Tanks in Washington ahead of Trump's
Fourth of July pageant
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[July 03, 2019]
By Andy Sullivan and Idrees Ali
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Battle tanks were
seen on a train in Washington on Tuesday ahead of a July Fourth
celebration highlighting U.S. military might that Democrats say
President Donald Trump may turn into a re-election campaign rally.
Amid questions about the cost and tone of the event, White House
officials said the Republican president will avoid politics and stick to
patriotic themes in his speech in front of the Lincoln Memorial in
Washington on Thursday.
Reuters photographed M1 Abrams tanks and other armored vehicles atop
flat rail cars in Washington on Tuesday morning, a sign of the military
firepower that will be featured, differing significantly from past
annual celebrations of the 1776 Declaration of Independence.
For decades, U.S. presidents have kept a low profile during the event,
which typically draws hundreds of thousands of people to Washington's
monument-lined National Mall for a concert and fireworks.
This year, Trump plans to speak at a military "Salute to America" that
will feature military bands and flyovers from the U.S. Navy's Blue
Angels and Air Force One, the modified Boeing 747 that transports U.S.
presidents.
The event could also feature M1 Abrams battle tanks, a B-2 bomber, F-35
and F-22 fighter jets, and the Marine One helicopter that transports the
president, the Pentagon said. Air traffic at nearby Ronald Reagan
National Airport will be suspended during the flyovers and the
fireworks, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
The antiwar group Code Pink said it had secured a permit to bring a
"Baby Trump" blimp, depicting the president in diapers, to a protest in
the Mall during his speech. The permit does not allow the balloon to be
filled with helium so it can float.
Democrats in Congress have questioned whether Trump will turn a
patriotic celebration into a taxpayer-funded campaign rally.
"That's absolutely ridiculous. This is all about a salute to America.
The president is not going to get political," White House spokesman
Hogan Gidley said on Fox Business Network.
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M1 Abrams tanks and other armored vehicles sit atop flat cars in a
rail yard after U.S. President Donald Trump said tanks and other
military hardware would be part of Fourth of July displays of
military prowess in Washington, U.S., July 2, 2019. REUTERS/Leah
Millis
On June 18, Trump officially launched his 2020 campaign to seek a
second four-year term. More than 20 Democrats are campaigning for
their party's nomination to run against Trump.
The administration has not said how much Trump's pumped-up July
Fourth celebration will cost. The Pentagon postponed a military
parade planned for last November after it estimated it could cost
$90 million.
The National Park Service is diverting about $2.5 million in
entrance and recreation fees primarily intended to improve parks to
cover costs associated with the celebration, the Washington Post
reported, citing unnamed sources.
The agency did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for
comment on the report.
"It is unacceptable that the Interior Department is failing to
inform Congress about how it plans to spend taxpayer money to fund
the president’s lavish July Fourth plans, which reportedly include
special access to the National Mall for the politically connected,"
Democratic Senator Tom Udall said in a statement.
A VIP section set up near the Lincoln Memorial will be open to
government officials and lawmakers, according to a White House
official speaking on condition of anonymity. In previous years,
government officials and other VIPs have watched the fireworks from
the White House lawn.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan and Idrees Ali; additional reporting by
Steve Holland, Kevin Fogarty, Makini Brice and Susan Heavey; Editing
by Grant McCool and Lisa Shumaker)
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