CyberWire Daily - Memorial Day special.
Episode Date: May 27, 2024Rick Howard, N2K CyberWire’s Chief Analyst, CSO, and Senior Fellow, commemorates Memorial Day. References: Abraham Lincoln, 1863. The Gettysburg Address [Speech]. Abraham Lincoln Online. Amanda Onio...n, Original 2009, Updated 2023. Memorial Day 2022: Facts, Meaning & Traditions [Essay]. HISTORY. Brent Hugh, 2021. A Brief History of “John Brown’s Body” [Essay]. Digital History. Bob Zeller, 2022. How Many Died in the American Civil War? [Essay]. HISTORY. General George Marshall, 2014. President Lincoln’s Letter to Mrs Bixby [Movie Clip - Saving Private Ryan]. YouTube. JOHN LOGAN, 1868. Logan’s Order Mandating Memorial Day [Order]. John A. Logan College. John Williams, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, 2012. The People’s House: Lincoln (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [Song]. Apple Music. John Williams, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, 2012. The Blue and the Grey: Lincoln (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [Song]. Apple Music - Web Playe. Livia Albeck-Ripka, 2023. A Brief History of Memorial Day [Essay]. The New York Times. Paul Robeson, 2021. John Brown’s Body [Song]. YouTube. Robert Rodat (Writer), Steven Spielberg (Director), Harve Presnell (Actor), 1998. Saving Private Ryan [Movie]. IMDb. Staff, 2020. A Brief Biography of General John A. Logan [Biography]. John A. Logan College. Staff, 2024. Civil War Timeline [WWW Document], American Battlefield Trust. Thomas Jefferson, 1776. Declaration of Independence: [Transcription]. National Archives. Winston Churchil, 1940. Never was so much owed by so many to so few - Winston Churchill Speeches [Speech]. YouTube. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to the Cyber Wire Network, powered by N2K.
Air Transat presents two friends traveling in Europe for the first time and feeling some pretty big emotions.
This coffee is so good. How do they make it so rich and tasty?
Those paintings we saw today weren't prints. They were the actual paintings.
I have never seen tomatoes like this.
How are they so red?
With flight deals starting at just $589,
it's time for you to see what Europe has to offer.
Don't worry.
You can handle it.
Visit airtransat.com for details.
Conditions apply.
AirTransat.
Travel moves us.
Hey, everybody.
Dave here.
Have you ever wondered where your personal information is lurking online?
Like many of you, I was concerned about my data being sold by data brokers.
So I decided to try Delete.me.
I have to say, Delete.me is a game changer.
Within days of signing up, they started removing my personal information from hundreds of data brokers.
I finally have peace of mind knowing my data privacy is protected.
Delete.me's team does all the work for you with detailed reports so you know exactly what's been done.
Take control of your data and keep your private life private by signing up for Delete.me.
Now at a special discount for our listeners.
private by signing up for Delete Me. Now at a special discount for our listeners,
today get 20% off your Delete Me plan when you go to joindeleteme.com slash n2k and use promo code n2k at checkout. The only way to get 20% off is to go to joindeleteme.com slash n2k and enter code
n2k at checkout. That's joindeleteme.com slash n2k code n2k. And now, a message from our sponsor, Zscaler, the leader in cloud security.
Enterprises have spent billions of dollars on firewalls and VPNs, Thank you. that are exploited by bad actors more easily than ever with AI tools.
It's time to rethink your security.
Zscaler Zero Trust Plus AI stops attackers by hiding your attack surface,
making apps and IPs invisible, eliminating lateral movement,
connecting users only to specific apps, not the entire network,
continuously verifying every request based on identity and context, Thank you. organization with Zscaler, Zero Trust, and AI. Learn more at zscaler.com slash security. Not to be confused with Veterans Day, a holiday that celebrates American military personnel,
Memorial Day honors the fallen soldier.
As author Tamara Bolton says,
quote,
This is the day we pay homage
to all those who didn't come home.
This is not Veterans Day.
It's not a celebration.
It is a day of solemn contemplation
over the cost of freedom,
end quote.
Today, here at N2K Cyber Wire,
we commemorate Memorial Day.
My name is Rick Howard, and I'm broadcasting from the N2K CyberWire's secret Sanctum Sanctorum studios,
located underwater somewhere along the Patapsco River near Baltimore Harbor, Maryland, in the good old U.S. of A. And you're listening to CSO Perspectives, my podcast about the ideas, strategies, and technologies that senior security executives wrestle with on a daily basis.
Memorial Day began almost immediately after the American Civil War from 1861 to 1865,
although we didn't start calling it that for another hundred years.
When the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia surrendered to General Grant
at the Appomattox Courthouse in South Central Virginia,
over 600,000 soldiers had perished because of the conduct of that war,
both from the Confederate and from the Union sides.
At least 2% of the American population at the time,
more lives lost than any conflict in U.S. history.
