was like, ‘No, that cannot happen.’”The family told Jimmy that if he made it to 100, they would give them their blessing.”I want to get this out of my system,” Jimmy said.Well, Jimmy made it.Jimmy decided to make a tandem jump with an instructor at SkyDance SkyDiving in Davis, California. His son and his grandson also decided to jump.Hernandez has 13 children and dozens of grandchildren. His family gathered at the landing spot, cheering him on.

    A World War II veteran recently took to the sky to show everyone that age is just a number. Last week, Jimmy Hernandez jumped out of a plane on his 100th birthday.

    “I’ve been waiting for a long time for this,” Hernandez said.

    Hernandez first wanted to skydive when he was 96, but his family talked him out of it.

    “I was like, really,” son Mark Hernandez asked, “Is that what he just said? I was like, ‘No, that cannot happen.’”

    The family told Jimmy that if he made it to 100, they would give them their blessing.

    “I want to get this out of my system,” Jimmy said.

    Well, Jimmy made it.

    Jimmy decided to make a tandem jump with an instructor at SkyDance SkyDiving in Davis, California. His son and his grandson also decided to jump.

    Hernandez has 13 children and dozens of grandchildren. His family gathered at the landing spot, cheering him on.

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  • A U.S. sailor was killed on the day WWII officially ended. His remains have now been identified.

    A World War II sailor who died the day the war officially ended has been accounted for, military officials said Monday. 

    U.S. Navy Reserve Ensign Eugene E. Mandeberg, 23, was a member of Fighting Squadron 88 aboard the USS Yorktown during the summer of 1945, according to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency. He enlisted in 1941 and first went overseas in February 1944, according to a news clipping shared by the DPAA. 

    His formation engaged with enemy fighter planes over Tokyo while returning from a mission in Japan on Aug. 15, on V-J (or Victory over Japan) Day, the DPAA said. Four of the six aircraft in the formation did not return to the USS Yorktown. A news clipping shared by the DPAA said that the formation was met by 20 Japanese planes.

    U.S. Navy Reserve Ensign Eugene E. Mandeberg.

    Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency


    Mandeberg was listed as missing in action after he failed to return. His family held out hope that he might have survived and could have been on a Pacific Island, according to a news clipping shared by the DPAA. 

    On March 20, 1946, U.S. personnel retrieved the remains of an unknown American servicemember from a temple in Yokohama, Japan, the DPAA said. The remains, known as X-341 Yokohama #1, were believed to belong to an American pilot who had crashed there on Aug. 15, 1945. The wreckage of the plane was linked to the USS Yorktown, but the remains could not be positively identified. The remains were interred at the Manila American Cemetery and Memorial as a “World War II Unknown.” 

    In 2019, the DPAA exhumed those remains, and scientists used dental and anthropological studies, as well as multiple forms of DNA analysis, to identify them as Mandeberg’s. 

    Mandeberg’s surviving family members were briefed on his identification and recovery in March 2025. He was buried in Livonia, Michigan, on Sept. 14. 

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  • Medvedev accuses Finland of preparing for war with Russia

    Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev has accused neighbouring Finland of pursuing a course of war against Russia – and has renewed claims for reparations for World War II.

    “After joining NATO, Helsinki is pursuing a course of confrontation in preparation for war with Russia under the pretext of defence measures and is apparently preparing a bridgehead for an attack on us,” Medvedev, who is still influential as deputy head of the National Security Council, wrote in a column for the state news agency TASS.

    Medvedev complained that staff structures for army units were being created in Lapland “in the immediate vicinity of the Russian border.”

    It was clear who these structures were directed against, as NATO had declared Russia an enemy, he wrote. The column itself is entitled: “Finland’s new doctrine: Stupidity, lies, ingratitude.”

    The Finns’ security endeavours following the Russian invasion of Ukraine are perceived as ungrateful in Moscow. Finland, which was neutral for decades after World War II, joined NATO together with Sweden as a reaction to the start of the Ukraine war.

    Medvedev now sees this as an opportunity to renew old demands for reparations, claiming that the new Finnish policy tramples on old agreements.

    Moscow is therefore no longer bound by the peace treaty of 1947, which limited Soviet reparation claims to $300 million: Medvedev argued the damage actually caused by Finland during World War II amounted to 20 trillion roubles ($244 billion), he claimed.

