French residents furious after Pete Hegseth’s bizarre D-Day speech

 

The silence over the graves shattered the moment he spoke. What should have been a solemn D-Day tribute turned into a political firestorm on the beaches of Normandy. Locals branded Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth “persona non grata,” accusing him of hijacking their history. His words about migrants, “invasion,” and Europe’s future changed everyth… Continues…

 

In Langrune-sur-Mer, villagers had prepared to honor the young men who died on their sands, not to host a speech they felt weaponized that sacrifice. Civic leaders, already uneasy with Hegseth’s past remarks, watched in disbelief as he compared wartime invasions to modern migration, framing desperate crossings as a new ideological storm battering Europe’s shores. For many, it felt like their dead were being drafted into a different war they never chose.

The backlash was immediate and raw. Residents spoke of betrayal, of democracy reduced to a talking point, of institutions built after 1945 casually dismissed. Extra security agents ringed Hegseth’s family as the mood soured, a jarring contrast to the quiet crosses stretching toward the sea. In the end, the visit exposed a painful rift: between memory as sacred duty, and memory as ammunition in today’s battles over borders, identity, and who gets to speak for the fallen.

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