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Gates Visits Troops in Washington State
By Rachel Young Special to American Forces Press Service
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FORT LEWIS, Wash. , July 8, 2008 – Fort Lewis soldiers received a visit
from Defense Secretary Robert Gates this week, as he spent yesterday
and today talking with soldiers, airmen and their families.
 Defense
Secretary Robert M. Gates and Army Col. Harry Tunnell, 5th Brigade, 2nd
Infantry Division, look into a Stryker transport vehicle while on a
tour of 5th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, on Fort Lewis, Wash., July
8, 2008. Defense Department photo by U.S. Air Force Tech Sgt Jerry
Morrison (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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Gates, who lives near Mount Vernon, Wash., when he is not at the
Pentagon, stopped by Fort Lewis and McChord Air Force Base for a visit
on his way back to Washington, D.C., after the Independence Day
holiday.
Gates
visited wounded warriors at Madigan Army Medical Center, talked with
Army Rangers, McChord airmen and some Fort Lewis spouses, including a
few who had just given birth at Madigan.
“It’s been very
useful,” Gates told reporters this morning after receiving a briefing
in the Intelligence Operations Facility. “The conversations with NCOs
and their wives are always instructive, and I’m always impressed with
their dedication and their commitment.”
Gates praised Army
spouses for their commitment and affection for the military, saying
that theirs might be even stronger than that of their soldiers.
The
secretary also received a briefing from Army Col. Harry D. Tunnell,
commander of 5th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, and Stryker soldiers
from 4th and 5th brigades, 2nd Infantry Division, about their vehicles.
Gates, accompanied by Army Lt. Gen. Charles H. Jacoby Jr., commander of
1st Corps and Fort Lewis, and Lt. Gen. Peter Chiarelli, military
assistant to the secretary of defense, toured four Strykers: a
commander’s vehicle, an infantry carrier vehicle, a mobile gun system
and an engineer squad vehicle.
While receiving his briefing on
the mobile gun system, Gates got a fresh-from-the-battlefield
perspective from Capt. Christopher Lilley, a vehicle commander and
platoon leader in Company B, 2nd Battalion, 23rd Infantry Regiment,
part of 4th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division. Lilley and his soldiers
returned from Iraq last month, where they were the first to use the
mobile gun system in combat. Lilley said he was pleased to be able to
share his knowledge with the secretary of defense.
“It was
very nice,” he said. “I think he saw the point we were trying to get
across to him, ... how important this vehicle is for the infantry
commanders and also the infantry to have this weapon system at their
hands to help them out and support them in their mission and provide
the security and firepower that they need.”
A senior official explained that Gates visits troops often to get a feeling for what is on their minds.
“We do this as much a possible,” said Geoff Morrell, the Pentagon press secretary.
Gates finds it useful to gather troops and spend time talking to them and allowing them to ask candid questions, Morrell said.
(Rachel Young is a reporter with Fort Lewis’ Northwest Guardian.) |
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