Brian Burridge

Brian Burridge

Infobox Military Person
name= Sir Brian Burridge
lived=
placeofbirth= Maidstone, Kent
placeofdeath=


caption= Air Marshal Sir Brian Burridge
Picture: Crown copyright
nickname=
allegiance= flag|United Kingdom
serviceyears=1967–2006
rank= Air Chief Marshal
branch= air force|United Kingdom
branch
commands= Strike Command
Joint Services Command and Staff College
No. 11/18 Group
unit=
battles= Iraq War
awards= Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Commander of the Order of the British Empire
laterwork=

Air Chief Marshal Sir Brian Kevin Burridge KCB, CBE, ADC, FCMI, FRAeS (b. around 1950 in Maidstone, United Kingdom) is a retired senior Royal Air Force commander.

RAF career

Brian Burridge joined the Royal Air Force as a University Cadet. He was a pilot with operational background in the Maritime Patrol role, serving on Nos 206 and 120 Squadrons.

In 1986 he attended the Royal Naval Staff College and then later that year went on to command the Nimrod OCU. In 1990 he became Officer Commanding RAF Kinloss.

From 1992 to 1997 he served in the Ministry of Defence, initially as Deputy Director of Force Doctrine (RAF), later becoming the Director of Force Development in the Central Staff before spending almost 3 years as the Principal Staff Officer to the Chief of the Defence Staff.

In 1997 he attended the Cabinet Office Top Management Programme and then later in the year became a Defence Fellow at King's College London. In 1998 he attended the Higher Command and Staff Course.

In 1998 he was promoted to Air Vice Marshal and was appointed Air Officer Commanding No. 11/18 Group with operational command of the RAF’s air defence, maritime, and search and rescue forces. In this appointment, he was double-hatted in the NATO post of COMMAIREASTLANT.

In January 2000 he became Commandant of the Joint Services Command and Staff College, subsequently moving the College into a Public Private Partnership at Shrivenham.

In February 2002 he was appointed Deputy Commander-in-Chief Strike Command, and also assumed the role of Commander of NATO’s Combined Air Operations Centre 9, based at RAF High Wycombe. In October, he was detached from his duties at Strike Command to become the UK’s National Contingent Commander for operations against Iraq. Operating alongside US Central Command in Qatar, he commanded the 43,000-strong UK Joint Force during deployment, the combat phase and the early weeks of the aftermath.

In May 2003 he returned to the UK in May, and was subsequently appointed as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath on the Iraq Operational Honours List. He was also appointed Commander-in-Chief Strike Command.

Later career

In 2006 he retired after 39 years of service with the Royal Air Force and joined Finmeccanica as Senior Military Advisor.

Other details

His first staff tour was as Personal Staff Officer to the Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief Strike Command.

He has completed a number of tours as a flying instructor which included command of Cambridge University Air Squadron.

Interests

In 2005 Air Marshal Burridge was President of the RAF Mountaineering Association and a trustee of the Windsor Leadership Trust.

ee also

* Operation Telic Invasion of Iraq
* Order of the British Empire (CBE)
* Aide de camp (ADC)

External links

* [http://www.raf.mod.uk/telic/am_burridge.html Official Biography Page]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3009897.stm BBC profile]

-
-
-


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Burridge (disambiguation) — Burridge may refer to:*Alan Burridge, cricketer *Alan Burridge (writer), writer *Brian Burridge, Royal Air Force commander *Darren Burridge, wrestler *Geoffrey Burridge, English actor *John Burridge, English footballer *Kate Burridge, linguist… …   Wikipedia

  • Brian Robertson — Infobox Musical artist Name = Brian Robertson Background = non vocal instrumentalist Alias = Robbo Born = Birth date and age|1956|2|12|df=y Clarkston, Scotland Died = Instrument = Guitar Genre = Heavy metal, hard rock Occupation = Guitarist,… …   Wikipedia

  • 2003 invasion of Iraq — This article is about the 2003 invasion of Iraq. For events after May 1, 2003, see Iraq War. For the Mongol Invasion of Iraq, see Siege of Baghdad (1258). For the British invasion of Iraq during World War II, see Anglo Iraqi War. 2003 invasion of …   Wikipedia

  • RAF Strike Command — Infobox Military Unit unit name= Strike Command caption= Strike Command Badge start date= 30 April 1968 end date= 1 April 2007 country= United Kingdom allegiance= branch= Royal Air Force type= role= size= command structure= garrison= RAF High… …   Wikipedia

  • Invasión de Irak de 2003 — Para los acontecimientos posteriores al 1 de mayo de 2003, véase Guerra de Irak. Invasión de Irak de 2003 Parte de la Guerra de Irak …   Wikipedia Español

  • Open University — is also the name of other institutions. See Distance education or the Open Universities category for a list. The Open University Motto Learn and Live Established …   Wikipedia

  • Post-invasion Iraq (2003 to present) — See also: Iraq War, 2007 in Iraq, 2008 in Iraq, and 2009 in Iraq Post invasion Iraq (2003 to present) Part of the Iraq War …   Wikipedia

  • List of people associated with the 2003 invasion of Iraq — List of people associated with the 2003 Invasion of Iraq.Australia* John Howard, Prime Minister * Andrew Wilkie mdash; intelligence officer, resigned in protest at misuse of intelligence reportsIraq* Tariq Aziz * Ahmed Chalabi Iraqi National… …   Wikipedia

  • Operation Telic — Operation (or Op) TELIC was the codename under which all British military operations in Iraq were conducted between the start of the Invasion of Iraq on 19 March 2003 and the withdrawal of the last remaining British forces on 22 May 2011. The… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Open University people — This is a partial list of alumni of the Open University. The OU has over 2 million alumni, including:*Joan Armatrading, singer/songwriter *John Battle, MP *Connie Booth, actress *Lord Bridge of Harwich, retired Lord of Appeal in Ordinary *Craig… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”