Dwight D Eisenhower D-Day Speech Summary

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The chance to speak to a giant armada on the eve before the attack is an immense challenge on its own but Dwight D Eisenhower and his D-Day Letter was able to do it and inspire a army. What can you do to get your soldiers trained up for this? The enemy has been known to scare the country, but our soldiers stand tall do they believe in the words that our president shared with them? All this plagued our president at the time but regardless he had a speech that was given to the soldiers. Dwight D Eisenhower gave a speech on the eve of the of one of the bloodiest battles our forces and allies were involved in. Providing them the inspiration and motivation they needed to move forward with one of the greatest battles that went down in WW2. These …show more content…

Dwight D Eisenhower wrote this letter like the victory was guaranteed that we had no chance of losing the president states that “Our Air offensive has seriously reduced their strength in the air and their capacity to wage war on the ground” (6) “the tide has turned” (7). The President is confident that we will win this battle and portrays that confidence by giving it to them straight letting them know that we are going to win. As a soldier in the field hearing the words from Commander in Chief should be enough to rile you up and prepare you for battle so our soldiers full of motivation in their hearts moved forward and launched the attack. But what of our president, was he ready to accept the outcome of this battle? Was he ready to win or possibly lose? He prepared for a loss Here's The Chilling Letter General Eisenhower Drafted In Case The Nazis Won On D-Day by Eloise Lee shows a letter in where the president prepared a speech for the public in which we lost the battle. The insight this letter makes it very clear that he was worried and scared like any good leader sending out his soldiers our author Eloise Lee goes out mention that he dated the letter wrong “He accidentally dated the letter July 5. It should have been June 5.” (8) Our president was prepared in the situation of there being a loss, he was prepared to accept this fact but due to his errors and short response we can infer that he was not prepared to accept that defeat. In the letter he states that “My decision to attack at this time and place was based upon the best information available” (9) so knowing this he knew the took the perfect time to plan out his attack and he expected to win but the idea of losing was something he was prepared for. What this leads me to is that he moved forward and that the