Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Press Briefing by Rear Admiral Kirby

Department of Defense Press Briefing by Rear Admiral Kirby in the Pentagon Briefing Room

REAR ADMIRAL JOHN KIRBY: Good afternoon, everybody. Let me start out with a few comments here.


The first thing I want to address is the safety of the military personnel responding to the Ebola crisis. The joint chiefs have made a recommendation to Secretary Hagel that he consider a regimented program of 21 days of controlled, supervised monitoring for all troops returning from Ebola response efforts in West Africa.


The secretary is in possession of that recommendation. He has made no decision yet.


Secretary shares the concerns by the chiefs about the safety and well-being not only of our troops, but also of their families, and he appreciates the thoughtfulness and the gravity of the recommendations Chairman Dempsey sent to him.


When a decision has been made, we will certainly let you know.


In the meantime, the secretary supports the decision made by Army leadership to place Major General Williams and his team under this same quarantine-like program.


Now, if I could, I'd like to turn just briefly to events against ISIL.


Over the last 24 to 36 hours, we've seen the Iraqi Security Forces and other anti-ISIL forces, such as the Peshmerga, make some gains in several parts of Iraq and Syria.


In central Iraq, ISF operations to expand Iraqi control of territory beyond the Baiji oil refinery are making progress. ISF is also advancing against ISIL, in Amiriyah, with the assistance of coalition airstrikes, and we've seen ISF achieve success in countering ISIL fighters in southwest Baghdad as well, or southwest of Baghdad as well. Sorry.


In addition, in northern Iraq, Peshmerga forces have regained control of Zumar, a town approximately 60 kilometers southwest of Mosul, and surrounding areas well inside operationally planned timelines. The operation was planned -- was planned -- has been planned for over a week, but objectives were achieved in a number of days.


This is the fourth offensive operation in which Peshmerga forces have been able to regain control of ground from ISIL, including Mosul Dam, Sardek Mountain, and Rabia Gate.


Finally, ISF, Kurdish, and coalition forces have targeted specific ISIL target tactical locations to impede its
ability to shoot, maneuver, communicate, and move near Mosul Dam, Zumar, Baiji, and Baghdad.


This has included the destruction of multiple fighting positions, at least eight ISIL vehicles, to include an ISIL tank, a staging area, and a logistics base.


While we recognize that a major Iraqi offensive against ISIL may still be a ways off, these are encouraging reports that highlight Iraq's determination to take the fight to ISIL. We continue to see that these combined targeting efforts are disrupting ISIL and forcing them to consider changes -- more changes in their tactics to try to avoid being targeted.


Meanwhile, in Syria, the situation in Kobani remains tenuous, with ISIL continuing to put pressure on that city and anti-ISIL forces continuing to hold out.


As U.S. Central Command's news release today pointed out, coalition airstrikes over the last 24 hours in Kobani destroyed several ISIL fighting positions and struck ISIL fighters. Despite these positive developments, it's important to point out that ISIL remains a very determined enemy. They continue to reinforce areas where they've been losing ground, such as in Kobani, Anbar province, and in the vicinity of Mosul Dam, and they continue to threaten innocent civilians wherever they are.


No one underestimates the challenges before us. As we've said from the outset, this campaign is going to be challenging and it's going to take time.


Finally, I have one other piece of news to pass along. At the request, the Government of Iraq, U.S. Air Force C-130 aircraft conducted an airdrop early on the morning of October 27th, Iraqi time, in the vicinity of Al Asad Air Base to provide humanitarian aid for delivery by Iraqi Security Forces to members of Iraq's Abu Nimer tribe.


U.S. aircraft delivered more than 7,000 Halal meals which were retrieved by the ISF and then delivered to the tribe, which had been recently relocated from their homes near Hit, Iraq, to flee ISIL aggression. C-130 aircraft which are deployed to U.S. Central Command area of responsibility exited the airdrop zone safely.


This assistance is just another example of our resolve to assist the people of Iraq and deny ISIL key terrain and safe haven, as well as our commitment to assist those forces who are opposing ISIL.


And with that I'll take your questions.


Bob?


Q: Yes, I wonder if on the Ebola recommendation from General Dempsey whether you could flesh out a little bit, how that would work in practice? Would it be uniform, regardless of whether it was in the United States or anywhere abroad? And also in Vicenza, in that particular case, did the Italian government require that that be the step to be taken in that case?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I'm not aware of any requirement by the Italian government to do this. This was a decision by Army leadership in keeping with the recommendations that the Joint Chiefs floated up to the secretary.


On actual execution, I think there's still some homework to be done on that, Bob. I don't have any specifics for you on how that would work. Should the secretary decide to implement it force-wide, I think there's still some spade work that needs to be done to kind of -- to figure out all the eaches of that and we're just not at that stage right now.


Q: Is he seeking outside advice on -- before he decides how to do that?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I'm not aware of outside advice that he's seeking. He greatly values the opinions and recommendations of Chairman Dempsey and the chiefs as well. But he's going to take the time that he feels he needs to make a decision. And I think everybody understands the importance of that decision. And when he's ready, when he's made one, we'll let you know.


Q: Admiral Kirby?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Yeah.


Q: On ISIS if you don't mind?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Yeah.


Q: OK. Just to make sure, could you clarify what's the status now, the situation at the Mosul Dam?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Well, I talked about it in my opening statement. The Mosul Dam, the facility, still is in control of Iraqi forces -- Iraqi and Kurdish forces. It continues to be a target for ISIL. They continue to want to threaten it, but they have not successfully since they've been dislodged from it.


Q: Now would the broad picture that you have provided that the Peshmerga and the Iraqi forces that are gaining ground in many areas. But then the same time, we heard in the past hours, that even -- that the Assad regime forces have gained ground close to [inaudible] at the border between Syria and Iraq and also in the north near Aleppo. Do you have any information on that? How do you describe it?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I don't have any specific information about the Syrian regime and their operations. There's no doubt that the Assad regime continues to pressure opposition forces, continues to attack them. That's absolutely true. And we've said, all along, that his legitimacy to govern is gone and that we're going to continue to work on this train-and-equip program to get a moderate opposition that cannot only go against ISIL, but can work towards a political settlement inside Syria. But I don't have details on, you know, Assad's military movements specifically.


Yeah, Bill?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Admiral, following up on your ISIL summary, you said there was some early encouraging progress against them in Iraq.


But General Allen, when he was in Kuwait this week, talked about the importance of fighting them in the information space and having a propaganda effort to counter their social networking, like the video that's out from Kobani.


Can you tell us what this department is doing on that score and whether it's going to expand its efforts to fight
against the information aspect to this terror campaign?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Well, we're obviously supporting the effort. It's an interagency effort as well as a cross-DOD effort.


I won't get into -- and I think you can understand why I wouldn't -- get into too much specifically about this, because this is a -- there's a cyber component to this, and then there's also a messaging component to this as in any kind of counter-propaganda work.


So again, I really would be low to get into too much detail from the podium. But I can tell you that we -- we're taking it seriously. The Department of Defense is contributing to an interagency effort to do this, and it will continue to do that.


