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Cold War
Veterans Association
CWVA™
A 501(c)(19)
Veterans Service Organization
Founded 2001

Updated May 6,
2010
CWVA
Membership: Join
/ Renew
2010
Cold War
Victory
Day
May 1st is the day
we commemorate Cold War Victory Day. May 1, 2010 was the most
recent commemoration of this holiday. Here is a video
from a ceremony recognizing this day in history. (The relevant portion begins
after about one minute and lasts less than four minutes.) This (April
29, 2010) speech was before the Johnson County (Kansas) Board of County
Commissioners (and assembled guests).
On May 1, 2010, the Johnson County
(Kansas) Chapter of the NAACP graciously hosted a Cold War Victory Day
event for the CWVA. A fifteen minute speech was delivered by the CWVA
Chairman followed by a nearly one hour discussion (led by the CWVA
Chairman).
A Special THANKS goes out to the State
of Arizona which enacted Cold War Victory Legislation.
Please see our Arizona Special Page.
In addition to the above-cited special
recognition of Arizona, below are numerous Proclamations recognizing this day in history.
2010
Proclamation
issued by The Governor of Kansas
2010
Proclamation
issued by The Governor of Oregon
2010
Proclamation
issued by The Governor of Tennessee
2010
Proclamation
issued by The Kansas House of Representatives
2010
Proclamation
issued by The Johnson County (Kansas) Board of Commissioners
2010
Proclamation
issued by The Mayor of Lenexa, Kansas
Below is a picture from an above-cited
ceremony with Annabeth Surbaugh (Chairman of the Johnson County Board of County
Commissioners) presenting a proclamation to Vince Milum (Chairman of the CWVA)

____________
Below are links to
Proclamations from past years:
2009
Cold War
Victory
Day
Proclamations
Kansas
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2009)
Johnson
County
Kansas
(Home of CWVA)
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2009)
Lenexa
Kansas
Mayor
(Home of CWVA)
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2009)
Oregon
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2009)
Tennessee
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2009)
2008
Cold War
Victory
Day
Proclamations

