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John Cantwell (general)
Retired Australian Army officer

John Cantwell (general)

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Quick Facts

Intro
Retired Australian Army officer
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Ipswich
Age
68 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Major General John Patrick Cantwell AO, DSC (born 9 October 1956) is a retired senior Australian Army officer.

Early life

Cantwell was born in Ipswich, Queensland, on 9 October 1956 to Cecily Mary (née McInnerney) and Daniel Cantwell. Growing up in Toowoomba, he was educated at Downlands College and St. Mary's College.

Military career

Cantwell was a member of the Australian Army Cadets prior to joining the Australian Army in 1974 as a regular soldier with the rank of private.

He attended officer training at Officer Cadet School, Portsea in 1981, and was commissioned into the Royal Australian Armoured Corps. As a major, Cantwell commanded A Sqn 4/7RDG, a British tank squadron as an exchange officer with the British in Germany. As a result of that posting, he served in Operation Desert Storm with the Coalition forces in Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Kuwait (1990–1991).

Cantwell was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in 1989 in recognition of service to the Australian Army as Adjutant of the Armoured Centre.

In August 1996 Cantwell became Commanding Officer and Chief Instructor at the Royal Military College, Duntroon. In January 1999 he took up an appointment as an instructor at the British Joint Services Command and Staff College in the United Kingdom, returning to Australia as the Director of the Force Development Group, Land Warfare Development Centre, on promotion to colonel in December 2000.

Cantwell was promoted to brigadier in January 2003, and appointed Director General of Capability and Plans in Australian Defence Headquarters. Following command of the 1st Brigade (2004–2005), in early 2006 he deployed to Iraq as the Director Strategic Operations, Headquarters Multi National Forces Iraq. He was promoted in the field to the rank of major general on 4 December 2006, the first time in 60 years that an Australian was promoted to major general while on operations. He was promoted by General George Casey, (US Army) and Major General David Fastabend, (US Army). During this ceremony he was also appointed an Officer of the Legion of Merit. He assumed the appointment of Deputy Chief of Army on 29 January 2007.

Cantwell was advanced to Officer of the Order of Australia in 2007 for distinguished service as the Director of Strategic Operations for the Multi-National Force – Iraq.

In February 2008 Cantwell was selected by then Chief of the Defence Force, Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, to be the senior military member of the team working on a new Defence White Paper, the paramount Australian security and defence policy document commissioned by the Australian Government.

Following the Victorian bushfires disaster of 7 February 2009, Cantwell was attached to the Office of the Premier of Victoria as the Interim Head (and later, Chief of Operations) of the Victorian Bushfires Reconstruction and Recovery Authority responsible for coordinating all Commonwealth, State and non-government efforts to recover from the effects of the fires.

In 2010 he served a twelve-month tour as Commander of Australian Forces in the Middle East Area of Operations (Joint Task Force 633). As a result of Cantwell's "inspired leadership, deep commitment to his people and superior performance on operations" in the Middle East, he was awarded a Distinguished Service Cross in the 2012 Australia Day Honours List, for distinguished command and leadership in action as the Commander Joint Task Force 633 on Operations SLIPPER and KRUGER. He retired from the Australian Army on 7 February 2012 after 38 years of service.

Later life

Cantwell and his wife Jane, who met while she was serving in the Australian Army, where she served for six years, moved to the Sunshine Coast, Queensland in September 2011 before he announced his retirement from the Australian Army in February 2012.

John Cantwell is an occasional television commentator on military affairs and contributes articles to various newspapers and magazines in Australia. He is a nationally recognised advocate for better mental health care for Australian veterans, and is Patron or Ambassador of several organisations promoting veterans' mental health.

He has published two books:

Honours and awards

Order of Australia (Military) ribbon.png DSC (Australia) ribbon.png Australian Active Service Medal ribbon.png Afghanistan Medal (Australia) ribbon.png

Iraq Medal (Australia) ribbon.png Australian Service Medal ribbon.png DFSM with Rosette x 4.png Australian Defence Medal (Australia) ribbon.png

Gulf Medal BAR.svg Us sa-kwlib rib.png Us legion of merit officer rib.png NATO Medal ISAF ribbon bar.svg

Order of Australia (Military) ribbon.pngOfficer of the Order of Australia (AO)June 2007
Member of the Order of Australia (AM)January 1989
DSC (Australia) ribbon.pngDistinguished Service Cross (DSC)January 2012
Australian Active Service Medal ribbon.pngAustralian Active Service Medalwith 3 Clasps KUWAIT, IRAQ 2003 and ICAT
Afghanistan Medal (Australia) ribbon.pngAfghanistan Medal
Iraq Medal (Australia) ribbon.pngIraq Medal
Australian Service Medal ribbon.pngAustralian Service Medalwith 1 clasp
DFSM with Rosette x 4.pngDefence Force Service Medal with 4 Clasps35–39 Years of Service
Australian Defence Medal (Australia) ribbon.pngAustralian Defence Medal
Gulf Medal BAR.svgGulf Medal(United Kingdom) with 1 clasp 16 Jan to 28 Feb 1991
Us sa-kwlib rib.pngKuwait Liberation Medal(Saudi Arabia)
Us legion of merit officer rib.pngOfficer of the Legion of Merit(United States) 4 December 2006
NATO Medal ISAF ribbon bar.svgNATO Medal for Service with ISAF(NATO)

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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