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 You are in: Under Secretary for Management > Bureau of Diplomatic Security > News from the Bureau of Diplomatic Security > Bureau of Diplomatic Security: Testimonies, Speeches, and Remarks > 2003 

Graduation of Security Engineering Officers and Naval Support Unit Seabees

Ambassador Francis X. Taylor, Assistant Secretary of State for Diplomatic Security and Director for the Office of Foreign Missions
At the Graduation Ceremony for Security Engineering Officers and Naval Support Unit Seabees
Washington, DC
March 20, 2003


 
I am excited to be here in the Treaty Room with you, the first combined graduating classes of Security Engineering Officers and Naval Support Unit Seabees. This is a very special day for me, as it marks the first time that I have had the privilege as Assistant Secretary of State to welcome our new Security Engineers and Seabees to the Bureau of Diplomatic Security. Welcome!

You are graduating at unique time and your contributions will have an immediate impact. It is important to take time to celebrate this day with family and friends. In the very near future, you will join America’s war against global terrorism. We will ask you to travel to some of the most challenging and dangerous areas of the world to protect our diplomats and missions abroad. Your jobs, our jobs, are critically important in ensuring that the President’s foreign policy agenda is carried out safely and securely.

You will have many unique experiences during your careers, such as providing technical security protection for the Secretary of State in a foreign land. We may ask you to go to Afghanistan to assist in safeguarding our newest ally in the war on terrorism, President Hamid Karzai. You will be required to design, install and maintain technical and physical security systems at our embassies and consulates abroad that will protect our Foreign Service colleagues and national security information from terrorist, criminal and technical attack.

Together, the collective challenges we face are clear. Without question, we have a difficult job—a job where there are no points for second place. In order to meet these challenges successfully, we must use all resources available to us.

As Assistant Secretary for Diplomatic Security, I can assure you that I will work day and night to ensure that DS has everything it needs, from information to state of the art technology, to effectively accomplish our missions of today and tomorrow. I will seek and expand opportunities for you to broaden your technical and leadership experiences within the Bureau and the Department. I firmly believe that you must have a broad-based understanding of our relationship with other agencies and an appreciation for the rapidly expanding and important role that we play in the government’s war on terrorism.

As in any endeavor, mission effectiveness is critical. Today’s threat environment is very complex, and as events of the past 18 months have proven, extremely dangerous. Our adversaries are very intelligent and their ideologies, strategies and tactics are diverse. They vary from nation states that sponsor terrorism or use their security or intelligence apparatus to spy on us to terrorist organizations like Al Qaida that operate globally with the aim of destroying the American way of life and all that our country stands for. Our opponents have become more dangerous as they too increase their access to modern technology and seek weapons of mass destruction.

I have laid out an ambitious vision of a future that I firmly believe in. However, in your pursuit of this shared goal, always remember your core values. Shortly you will receive your credentials. Honor them and treat them with respect as you do your colleagues. Act with integrity and you will be treated in kind. Admit your faults and quickly work to overcome them. We will always be there to support you.

The Diplomatic Security Service is one of the preeminent security and law enforcement organizations in the world and our reputation for excellence is unmatched. You are the future of DS. We will call upon you to excel early and often in your career, and I am confident that each of you will make a difference for our department, our nation and the American people. That is what we have trained you to do and now it is time to perform.

Welcome to our team and God bless each of you and your family as you go forth to serve this great nation and our people. Thank you.


Released on March 20, 2003

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