We're -- we're very good in this realm. We're very flexible in this -- at these kinds of capabilities, and we're confident that over time, we're going to be able to have an effect.


Q: One other thing on Iraq, just real quick.


OPCW said today that they have not been asked either by Baghdad or Washington to actually investigate these reports about ISIL chlorine gas attacks there.


Can you tell us whether people in this department have decided not to ask them to do an investigation? You said last week DOD is not looking into it. Can you explain why you wouldn't ask them to see if the reports are accurate?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Well, let me take that for the record, Phil, and get back to you. I'm not aware of any decision that's been made here in the Defense Department to ask or not to ask OPCW to do it.


What I said last week is that this would -- this is a -- this is a typical OPCW function, not something that the Defense Department would normally do.


But I owe you a better answer, so let me get back to you on that.


Q: Thanks.


On the 21-day quarantine decision that Secretary Hagel has to make, in effect, hasn't the decision already been made for him with General Odierno's orders to quarantine these people already? It's already in practice.


He said he supports it, so he's not going to reverse it, is he?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I'm not going to get ahead of a decision that the secretary hasn't made yet, but no, it hasn't been made for the secretary.


The secretary reserves the right to make this kind of decision, a policy decision for the entire Defense Department, for all our troops, and like I told Bob, he'll take the time necessary to make the decision, and then like I said, we'll -- we'll let you know what that is.


But he supports the decision that was made by Army leadership to do this for General Williams and his team, and we'll go from there.


Q: OK. Well, can you tell us why he supports the decision when the CDC says that, you know -- the scientists working on this say, in fact, that decision doesn't make sense, and it's not the recommendation?


Why does it make sense for the military when it doesn't make sense for the civilians?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: This was the first group of U.S. military personnel that have come back from Liberia. It's the very first installment.


I think the secretary understands that Army leadership, supported by the recommendations of the Joint Staff, wanted to take a very conservative approach, particularly for this first group, and again, he understand that and didn't feel it was necessary to step in the way of it.


But broadening it to the entire force and making a department-wide policy decision is something that he wants to take very seriously, and as I said, when -- when he's had time to consider it, we'll let you know.


Q: Clarification on that? So is he reviewing the Army decision, or will the Army decision stand, and he is deciding whether to expand it to the other military services?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: So let me try to do some forensics on this. You have -- you have a Joint Chiefs recommendation that went to the secretary. In keeping with that recommendation, Army leadership made this decision because time was a factor here.


These guys were coming out of Liberia right away. So, I think using prudence, caution, and a conservative approach, Army leadership made this specific decision for General Williams and his staff. And it was in keeping with a recommendation that was working its way to the secretary.


That recommendation is now with the secretary to -- for him to consider doing it force-wide, and to implement this across the force. He's got it. He'll examine it. And then -- and then we'll go from there.


I mean -- but it -- but the decision was made as the recommendation was making its way up because these individuals were, at the time -- at the time the recommendation was being proffered, they were actually traveling back from Liberia.


Q: What I'm asking is, if he -- if he says "no, we're going to just go with the CDC guidelines. We're not going to do this force-wide." Is General Williams then released, or does General Williams stay in his 21-day quarantine?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: That's a hypothetical question, Julian, and I'm not good at that. But I will -- I don't foresee any plans to change the regimen for General Williams and his team at this time. I don't foresee that there'll be any change, regardless of what the secretary decides to the regimen that they're going through.


Barb?



Q: Admiral Kirby.


You keep saying that it's for General Williams and his team. But in fact, General Odierno's statement is all military, all Army personnel, all of them coming out of West Africa, not just General Williams and his team, will be subjected to 21 days of controlled monitoring. So, this is already a very broad program.


And you also have Air Force personnel, as well as others already going back and forth. And I want to try this again. You say that the secretary supports what General Odierno has done, which is for all Army personnel.


So, if he supports it, he supports it. I mean, otherwise, he doesn't, and he's going to reverse it. Which is it?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: He supports this decision for -- for Major General Williams and his team and what they're going through right now. But as the Secretary of Defense, he reserves the right, and it's his responsibility, to determine whether this should be applied across the force. And he's got the recommendation. He'll review it and he'll make a decision.


Q: So, to be clear, your statement that he supports it right now, just to make sure I'm understanding --


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Let me put it in another way. He's not going to oppose or get in the way of the decision that Army leadership made with respect to this group of soldiers coming back. He's not going to --


Q: Please. What you are saying then is that Secretary Hagel only supports this, you've said it several times now, it's just taken me awhile to realize it, that Secretary Hagel only supports this for General Williams and his team. You are not making a statement that Secretary Hagel supports what General Odierno has done for all Army forces returning from Africa.


REAR ADM. KIRBY: The secretary is not going to oppose this initial decision made by Army leadership. He is reviewing the recommendation, and he will have a -- he will have a decision soon, and then we'll go from there.


Q: Does he support it only for General Williams and his team, or does he support what General Odierno has done for all -- for all Army forces returning --


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I think I've answered the question.


Q: I don't understand --


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I've answered the question seven times, Barb.


Q: Admiral Kirby, you have said limited to General Williams.


I'm asking you, does Secretary Hagel support General Odierno in terms of all Army personnel going into 21 days of monitoring.


REAR ADM. KIRBY: The secretary supports the decision that was made for General Williams and his team. He is not going to oppose, at this time, the decision made by Army leadership for all soldiers. That said, he has the recommendation of the Joint Chiefs. He's going to review it and he'll make a decision. I can't make it any plainer than that.


Next question.


Q: What effect -- do you think this decision by the Army undermines the messaging that you had and others have had saying these troops are not exposed to any risk? I mean, they're taking -- they're being -- they're being isolated in a way that goes well beyond scientific guidelines and recommendations that the president himself has been espousing? So, you know, is -- doesn't this send a message to the troops' families that these guys are in much greater danger than has been made publicly before?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I think -- again, I won't speak -- I can't speak for the decision made by military leadership. I just can't do that. My understanding is this was done out of an abundance of caution, to be prudent and because this was the first installment of troops to come back. I think it was -- you know, there was an abundance of caution applied to this.


And let me finish. And then we'll see whether this is the right protocol moving forward for everybody. I mean, I think we're just going to have to see.


Q: But no science to back up what appears to be happening. The question is: Is there more happening in Liberia than we're aware of that would justify this decision?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I'm not aware of anything more that's happening. I think it's important to remind that nothing has changed about the fact that these troops -- our troops in Liberia are not going to be treating Ebola patients. They're not going to be coming in direct contact with people who have the disease. They are engineers, logisticians, Seabees, aviators.


And so nothing has changed about that. And nothing has changed about the fact that we hold their safety and their security to be our prime responsibility. The secretary is very committed to that. Again, I -- I think we just, you know, he's got the recommendation. He'll consider it and then we'll go from there.


But I don't think says anything other than the fact that Army leadership had a concern about their safety and the safety of their families and they acted on that.


Q: What is that safety concern based on? If not based on science, what is it based on?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Based on, again, an abundance of caution for this first group coming back.


