by Airman 1st Class Katrina Heikkinen
341st Missile Wing Public Affairs
11/1/2012 - MALMSTROM AIR FORCE BASE, Mont. -- Lt.
Gen. James Kowalski, Air Force Global Strike Command commander, visited
Malmstrom Air Force Base to meet with Airmen serving in support of the
nuclear deterrence mission on Oct. 28 to 30.
Kowalski began his three-day visit with civic leaders of Montana
including Great Falls Chamber Executive Board members, the Military
Affairs Committee, and city and county commissioners.
The general spent the rest of his stay traveling all over the
installation meeting with Airmen in various work centers to include the
12th Missile Squadron, the 40th Helicopter Squadron, the Weapons Storage
Area and the 341st Medical Group. He also had the opportunity to fly in
a UH-1N Huey helicopter, observe a convoy demonstration and tour a
launch facility.
On his final day here, Kowalski spoke with 20 Airmen at the Elkhorn
Dining Facility over breakfast with an emphasis on leadership, success
and discipline.
"What you do here is important and how you do it is important," Kowalski
said. "If you [Airmen] weren't critical to this mission [at Malmstrom],
you wouldn't be here. That discipline and professionalism you are being
emerged in as young Airmen is one where we follow all checklists. Every
day we carry around a significant trust and responsibility. You will
not find anyone who is successful in their career field without having
discipline in their life."
Following Kowalski's breakfast, he spoke to officers and senior
noncommissioned officers during a briefing at the base auditorium.
"I need you to take a strong message back to your Airmen," Kowalski said
during the briefing. "And that is what you do is important. It's not on
the front page of the paper. It's not supposed to be something we get
silver or Bronze Stars for; it's called deterrence. What you do day-in
and day-out is prevent bad things from happening - on a global and small
scale. What you do every day is maintain that ultimate guarantee of our
national sovereignty. And the need for that is not going away anytime
soon."
From junior enlisted Airmen and senior noncommissioned officers to
lieutenants and colonels, Kowalski's message was the same to all:
leadership and discipline applies to all members of Air Force Global
Strike Command.
"Everyone is a leader here," he said. "This is not an Air Force where
leadership starts when you are put in a leadership position.... As part
of that special trust and responsibility is the attention to detail,
discipline, professionalism, and compliance with checklists, technical
orders and Air Force instructions. [All Airmen] have the responsibility
for ensuring these incredibly powerful weapons remain safe, secure and
effective. It's significant and it's something everybody in this command
bears to some degree or another."
Monday, November 05, 2012
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