By Claudette Roulo
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13, 2015 – Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel
today opened his final domestic trip with a stop at Whiteman Air Force Base,
Missouri, home of the 509th Bomb Wing -- the world's only B-2 Spirit stealth
bomber unit.
With a T-38 Talon trainer aircraft to either side, Hagel told
the airmen their military service plays a critical role in the nation's
security and that service will shape their lives.
The defense secretary said while he'd served "when
dinosaurs roamed the Earth," his Army service informed every part of his
life that followed.
"It probably did as much to shape me and mould me and
affect me as any one experience I ever had in my life," the secretary
said. "... Everything I have done in my life, I have drawn from that
experience in the military."
Nuclear Triad
The nuclear triad is "always about strategic
deterrence," Hagel told the airmen. "It is about staying ahead,
technology-wise, of our adversaries -- those who would want to do great damage
to this country and our way of life and our allies'."
Modernization -- particularly of the nuclear enterprise --
is the key to national security, the defense secretary said. Military
modernization, Hagel added, was interrupted by sequestration and other fiscal
difficulties. "That hurt us in many ways," he said, noting that modernization
is the one area in which the United States cannot afford to fall behind.
"We have paid a lot of attention to that -- especially
the last year," Hagel said. "We're committing more resources in our
budget that we'll be presenting to Capitol Hill here in the next few weeks, so
I want to assure you of that component of your job."
People Are Important
The Defense Department cannot afford to lose good people, he
said. "We have to continue to assure that we are recruiting and we're
bringing good people in to this business, because technology, modernization --
all the components that are critical for our national security -- are only as
good as the quality of the people that we have behind those technologies."
Everyone in the military is linked, the defense secretary
said. The success of any one service member is tied to the ability of every
other service member to succeed, he explained.
"If one of you is weak, or if one of you falls down, or
if one of you is not capable, it will affect the entire effort," Hagel
said. This is true in every challenge service members face, he said, from
flying 36-hour missions in a B-2 bomber to confronting the problem of sexual
assault.
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