And the other thing I'd say, Phil, is we always reserve the right to refine our procedures and our protocols. So things could still change further. I don't know. I mean, the secretary has got to consider this. But one of the things we're good at is changing and tacking if we need to. And, you know, the Army made this decision. We'll
see where it goes from here.


Q: Doesn't each service chief have the authority to increase -- to change this -- the rules for their own individual services? So if the, you know, if the Air Force decides, General Welsh could say the same thing, the 21-days applies to all airmen coming back. And so on and so on.


Even if Secretary Hagel does not sign off on this, couldn't each of the service chiefs still implement these same rules that the Army has implemented for their -- (CROSSTALK)


REAR ADM. KIRBY: The service chiefs have wide latitude to do what they need to do for force protection. That's true. And they can be more conservative usually than whatever the standard is, the floor is. What we're talking here does the floor need to be raised or not. And the secretary gets to make that call for the entire department.


Q: Then each of those service chiefs did agree that the floor does need to be raised? They do need to have a 21-day quarantine, correct?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: My understanding is -- yeah, what I said in my opening statement.


Q: So at this point it just stands to reason that that's going to happen because even if the secretary signed off on it -- (CROSSTALK)


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Let's not get ahead of a decision that hasn't been made yet.


Q: Given that there is apparently additional fears of Ebola exposure, given the 21-day quarantine or controlled monitoring for the Army soldiers, is there any re-thinking about the protective gear that soldiers who are deploying and working there are going to be wearing?


I know that they're not supposed to be in contact with Ebola patients, but clearly there's a fear that they might be. Are you going to give -- are you going to upgrade their protective gear that they wear on a daily basis?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I know of no plans to do that, Julian. Again, to remind, our U.S. troops that are down there are working on four lines of effort: command and control, training, logistics, and engineering. That has not changed. There's no plans to have them in direct contact with Ebola patients.


We're going to constantly monitor their health while they're down there routinely and regularly. And regardless of what final decision gets made about the return, the post-deployment, they'll obviously be monitored and assessed going forward after they -- after they come home. But whatever that protocol ends up looking like, it's going to result in some monitoring and assessment obviously for at least 21 days.


So no, I know of no plans to change their kit necessarily because of the work that they're doing.


Q: It seems logical if you're going to extend the monitoring, if there are additional fears, that you might want to also do additional protection -- (CROSSTALK)


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I think that your questions, you know, suggest additional fears. I'm not aware of any additional fears. You know, to Phil's question, this is -- this was out of prudence and caution and a conservative approach. It's not atypical for military commanders to take a conservative approach when it comes to force protection. That's what you want. That's what you would expect. But it doesn't indicate additional fears, as you put it.


Q: Admiral Kirby, can you give us some insight into the living conditions of these troops that have been quarantined or monitored or whatever you want to call it? I mean, are they still doing work of some kind? Do they have any entertainment? Or are they just sort of sitting there staring at a wall for the next three weeks?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I would -- actually, I can answer that question just obliquely because I don't have -- I don't have the exact details of their life right now. As I understand it, they are isolated, not in contact with other individuals or their families. At least not person to person. I think they're in contact through electronic means, obviously, with their loved ones, of course, and that they have -- they do have access to recreational activities and the ability to exercise. I'm told they're eating well and, you know, they have television and, you know, it's not they're subsisting quite well is what I understand.


But I don't know exactly where they all are and what the physical infrastructure looks like.


Q: Quick follow up. If these quarantine procedures are kept in place, would this all take place overseas or potentially would troops returning to the U.S. be isolated, you know, somewhere on a U.S. base or another military -- (CROSSTALK)


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Again, well, this kind of gets to Bob's question. I think there's a lot of detail and spadework that still has to be done to work through this. Again, let's keep in mind where we are in the process. There's a recommendation. The secretary is considering it. And then we'll go from there.


Q: When did he get the recommendation --


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Today.


Q: In the recommendation that the chiefs made to the secretary, did they explain in that why they're going beyond the CDC guidelines?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I won't detail the correspondence between the Joint Chiefs and the secretary. I think what I would say is they made -- they made plain their concerns and the reasons why they felt the way they did.


Q: (inaudible) you said the reasons Odierno made the decision is because this was the first batch, out of an abundance of caution. But the chiefs are talking about a recommendation for all forces here on out, not just for this batch. Is that correct?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: That is correct.


Q: But again, you don't know why they're making that recommendation to the secretary?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I do know why, Craig, but I'm not going to detail recommendations -- specifics of recommendations made by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the Secretary of Defense. That's not my place. I wouldn't do that. But -- but did they make -- did they make their point -- did they make their arguments clear? Yes, they did.


Q: Did they address the CDC guidelines and why they aren't adhering to those?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I don't -- again, Craig, I'm just not going to get into specific details about a recommendation from the Joint Chiefs directly to the secretary. That wouldn't be appropriate. They'd made plain their concerns.


Q: But this will presumably affect others. I mean, what the military decides will weigh in on how scientists, health workers, journalists, people who aren't in the military, I imagine that's going to have at least an indirect influence over others in the country and how they're treated. Why would the military not describe the rationale for this kind of position?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I didn't say they didn't describe their rationale. I said I wasn't going to detail it. But the -- the recommendation is about U.S. military troops and only U.S. military troops. That's it. And the Joint Chiefs get paid to look after their troops and their families. That's their job. And the recommendation was in that vein and in that light. It wasn't meant to drive any other public discussion or debate. It wasn't meant to challenge the opinions or other protocols of other agencies inside or outside government. It was simply meant to address their concerns about their people and their families.


Q: May I follow up? I do have to follow up on what he keeps asking you. The Pentagon has said from the beginning that the Ebola program is not classified. I understand that you do not talk about recommendations made in the Tank for the Secretary of Defense. But the U.S. military exists as a public entity in this country.


So, is there -- are you -- is the Pentagon just simply going to continue to refuse to say publicly, since everyone is concerned about Ebola, why the Joint Chiefs of Staff are making this recommendation? Can you say whether there is any science behind it? Or is it just something they want to do?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Barb, you'll find this answer completely unsatisfying, but I'll try it anyway. I speak for Secretary Hagel and for the Defense Department. I do not speak for Chairman Dempsey, for the Joint Chiefs. I will not -- I will not from this podium detail specific recommendations that the Joint Chiefs make to the Secretary of Defense. It would be completely inappropriate. It's not about whether it's classified or not. It's inappropriate. And I won't do that.


I've already provided much more detail than I normally would by -- by acknowledging that the recommendation exists and what it basically came down and said. Normally, I wouldn't even go that far. But it had already been out in media space in such a way that it was unavoidable. I didn't even like doing that much.


I won't -- I just simply can't, you know, go beyond that.


Q: Can't Secretary Hagel talk about what they are telling him? The Joint Chiefs existence is part of this country and is part of the public concern. There are thousands of military families and people all over the country concerned.


