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Army Values

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Title: Army Values


1
Task Learn, discuss the Army Values Conditions
Classroom Standards Apply Army Values to all
situations.
2
The Seven Army Core Values
  • Loyalty
  • Duty
  • Respect
  • Selfless Service
  • Honor
  • Integrity
  • Personal Courage

3
Army Skills
  • Throughout history, soldiers and their leaders
    have always been expected to know the profession
    of arms and be skillful at it.

John O. Marsh Jr., Former Secretary of the Army,
1981-1989
4
A Foundation of Character
Without character - particularly in the
military profession - failure in peace, disaster
in war, or, at best, mediocrity in both will
result.
General Matthew B. Ridgway
5
Use Army Core Values to Focus Your Skills
  • In peacetime, we practice tactics, strategy,
    and weapons firing. We must do the same with our
    values.

General Donn A. Starry
6
Army Core Values Form a System
  • Our Army values form a system of belief and
    behavior of what is proper conduct for a soldier
    of the US Army.

7
Remember the Army Values L-D-R-S-H-I-P
Loyalty
  • Bear true faith and allegiance to the U.S.
    Constitution, the Army, your unit, and other
    soldiers.

Duty
Fulfill your obligations.
Respect
Treat people as they should be treated.
Selfless Service
Put the welfare of the Nation, the Army, and
your subordinates before your own.
Honor
Live up to all the Army Values
Integrity
Do whats right, legally and morally.
Personal Courage
Face fear, danger, or adversity both physical
or moral.
8
Values Defined
  • The social principles, goals, or standards held
    or accepted by an individual, class, or society.
  • The abstract concepts of what is right,
    worthwhile, or desirable principles or standards.

9
Values come from..
  • Mass media
  • Religion
  • Family
  • Community programs
  • Experiences (major source)

Our behavior is based on our values, while our
priorities reflect our values and thus shape our
behavior.
10
Loyalty
  • Army loyalty entails the correct priority of
    soldiers' obligations and commitments to the
    Constitution, the Army, the unit, other soldiers,
    family, friends, and, finally, yourselves.
  • Loyalty demands commitment.

11
Duty
  • Army duty entails fulfilling professional, legal,
    and moral obligations.
  • Duty means accomplishing all your assigned tasks
    to the best of your ability.
  • Duty requires a willingness to accept full
    responsibility for the actions of ones self, and
    those of ones subordinates.

12
Respect
  • Army respect means to promote dignity,
    consideration of others, fairness, and equal
    opportunity. It includes a sensitivity to and
    regard for the feelings and needs of others and
    an awareness of the effect of a person's behavior
    on them.
  • Respect also involves the idea of treating people
    justly.

13
Selfless Service
  • Army selfless service signifies action based on
    proper priorities. It places service above self.
    The welfare of the nation and the accomplishment
    of the mission come ahead of the personal safety
    of the individual or the unit.
  • Selfless service requires you to give credit
    where credit is due, never unjustly taking credit
    for something you did not do.

14
Honor
  • Army honor demands adherence to a public moral
    code, not protection of a reputation. Honor is a
    moral virtue--a state of being or a state of
    character that people possess by upholding the
    values that make up the Army's public moral code.
  • Honor depends upon the exemplary display of
    integrity, courage, loyalty, respect, selfless
    service, and duty.

15
Integrity
  • Army integrity means possessing high personal
    moral standards and being honest in word and
    deed.
  • It involves the consistent adherence of action to
    one's personal moral beliefs.
  • The goal over time is for your private moral code
    of integrity to converge with the publicly
    declared code of honor for the Army.

16
Personal Courage
  • Army personal courage manifests physical and
    moral bravery. It depicts the military virtue
    that enables us to face fear, danger, or
    adversity no matter what the situation is,
    whether it be physical or moral.
  • Personal courage is the strength to do what is
    right, to adhere to a higher standard of personal
    conduct, to lead by example, and to make tough
    decisions under stress and pressure.

17
Continue the Values Journey
  • Continue to learn about the Army values.
  • Share what you believe about the Army values with
    others.
  • Live the Army values in all parts of your life.

18
Story 1 Prisoners in the Desert
  • After the battle of Desert Storm in 1991, an Army
    platoon sergeant told the following story, The
    morning of the last day of the war, we had a T-55
    tank in front of us and we were getting ready to
    TOW him. We had the TOW up and we were
    tracking him and my wing man saw him just stop
    and a head pop up out of it. And Neil started
    calling me saying, Dont shoot, dont shoot, I
    think they are getting off the tank. And they
    did. Three of them jumped off the tank and ran
    around a sand dune.

