Academy graduates will help secure freedom, Rumsfeld says

  • Published
  • By Steven Donald Smith
  • American Forces Press Service
The U.S. will triumph over murderous extremists because of the daring and ingenuity of its people and armed forces, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said in his commencement address at the U.S. Air Force Academy May 31.

"Violent extremists are trying to terrorize and intimidate free people into submitting to their will," Secretary Rumsfeld told the graduating Airmen in Colorado Springs, Colo. "Our country has sent its finest young men and women in defense of the ideal that people, when faced with paths either leading to tyranny or freedom, will forever choose freedom."

He said the graduates are well-prepared to meet the terror threat head on.

"Everything you folks have done in your life before, what you've studied, your experience, your accomplishments, has prepared you for this moment," he said.

The war against terrorism is more than just a struggle between opposing sides. The terrorists' goal is to control or destroy the United States, he said.

"These extremists are waging a war against society itself," he said.

The U.S. armed forces must constantly adapt to meet the terrorist threat, and pointed to operations in Afghanistan as examples, Secretary Rumsfeld said.

"From the moment they landed in Afghanistan, our forces began adapting to the circumstances on the ground," he said. "They ended up riding horses that had been conditioned to ride through machine-gun fire."

He said some of those forces operating in Afghanistan were Air Force combat controllers.

"And those Airmen likely thought they would have sooner found themselves riding jet aircraft rather than horses," he said. "But they joined the American tradition of daring and ingenuity that has defined America for generations."

The United States must continue to transform and streamline its military forces to meet future challenges, he said. People who want change always face resistance, and the secretary urged the Airmen to challenge inherited assumptions and seek out better approaches.

"I urge you to make that the bedrock of your careers," he said.

Three members of the Doolittle Tokyo Raiders were present for the commencement ceremony. The raiders were volunteers from the Army Air Forces, predecessor of the Air Force, led by then-Lt. Col. James H. "Jimmy" Doolittle, who flew a daring mission to bomb Japan just four months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

"I remember as a boy the electrifying emotion in our country when America learned what that small band of airmen had done," Secretary Rumsfeld said of the mission. "They inspired our country. They gave the American people the strength to persevere on behalf of human freedom."

Secretary Rumsfeld also spoke about the Raiders' legacy to today's young Airmen.

"That is the force you join today," he said. "A force where the improbable can become the norm, where individuals are dedicated to securing our liberties no matter what the circumstances, no matter what the odds."

Secretary Rumsfeld closed his remarks by thanking the graduating Airmen, the first class to enter the academy after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, for volunteering to defend America.

"You raise your right hands to say, 'Send me to serve others,'" he said. "So to each of you, I thank you for what you do. I thank you for all you are. Go out and make history."