The New Zealand Herald

NZ Army marching at pace with 21st century makeover

- Kurt Bayer

The unmistakab­le smell of new carpet triggers conflictin­g thoughts for Major General John Boswell.

He remembers when that old carpet at Burnham — a place that still feels like home — was first laid down.

It was around that time, as a young platoon commander, he was posted to Singapore, perfecting jungle warfare and counter-insurgency tactics, using a prismatic compass and Vietnam-era radio.

But like that Burnham carpet, those tactics, archaic equipment and training environmen­ts eventually wore threadbare and needed replacing.

Now, the smell of newly-laid carpet signals the ongoing changes to the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) for its Chief of Army.

Boswell, former Commanding Officer of the storied 2nd/1st Infantry Battalion based at Burnham Military Camp outside Christchur­ch, is coming up two years in the top job. He is overseeing some of the biggest changes in the organisati­on’s history, aiming to transform it into a “modern, agile, highly-adaptive light combat force” that can plug in with coalition partners, in particular other Five Eyes nations — the United States, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom.

New Zealand’s future high-tech soldiers will be satellite-tracked and wear linked-up helmet-cams on the battlefiel­d, allowing them to communicat­e directly with comrades and take orders from officers.

Drones will become “as ubiquitous as section machine guns”, while drones, artificial intelligen­ce (AI), and big data are being considered for the Army’s arsenal.

The second tranche of the Network Enabled Army project, backed by a capital investment of up to $106 million rolled out over four years, is under way.

Boswell says the digitising of command and control systems will allow the Army to “operate in the informatio­n-rich environmen­t that is the contempora­ry battle space”.

“This is fundamenta­lly-important to the future of the New Zealand Army and our ability to be both effective in support of our community, our nation, and globally, but to be interopera­ble with our partners and allies. And that’s tracking pretty well,” he said on a recent visit to Burnham

Soldiers are getting a makeover too. The old Multi Camouflage Uniform (MCU) is being replaced by the New Zealand Multi-Terrain Pattern (NZMTP) uniform.

There’s also a major programme looking at upgrading the Army’s vehicles, which Boswell says comes as a “direct result of the proliferat­ion” of improvised explosive devices (IEDs) used on the modern battlefiel­d, and used to devastatin­g effect during the post-9/11 wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq.

Although the Covid-19 global pandemic has disrupted many planned training exercises, Boswell says big joint training exercises are still “critically important to us”.

Exercises like the recent vast multi-national Joint Warfightin­g Assessment provide a perfect opportunit­y for the NZDF to exercise and train alongside its likely partners and allies, and to test interopera­bility — a key military buzzword that constantly crops up in discussion­s with top brass across Five Eyes nations.

“The New Zealand Army enjoys a great relationsh­ip with the Australian­s and the Americans based in Hawaii and any opportunit­y to train alongside them is an opportunit­y for us to confirm our interopera­bility with them and to demonstrat­e what our value-add is to a coalition environmen­t, and that’s really important,” Boswell explains.

Boswell’s also on a major recruitmen­t drive. The NZDF Defence Capability Plan aims to increase NZ Army personnel numbers from about 4700 to 6000 by 2035 — while the Defence White Paper talks about 5150 personnel by 2025.

He thinks the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic could attract fresh interest for many in a career in the armed forces.

“It may well be that there is an opportunit­y in that space that will allow us to progress appropriat­ely along that pathway to 5150 [personnel] by 2025,” he says.

 ??  ?? Major General John Boswell.
Major General John Boswell.

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