You are discussing a matter that is outside the mainstream of what the CDC is saying; outside what the White House is saying; outside of what most public health professionals in this country are saying. And people, I think it's fair to say, would be very interested to know what materials Secretary Hagel is reviewing that leads him to support, which is what you said, a mandatory 21-day quarantine for military people who are part of this country. They do not exist in isolation.


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I said he supports this initial decision made for General Williams and his team. I did not say -- I did not say he supports -- (inaudible). I said he wasn't at a position now where he would oppose that decision. That said, he hasn't made a decision about implementing this force-wide.


And I'm not going to close down the decision space for the secretary at this point in time. He hasn't made a decision.


Now, there are lots of things that go to the secretary's desk from the Joint Chiefs of Staff every single day. And we don't get up here at the podium and talk about those things, whether they're classified or not.


It's just not appropriate, and I'm not going to go in there. Now, once the secretary makes a decision, I will come up here and I will explain it and you'll have all the detail about what decision he made and why he made it. But until there's been a decision made by the secretary of defense for the United States of America, there's really nothing more to say.


It's a recommendation. He's considering it. We'll go from there.


Yes, in the back.


Q: Hi, Admiral Kirby.


Two quick ones. Can I get to ISIL, is that OK?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Sure, yeah, that would be a welcome break.


Q: So, my first question is do you have an update on cost for us, and then the follow up to that is do you have anything on the 150 Peshmerga fighters that have crossed into Turkey, and how the U.S. might coordinate as they're heading into Kobani?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: There's been no change to the estimated costs. It's still around, I think we said 8.3 last week, earlier this week. And that's about where it still is. So, it's still in that seven to ten range that I've talked about before, the million dollars per day.


And I can get you -- I think I have a total figure if you need that, because I know now I have to have that.


Let's see where it is.


So a total of $580 million since the start of airstrikes on August 8th. I don't have an update on the -- on the Peshmerga or the -- yeah, the Peshmerga fighters that you're talking about. I just don't have anything operationally on that today.


Yeah, Christina?


Q: On ISIS. Does the department anticipate forwarding a request for additional money to Congress for 2015 for the ISIS fight?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I think you've heard Secretary Hagel and the chairman talk about this. I think certainly there's going to have to be some considerations going forward, but I wouldn't get ahead of specific budget moves that haven't been made yet.


I think, you know, we've gone to the Hill, we've testified to the operations, and again, Secretary Hagel has been very clear that certainly considerations for added funding are going to have to be part of the calculus going forward. But we're just not in a position right now where we can detail what that would look like, what form it would be, how much it would be, that kind of thing.


Q: Right now, secondly, in light of General Allen's remarks on stemming ISIS's online propaganda, what is the department seeing in terms of recruitment for ISIS, since military action began -- U.S. military action began?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Well, we don't have -- you know, we don't have the methods to garner great specificity about their recruiting efforts. We do still -- we still believe that they are able to recruit, and continue to recruit. They are facing some attrition, obviously, through these operations: not just from the air, but from the ground.


But there's no question that they still possess the ability to reconstitute their manpower and that's just -- again, that's an indication of the strength of their ideology right now, which is why we're working hard to counter that, and the fact that this is going to be a long struggle.


Q: Hard to quantify, but are we seeing an increase in recruitment for ISIS?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I can't -- I just can't give you a measure right now, Kristina. And I don't know that we would really be able to do that with any great accuracy.


They do continue to recruit. There's no question about that. And they -- we know they have the ability to reconstitute some of the manpower that they've lost, but again, that's an indication that this is just going to take time. This ideology is very attractive to -- to some young men, and it's going to take time to get after that.


David?


Q: Is there a clock ticking on Hagel's Ebola decision? In other words, is there a planned redeployment of troops that would force the issue the way that the return of Williams and his staff forced the issue for Odierno?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: No. I think -- I think -- (inaudible) -- don't think he's going to dawdle over this decision; I think -- I think he'll make a decision very soon. But no, there's no a hard clock in terms of a number set coming back that's -- that's going to drive him artificially to an answer.


He's got the recommendation. He got it today. I'm confident that he will come to a decision very soon, and then we'll -- we'll disclose what that is.


Q: Admiral, you say you can't talk about the Joint Chief's recommendation, but can you offer any insight into what the secretary's thinking is to see -- does he have any particular concerns? Why is he not approving the recommendation outright?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: Well, Andrew, he just got it today, so within just a few hours ago, so it's not like he's delaying or anything like that.


I'm not -- I'm not going to get ahead of a decision that he hasn't made. I just -- I don't think that would be appropriate.


Q: (OFF-MIKE) is he concerned that his decision, whether he likes it or not, is going to have serious influence on the public debate, which is based in large part of fear right now.


I know you say this -- your decision is not based on fear, but could the public interpret it that way, and is that playing into his decision?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I think it's safe to say that he's considering a number of factors as we weighs the decision, and certainly, the -- the spillover effect -- you know, to Craig's question, the spillover effect on -- on -- on other agencies and the American people certainly are on his mind.


But his primary responsibility is to take care of the Defense Department, our troops and our families, and that's always been foremost in his mind, and that will, I'm sure, be the most significant factor as he weighs the decision.


Q: Some reports from the Iraqi Kurdish region of -- particularly Iraq Kurdistan region, say that the U.S. is going to establish a military base in Irbil. Can you confirm this, Admiral?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: I don't have anything for you on that today? Sorry.


I'll take one more. Luis?


Q: There was an ISIS propaganda video that was released yesterday. Do you have any -- any information that would suggest that it was authentic?


And it also named you by name in citing mistruths about the ongoing situation there. Do you have any comment on that?


REAR ADM. KIRBY: We -- we're analyzing the video, as we do when they release these kinds of propaganda videos, so we're still in the process of assessing its validity. I don't have any indication -- I've seen no indications that -- that would tell us it's not authentic and that it wasn't shot the way it was -- appeared to -- to
have been shot.


And as for specific mention of me, no, I don't have any comment on that.


I would -- the only thing I would add, though, is that, you know, this is just another example of the barbarity of these people, you know, that they're taking a hostage, a man they've taken captive, and obviously forcing this individual to do this video. I mean, it's just another example of their depravity. But beyond that, I don't think I'll comment.


Thanks, everybody.

PROVIDING GUIDANCE



A U.S. Army trainer, center, provides guidance to an Albanian soldier during the Combined Resolve III exercise on the Hohenfels Training Area in Germany, Oct. 27, 2014. Albania is one of more than a dozen NATO and European partner nations participating in Combined Resolve, a bi-annual exercise that enhances connections personally, professionally, technically and tactically in a multinational brigade training environment.The U.S. soldier s assigned to the Joint Multinational Readiness Center.

SEAHAWK TAKEOFF



An MH-60S Seahawk helicopter from Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 21 prepares to take off from the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu during routine flight operations in the South China Sea, Oct. 29, 2014. The Peleliu is the lead ship in the Peleliu Amphibious Ready Group commanded by U.S. Navy Capt. Heidi Agle, and is conducting joint forces exercises in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of responsibility.