Above:
Kansas State
Representative Ron Worley
(right)
presents CWVA Chairman Vince Milum
(left) with the
2008 declaration of May 1st as Cold War Victory Day
from the Kansas House of Representatives.
Cold War
Victory
Day speech
Cold War
Victory
Day article
Kansas
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2008)
Kansas
House
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2008)
Johnson
County
Kansas
(Home of CWVA)
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2008)
Lenexa
Kansas
Mayor
(Home of CWVA)
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2008)
Minnesota
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2008)
Oregon
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2008)
Tennessee
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2008)
2007
Cold War
Victory
Day
Proclamations
Kansas
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Kansas
Senate
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Kansas
House
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Johnson
County
Kansas
(Home of
CWVA)
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Lenexa
Kansas
Mayor
(Home of
CWVA)
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
California
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Colorado
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day
(PDF-2007)
Georgia
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Maine
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Minnesota
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Montana
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Nevada
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
New
Jersey Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day
(PDF-2007)
Oregon
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Tennessee
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Texas
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Houston
Mayor declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Virginia
Legislature
declares Cold War Victory Day
[Perpetual]
Vermont
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
Wisconsin
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2007)
2006
Cold War
Victory
Day
Proclamations
Arizona
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Colorado
Governor declares Cold War Victory Day
(2006)
Florida
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Georgia
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Houston
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Illinois
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Johnson
County
Kansas
(Home of
CWVA)
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day
Kansas
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Kansas
Legislature
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Lenexa
Kansas
Mayor
(Home of
CWVA)
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day
New
Jersey Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Nevada
Governor declares Cold War Victory Day
(2006)
Minnesota
Governor declares Cold War Victory Day
(2006)
Oregon
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Tennessee
Governor
declares Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Vermont
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Virginia
Legislature
declares Cold War Victory Day
(2006)
[Passage]
Wisconsin
Governor
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Wisconsin
Legislature
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
Waukesha
County
Wisconsin
declares
Cold War
Victory
Day (2006)
2005
Cold War
Victory
Day
Proclamations
Kansas
Governor declares Cold War Victory Day
(2005)
Kansas
Legislature declares Cold War Victory Day
(2005)
Johnson
County Kansas declares Cold War Victory Day
(2005)
Lenexa,
Kansas declares Cold War Victory Day
(2005)
Arizona
Legislature declares Cold War Victory Day (2005)
Florida
Governor declares Cold War Victory Day
(2005)
Louisiana
Governor declares Cold War Victory Day
(2005)
Texas
Legislature declares Cold War Victory Day
(2005)
Tennessee
declares Cold War Victory Day (2005)
Vermont
declares Cold War Victory Day (PDF-2005)
Wisconsin
Governor declares Cold War Victory Day
(PDF-2005)
Wisconsin
Legislature declares Cold War Victory Day
(PDF-2005)
2004
Cold War
Victory
Day
Proclamations
Arizona
Governor declares
Cold War Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Colorado
declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Florida
Governor declares
Cold War Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Kansas
Governor declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Kansas
House recognizes
Cold War Veterans (2004)
Michigan
declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Montana
declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Nebraska
declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Nevada
declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
New
Jersey
declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
New
Mexico declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Ohio
declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Tennessee
declares Cold War
Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Texas
declares Cold War
VETERANS Day: May 1, 2004
Wisconsin
Governor declares
Cold War Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Wisconsin
Legislature declares
Cold War Victory Day: May 1, 2004
________________________
Johnson
County, Kansas
declares
Cold War
Day: May 1, 2004
Lenexa,
Kansas declares
Cold War Victory Day: May 1, 2004
Cold War
Victory Day 2003:
Read
the Special Cold War
Victory Day Issue of the Cold War Times
Click
Here for
photo of
Kansas
Governor
proclaiming
the first Cold War Victory
____________
MAY 1ST ANNUAL DAY OF
OBSERVANCE FOR COMMEMORATING OUR VICTORY IN THE COLD WAR
The following was entered
into the Official Record of the U.S. Congress by CWVA Member –
Congressman Dennis Moore – on May 1,
2003.
(See below or
Click
Here for
the
Official PDF version)
SPEECH OF HON. DENNIS MOORE
OF KANSAS
IN THE U.S. HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
THURSDAY, MAY 1, 2003
[Mr. MOORE:] Mr. Speaker, the
Governors of Kansas and Wisconsin have proclaimed May 1 as their annual day of
observance for commemorating our victory in the Cold War.
In a very real sense, the
victory of the western allies was also a victory for the oppressed peoples of
the Soviet bloc, and liberation for the Russian people, who are now friends and
allies of the United States. May 1 was the traditional day of celebration for
Communists worldwide, and displays of military might. It is fitting that May 1
now become a day of celebration of liberty for free peoples everywhere, and for
remembrance of the sacrifices that made the downfall of Communism a reality.
These state
proclamations were in response to efforts by the Cold
War Veterans Association,
which has its headquarters in the State of Kansas, and of which I am proud to be
a member.
The Cold War was a long
struggle, less dramatic than traditional wars, which ended with battles for
cities, dropping of bombs, and formal surrenders. The Cold War ended over a
period of several years, but as both President George W. Bush and Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld said, "It was a war, and we won." The resolute
opposition to the Communist Empire took many forms, and cost many lives of
American soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines. It will be years before the
casualty count is complete, but it is real, whether the losses were at sea, over
Soviet or east European airspace, in shoot-downs over international waters, or
along the Korean demilitarized zone (DMZ).
May 1 is the anniversary of the
shoot-down of Francis Gary Powers' U-2 in 1960, and the beginning of his
captivity in the U.S.S.R. The month of May saw other losses, and some small but
shining victories.
May was the month in 1949 that
the Soviets ended their blockade of West Berlin, after the U.S. Air Force and
the British Royal Air Force supplied the besieged city with food and fuel for
almost a year, costing the lives of 68 Allied servicemen and 9 Germans. Attacks
on U.S. aircraft in the month of May included one in 1955, in which 2 Chinese
Communist soldiers were shot down over international waters, an attack on U.S.
reconnaissance aircraft over the U.S.S.R. (1954), and over international waters
near the Kamchatka Peninsula (1953), shoot-downs over East Germany (1953, 1960,
1964), and by North Koreans (1963, 1974). U.S. military officers assassinated in
May included 2 in Iran (1975) and one in El Salvador (1983). An attack in May
1967 by North Koreans on a U.S. Army barracks left 2 Americans dead and 17
wounded. Two separate terrorist attacks in May 1972 by the Red Army Faction in
West Germany left 4 U.S. soldiers dead and 18 wounded. A terrorist attack in San
Juan, Puerto Rico, in May 1982 killed one crewman and wounded 3 others from the
U.S.S. Pensacola (LSD-38). Casualties at sea in May included the entire crew of
99 aboard the U.S. nuclear submarine Scorpion, which was lost at sea in 1968.
May 1954 saw the U.S.S. Bennington (CV-20) damaged by an explosion and fire in
the Atlantic, killing 103 and injuring 201. In May of 1981, an EA6B Prowler
crashed during landing aboard the carrier U.S.S. Nimitz (CVA-68) in the
Atlantic, with 14 killed and 48 injured. In May 1987, 37 sailors aboard the
U.S.S. Stark were killed and 21 wounded by an Iraqi Exocet missile. In May 1975,
after our involvement in Vietnam and Cambodia had ended, our troops had to
rescue the U.S.S. Mayaguez and its crew from the Khmer Rouge, again at a cost of
lives of our sailors and marines. And the list goes on.
During the Cold War, over 40
U.S. aircraft were shot down, and others were lost during operational missions.
Shooting incidents on the ground, along the Iron Curtain in Europe and the
Bamboo Curtain in Asia often made the morning reports, but seldom the morning
papers. Our atomic veterans participated in a large number of nuclear weapons
tests; many of them exposed to ionizing radiation, with tragic consequences in
later life.
There were many successful
missions. Many long nights of faithful and vigilant service, on the frontiers of
freedom, on polar ice, submerged, flying airborne alerts and reconnaissance.
Staying combat-ready in the Fulda Gap of Germany. Keeping watch on the Korean
DMZ. Standing watch in stormy seas. Maintaining the defenses of the continental
United States. Constantly improving the combat capability of the United States
through research and development.
So on May 1, I salute the brave
men and women of our Armed Forces who served in the Cold War, and especially
those who paid the ultimate price. We refuse to allow their bravery to go
unheralded in the name of "political correctness." We also salute the
freedom fighters who stood up to tyranny on the streets of Poland (1956, 1981),
East Germany (1953), Czechoslovakia (1968), Hungary (1956), Romania (1989), and
Afghanistan (1979-88). Their victory and ours are commemorated on each May 1
from this year forward.
I now ask
our National Government and other state governors to proclaim this day of
observance, with appropriate ceremonies and recognition. I also ask President
Bush to create the Cold War Victory Medal by executive order, for award to all
who served in the Armed Forces and civilian intelligence agencies during this
period. We owe them nothing less.
CWVA
Membership: Join
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