Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Statement by Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III on the President's Nomination of Dr. Ely Ratner as the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs

 April 21, 2021


"I welcome the President's nomination today of Dr. Ely Ratner as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs. Ely has already proven an invaluable member of our team as Director of the China Task Force, and his deep knowledge of the Indo-Pacific region will prove invaluable as we begin to shape our operational concepts and strategy for dealing with threats and challenges in that part of the world. There is simply no better person for the job. I am grateful to Ely for his commitment and willingness to serve, and I look forward to working with him. I urge the Senate to confirm Ely as soon as possible so he can take up this important work for our nation."

Official Says Women's Contributions Are Vital to DOD, Allies and Partners

 April 21, 2021 | BY David Vergun , DOD News

Representatives from ally and partner nations in southeast Europe today spoke at a conference about the important role women play in their armed forces.

Laura K. Cooper, deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia, represented the Defense Department at the virtual Conference of the U.S.-Adriatic Charter on Women's Contribution to Peace and Security: Lessons Learned and Challenges Ahead.

Cooper said the DOD has been making significant strides in working to integrate gender considerations into policies, plans, operations and training to ensure women participate across all ranks within our force since implementing its Women, Peace and Security, or WPS, in 2020.

A woman sits at a desk and looks at a computer screen.

"We view our own WPS initiative, which is aimed at achieving a more stable world and safety, equality and opportunity for women and girls, as absolutely critical to U.S. national security," she said, adding that there is still more work to be done.

One WPS priority is to establish gender advisors across the entire department, she said, noting that there are now full-time gender advisors at every geographic combatant command. 

The advisors will work to implement the DOD's 2020 WPS strategic framework within their components, advising their commanders or senior staff on how to better integrate gender into a wide swath of defense activities, Cooper said.

Another priority is developing and conducting training on WPS principles across the department, she said. 

In addition to U.S.-based training, personnel have been sent to leading partner-country WPS initiatives, such as the Nordic Center for Gender in Military Operations in Sweden, she said.

Also, the Defense Security Cooperation University in the U.S. is working to build partner-country capabilities in support of WPS goals, she said.

"Our security cooperation activities seek to increase gender diversity across all ranks of partner security sectors and to consider the security needs of women and girls, particularly when faced with conflict or crises," she said.

A woman sits at a desk and looks at a computer screen.

Cooper said allies and partners in Europe — including the five U.S.- Adriatic Charter nations of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Albania — have made critical contributions to the collective WPS effort. She also mentioned noteworthy progress in Serbia and Slovenia, the latter of which appointed its first woman as chief of its armed forces in 2018. 

Croatia is currently advancing through a partnership with the U.S. government-funded project to strengthen gender equality within the Croatian army's peacekeeping missions, she said.

Part of that effort is the first-ever analysis on the status of women in the Croatian armed forces and peacekeeping missions. As a result, Croatian leaders will be equipped with recommendations and measures to improve the status of women in the military and promote a culture of zero tolerance to violence, Cooper said, mentioning that the U.S.'s WPS efforts will be informed by what is achieved in Croatia.

The U.S. is also working through NATO channels to support WPS efforts, including through the NATO Committee on Gender Perspectives and the integration of gender considerations into joint exercises, she said.

"[WPS] initiatives do not only benefit women, they also benefit the entire population and contribute to the security of our partnerships and, in the case of NATO, to the strength of the NATO alliance. History shows clearly that the inclusion of women is critical to establishing lasting peace and prosperous futures," she said.

History of WPS

On Oct. 31, 2000, the United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 1325, the Women, Peace and Security initiatives.

The resolution calls for the participation of women in: the prevention, management, and resolution of conflicts; peace negotiations; peace-building; peacekeeping; humanitarian response; and post-conflict reconstruction. It also stresses the importance of their equal participation and full involvement in all efforts to maintain and promote peace and security. 

In addition, the resolution urges an increase in the participation of women and the incorporation of gender perspectives in all United Nations peace and security efforts. It also calls on the parties involved in armed conflicts to take special measures to protect women and girls from gender-based violence, particularly rape and other forms of sexual abuse.

