By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 7, 2014 – As nations worldwide experience a
period of unprecedented economic and political transformation, the world would
be a more dangerous place without a strong U.S. military, Defense Secretary
Chuck Hagel said during a town hall meeting yesterday at Naval Station Great
Lakes, Illinois.
During the second stop on a two-day trip to Illinois, Hagel
visited the Recruit Training Command School, where he discussed the current
world situation and took questions.
“I don’t think we’ve seen such a time since right after
World War II,” Hagel said. “And, again, the United States is an essential
architect of this process.”
This process must continue at a time in which the nation
must wisely use all of its resources, dimensions and instruments of influence
and power, the secretary said. Though the big issues and challenges the world
faces mostly cannot be solved militarily, Hagel said, the world becomes more
dangerous without a strong, cutting-edge U.S. military that has the best-led,
best-trained, best-educated and most-motivated people.
“And our options become fewer and fewer in helping build a
better world for the first part of the 21st century,” he said.
Hagel said most service members, just as he does, focus on
their day-to-day jobs and responsibilities. But occasionally, he added, it’s
important to step back and take a broader view of the work they do and what the
point of having a great military is. Great militaries always are integral to
the influence and defense of a nation’s values, principles and interests around
the world, he said.
“So I note that,” Hagel continued, “because it’s an area
that I spoke about this morning in my speech to the [Chicago Council of Foreign
Affairs], and in answer to some questions I got from our students there from
the University of Chicago. You’re living in a historic time. You’re making
history. You are doing something that few generations ever have the opportunity
to do, and that is to truly transform things for a purpose. And that purpose is
to continue to build a better world.”
Hagel said he wanted to express his appreciation to service
members for their role in this transformation, and he encouraged the troops to
keep doing what they’re doing.
The few hours he had spent at the naval station, Hagel said,
gave him a good understanding of the importance of the Recruit Training Command
School and what it means to the defense enterprise and the nation.
“I want to also thank you personally for what you do,” he
said. “I know this is your job. I know this is something that you’re very good
at, and you like to do it, and you’ve had other jobs. But I know it’s not easy.
I know it’s tough on families. It’s a big sacrifice to do this, and I appreciate
that.”
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