    Finland took part in the war against the Soviet Union alongside Hitler’s Germany in 1941. The Finns saw this as a continuation of the Winter War launched by the Soviet Union in 1939, in which Moscow annexed large areas of Finland.

    To this day, the 1939 Winter War following the Hitler-Stalin Pact is just as rarely discussed in Russian historiography as the annexation of the Baltic States carried out by Moscow at the time.

    In this context, Medvedev wrote that Finland was just as responsible for World War II as Germany.

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  • Japanese internment camp survivor reflects on the painful history of Heart Mountain:

    Few people willingly return to their old prison, but 92-year-old Sam Mihara did just that, recently returning to the Heart Mountain Relocation Center in rural Wyoming. 

    “Our family suffered a lot,” Mihara told CBS News. 

    He doesn’t want to forget what happened at Heart Mountain. He wants all Americans to remember.

    “My father went blind,” Mihara said. “But the worst was my grandfather. He died here.” 

    It has been about 80 years since the U.S. defeated Japan in World War II, ending a painful chapter in American history when more than 120,000 Japanese Americans were forced from their homes in 1942 and sent to internment camps.

    With the U.S. victory, they were finally freed, with the last internment camp closing in March 1946.

    Mihara was 9 years old when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. Eight months later, the government uprooted his family from San Francisco and forced them to move into prison barracks at Heart Mountain.

    “People lost homes,” Mihara said. “…The worst cases were farmers who lost entire farms.”

    Mihara said it was “racist” that the government relocated Japanese Americans, but not Italian Americans or German Americans.

    Heart Mountain was one of 10 internment camps. More than 10,000 Japanese Americans were imprisoned there for about three years.

    “I refer to it as an American concentration camp,” retired Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Lance Ito told CBS News.  

    Ito’s parents met at Heart Mountain.
     
    “It caused both of our families great anguish,” Ito, who was born in 1950, said of Heart Mountain. “And when they got released from the camp…there was a lot of hatred, a lot of discrimination.”
     
    Ito would become a lawyer before being named a judge. He famously presided over the murder trial of O.J. Simpson in 1995.

    “My grandma turned to me and said, ‘You know, when they took us to the camps, there were no lawyers to help us’…And so that’s when I thought, ‘Gee, maybe I ought to be a lawyer,’” Ito said.

    In 1988, then-President Ronald Reagan formally apologized to Japanese Americans for the internment camps. Mihara now tours the country, giving lectures.
     
    “The leaders of this country must honor the Constitution,” Mihara said. “We were denied liberty. We were denied justice. It should never happen again.”

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  • Today in History: September 2, Japan surrenders to end World War II

    Today is Tuesday, Sept. 2, the 245th day of 2025. There are 120 days left in the year.

    Today in history:

    On Sept. 2, 1945, Japan formally surrendered in ceremonies aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, ending World War II.

    Also on this date:

    In 1666, the Great Fire of London began, which would destroy more than 13,000 homes and hundreds of additional structures, including St Paul’s Cathedral, over the ensuing three days.

    The Associated Press

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  • Crews battling a wildfire in English countryside face added risk of hidden WWII-era bombs exploding

    North Yorkshire, England — The already-risky work of fire crews battling a wildfire in England’s North York Moors National Park has been made all the more dangerous by World War II-era bombs and tank shells hidden under the dense, dry vegetation. A local fire official said Wednesday that there had been nearly 20 explosions as the fire burns through brush to detonate the hidden weapons.

    “As the peat continues to burn down, it is finding the World War II ordnance and therefore exploding, and we have now experienced over 18 ordnance explosions within key areas,” County Chief Fire Officer Jonathan Dyson said, according to CBS News’ partner network BBC News.

    The Langdale Moor fire, which started on August 11, has charred about 10 square miles in the picturesque coastal region of North Yorkshire. Emergency fire crews have been tackling the blaze, aided by local farmers and game keepers who’ve swung into action with water tanks and tractors, dousing brush and helping cut fire breaks through the moorland, which is covered largely by dense shrubs and grass.

    A firefighter helps combat a wildfire on heathland alongside the A171 road, Aug. 14, 2025, in Fylingdales, in the North York Moors National Park, northeast England.

    Ian Forsyth/Getty


    Dyson said part of the active fire area was a tank training ground during the 1940s, explaining why so many weapons were still lurking under the first layers of the rugged landscape. There is still a U.K. military site, the RAF Fylingdales radar station, in the immediate area.

