USAID - U.S. Agency for International Development

11/11/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/11/2024 09:52

On Veterans Day, Honoring our Veteran Colleagues and All Service Members

Legendary tennis player and U.S. Army veteran Arthur Ashe once reflected that true heroism is, as he put it, "not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost, but the urge to serve others at whatever cost." Today, on Veterans Day, we honor that spirit of service - celebrating those who have worked so hard, and sacrificed so much, to protect their communities and their country.

We are grateful that so many of these veterans have chosen to continue their careers of service here at USAID. The experience, knowledge, and dedication of service members has shaped our Agency since its inception - and we continue to benefit enormously from their contributions. In 2024, 12 percent of new Civil Service hires were veterans. USAID provides special hiring authorities through Veterans Appointing Authorities and Special Hiring Authorities for Military Spouses and Family Members to support their employment within the workforce. Further, the Agency offers the USAID Temporary Employment Program and the USAID-Department of Defense (DoD) SkillBridge Program to provide short-term developmental opportunities that may lead to permanent placement in public service careers. To learn more about veteran employment at USAID, you can review the Veterans Program site, or reach out to [email protected](link sends email) for additional information.

Today, as historic levels of conflict are driving unprecedented levels of humanitarian need, coordination with the military is particularly vital to our development work, and veterans often play a critical role in advancing that cooperation. USAID first introduced the Mission Civilian-Military Coordinator (MC2) position in 2017 to align essential humanitarian and development programming with our colleagues at DoD. We now have 120 MC2s across our Missions and Country Offices worldwide, helping DoD and USAID work together to coordinate crisis response and advance development goals.

In Djibouti, for instance, USAID and DoD worked together to support primary education - with DOD rehabilitating 80 percent of the country's primary schools in areas outside the capital, and USAID then providing hundreds of thousands of teaching and learning materials to these schools to help children learn to read - helping to increase the percentage of second graders reading at a minimum level of proficiency from 20 to 46 percent. In Vietnam, DoD and USAID are working to overcome the legacy of war by coordinating the remediation of soil contaminated with dioxin, the toxic chemical byproduct of Agent Orange. Veterans have been essential in both identifying opportunities for collaborations like these and bringing together teams across Agencies to make them happen.

Please join me today in thanking all of our country's veterans, including those who have contributed their dedication, service, and hard-earned experience toward our mission of advancing human dignity worldwide. We recognize and honor their sacrifice and the sacrifice of their families. The patriotism, selflessness, and courage they demonstrate in some of the world's most challenging and dangerous environments is extraordinary - and we owe an enormous debt of gratitude to the quiet heroism of generations of veterans who have chosen to step up and serve others, at whatever cost.