Just a month after the South surrendered, thousands of freed Black Americans in the
ruined city of Charleston, South Carolina, commemorated a mass grave of Union soldiers
buried in an abandoned racecourse. 3,000 schoolchildren carrying roses and hundreds
of women carrying flower baskets, wreaths, and crosses sang the old Union Army marching song, John Brown's Body, which is more famously known today as the Battle Hymn of the Republic.
By May of the next year, 1866, citizens of the city of Waterloo, New York, decorated their streets with flags at half-staff, draped with evergreens and morning black.
A hundred years later, the U.S. federal government declared this commemoration as the official first Memorial Day.
That same year, though, in Columbus, Mississippi, women placed flowers on the graves of both Confederate and Union soldiers.
Two years later, May 1868, General John A. Logan, the commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the
Republic, a veteran of eight major Civil War campaigns, established a national holiday when
he signed General Order No. 11, saying, quote, their soldier lives were the revelry of freedom
to a race in chains, and their deaths the tattoo of rebellious tyranny in arms.
According to the USO, the United Service Organizations,
over 5,000 first-ever National Decoration Day participants decorated the graves of the 20,000 Union and Confederate soldiers
buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
By the late 1800s, cities and communities across the United States began to observe the day,
and several states declared it a legal holiday.
According to the New York Times, most referred to the day as Decoration Day.
But as the country got involved in other wars, like the Spanish-American War,
World War I, World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War,
Americans began referring to the observance as Memorial Day,
not just to remember Civil War deaths, but to honor the American fallen from all wars. In 1967,
Congress formally changed Decoration Day to Memorial Day, and in 1971, decreed that the
holiday would land on the last Monday of May to ensure a three-day holiday for federal workers.
Today, American citizens don't really acknowledge the distinction between Veterans Day and Memorial
Day. Most appreciate the two American three-day weekends, official national holidays, by attending
parades, firing up the backyard grill for burgers and hot dogs, and maybe tipping their baseball
caps to the veterans in the vicinity. and this is all well and good. But for me, it's one thing to be a veteran
of the U.S. Armed Forces, a true and noble calling for which I'm proud to have followed. It's quite
another, though, to lay down your life in the name of a bigger idea, that all people are created
equal, that they are endowed
by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness, and that to secure these rights, men and women must be ready to stand in the breach
to protect them. I'm reminded of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Bill of Rights Proclamation in 1941,
quote, those who have long enjoyed such privileges
as we enjoy forget in time that men have died to win them. Or Winston Churchill's speech on the BBC
about his citizens' response to the Battle of Britain in World War II, quote, never in the
field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few. The great air battle which has been in progress over this island for the last few weeks has
recently attained a high intensity.
It is too soon to attempt to assign limits either to its scale or to its duration.
We must certainly expect that greater efforts will be made
by the enemy than any
he has put forth.
The gratitude of every
home in our island,
in our empire, and indeed
throughout the world,
except in the abodes of the guilty,
goes out to the British airmen
who, undaunted by odds,
unwearied in their constant challenge and mortal danger,
are turning the tide of the world war by their prowess and by their devotion.
Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.
Or the hot take from the famous American general George S. Patton in 1945, quote, It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather, we should thank God such men and women lived.
In President Lincoln's condolence letter to Mrs. Bixby in Boston, he succinctly expressed the nation's thoughts about our nation's fallen sons and daughters.
This is a dramatization of the reading of the letter by the Army's Chief of Staff, General George C. Marshall,
played by the actor Harvey Presnell in the movie Saving Private Ryan.
I have a letter here.
Press now in the movie Saving Private Ryan. I have a letter here.
Written a long time ago to a Mrs. Bixby in Boston.
So bear with me.
Dear Madam,
I have been shown in the files of the War Department a statement
of the Adjutant General of Massachusetts that you
are the mother of five...
sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle.
I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine
that would attempt to beguile you from the grief
of a loss so overwhelming.
But I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation that may be found
in the thanks of the Republic they died to save.
I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement
and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost.
The solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.
Yours very sincerely and respectfully, Abraham Lincoln.
When I was still in the U.S. Army in the later part of my career, this is early 2000s, I was stationed at the Pentagon.
My unit visited Arlington Cemetery, the cemetery where the country buries its veterans.
And I was sufficiently moved by the experience that I wrote an essay about it.
It's called Reborn at Arlington, and you can find it in total on the N2K website.
A couple of years ago, with the help of Elliot Peltzman, the N2K Executive Director of Sound and Vision,
we dramatized the essay. So, for this Memorial Day, we're rebroadcasting that show.
As President Lincoln said in his Gettysburg Address,
it is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.
1,500 U.S. Army soldiers stood on the misty parade field at Fort Myer, Virginia, waiting for the sun to rise.
The leadership had scheduled another morale-building-yet-mandated fun run,
where once a quarter the entire unit comes together to do PT, physical training, and a show of esprit de corps and unit cohesion.
