Difference between revisions of "Glenn Torpy"

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{{Template:Revolving Door badge}}Air Chief Marshal Sir [[Glenn Torpy]] was the Chief of the British Air Staff from 2006 until  his retirement from the military in 2009.  
Air Chief Marshal Sir [[Glenn Torpy]] was the Chief of the Air Staff from 2006-2009. While serving as Air Chief Marshall, Sir Glenn Torpy was amongst other top military officials to have been hosted by [[BAE Systems]] on 52 private dining and social occasions, across a three year period.<ref>Rob Evans, [https://www.theguardian.com/business/2010/aug/22/bae-systems-ministry-of-defence-hospitality  
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Revealed: how BAE Systems wined and dined MoD top brass 52 times],guardian.co.uk, 22 August 2010.</ref> After retiring, he became senior military adviser to [[BAE Systems]] in January 2011.<ref>Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/dec/17/defence-minister-mod-overspend-ann-taylor Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend],guardian.co.uk, 17 December 2010.</ref>
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Sir Glenn was named among a group of top military officials hosted by [[BAE Systems]] on 52 private dining and social occasions, across a three-year-period to 2010.<ref>Rob Evans, [https://www.theguardian.com/business/2010/aug/22/bae-systems-ministry-of-defence-hospitality Revealed: how BAE Systems wined and dined MoD top brass 52 times],guardian.co.uk, 22 August 2010.</ref>  
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After retiring, Torpy took up a new role as a senior military adviser to [[BAE Systems]] in January 2011.<ref>Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/dec/17/defence-minister-mod-overspend-ann-taylor Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend],guardian.co.uk, 17 December 2010.</ref> Torpy also became  Chairman of
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Trustees of the RAF Museum in 2012. <ref>'[http://www.rafmuseum.org.uk/documents/freedom_of_information/Who_we_are_and_What_we_do/Trustees-biographies-201508.pdf TRUSTEES OF THE ROYAL AIR FORCE MUSEUM page 1]', "RAF Museum" accessed 12 September 2016.</ref>{{#ev:youtube|[https://youtu.be/Fsb-iaqLQ7k?t=39s|450|right|}}
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<br> <br>
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==Biography==
  
 
A 2001 [[Ministry of Defence]] biography gave the following details of Torpy's career:
 
A 2001 [[Ministry of Defence]] biography gave the following details of Torpy's career:
 
 
[[Image:Glen Torpy 2.jpg|250px|right|thumb|'''Glenn Torpy at the Global Air Chiefs Conference, 2007''']]
 
[[Image:Glen Torpy 2.jpg|250px|right|thumb|'''Glenn Torpy at the Global Air Chiefs Conference, 2007''']]
  
 
::Air Vice-Marshal Glenn Torpy joined the Royal Air Force in 1974 after studying aeronautical engineering at Imperial College, London. He has completed two tours as a Jaguar reconnaissance pilot, a tour as a Qualified Weapons Instructor on the Hawk, and commanded a Tornado GR1A tactical reconnaissance squadron. He saw active service with 13 Squadron during the Gulf War, for which he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order. Graduating from the RAF Staff College in 1987, he served in a staff appointment at MOD before acting as Personal Staff Officer to the AOCinC Strike Command. He commanded RAF Bruggen in Germany, graduated from the [[Royal College of Defence Studies]], and attended the Higher Command & Staff Course. A posting at the Permanent Joint Head Quarters, Northwood, as Assistant Chief of Staff for Operations included Operation Desert Fox in December 1998. He spent a short time as Director Air Operations at MOD before promotion to Assistant Chief of the Defence Staff (Operations). He became Air Officer Commanding 1 Group in March 2001.<ref>[http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/+/http://www.operations.mod.uk/telic/biogs_old.htm Brief biographical details of the senior UK commanders involved in Operation Telic], Ministry of Defence, Archived by the National Archives, 8 April 2010.</ref>
 
