Sergeant Wirth, thank you.
I am honored to be introduced by anyone today -- [unintelligible] with a positive today -- but I'm particularly honored and privileged to be introduced by Sergeant First Class Wirth. He’s a typical Nebraskan: good looking, smart, great patriot, and many other virtues. Our warmest regards to Shannon...and in particular your mother in Vermillion, South Dakota. She deserves all of the credit for producing a family like yours: patriots, people who give to their country, selflessly, as everyone in this audience and people, I understand, around the world...are doing that, have done that, and will continue to do.
(A joke.... [stage microphone on])
I'm not going to replay all those nice things I said about Sergeant First Class Wirth, except his mother: magnificent woman. She's in Vermillion, South Dakota, but she was born and raised and grounded in Nebraska.
Gordon, Nebraska, is where Sergeant First Class Wirth is from. It's a little town up in the northwestern part of the state. My family and I lived in that county, Sheridan County, for five years. My brother, Tom, and I, who were in Vietnam together, served side-by-side, actually, for 10 months of our 12-month tours, we had our tonsils out together back in the '50s, when dinosaurs roamed the Earth. And I don't know if it was a two-for-one deal, but we had -- it was the only hospital in three counties, Gordon, Nebraska, so I wouldn't say I have fond memories of Gordon, but nonetheless, thank you.
And thank you all for what you are doing and have done, will continue to do for our country.
And I also want to address, of course, the people all over the world who continue to help make our country safe, keep it strong, and make America the great nation and the tremendous force for good that America is.
I want to also acknowledge much of our leadership in this institution who are here today. Specifically, we have the Deputy Secretary of Defense, Ash Carter, who was here; Chairman of the Joint Chiefs; we've got the Chief of Staff of the Army -- he makes me shake a little, being an old Army Sergeant. But the Sergeant Major of the Army scares the hell out of me. I think he does the General, too, actually. And all of you who are so important to our country, thank you.
A couple of hours ago, I took the oath of office to become the 24th Secretary of Defense. It's a great honor. It's a privilege. Yes, for me, my family, but to be part of your team, who you are is the honor. That's the great privilege. You're not joining my team; I'm joining your team.
And I want you to know how proud I am of the opportunity the President of the United States has given me and the Congress of the United States has given me. And I will tell you what I told the President, as I told the Congress, that I will do everything in my power to be the kind of leader that you expect and you deserve, also, the kind of leader the country expects and deserves.
We are living in a very defining time in the world. You all know that. It's a difficult time. It's a time of tremendous challenge. But there are opportunities. And I think it's important that we all stay focused, obviously, on our jobs, on our responsibilities, which are immense, but not lose sight of the possibilities for a better world.
If there's one thing America has stood for more than any one thing, is that we are a force for good. We make mistakes. We've made mistakes. We'll continue to make mistakes. But we are a force for good. And we should never, ever forget that, and we should always keep that out in front as much as any one thing that drives us every day. As difficult as our jobs are with the budget and sequestration -- I don't need to dwell on all the good news there -- that's a reality. We need to figure this out. You are doing that. You have been doing that. We need to deal with this reality.
We've got ahead of us a lot of challenges. They are going to define much of who we are, not this institution only, but our country, what kind of a world our children are going to inherit. I mean, that's the big challenge that we have. That's the bigger picture of the objective for all of us. Yes, it's difficult.
But it's also pretty special. I mean, when you think about generations and how many generations have had an opportunity to be part of something great, as difficult as this is, with everything, challenges coming at us, different kinds of challenges, cyber issues, you know all of them. But we can really do something pretty special for our country.
I've said to the Congress, the President, as Secretary of Defense, I will do everything I can to ensure the safety, the well-being, and the future of you and your families.
And I want to mention for a moment families. I think the families are always in a difficult spot, maybe the most difficult spot, because they are left behind. They're dealing with a lot of uncontrollables. And we are doing our job, and that consumes us, and that's good. But the families have a tough time.
And it's also important for you to know that I'm committed to -- and I've told the President this, the Congress -- to assuring that every person in the Department of Defense, associated with the Department of Defense, civilian or military, is absolutely treated fairly, honestly, equal benefits, everything that each of you do should be dealt with on a fair and equal basis, no discrimination anywhere in any way.
I've always believed that America's role in the world is one that -- and we've had variations of this throughout history -- has been one that should engage the world. We can't dictate to the world, but we must engage in the world. We must lead with our allies.
