Monday, January 3, 2011

Formal launch of AADI Defence Pty Ltd


AADI Defence Pty Ltd (www.aadidefence.com) was formally launched at an end of year and launch function held in one of the function rooms at 1 Queens Road, Melbourne, where it has its office.

Below are the addresses made to the assembled Associates and guests by two of our principals, Dr Bill Schofield and MGEN (Retd.) Jim Molan.

Bill Schofield

Ladies and gentlemen – thank you very much for coming  at what was quite short notice for a launch a couple of weeks out from Christmas.

Today we are launching a company that is unique in Australia – AADI Defence Pty Ltd – which has its office on the fourth floor of this building.  It is a unique company in the Australian context in that it consists of a happy band of 30 or so senior people with extensive experience and achievement in the defence sector.

This company can deliver expertise on every aspect of defence and defence industry by forming teams from its members to address specific requirements of a client:

-  From our ex-military people we get knowledge of concepts of operations and how the services input into acquisition projects.

-  From DSTO scientists we get the capability to evaluate defence technology and the role of DSTO in any defence purchase.

-  From Defence Industry experience we can evaluate paths to market of new technology or services.

-  From defence bureaucracy experience we can understand the how, when and why defence and major defence contractors buy goods and services.

The company commenced trading in July this year but as most of you know it was not a cold start up – for five years I have been involved with running a company called AADI Limited – which was a not-for-profit company doing a lot of pro bono work for small companies. It was partially financed by the Victorian government, with a quarterly grant, but the grant ceased in June this year and the not-for-profit company was no longer viable.  So we decided to form AADI Defence.

I am pleased to say that in the few months since we got up and running we have had many enquiries and  work covering a very wide range of goods and services that companies wish to market into the defence sector. 

So we come to this launch in good spirits and very enthusiastic.

I now want to introduce one of the principals of our company, Major-General Jim Molan who as most of you would know ran the war in Iraq for some 15 memorable months and is our lead on Army concept of operations.

Jim is going to give us a short talk this evening on the Australian Army and counterinsurgency warfare.

Jim Molan

Ladies and Gentlemen

Bill thank you very much for the introduction and a Happy Christmas to you all on this, the Christmas launch of AADI Defence Pty Ltd.

Very briefly, I would like to talk about one aspect of modern warfare that may have relevance not only to the military community and strategic think-tanks, but also to us, the business community.

That aspect is that: “A modern counter insurgency campaign requires a military to be competent across the full range of military capabilities.”

I say this because modern counter insurgency is not like the Malayan Emergency or Northern Ireland but much more like Vietnam, but with a real potential to occur in any one of a range of countries. What differentiates it is that our victory in Iraq or in Afghanistan, may cause its outbreak in one or a number of other countries, such as Yemen or Somalia, or make it worse in Pakistan, or spark it up in Indonesia. 

And as well, the ADF must not come out of its current concentration on counter insurgency only with a land capability middlingly competent at counter insurgency. The ADF must be able to fight as our White Papers have demanded for years that we fight, as a joint force consisting of a land force with real combat capability, a Navy based around subs and AWDs and amphibs, and an Air Force based around a JSF that works and wins, in an environment where the primacy of the US is being challenged.

I will base what I say on an interview that I gave to a magazine that was handed out at the Land Warfare Conference recently so some of you might have seen some of the ideas there. It kind of works into the themes that I heard expressed by our “captains of industry” at that conference in relation to Defence Industry as a whole and the way government runs Defence and its support for Defence Industry. The thing that I mentioned only in passing in the interview was that we are often attacked by our enemies in a way described as “asymmetrical”, but we also have asymmetry, and our asymmetry is in fact technology.

On 24 August this year, 20 of our soldiers and 20 Afghan soldiers ran into a large group (some say up to 100) Taliban and had a 3 hour fight in which a Brisbane soldier was killed. This is the second time to my knowledge we have run into a group of 100 Taliban in Uruzgan Province.

