Speaker 1 (16:23):
Jesus freed.
Speaker 2 (16:24):
Good afternoon, Fairford.
Audience (16:26):
Woo.
Speaker 2 (16:29):
Try that again. Good afternoon, Fairford.
Audience (16:31):
Woo.
(16:31)
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
I see a lot of joint force partners out there. That's good to see. I don't have to tell you just how critical our mission is regardless of what uniform you're wearing or how much impact specifically the 501st has across multiple combatant commands and across the globe. You're making it happen every day. But when our nation's senior leaders take notice and make the time to spend time with us on our turf, that should let you know just how important and how much you are valued and appreciated. With that, join me in giving a hearty Pathfinder welcome to our Vice President of the United States, J.D. Vance.
Audience (17:15):
Woo.
Speaker 3 (17:59):
[inaudible 00:17:57] on the West Side, all the people who are doing [inaudible 00:18:00].
Speaker 4 (18:00):
Thank you all. Thank you. Please, Airmen, at ease. It's good to be here with you. Please have a seat. I see we have some beautiful families out there. I served a few years in the Marine Corps and I got to say I'm pretty jealous. This is a pretty fine duty station if I do say so myself. This is a beautiful country. I just spent the past few days here actually. Some meetings, some downtime with the family, and we've had a very, very good time here in England. The United Kingdom, of course, is one of our great allies. So I think I speak for all the Pathfinders here… Is that right, what I say?
Audience (18:36):
Woo.
Speaker 4 (18:37):
And all the Red Dragon folks as well.
Audience (18:41):
Woo.
Speaker 4 (18:41):
When I say that we are proud of the special relationship and we are proud to work together with our British friends right here at Fairford Base. God bless you all.
(18:51)
So here's the simple thing. We've got a beautiful country here. We've got a beautiful alliance. And I think every single one of you know that for over 100 years, we have worked with our friends from the United Kingdom to achieve great victories. And if you look at the long sweep of history, every time something big happens for the world, every time a great victory is won for freedom and for peace and for prosperity, it is almost always the Brits and the Americans that do it together. And we win every single time we go to war together. You guys know that as well as anybody.
(19:29)
But it's not just about going to war and it's not just winning when we do, when we work together, when we fight together, when we make it clear that we always approach every situation with an open hand, but if things go poorly, we're willing to do what we have to do. We make it easier to achieve peace and prosperity all over the world.
(19:49)
So I want to say, from all of us back home in the United States, for all the people that you serve with, that you fight for, that you make it possible to live the American dream and peace and prosperity, we are proud of you. We are grateful for you. And as your Vice President, I am damn proud to be here with you today. God bless every single one of you.
Audience (20:09):
Woo.
Speaker 4 (20:20):
Now, it would be impossible for me to list every single thing that has happened just from this single base over the past 100 years. From World War I to our operations against terrorists in Yemen, the history of this base, of its mission, of all of the things that we've done with our friends from the United Kingdom, it is a very, very proud tradition. So I won't try to list everything that we've done, but you guys know the mission, you guys know the story, and you guys know the history. We have done so much with our English friends, with our friends from the UK.
(20:53)
And I started the day, or excuse me, I started the week in a place called Chevening with the Foreign Secretary of the United Kingdom further south in the country in a county called Kent. And what we did is we worked on one of our most important shared security goals in Europe, which is the end of the war between Russia and Ukraine. The President of the United States came in six months ago, and I just talked to him right before I came on the stage, and he said very simply that we are going to make it our mission as an administration to bring peace to Europe once again. But as you all know, it is impossible to bring peace anywhere unless the bad guys are also worried that we've got a hell of a fine Air Force and a hell of a fine military to back up the peace to begin with.
(21:40)
So what you guys do, even though you may not see it every single day, is you make it possible. You make it possible for us to accomplish the President's goals through negotiation. You make it possible for us to go into a room and say, "Yes, we want peace. Yes, we want to work together. Yes, we'd like to bring an end to this terrible conflict, but we've also got some great Airmen back at Fairford and other bases. They're going to make sure that no matter what happens, the peace and the prosperity and the goals of the American people are going to be well-served by what you do."
(22:12)
So I think if you look back at the last six months, if you look back at the number of lives that we've saved in Rwanda, in the Congo, the President ended a 30-year war there. If you look at what we've done in East Asia where the President ended a conflict in Serbia, Kosovo, where the President has brought peace to that area of the world. And now in just a couple of days with the President heading to Anchorage, Alaska to try to achieve and end into this terrible war in Russia and Ukraine, you guys make that possible. You guys are the reason why we can go into a negotiation with strength. You guys are the reason why we have leverage in these conversations with world leaders because they know that if we cut a deal, it is backed up by the finest fighting force anywhere in the world. And that is what makes your job so important, and that's what makes it so important and such a proud moment for me to be here with you today. Because nothing that I do, nothing that we do as an administration is possible without the hard work, the courage, and the skill that you guys bring to the job.
(23:18)
Now, I mentioned earlier I was at Chevening meeting with the British Foreign Secretary. I've met with a number of foreign leaders just in the last actually hour. I had a call with about 30 European leaders. And over the past couple of days, I've met with a number of leaders across the UK, across political parties, across the generations. Because that's one of the great things about the UK's special relationship with the United States is it cuts across political alliances, it cuts across political parties, it cuts across generations because we've been working together for literally centuries. And you know what every single person that I meet often tells me? They tell me about how impressed they are by the skill, by the determination, and by the dedication of the American military. You all are what make it possible for us to do what we do.
(24:09)
When Marco Rubio, our great Secretary of State, goes to engage in some diplomatic negotiation, he knows that he's got the great people, the Secretary of Defense standing behind him. And that fact, the fact that people are impressed by you, the fact that so many people are, frankly, afraid of you is why we're able to do what we do as an administration.
(24:28)
So I just want to say from the President of the United States, who, again, I just spoke to and he told me to give you this message, we're proud of you. We're grateful to you. We know that it's not always an easy job. We know there are often long hours. But I hope you know that the peace and the prosperity and the safety of your countrymen depend on you doing a good job, and we are damn proud of the job that you do every single day. God bless you all, and thank you for having me your Vice President here in the UK.
Audience (24:55):
Woo.








