On The 70th Anniversary Of D-Day, A Look At What Could Have Been Seventy years ago, U.S. assault troops landed on Omaha Beach during the invasion of Normandy, deciding the course of history. What might be different today if they had been turned back?

On The 70th Anniversary Of D-Day, A Look At What Could Have Been

  • Download
  • <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/319581476/319718334" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player">
  • Transcript

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

The men and women who brought down Adolf Hitler's war machine cannot defeat mortality. As the dwindling number of veterans who served during D-Day are saluted on their 70th anniversary, we might consider how different our lives might have been if those soldiers and sailors had been turned back on those beaches.

Stephen Ambrose, the American historian who founded the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, believed the allies might've tried another invasion, when ocean tides allowed. But that would have meant another year of war and suffering, and it would have lacked the strength of surprise they had at Normandy.

Ambrose believed the Churchill government would have fallen, and that Franklin D. Roosevelt might not have run for his fourth term. Isolationism, rampant on both the right and left in America and Britain before the war, would have been renewed. A Charles Lindbergh or Joseph P. Kennedy might have been elected in America to reach peace with Germany as Philip Roth imagined in his novel "The Plot Against America." That would have left Germany free to pursue The Final Solution to extinguish Jews from Europe, and gays, Roma and millions more.

John Keegan, the late British military historian, pointed out that Germany's V-1 rockets became operational just days after D-Day. "Large, static concentrations of shipping," he wrote, "present targets that could be devastated with ease," which would destroy any second invasion before it could launch.

The Allies might still have produced a nuclear weapon, as they did just a year after D-Day. But John Keegan reminded us, Hitler had a nuclear weapons program of his own and might then have succeeded in threatening his enemies with a nuclear strike.

When we interviewed Mr. Keegan at his home years ago, he swept a hand over a globe and told us, America would be marooned, alone on a vast planet flooded by fascism.

Today we might ask, what kind of hell would we have grown up with, in a world commanded by the creators of the Nuremberg Laws and death camps?

The Second World War animated a lot of Americans to live up to their ideals. The world began to overthrow empires, even as it struggled with totalitarianism, and America overturned segregation. As President Obama said yesterday in Normandy, none of that would have happened without the men who were willing to lay down their lives for people they'd never met and ideals they couldn't live without.

They were normal men and women, young, scared and vulnerable. That's what made them heroes.

SIMON: You're listening to NPR News.

Copyright © 2014 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.