One participant in the battle wrote to a relative using social media about how the fight had not gone all that well and listed all the problems that they had. His relative, who was a Vietnam veteran, could not understand that if they had all that fire support, why could they not use it and win?

The father then sent the email to many of his veteran mates, and probably no one who received it was surprised that it finally leaked.

The question in my mind was not that the soldiers did not have enough firepower; it was always that the soldiers could not use that firepower to effect because of Rules of Engagement, because of attitude and because of a lack of familiarity with using it all together, evacuating the wounded and winning the fight at the same time.

Would it have been better I ask you, to have won that fight, to have killed or captured 100 Taliban in Uruzgan Province, and perhaps made some more enemies among that portion of the population, or to have let most of them stay victorious on that battlefield, and after a 3 hour fight, for us to withdraw and one month later, not to have gone back there again?

What do you think might have had the maximum effect on the Province? A victory as I describe, where everyone in the province would have known that if you challenge the central government troops you will lose and lose decisively, so don’t do it. Or the application of the Rules of Engagement which preserves a few lives today at the cost of possibly many tomorrow?

This is a difficult situation and we are restricted by our society’s attitude, our own morality, and our gullibility. All of these make us vulnerable to our enemies, not just psychologically, but also physically.

The answer to a large extent is technology. And of course it is technology that most of us here are concerned with, technology delivered via Australian Defence industry, or at least supported by Australian Defence industry.

Defence’s reaction to that soldier’s leaked email expressing his frustrations appeared clumsy from the outside. Defence stressed that our soldiers had enough firepower and that it was not the job of the soldiers at that time to destroy the enemy and anyhow, we will have an inquiry that will report in many months, not what it takes a real soldier about 30 seconds to decide, but what totally defuses the issue.

So the issue of that day, 24 August, is totally off the table. Just like (yet again) another study/report/investigation into Defence Industry. The Australian public, unlike the father of the soldier who was an experienced fire controller from Vietnam, could not understand the issues, and really were not that interested.

When I first received the email, without referring to it, I had written an opinion piece that said if you want to protect our soldiers and win the war in Uruzgan, two goals that I saw as quite reasonable but which are only partially accepted by the Government, then give them tanks and give them attack helicopters.

My view was that if they had enough firepower, but for good reasons they do not have the experience or the skill to use it all together with evacuating their casualties and winning the battle, then give them tanks particularly because tanks win battles and save lives without the same need to skilfully coordinate with everything around them.

Then the opposition spokesman on Defence decided to take the idea of tanks and attack helicopters directly into Parliament. Now mentioning tanks in Australia is a bit like advocating tax reform and suggesting one way to do it was by increasing GST. Immediately the media focuses on GST.

If you want to give our soldiers the ability to protect themselves and to win, and you mention tanks, the experts in the media and the commentary world immediately decide that of course you cannot use tanks in Afghanistan. Or as our PM said, tanks in Afghanistan and “guffaws” go together, and taking tanks to Afghanistan would be as silly as taking submarines to Afghanistan.

You see I wonder to this day why our PM, who deserves our respect because she is the PM, was not protected from making such an unfortunate statement on tanks by good advice from her military and civilian advisers.

Did they not know that the Danes, who are doing an extraordinary amount of counter insurgency and fighting, have tanks in Afghanistan and swear by their effectiveness?

Did they not know that the Canadians have had tanks in Kandahar for years and also swear by them, having just bought new ones from Germany just for Afghanistan?

Did they not know that whenever the UK wants tanks in Afghanistan they borrow the Canadian or Danish ones?

Did they not know that the documents that were used to justify the purchase of our 50 high quality tanks for $500m only a few years ago said exactly what I am saying now?

Did they not know that the Australian military for the last sixty years has itself resisted the use of tanks until forced to take them, and then found them priceless to not only save lives, but to win battles?

If they did not know these things then they should have known these things and they are to be condemned for not knowing them.

And how could they let our PM out on a limb like that when there was always the chance that other countries, who understand what tanks can do, might put tanks into Afghanistan and so detract more from her stature?

