The remembrance ceremonies at Normandy this week were meant to honour the fallen. Instead, they became a stage for a searing indictment of Europe’s present. Pete Hegseth, the Fox News host and veteran, used his platform to draw a brutal contrast between the sacrifice of 1944 and the continent’s current crisis.
‘They did not die so that Europe could be overrun by unchecked migration,’ he said, his words landing like a grenade among the poppies. It was a sentiment that would have been unthinkable a decade ago, but now echoes through the cafes of Paris and the precincts of Brussels.
The human cost is no longer abstract. Walk through the banlieues of France or the inner cities of Sweden, and you see the social fabric fraying. Schools overwhelmed, public squares turned into contested spaces, a quiet resentment simmering among those who feel their history has been erased. The cultural shift is undeniable: a continent that once prided itself on stability now grapples with fragmentation.
Hegseth’s rebuke hits at a deeper truth. Europe’s migration policy has been catastrophic, not because of the intentions, but because of the lack of integration. The generosity of the post-war era required a shared identity. Today, that identity is in doubt. The new arrivals, often from conservative societies, clash with liberal values. The result is a mutual alienation that breeds extremism on all sides.
The D-Day generation understood something we have forgotten: that freedom requires a defended border. Without it, the very societies those soldiers died to protect become unrecognisable. Hegseth’s words were a mirror, and Europe does not like what it sees.
The question now is not whether the old order can be restored, but whether a new one can be built on the ruins of the old consensus. The streets of Europe are telling us that the answer is not yet clear. And the silence from the political class is deafening.