Allies are -- as everyone in this room knows -- particularly important. No nation -- as great as America is -- can do any of this alone. And we need to continue to build on the strong relationships that we have built. I think what my friends and my predecessors, Bob Gates, Leon Panetta, have done, build on that foundation, not just within our institutions here about teamwork, which I have noted, but teamwork with allies.
We renew old alliances. We reach out and find new alliances based on the common interests of people. There will be differences. And we have great power, and how we apply our power is particularly important. That engagement in the world should be done wisely. And the resources that we employ on behalf of our country and our allies should always be applied wisely.
The world looks to America for leadership. You know, it's interesting, when you look at the turbulent times that we are going through in this country, the one institution that still maintains astounding credibility and confidence and trust in this country is this institution, the military and all those associated with it. Gallup runs polls every year, and they take the 15 largest institutions in America. The military's way up here.
Well, there's a reason for that. The reason is, essentially, what you have done. You earn confidence. You earn trust. It isn't given away, nor should it ever be given away. You've done that through your sacrifices. And we don't want to squander that.
And we can use that to rebuild all the necessary institutions we have to deal with here in our country and the world. The world can look to this institution as an institution they can have confidence in and trust. I will do everything within my power to continue to build on to what Secretaries Panetta and Gates have begun to build and what you all are beginning to build.
As I said earlier in another meeting, leadership is a team business. It isn't about the leaders. It's about the team. It is about the team. Everybody plays a role in that.
This morning, after I was sworn in, I went over and spent a little time at the 9/11 Memorial in the park, the chapel, and reflected a bit on what happened on that day in 2001. I was on Capitol Hill at the time. Everyone in this room remembers where you were at 9:37 in the morning on September 11th, 2001. And I surely remember exactly where I was.
But in Churchill's words long ago, that was a “jarring gong,” the event, that set in motion dynamics that we are living with today. You go back almost 22 years ago -- as Chairman Dempsey noted this morning in a meeting, 22 years ago tomorrow, in 1991, February 28th, the end of Desert Storm. If you take those two events and start charting this, not unlike history, you start to see a picture emerge of different kinds of threats, new threats, and there will be more new threats.
And it gives you some dimension when you back up a little bit and understand this, not that any of us, I don't think, are smart enough to know it all or figure it all out, but it gives us some dimension of what's going on in the world. The world is at such an uncertain time. Our budget problems here, meaning -- if nothing else, what we're dealing with, what you're dealing with, what we're all dealing with is, yes, dollars coming down, but it's the uncertainty of the planning, it's the uncertainty of the commitments, the uncertainty of what's ahead.
People are always the most important resource of any institution. You all know that. You always take care of your people, always take care of your people first. And you all have done a tremendous job of that, partly one of the reasons why this institution is so highly valued, trusted by the American people, because you take care of your people.
And, again, I say to you, I will do everything within my power as Secretary of Defense to be worthy of you and to be worthy of this country and to do everything I can to make sure our people are taken care of, their families, our veterans.
One of the proudest times in my 12 years in the United States Senate is when friend, former Vietnam veteran Jim Webb, who's spent a little time in this building over the years, he and I co-authored the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill. I was very proud of that, having nothing to do with me. I was proud of that because we were able to get two World War II veterans, John Warner and Frank Lautenberg, Democrat, Republican, Jim Webb, Chuck Hagel, two Vietnam veterans, Democrat, Republican, we got together, and we got the votes, and we passed the bill.
Now, that's the way things should work for our country, because the objective was not to give Jim Webb or Chuck Hagel or anybody any credit or a party, but the objective was to do something for the country, to do something for the people who sacrifice and who serve and who deserve this kind of attention and this kind of recognition.
And I say that because much of my life has been about doing everything I could in some way to help veterans and their families, whether it was chairing the Agent Orange payment program, whatever it was, and I'm proud of that. I'm more proud of that than any businesses or anything else I've been involved in. And I'm proud of my background. I'm proud of my career, like you all are. But nothing makes me prouder, has ever made me prouder than my association with the military and the veterans.
Well, again, to you, each of you in this room, those of you who are watching this around the world, I say to you: Thank you. Again, I say thank you to you for your service, your sacrifices, and I will do everything I can to be worthy of Sergeant First Class Wirth and his family and everybody in this building.
I look forward to working with you. You'll always know that you have a Secretary of Defense that will deal straight with you, I'll be honest, I'll be direct, I'll expect the same from you. I'll never ask anyone to do anything I wouldn't do. I'll never ask anybody to do more than I would do. That's the story of your lives. I wouldn't be worthy if that was not the case.
Again, thank you for this tremendous opportunity. I am very proud to be on your team.
Now I've got to go to work.
Thank you.