The Day

A ‘REMARKABLE JOURNEY’ ENDS

Vice President Harris congratula­tes Coast Guard Academy graduates

- By ERICA MOSER Day Staff Writer

“You will graduate into a world that’s going to need your leadership, one that is full of possibilit­y and the promise of progress. At the same time, the world you graduate into is unsettled. It is a world where long-establishe­d principles now stand on shaky ground.”

VICE PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS

New London — Vice President Kamala Harris addressed members of the U.S. Coast Guard Academy’s Class of 2022 at their commenceme­nt Wednesday, talking about how they will lead in an “unsettled world” after four unusual years at the academy.

Graduates in their first year experience­d the longest U.S. government shutdown in history and stepped up to help local Coast Guard members, in their second year were abruptly sent home at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and in their fourth year saw the Russian invasion of Ukraine — the native country of one of their own.

And now they have graduated, with the nation’s first female and first Black vice president as the keynote speaker for the academy’s 141st commenceme­nt exercises.

“Your four-year cadet experience was unlike any other,” Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Karl Schultz told the class of 252 graduates on Wednesday, a sunny and 70-degree day. He said the academy experience is taxing in normal times, between the rigorous academic programs and athletics.

Schultz is set to retire at the end of this month after a 39-year career in the Coast Guard, and his successor is Adm. Linda Fagan, who will be the first woman to lead an armed service.

Harris congratula­ted the cadets on completing a “remarkable journey.” She flew in to Groton-New London Airport and walked onstage at Cadet

Memorial Field about 11:15 a.m., after the graduating firstclass cadets marched in.

Presidents and vice presidents rotate through the service academies’ graduation ceremonies; President Joe Biden spoke at the academy last year and former Vice President Mike Pence was the keynote speaker in 2018.

“You will graduate into a world that’s going to need your leadership, one that is full of possibilit­y and the promise of progress,” Harris told the graduates Wednesday. “At the same time, the world you graduate into is unsettled. It is a world where long-establishe­d principles now stand on shaky ground, where the rule of law in places is strained, where rules and norms are under question.”

She talked about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and how she thinks we have taken the internatio­nal rules-based order for granted far too often.

“Frankly, sometimes we forget how rare it is, in human history, to have a period of relative peace and stability among the nations,” Harris said. “We must remember: upholding a system of laws, institutio­ns and common understand­ings, this is how we secure the safety and security and prosperity of the United States, and this is how we preserve stability in the world.”

This is where the cadets come in, the vice president said.

For example, she chaired a meeting in Washington, D.C., last week with nine leaders on Southeast Asia and “spoke with them about the United States Coast Guard, about you, with pride.” Harris noted that the U.S. is sending additional Coast Guard personnel to that region to help build law enforcemen­t capacity and launching new initiative­s to cut down on illegal fishing.

But she said if the U.S. is to be strong abroad, it must be strong at home, and “every single American, in addition to you cadets, has a role to play in bettering our nation.”

Harris said Wednesday was a joyous occasion but it was impossible to ignore the “horrific attack of hate” in Buffalo, N.Y., on Saturday. A white 18-year-old opened fire with a rifle at a supermarke­t, killing 10 people and wounding three others in what authoritie­s described as “racially motived violent extremism.” Harris called it another despicable attack in what she fears is an epidemic of hate.

But she looks at the cadets and sees “the very best of America,” individual­s who have entered as many but will leave as one, she said. And she noted they are uniquely suited to the task at hand, both growing up online and in the post-9/11 era, with threats from the climate crisis and the pandemic.

“You are familiar with a world that frankly feels strange and so new to so many of us,” Harris said. “I believe you have the ability to see what can be unburdened by what has been, to learn from the past but not be limited by it, to identify new opportunit­ies for our Coast Guard to lead both in today’s unsettled world and far into the bright, beautiful future. We need your perspectiv­e and we need your expertise.”

‘Fortune favors the brave’

Among the Class of 2022, 39% are women and 36% are underrepre­sented minorities, with the largest number of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in academy history. The class includes 12 graduates from Connecticu­t, and nine from other countries: Cambodia, Iceland, Jordan, Mexico, Madagascar, Palau, Panama, Rwanda and Ukraine.

Anton Kononuchen­ko from Ukraine got particular­ly loud applause as Superinten­dent Rear Adm. William Kelly read the names of cadets from other countries, and a standing ovation when walking across the stage to accept his degree.

“We stand with you, Anton,” Kelly said.

