Vice Admiral Robert Andrew Kevin WALLS AO
RAN
Deputy Chief of Navy (1991)
Commander Australian Fleet (1991 - 1993)
Deputy Chief of Australian Defence Force (1995 - 1997)
On
28 August 2023 Vice Admiral Robert Andrew Kevin Walls passed
away after a long illness. He was an officer who
developed into an insightful strategic thinker and made a
significant contribution to the post-carrier RAN.
Robert Walls was born at Colac,
Victoria, on 15 March 1941 and was educated at country
schools before joining the Royal Australian Navy College
(RANC) when it was still at Flinders Naval Depot/HMAS
Cerberus following the Depression-era strictures.
Joining in 1955 his class was the last 13-year old entry.
During his training the RANC was relocated to its original
site at Jervis Bay, commissioning as HMAS Creswell
in February 1958. The discipline at the RANC during
the FND years could be harsh and young Cadet Midshipman
Walls found it tough going at times and even contemplated
leaving the College.
Following graduation Rob Walls, who
was also known by his initials ‘RAK’, initially went to sea
in the training sloop HMAS Swan. In April
1959 he and his classmates left Australia to join the
Britannia Royal Naval College (BRNC), Dartmouth, UK, for
continuation training.
Midshipman Walls found the
environment at Dartmouth much to his liking, enjoying his
time both at BRNC, and in the Type 15 frigate HMS
Vigilant, at that time operating in the West Indies as
part of the Dartmouth training squadron.
As a Sub-Lieutenant he continued his
training in the aircraft carrier HMAS Melbourne and
then the frigate HMAS Quiberon. In 1962 he
undertook the Destroyer Gunnery Officers’ course and then
served as gunnery officer in the frigate HMAS Quickmatch.
The Qs were successful stop-gap anti-submarine frigates, but
they could not hide their World War II destroyer
austereness.
In 1964 Lieutenant Rob Walls was
part of the commissioning crew for the Type 12 frigate HMAS
Derwent. Armed with Seacat, she was the RAN’s
first warship to be missile armed and represented the latest
word in Cold War frigate design. Rob Walls remained in
Derwent until mid-1965 during which time he saw
operational service off Borneo and Malaysia during the
‘Indonesian Confrontation’.
In 1965 Rob Walls’ next sea posting
was to the guided missile destroyer HMAS Hobart
under the command of Captain Guy Griffiths. He joined
in the US as part of the commissioning crew and undertook a
range of courses including the Air Intercept Controller
(AIC) course. Hobart was the first of the RAN
DDGs to receive the full systems and operations training in
the US. For Rob Walls the complexity of the DDG,
combined with the sophistication of the US technical and
operational training was a revelation.
Hobart was the first of the
RAN destroyers to serve in the Vietnam War. Notably,
Captain Griffiths organised for Rob Walls and Leading Seaman
Corrie Halliwell to serve as AICs for a period in the
nuclear-powered cruiser USS Long Beach off the
North Vietnam coast. They were the first RAN personnel
to be exposed to the duties of Positive Identification Radar
Advisory Zone or PIRAZ procedures and more significantly the
new Naval Tactical Data System (NTDS). He saw first
hand the power of combat data systems to knit together
weapons and sensors. In Long Beach Rob Walls
controlled Combat Air Patrol (CAP) aircraft and ran
intercepts using USN F4 Phantom aircraft against the North
Vietnamese fighters. Hobart’s outstanding
deployment, in which she came under shore-fire on numerous
occasions, led to the ship being awarded a United States
Navy Unit Commendation for meritorious service.
Captain Griffiths was a major
influence on Rob Walls’ approach to his naval career.
Rob would later write, “the superior training and morale of
his crew was a fine match for his calm demeanour and
masterful ability to create trust and commitment amongst his
men.” Rob Walls and Guy Griffiths would remain in
regular touch until Rob’s last days. Rob Walls wrote
the Foreword to Peter Jones’ biography of Rear Admiral
Griffiths and one of his last public appearances was at the
launch of the book at the Australian War Memorial.
Later in life Rob Walls credited his
time in Hobart with learning not only important war fighting
skills but some of life’s most valuable and lasting lessons.
