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  1. Phil Jones served for 36 years in the British Army, departing the Service as a Lieutenant General. With over 15 international operational deployments, including three secondments to the UN and two to NATO in leadership roles, he gained operational experience in most of the major military campaigns of the past 30 years, including serving for over 3.5 years in Afghanistan.

  2. Phil Jones served for 36 years in the British Army retiring from the Army as a Lieutenant General. He has operational experience gained from most of the major military campaigns of the past 30 years including over 3 years in Afghanistan; most recently he was Chief of Staff of NATO's Allied Command for Transformation. · Experience: Othrys Ltd · Location: Eye · 500+ connections on ...

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    • Eye, England, United Kingdom
  3. Two defence lines in Libya were outflanked, and it was not until the 8th Army entered Tunisia on 4 February 1943 that resistance increased. On 6 March 1943, the Axis forces counter-attacked at Medenine, but were repulsed. The Mareth Line was reached on 24 February 1943. This was a former defence line constructed by the French to guard against ...

  4. Sep 16, 2011 · Major General Phil Jones joined the Infantry (The Royal Anglian Regiment) in 1981. Since then he has served on eight operational tours of duty in Northern Ireland, from platoon to brigade commander. He has also served on operational tours of duty in Belize (1982), the Balkans (1995) and Georgia/Abkhazia (1999). Major General Jones has served ...

  5. The National Army Museum holds the soldiers’ effects ledgers that were created by the War Office to record the monies owing to those who died while serving in the British Army. These records run from 1901 to 1960, covering the latter stages of the Boer War and, of course, both World Wars. Typically, they contain the following details: name ...

  6. 13.3 Records of soldiers’ effects 1901-1960. The National Army Museum holds records of soldiers’ effects for April 1901 to March 1960. Those from 1901 to 1929 are available on Ancestry (charges apply). For 1930-1960 contact the National Army Museum directly.

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  8. hard work and book-learning.3 A number of officers agitated prominently for reforms to the army’s institutions throughout this period, most especially Garnet Wolseley and his ‘ring’ of favorites, but they were unable to entirely transform the system they served in, even if they had 1.