By Cheryl Pellerin
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Feb. 19, 2015 – During a standing-room-only
all-hands gathering in the Pentagon’s auditorium today, Defense Secretary Ash
Carter enthusiastically greeted those he will lead and discussed his priorities
as the 25th secretary.
Deputy Defense Secretary Bob Work introduced Carter, citing
the defense secretary’s “deep understanding of our business, of our shared
enterprise, of organizing and training and equipping an organization [and] a
fighting force that is ready for war and operating forward to preserve the
peace.”
Taking the podium, Carter said, “The first and most
important commitment for me always has been and always will be to you … I mean
all of you -- those who make up the greatest fighting force the world has ever
known, and the finest and most decent fighting force the world has ever known.”
The total national team includes soldiers, sailors, airmen
and Marines. It includes civilians and contractors, he added, “and the fallen,
the families of the fallen and wounded warriors. I think we have to start
there.”
Commitments and Priorities
To those he will lead, Carter explained how he sees the job
and what he’ll be doing, and detailed his commitments and priorities.
Carter said a critical responsibility for him as defense
secretary is “to make sure we never put anyone and their family in [harm’s way]
without the greatest care and reflection about why we're doing it and what its
purpose is and what the benefit is for our nation and for the future.”
A primary role in the job, the secretary said, is to assist
the president and the national leadership in making decisions that will keep
the nation safe and protect the country and its friends and allies now and into
the future.
“We're a large institution … a beacon of quality, if I may
say so, in the federal service, so we have a lot to offer our national
leadership in helping them make decisions,” Carter said.
DoD’s ‘Great Expertise’
“I intend to be very active in doing that,” he added, “and I
will be counting on you to help me, and lift the great expertise of this
department and all its people to the service of the country's national security
decisions.”
Carter summarized the multiple national security threats --
old and new -- facing the nation, but said the nation also has bright
opportunities to explore.
“We are not only the finest fighting force in the world, but
I think we're the brightest beacon of hope as a country in the world,” Carter
said.
“If you want evidence of that,” he added, “take a look at
who has all the friends. The United States has friends and allies in every part
of the world. No other country on earth can say that, [and] our antagonists
have none or few.”
Opportunities to Pursue
Carter said the country has a lot to be proud of and many
opportunities to pursue, “if only we can all come together and grab hold of
them” for a better future.
Today’s constrained budget and resource environment presents
challenges, he acknowledged.
“If we're going to convincingly make the case to our people
that they need to spend more on their defense -- which I believe they do -- we
need to, at the same time, show them that we know we can do better at spending
that money,” Carter said.
Being open to change and to the wider worlds of technology
and culture will help make the Pentagon better at spending money, and better at
succeeding in the future, he added.
Continuing to Excel
“If we're going to continue to be the best, we need to be
open to the future and open to change. And you'll see me challenging you all
and myself to be open in that way,” the secretary said.
For the Defense Department, succeeding in the future also
means attracting young people to the department’s mission, he noted.
The Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks against the United
States were a “terrible” thing, Carter said. However, 9/11 also was a
"galvanizing thing for our country,” he said, that “motivated many people”
to come to the defense of the nation.
Attracting the Next Generation
There is something compelling about the commitment, the
mission and the excellence that those in DoD’s workforce represent and that
those to come will find attractive, he added.
“They'll want to follow, not in our footsteps, because …
they're going to want to do it in their own way, but in the same general
direction that we came,” the secretary said.
Carter said he’ll try in the best way he knows how to speak
to the country as a whole “about us and who we are, and try to reflect who you
are. And speak to the generation to come and appeal to them and challenge them
to fill the shoes of the really excellent people I see in front of me.”
He told the audience, “You are excellent. You mean
everything to me. The people of this department are so very wonderful and my
wife Stephanie and I are so very devoted to you.”
That, Carter said, “is why I'm back. It's that simple. It's
you. It's the mission. And I look forward once again to being in your ranks and
working with you.”
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