And of course, the US Marines two days ago rolled tanks, almost the exact same ones that we have, into Helmand province. They understand about tanks because they do this so often and are not into self delusion. As I say in the magazine article, counter insurgency requires that you be competent across all aspects of land warfare. Technology is our asymmetry.

The situation in the world at the moment is that no one, except someone as mindless as North Korea, is going to militarily challenge a super power. Current wars are “wars among the people” because our enemies are exploiting our moral approach to war and our open and moral (though sometimes naïve) societies by attacking us asymmetrically from within the people. And how do we respond. We respond through technology, and where does technology come from? From Defence industry.

The reason that we do not get the wanted response from Government on Defence Industry or on tanks is the same. It is because of a lack of knowledge of military matters that prevent government making up its own mind on military or industry matters or assessing the advice it gets, a fear of mistakes that prevents governmrnt or its officials ever taking chances, and a lack of knowledge about conflict that prevents anyone from actually preparing for war. This creates the same risk for soldiers as it creates for defence industry.

Ladies and Gentlemen, counter insurgency is heavily dependent on technology and counter insurgency is the war of the moment. Defence Industry in Australia has a role to play in counter insurgency, not just in protecting our troops but in winning the war.

And if we think that counter insurgency is tough and needs technology then think how hard it is going to be if and when the Government has to think about a war on the Korea peninsula.

Just imagine if North Korea blatantly sank a South Korean warship and shelled South Korean territory, one of our most important trade partners and a pillar of our standard living. Just imagine if our PM was talking tough to our allies about using force in our region. But, what’s that you say - this has now happened!

Our strategic thinkers have been predicting for some time that this kind of war would occur and the Defence Capability Plan is structured to allow us one day, as far away as 2030, to have the equipment to fight it. I hope that the North Koreans hang on.

And how ready do you think the ADF is to provide a meaningful joint contribution to a morally correct intervention by our allies, if they were ever to act on what our PM recommends? Does anything much that we have actually work well enough to take to war? Well, we put one observer on board a US aircraft carrier off the coast of Korea. And of course the big ticket items in the DCP continue their march, not to battle, but to the right.

Ladies and gentlemen, you have the ideas, we in AADI Defence have the facilitation, let’s do the best we can for the country, for the soldiers, sailors and airmen, and let’s do the best we can for Australian Defence Industry.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Bill Schofield to deliver Hargrave Lecture


This year’s annual Hargrave Lecture is to be delivered to the Melbourne Branch of the Royal Aeronautical Society (Australian Division) by Dr Bill Schofield AM, one of aadiDefence’s Principals.

The lecture

The subject of the lecture will be David Warren, the Scientist, the Black Box Saga and the lessons learnt.

The impact of David Warren’s invention of the black box flight recorder has been immense -  in a world where the volume of air travel continually increases yet the number of air accidents has gone down over the years because we can find out what causes aircraft to crash, David’s invention must have saved tens of thousands of lives. Not many scientists can say that about their work.

And yet he faced overwhelming opposition and indifference to the  introduction of his black box. Recognition of him and his  inventiveness came very late in life after he had finished regular employment and to this day there are many in Australia, let alone the world, who do not know that the black box was invented a few miles from the Melbourne CBD by a combustion chemist.

Soon after graduation Bill Schofield worked for David as an assistant, later as a colleague and became his admirer and friend. He was an extraordinary and unconventional man who went on to work on fuel cells and the world’s future energy supply long before others saw these as important scientific topics.

This lecture will recount some anecdotes that illustrate David’s unusual  attitude to science, work and authority. It will also draw out some lessons from the Black Box story about the acceptance of disruptive technology.

The lecturer

Dr Bill Schofield is one of Australia’s leading scientists with a career spanning forty years in the Department of Defence and as a consultant on aeronautical and defence technology for  Australian Industry.

He was the Director of the Aeronautical and Maritime Research Laboratory for six years where he was responsible for all science and technology for the Royal Australian Navy and the Royal Australian Air Force. Before this Dr Schofield held the positions of First Assistant Secretary Science Policy, Chief of Air Vehicles Division and Chief of Flight Mechanics & Propulsion Division in the Defence Science and Technology Organisation.

