by Staff Sgt. Maria Bowman
375th Air Mobility Wing Public Affairs
11/6/2012 - SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE, Ill. -- Marine
Corps Sgt. Maj. Bryan Battaglia, senior enlisted advisor to the
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, visited Scott AFB Oct. 28-Oct.
31.
The SEAC, who is the principle advisor to the CJCS and the Secretary of
Defense on all joint and combined total force matters, toured Team Scott
and the community.
The SEAC said touring Scott and meeting its people was a memorable experience.
"The monumental piece was visiting all the units," Battaglia said. "It
was a pleasure to hear the Airmen and young noncommissioned officers
talk about their job, their contribution and the impact they bring to
the overall mission."
From his office in the Pentagon as the top enlisted person in the entire
U.S. military, he's spent the last year visiting bases and combat zones
meeting and listening to Soldiers, Sailors, Marines and Airmen.
"Regardless of time served, regardless of someone's AFSC, you and I are
all members of this profession," Battaglia said. "This profession is so
much larger than just a job."
The SEAC also held an all call Oct. 29 in the base theater to underscore
the four priorities of the CJCS: Achieve national objectives in current
conflicts, develop Joint Force 2020, keep faith with the military
family and renew service members' commitment to the profession of arms.
Battaglia said one of his personal priorities is renewing the commitment to the profession of arms.
"It is time to recommit to the profession of arms, no matter if the
person has been in for four years or 40. You all took (an oath) when you
joined your branch of service," said the 33-year serviceman. "The oath
that I take as the most senior NCO in the Armed Forces is the same
identical oath as the most junior service member in this building right
now."
The SEAC also emphasized the importance to build up an inner toughness to effectively handle adversity.
"We hit challenges every day of our life," he said. "When you hit that
barricade, you have some choices to make. You can either go through it,
around it or turn around and go the other way.
"The military teaches to access the problem, develop some courses of
action, select a course of action, and accomplish and overcome," he
said. "Resiliency is having a lifestyle of building toughness in those
domains and being able to overcome adversity with less agony and
resistance for when you hit that barricade."
Battaglia also visited Jefferson Barracks where he met with wounded
service members, vets and toured the new post-traumatic stress disorder
facility.
"Our veterans are as much a part of the family as our active duty,
reserve and guard members," he said. "A veteran's recovery is important
to us and that's the connection we have in the Armed Forces as one big
family."
Thursday, November 08, 2012
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