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In the March ’22 edition of Army News, as we came out of Operation Protect, I spoke about the opportunity provided us by regeneration. I spoke of rebuilding our unit, camp, and formation environments; of the need for both positivity and professionalism; and of the requirement to not just lift our individual skills but our ability to successfully execute missions under battlefield conditions.
I spoke of the need to, deliberately and progressively, progress from small group, to collective, then combined arms training to the point where we could effectively synchronise combat, combat support and combat service support functions to achieve mutuallycomplementary battlefield effects. And I was clear that we needed to work towards an endstate where, as an Army, we were not only able to integrate all arms into the fight, but were positioned to contribute to joint, inter-agency, multi-national operations.
Achieving these outcomes required an ‘all-in’ approach from Army and has meant that our efforts across all areas, and from the strategic to the tactical, were clearly prioritised and appropriately aligned. This week, with the deployment to Australia of a significant number of Army personnel and capabilities on Exercise Talisman Sabre, we have achieved a major milestone towards that endstate.
Exercise Talisman Sabre is our first major combined arms deployment in well over two years and is a tangible outcome of the capability regeneration effort, of all the hard work, that has taken place in Army over the past 15 months. In simple terms, we have now got the Army to the point where we can not only make a positive contribution to a world class training opportunity of this type but exploit the opportunity it provides to practise and test interoperability in a mid-intensity environment alongside our ally and partners. Government has made it very clear to defence that a key measure of the value of our alliance with Australia is our ability to work together on operations in pursuit of common objectives. Participating in Exercise Talisman Sabre at the level we are is a clear signal that Army can again, actively and appropriately, play its part in that alliance should the need arise –none of this is to say that there isn’t still work to be done but rather, that Army is well and truly back in the game and ready for whatever task is asked of us.
Therefore, and without question, our participation in Exercise Talisman Sabre is an important milestone in our regeneration journey and we should celebrate that. But we should also view the exercise as a key determinant of the future direction of our Army.
Firstly, the exercise provides the NZ Army the opportunity to observe, test and experiment with our recently adopted prime reference for mounted combat, LWD 3-3-1. The LCC and G7 will use our participation in the exercise to provide an assessment of how we best adopt and adapt LWD 3-3-1 to our requirements, whilst retaining a strong focus on the overall value of alliance interoperability and therefore common doctrine and tactics.
Secondly, it provides us an opportunity to better understand the capabilities that our modern Motorised Infantry Battle Group (MIBG) and Special Operations Task Group (SOTG) require to meet Government’s expectations of its Army. Expectations that include the requirement for both the MIBG and SOTG to be combat capable and able to fully integrate with Australia and other ABCANZ partners. Equally, the exercise will enable Army to observe, analyse and identify the capabilities our MIBG and SOTG require to lead, manage and sustain independent tactical actions in our region at Battle and Task Group level for prolonged periods.
Thirdly, the alliance benchmarking we will do on Talisman Sabre will be analysed to ensure that Army provides Government with credible contributions to multinational and/ or coalition combat operations; the ability to lead regional security and stability responses; or participate in humanitarian and disaster relief operations as part of a NZ Joint Force.
These three outcomes combined reflect the enduring utility of the NZ Army’s multi role combat forces across the spectrum of conflict, as explained in the recently released Army Command Statement – the utility of Multi Role Combat Forces
Looking past our current contribution to TALISMAN SABRE a range of other efforts are being enacted to move past regeneration and better guarantee/deliver our Army’s operational capability. Within 1 Bde the focus is shifting, whilst always cognisant of the need to ‘build the force’ for the future, to one of being ready to deploy and operate now with what we’ve got. Likewise our special forces are continually reviewing how they can best position their force elements to both deliver on outputs and evolve to meet the challenges of a changing security environment.
At Army level, over the last month, the first Plan ANZAC meetings with the Australian Army have occurred. Capability, Training, People and Engagement objectives for our relationship with Australia have been identified and Army staff are now in the process of