Showing posts with label SUPPORTING VETERANS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SUPPORTING VETERANS. Show all posts

Sunday, April 27, 2014

JOINT CHIEFS CHAIRMAN GEN. DEMPSEY MAKES CASE FOR SUPPORTING VETS

FROM:  U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT
Chairman Makes Case for Support to Veterans
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, April 27, 2014 – The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff praised the members of the Dallas-based America’s Future organization for their efforts on behalf of veterans, but said such efforts must continue.

Groups like America’s Future will help define how the nation looks at its veterans, Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey said yesterday during a speech to the group in Dallas.

“What image will this generation’s veterans have?” the chairman asked. “The veterans themselves have less to say about who they are and how they will be remembered than you do, frankly.”

Dempsey spoke about the images he has had of veterans from World War II and Korea, Vietnam and Desert Storm. “Now we have the veterans of 12 years of conflict in an all-volunteer force, and how they will be remembered by history will be largely shaped by if America’s people and businesses and communities either embrace them or convince them that their service was valued or was not,” he said.

Dempsey brought up a lesson from history. Yesterday was the 77th anniversary of the German-Italian bombing of the Spanish village of Guernica. “The idea was they were working on advancing this new technology related to aerial warfare,” he said. “And the big idea on the part of the Axis was they would make resistance so outrageous, so costly to the Spanish that they would just capitulate.”
It didn’t work that way, the chairman said, and Pablo Picasso captured it in the famous painting, “Guernica”.

“Seventy-seven years later, technology keeps charging on and we learn to adapt with it,” Dempsey said. “But we can’t ever forget that what really matters in warfare are our young men and women who choose to serve and put themselves in harm’s way.”

The chairman used a photo to make this point. He showed a shot from Afghanistan where a young squad leader is on the radio. On the left is a rifleman protecting him. He’s obviously calling for something – aerial support, indirect fire, medical evacuation, guidance.

“Whatever it is he’s asking for, he is going to get,” Dempsey said. “That’s what sets us apart from any other military in the world. That’s a bond of trust we have with these kids, that when we put them in that position, that whatever they need, they’ll get.”

The chairman noted the soldier is also wearing a wedding ring. This bond of trust goes all the way from the front edge of the battlefield to communities and cities across the United States. “That is a bond of trust, without which this all-volunteer force would not hold together,” he said.

The bond of trust has to continue when service members and their families come home as well, the chairman said. “When they come home, there is a sense of trust – not a sense of entitlement,” the chairman said. “It’s not about them feeling entitled. They don’t want a handout, they want a handshake. They just want a chance.”
What communities like Dallas do to give these men and women that chance really is important, Dempsey said.

The chairman discussed the U.S. military in transition. The military is going through a transition after 12 years of war, Dempsey noted. “This doesn’t mean all conflict will magically cease, but we will have to rebalance to meet some enduring challenges and new challenges,” he said. “We have to rekindle some skills that we’ve lost over the past 12 years.”

And it must be done at a time of fiscal austerity. “We will manage our way through this, but the sooner we have some certainty, the sooner we gain some flexibility in the way we apply our budget, and the more time we are given to manage these changes then the better off we will be,” he said. “As we go through this, we will continue to earn and re-earn your confidence and the confidence of the American people.”

The bottom line for all Americans is to make the sacrifices these young men and women have made worth their blood, sweat and tears, the chairman said.
Dempsey told the audience that he has a box in his Pentagon office with the words, “Make It Matter” engraved on top. It contains the names and biographies of all those killed while under his command.

“We have an obligation to make the sacrifices of these young men and women who have fallen, but also those who have served, those who are suffering from wounds both physical and emotional – we have a genuine obligation to make their sacrifices matter,” he said. “And one of the ways we make their sacrifices matter is by taking this task on board: The task of helping their teammates.”

Dempsey spoke of visiting Brook Medical Center in San Antonio on Friday. There have been 1,645 amputees since the wars began in 2001. In previous wars, they would most likely have died. With medical advances 500 of them have returned to active duty, and 60 have gone back into combat.

“But there are more service members who have limbs so badly damaged that they contemplated having an amputation,” the chairman said. Enter a public-private partnership. The joint venture developed a brace that allows these men and women to carry the weight and eliminates much of the pain.

