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Maj. Gen. Colin Tuley gives annual State of Fort Benning address

Maj. Gen. Colin Tuley gives annual State of Fort Benning address

Yahoo25-04-2025
COLUMBUS, Ga. () — Community leaders and U.S. Army officials gathered at the National Infantry Museum Friday morning. They were there for the annual State of Fort Benning address.
A lot has happened at Fort Benning in the past year, from leadership changes to a name redesignation, innovation upgrades and more.
The U.S. Army installation's current commanding general, Maj. Gen. Colin Tuley, addressed what's new on post, including some quantifiable data.
'We have graduated over 64,000 students… that included over 25,000 infantry and armor soldiers,' said Tuley, who took command of Fort Benning – then Fort Moore – in July of 2024.
Also included in that 64,000 were 1,900 armor and infantry officers who graduated from the installation's basic officer courses; 1,400 Ranger-qualified soldiers and 10,000 paratroopers, according to Tuley.
Fort Benning's current commanding general was also quick to address the post's redesignation back to the Benning name, after Sgt. Fred Benning, a Distinguished Service Cross Recipient.
'He was left all alone as an 18-year-old. And he said, 'I will lead this platoon,'' Tuley said, adding, 'That's all he worried about, was those young soldiers just like him to his left and to his right.'
Tuley highlighted Sgt. Benning's humility, courage and commitment to those around him while in service, saying those qualities exemplify what the U.S. Army post hopes to instill in its soldiers.
The redesignation is expected to cost Fort Benning $653,000.
Fort Benning also continues to move forward with a modernization effort, experimenting with technology and human machine integration. On top of new drone tech, combat vehicles and weapons, it has been making changes with its new Maneuver Innovation Lab.
'The Innovation Lab is where we test out new technologies, things from medical, communication, weapons—again—small UAS, it's tested there and experimented here,' Tuley explained.
That lab hosted its inaugural open house in January of this year. It is partnering with Columbus State University students to help solve problems faced by the Army.
Asked about potential workforce reductions, Tuley talked about workforce optimization.
'You can look at it from a lens of reduction, but there is also a lens of, 'How do you optimize?'' said Tuley. 'How do you optimize a way in which [the] robotics and artificial intelligence-enabled programs, or processes, that are actually out there, [to] help … put human beings and people into better and into other positions where we need more folks oriented towards.'
Tuley also emphasized the Columbus community's importance in improving the quality of life of Fort Benning soldiers and their families.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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In the wake of the blast, these eerie shadows were left etched into surfaces across the city—almost like a photo negative of those who were lost. When the atomic bomb detonated over Hiroshima, it left behind haunting reminders of people who died in the August 1945 blast. Whoever stood on the steps of Sumitomo Bank at the time of the blast created a shield of sorts against the radiant light and heat that bleached everything in its path. Photograph by Universal History Archive, UniversalIt was business as usual in the morning of August 6, 1945, in Hiroshima, Japan. In the city's financial district, bankers prepared for the day and customers queued up to deposit money or apply for a loan. At 8:15 a.m., someone was either standing or sitting on the steps of Sumitomo Bank when the Enola Gay, a U.S. Army Air Force plane, flew overhead and dropped an atomic bomb that detonated 1,900 feet above the city. Aerial view of the first atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945. The Enola Gay dropped the bomb 1,900 feet over the city—unleashing an explosion of intense heat, light, and radiation that washed over the city in a fraction of a second. Photograph Courtesy U.S. Army, A.A.F. photo, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division This official U.S. Army photo shows the devastation in Hiroshima after the bomb. The explosion killed upwards of 80,000 people in a flash and thousands more would die in the subsequent days and months. Photograph Courtesy U.S. Army, Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division That person likely died immediately, as the intense heat at the center of the blast would have been in excess of 7,000 degrees Fahrenheit, hot enough to swiftly kill anyone. But a shadowy imprint of their body was left scorched onto the stone steps. And this mark wasn't alone: The intensity of the bomb created so-called nuclear shadows throughout the area on the ground beneath the explosion, as if freezing the city in time. 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Photograph by AFP, Getty Images The explosion killed upwards of 80,000 people in a flash, and thousands more would die in the subsequent days and months. Among the victims were workers inside Sumitomo Bank. Fukushima notes that only 'three individuals are known to have escaped,' though 'one of them died a few days later.' These shadows also helped scientists solve one major question when they descended on Hiroshima in early September 1945, shortly after Japan's surrender, to study the weapon's effects. The angle of the shadows 'enabled observers to determine the direction toward the center of explosion,' allowing them to locate the bomb's hypocenter 'with considerable accuracy.' The legacy of Hiroshima's nuclear shadows Although we'll never know the stories of those who were killed in the bomb's hypocenter, their shadow endures. In 1971, Sumitomo Bank donated its steps to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, where the silhouette remains a haunting symbol of what happened 80 years ago. 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