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AETC presents General Flowers with Order of the Sword
Air Education and Training Command enlisted service members greet retired Maj. Gen. Alfred K. Flowers with applause during his arrival to the officers club April 6, 2012, at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph, Texas. Flowers was inducted to the Order of the Sword. He is the seventh person in AETC history to be selected. (U.S. Air Force photo/Joel Martinez)
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General Flowers presented with Order of the Sword

Posted 4/7/2012   Updated 4/6/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Staff Sgt. Clinton Atkins
Air Education and Training Command Public Affairs


4/7/2012 - JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-RANDOLPH, Texas (AFNS) -- The enlisted men and women of Air Education and Training Command presented retired Maj. Gen. Alfred K. Flowers with the Order of the Sword during a ceremony April 6 here.

Before his retirement in November, Flowers served as the deputy assistant for Budget at the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Management and Comptroller in Washington D.C. He is the longest serving military member in Defense Department history with more than 46 years on active duty at the time of his retirement. Flowers served as an enlisted Airman for more than 13 years and was a master sergeant select before commissioning.

The Order of the Sword was established by the Air Force enlisted force to recognize and honor senior military officers and civilian equivalents. Its history and approval process are laid out formally in Air Force Instruction 36-2824, Order of the Sword Programs. Noncommissioned officers bestow the honor for conspicuous and significant contributions to the welfare and prestige of the Air Force enlisted force, mission effectiveness and the overall military establishment.

"This is the highest level of recognition that the enlisted force can bestow upon anyone," said AETC Command Chief Master Sgt. James Cody.

"Without question, what General Flowers has contributed to the enlisted force throughout his career, specifically for us in AETC, as the 2nd Air Force commander and then as he moved on to be the Air Force (financial manager), has certainly furthered their development, furthered their ability to meet the demands and needs of our nation," he said.

As the 2nd Air Force commander, he played a key role in the development and implementation of the new Basic Military Training, which includes the Basic Expeditionary Airman Skills Training, better known as the BEAST, where trainees learn valuable combat and deployment skills.

During his last assignment in Washington D.C., Flowers continued to be an advocate for the enlisted force by finding resources and money to support programs such as professional military education.

Flowers is the seventh person in AETC history to be selected for the Order of the Sword.

"I'm honored that the noncommissioned officers selected me to receive this and I'm humbled by the experience," he said. "This is as good as it gets."

Flowers said he attributes his success to the thousands of men and women who helped him throughout his career.

"I cannot make myself successful," he said. "I'm not smart enough, I'm not good enough. It's the men and women that surrounded me that made me as successful as I became."



tabComments
4/11/2012 1:29:38 PM ET
SM I was at a wedding reception and had a table try to order drinks from me. The groom was even married in Mess Dress an hour earlier as well.
Maj, SWA
 
4/10/2012 7:12:19 PM ET
I agree with John. Last time I was at an AF function held at a hotel restaurant because the club wasn't available people asked me to carry their luggage
SM, NM
 
4/10/2012 5:06:36 PM ET
Standard going away present for Majcom commanders. USAFE leads the way in Order of the Sword recipients. How many fine officers serving in harms way are considered yep thought so.
John, Pensacola
 
4/10/2012 2:00:30 PM ET
John I'm more than pleased with our Mess Dress. It could be much worse as noted with countless other nations but that's who we are as an Air Force. Separate from the other branches yet still uniform in appearance it's not a fashion show. As I previously mentioned it could be much worse we could have bright yellow uniforms or drab red. Or perhaps neon green is a more fitting color I'm more than proud to look like an Airman how you see that as food service is beyond me.
Name, BearJay
 
4/9/2012 7:15:51 PM ET
Congratulations to the general...but the Air Force really needs to do something about their formal dress uniforms. The guy in white is the only one that picture dressed for a formal occasion. The others look like they're preparing to serve some food or drinks.
John, Maryland
 
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