By Karen Parrish
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 3, 2012 – The network of
people, government and private organizations that tends to America’s wounded,
injured and ill service members has achieved results over the last decade that
are “absolutely remarkable,” the nation’s top military officer told an audience
here yesterday.
Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke last night at a “Heroes of Military Medicine”
event hosted by the Center for Public-Private Partnerships at the Henry M.
Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine.
“I do find heroes and military medicine
to be a little redundant, actually. … Every time we think they can’t do more
for us, they step up and find it,” the general said.
Earlier this week, Dempsey noted, he
attended the opening ceremonies for the 2012 Warrior Games in Colorado Springs,
Colo. The games, which continue through May 5, are a series of Olympic-style
events in which wounded, ill and injured service members of all services, along
with veterans, compete in archery, cycling, shooting, sitting volleyball,
swimming, track and field and wheelchair basketball.
The Warrior Games, created in 2010, are
a combined effort of the U.S. Olympic Committee and the Defense Department. The
games are notable because of the courage of the competitors, who Dempsey said
are “young men and women putting ability over disability.”
The chairman said attending both the
games and the “heroes of medicine” gathering in the same week highlighted for
him the connection between today’s service members, who survive combat injuries
at rates never before seen, and the medical establishment that makes their
survival possible.
“What I want you to know tonight is how
much we, who wear the uniform today, appreciate what everyone is doing to pull
together in the common cause of making sure that the young men and women who
put themselves in harm’s way are cared for,” Dempsey said.
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