19
Story 1 Prisoners in the Desert
  • I told my wing man, Ill cover the tank, you go
    on down and check around the back side and see
    whats down there. He went down there and found
    about 150 POWs down there, so the only way we
    could handle that many was just to line them up
    and run them through . . . a little gauntlet, and
    we had to check them for weapons and stuff and we
    lined them up and called for the POW handlers to
    pick them up. It was just amazing.

20
Story 1 Prisoners in the Desert
  • We had to blow the tank up. My instructions were
    to destroy the tank, so I told them to go ahead
    and move it around the back side of the berm a
    little bit to safeguard us, so we wouldnt catch
    any shrapnel or ammunition coming off. When the
    tank blew up, these guys started yelling and
    screaming at my soldiers, Dont shoot us, dont
    shoot us, and one of my soldiers said, Hey,
    were from America. We dont shoot our
    prisoners. That sort of stuck with me.

21
Question
  • What does this story tell us about the values of
    the US Army as compared to the expectations of
    the enemy?

22
Answers
  • In this story, it was clear in the US soldiers
    mind that shooting prisoners was simply not
    something that American soldiers did. The fact
    that this prohibition had become such a part of
    his thinking that it did not pose a question is
    significant it was a deeply entrenched idea that
    contributed to his good character, the character
    of the Army, and the nation. Our behavior is a
    reflection of our character. The soldier had a
    choice he could have fired upon the enemy
    soldiers. However, he made the right decision
    because the right principles had been so deeply
    ingrained in him that they were part of his
    nature?part of his values.

23
Story 2 Stuart S. Stryker
  • PFC Stuart S. Stryker was assigned to Company E,
    of the 513th Parachute Infantry, 17th Airborne
    Division. On 24 March 1945 he was a platoon
    runner when the unit assembled near Wesel,
    Germany, after a descent east of the Rhine.
    Attacking along a railroad, Company E reached a
    point about 250 yards from a large building used
    as an enemy headquarters and manned by a powerful
    force of Germans with rifles, machine guns, and
    four field pieces.

24
Story 2 Stuart S. Stryker
  • One platoon made a frontal assault but was pinned
    down by intense fire from the house after
    advancing only 50 yards. So badly stricken that
    it could not return the raking fire, the platoon
    was at the mercy of German machine gunners when
    PFC Stryker voluntarily left a place of
    comparative safety and, armed with a carbine, ran
    to the head of the unit. In full view of the
    enemy and under constant fire, he exhorted the
    men to get to their feet and follow him.

25
Story 2 Stuart S. Stryker
  • Inspired by his fearlessness, they rushed after
    him in a desperate charge through an increased
    hail of bullets. Twenty-five yards from the
    objective, the heroic soldier was killed by the
    enemy fusillades. His gallant and wholly
    voluntary action in the face of overwhelming
    firepower, however, so encouraged his comrades
    and diverted the enemy's attention that the
    company was able to surround the house, capturing
    more than 200 hostile soldiers and much
    equipment, and freeing three members of an
    American bomber crew held prisoner there.

26
Story 2 Stuart S. Stryker
  • The fearlessness and unhesitating self-sacrifice
    of PFC Stryker were in keeping with the highest
    traditions of the military service.
  • PFC Stryker was born and entered service at
    Portland, Oregon. He was posthumously awarded
    the Medal of Honor for his actions.

27
Question
  • What Army core values did PFC Stryker
    demonstrate?

28
Answers
  • Duty, by fulfilling his obligations without
    direction.
  • Personal courage for his action in the face of
    danger.
  • Loyalty, by urging his comrades to continue the
    fight.
  • Honor, by living up to all the Army values.

29
Story 3 Brigadier General McAuliffe in
Bastogne
  • During World War II, in December of 1944, the
    101st was ordered into Bastogne, an important
    city because of its location and its road and
    rail networks. The division met tough resistance
    and was soon encircled. The German army tried
    several times to break through the defenses of
    the 101st, but the division held its ground. The
    one standing order that BG McAuliffe, the acting
    division commander, had received was "Hold
    Bastogne."

30
Story 3 Brigadier General McAuliffe in
Bastogne
  • The German army, which greatly outnumbered the
    American division, issued an ultimatum for the
    101st to surrender. BG McAuliffe considered the
    competence and character of the division, and
    decided that they would not surrender. He
    responded in a famous short message by telling
    the Germans Nuts.

31
Story 3 Brigadier General McAuliffe in
Bastogne
  • This response to the enemy became a big morale
    booster to the besieged US division, and the
    101st continued to resistdespite bad weather,
    many casualties, and lack of supplies. They had
    confidence in themselves and the rest of the US
    Army behind them. Several days later, the 4th
    Armored Division secured a small corridor to
    Bastogne, and soon the VIII Corps relieved the
    101st in place. This holding action prevented
    the German Army from employing their assets
    elsewhere.

