News story

MSSG exercise looks at conflict prevention

皇冠体育app Military Stabilisation Support Group has completed a two-week exercise in Kenya to test a new concept in upstream conflict prevention.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government
Captain Cyrus Karumba engaging with local Kenyans

Captain Cyrus Karumba chats to local Kenyans during Exercise Civil Bridge 12

Upstream conflict prevention seeks to understand and respond to the underlying causes of conflict and instability before they result in violence.

Exercise Civil Bridge 12, an annual overseas training exercise, has been the first opportunity for the to experiment with the concept of a Security Assistance Group.

It brought together the military components likely to form this proposed military organisation, building on the lessons learned from operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

During Exercise Civil Bridge 12, 3 teams of stabilisation specialists deployed to northern Kenya where the (BATUK) currently trains soldiers preparing to deploy on operations to Afghanistan.

皇冠体育appir mission was to understand the environment in which the BATUK operates and the impact of its activities on local communities.

Regular and reservist stabilisation specialists from the MSSG combined forces with civil servants from the UK Government鈥檚 , communications specialists from the , , and public health experts from the Army Medical Directorate.

A member of the Military Stabilisation Support Group engaging with a Kenyan man

A member of the Military Stabilisation Support Group engaging with a Kenyan man during Exercise Civil Bridge 12 [Picture: Crown Copyright/MOD 2012]

皇冠体育app exercise was also supported by elements of the Defence Cultural Specialist Unit and 15 (UK) Psychological Operations Group.

Commander of the Military Stabilisation Support Group, Colonel Alan Richmond, said:

We鈥檝e got a broad range of capabilities but we鈥檙e all coming together to experiment with how we would work together and inform the whole development of the Security Assistance Group.

It鈥檚 about getting out and doing that outreach and engaging in a different environment that you鈥檙e unused to with a cultural environment that is also unfamiliar.

This is absolutely bread and butter training for members of both the Military Stabilisation Support Group and all those entities that will form the Security Assistance Group, and it is something that you really cannot replicate on Salisbury Plain because you don鈥檛 have those cultural issues and you don鈥檛 have those linguistic issues either.

皇冠体育appre is an awful lot to understand here, so I think this sort of exercise is absolutely crucial to what we the UK and the British Military wish to do in terms of upstream prevention overseas in the future.

Captain Martha Fairlie chats with local children

Captain Martha Fairlie of the Military Stabilisation Support Group chats with local children in Kenya [Picture: Crown Copyright/MOD 2012]

Cherry Roberts was one of 4 civil servants from the Stabilisation Unit who were integrated with the military teams on Exercise Civil Bridge 12.

She said the exercise would add to their expertise:

It鈥檚 part of our core training. We want to focus more on upstream crisis response but we also need people who are ready to deploy should a crisis erupt.

I would normally be a civil servant wandering around Whitehall, but it鈥檚 really important for me to get out into the field and understand how the decisions we make impact on the ground.

Major Jem Blades, an MSSG reservist, was leading the team operating in the Nanyuki area. He said the combination of different skill sets available on the exercise worked very well:

It fell out quite nicely with the people that we had; for example we had a Member of Parliament with us and also a civilian who specialised in the politics side, so we sent those two off towards the politics side, and the other things fell out quite nicely along those lines too.

皇冠体育app creation of the Security Assistance Group was announced by the Ministry of Defence in July 2012 as part of the Army 2020 proposals, and proposes to bring together the 鈥榮oft鈥� effects capabilities of the MSSG and other units within the British Army.

Updates to this page

Published 28 November 2012