I did just now. I was at work when I posted last. It was the end of a 14 hour shift. I arranged to do last night for 14 hrs so I could have today to spend with my kids who have arranged to be here for my Birthday and Fathers Day.
Your editing makes my last post look a bit.............lost. People won't know what I'm going on about.
If Ozzy saw what I just wrote, he would say "same 'ol, same 'ol. Who ever understands anyway!"...............lol

Back to your question. The War dead and those who suffered, be they military or not, must be remembered. Memorials do that to a degree. Virtually every town in Australia has one. I understand they are in virtually every town in the US and UK also. I know France have man,, to there own and to the foreign countries who fought there, especially in WWI.
Many of these memorials are stone or concrete obelisks, and plaque type arrangements, but also many are in the form of an artillery piece or tank (I think there's a tank at the bridge in France that the British held.................ahhhhh, Pegasus bridge. (Maybe not, not sure), but anyway. Certainly here, just around the corner from me is the RSL club (which I mentioned earlier) which has a '25 pounder' and a 40 mm AAA Gun out front, with a 'Lest We Forget' plaque.
Our National monument is the Australian War Memorial. Many see it as a 'museum' but it's a consecreated memorial and the rules with regard to Photos, films and personal behaviour etc apply. The 'Unknown Soldier's Tomb' is there. It's full of every item of warfare from the Boar War to the Gulf. Tanks, Planes, Japanese Midget Subs from Sydney Harbour all the way down to Uniforms of almost every major Service from every major Country.
And of course, walls lined with the names of every man and woman who died in Service.
So, having visited and seen this place, and all the memorials all over the coubntry since I was a child, the thought of Military items and paraphenalia used as a means to honour the War dead is natural to me.
I thought that Auschwitz and Birkenau etc were kept standing as a memorial to those who perished their. Is this true? If so, then they are representative of the same kind of suffering as the military items.
Gees, I have gone on a bit, haven't I? Sorry. Anyway, this is the first I've ever heard of the concept being questioned, in print or any other part of the media.