    Britain’s Ministry of Defense in London said an explosive ordnance disposal team had found “various World War II-era unexploded ordnance items,” declaring them to be “inert practice projectiles.”

    Dyson said the North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service had requested help from other agencies in the country, and that crews had adopted a “very defensive fire-fighting strategy” to protect members given the presence of unexploded bombs.

    The scale of the wildfire has been atypical for northern England — a region often associated with heavy rainfall even within the U.K. But this year saw an incredibly hot, dry spring and early summer, leaving the moors (a British word for uncultivated hills) tinder dry. The U.K. is on track to see 2025 go down as the hottest year ever recorded.

    As well as road closures, some rights of way have also been closed, due to the on-going wildfire. Please check this…

    Posted by North Yorkshire Fire & Rescue Service on Wednesday, August 27, 2025

    The North York Moors park covers more than 550 square miles of rolling hills abutting the Yorkshire coast. It is dotted with villages and seaside towns that are popular summer vacation destinations, including the ancient fishing town of Whitby, considered the inspiration for Victorian-era author Bram Stoker’s iconic tale of “Dracula.”

    Along with many smaller towns, Whitby has been hit by road closures due to the fire that have kept some tourists at bay. Several campsites and other businesses in the region have been forced to evacuate and close up.

    The moors are also used as grazing land for flocks of sheep, and seeing so much ground burn away — after weeks with little rain to grow fresh grass had already squeezed many farmers ahead of the winter months — has been distressing for local farmers.

    Langdale Moor Fire Flares Up Again

    Verity McLeod, 7, and her mother Vicky hold a placard thanking local farmers as they pass on their way to assist with the firefighting efforts on Langdale Moor, where a wildfire had been burning for more than two weeks, Aug. 27, 2025, in Fylingdales, England.

    Ian Forsyth/Getty


    “It’s people’s livelihoods,” farm worker Darren Coates told the BBC. “To see the moors and farmland burned to a crisp it is just devastating.”

    Area farms and stables not impacted by the fire have posted messages on social media for weeks, offering to temporarily shelter horses and other animals displaced by the blaze.

    Wednesday finally brought some desperately needed rain to the region, helping the fire crews and farmers gain some degree of control over the blaze, but the fire service warned residents on Thursday that many road and trail closures remained in place, and the fire was still active.

    “They are working hard on containing the fire by firefighting, hotspotting and adding fire breaks,” the service said. “A helicopter is again in use today. We continue to ask people to avoid the area and not travel there to take photos and drone footage. This is an on-going operational incident and we want to make sure our crews, partners and the public stay safe.”

    It said the cause of the fire had not been established.

    There have been no reports of injuries or serious structural damage from the wildfire – or from old World War II bombs blowing up underneath it.

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  • Vance wrong that World War II ended with negotiation

    During an interview discussion of a potential end to the Russia-Ukraine war, Vice President JD Vance cautioned that ending it is a complicated process.

    “If you go back to World War II, if you go back to World War I, if you go back to every major conflict in human history, they all end with some kind of negotiation,” Vance said Aug. 25 on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

    This prompted social media criticism, with people pointing out that World War II ended when Japan unconditionally surrendered aboard the USS Missouri.

    The other examples Vance cited also range from wrong to misleading, historians told PolitiFact.

    “Many wars do end with negotiations, but others do not if the enemy is crushed,” said G. Kurt Piehler, director of Florida State University’s Institute of World War II and the Human Experience.

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    The Revolutionary War ended in negotiation, with the 1784 ratification of the Treaty of Paris, about two years after British Gen. Lord Charles Cornwallis surrendered to Gen. George Washington on the Yorktown battlefield. 

    “Many wars end with just surrender,” said Richard H. Kohn, a University of North Carolina emeritus history professor.

    “‘Negotiation’ suggests or implies very strongly that there’s a give and take,” Kohn said. “World War II was just a surrender — period — by both Germany and Japan.”

    Vance’s office did not respond to an inquiry for this article.

    The end of World War II

    U.S. Lt. Gen. W.B. Smith affixes his signature to the unconditional surrender document after it was signed by the representatives of the German government at Reims, France, on May 7, 1945. (Public domain)

    World War II’s two key war-ending events involved Germany, which unconditionally surrendered May 7 and 8, 1945, and Japan, which unconditionally surrendered Sept. 2, 1945.

