San Antonio Express-News

A century after fighting for Paris, leaders mark World War I armistice

- By Raf Casert

PARIS — Paris, the City of Light, always was the grandest prize of World War I, either to conquer or defend.

So it is only fitting that when victors and vanquished meet to mark the centennial of the armistice this weekend, the biggest ceremony should be on the famed Champs-Elysées at the Arc de Triomphe.

On Friday, some leaders began remembranc­e events in a wide crescent of cemeteries and trench-rutted battlefiel­ds north of the capital.

British Prime Minister Theresa May laid wreaths for the first and last British soldier killed in the fighting — the two were buried across from one another near Mons in southern Belgium. One grave holds the remains of Pvt. John Parr, killed Aug. 21, 1914. The other grave is of Pvt. George Ellison, who survived some of the war’s worst battles but was shot Nov. 11, 1918 — the war’s last day.

French President Emmanuel Macron continued his pilgrimage of WWI sites and caught up with May, as the two present-day leaders of the Allied forces that defeated Germany walked past graves at the Thiepval memorial.

“Each cemetery and memorial across the world is a unique and poignant reminder of the cost of the First World War,” May said.

Sixty-nine heads of state and government will underscore that message at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Paris on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month Sunday, exactly a century after the armistice.

Such was the symbolic importance of the French capital that victorious U.S. Gen. John J. Pershing said it was his “desire that every man in the American Expedition­ary Forces should be given the opportunit­y to visit Paris before returning to the United States.”

Far from every surviving U.S. soldier from the 19141918 war made it to the French capital, but Sunday, President Donald Trump will join his French counterpar­t and host, Macron, and others to remember the millions who died during the first global conflict.

France, Britain and its empire, Russia and the U.S. had the main armies opposing a German-led coalition that included the AustroHung­arian and Ottoman empires. Nearly 10 million soldiers died, often in brutal trench warfare in which poison gas added a cruelty in warfare that the world had never seen.

Carrying the heritage of defeated Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel will visit the site in the woods north of Paris where military leaders agreed in a train carriage to the armistice at 5 a.m. Nov. 11, 1918, six hours before it took effect.

Trump will visit two burial sites that highlight how the U.S. came of age as a military power after it joined the war in 1917.

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