¶ … Organizations
The Structure of the British Army Compared to a Civilian Business Organization
Military life, especially during combat situations, is difficult for the individual who has always been a civilian to imagine. The structure of the organization is rigid, strict control is maintained of all personnel, the management style is historically largely authoritarian, and conditions can be harsh. However, there are always people who volunteer for this service for many reasons. The individual lacks responsibility and wishes to gain it, there is a scarcity of sustainable employment, the promise of adventure awaits the soldier. Other reasons exist, every soldier or sailor has one, but whatever the reason when a person joins the military they soon understand the organization. There is no mystery regarding large goals or minor objectives. The British Army has a unique history and purpose that can be useful to companies that want to survive and remain successful in all endeavors.
The British Army has a history that extends back to pre-Roman times. At that juncture the British Isles contained many tribes whose main objective, much like the native American and Australian aboriginal tribes, was to survive the conquests of opposing tribes in the island. When the Romans arrived they implemented a much more rigid structure and began the tradition of the British military. The island moved from clannish factions over the next several centuries to a solid military structure.
Great Britain designed its modern army after the needs that they saw as an island nation surrounded by enemies. "Britain,…coupled a flair for coalition warfare with a sustained strategy of maritime dominance, refined a policy that combined aggressive economic policies, maritime dominance, and fighting continental opponents by proxy within coalitions…The British used this method to build a force structure around a large, vigorous Navy and a small (by continental standards), but highly professional, expeditionary army" (Kuehn, 2003). The large navy was used to blockade the enemies that could threaten by sea, and the small army was used to fight enemies that threatened empirical gains. Due to this found need, "in the early 19th century, British statesmen created a quasi-tribal regimental system in which officers and enlisted men served together over extended periods of time, rotating between overseas and home assignments" (Cassidy, 2005). This was also in response to a large war with the American colonies which had shown that the old Roman phalanx system of fighting would not work in many cases. The British army went back to the tribal system that had been so successful in the early days of the people on the island.
One issue that the army had was its treatment of soldiers. For "British soldiers in the eighteenth century: enlistments were for life and pay was unsustainably low" (Moran, 1994). This meant that the camps had to have followers to supply the individual soldier with the food and care that a warrior required. However, "throughout British history, its' ill treated, underpaid, and often abused soldiers continually rewrote military tactics with impossible feats of courage. It mattered not how many times the personnel of the Regiment were replaced, it always had its distinct Regimental identity, and was known and feared because of its historical reputation" (Moran, 1994). The British soldier had the reputation around the world of bulldog determination. Many times soldiers fought in a square, facing out, against unbelievable odds. They were able to overcome many enemies by bravery alone.
One facet of this army though was troubling to nations which wished to emulate the style that the British had been so successful with. Thomas Jefferson was trying to build up the American army, and "he was particularly interested in avoiding the worst elements of the British army, which he viewed as dehumanizing and repressive. Although the British army was honored throughout the world for its iron-clad bravery and discipline in battle, Jefferson saw a different image of an organization built for its own edification and expansion over the interests of its citizens" (Turley, 2002). The governors of the army would eventually see this also. Although the British army was respected around the world, the individual soldiers who gained British worldwide dominance continued to be ill treated. Over the years, many improvements were made that would continue the force's position as a leading fighting force into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. They have continued in this mode because "British strategy, executed over the long-term, proved remarkably flexible in meeting needs during periods of relative peace and during a sustained global conflict with France; in other words, across...
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