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52 WWII vets expected for end-of-war commemoration on Oahu as virus worries mount

CRAIG T. KOJIMA /CKOJIMA@STARADVERTISER.COM
                                The co-chairs of the 75th WWII Commemoration Committee, Maj.Gen. Darryll Wong USAF (Ret), left, and Capt. Steven W. Colon, USN (Ret) 75th Tony Vericella, executive director of the committee, and Elissa Lines, executive director of the Pearl Harbor Aviation Museum discussed plans today.
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CRAIG T. KOJIMA /CKOJIMA@STARADVERTISER.COM

The co-chairs of the 75th WWII Commemoration Committee, Maj.Gen. Darryll Wong USAF (Ret), left, and Capt. Steven W. Colon, USN (Ret) 75th Tony Vericella, executive director of the committee, and Elissa Lines, executive director of the Pearl Harbor Aviation Museum discussed plans today.

CRAIG T. KOJIMA / CKOJIMA@STARADVERTISER.COM
                                The 646-foot JS Ise arrived today at Pearl Harbor
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CRAIG T. KOJIMA / CKOJIMA@STARADVERTISER.COM

The 646-foot JS Ise arrived today at Pearl Harbor

CRAIG T. KOJIMA /CKOJIMA@STARADVERTISER.COM
                                The co-chairs of the 75th WWII Commemoration Committee, Maj.Gen. Darryll Wong USAF (Ret), left, and Capt. Steven W. Colon, USN (Ret) 75th Tony Vericella, executive director of the committee, and Elissa Lines, executive director of the Pearl Harbor Aviation Museum discussed plans today.
CRAIG T. KOJIMA / CKOJIMA@STARADVERTISER.COM
                                The 646-foot JS Ise arrived today at Pearl Harbor

With a Japanese helicopter destroyer, the battleship Missouri and USS Arizona Memorial behind them, officials announced today that 52 World War II veterans plan to attend events on Oahu marking the 75th anniversary of the end of the deadliest conflict in human history.

The news conference was a scene that pulled together the upcoming Rim of the Pacific exercise with the presence of the Japanese ship, the start and end of World War II represented by the Arizona and Missouri, and the many challenges to both RIMPAC and the 75th anniversary event due to a surging COVID-19.

Both RIMPAC and the Aug. 29 to Sept. 2 end-of-World War II commemoration have been reduced in scope and scale due to the coronavirus, but both are moving forward.

A mostly at-sea RIMPAC is scheduled Aug. 17 to 31 with 10 participating countries. The 646-foot JS Ise arrived today for a brief Pearl Harbor stop, while two South Korean destroyers showed up last week, the Navy said.

Planners of the end-of-war events described the passion behind the decision by veterans who are in their mid-90s and up to come to Hawaii — COVID-19 notwithstanding — and the importance of honoring the actual Sept. 2, 1945 official surrender date by Japan.

Fourteen of the veterans were either on the Missouri, in aircraft overflying the battleship, or on a ship nearby for the surrender ceremony in Tokyo Bay.

“The greatest motivator is if you talk to these veterans or their children or their grandchildren and their desire, their passion, their commitment, their resolve, to want to be a part of this,” said Tony Vericella, executive director of the 75th World War II Commemoration Committee in Hawaii.

He added that the veterans “are making the choice — they want to be here.”

Committee co-chair Steve Colon, a retired Navy captain, noted that the coronavirus “situation is changing on a daily basis,” but that Sept. 2 is the day that the surrender ceremony took place on the Missouri.

“Seventy-five years from Sept. 2 (1945) regardless of whether all of the World War II veterans who can and want to make it here, can, for whatever reason, or whether none of them can, we will do some sort of ceremony on the fantail of the Missouri,” Colon said. “That date is too important for us to just let that go.”

Modified quarantines and travel bubbles are planned to allow veterans, their families, dignitaries and vintage warbird crews to take part in specific events, organizers say.

Mark Esper, the secretary of defense, and Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, have shown a “strong indication” they will attend, Vericella said.

Meanwhile, 14 vintage warbirds and some crew are on their way on the Navy amphibious assault ship USS Essex to take part of three aerial flyovers.

Five AT-6/SNJ advanced trainers, two PBY Catalina flying boats, a B-25 bomber, an FM-2 Wildcat, an F8F Bearcat, a P-51 Mustang, a Stearman biplane, a TBM Avenger and a T-28 Trojan are among aircraft expected to participate in the flyovers.

Hawaii-based F-22 Raptors, C-17 cargo aircraft and KC-135 refuelers are also expected to participate. Oahu flyovers are scheduled for Aug. 29 and 30 and Sept. 2.

The abbreviated RIMPAC is the subject of a petition that a group called the “Cancel RIMPAC Coalition” said it delivered today to Gov. David Ige’s office with 12,000 signatures from Hawaii and foreign nations seeking a cancellation of the interoperability maritime exercise.

“With a record 207 new COVID-19 cases reported on Monday, holding RIMPAC is reckless and irresponsible. Yet, RIMPAC is still scheduled to take place in the waters off Hawaii from Aug. 17-31,” the group said in a release.

The group said it is seeking a cancellation of the exercise by U.S. Pacific Fleet and requirement for 14-day quarantine for all military personnel arriving in Hawaii.

Ige’s office said it was reviewing the petition.

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