by 2nd. Lt. Brooks Payette
157th Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs
2/17/2015 - PEASE AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, N.H. -- The
Air Force Chief of Staff visited Airmen at the 157th Air Refueling Wing
here during an all-call meeting Feb. 17 where he shared his key
message.
Get to know the Airmen around you - at a moment's notice any of them
could become the most important to the U.S. Air Force's mission was the
message relayed by Gen. Mark A. Welsh III.
"Never forget how critically important you are to this unit, the air
national guard, the Air Force and this nation," Welsh said, standing in
front of an Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft. "Some days you will
be the most important person ... on other days, the Airman next to you
is going to carry you."
Welsh highlighted his message in a conversation with Airman 1st Class
Katelyn Spencer, a commander support staff member of the 157 Logistics
Readiness Squadron. He reminded Spencer that she could serve as a key
link to ensuring airmen get out the door for deployments necessary to
defending the country.
"[Welsh] reminded us how important we are even at the lower ranks," said
Spencer, who enlisted in June 2013 and recently completed her technical
training. "He let us know that the guard plays a big role and that we
matter."
The all-call was part of a day long visit to Pease. The base has served
as a successful model for the Air Force's Total Force Integration
initiative and is slated to receive a new tanker aircraft, the Air Force
KC-46 Pegasus aircraft, in late 2018. The 157th ARW is also the most
recent recipient of the Maj. Gen. Stanley Newman Award, which recognizes
the Air National Guard's outstanding wing or group contributing to the
overall success of the Air Mobility Command.
"You should be proud of the unit you represent and you should of the job
you do," said Welsh. "You have no idea how proud I am of you."
Col. Rob Burrus, 157th ARW commander, said it was an honor to host Welsh
and believed the visit was a tribute to the important work done by
Airmen at the Wing.
"He understands the unique relationship we have with the total force and
our active-duty partners in the 64th Air Refueling Squadron," said
Burrus. "His message of recognizing our Airmen's accomplishments
resonates with me personally and it should resonate with all of our
Airmen equally.
Following Welsh's remarks, he fielded questions from active duty and
guard Airmen pertaining to training issues, funding concerns, cyber
security and more. Welsh challenged all Airmen to be forward thinkers
and put forth ideas to solve problems locally and Air Force wide - a
major of initiative of the Air Force.
"No one knows your job and your day-to-day mission better than you," said Welsh. "We should be listening to you."
Welsh noted that the key to tackling almost any issue Air Force wide
will be through improved communication and Airmen taking the time to
learn more about their counterparts, a lesson he said he learned while
serving as commander of the 8th Fighting Wing, Kunsan Air Base, South
Korea.
"If you don't know their story, you can't lead the Airmen," he said.
Before departing, Welsh took the opportunity to reaffirm his belief in
the value of all Airmen with a message to Spencer and the airmen around
her.
"We have known each other for an hour, but I'd die for you," said Welsh.
"I am just naive to believe if it mattered you'd do the same for me.
That is what makes us different. It is a commitment that everyone in
here in this room has made."
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