'General Sir (Hugh) Michael Rose',
KCB CBE DSO QGM (born
1940 in what was then
British India) is a retired
British Army General. As well as commanding
22 SAS, his best-known - and most controversial within and outside the Army - appointment in the regular army was as Commander
UNPROFOR Bosnia in
1994 during the
Yugoslav Wars.
Early life
The stepson of British author
John Masters, Sir Michael was educated at
Cheltenham College,
St. Edmund Hall,
Oxford, and the
Sorbonne. He was commissioned into the
Gloucestershire Regiment Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve (TAVR) in
1959, and transferred to the
Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve (RAFVR) in 1962. He joined the
Coldstream Guards in
1964.
Military career
After attending the
Staff College, Camberley, Rose became the
Brigade Major 16th Parachute Brigade from
1973 until
1975. He was Commanding Officer of the 22nd SAS Regiment from
1979 to
1982, as part of which he was in control of the operation to free the hostages of the
Iranian Embassy Siege in
1980. He commanded Special Service operations in-theatre as a colonel during the
Falkland Conflict. He then served as the commander of the 39th Infantry Brigade from
1983 to
1985. In
1987, Sir Michael was the
Commandant of the
School of Infantry until
1988, when he became the first Director Special Forces until
1989. He attended the
Royal College of Defence Studies.
Rose was General Officer Commanding North East District and Commander
2nd Infantry Division from
1989 to
1991, and between
1991 and
1993 served as
Commandant of the
Staff College, Camberley. Then, from
1993 to
1994, Rose was Commander UK Field Army and Inspector-General of the Territorial Army. Finally, from
1994 to
1995 he was Commander,
United Nations Protection Force,
Bosnia-Hertzegovina.
He was Deputy Commander-in-Chief
Land Command for part of
1995, then
Adjutant-General and
Aide-de-Camp General to
The Queen until
1997.
Rose was awarded the
QGM 1981, made a
CBE 1986, was knighted with a
KCB 1994, and received the
DSO in 1995.
Rose was one of the most highly decorated British soldiers in the latter part of twentieth century. He had extensive experience world-wide, particularly in the
Middle East, as a
special forces officer. Rose served in
Germany,
Aden,
Malaysia, the
Gulf States,
Dhofar, and in
Northern Ireland and the
Falkland Islands, for both of which he was
mentioned in dispatches, mostly in a relatively informal, small formation setting, working to very narrow objectives, with clearly superb results.
His lack of European land warfare command and control experience, within a large, multi-national, high-level formation military and political framework was somewhat exposed in his Balkan posting. The contrast in the effectiveness of his appointment is generally accepted as being no better demonstrated with the performance of his successor within and without his headquarters in Bosnia, Lt Gen
Rupert Smith.
He is also ''Colonel of the Regiment'' of the
Coldstream Guards.
Other occupations
Rose is a director of
Control Risks Group, a private security and consulting company.
Opposition to Tony Blair
In 2006 he came once again to public attention when he criticised British
Prime Minister Tony Blair, and called for his
impeachment for leading the country to war in
Iraq under false pretenses. This highlighted the unease felt in the highest levels of the British armed forces about the legality, and indeed the practicality, of the 2003 American-led
invasion of Iraq.
On
January 9,
2006, Rose called for
Tony Blair to be
impeached over the
2003 Invasion of Iraq, saying on
BBC Radio 4's
''Today'' programme "To go to war on what turns out to be false grounds is something that no one should be allowed to walk away from."
In
2007 he called for the admission of defeat and withdrawal of
Coalition forces from
Iraq describing the war as "hopeless" and comparing the situation to that faced by the
British during the
American Revolution [1].
References
1. BBC news
See also
★
Impeach Blair campaign
External links
★
BBC News: Impeach Blair over Iraq - general
★ "Unfinest Hour : Britain and the Destruction of Bosnia" Brendan Simms, pub Allen Lane The Penguin Press 2001