Defence Media Operations Centre

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Microphones-2-.jpg This article is part of the Propaganda Portal project of Spinwatch.

Background

The DMOC gives this acount of its role:

As a result of lessons from recent operations, in particular Operation TELIC, the DMOC was established to provide the Tri-service hub for Media Operations training, education and operational capability.
At the centre of this new concept is the formation of a rapidly deployable Joint Media Operations Team (JMOT) and the creation of a lead training school responsible for the overall co-ordination, development and delivery of Media Operations training and education across the Defence Community.
With a staff of 47 drawn from the RN, ARMY, RAF and the Civil Service, the DMOC reports to the Director General Media Communications (DGMC) at the Ministry of Defence and is in all respects a Tri-service asset.
The DMOC is predominantly located at RAF Uxbridge, which is easily accessible by road, only a couple of miles from the M40, 4 miles from the M4 or Tube into Uxbridge Tube Station. The Logistic Support Wing is based at Beaconsfield.[1]

Staff complement and location

With a balance of 47 Staff from the RN, ARMY, RAF and the Civil Service, the DMOC reports to the Director General Media Communications (DGMC) at the Ministry of Defence and is in all respects a Tri-service asset.
The DMOC is predominately located at RAF Uxbridge, which is easily accessible by road, only a couple of miles from the M40, 4 miles from the M4 or Tube into Uxbridge Tube Station. The Logistic Support Wing is based at Beaconsfield.[2]

History

Current activities

Views

Affiliations

People

  • Lt Col Stratford-Wright A leader of one of the MOD's Joint Media Operations Teams (JMOTs) working out of the Defence Media Operations Centre (DMOC) at Uxbridge. He is a strong believer in the essential role that the JMOT's play within keeping journalists embedded in the war zones safe.
"Reporters in Iraq and Afghanistan do suffer a major handicap that makes their job more difficult. This is the slightly strange propensity of Al Qaida and rogue Shia militias in Iraq and the Taliban to kidnap or murder reporters. I say strange as we credit the enemy in Iraq and Afghanistan as such effective propagandists yet, arguably, they are missing a trick by restricting journalist activities. Most reporters, quite understandably, are not prepared to go unilateral in search of a story so they come to us, the military, and embed to get the Iraq or Afghanistan story."[3]
  • Commander Angie Hancock Served at the Defence Media Operations Centre at RAF Uxbridge in London, 'training senior officers in media interview skills; organised numerous media events including a Royal family facility at the Trafalgar 200 celebrations in Portsmouth, and now works as a media support officer to bereaved families following the deaths of loved ones.'[4]

Funding

Clients

Publications, Contact, Resources and Notes

Publications

Contact

Address:
Phone:
Email:
Website:http://www.defencemediaops.co.uk/

Resources

Notes

  1. DMOC Defence Media Operations Centre, accessed 3 March 2009
  2. MoD The Defence Media Operations Centre (DMOC), accessed 28 November 2009
  3. Embedding - the MoD's view
  4. T Nichols Angie takes on new role as commanding officer of HMS Vivid Plymouth Evening Herald Saturday, September 13, 2008, 07:00, accessed 30 October 2010