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...ifications include KCB, CBE, DSO, QGMdl, and MA.
He joined the Reserve in 1957 and was commissioned into the Coldstream Guards in 1964. He subsequently served with the Special Air Service Regiment in the Middle and Far East. Following attendance at the Staff College in 1973, he commanded the Regiment during the Falkland Islands conflict. He commanded 39 Infantry Brigade in Northern Ireland and attended the Royal College of Defence Studies in 1986. He became Commandant of the Staff College in 1991. He was Commander of the UK Field Army, and Inspector General Territorial Army from April 1993 to January 1994 when he took command of the UN Protection Force in Bosnia-Herzegovina. In January 1995, he was appointed to the Army Board as Adjutant General. He served as 28th Colonel of the Coldstream Guards on his retirement from 1999 - 2009.
Since leaving the Army, he has written and lectured extensively on peacekeeping and leadership to audiences around the world which have included The Aspen Institute, The Wharton Business School, and The Council for Foreign Relations. He also lectured at the National Security Course at the Maxwell School Syracuse University for nine years.
His book about the UN in Bosnia, ‘Fighting for Peace’, was published in Nov 1998. His second book ‘Washington’s War’, which compares the American War of Independence with the US led war in Iraq, was published in UK April 2007 and in America in April 2008.
He served for four years on the St Edmund Hall Advisory Board, and is now a member of the Floreat Aula Society.
Organizations to whom General Rose has spoken have included PWC, General Motors, Marconi, JP Morgan, Winterthur, Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Merrill Lynch, Swiss Re, Novartis, Association of Private Client Investment Managers and Stockbrokers, The Council for Foreign Relations and the National Press Club in Washington and many more.
General Rose explains how strategic and leadership lessons learned, not only in Bosnia but during 35 years of soldiering, can be applied to the commercial world. He believes that although military force has a central position to play in ensuring peace, it can only succeed if it is applied on a sound moral basis, within a relevant political framework and where people are properly motivated. This opens the way to a more mature and realistic attitude towards global security in today's fragmenting world.
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- Leadership and Motivation
- The Challenges of Global Peacekeeping
- Military strategy
- The American War of Independence etc. etc
- Risk Management in a Terrorist Era
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