4th September 2013 USA

Security on the seas

I’m Kevin McGurgan and currently the British Consul General for Florida, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands, based out of Miami.

I have less than one year before my next diplomatic posting (wherever that may be) but before I go, intend to write a monthly blog about the UK-Florida relationship. I’ll share some of the insights I’ve gained during my three and half years service here so far.

This one is about our security co-operation, in particular the work of the Royal Navy.

Vice Consul Mark Smithson visits HMS Lancaster
Vice Consul Mark Smithson visits HMS Lancaster

Florida has had a longstanding and special relationship with the Royal Navy. In the 18th century, HMS Looe was deployed in the Florida Straits to intercept enemy shipping. In 1744, she sank after running onto the reef during an engagement with a Spanish ship off what is known today as Looe Key Reef, near Marathon in the Florida Keys. A WWII Royal Navy sailor is buried in Key West cemetery.

During my time here, Florida has hosted more Royal Navy ships visits than any other US state. This has ranged from our latest Type 45 destroyers HMS Daring and HMS Dauntless (not of Pirates of the Caribbean fame!) to HMS Lancaster (currently on service in the Caribbean) and HMS Argyll, who visited Key West in August.

HMS Argyll is on the homeward leg of what, appropriate for Key West, is best described as a seven month Hemingwayesque tour of the Atlantic and Pacific. Commander Tim Neild and his ship’s company have put her through her paces. She has sailed 30000 miles between three continents, brokered collaboration between West African armed forces, navigated iceberg floes in the South Atlantic while providing security for the Falkland Islands, taken on the Cape of Good Hope and transited the Panama Canal.

While in the Caribbean, HMS Argyll worked successfully with US, Colombian and Canadian allies to deter potential drug traffickers as part of Operation Martillo, a 15 nation counter narcotics effort. In recognition of this, Commanding Officer Time Neild was presented by Rear Admiral Steve Mehling of the US Coastguard with a “Snowflake” flag – a snowflake (representing cocaine) with a red X over it for the successful bust. HMS Argyll will fly this proudly when she pulls into her home port, Devonport, later this month for a well earned welcome reception.

However it’s not all about drugs busts on the high seas. HMS Lancaster – who also visited Key West this year – has an important disaster response role for the UK’s Caribbean Overseas Territories (Anguilla, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Turks and Caicos, British Virgin Islands and Montserrat) during hurricane season. Her role is to assist the Territories with their post hurricane operations, using the ship’s company and facilities to provide services from energy and clean water to emergency transportation. And in Miami, a Royal Navy helicopter pilot is on a reciprocal loan to the US Coastguard.

While the UK-Florida security relationship is not well known, it remains essential for our joint defence and prosperity.

Next month I’ll be blogging about Florida’s changing demographics, the State’s long term ambitions and what this means for the UK-US relationship.

About Kevin McGurgan

Kevin McGurgan took up his appointment as Consul General in Miami in December 2009. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1971, Kevin joined the Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO) in 1990.…

Kevin McGurgan took up his appointment as Consul General in Miami in December 2009. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1971, Kevin joined the Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO) in 1990. He came to Florida from southern Afghanistan where he spent 2008/9 as Deputy Head of the NATO Provincial Reconstruction Team in Helmand province. He worked there with Afghan political and tribal leaders to improve security and prepare the ground for the arrival of the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade of the US Marine Corps in spring 2009. He was made an Officer of the British Empire (OBE) for this work in the 2010 Queen’s Birthday Honours. This is Kevin’s second posting to the United States. From 1997 – 2000, he worked at the United Nations in New York on multilateral sanctions regimes, negotiating and implementing sanctions regimes in the Middle East, Asia and diamond and arms embargoes in Africa (Sierra Leone and Angola). Kevin’s earlier diplomatic career has seen him serve short tours in Russia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Syria (1993-4); as a press officer in the UK’s Permanent Representation to the European Union (1994-5); as a political and consular officer in Bosnia (1996-7) and from 2003-2005 as Head of the Political and Economic team in Sweden with a specific focus on European policy issues and counter-terrorism. Between 2005 and 2008 he was Deputy Head of the Iraq Policy Unit in the Foreign Office before being seconded to the Home Office to work on organised crime, counter terrorism and migration issues. In London he has also worked on Afghanistan, the Balkans and arms export policy. Kevin is accompanied by his wife Vicki (also from Scotland), and his two sons, Alexander and Michael.