When 10 British Army soldiers on a 10-day training exercise descended into Lows Gully, a narrow chasm

Question:

When 10 British Army soldiers on a 10-day training exercise descended into Low’s Gully, a narrow chasm that cuts through Mt. Kinabalu in Borneo, each knew “the golden rule for such expeditions—never split up.” Yet the fittest three struggled out of the jungle with concussions, malaria, and infected wounds 19 days later, two more terribly ill soldiers found a village the next day, and the remaining five emaciated and injured men were rescued from a cave by a helicopter on day 33. What happened? 

On a surface level, the near-tragic fracturing of the group began with a logical division of labor, according to the training’s initiators, Lieutenant Colonel Neill and Major Foster:

Because the group would be one of mixed abilities, and the young British and NCOs [non-commissioned officers] were likely to be fitter and more experienced than the Hong Kong soldiers, the team would work in two halves on the harder phases of the descent. The British, taking advantage of Mayfield’s expertise (in rock climbing), would set up ropes on the difficult sections, while he [Neill] and Foster would concentrate on bringing the Hong Kong soldiers down. Every now and then the recce (reconnaissance) party would report back, and the expedition would go on down in one unit until another reconnaissance party became necessary. The men reported that from then on, perilous climbing conditions, debilitating sickness, and monsoon rains permanently divided the group. A review board found differently, blaming Neill’s and Foster’s leadership and their decision to take some less-experienced soldiers on the exercise. No rulings were made about the near-catastrophic decision to divide the group, but closer inquiries show that this temporary work group of diverse members who were not previously acquainted started out with a high level of intragroup trust that dissolved over time. The resulting Faultline's, based on members’ similarities and differences and the establishment of ad hoc leaders, may have been inevitable.

Questions 

1. How was the common ground established by the reconnaissance subgroups different from the common ground established by the cave subgroups? 

2. Do you think the group should have fractured as it did? Why or why not? 

3. When the exercise was designed, Neill created a buddy system based on similarity of soldiers’ backgrounds (rank, unit, age, fitness, skills level). The first group out of the jungle was assigned buddies and one other: two lance corporals and one corporal from the same unit (regular army), ages 24–26 with good fitness levels, all top roping and abseiling (TR&A) instructors. The second group out was assigned buddies: a sergeant and a lance corporal from the same unit (elite regular army), ages 25 and 37, good fitness levels, both with Commando Brigade skills. The group left in the cave split into: a lieutenant colonel and a major (buddies), one from the regular army and one from the part time territorial army, ages 46 and 54, fair fitness level, one TR&A and one ski instructor. The second faction was the three from the Hong Kong unit—a lance corporal and two privates, ages 24–32, fair to good fitness levels, one with jungle training and two novices. Would you have set up the buddy system Neill did? Why or why not, and if not, what would you have changed?

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Related Book For  answer-question

Organizational Behavior

ISBN: 9780134729329

18th Edition

Authors: Stephen RobbinsTimothy JudgeTimothy Judge, Timothy Judge

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