PROPELLER MAINTENANCE



U.S. Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Andrew Laney performs maintenance on the propeller of a landing craft air cushion aboard the amphibious dock landing ship USS Fort McHenry in the Atlantic Ocean, Oct. 27, 2014. The Fort McHenry is underway as part of the Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready Group conducting composite training unit exercises with the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

DoD CONTRACTS


NAVY
 

Lockheed Martin Corp., Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co., Fort Worth, Texas, is being awarded a $391,607,952 cost-plus-incentive-fee contract to provide recurring sustainment support for delivered air systems for the F-35 Lightning II program including, but not limited to: ground maintenance activities; action request resolution; depot activation activities; Automatic Logistics Information System operations and maintenance; reliability, maintainability and health management implementation and support; supply chain management; and activities to provide and support pilot and maintainer initial training for the U.S Air Force, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Navy, and international partners. Work will be performed at Fort Worth, Texas (35 percent); El Segundo, California (25 percent); Warton, United Kingdom (20 percent); Orlando, Florida (10 percent); Nashua, New Hampshire (5 percent); and Baltimore, Maryland (5 percent), and is expected to be completed by Nov. 30, 2015. Fiscal 2014 and 2015 aircraft procurement (Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps) funds, and international partner funds in the amount of $360,313,730, are being obligated at time of award, none of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was not competitively procured according to FAR 6.302-1. The Naval Air System Command, Patuxent River, Maryland is the contract activity (N00019-15-C-0031).
 

Lockheed Martin Corp., Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co., Fort Worth, Texas, is being awarded a $220,748,611 modification to a previously awarded cost-plus-incentive-fee contract (N00019-12-C-0070). This modification provides for the System Development and Demonstration Phase I Increment 2, to continue support of F-35A Conventional Take Off and Landing (CTOL) air system for the government of Israel under the foreign military sales program. This modification includes the development and demonstration of the hardware and software for the Israel F-35A CTOL air system. Work will be performed at Fort Worth, Texas, and is expected to be completed in March 2019. Foreign military sales funds in the amount of $77,777,441 are being obligated on this award, none of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity.
 

Rockwell Collins, Inc., Government Systems, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, is being awarded a $101,069,955 firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract for the procurement of AN/ARC-210 electronic protection radio equipment in support of domestic and foreign military sales (FMS) aircraft. This contract consists of a maximum of 1,160 radios inclusive of potential FMS sales: 920 associated ancillary equipment; five training sessions; 15 FMS Have Quick software media downloads; 140 associated FMS license and royalty fees; 500 FMS standard commercial warranties; 250 receiver-transmitter conversions; 10 failure analyses; and one lot for data. Work will be performed in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and is expected to be completed in September 2015. Contract funds will not be obligated at the time of award. This contract was not was not competitively procured pursuant to FAR 6.302-1 The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland is the contracting activity (N00019-15-D-5501).
 

Raytheon Co., Integrated Defense Systems, Tewksbury, Massachusetts, is being awarded a $7,848,850 modification to a previously awarded contract (N00024-10-C-5126) to exercise options for integration, production and life cycle support planning and management services in support of the DDG 1000 program. Work will be performed in Portsmouth, Rhode Island (80 percent), and in Bath, Maine (20 percent), and is expected to be completed by December 2015. Fiscal 2015 shipbuilding and conversion (Navy) funding in the amount of $1,666,921 will be obligated at time of award. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, District of Columbia, is the contracting activity.
 

U.S. TRANSPORTATION COMMAND
 

Twenty-four transportation carriers have each been awarded indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity, fixed-price with economic price adjustment contracts for transportation protective services. The transportation carriers are: TNI (USA), Inc., doing business as AATCO, Duenweg, Missouri (HTC711-15-D-R002); Ace Doran Hauling Rigging Co, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio (HTC711-15-D-R003); AAT Carriers, Inc.,* Chattanooga, Tennessee (HTC711-15-D-R004); Baggett Transportation Co.,* Birmingham, Alabama (HTC711-15-D-R005); Bennett Motor Express, Inc., McDonough, Georgia (HTC711-15-D-R006); T. F. Boyle Transportation, Inc.,* Billerica, Massachusetts (HTC711-15-D-R007); Chalich Trucking, Inc.,* Ramsey, Minnesota (HTC711-15-D-R008); Cole Motorsports, Inc.,* Douglasville, Georgia (HTC711-15-D-R009); FedEx Custom Critical, Uniontown, Ohio (HTC711-15-D-R010); Green Valley Transportation Co.,* Tracy California (HTC711-15-D-R011); Landstar Inway, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida (HTC711-15-D-R012); Landstar Express America, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida (HTC711-15-D-R013); Landstar Ranger, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida (HTC711-15-D-R014); McCollisters Transportation Systems Inc., Burlington, New Jersey (HTC711-15-D-R015); Mercer Transportation Co., Louisville, Kentucky (HTC711-15-D-R016); Martin Logistics,* Canton, Ohio (HTC711-15-D-R017); NEI Transport LLC., Duenweg, Missouri (HTC711-15-D-R018); Northern Neck Transfer, Inc.,* King George, Virginia (HTC711-15-D-R019); Prestera Trucking Co.,* South Point, Ohio (HTC711-15-D-R020); PTS Worldwide Inc.,* Somonauk, Illinois (HTC711-15-D-R021); Panther II Transportation, Inc., Seville, Ohio (HTC711-15-D-R022); R and R Trucking, Inc., Duenweg, Missouri (HTC711-15-D-R023); Secured Land Transport, Glendale, Arizona (HTC711-15-D-R024); and Bedrock, doing business as Tri-State Motor Transit, Joplin, Missouri (HTC711-15-D-R025). The total cumulative face value of the program is $205,971,494. Work will be performed throughout the continental United States, Alaska and Canada, with an expected completion date of Oct. 27, 2015. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2015 transportation working capital funds to be obligated by individual military services, Defense Logistics Agency, and government agency transportation officers/ordering officers. The U.S. Transportation Command Directorate of Acquisition, Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, is the contracting activity.


AIR FORCE
 

Raytheon Technical Services Co., LLC, Indianapolis, Indiana, has been awarded a $35,000,000 indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract for Joint Miniature Munitions Bomb Rack Unit (JMM BRU) aircraft integration and lifecycle technical support. Contractor will provide aircraft integration and life cycle technical support throughout the technology development and engineering, manufacturing and development (EMD); and EMD F-15 flight test and production phases. Work will be performed at Indianapolis, Indiana, and is expected to be completed byAug. 31, 2021. This award is the result of a sole-source acquisition. Fiscal 2014 Navy research, development, test and evaluation funds in the amount of $634,398 are being obligated at the time of award. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, is the contracting activity (FA8672-15-D-0054).
 