After the ceremony, Kononuchen­ko told reporters he is flying back to Ukraine today, and his shoulder boards will be waiting for him in Kyiv. He will be commission­ed into the Ukrainian military.

“It is a new chapter of my life, and I’m ready to walk into it and do my best,” he said. He said the Coast Guard Academy cadets are all his family, and the support he’s gotten warmed his heart.

Asked if his family is safe, Kononuchen­ko replied, “More or less. I guess no one’s safe in Ukraine right now, but they’re alive.”

Distinguis­hed Graduate Logan Tobias, the graduate with the highest grade point average, said in his speech, “Continue to be brave, Anton. Fortune will favor you soon enough.” Tobias was referencin­g the class motto, “Fortune favors the brave,” which Kelly also talked about.

“If you are brave enough to do right by your people, if you care for them, if you prepare them, if you set high expectatio­ns for them, and if you challenge them to be great,” Kelly said, “then fortune will most certainly favor the brave, and your unit, the Coast Guard and our nation will be most certainly be stronger for it.”

Defense Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas told the graduates, “Each of you has the opportunit­y, and in fact the responsibi­lity, to build a better Coast Guard.” He added, “you will lead with honor, and honor will be the reward for what you give.”

The Class of 2022 is the first graduating class with officers from the cyber systems major, which was created in 2018.

As graduates took the oath of office, they were commission­ed as Coast Guard officers, transition­ing from cadets to ensigns. Most cadets are going to cutters, while some are headed to a Coast Guard sector or to flight school.

Growing up at the academy

Waterford native and Marine Science Magnet High School alumna Olivia Gonzalez is headed to the Pensacola-based Coast Guard cutter Dauntless, which does migrant and drug interdicti­on missions.

Gonzalez said she pretty much grew up on campus: Her father is Coast Guard Academy English professor Jose Gonzalez, who immigrated from El Salvador to New London at age 8.

Olivia Gonzalez said when she was growing up, her family sponsored Honduran cadets at their house, and seeing the kindness of cadets and the family atmosphere, “I knew I wanted to be a part of that.” In her time at the academy, she was involved in Compañeros, an affinity group with a focus on Latino culture; a member of the diversity peer educator program; and part of the crew team.

Graduates were allowed 10 guests each this year, compared to four last year. That meant that Merrill Cline of Ohio had the support of both parents, two grandparen­ts, two aunts, an uncle and a sister in the bleachers.

Kristin Cline said her daughter grew up sailing and only applied to the Coast Guard Academy; she knew once she visited this was where she wanted to come.

Fitzgerald Johnson said his daughter, Serheni’te Johnson, has an Army dad and Air Force mom but is the first person in the family to go into the Coast Guard. He said she always wanted to be an engineer growing up, and had gotten involved in robotics and was a junior member of the National Society of Black Engineers.

At the academy, Johnson majored in mechanical engineerin­g, played rugby and, for her senior project, designed an emergency evacuation system for boats.

“We’re proud of her in so many different ways,” Fitzgerald Johnson said.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Above, Ensign Devin Gettman, his father, U.S. Army Lt. Col. Matthew Gettman, and Vice President Kamala Harris smile for a photo.
Left, the graduates toss their caps in the air as a flyby of Coast Guard helicopter­s passes overhead to conclude the ceremony.
Above, Ensign Devin Gettman, his father, U.S. Army Lt. Col. Matthew Gettman, and Vice President Kamala Harris smile for a photo. Left, the graduates toss their caps in the air as a flyby of Coast Guard helicopter­s passes overhead to conclude the ceremony.
 ?? PHOTOS BY SEAN D. ELLIOT THE DAY ??
PHOTOS BY SEAN D. ELLIOT THE DAY
 ?? ?? Left, Ensign Khalfani Hargrow accepts his commission from retired U.S. Army Col. Cynthia Lightner, as Vice President Kamala Harris looks on Wednesday. retired U.S. Coast Guard Capt. Erik Langenbach­er and his daughter Emma Langenbach­er embrace after he presented her commission.
Left, Ensign Khalfani Hargrow accepts his commission from retired U.S. Army Col. Cynthia Lightner, as Vice President Kamala Harris looks on Wednesday. retired U.S. Coast Guard Capt. Erik Langenbach­er and his daughter Emma Langenbach­er embrace after he presented her commission.
 ?? ?? The members of the Class of 2022 arrive on Cadet Memorial Field for the ceremony.
The members of the Class of 2022 arrive on Cadet Memorial Field for the ceremony.
 ?? PHOTOS BY SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Right, Harris laughs as ??
PHOTOS BY SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Right, Harris laughs as

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