32
Question
  • What values were demonstrated here?

33
Answers
  • Duty, by the 101st refusing the ultimatum.
  • Selfless service, by putting their duty above
    their own welfare, knowing it would be hard to
    hold out against the larger German Army.
  • Personal courage and integrity, by facing the
    mortal danger of superior force, and doing what
    was right.
  • Honor, by living their values.
  • Loyalty and duty, by the 4th Armored and VIII
    Corps relieving the 101st

34
Story 4 Operation Assured Response
  • Liberia, a small country on the west coast of
    Africa, was settled in part by freed American
    slaves. Monrovia, its capital and principal
    port, was named after US President James Monroe.
    In 1847 it established a government modeled on
    that of the United States, and it has had close
    relations with the US ever since.

35
Story 4 Operation Assured Response
  • The country was mostly peaceful until the 1980
    assassination of its President in a military
    coup, after which it was ruled, brutally, for ten
    years. A vicious civil war began in 1989 when a
    group of rebels seeking democracy invaded the
    country. Although the tyrannical government was
    overthrown in 1990, the rebellion degenerated
    into six years of mostly tribal warfare and
    massacres.

36
Story 4 Operation Assured Response
  • In April of 1996, intense fighting between
    opposing factions closed in around Monrovia. On
    April 9, President Clinton ordered US military
    forces to Monrovia to reinforce the Marines
    protecting the embassy, and to evacuate American
    citizens and other country civilians who had
    taken refuge in the US Embassy. That same day, a
    small relief force of Army Special Forces and
    Navy SEALS deployed to Monrovia, and Operation
    Assured Response began.

37
Story 4 Operation Assured Response
  • The first team of rescuers arrived at the embassy
    compound in two MH-53 helicopters. Troops
    reinforced the Marine guard, and the first
    helicopters soon took off from the embassy with
    24 adults and 2 children on board for the
    two-hour, 235-mile flight to Freetown, the
    capital of neighboring Sierra Leone.

38
Story 4 Operation Assured Response
  • Following soon after the initial relief force,
    additional units departed bases in Europe and the
    US bound for Liberia. In Monrovia a central
    evacuee assembly collection point was secured
    from which the evacuees from across the city were
    moved to landing areas where helicopters carried
    them to safety. Many of the evacuations were
    made at night to take advantage of the cover of
    darkness.

39
Story 4 Operation Assured Response
  • Deployed Army units included elements of 1st
    Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group, Boeblingen,
    Germany Company C, 1st Bn., 508th Airborne
    Combat Team, Vicenza, Italy and a platoon from
    3rd Bn., 160th Aviation Regiment, Hunter Army
    Airfield, Ga. During the 10-day action, US
    forces safely evacuated more than 2,200 people
    from 73 countries, including 540 Americans.

40
Story 4 Operation Assured Response
  • On July 19, 1997, Liberia's seven-year war was
    finally ended through an election that swept
    former faction leader Charles Taylor and his
    party, the National Patriotic Party (NPP), into
    power with 75 percent of the vote.
  • In this example of joint US operations the
    military was ready for anything. Although the
    soldiers never entered combat and there was not a
    single reported injury, the operation itself
    demonstrates many of the Armys and the countrys
    values.

41
Question
  • What Army core values were demonstrated in this
    brief history of the 1996 evacuation of Liberia?

42
Answers
  • Loyalty was demonstrated to the citizens of the
    US in Liberia by helping them escape from the
    conflict.
  • Respect was shown to the citizens of friendly
    countries in helping them escape from the
    conflict.
  • Duty was demonstrated by the Army units and the
    units of other services who fulfilled their
    obligations in rapid response, and effective and
    safe completion of the evacuation.
  • Selfless service was demonstrated by soldiers
    working during the night as well as during the
    day, for day after day.
  • Cont..

43
Answers
  • Integrity was demonstrated by doing what was
    legally rightprotecting US citizens, but also
    what was morally righthelping those of other
    countries.
  • Personal courage was shown by the soldiers who
    deployed with no advance notice of where they
    were going or what they would have to do. The
    soldiers in Monrovia showed personal courage by
    entering unknown situations around the city
    despite the armed rebel factions trying to
    control the city.
  • Honor was demonstrated by the individual soldiers
    and the Army as a whole living up to all the Army
    values.

44
Summary
  • The Army core values go hand in hand with Army
    combat skills.
  • The Army core values all work together, and no
    value can be ignored in favor of another.
  • The Army core values must be practiced as a part
    of the way we live as US Army soldiers.

45
Closing Quote
  • There are only two forces in the world,The sword
    and the spirit. In the long run the sword will
    always be conquered by the spirit.

Napoleon (1769-1821)

46
Summary
Loyalty Duty Respect Selfless Service Honor Integr
ity Personal Courage
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