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Home » Celebrating 250 Years Of The U.S. Army

Celebrating 250 Years Of The U.S. Army

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Fri, 07/11/2025 - 12:00am

George Wees in his dorm room at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. (Courtesy photo)
By 
Gregory Wees
Nebraska Examiner

In June, we wished our United States Army a happy 250th birthday. It was a significant day for me, having grown up around the world among soldiers, sailors, airmen and their families.

My father, George Wees, was born in Omaha to second-generation Polish immigrants. His father, Francis Wees, built houses in South Omaha, including the house he, my grandmother, and their nine children called home near 38th and G Streets. Dad attended Creighton Prep and graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1958.

I was born a few years later, in Heidelberg, in then-West Germany. Young Lt. Wees was on one of his early assignments working with the newly established West German military, via a NATO attachment, to establish secure government communications networks just miles away from Soviet-allied East Germany.

In 1966, dad received orders for Vietnam. He was to advise a South Vietnamese Army unit in the burgeoning conflict between the communist North and the democratic South. He parked my mother and us kids in a little duplex in East Omaha, and off he went to spend a year on the other side of the globe.

Communicating With Us

I remember he furnished us with a little tape recorder and microphone, and he and my mother exchanged tapes, in addition to near-daily letters, during his deployment. She still has the tapes.

In some of his messages, you hear the gunfire in the distance. And at those times, you hear a bit of unsteadiness in the young lieutenant’s voice.

When Dad returned in 1967, he was stationed at the Pentagon, now a Captain. We lived in a little house across from a park in Vienna, Virginia, where I attended kindergarten and first grade.

It was there that I really got to know him. He set up a darkroom in the basement to pursue his photography hobby, bought a Mustang for the Pentagon commute and patiently hosted siblings from Omaha who wanted to come visit Washington.

But by 1969, it was time for his second tour in Vietnam. Back we came to Omaha, to another little house on 43rd and Center, a rental owned by friends. There my mother, sister and I would wait out another year of war. That is, if dad survived.

By this time, things were less taut, less military, and problems extended from the front to the rear. In command of American troops near Nha Trang, dad survived at least one attempt on his life—from his own troops.

Because by this point, many of the young draftees were convinced the war was pointless.

Lives Of Service

Eventually, after resisting the notion for years, Col. Wees agreed with me that the war, through Democratic and Republican administrations, was ill-conceived and badly executed. In other words, pointless.

But we should remember that rank and file soldiers like my dad only served. None of it was their idea, nor did they make the big decisions. That was the province of civilian leadership in Washington — folks who would soon be ousted, many imprisoned, with a president resigning in disgrace.

Our current civilian leader, who has already been disgraced by multiple felony convictions and a civil sexual abuse judgment against him, used the occasion of the Army’s birthday to throw a party and have a parade.

The Army, as always, followed the commander-in-chief’s orders and rolled the tanks down Constitution Avenue in a light rain as the president attempted a few salutes. Nearby, at Arlington National Cemetery, my father rested.

Though drafted, the president never served (bone spurs), and according to witnesses, he has labeled as “suckers and losers” some rank-and-file soldiers who make up the service. His campaign-style speech to West Point’s 2025 graduating class — complete with MAGA hat — was thin on talk of duty or honor.

But those cadets did what cadets do. They listened to the president troll and dismiss his predecessor, threaten his political “enemies”, invent “facts”, and brag about himself, without visibly reacting, except to politely applaud as they shared their achievement with the commander-in-chief.

That’s what it looks like when doing one’s duty, honorably, for one’s country. It looks like discipline, because that’s what is required to lead. Happy 250th to the United States Army. May you continue to serve and protect the Constitution, and to quietly obey the lawful orders of whatever civilian leadership the voters place above you, for centuries to come.

 

This story was published by Nebraska Examiner, an editorially independent newsroom providing a hard-hitting, daily flow of news. Read the original article: https://nebraskaexaminer.com/2025/07/08/celebrating-250-years-of-the-u-s...

Opinions expressed by columnists in The Daily Record are not necessarily those of its management or staff, and do not constitute an endorsement or recommendation. Any errors or omissions should be called to our attention so that they may be corrected. Contact us at news@omahadailyrecord.com.

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