Since we were all stationed at the Pentagon, many of us had been in the Army for a
while. We were a little broken down in the body department and had seen our fair share of these
types of events. There we were at the twilight of our careers, huddled in small groups during the
dawn of one more PT morning. Of course, there was the usual grumbling between the old soldiers,
asking one another if we were motivated yet and if we had a cup of esprit de corps to spare. But there was a sprinkling of young soldiers among us too, and their shiny new faces
kept us old-timers from getting too cynical and fussy. As the sun poked up above the horizon,
the Army's Command Sergeant Mater called the gaggle to attention. And the formation began to run. One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
Double time.
Halt.
C-130 rolling down the strip.
C-130 rolling down the strip.
We're on an airborne range, we're gonna take a little trip.
We're on an airborne range, we're gonna take a little trip.
The non-commissioned officers, the NCOs, led the assemblage in rousing voice
and extolled the virtues of Granny, My Girl, and the C-130.
Below the roar of the singing, just in the background,
you could hear the footsteps of the 1,500 strong pounding the pavement in syncopated rhythm.
One, two, three, four, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four, three, four. One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four, three, four.
My old granny, she's ninety-one.
The formation crested the hill overlooking Arlington Cemetery,
and the vista of Washington, D.C. opened up before us.
The Army colors at the front of the formation started their descent towards the cemetery,
just as the rising sun reached the top of the Washington Monument several miles distant.
And still, the singing and the pounding drove the formation
as it snaked down the hill towards the front gates.
My old granny, she's a lion in the hay.
She does beat me in a tree.
She does beat me in a tree.
As the colors passed the cemetery, like a line of dominoes falling, the singing faded away.
One platoon after the other fell silent in mute honor of our fallen comrades-at-arms,
laid to rest in the National Cemetery.
As the voices muted, the only sound you could hear was the constant beat, beat, beat of
the run and the Army colors whipping in the slight breeze.
Nobody spoke, except the occasional NCO, keeping everybody in step with a solid but quiet
1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4
It was serene. It was sublime.
Midway through the run, the command sergeant major called the formation to a halt
and commanded us to execute a right phase towards the middle of the cemetery.
The morning sun had burned off the last vestiges of mist from the manicured lawns.
The breeze trickled through the formation's silence and the army colors at the front. And then we all heard it.
That mournful sound of a single bugler playing taps.
He began low at first, almost whispering the sound through the horn.
But slowly his crescendo wrapped the listener into a cocoon of sadness, memory, and gratitude
about the lives that could have been or that was.
On that misty morning, young and old soldiers alike shed mutual tears as the bugle played on.
When it was done, and the silence greeted the end of the song, a chill went down my back.
It occurred to me that we were not merely taking a morning jog anymore.
We were actually passing in review.
These fallen soldiers, some of whom had given the ultimate sacrifice for their country,
and others who were prepared to do so, were watching us and sizing us up.
I hoped that we could pass muster.
I had this great desire to let them all know that we had the guide on now and it was in good hands. We would not let them down.
I stood a little taller then. My old muscles didn't ache so much. As we began to run home,
the burden was a little lighter. As 1,500 boarded the buses to head back to the Pentagon,
I realized that this old soldier was less cynical today, less worn for wear.
Although I may not have that shiny face of one of those new soldiers,
I was reborn this morning, together, both old and young.
We will carry on.
And that's a wrap.
For all of you friends and family members who have lost a loved one in the service of this country,
we stand with you to commemorate this Memorial Day.
And that's CSO Perspectives, brought to you by N2K CyberWire.
Visit thecyberwire.com for additional resources that accompany this episode.
And check out our book, Cybersecurity First Principles,
a reboot of Strategy and Tactics,
or a deep dive on all topics covered in this podcast.
For reference, I've added some helpful links in the show notes.
And we'd love to know what you think of this podcast.
Your feedback ensures we deliver the insights to keep you a step ahead in the rapidly changing world of cybersecurity.
If you like the show, please share a rating and review in your podcast app.
And you can also fill out a survey in the show notes or send an email to csop at n2k.com.
at n2k.com.
We're privileged that N2K Cyber Wire is part of the daily routine
of the most influential leaders and operators
in the public and private sector,
from the Fortune 500
to many of the world's preeminent intelligence
and law enforcement agencies.
N2K makes it easy for companies
to optimize your biggest investment,
your people.
We make you smarter about your teams while making your team smarter.
Learn how at n2k.com.
This episode was produced by Liz Stokes.
Our theme song is by Blue Dot Sessions,
remixed by Elliot Peltzman,
who also mixes the show and provides original music.
Our executive producer is Jennifer Eibman.
Our executive editor is Brandon Karp.
Simone Petrella is our president.
Peter Kilpie is our publisher.
And I'm Rick Howard.
Thanks for listening. Thank you. impact. Secure AI agents connect, prepare, and automate your data workflows, helping you gain
insights, receive alerts, and act with ease through guided apps tailored to your role.
Data is hard. Domo is easy. Learn more at ai.domo.com. That's ai.domo.com.