Credence Management Solutions, LLC, Herndon, Virginia, has been awarded a $29,852,448 cost-reimbursable contract for advisory and assistance services (A&AS) for the Battle Management Directorate - Distributed Common Ground System. Contractor will provide A&AS support for all the weapon systems, platforms, cells, and capabilities managed by the C21SR Division in support of Air Force Life Cycle Management Center Battle Management. Work will be performed predominantly at Robins Air Force Base, Georgia, and will have some additional performance at Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, and Langley Air Force Base, Virginia, and is expected to be completed byDec. 5, 2019. This award is the result of a competitive acquisition solicited as a Fair Opportunities Notice to Pool 3 awardees of the General Services Administration One Acquisition Solution for Integrated Services Small Business indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract, with 14 offers received. Fiscal year 2015 operations and maintenance funds in the amount of $50,000 are being obligated at the time of award. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, is the contracting activity (FA8622-15-F-8100).
 

Boeing Co., Defense Space and Security division, Kent, Washington, has been awarded a not to exceed $25,640,000 firm-fixed-price, fixed-price-incentive-fee, cost-plus-fixed-fee for the Japan Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) mission control unit design and production program to upgrade four E-767 aircraft and three ground support facilities. Contractor will provide procurement of mission computing, electronic support easures, traffic alert and collision avoidance system, interrogator friend or foe transponder, next generation IFF, automatic identification system, and data link upgrades. Work will be performed at Kent, Washington, and is expected to be completed by Feb. 28, 2015. The contract is 100percent foreign military sales. This award is the result of a sole-source acquisition. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, is the contracting activity (FA8730-15-C-0003).
 

Spokesman: No DoD Decision on Monitoring Returning Troops


By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Oct. 28, 2014 - Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has not made a decision on a Joint Chiefs of Staff recommendation for how to handle troops returning from areas affected by Ebola in West Africa, a Pentagon spokesman said today.

Joint Chiefs Chairman Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey and the rest of the chiefs have recommended "a regimented program of 21 days of controlled, supervised monitoring for all troops returning from Ebola response efforts in West Africa," Pentagon Press Secretary Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby said during a news conference.

Hagel has the recommendation, Kirby said, but has made no decision. "The secretary shares the concerns by the chiefs about the safety and well-being not only of our troops, but also of their families," he added, "and he appreciates the thoughtfulness and the gravity of the recommendations Chairman Dempsey sent to him."

When the secretary makes a decision, Kirby said, he will announce it.

In the meantime, he added, Hagel supports the decision made by Army leadership to place Maj. Gen. Darryl Williams and his team from U.S. Army Africa under the same "quarantine-like" program.

The secretary received the recommendation today, Kirby said. "I don't have any specifics for you on how that would work," the admiral said, noting that a lot of work remains to be done should the secretary decide to implement it throughout the Defense Department.


Primary Candidates Support Jeff Prang for Assessor



The City of Bell's Mayor, Nestor Valencia, credited with steering the scandal-plagued city back to respectability, has joined 4 other primary candidates endorsing Jeff Prang for Los Angeles County Assessor in the Nov. 4th General Election.

"Jeff is the only candidate that can bring the necessary experience and integrity to the Los Angeles County Assessor's Office," Bell Mayor Nestor E. Valencia said. "I know about corruption, having to fight it here in my beloved City of Bell and Jeff Prang has been part of the reform effort at the Assessor's Office for nearly three years now, and we need him to continue his work. This is not the time for an amateur. Los Angeles County needs Jeff Prang as its next assessor."

Valencia's father worked in the same factory until his retirement and his mother worked at home raising five children. They instilled the foundation for education, hard work, honesty and a spiritual life. Attributes shared by Mr. Prang, who's married to his long-time partner, Ray, a public school teacher.

"I am honored and humbled by the support of Mayor Valencia," Prang said. "Mayor Valencia understands better than most the daunting task of righting a corrupt and damaged ship. He has done that in the City of Bell. I have helped to do that in the Assessor's Office for nearly three years now, and I will continue to do that when elected your Los Angeles County Assessor."

Mayor Valencia was referring to the scandal that hit the office nearly three years ago, when Jeff was brought in to stabilize the office. Jeff played a pivotal role in reforming the Assessor's Office when Assessor John Noguez was indicted on corruption charges. In 2012, Mr. Prang orchestrated Noguez' exit from the Office, and facilitated the appointment of a reform administrator by the Board of Supervisors. As a key member of the reform administration, Prang played a crucial role in implementing reforms, including a ban on campaign contributions to Assessor candidates from tax agents who do business with the Office, and from Assessor employees, and implementing fiscal and management audits. 

Of Prang, Omar Haroon, a leading Primary Election candidate said, "Jeff's leadership role in the office was crucial to getting the office running smoothly again. This office needs to be lead by someone with knowledge and experience, that person is Jeff Prang."

Candidate John Loew stated, "It is my firm belief that Jeffrey Prang is not only the most qualified and competent Assessor candidate, but Jeffrey also has the vision and foresight to lead and inspire the office through the many changes the office will be undergoing." 

Mayor Valencia joins four others who ran in the June Primary for the Assessor seat. There were 12, including Mr. Prang, vying for the seat in the primary, and in an unprecedented move, four of those have now endorsed Jeff. They say he is the only one capable of running this complicated, tax-based office. The other candidates are: Omar Haroon, Krish Kumar, Brilliant Manyare, and John Loew.

U.S. Airdrops Aid in Support of Iraqi Humanitarian Efforts


From a U.S. Central Command News Release

TAMPA, Fla., Oct. 28, 2014 - U.S. Air Force C-130 aircraft conducted an airdrop yesterday near Al Asad Air Base, Iraq, to provide humanitarian aid for delivery by Iraqi security forces to members of the Iraqi Albu Nimr tribe, U.S. Central Command officials reported today.

In response to a request from the Iraqi government, the aircraft delivered more than 7,000 halal meals, Centcom officials said. Iraqi forces retrieved the meals and delivered them to the tribe, who recently relocated from their homes near Hit, Iraq, to flee aggression by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant terrorists, they added.

The C-130 aircraft are deployed to the Centcom area of responsibility, and they left the airdrop zone safely, officials said.

Technological Dominance Threatened By Fiscal Uncertainty



By Claudette Roulo
DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Oct. 28, 2014 - The Defense Department is passionate about technological superiority, but this longtime advantage is now being challenged by factors including budget uncertainty and complacency, the assistant secretary of defense for acquisitions said today.

"Our superiority has been eroding, because the world has been studying us. And it's adapted to what we have delivered or are developing," Katrina McFarland told an audience at the TechAmerica Foundation's Vision Forecast Conference here.

Ongoing budget uncertainty is threatening research and development programs that might find new ways of technological dominance, she said. "Our superiority is directly related to the level of R&D in our investment pipeline," McFarland explained, and the current budget climate makes it difficult to keep this pipeline open.

The nation's technological superiority is not assured if R&D is treated as a variable cost and more time is lost to budgetary delays, the assistant secretary told the audience. "Time is not recoverable," she added.

A global competition

The United States is now in a global technological competition for human resources, financial resources and basic research resources, McFarland said, a climate fraught with incredible challenges in this area of technology.

"We've become complacent and risk-averse," she said. "We rely on history, and we believe that ... we're OK because we've been dominant for decades. The problem is that is no longer factual, and we are seeing clear evidence that we have a challenge in front of us, [and] what we must do is meet it head-on."