Band-Aid Prep

 

Air Force Senior Airman Benedict Barnett, a medic assigned to the 193d Special Operations Wing, Pennsylvania Air National Guard, prepares band-aids at the Esperanza Community Vaccination Center in Philadelphia, April 8, 2021. The Pennsylvania National Guard is supporting local and federal agencies in the whole-of-government response to COVID-19.

Mass Vaccination

 

Army Spc. Nyvasia Parks, a unit supply specialist assigned to the Marietta-based Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st General Support Aviation Battalion, 171st Aviation Regiment, Georgia Army National Guard, receives a visitor at a mass vaccination site in Savannah, Ga., Apr. 13, 2021. The Georgia National Guard provided on-site logistics and operation support to the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency as they administered COVID-19 vaccinations at mass vaccination locations across Georgia.

COVID-19 Vaccine

 

Army Pfc. Sara Jennings, a combat medic specialist assigned to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, prepares doses of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine in Landstuhl, Germany, April 19, 2021.

Administering Vaccines

 

An Oregon Army National Guard medic administers the COVID-19 vaccine during a mass vaccination clinic at the Oregon Convention Center, Portland, Ore., Apr. 19, 2021. On April 6, President Joe Biden announced that all American adults would be eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine by mid-April., as Oregon Guardsmen have now administered over 300,000 vaccinations since being activated.

DOD's Military OneSource Provides Access to Military Funeral Honors Directory

 April 21, 2021


The Department of Defense provides members of the military community access to a Military Funeral Honors Directory on the Military OneSource website. The interactive online directory allows funeral planners, veterans, family members, or anyone arranging for military funeral honors to locate the appropriate service representative.

Anyone can use the online directory to look up a military funeral honors representative by service and state. This resource also includes information on how to arrange for military funeral honors in overseas locations.

“The rendering of military funeral honors is an important way we show our deep gratitude to those who have faithfully served our country,” said Deborah Skillman, director of DOD’s Casualty and Mortuary Affairs office. “We are pleased to provide this online directory and valuable content, so families can easily arrange for this final tribute and ceremonial paying of respect for their loved ones.”

Military OneSource also features helpful information about the military funeral honors process, as well as an eTutorial that allows users to better understand the program and eligibility.

The department’s Casualty Assistance Program makes sure that military families have support in their time of need, including understanding all benefits and other forms of assistance. Although the term “casualty” is usually associated with death, casualty support to eligible family members also means support after injury and illness, and when a service member is missing.

For more information, visit the Military OneSource website at https://www.militaryonesource.mil/ or call 800-342-9647 to speak with a consultant.

About Military Community and Family Policy 

Military Community and Family Policy is directly responsible for establishing and overseeing quality-of-life policies and programs that help our guardians of country, their families and survivors be well and mission-ready. Military OneSource is the gateway to programs and services that support the everyday needs of the 5.2 million service members and immediate family members of the military community. These Department of Defense services can be accessed 24/7/365 around the world.

About Casualty and Mortuary Affairs

The Casualty Assistance, Mortuary Affairs and Military Funeral Honors Office provides policy oversight of programs pertaining to casualty notification, casualty assistance, mortuary affairs and military funeral honors to deceased, missing, ill or injured personnel. 

Military Child Larissa Heslop Stands Out as a Student-Athlete, Volunteer

 April 21, 2021 | BY Barbara Gersna

Most children of those serving in the military move around a lot and sometimes attend several different schools. They learn to adapt to new environments as they move, leaving behind friends with hopes of making new ones. Many learn how to use these challenges to enhance their lives at a very young age.

Larissa Heslop, daughter of Army Lt. Col. Larry W. Heslop, G33 chief of operations, 1st Theater Sustainment Command, achieved much success as a student-athlete playing soccer while attending Eastern Kentucky University. In addition to these successes, she also volunteers to help others.

A woman poses with a cap and gown during her graduation.

Heslop said that she was exposed to diverse groups of people and different ways of thinking due to moving around a lot as a child. Her aspirations for international public service are driven in part by her upbringing as a military child. 