    Germany signed its surrender at Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s headquarters in Reims, France, with representatives of the United States, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and France signing on behalf of the allies. At Soviet insistence, separate documents were signed in Berlin the following day, which the Soviets considered Germany’s official, legal surrender.

    “We the undersigned, acting by authority of the German High Command, hereby surrender unconditionally to the Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary Forces and simultaneously to the Soviet High Command all forces on land, sea and in the air who are at this date under German control,” the document read in part.

    Japanese Gen. Umezu Yoshijiro signs the surrender on behalf of the Imperial Japanese Army on board the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay on Sept. 2, 1945. (Public domain)

    Almost four months later, following the U.S. nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan also surrendered. U.S. Gen. Douglas MacArthur accepted the surrender on behalf of the U.S. and its allies. 

    Although the United States ultimately allowed Japan to keep its imperial throne, historians say it was not decided at the time of Japan’s surrender and was resolved later at the United States’ discretion.

    “In the proceedings that ended the war, allied senior officers dictated surrender terms to both the Germans and the Japanese,” said John Coyne McManus, a professor of military history at the Missouri University of Science and Technology. “This was not a negotiation. It amounted to surrender instructions.”

    The end of World War I

    After the armistice ending World War I, German troops were disarmed by the Dutch. (Public domain)

    The first stage of World War I’s end — a Nov. 11, 1918, armistice, or ceasefire — wasn’t an unconditional surrender, but the allies leaned heavily on Germany. 

    During armistice discussions, French Marshal Ferdinand Foch made small accommodations to Germany, such as letting the Germans keep some of their weapons. But agreement was tilted strongly against Germany, requiring it to give up 5,000 artillery pieces, 25,000 machine guns, 1,700 airplanes, 5,000 railroad locomotives, 5,000 trucks and 150,000 wagons, as well as the French territory of Alsace-Lorraine. Germany also agreed to an Allied occupation of German territory along the Rhine River.

    The Treaty of Versailles, signed June 28, 1919, sealed the Allied victory with harsh terms.

    In addition to losing both continental and overseas landholdings, Germany had to accept “war guilt” and make reparations to the allies, at an amount eventually set at $33 billion. The treaty permitted the allies to take punitive actions if Germany fell behind in its payments.

    “There really was no significant negotiation with Germany in World War I,” Piehler said. “The armistice was essentially imposed on Germany, and Germany did not participate in the negotiations at Paris that led to the Treaty of Versailles. The German delegation had to take it or leave it.”

    The end of ‘every major conflict in human history’

    Roman soldiers attack the walls of Carthage during the siege that ended with the destruction of Carthage in 146 BC, by Sir Edward John Poynter, 1868. (Public domain)

    Unconditional surrenders predate those by Germany in World Wars I and II and Japan in World War II, historians said. The Philippine-American War, the Invasion of Panama and the first Persian Gulf war were among those the U.S. has fought that ended in unconditional surrenders rather than negotiations, said David Silbey, a Cornell University historian.

    One earlier example is the Third Punic War from 149-146 BCE, the third and final war between Rome and Carthage. Despite resistance by Carthaginians, Rome essentially annihilated its neighbor. Estimates suggest that only 50,000 of a quarter million residents survived to the surrender; they were sold into slavery, the city was destroyed, and Carthage became a Roman province.

    The ending of the Civil War is a bit murkier. On the battlefield, Confederate general Robert E. Lee surrendered to the Union at Appomattox Court House, Virginia on April 9, 1865. That was followed by a series of additional surrenders by other commanders through November 1865.

    These did not involve far-reaching negotiations. But President Abraham Lincoln indicated that he was open to further discussion on other issues beyond the nonnegotiable end to slavery, an ending of hostilities and recognition of the Union’s political supremacy. This took the pressure off Lee and other generals to negotiate on the battlefield.

    Less than a week after Appamattox, Lincoln was assassinated.

    Our ruling

    Vance said, “If you go back to World War II, if you go back to World War I, if you go back to every major conflict in human history, they all end with some kind of negotiation.”

    In World War II, both Germany and Japan surrendered unconditionally. As the World War I armistice was being negotiated, Germany won small concessions, but the allies generally imposed their will, an approach that strengthened with the Treaty of Versailles.

    Other unconditional surrenders in history include the Third Punic War.

    We rate the statement False.

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