Biden calls on troops to 'remember your oath' in final remarks to military
Jan 16, 2025
President Biden on Thursday continued his farewell tour of Washington, D.C., with wide-ranging final remarks to U.S. service members, touting his defense record while praising the military and urging them to “remember your oath” to uphold the U.S. Constitution.
“Our commitment to honor, to integrity, to unity, to protecting and defending not a person or a party or a place, but an idea,” Biden said. “That's the idea that generations of service members have fought for, an idea you have sworn an oath to defend as a nation. We've never fully lived up to that idea, but we've never, ever, ever walked away from it. Our country is counting on you to ensure that that will always be true.”
Biden — addressing a crowd of service members and officials including Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., Vice President Harris and First Lady Jill Biden — moments earlier had received a Department of Defense medal for Distinguished Public Service.
He then took to the podium to praise troops, sailors and airmen for representing “America's character, honesty, integrity, [and] commitment.”
“Every time I'm here, it's made me so damn proud to be an American,” Biden said at the farewell ceremony at Joint Base Myers-Henderson Hall in Fort Myer in Arlington, Va.
“Serving as your commander-in-chief has been the greatest honor of my life. While I'm deeply grateful for your thanks and affection, I'm here to thank you. Thank you for your service to our nation, for allowing me to bear witness to your courage, your commitment, your character.”
He went on to highlight a myriad of actions during his time in the White House including investing “record resources to fight the scourge of military suicide,” bringing veterans' homelessness to new lows, changes in the military justice system — which he said has reduced the rates of sexual assault for the first time in nearly a decade — ending President-elect Trump’s enacted ban on transgender service members, creating more economic opportunities for military spouses and expanding opportunities for women in combat roles.
Biden devoted several minutes to his administration’s effort to enact the PACT Act, legislation that increases access to medical care for veterans exposed to toxic burn pits and substances. The issue is particularly close to his heart given his eldest son, Beau Biden, died in 2015 after being diagnosed with brain cancer, believed to be a consequence of exposure to military burn pits while serving in Iraq.
He also praised troops for their role in the ending of the Afghanistan War in August 2021 — a chaotic and deadly withdrawal that his adversaries have often attacked his handling of.
“When I asked you to end our nation's longest war, you rose to the occasion...accomplishing the largest airlift in military history in any war," he said, "I believe history will reflect it was right thing to do, but I know it was hard,” added, noting that he carries the pain of losing 13 service members during the withdrawal “every single day.”
And just six months after that war ended, when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, and Biden called on the U.S. military to help Kyiv, “you didn't hesitate. You kept Ukraine in the fight, trained Ukrainian soldiers and pilots, troops bolstered NATO's eastern flank, and above all, you showed the world America stands up for freedom.”
He also pointed to U.S. deployments to the Middle East following Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which ignited several regional conflicts including between Israel and Iran and its proxies in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen.
“You stepped up, pulling long nights and long deployments to weaken Hamas, to defend Israel against unprecedented attacks from Iran. Imagine, had we not. If we don't lead the world, who will lead the world? Who?” Biden said, his voice rising.
He also highlighted his appointment of the first female service chief and first woman on the Joint Chiefs of Staff in U.S. history, Adm. Lisa Franchetti, who became chief of naval operations in November 2023.
Wrapping up his remarks, Biden added that he had one additional request for those in the military, made as someone who “spent 50 years of his life serving his country in a different way,” referring to his time in the U.S. Senate, as vice president, and as president.
“Remember your oath,” he said.