She attended seven different schools by the 12th grade.

"When I moved to different schools, I did not try to change myself to fit in; I remained true to myself," she said. "Staying true to myself contributes to my confidence in my ability to achieve my goals and follow my own path. The advice I would give to other military children is to stay true to yourself and what you love. From the military lifestyle, you will be exposed to many different cultures and people. While it is important to learn from every person and situation, it is also important to stay grounded in your own values."

Military children learn from an early age how to adapt to change since it is more constant and frequent in our lives."
Larissa Heslop

Heslop graduated from EKU as summa cum laude with a 4.0 grade point average in May 2020. She is now pursuing a master of public administration at the University of Kansas School of Public Affairs and Administration in Lawrence, Kansas. She is preparing for a career in public service and hopes to lead humanitarian aid and relief efforts abroad with an international nonprofit organization or government agency.  

During high school she visited her father in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. She traveled internationally within the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility as part of her undergraduate studies in Egypt and also studied in England, Israel and Brazil.

A woman kicks a soccer ball during a game.

The COVID-19 pandemic didn't stop Heslop from volunteering during her summer break. She delivered meals to the elderly with Warm Blessings Inc. and also read books virtually to hospitalized children with the Happy Hope Factory. 

An active leader both on and off the field, Heslop has received numerous awards recognizing her leadership, outstanding academic performance and community service. 

We are very proud of Larissa's hard work and accomplishments and hope that she may be an encouragement for other military children to make the most of the unique opportunities within our community."
Lt. Col. Larry W. Heslop

Heslop was named the 2019 Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar of the Year for women's soccer by the publication Diverse: Issues in Higher Education. She also received the Athletics Director Leadership Award - 2020 Colonels’ Choice Awards. She was named an academic All-American in 2019 and was a speaker at the 2018 Annual Eastern Kentucky University Championing Women's Athletics Luncheon. 

Heslop was also recognized with Play of the Year in the 2017 Colonels' Choice Awards for her game winning penalty shootout goal in the Ohio Valley Conference tournament semifinals. 

As one of the winningest athletes in EKU soccer history, Heslop was nominated for the National Collegiate Athletic Association Woman of the Year award for 2020, representing Eastern Kentucky University and the Ohio Valley Conference. She was one of only two athletes selected in the initial Division 1 cut from the Ohio Valley Conference.

Heslop continues to be recognized at the University of Kansas where she was recently awarded the Harry S. Truman Good Neighbor Award.

A family of three walks after a soccer game

"My advisor nominated me for the award for graduate students at UK who demonstrate promise for a potential career in international service," she said.

"Separate from the Truman Award, I will be interning this summer with the U.S. Agency for International Development in the Middle East Bureau," she said. "USAID is an organization I have been wanting to intern with, because I could see myself working there in the future as a foreign service officer," she said. 

Her father said, "We are very proud of Larissa's hard work and accomplishments and hope that she may be an encouragement for other military children to make the most of the unique opportunities within our community."

Larissa shared a famous quote from the Greek philosopher, Heraclitus of Ephesus, "The only thing constant in life is change." She said, "Military children learn from an early age how to adapt to change since it is more constant and frequent in our lives. Many people do not learn to deal with big changes until later in life. I would encourage other military children to embrace this skillset. Life is easier when you learn to trust that change can work for your benefit and that each season of life can bring new growth."

Commander Says Africa Is Too Important for Americans to Ignore

 April 21, 2021 | BY Jim Garamone , DOD News

Africa is a fascinating continent of tremendous possibilities but also tremendous dangers, and the U.S. ignores the nations of Africa at its own peril, the commander of the U.S. Africa Command said during an interview.

Four men in military uniforms walk into a building.

"China and Russia don't ignore Africa, and that alone should say something," Army Gen. Stephen J. Townsend said.

Africa has 13 of the 25 fastest growing economies in the world, Townsend said. In a time of climate change, Africa has 60% of the arable land on the globe. "This fact alone should show how important Africa is for the world," he added.

The continent also has a plethora of strategic materials, such as cobalt, chromium, tantalum and more. African resources are critical to 21st century progress. 