Moreover, that experience instilled in him the value and
importance of mentoring others, something Rob Walls
continued to do all his life and there were many who were to
benefit from his time, consideration and wise counsel.
In 1968 Lieutenant Rob Walls
returned to the UK and after completing the Royal Navy
Direction Officer’s course at HMS Dryad he served
in 893 Squadron, then attached to the aircraft carrier HMS
Hermes, in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, and at
RNAS Yeovilton, Somerset, as Training Officer at
the Direction School.

The then Lieutenant R Walls,
right while serving in HMS Hermes.
Other RAN officers include: Lieutenant J McDonald, left, and
Lieutenant K Clements
Promoted Lieutenant Commander in
1971, he returned to Australia and to sea in the destroyer
HMAS Perth as the ship’s Direction Officer, before
joining the Navigation & Direction School at HMAS Watson
in 1973 as a Training Officer. His next appointment
was on the staff of the Flag Officer Commanding the
Australian Fleet (FOCAF), as Fleet Direction Officer from
1975-1976, a position he held until appointed executive
officer of Perth in January 1977.
In 1978 Commander Walls served in
Navy Office for the first time in the Operational
Requirements Branch, as the Follow-On Destroyer Project
Officer. In that position Rob Walls was responsible
for preparing the case for the new destroyer. His
major contribution was the preparation of the draft Defence
Navy Destroyer Group Report of June 1980. Rob’s
commentary on and analysis of the seven ship options was
central to this report’s findings. The report was
considered by Defence’s Force Structure Committee and
resulted in the construction of the guided missile frigates
HMA Ships Melbourne and Newcastle at
Williamstown. During that process Rob was exposed to
the workings and challenges of progressing Navy proposals
through senior Defence Committees, which stood him in good
stead for future postings.
At the end of 1981 Commander Walls
was appointed in command of the RAN’s heavy lift ship HMAS
Tobruk. This was to prove a rewarding
appointment with one of Tobruk’s first operational
missions being to transport eight UH-1H helicopters and
stores to Israel in support of a United Nations sponsored
Multi-National Force operating in the Sinai Desert.

HMAS Tobruk, Walls' first
ship command (1981–83)
During his time in command of
Tobruk, the ship grounded in the Brisbane River, a
potentially career-ending event. The Fleet Commander
at the time, Rear Admiral Mike Hudson, was a navigational
specialist who understood the complexities Rob was facing in
the river. He embarked in Tobruk soon thereafter to
gain a first-hand assessment and was well satisfied with her
captain and the ship’s organisation. Rob remained in
command. In his performance report, subsequent to the
grounding, Rob was described: “He’s generally met the
challenges of ship handling but has at times not paid
sufficient attention to navigation detail.
Particularly important in a ship with that role. A
recent unintentional grounding has probably corrected any
tendency to overlook such detail and I do not expect any
further misjudgements.” The report went on to
recommend him for promotion.
Following his command in June 1983,
Rob Walls was appointed Commander Australian Amphibious
Squadron and Commanding Officer of the shore establishment
HMAS Moreton, situated on the Brisbane River.
Promoted Captain in 1984 his next
appointment was a return to Canberra as the Director of
Naval Force Development (DNFD) in Navy Office. The
following year Vice Admiral Hudson became the Chief of Naval
Staff (CNS) with the task of leading the Navy into its
post-aircraft carrier future. Rob Walls’ intellect and
toughness were much valued by the new CNS in that
challenging time.
During this posting, Rob Walls was
heavily involved with providing the Navy’s input to the Dibb
Review and the White Paper Defence of Australia 1987
(DOA87). One of his major influences was the analysis
of major surface combatant numbers required for concurrent
presence in five broad northern Australian maritime areas.
He concluded that the RAN required a force of 16 to 17 major
surface combatants. His analysis was accepted by the
review and was reflected in their report, and later DOA 87.
In recognition of his achievements as DNFD Rob Walls was
made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in June 1987.
Rob Walls assumed command of the
destroyer HMAS Brisbane in June 1987 while the ship
was undertaking an extensive half-life modernisation.
