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Army : The Future Structure of the Royal Signals
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From: MSN NicknameLettie011  (Original Message)Sent: 10/6/2006 1:14 PM

FUTURE ARMY STRUCTURE (FAS)


Under the FAS proposals the Regular Units of the Royal Signals will be enhanced as follows:

a. A new Signal Regiment (22 Signal Regiment) will be established, equipped initially with Ptarmigan and then Falcon.

b. Deployable unit structures (operational Divisional Signal Regiments and Brigade Signal Squadrons) will be made more robust.

c. Enhancements will be made to strategic communications.

The Royal Signals TA will be structured as follows:

a. There will be three Ptarmigan regiments based within 11 Signal Brigade, providing a composite Ptarmigan Regiment to the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps.

b. Within 2 (NC) Signals Brigade, a total of eight signals regiments (including 36 and 40 Signal Regiments) and four sub-units will provide NC (National Communications) units in support of the Home Defence MACA (Military Aid to the Civil Authority. In addition these units will provide bespoke support to other government departments.

c. 63 Signals Squadron (SAS) will continue to support Director Special Forces.

d. An Air Support Signal Troop will be provided for Joint Headquarters.

e. Royal Signals TA will continue to provide individual reinforcements to the Regular regiments attributed to LSDI.

Functions of military communications

Military communications roles undertaken by the Royal Signals may be divided into three separate functions:

Strategic communications

Communications between the political leadership, military high command, and military administrative and field commands at the divisional level. In terms of capability as opposed to function, modern communications systems increasingly blur the distinction between strategic and tactical systems as a consequence of technological advance.

Tactical communications

Communications between field formations from corps to division through brigade down to battalion level.

Electronic Warfare

The security of own forces and friendly forces communications, and the penetration, compromise and degradation of hostile communications.

Roles of military communications

Communications have enabling capabilities that support all military operations in war and peace. These roles may be summarised under the following headings:

Command and Control

Communications enable commanders at all levels to exercise command and control over their own forces. Communications enable commanders to receive information, convey orders and move men and materiel, and select and position their attacking and defensive forces to maximum effect in order to take advantage of their own strengths and enemy weaknesses.

The capacity to deliver firepower, troops and supplies to any part of the battlefield is crucial to success. From the earliest days of messengers, flags, bugles and hand signals, this has been vital to successful command. Modern electronic communications systems have vastly added to this capacity, increasing the distances over which Command and Control can be exercised - from line of sight or hearing to any geographical area where forces are deployed.

Computerised Command Information

Communications enables commanders to receive information from the field and rear to build up a picture of the state and disposition of their own forces as well as enemy forces. Commanders have always sought to have the fullest possible information on the dispositions and states of both their own and enemy, forces - but were typically limited by restraints of time, space and information carrying capacity.

Computer hardware and software �?allied to the geographical spread, bandwidths and data-carrying capacity of modern military networks - have removed many of these constraints. Computer processing power enables information received from all sources to be sorted into meaningful patterns of use to commanders.

Such sources include:

  • Voice and data reports from troops in the field

  • Intelligence reports

  • Mapping

  • Battlefield sensors

  • Multi-spectral imaging from ground reconnaissance units

  • Reconnaissance and surveillance satellites, aircraft, helicopters and unmanned aerial vehicles

  • Electronic Warfare systems on ground, air and sea platforms

In modern war, to capture the full scope of computer information systems, this communications effect is typically described as Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (C4ISR)

Electronic Warfare

Secure communications deny the enemy knowledge of own and friendly force activities, capabilities and intelligence (Communications Security. Communications enable the penetration, compromise and destruction of enemy communication systems (Electronic Warfare).

Royal Signals Missions

Royal Signals units have three principal missions:

Communications Engineering

Communications units design, build and dismantle the tactical communications networks at division and brigade levels.

Communications Operations

Communications units operate the tactical communications networks at division and brigade levels, and also battalion and battalion group level in the case of a detached formation.

In conventional divisional and brigade level operations, battalions will typically be responsible for their own communications.

Communications Management

Communications units are responsible for the management of the whole communications nexus at division and brigade level.

These missions will need to be performed in all phases of battle:

Offensive

In the offensive: setting up command posts, setting up area communications networks and setting up wire networks to connect battalions to brigades and elsewhere as far as possible. Can set up air portable communications systems shortly after a foothold is secured on air base

Advance

In the advance: continuing to keep forward and area communications running and providing logistics and maintenance needs for company and brigade forces as appropriate. Running wire forwards as afar as possible with the advance, Setting up alternate Brigade HQs. Relocating and maintaining relay and retransmission points and ensuring communications to rear and flanks remain open

Defensive

In the defence: re-enforcing command posts and relay points. Increasing the complexity and robustness of wire networks. Providing alternate and redundant communications for all users

Withdrawal

In the withdrawal: Preventing communications assets falling into enemy hands, setting up alternate command posts on the line of withdrawal, running wire networks backwards to rear. Keeping nodes open and supplying logistics and maintenance support as required

Non-Combat missions

Communications perform non-combat roles during peacetime, including national peacetime contingencies and multilateral peace support operations in foreign countries

Training

All Royal Signals officers undergo officer training at RMA Sandhurst (44 weeks) before taking the Royal Signals Troop Commanders Course at the Royal School of Signals at Blandford Camp. Royal Signals officers are expected to have or to obtain university degree-level engineering qualifications.

Recruit training for other ranks involves 2 phases:

  • Phase 1 - Soldier training (11 to 21 weeks: apprentices 6 months)

  • Phase 2 - Trade training (7 �?50 weeks)

Every Royal Signals soldier, whether from the Army Training Regiment Bassingbourn, the Army Technical Foundation College Arborfield, or the Army Apprentices College Arborfield, carries out trade training at the Royal School of Signals at Blandford Camp. The length of the course depends on the trade chosen, varying from seven weeks up to 50. All trades will carry out a common module of Basic Signalling Skills and a computer literacy module before specialising. Special Operators attend an introductory course of two weeks at the Royal School of Signals before completing their training at the Defence Special Signal School in Chicksands.

11 Signal Regiment is responsible for the special to arm training for both officers and other ranks. The Royal School of Signals at Blandford Camp conducts approximately 144 different types of courses and numbering over 714 courses run per year. There are in excess of 5,250 students completing courses throughout the year with about 1,070 here at any one time. These figures equate to approximately some 470,000 Man Training Days a year.

 



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