>Bob (UK) Stewart-BS-09<
Col. Bob Stewart
has worked in some of the toughest circumstances in the world. He was the first
British United Nations Commander in Bosnia and has completed long service in
Northern Ireland. He experienced policy-making at the highest level during his
two years as Chief of Policy at Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe. Bob's
extensive knowledge of strategy and management of challenging circumstance makes
him ideally positioned to inspire today's business leaders and to talk about
negotiating in crisis situations.
The son of a Regular Officer, Bob was selected for officer training when he was
seventeen years old. After two years officer training at the Royal Military
Academy, Sandhurst, he was commissioned as an infantry officer in 1969. Four
years later he was sent to university by the Army where he obtained a First
Class Degree in International Politics.
Returning to full-time Army service in 1977, Bob first became an intelligence
officer in Northern Ireland before being sent to Sandhurst as an instructor. Two
years later he attended the Army Staff College at Camberley for fifteen months
before once again returning to Northern Ireland, this time as an infantry
company commander. On 6 December 1982, as the incident commander, he was
responsible for controlling and responding to a terrorist bomb at Ballykelly in
Northern Ireland. The bomb killed seventeen people - six of them soldiers from
his own company. He was awarded a personal commendation by the General Officer
commanding Northern Ireland for his actions that day.
Over the next seven years he carried out a series of appointments. He served in
Military Operations at the Ministry of Defence, attended the Joint Service Staff
College, and was second in command of an infantry battalion. He became Military
Assistant (Lieutenant Colonel) to the highest ranking officer in NATO, where he
was responsible for writing the first speech made by a NATO officer to the
Soviet Ministry of Defence in Moscow. In March 1991 he assumed command of 1st
Battalion, the Cheshire Regiment. As Commanding Officer, he carried out two
operational tours: to Northern Ireland again (his seventh deployment there) and
as the first British Commander under United Nations command in Bosnia from
September 1992 to May 1993.
During his time in Bosnia, he was nicknamed 'Bosnia Bob' and became a familiar
face to television viewers around the world as he handled the intricacies of
Balkan politics. On returning from Bosnia he was awarded the Distinguished
Service Order by Her Majesty The Queen. He then took up an appointment as Chief
of Policy at Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe for two years. During
that time he wrote a best-selling book on operating under United Nations Command,
titled Broken Lives.
He left the British Army in September 1995 to become a Senior Consultant in the
public affairs and corporate policy division of a major London firm. From May
1998 to March 2001, Bob was Senior Vice President for Europe and the Middle East
of The WorldSpace Foundation, a company which launches satellites and promotes
education/health programmes throughout the world. Bob Stewart is also spokesman
and Director of Justice In Action – the company’s main aims are investigation,
indictment and bringing to trial war criminals world wide.
He is a frequent commentator on television and radio and speaks to differing
audiences on subjects such as leadership in adverse situations, crisis
management, negotiating skills, planning a complex operation, team-building,
peacekeeping, the military and politics, and the future utility of defence
politics and military power. A distinguished speaker, Bob is an excellent
communicator, captivating audiences with his experiences and sharing his insight
on effective corporate leadership and team management. Bob is equally at home in
the after dinner environment where his stories of managing high tension
situations not only fascinate but are peppered with characteristic humour,
creating a highly entertaining evening.