He was a co-author of the ‘Kinnaird’ report to cabinet into defence acquisition practices which now sets the guidelines for all Defence acquisitions. Between 1996 and 2006 he has served on a number of advisory panels for the Victorian Government. He has led reviews of Australian defence industry for both the Federal and Victorian governments and was appointed by federal cabinet to the Board of the Australian Submarine Corporation [2006-2009]. He is Chairman of the CRC for Advanced Composite Structures and the board of another four defence and aeronautical related companies.


His achievements have been recognized by his appointment as a Member of the Order of Australia “For service to the Australian Defence Force’s aviation capabilities as a research scientist and administrator, particularly through the Aeronautical and Maritime Research Laboratory” and the award of a Centenary Medal for “outstanding contribution to science and technology particularly public science policy”. He is a Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society, the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering and a Member of the Institute of Company Directors.

Venue and timing

The lecture will be delivered at a dinner at the Crown Entertainment Complex at 6.00 for 6.30 pm on Monday 6 December 2010. Registrations close on Friday 26 November 2010.

Further details and details of how to register may be found on the RAeS Melbourne Branch’s website here.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Richard Hodge joins AADI Defence team


Dr Richard Hodge has become an Associate of AADI Defence Pty Ltd.

Some highlights of Dr Hodge’s career are:

Director CAE Professional Services (2007-10)
Developed the future ‘Battlespace Architecture’ for Defence to instantiate a framework for interoperability across the Services and with its coalition partners, demonstrating how the architecture uses simulation to evaluate capability development options for improved network-enabled outcomes from Defence’s 10-year, $60B capital program.

Senior Associate, Booz and Company (Australia), Canberra (2001-07)
Founding member of the management team, establishing global strategy and technology business in the Defence and national security sector - the first time for such an office outside of the US.

Opened new line of business in strategic security and critical infrastructure protection by building new networks at the executive and political levels in Federal and selected State governments and with industry leaders. 

Scientific Adviser, Strategic Policy and Planning, Department of Defence (1998-2001)
Adviser to the Head Strategic Policy & Planning on applying scientific principles to improve traceability in the planning process and in the auditability of Defence strategic and capability decision making.  Devising a research program, building multidisciplinary teams and leading the execution of R&D to reframe and then implement a new strategy process in concert with senior executives across the Defence Strategy Group.

Senior Analyst, Science Adviser Branch (1995-98)
Coordinated programs across the three Services to guide human systems and information systems research into Defence’s complex policy, command and intelligence functions, where systems interoperability for joint operations is paramount.

Dr Hodge has a Doctorate of Philosophy in Systems Engineering from the Australian National University (Joint Services Staff College).

Land Warfare Conference 2010


This year’s Land Warfare Conference Full Spectrum Threats, Adaptive Responses will be held at Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre from 15-19 November 2010 (for details see conference webpage here).

Two of AADI Defence’s Principals will be in attendance throughout the Conference – Dr Bill Schofield and MajGen Jim Molan, so if you have something you think we can help you with, please look out for them.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Introducing AADI Defence Pty Ltd


AADI Defence Pty Ltd is a company established in the middle of 2010 assist technology-oriented companies to market their goods and services effectively to defence end users and to defence industry.

Our key areas of expertise are:

-  Concepts of military operations
-  Current Australian defence acquisition policy and practice
-  Role of the Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO) in technical assessments of defence acquisitions and sustainment bids
-  Current defence industry policy and practice.

We also seek to identify applications for Australian defence technologies in non-defence industry.

Through our principals and our network of associates we have a wealth of experience upon which to draw, in defence policy, defence science and technology, military operations and military acquisition, sustainment and logistics.