The country relies on offset strategies -- technological solutions to challenges that might otherwise be overwhelming, McFarland said. In the 1950s, the Eisenhower administration relied on nuclear weapons and long-range airpower instead of trying to match the Soviets weapon for weapon and troop for troop. More recently, precision-guided munitions, stealth aircraft and GPS have shaped conflicts from the Gulf War to today's campaigns in Iraq and Syria.

"So what's our next offset strategy?" she asked. "How are we going to address this future?"

At the same time the nation's technological dominance is being threatened, budgets are increasingly restricted, McFarland said.

"We're in a period of uncertainty, and it's reflected everywhere around us," the assistant secretary said, noting that sequestration spending cuts will resume in fiscal year 2016 unless Congress changes the law.

"Sequestration for us is horrendous. ... This isn't rhetoric. This is real for us. Funding for the accounts that exercise our design engineers [has] declined nearly 50 percent in the last five years. That's not trivial. That's engineers -- that's the basic foundation of innovation."

Invest to survive

History has shown that investment in the future during lean times -- in R&D, specifically -- is a predictor of who will best survive a budgetary downturn, McFarland said. So to guarantee the nation is prepared when the world emerges from the current period of fiscal uncertainty, she added, the Defense Department must first address the existing challenges to national security, "or we will not be reality in future -- they will be."

Then, she said, "we need to address affordability in current and future systems, and we must develop a technological surprise."

The eight focus areas of the Defense Department's Better Buying Power 3.0 initiative have technological dominance as a common goal, McFarland said. BBP 3.0 seeks to develop technical excellence and innovation, she added.

"It doesn't eliminate 1.0 or 2.0, it builds upon it, narrowing its scope to focus on our future," the assistant secretary said.

The acquisition community is concentrated on the future in addition to today, she said. "Our defense markets are cyclical, but we must have an upturn. It's eventual, but it will happen. History has shown us.

"This country is renowned throughout the world for [its innovation]," the assistant secretary continued, "and we need to continue that in order to retain where we are and our freedoms."

And that includes taking more research risks, McFarland said.

"If we want to continue to be the superior force, we need to take chances, and taking risks is not optional," she added.


DoD Identifies Marine Casualty



The Department of Defense announced today the reclassification of a previously reported death of a Marine in support of Operation Inherent Resolve.

Cpl. Jordan L. Spears, 21, of Memphis, Indiana, was lost at sea Oct. 1 while conducting flight operations in the North Arabian Gulf. He was initially classified as a non-global war on terrorism casualty.

Spears was assigned to Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron-163, Marine Aircraft Group 16, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, California.

For more information, media may contact the I Marine Expeditionary Force Public Affairs Office at (760) 763-7039 or after hours at(760) 207-5865.
 

Pentagon Spokesman: Iraqi Forces Make Gains Against ISIL


By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Oct. 28, 2014 - Iraqi security forces including the Kurdish peshmerga have been making incremental progress against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant terrorists inside Iraq, Pentagon Press Secretary Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby said today.

In the past day and a half, Iraqi forces have made gains in many parts of the country, Kirby said at a Pentagon news conference.

"In central Iraq, [Iraqi security forces] operations to expand Iraqi control of territory beyond the Bayji oil refinery are making progress," the admiral added.

Iraqi forces also are advancing against ISIL in Amiriyah. With the assistance of coalition airstrikes, Kirby said, Iraqi forces have achieved success in countering ISIL fighters southwest of Baghdad as well.

Regaining ground from ISIL

In northern Iraq, a planned peshmerga offensive against ISIL forces has retaken Zumar, a town about 40 miles southwest of Mosul, and the surrounding area. "This is the fourth offensive operation in which peshmerga forces have been able to regain control of ground from ISIL, including Mosul Dam, Sardek Mountain and Rebiya Gate," Kirby said.

Iraqi, Kurdish and coalition forces have targeted specific ISIL tactical locations to impede the terror group's ability to shoot, maneuver and communicate near Mosul Dam, Zumar, Bayji, and Baghdad, the admiral said. "This has included the destruction of multiple fighting positions, at least eight ISIL vehicles, to include an ISIL tank, a staging area and a logistics base," he said.

Major Iraqi offensive will take time

A major Iraqi offensive against ISIL will take some time, the press secretary acknowledged. Still, he said, "these are encouraging reports that highlight Iraq's determination to take the fight to ISIL." The ground and air attacks on ISIL have disrupted the group and forced them to change their tactics to avoid being targeted, he added.

In Syria, the situation in Kobani remains tenuous, Kirby said. Coalition airstrikes there over the last 24 hours destroyed several ISIL fighting positions and struck ISIL fighters.

"Despite these positive developments, it is important to point out that ISIL remains a very determined enemy," the admiral said. "They continue to reinforce areas where they've been losing ground, such as in Kobani, Anbar province, and in the vicinity of Mosul Dam, and they continue to threaten innocent civilians wherever they are."

AIRCRAFT MAINTENANCE


10/28/2014 03:56 PM CDT

U.S. Air Force Master Sgt. Rio Wendell services an A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft on Lajes Field, Azores, Portugal, Oct. 23, 2014. Lajes Field enables the movement of warfighters, warplanes and global communications to combatant commanders and supporting joint, coalition and NATO operations as part of U.S. and allied air expeditionary forces. Wendell is a crew chief assigned to the Michigan Air National Guard's 127th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron.

FUELING UP


10/28/2014 01:51 PM CDT

Air Force Senior Airman Crystal Cash refuels an F-15 during exercise Vigilant Shield 15 over the United States, Oct. 20, 2014. The annual exercise is designed to integrate Defense Department and civil response in support of the national strategy of aerospace warning and control, defense support of civil authorities and homeland defense.

CROSS OVER


10/28/2014 01:51 PM CDT

Pilots from the Air Force Thunderbirds air demonstration squadron perform the crossover break maneuver during a practice show in Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 25, 2014.

SIDE STROKE


10/28/2014 01:51 PM CDT

A soldier practices swimming techniques during a combat water survival test on Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., Oct. 17, 2014. The test is used to assess a soldier's swimming capability and train him or her for maritime operations.

GENERAL QUARTERS


10/28/2014 01:51 PM CDT

Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Zachary Turner tends a fire hose during a general quarters drill aboard the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis in Bremerton, Wash., Oct. 27, 2014. The Stennis is undergoing a docking planned incremental availability maintenance period at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility.

HOOKING UP


10/28/2014 02:10 PM CDT

U.S. Navy Seaman Cornesha Weston attaches a span wire during a replenishment-at-sea with the Military Sealift Command USNS Leroy Grumman aboard the guided-missile destroyer USS Roosevelt in the Mediterranean Sea, Oct. 23, 2014. Roosevelt is deployed as a part of the George H.W. Bush Carrier Strike Group supporting maritime security operations.

Improving Your ‘Lines of Gratification’

6 Tips for Improving Your ‘Lines of Gratification’
‘The Michael Jordan of Lung Surgery’ Lists 
Principles that Reliably Yield Success

As we enter the year’s final quarter, Dr. Robert J. Cerfolio, a world-renowned cardiothoracic surgeon, says it’s never too early to think about self-improvement for the New Year … and this year.