Africa has a growing population, and demographers estimate that by 2050 one in four people on Earth will be African. 

The country is also a crossroads of the world. The Bab el-Mandeb Strait between Djibouti and Yemen is a choke point at the southern end of the Red Sea. There is another choke point between Sicily and Libya. The Strait of Gibraltar is between Europe and Africa. The recent blockage of the Suez Canal threw light onto two more choke points: the Mozambique Channel and the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa, Townsend said. These sea lines of communication are vital around the globe and are ever in Townsend's mind as he engages the nations of the continent.

A number of Africa countries are among the "most fragile" in the world, Townsend said. These countries have ungoverned or little governed areas that attract violent extremist organizations, which capitalize on economic and political dysfunction to extend their reach. 

An aircraft flies over foreign military vehicles and service members in the desert.

He said governments in these areas need help. "An African leader once said to me 'A drowning man will reach for any hand,'" Townsend said. "They are drowning in poverty and will take help from whomever it comes from."

This offers a perfect opening for Russia and particularly China, Townsend said. "The Chinese sometimes refer to Africa as their 'second continent,' and some Chinese military leaders refer to the east coast of Africa as China's 'fifth island chain,'" the general said. 

China has its first overseas military base in Djibouti and has invested heavily in ports around the continent, he said. The Chinese are playing a long game on the continent. The Chinese Communist Party wants to change the international rules-based architecture to favor China.

Economic pressure on African nations could gather votes in the United Nations and in other world bodies to do just that. Maybe not tomorrow, but some day.

Shaded by an umbrella, five men in military uniforms sit at a table outside and talk; a desert landscape is in the background.

The United States, actually, is the preferred partner on the continent, Townsend said. "We were never a colonizing power in Africa, and we are regarded as an honest broker by many nations," he said. "In addition, our values are their values."

Townsend said the U.S. could use this to gain access and influence with the nations of Africa without "debt-trap diplomacy" — a term that refers to China's lending practices. 

A number of violent extremist organizations operate in Africa, including al-Qaida affiliate al-Shabab in Somalia and ISIS allies. Al-Shabab has stated it wants to attack the U.S. homeland, and it is a major contributor to global al-Qaida. 

Townsend said the U.S. can help Africans confront these groups. "We say we work 'by, with, and through' our African partners, so much it is almost a cliche, but it is true," he said. "It's the only way to get a handle on this problem: African solutions for African problems is the way we work at Africom."

From the deck of a ship, service members point guns upward at a large ship.

More engagement is needed, the general said. Exercise African Lion and the Express series of naval exercises are important to develop the personal contacts needed to operate on the continent. In addition, having more African military officers and noncommissioned officers going to American professional military education would also benefit U.S. relations with the nations of the continent. 

The Ebola outbreak of 2014 is an example of what U.S. aid can achieve in Africa. When the disease first appeared, U.S. military epidemiologists worked closely with African medical professionals to contain the disease. They worked to educate populations on ways to stop transmission and developed procedures to care for those infected. U.S. Army units deployed to the region to build care facilities, laboratories and more.

The epidemic ended without becoming a global pandemic. "Ebola is still present in some countries in Africa, but they learned how to contain it," Townsend said. "Sure, we helped them develop their capabilities, but they have [the] capacity to manage Ebola on their own now."

Flag Officer Announcement

 April 21, 2021


Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III announced today that the president has made the following nomination:

Navy Rear Adm. William J. Houston for appointment to the grade of vice admiral, and assignment as commander, Naval Submarine Forces; commander, Submarine Force, U.S. Atlantic Fleet; and commander, Allied Submarine Command, Norfolk, Virginia.  Houston is currently serving as director, Undersea Warfare Division, N97, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Washington, D.C.

Recovery Mission

 

Air Force Staff Sgt. David Dat Trinh, a recovery team linguist with Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, carries buckets during a recovery mission in Quang Nam province, Vietnam, April 11, 2021.

Twirl Technique

 

Soldiers perform during a tour at Arlington National Cemetery, Va., March 19, 2021.