By Amaani Lyle
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17, 2014 – Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel
yesterday lauded training efforts at the Army’s National Training Center at
Fort Irwin, California, where he addressed troops and observed a
“full-spectrum” war exercise involving about 4,700 soldiers preparing for
deployments to the Middle East.
The training on the 1,200-square-mile site included
exercises in traditional tactics, political leader and citizen interactions,
and cyberattacks.
Importance of Training
“It is critically important that the kind of training you're
getting here continue to be refined, because … it is training that prepares
you, that keeps you ready,” Hagel said. “It is training that keeps you on the
cutting edge of what's coming next.”
Noting that the “unpredictable is the predictable,” Hagel
championed a proactive approach to threats and challenges. He described joint
efforts among Army, Navy and Air Force special operations forces as “important
and essential” to the U.S. military’s future. He lauded the comprehensive training
for transcending the parameters of basic soldiering with its inclusion of
understanding the culture and appeal of radicalism to insurgents.
“You've got to know a little something more about the
environment that you're going into -- some of the history, some of the culture,
some of the human dimensions that always play out in any contest, and in any
conflict,” he said.
Troops Will Gain Greater Training Control
Hagel noted the “impressive” level of coordination he
observed and vowed to give commanders and their troops more latitude and
flexibility in preparing for current and future challenges.
“You have to be mayors of small towns, you have to be sewer
commissioners, you have to be architects,” he said. “And you have to be
soldiers.”
Hagel reminded the troops that they serve as role models for
society and future generations of service members.
“What you do is not just what you do here or on the
battlefield or anywhere else you go,” Hagel said. “But you represent as proud a
tradition and as important a job as there is in this country.”
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