Our principals and some of their career highlights are:

Dr Bill Schofield AM
Director, Australian Submarine Corporation
Director, Aeronautical and Maritime Research Laboratory, DSTO
First Assistant Secretary, Science Policy, Department of Defence

MajGen Jim Molan, AO, DSC
Commander, Deployable Joint Force Headquarters and 1st Division
Commander Australian Defence Colleges
Chief of Staff, Multinational Force – Iraq
   
Paul Barratt AO
Secretary, Department of Defence
Secretary, Commonwealth Department of Primary Industries and Energy
Executive Director, Business Council of Australia

Dr Daniel Ho
Materials     Engineer, ExxonMobil Australia
Engineering Consultant, Monash University
Engineer, Ford Motor Company Australia

Our associates and some of their career highlights are:

Dr Roger Lough AM
Chief Defence Scientist, Department of Defence
Director, Aeronautical and Maritime Research Laboratory
First Assistant Secretary, Science Policy, Department of Defence

Mr Colin Sharp AM CSC
Head Land Systems Division, Defence Materiel Organisation
Principal Consultant, Capability Matters
Director General Future Land Warfare, ADF

AVM John Blackburn AO
Deputy Chief of the Royal Australian Air Force
Commander HQ Integrated Air Defence System
Head Strategic Policy, Department of Defence

AIR CDRE Noel Schmidt AM CSC
Director General, Technical Airworthiness, ADF
Officer Commanding 501 Wing, RAAF Base Amberley
Director Technical Airworthiness, RAAF

Vice Admiral David Shackleton AO
Chief of Navy
Head Capability Development
Director General Command and Control Support Systems

Mr Ross Milton
Acting Chief Executive Officer, ASC
Deputy Chief Executive Officer, ASC
Business Development Manager, ASC

Mr Rod Locket
Managing Director, AeroStructures Technologies Pty Ltd
Managing Director, Advanced Technology Training Pty Ltd
General Manager, Melbourne Jet Base Pty Ltd

Mr Peter Sharp
Head Personnel Policy, Department of Defence
Author “Defence Strategic Workforce Planning Review”
Group Head Defence Corporate Support Services

Dr David Wyllie
Director General Science Policy, DSTO
Chief Air Vehicles Division, DSTO
Chief Maritime Platforms Division, DSTO

Mr Colin Martin FRAeS
Chief Air Operations Division, DSTO
Head DSTO Program Office, Melbourne
Research Leader Structural Integrity, Airframes and Engines Division, DSTO

Mr Bill Dickson
Chief Weapons Systems Division, DSTO
Research Leader Air Weapons Systems, DSTO

Dr David Heilbron
Chief Maritime Operations Division
Chief Electronic Warfare Division
Research Leader, Microwave Radar

Dr Don Sinnott
Chief of a number of DSTO Research Divisions in sensing and IT disciplines
First Assistant Secretary, Science Policy, Department of Defence
CEO, Cooperative Research Centre for Sensor Signalling and Information Processing

Mr Peter Croser
Managing Director, Gibbs & Cox Australia
Deputy Director and Project Management Delegate AEW&C Project, BAE Systems Australia
Head Industry Division, Defence Materiel Organisation

Mrs Samantha Croser
Ground Support Segments Integration Manager, BAE Systems Australia
Battlemap Redevelopment Project Manager ESRI Australia
Senior Software Engineer, ADI Limited

Mr Paul Kristensen
Executive Chairman, Capital Technologies Pty Ltd
Chairman, DDD Group Plc (Listed on the London Stock Exchange); including most of its subsidiaries in North America and Australia
Chairman, Lumitex Limited

Dr Ravidprasad Krishnamurthy 
Expert in applied research in nanotechnology, metallurgy and materials
Director of nDure Technolgies Pty Ltd
Program Manager, Nanomanufacturing, Nanotechnology Victoria Limited (Nanovic)

Ms Pauline Mau
Manager, International Business Relations, Australia Post
Deputy Director, NSW State Office, Commonwealth Department of Industry, Science and Tourism
Executive Officer, Australian Manufacturing Council

Other associates are in the process of joining us and their accession will be posted as they come on board.

Please visit our company’s website at www.aadidefence.com.