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News > Commentary - Strengthening our core
Strengthening our core

Posted 7/19/2012 Email story   Print story

    


Commentary by Col. Jim Dryjanski
National War College


7/19/2012 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- The greatest threat to the United States Air Force right now is not external. It is from within. The allegations of sexual misconduct at Lackland Air Force Base splashed across the news will undoubtedly be fully investigated and criminal behavior will be prosecuted appropriately.

The victims will be heard and they will be cared for, but the bell cannot be unrung. The reverberations from "Jerry Springer-esque" moral failure can shake public trust.

Senior leaders of our Air Force and the Department of Defense will look deeply, far beyond the current trial, to see if there are any institutional root causes in climate, leadership, training and oversight that need to be addressed.

We can expect some necessary actions to be taken, but will disciplinary action or the implementation of recommendations from various independent top-down strategic reviews be sufficient? Probably not, if we as Airmen don't recognize the moral battle being waged or fail to act from the grassroots-level to strengthen our core. The stakes are incredibly high--so should be our attention and urgency.

Lackland Air Force Base is known as the "Gateway to the Air Force." Every enlisted trainee must pass through this training crucible in order to earn the title of "Airman." The center of our identity as Airmen is found in our core values: Integrity first, Service before Self, and Excellence in all we do. Every Airmen can spout these core values...Integrity, Service, Excellence are easy to remember and easy to say, just as former Chief of Staff of the Air Force, General Fogleman designed them. So what's the problem?

The words Integrity, Service, and Excellence are ubiquitous in our Air Force. Like the sound of a dripping faucet they can fade into the background over time. They are on power point slides, on wall-hangings in various offices, and they are all over the social media outlets of our Service. But, are they only words? Only words to be recited in speeches by commanders and enlisted leaders? Only words to be cited by those very same leaders when an Airmen breaks a rule or regulation?

Yes, they are...if we let them be. If we lose sight of the moral truth that our core values are grounded in, these mere words of Integrity, Service, and Excellence lose their true meaning and true power.

Sunshine is often the best antiseptic. Increasing transparency of our training and strengthening the accountability of our instructors at Basic Military Training in this light will help. But, more broadly, all Airmen in our Air Force should use this opportunity to illuminate why our Core Values are much more than mere words.

Let's be clear about one thing, the vast majority of our Airmen--like their joint brothers and sisters in arms, are honorably serving our nation at a very critical time in our history. They are among the very best our nation has to offer, and they are making the extraordinary look ordinary around the globe every single day. That said, no Airman is exempt from the temptation in life to do the easier wrong, rather than the harder right. We must be prepared to win this battle every single day..

It is up to Airmen--wingmen, leaders, warriors to calibrate our moral compasses to true north and give life to our Core Values where the rubber meets the road during our toughest times.. Lou Holtz, former head football coach at Notre Dame, had a great way of boiling complex ideas down to their essence. He has said there are three questions people have when they meet you.

Can I trust you?
Do you care about me?
Are you committed to excellence?

If "yes" is the answer to those questions, people want you on their team. How do you get to "yes?" Holtz has three rules to live by.

Do the right thing.
Care about people.
Do your best.

Simple and profound rules to live by and strengthen our core and our team: Integrity First, Service before Self, and Excellence in all we do.

Aim High...Fly, Fight and Win!



tabComments
8/8/2012 8:28:42 AM ET
Sorry Air Force Guy but this article is not about what happened at BMT. It is about core values and brings up morals at least four times. The sad part is we can not be public about our view of those morals without being called homophobes. And sorry K9 but to compare slavery in ancient times to what early African Americans went through is simply ignorant.
Paul, San Antonio
 
8/7/2012 5:47:42 PM ET
I honestly don't think I have ever been more ashamed to call myself an Airman. You people sit here with your bigoted ideas of morality that you got from where The Bible a book that spells out the price for a slave and tells us that we should stone a woman who is not a virgin on her wedding night. Guess what this is not a Christian military just like this is not a Christian nation. People in the military should be judged by their work ethic and abilities not what they do in the privacy of their home with a consenting adult. While I may not agree with homosexuals marching uniform at parades I am happy to serve side by side with them. Just look at history and know that in a few years you will have the chance to be just as embarressed as the people who fought against integration.
K9, Reality
 
8/7/2012 2:38:56 PM ET
So let me get this straight. This article is about heterosexual males preying upon young female trainees but all these comments are bashing gays.
AIR FORCE GUY, AFB
 
8/7/2012 8:33:02 AM ET
I would suggest to all who think the decline in moral standards has no effect on society to look at the fall of the Roman Empire. Homosexuality is a choice as is adultery, which is why comparing this discernment of homosexuality to the treatment of persons of color is way off base. Finally, for those who think we are all homophobes, we do not hate the sinner but the sin.
Paul, SA
 
8/2/2012 3:06:01 PM ET
@I See it the Same. Adultery is less acceptable because it involves a victim. Simply being homosexual never in any way infringes on anybody else's rights.
Daley, New Mexico
 
8/1/2012 3:06:09 PM ET
With morality on the decline, what's next? Beastiality? Pedophilia? Where do we draw the line...obviously not at homosexuality.
more ashamed, earth
 
7/31/2012 5:23:17 PM ET
Ashamed, the comparison isn't actually going overboard. Homosexuallity is a choice just like adultery. Why is adultery any less acceptable. If we can accept one why not the other.
I See it the Same, earth 2
 
7/31/2012 3:28:45 AM ET
I'm not ashamed of myself but of those who believe that opening the door to those who favor the same sex or both is demoralizing and ruining today's Air Force. You don't have the right to judge how someone else lives their life. They fight and serve just as everyone else who joined. They are people... a person just like you. I don't agree with marching in uniform as some do, but that's for the Air Force to decide not you. Gay's and lesbians have always been in the military just now it's allowed and they have every right to express who they are. To those comparing adultry to a way of life, you're going overboard my friend.
Ashamed, UK
 
7/27/2012 2:46:03 PM ET
@Tom-Pardon my being flippant, but following the argument that times are changing and therefore we need to adapt one could argue that our core values need to reflect with the times. Perhaps integrity later-serve yourself- and profit in all you do. Just because times change does not mean moral values should even if everyone else thinks so.
Lt Kirchner, Hill
 
7/27/2012 1:11:49 PM ET
If times are changing and we just have to accept it, when can we just start accepting adultery as an adult decision and wipe it off the books too?
Not Changing, Earth
 
7/26/2012 1:58:07 PM ET
How does allowing homosexuals to march in uniform constitute as a moral failure Maybe according to your morals but times are changing and things will not go back to the so called good old days. I am glad that the military has stopped discriminating against homosexuals it was the right thing to do. Youre on the losing side of history so you might as well get used to these types of changes.
Tom, Earth
 
7/24/2012 1:28:02 AM ET
@Jay exactly and they just opened another can of worms for them to deal with. What's next people wanting to walk in other unattractive marches for the military in uniform
wolf-1, earth
 
7/20/2012 10:52:09 AM ET
I'm wondering how in this day and age anyone in the Air Force can speak about calibrating our moral compass when we now have open homosexuals that have been approved by the Air Force to march IN UNIFORM at a gay pride parade. Seems to me like morals are out the window. At least for another 108 days.
Jay SMSgt Ret, DC
 
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