By Terri Moon Cronk DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, October 7, 2015 — The U.S. Marines at Morón
Airbase in Spain stand at the cutting edge of the Defense Department’s
strategic transition that’s designed to prepare all service members to deal
with a full spectrum of threats, Defense Secretary Ash Carter said during a troop
talk at the air base yesterday.
The secretary is on a five-day trip to Europe for the NATO
Defense Ministerial Conference in Brussels, in Belgium, and to meet with his
counterparts in Spain, Italy and the United Kingdom. His troop talk at Morón
marked his second day of the trip.
The secretary said DoD’s strategic transition follows14 hard
years in Iraq and Afghanistan, where the Marines now at Morón were deployed and
performed in a spectacular manner in every way as part of U.S. forces.
“But it was all consuming,” he said, adding that while what
the future holds is unknown, what does exist presents a broad span of
challenges.
Strategic Transition Has Broad Range
The strategic transition “ranges all the way from high-end
opponents down to terrorists, people who are threatening our fellow Americans
doing [the] work of our country out here in the region, which is one of your
principle missions,” Carter said. .
Under key military leaders and with U.S. full support, he
said, “We are asking you now to make that strategic transition.”
U.S. service members spent a lot of hard years in Iraq and
Afghanistan and performed spectacularly well, Carter said.
“But it also taught the American people … what it's all
about, what you guys do, how much you sacrifice, how much your family
sacrificed, and how much it means,” he added.
U.S. Partnership With Spain
Through a joint Spanish-U.S. assault team, the Marines at
Morón represent the value of the United States’ long-standing friendship with
countries such as Spain, the secretary noted.
The United States and Spain are long-term allies in a strong
and principled partnership that’s continued by U.S. troops’ presence, Carter
said.
“But the main thing we share [is] a way of looking at the
world. We share values, we share principles,” he added.
The United States is proud of its service members and
grateful for what they do for the nation to protect its people, the secretary
said.
And, he added, the global community “looks to us for so much
in the way of peace and security, and to give their children a better life. And
you do that.”
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