That command capped off service at sea in all three of the
RAN’s guided missile destroyers, and Rob later described it
as the most enjoyable posting of his 42-year naval career.
Rob Walls was a tough captain who set high standards.
His approach suited the ship and the times, and with his
Executive Officer (XO), Commander Garry Kennedy, they proved
a formidable team, creating an efficient and happy ship,
that worked hard and played hard.
Garry Kennedy recalls, when he
posted to Brisbane in December 1987 “he felt at the time,
then Captain Walls was quite sceptical about having a diver
as XO, rather than a fully qualified Principal Warfare
Officer (PWO). Our initial relationship was a bit
guarded but after my settling in period, we became very
close and subsequently good friends, both during my tenure
in Brisbane and beyond as Rob passed through the
promotions of his career. Rob was also the Maritime
Commander when I was CO Tobruk and he chose to have
his handover ceremony onboard Tobruk.”
Rob Walls was promoted Commodore in
1988 before attending the National Defence College (NDC),
New Delhi, India in 1989. When Rob went to the NDC in
India, he asked Garry Kennedy to store his fine wines as he
didn’t want them in the normal storage. Garry stored
the wine under his house in suburban Canberra where it was
cool but when Rob came to collect the wine on his return,
snails had gorged themselves on all the labels.
Neither Rob nor Garry had any idea which wines were which.
They decided that the collection should be known as the wine
‘lucky dip’. During his time in India, Rob Walls
learnt fly fishing in the Himalayas and for many years it
was to be a pastime of endless fascination. He and
Rear Admiral David Campbell would often embark on
fly-fishing expeditions in both Australia and New Zealand.
Returning to Australia the following
year Rob Walls was appointed Director General Naval Policy
and Doctrine. That posting was to coincide with
heightened tensions in the Middle East following Iraq’s
invasion of Kuwait and the advent of the Gulf War. A
team of three, led by Commodore Walls, and comprising
Captains Tim Cox and Boyd Robinson were sent to the Middle
East by RAAF VIP jet, to set up arrangements for the RAN’s
initial deployment and its sustainment. Prior to
deployment Rob Walls briefed the Minister for Defence,
Senator Robert Ray, on the planned scope and approach of the
team. He received the Minister’s endorsement and was
given flexibility to make arrangements as he saw fit to
progress matters. During that time Rob’s expertise was
drawn upon to evaluate and dissect the complexities of the
operation to liberate Kuwait, developing a concept of
operations, taking the lead in establishing Rules of
Engagement for the RAN task group, and representing
Australia at the respective Multinational Planning
Conferences in preparation for Operations Desert Shield and
Desert Storm.
In 1991 Rob Walls was promoted to
Rear Admiral and he initially took up his posting as the
Deputy Chief of Naval Staff towards the end of Vice Admiral
Hudson’s tenure. The incoming CNS, Vice Admiral Ian
Macdougall arrived in March 1991, with an agenda to
introduce a new management system, known as Naval Quality
Management (NQM). This was the root cause of
considerable friction between the two, and no doubt resulted
in Rob’s replacement after a relatively short term.
Rob’s replacement, Rod Taylor was also opposed to NQM, as
were many others in Navy.
In November 1991 Rear Admiral Walls
was appointed Maritime Commander. In Exercise RIMPAC
’92 he served as the Battle Force Commander of USN, USAF,
Canadian, Korean, and Australian Task Groups.
For his contributions to the
pre-hostilities agreements reached on the Gulf War, he was
advanced to an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in
1992. In writing to congratulate Walls, the Chief of
the Defence Force remarked that "The award reflects in part
your excellent work in the Gulf War but not only that."
In
December 1992 he oversaw the deployment of Tobruk
and the training ship HMAS Jervis Bay to Somalia as
part of Operation Solace. This was the largest
Australian military sealift operation since the Vietnam War.
Among other things, Operation Solace
validated Rob Walls’ belief in the important role that women
would play in the future of modern naval fighting forces.
After some early false steps in the RAN’s introduction of
women at sea, Rob Walls memorably cleared lower deck of the
Fleet at Garden Island to give every officer and sailor his
unvarnished expectations of each and every one of them.
