By Gary Raynaldo DIPLOMATIC TIMES
Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III today told the graduating class of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York that the academy’s lessons will equip them well to face new challenges and adversity in a rapidly changing world. The first African-American Defense Secretary also said that when he was a cadet in the 1970s, his leaders taught him valuable lessons that served him well during his 41-year Army career. Among those lessons were the value of being well prepared; learning to focus; following with loyalty; questioning with rigor, character, discipline, teamwork; mastering one’s trade; telling the truth; treating people with dignity and respect; and leading with honor, Defense Secretary Austin said.
“Those values are the lasting legacy of West Point. Those are the guideposts that will steer you right when you face the hardest decisions of your lives,” Defense Secretary Austin said.
Austin stressed that the cadets will face new challenges and adversity in a rapidly changing world.
“You’re about to graduate into a changing country and a changing world where many of the old ways of doing business don’t hold up anymore,” he said. “You’re seeing raw divisions at home and the painful aftermath of the pandemic. “You may also have heard some of America’s competitors claim that the future belongs to a model that promises wealth as it stamps out freedom,” he added, referring to China and Russia.”
The graduating cadets are entering a world where technology will change the character of war itself, he said. “Even as big and rising powers jostle and compete, you are seeing new threats—from pandemics to terrorism to cyber weapons—and you’re seeing those threats race across borders like a gale,” Austin said, adding that the department is working hard every day to meet those challenges.
Austin noted that during his time in uniform, the Army wasn’t a perfect institution. “I’ve seen the problems. But just like the nation it defends, the U.S. military strives to be a more perfect version of itself — and I will take that over our competitors any day.
“You serve a country that strives to grow, and to mend, and to reach the better angels of our nature,” he added.
Graduates of the U.S. Military Academy celebrate at the commencement ceremony, West Point, N.Y., May 22, 2021. (Photo By: CDT Ellington Ward)
Austin’s family included other service members, including:
- His father, who served in World War II as a truck driver in the Army Air Corps.
- His uncle, who was a Green Beret and left a lasting impression on Austin when he was a youngster. Austin said he knew he wanted to be like him someday.
Austin wanted to go to Notre Dame and even had a full scholarship to go there, but his father talked him into going to West Point. The trip to West Point included his first-ever airplane ride. Before going to the academy, the furthest north Austin ever went was north Georgia.
The U. S. Military Academy is a four-year, co-educational, federal, liberal arts college located 50 miles north of New York City.
It was founded in 1802 as America’s first college of engineering and continues today as the world’s premier leader-development institution, consistently ranked among the top colleges in the country.