By Terri Moon Cronk
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, June 4, 2015 – The people of the U.S. military
are what make it the greatest fighting force the world has ever known, Defense
Secretary Ash Carter said during a troop talk at U.S. Africa Command
headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany, today.
Following a 10-day trip to focus on the U.S. rebalance to the
Asia-Pacific region, Carter told service members the United States’ many
friends and allies around the world are “a great force multiplier,” … [but] it
still comes down to the service members for their work to secure the nation.”
With one million spouses, three million family members and
the civilian workforce also comprising the DoD family, Carter said he is proud
to be part of a “wonderful” team.
‘You Come First’
“I advise the president about the use of force and our role
in the world today,” he said, “and I make sure I keep the pledge to myself that
you come first ... your safety, welfare and dignity are always respected.”
Carter said while he wishes Congress was “more generous”
with the resources it provides DoD, the military strives to use them wisely,
“so the total investment is the force the country and the world so desperately
need -- and that’s you.”
The military mission is not a game, the secretary emphasized.
“It is serious business,” Carter said. “What we provide [to]
people, which is security, allows them ... to do everything human beings want
to do. They want to have dreams, raise children, [and] hand off a world and
country to their children that’s better. None of that is possible without
security. It’s the bedrock.”
Saluting Africom
The secretary said he wanted to “foot stomp” how important
Africom’s mission is, and while it is the newest combatant command, it has
“done so much and proven its worth so thoroughly.”
He told Africom’s members, “You have risen to the cause,
whatever it’s been that affects the people of Africa, but ultimately,
indirectly, our own security.”
The work of Africom personnel, such as helping to curb last
year’s Ebola disease epidemic in West Africa, “made you and our country big
heroes in the eyes of people,” Carter said.
“Showing what we stand for and who we are is important
because we’ll need that in a pinch, when we need people to understand who we
are,” he said.
Africom’s Significance
Why does DoD need Africom? Carter asked.
“We’re in a counterterrorism pinch and that’s no joke,” the
secretary emphasized. “The evil of [Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant],
narcotics, corruption, organized crime … are rife in Africa and ultimately they
will come home to roost if we don’t combat it there, and that’s what you’re
doing so ably.”
The secretary spoke of the “American secret sauce,” defining
it as, “Good people around the world like working with us.”
Bad people “fear us” and that’s a pretty good place to be,
Carter said.
“That is very true in Africa,” the secretary told the
Africom troop audience, “and you represent a hugely successful application of
that strategic theory.”
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