The Borneo Post

Second Marine misidentif­ied in iconic Iwo Jima picture

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right.”

And Tusk said: “I regret that it was 48 and not 52.”

But despite their misgivings, both men argued that the deal would protect the rights of remaining EU citizens and the integrity of the bloc’s single market.

Johnson, a leader of the ‘leave’ campaign in 2016 who has vowed to walk away from the EU at the end of this month come what may, said he had secured a “great new deal that takes back control”.

Looking worn and tired after days of intense politickin­g, Johnson urged MPs “to come together to get Brexit done, to get this excellent deal over the line and to deliver Brexit without any more delay.”

The compromise reached on Thursday is a personal victory for Johnson, who was told repeatedly by EU leaders that they were not open to reworking a deal initially inked last year.

But there were immediate signs the Commons – which rejected the previous divorce text three times – might again refuse to play ball.

Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which props up Johnson’s Conservati­ves, said it was “unable to support these proposals”.

The main opposition Labour, Scottish National and Liberal Democrat parties also spoke out against it.

Their response sent the pound sinking again after it had earlier risen to five-month peaks on news of the deal.

The draft agreement was forged after weeks of tense negotiatio­ns focused on altering arrangemen­ts to keep open the border between British Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland.

All sides agree they do not want infrastruc­ture on the frontier, to avoid exacerbati­ng tensions over Britain’s control of Northern Ireland that caused decades of deadly violence up until the 1990s. — AFP WASHINGTON: The US Marine Corps on Thursday acknowledg­ed an error in the identity of a second marine pictured lifting the American flag over Iwo Jima in one of the most iconic photograph­s of World War II.

The record was corrected after three private historians came forward last year with new informatio­n that showed that one of the Marines in Joe Rosenthal’s famous picture was mistakenly identified as Private First Class Rene Gagnon.

They produced dozens of previously private photograph­s to support their contention that the marine in question, pictured on the far side of the flag pole with only his helmet visible, was actually Corporal Harold Keller.

A board was formed to study the new evidence and the FBI was brought in to help, which ultimately led the Marine Corps to accept the change in identity.

It followed an earlier correction in 2016 in the identity of another of the marines pictured raising the flag on Mount Suribachi after a battle that raged from Feb 19 to March 26, 1945.

In that case, historians determined that the marine in the picture was not Private Second Class John Bradley as previously believed but rather Private First Class Harold Shultz.

The errors appear to stem in part from confusion arising from the fact that a smaller flag was first planted on Mount Suribachi and was then replaced with a larger flag.

Also, Rosenthal, an Associated Press photograph­er, did not record the names of the men at the time of the flag-raising.

That happened later at the request of the Roosevelt administra­tion, which then used the men to promote the war effort at home.

The Marine Corps said that while Gagnon wasn’t in the Rosenthal picture, which is the basis of the Iwo Jima Memorial in Arlington, Virginia, he played a significan­t role in the flagraisin­g.

Gagnon “was directly responsibl­e for getting the larger second flag to the top and returning the first flag for safe keeping.”

“Without his efforts, this historical event might never have been captured, let alone even occurred,” a Marine Corps statement said.

“Regardless of who was in the photograph, each and every Marine who set foot on Iwo Jima, or supported the effort from the sea and air around the island is, and always will be, a part of our Corps’ cherished history,” it said. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? (From left to right) Luxembourg’s Prime Minister Xavier Bettel, Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Czech Republic’s Prime Minister Andrej Babis and Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederikse­n arrive for a European Union Summit at European Union Headquarte­rs in Brussels.
— AFP photo (From left to right) Luxembourg’s Prime Minister Xavier Bettel, Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Czech Republic’s Prime Minister Andrej Babis and Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederikse­n arrive for a European Union Summit at European Union Headquarte­rs in Brussels.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? This handout photo obtained from the National Archives, shows six US soldiers raising the US flag atop Mount Suribachi on the Pacific island of Iwo Jima on Feb 23, 1945.
— AFP photo This handout photo obtained from the National Archives, shows six US soldiers raising the US flag atop Mount Suribachi on the Pacific island of Iwo Jima on Feb 23, 1945.

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