Hegseth Uses D-Day Anniversary to Warn Europe Against «Invasion»

Hegseth Uses D-Day Anniversary to Warn Europe Against «Invasion»
Credit: Getty Images

Pete Hegseth’s speech during a D-Day anniversary ceremony in Normandy quickly became one of the most controversial moments of this year’s commemorations after the U.S. defense secretary used the historic event to warn about immigration and what he described as dangerous ideologies entering Europe. Speaking on the same coastline where Allied troops launched the liberation of Western Europe in 1944, Hegseth compared modern migration to an «invasion» and urged European governments to take action before it was too late. The remarks immediately sparked fierce debate online and drew criticism from historians, security experts and human rights advocates, who accused him of politicizing the memory of D-Day and distorting the legacy of the soldiers who fought there.