Rob Walls remained a life-long
advocate of exploiting information and understood the value
of smart information systems – classified or not. He
created the position of Chief Staff Officer Command Control
Communications Intelligence (C3I) in Maritime HQ to
consolidate all these areas within the command.
Rob Walls took to heart that
preparing for combat meant that high standards were the only
standards. He strongly associated himself with Admiral
Sir Sandy Woodward’s maxim that combat required hard-nosed
leaders who knew how to get the best from their people, but
that some failures would emerge, who had to be moved on for
the betterment of the Navy. Rob Walls did not tolerate
those who did not have what it took to get results. As
Maritime Commander, Rob Walls made that point directly to
his commanding officers as well as his staff, and some had a
very hard time.
Rear Admiral Wendy Malcolm served as
Flag Lieutenant to Rob Walls during this time. She
vividly remembers the way in which Rob Walls drove the
Fleet, the staff and applied a relentless demand for
excellence. He was a “fearsome leader” and even some
seasoned operators could shake in their boots when Rob Walls
would ask “What’s on your mind?” They would speak –
Rob’s eyes would narrow and a long uncomfortable pause would
follow. Many would dive headfirst into the abyss and
keep talking, some committing career suicide in the process.
They had been famously sent “to the other side of the Wall”.
One of Rob’s characteristics when angry was to call the
person he was speaking to “pal”. That was usually a
sign things were going to deteriorate.
Yet most people prospered in
striving to meet Rob Walls’ demand for excellence.
Along with many others, Wendy Malcolm was strongly
encouraged by Rob Walls. “He was the first person to
make me think I was worthy of achieving something with my
life – his support, his advice and his friendship stood me
in good stead for more than thirty years”. He was
always willing to listen, to help and thought about things
deeply. “Rob was a great friend and mentor who shared
great advice and many a good joke”.
During 1994-1995 Rear Admiral Walls
served as the Assistant Chief of the Defence Force for
Capability Development. In that role he enjoyed myriad
responsibilities including the shift of the ADF’s focus from
the southeast of the Australian continent to the west and
the north, the 1994 Defence White Paper, the Ten Year
Defence Plan and the ‘mopping up’ following the Force
Structure Review.
In 1995 Rob Walls was subsequently
promoted Vice Admiral and appointed Vice Chief of the
Australian Defence Force, a position he held until his
retirement from uniformed service in March 1997. Vice
Admiral David Shackleton sums up Rob Walls in the following
terms, “He was a great networker and built relationships
across multiple disciplines, military and civilian, across
all of defence – and then in the private sector where he had
a senior role with ADI and then CEA. He had good
relationships with ministers and he and Senator Ray seemed
to hit it off.”
After retiring from the RAN, Rob
Walls pursued a business career in defence industry,
focusing on strategic and risk counselling, and consulting.
He was chairman, director, or advisor to a number of
Australian and foreign companies, including Science
Applications International Corporation (USA), Price
Waterhouse Coopers, Thales Underwater Systems, Bell
Helicopter, Australian Defence Industries/Thales, and CEA
Technologies.
His later activities included being
a member of the Advisory Council for the Strategic and
Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National
University, the Australian Defence Association and of the
Australian Committee for Security and Cooperation for Asia
and the Pacific. He was appointed a Chevalier of the
Order of National Merit of France in 2002.
The enduring legacy of ‘RAK’ Walls
to the RAN was helping it position itself following the loss
of the aircraft carrier Melbourne, to assiduously
promote excellence in the Fleet and to skilfully advocate
the need for a capable RAN as part of a much more integrated
Australian Defence Force that was suitable for operations in
the 21st Century.
Underpinning his grasp of Defence
and naval matters was a love and appreciation of naval
history, a deep interest in geopolitics and strategic
affairs. Rob Walls’ interest in the modern RAN did not
wane and he was one who was always willing to share his
thoughts with those who, during his later life, sought his
counsel on difficult matters facing both the Navy and the
broader defence community.
Rob Walls is survived by his wife
Susan, daughter Catherine and son Nicholas.
Sources:
Australian Naval Institute - John Mortimer and John Perryman
Royal Australian Navy Biographies
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