“Habitual procrastination can really hurt you in the long run because waiting to take care of something that’s obviously important to you – health, money, family matters – weighs on your subconscious,” says Dr. Cerfolio, known as “the Michael Jordan of lung surgery.”

Understanding one’s personal “line of gratification” is the foundation for sticking to self-improvement goals, he says.

“There are many kinds of lines of gratification,” he says. “For some, they’re the number of zeroes in their bank statement; for others, the curves of their muscles after they leave the gym. It’s good and healthy to look back on your hard work and admire what you have accomplished before moving on to the next task.”

Dr. Cerfolio, author of “Super Performing at Work and at Home: The Athleticism of Surgery and Life,” shares tips on how to make those lines of gratification more impressive.

•  Be an early riser. The main reason operating rooms hum into action at 7 a.m. is tied to human physiology; the bodies of patients are better able to handle the stress of surgery at that time.

“People are generally better off getting work done early in the day when we’re better prepared for stress and performance,” he says. “And getting a job done early frees you up later in the day.”

•  Love what you do. Why wouldn’t you want to take ownership, responsibility and pride in what you do for a living? When you treat a job as only a means to a paycheck, you are missing the point. If your job isn’t the one you’d really love to have, don’t make it worse with a negative attitude. Instead, make it your own. Make it a point of personal integrity and principle to challenge yourself to achieve something every day. After all, 40 hours a week is a long time to stay anywhere.

•  Ask yourself: Did I really try my best? “I tried my best” is a common refrain from those who haven’t reached their goals. An honest response you can ask yourself is, “Am I sure?” This question is not about being overly critical. It’s simply about realizing that, if you had practiced or studied an extra 10 minutes each day, you would’ve been that much closer to your goals.

•  Set specific, measurable goals.Results define goals. Every individual should have clear goals that are objective and measurable. Goals such as “to be happy,” “to do well at work” or “to get along” are too nebulous. To be successful, you have to be able to define your goals by measurable results.

•  Find the high ground. In anything you do, aspire to live up to the noblest, highest aspect of your job. Certain jobs – such as police work, firefighting, teaching or working in health care – are service oriented, so it’s easier to feel good about your contributions. Look for the contributions you’re making in your job and take pride in what you’re doing to make the world a little better.

•  Be the go-to guy or girl. This takes time, practice and the confidence necessary to want the ball in a critical situation. Being the go-to guy or girl means being willing to take responsibility and risk failing. A go-to person is also willing to speak up about problems or changes necessary in a business or organization, and suggest solutions.

About Robert J. Cerfolio, MD, MBA

Robert J. Cerfolio, MD, MBA, is the James H. Estes Family Endowed Chair of Lung Cancer Research and Full Professor Chief of Thoracic Surgery at the University of Alabama in Birmingham. He received his medical degree from the University of Rochester School of Medicine, surgical training at the Mayo Clinic and at Cornell-Sloan Kettering hospital, and has been in practice for more than 26 years. The author of “Super Performing at Work and at Home,” Cerfolio, who was a First Team Academic All-American baseball player in college, is a world-renowned chest surgeon and recognized as one of the busiest and best thoracic surgeons in the world.

Face of Defense: Chaplain Fights Cancer on Own Terms


By Army Staff Sgt. Mary Junell
North Carolina National Guard

RALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 28, 2014 - On Oct. 12, Army Chaplain (Maj.) Melissa Culbreth sat laughing and joking in a chair on the front porch of the farm where she works in Franklinton, North Carolina. The North Carolina National Guard chaplain's signature red hair was styled into five braids.

Click photo for screen-resolution image
Friends braid the air of North Carolina National Guard Chaplain (Maj.) Melissa Culbreth ahead of a head shaving party in her honor. U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Mary Junell
 
(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.

The porch was full of friends, family and fellow soldiers watching and waiting for the braids to be cut off and collected.

Army Sgt. 1st Class John Setera, who had deployed to Iraq with Culbreth in 2009, draped a black hairdresser's cape around her and grabbed the clippers. Chunks of Culbreth's hair fell down the front of the cape and onto the floor at her feet.

"I wanted to take my hair on my own terms," Culbreth said, "instead of letting the chemo take it."

This was the second party the chaplain has held to shave her head shortly after starting chemotherapy for breast cancer. The first was in March 2010, when she was less than two months home from a deployment to Iraq with the 30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team.

"I'm not sure which is going to be harder -- not knowing what is going to happen over the next 18 weeks, or knowing what is going to happen over the next 18 weeks," she said.

Third diagnosis

Culbreth, who now serves as the brigade chaplain for North Carolina National Guard's 449th Theater Aviation Brigade, began her most recent round of chemotherapy the week before her party. This is her third diagnosis and her third round of chemotherapy.

"I know what chemo is like, because I've done it," Culbreth said. "To know I'm going to be doing that again, and going through all the side effects. Again. Right now, that's probably the hardest part."

At the head-shaving party Culbreth had in 2010, some 17 people shaved their heads to show their support. At this party, four people shaved their heads, and many had a strip of their hair dyed pink. Culbreth said she has lost track of the total number of people who were not able to make it to the party who have done the same.

"It's been cool," she said. "It's been people from a girl I went to middle school with and high school with, to soldiers I deployed with to Iraq, to present-day folks that I served with in Charis Foundation and worked with as therapists."

About 30 people gathered at the farm to celebrate Culbreth and support her in her fight, including Army Sgt. Carrie MacCollum of the 1132nd Military Police Company, another of the soldiers who deployed with Culbreth, in 2009.

The boss of the situation

"She's being the boss of the situation," MacCollum said. "She's not letting cancer beat her; she's beating cancer. She took it upon herself to shave her head, and she's taking her hair, not cancer. So she's beating this, and we're all here to support her with that. We're beating it with her."

Culbreth spent the evening surrounded by her family of friends and soldiers she draws on for support.

"The military is my family," Culbreth said. "That's who I have depended on since I got in, in 2006. They are my brothers and sisters. I wouldn't know what to do. Some of the first people I told were buddies that I deployed with. My unit, my brothers and sisters in the Guard, my participation in the 30th Infantry Division Association, those are the people I depend on. The whole 'Guard is family' thing seems like a pithy saying, but I'm living proof that it's more than that -- that it's true and it's honest, or there wouldn't be so many people here tonight."

Culbreth has spent eight years in the North Carolina National Guard as a chaplain, being part of the support system for other soldiers. Sometimes being a chaplain feels as if she is invisible, she said, but at the party, she added, she realized how many people care.

"You're the fire extinguisher -- break in case of emergency. When [life gets hard], everybody wants you there, but sometimes you wonder if people notice in the meantime, and the answer to that is yes, because tonight shows people care. And that's really important to me."

Happy 128th birthday to the Lady Liberty! On this day in 1886,...



Happy 128th birthday to the Lady Liberty! On this day in 1886, the Statue of Liberty was officially dedicated, becoming a universal symbol of freedom and democracy. In 1924, it was designated as a National Monument.