Swearing-in of
Secretary of the Air Force Michael Donley
As delivered by Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates
Arlington, Va.
October 17, 2008
Thank you, General Schwartz, for the
introduction.
This is an occasion to welcome Mike Donley to his new post, and take
stock of the achievements of the storied service that he has been
entrusted to lead.
No doubt Mike assumes this duty at a challenging time – for the Air
Force, for the U.S. military, and for our country. The United States
Air Force enters its seventh decade in a position of unquestioned –
but not necessarily eternal – air dominance.
Today’s Air Force has been deployed and in some phase of war for 18
years – since Iraq first invaded Kuwait in the summer of 1990. Since
September 11th, the Air Force has flown more than one million
missions – ranging from lift to medevac to close air support –
including tens of thousands of sorties flown over America’s skies to
protect our homeland. Intra-theater air lift has taken thousands of
troops and convoys off Iraq’s roads. Thousands of battlefield airmen
are performing tasks such as detainee operations, explosives
ordnance disposal, and convoy security in Iraq and Afghanistan. The
increased air missions and capabilities employed in Iraq – manned
and unmanned – have been a decisive factor in the dramatic security
turnaround we’ve seen over the past 18 months.
Put simply, without the Air Force’s contributions in the skies and
on the ground, America’s war effort would simply grind to a halt.
Little of that is widely known or appreciated. But I can assure you
that I value everything you are doing in support of the nation.
Now the Air Force is at an important pivot point – as it sees the
current conflicts through to success, while preparing for challenges
on and beyond the horizon, including:
• Restoring trust in the Air Force’s stewardship of the most
sensitive part of our arsenal – nuclear weapons and nuclear-related
materiel;
• Modernizing the aging fighter and tanker fleets;
• Protecting the global commons of the 21st century – space and
cyberspace; and,
• Making the most effective use of air power in counterinsurgency
operations while maintaining strategic deterrence and technological
superiority as a hedge against rising powers.
Mike brings decades of experience in the military, the government,
and the private sector to this post.
He is a former assistant secretary of the Air Force for financial
management, and was acting secretary for several months in 1993. In
addition to work in the private and nonprofit sector, Mike has been
on the staff of the Senate Armed Services Committee and on the
National Security Council staff. He is a former paratrooper who
served in the Army’s 18th Airborne Corps and in the Special Forces.
And, of course, Mike’s last post was as “mayor of the Pentagon” –
where as director of administration and management, he oversaw DoD’s
elephantine headquarters apparatus. No doubt, he has already put
those bureaucratic skills to good use on behalf of the men and women
of the Air Force.
This has been Mike’s second stint as acting secretary of the Air
Force. So we’re glad to see him get the official imprimatur he so
richly deserves from the President and the Congress. Now, he will
always be Secretary Donley. That sounds just right.
Thank you.
(Archives)
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