Lisa Ferdinando at the DoD
News offers the below piece:
WASHINGTON, Feb. 16, 2018 —
The global successes of the U.S. Special Operations Command and the services’
special operations forces are due to their extraordinary people and the support
from Congress, senior special operations officials told lawmakers yesterday on
Capitol Hill.
Owen West, assistant
secretary of defense for special operations and low-intensity conflict, told
the House Armed Services Committee’s emerging threats and capabilities
subcommittee that funding for Socom amounts to about 1.9 percent of the defense
budget, enabling a presence in 90 countries.
"This capital
expenditure fuels the current fight, but it must also result in long-term
competitive advantage,” West told the House panel during a hearing on the
fiscal year 2019 budget request for special operations forces and Socom.
‘Outsized Effects Around the
Globe’
West and the Socom commander,
Army Gen. Raymond A. Thomas III, thanked Congress for its support through
funding the command and approving authorities for operations.
Socom’s budget was $11.8
billion for fiscal year 2017, Thomas said. The projected budget for fiscal 2018
is $12.3 billion, he added, noting that the figure is projected to be $13.6
billion for fiscal 2019.
The support from Congress,
West and Thomas said, has allowed special operations forces to make significant
contributions, such as contributing to the defeat of the Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria.
"Special operations
forces played an integral role as part of the joint force in the destruction of
ISIS' physical caliphate in Syria and Iraq,” Thomas said. "We continue to
have outsized effects around the globe, defeating our enemies, training,
equipping and enabling our friends and allies, rapidly transforming the
organization to be prepared for all future threats and caring for our fallen,
wounded and ill and their families.”
Recruiting Members for Elite
Forces
West said he and Thomas are
partners in making the command a “more efficient enterprise that supports the
National Defense Strategy and the secretary of defense.”
Explaining that only 30
percent of high school students are eligible for military service, West
underscored the importance of exploring “unconventional techniques and new
pools” to recruit the elite force of men and women.
"Today's battlefield has
challenged the traditional definition of a combatant, successfully operating in
the global contact layer demands that we build a diverse force,” he said. “The
[special operations forces] entry standards are high, but America has always
encouraged its pioneers." The most important capital investment is human,
West said.
"The task is to remain
unpredictable but expansive, pushing the competitive boundaries in ways our
enemies do not expect," he added. "To sustain this expansion, we must
be fiscally hawkish, reducing asymmetry by adopting a focus on return on
investment."
‘Decisive Advantage’ in the
People
Socom and the special
operations forces are “relentlessly focused on winning our current fights and
preparing for all future threats facing our nation," Thomas said. He told
the subcommittee that members of the command and formations are better than
they have ever been, thriving under pressure, executing the toughest missions
and achieving success.
“Socom continues to enhance
our role as part of the joint force in assuring allies and improving their
capabilities in the face of aggressive regional hegemons, reinforcing host
nation and law enforcement efforts in the Western Hemisphere in the defense of
our national boundaries, and preparing for contingencies,” the general said.
The successes, he said, are
directly attributable to “recruiting and training amazing Americans, outfitting
with them with the best equipment and training in the world and empowering them
with the requisite authorities to defeat our adversaries.”
Thomas said the people
“continue to be the decisive advantage." He paid tribute to those who have
made the ultimate sacrifice.
Note: In the above Navy photo
taken by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Mat Murch East Coast-based
Navy SEALs participate in a nighttime exercise during TRIDENT 17 on May 4, 2017
at the John C. Stennis Space Center, Mississippi.
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