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Hugh Beach

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Education
  
Winchester College

Years of service
  
1941–1981

Battles and wars
  
World War II


Battles/wars
  
World War II

Rank
  
General

Name
  
Hugh Beach

Service/branch
  
British Army

Hugh Beach httpsiytimgcomviLHpGHWv9TNEhqdefaultjpg

Born
  
20 May 1923 (age 100) (
1923-05-20
)

Commands held
  
Staff College, Camberley

Awards
  
Order of the British Empire, Order of the Bath, Military Cross

General sir hugh beach on trident britain s strategic nuclear weapon system


General Sir William Gerald Hugh Beach, GBE, KCB, MC (born 20 May 1923) is a former British Army officer who, in retirement, researches and advises on defence policy, arms control and disarmament, with an active interest in promoting concerns about ethical issues of peace and war.

Contents

Hugh Beach Hugh Beach Engaging Vulnerability

Sir hugh beach clinging on to trident is nonsensical


Early life

Hugh Beach General Sir Hugh Beach Responds To Allegations theneedleblog

Beach was educated at Winchester College, Peterhouse, Cambridge (MA 1961) and Edinburgh University (M.Sc. 1971).

Military career

Beach joined the Corps of Royal Engineers in August 1941. He saw active service in France in 1944 and in Java in 1946. During the 1960s he commanded an engineer regiment and an infantry brigade, both at Osnabrück in Germany. He was director of army staff duties at the Ministry of Defence from 1971 to 1973, commandant of the Staff College, Camberley from 1974 to 1975 and Deputy Commander-in-Chief UK Land Forces from 1976 to 1977 before becoming Master-General of the Ordnance (Army Board member for Procurement) from 1977 to 1981.

Later life

Retiring from the army in 1981, he served as warden of St. George's House, Windsor Castle from 1981 to 1986, vice-Lord Lieutenant of Greater London from 1981 to 1987, Chief Royal Engineer from 1982 to 1987 and member of the Security Commission from 1982 to 1991. He chaired Ministry of Defence Study Groups on Censorship in War in 1983 and Education in the Army in 1984. He was director of the Council for Arms Control from 1986 to 1989. In the 1990s he was chairman of the governors of Gordon's and Bedales schools, and also chaired the boards of the Church Army and the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.

He is currently a member of the board or executive committee of: the Council for Christian Approaches to Defence, the Centre for Defence Studies (King's College London), the Verification Technology Information Centre (VERTIC), the International Security Information Service (ISIS), and of the British Pugwash Group. He lectures and has contributed chapters to over two dozen books as well as publishing a number of monographs, articles and book reviews. In 1999 he co-authored, with Nadine Gurr, a book on British nuclear weapons policy and, in 2001, a briefing paper on cluster bombs,

In January 2009, The Times newspaper published a joint letter from Field Marshal Lord Bramall, General Lord Ramsbotham and General Beach arguing that the UK government should fund more realistic military needs rather than perpetuate its Trident programme, arguing that:

Nuclear weapons have shown themselves to be completely useless as a deterrent to the threats and scale of violence we currently, or are likely to, face — particularly international terrorism; and the more you analyse them the more unusable they appear.

Honours

He holds an honorary Doctorate of Civil Laws from the University of Kent in Canterbury (1990). He is an honorary fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge and of the Chartered Institute of Building Service Engineers, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and a Companion of the Chartered Management Institute.

References

Hugh Beach Wikipedia