::Air Vice-Marshal Glenn Torpy joined the Royal Air Force in 1974 after studying aeronautical engineering at Imperial College, London. He has completed two tours as a Jaguar reconnaissance pilot, a tour as a Qualified Weapons Instructor on the Hawk, and commanded a Tornado GR1A tactical reconnaissance squadron. He saw active service with 13 Squadron during the Gulf War, for which he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order. Graduating from the RAF Staff College in 1987, he served in a staff appointment at MOD before acting as Personal Staff Officer to the AOCinC Strike Command. He commanded RAF Bruggen in Germany, graduated from the [[Royal College of Defence Studies]], and attended the Higher Command & Staff Course. A posting at the Permanent Joint Head Quarters, Northwood, as Assistant Chief of Staff for Operations included Operation Desert Fox in December 1998. He spent a short time as Director Air Operations at MOD before promotion to Assistant Chief of the Defence Staff (Operations). He became Air Officer Commanding 1 Group in March 2001.<ref>[http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/+/http://www.operations.mod.uk/telic/biogs_old.htm Brief biographical details of the senior UK commanders involved in Operation Telic], Ministry of Defence, Archived by the National Archives, 8 April 2010.</ref>
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Torpy gave evidence under a public hearing to the Iraq Inquiry on 18 January 2011.
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==Affiliations==
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Torpy is an advisory member of the [[EastWest Institute]].
  
 
==External resources==
 
==External resources==
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[[Category:RAF|Torpy, Glenn]][[Category:Revolving Door|Torpy, Glenn]]
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[[Category:RAF|Torpy, Glenn]][[Category:Revolving Door|Torpy, Glenn]][[Category:Arms Trade Revolving Door|Torpy, Glenn]]

Latest revision as of 12:13, 22 December 2017

Revolving Door.jpg This article is part of the Revolving Door project of Spinwatch.


Air Chief Marshal Sir Glenn Torpy was the Chief of the British Air Staff from 2006 until his retirement from the military in 2009.

Sir Glenn was named among a group of top military officials hosted by BAE Systems on 52 private dining and social occasions, across a three-year-period to 2010.[1]

After retiring, Torpy took up a new role as a senior military adviser to BAE Systems in January 2011.[2] Torpy also became Chairman of Trustees of the RAF Museum in 2012. [3]{{#ev:youtube|[https://youtu.be/Fsb-iaqLQ7k?t=39s%7C450%7Cright%7C}}

Biography

A 2001 Ministry of Defence biography gave the following details of Torpy's career:

Glenn Torpy at the Global Air Chiefs Conference, 2007
Air Vice-Marshal Glenn Torpy joined the Royal Air Force in 1974 after studying aeronautical engineering at Imperial College, London. He has completed two tours as a Jaguar reconnaissance pilot, a tour as a Qualified Weapons Instructor on the Hawk, and commanded a Tornado GR1A tactical reconnaissance squadron. He saw active service with 13 Squadron during the Gulf War, for which he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order. Graduating from the RAF Staff College in 1987, he served in a staff appointment at MOD before acting as Personal Staff Officer to the AOCinC Strike Command. He commanded RAF Bruggen in Germany, graduated from the Royal College of Defence Studies, and attended the Higher Command & Staff Course. A posting at the Permanent Joint Head Quarters, Northwood, as Assistant Chief of Staff for Operations included Operation Desert Fox in December 1998. He spent a short time as Director Air Operations at MOD before promotion to Assistant Chief of the Defence Staff (Operations). He became Air Officer Commanding 1 Group in March 2001.[4]

Torpy gave evidence under a public hearing to the Iraq Inquiry on 18 January 2011.

Affiliations

Torpy is an advisory member of the EastWest Institute.

External resources

  • Iraq Inquiry, [1], 18 January 2011.

Notes

  1. Rob Evans, Revealed: how BAE Systems wined and dined MoD top brass 52 times,guardian.co.uk, 22 August 2010.
  2. Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes, Ex-defence minister joins arms firm behind MoD £1.5bn overspend,guardian.co.uk, 17 December 2010.
  3. 'TRUSTEES OF THE ROYAL AIR FORCE MUSEUM page 1', "RAF Museum" accessed 12 September 2016.
  4. Brief biographical details of the senior UK commanders involved in Operation Telic, Ministry of Defence, Archived by the National Archives, 8 April 2010.