“What it says to me, is we’ve got to keep learning,” he said.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

ADM. WINNEFELD FOCUSED ON SUPPORT OF RETURNING VETERANS

FROM:  U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Winnefeld: Returning Veterans Need Nation's Support

By Amaani Lyle
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Oct. 31, 2012 - The vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff praised caregivers and other people and organizations that support the nation's military veterans at an event here yesterday.

Navy Adm. James A. Winnefeld Jr., who spoke at the Military Officers Association of America Community Heroes Award Dinner, also extended his thoughts and prayers to Hurricane Sandy victims, noting the Defense Department is teaming with other federal agency and state and local partners in response and recovery efforts.

"We in DOD are working very, very hard in support of our civilian partners [and] in support of the various states that have been impacted by this [storm]," Winnefeld said.

Turning to the association hosting the event, he noted that the nonprofit organization's legacy of support for the military can be traced to its 1920s roots in Southern California, with an enduring focus on advocacy for and assistance to fellow and former members of the military.

"We recognize the ongoing efforts of ... individuals, organizations and family members who comprise the sea of goodwill and have made such a tremendous difference," Winnefeld said.

He reminded attendees that "half a world away," the nation remains at war.

"We've already furled the battle flags from Iraq," Winnefeld said. "We need to make sure that our support for these men and women doesn't fade over time, long after the battle flags from Afghanistan are furled over the next couple of years."

Winnefeld listed several steps Americans should take to assist Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.

"As our troops transition to civilian life, we have to continue to highlight that employing a veteran is not charity," Winnefeld said. "Who better to hire than someone with transportable skills, who has ingrained discipline and ... so clearly [demonstrates] the willingness to sacrifice for something bigger than themselves?"

With a 12 percent unemployment rate among post-9/11 veterans and a million more service members preparing to re-enter the workforce in coming years, Americans must do more to ensure veterans have a place to sleep at night, Winnefeld said.

"Tonight, one-third of the entire adult homeless population in our nation is veterans," Winnefeld said.

Despite charities in Washington and beyond aimed at reducing homelessness among the veteran population through housing, employment assistance and career counseling programs, he noted, more than 67,000 former troops sleep on the streets.

"There's more we can do to both prevent this from happening in the first place and ... get those who have fallen into homelessness back on their feet ... into the workplace and ... [into] a proper home," he said.

The admiral also noted caregivers' attention to wounded warriors and gave thanks for the technical advances over the last decade during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, including rapid movement from the battlefield and post-battlefield medical care.

"We're ... grateful for the immediate caregivers, the remarkable, dedicated medical professionals we have across the spectrum of care," Winnefeld said. "From battlefield corpsmen ... to those in ... facilities in Afghanistan ... [and at] Landstuhl, to the people who receive and transport ... wounded warriors, to [continental U.S.] medical facilities."

The admiral praised the professionals who saved many American warriors, noting more lives would have been lost in earlier wars.

"Thankfully, as these warriors return to a grateful nation, they will be with us for decades, but that means we need to make sure we take care of them and their unseen and seen wounds for decades," Winnefeld said.

Injured veterans require the support and attention of caregivers, communities and families, who all, in turn, need the nation's support, the admiral said.

"This is a family business we're in ... and the role ... these essential caregivers [fill] is indescribable in its importance and sacrifice," Winnefeld said. "These people literally drop everything for years at a time to care for our injured, giving up their careers and their lives ... they are patriots, and we must do all we can to provide them the direct and indirect support that they need and deserve."

Other caregivers, Winnefeld added, push the bounds of military medicine and therapy in areas such as prosthetics and physical rehabilitation, giving courage and hope to a new generation of wounded warriors.

"Thanks to all these caregivers, our wounded sailors, soldiers, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen have a future that's brighter than ever before," Winnefeld said. "Yet even with [the] outstanding support of our caregivers, our collective work is not complete; there's more work to do."

The admiral encouraged the nation to renew its resolve to provide a continuum of care that reflects the same level of commitment veterans have shown their country on the battlefield.

"Together, we can continue to fulfill the commitment to those who have worn the cloth of our nation," Winnefeld said.

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