Land Information Assurance Group (LIAG)
Encyclopedia
The Land Information Assurance Group - LIAG - is a specialist Territorial Army (TA) unit, formed as a result of the Strategic Defence Review
Strategic Defence Review
The Strategic Defence Review was a British policy document produced by the Labour Government that came to power in 1997. Then Secretary of State for Defence, George Robertson, set out the initial defence policy of the new government, with a series of key decisions designed to enhance the United...

 (SDR) of 1998:

'On Information Warfare... Our potential

adversaries may choose to adopt

alternative weapons and unconventional

(or asymmetric) strategies, perhaps

attacking us through vulnerabilities in

our open civil societies.'

Extract from The Strategic Defence Review, 1998


The LIAG falls within the Corps of Royal Signals 2 (National Communications) Signal Brigade
2 (National Communications) Signal Brigade
2 Signal Brigade is an operational Brigade of the Royal Corps of Signals with a Regular HQ, 1 Regular Regiment, 8 TA Regiments and a number of specialist sub-units...

and its tasks are managed by the Royal Signals Central Volunteer Headquarters (CVHQ).

The LIAG is a specialist TA unit - unlike units of the more common independent kind, which are formed by volunteers with all manner of professional and personal backgrounds, LIAG (like other specialist units in medical and communications areas) consists of professionals selected for their professional skills. This reduces the training burden on the military such that only military skills need to be provided to these volunteers - their technical skills are the main selection criteria.

It is also unusual that LIAG is a multi cap badged unit consisting entirely of commissioned Officers - the CO is a Lieutenant Colonel, and the unit is comprised in the main of Majors and Captains.

The LIAG has its own homepage at http://www.army.mod.uk/signals/organisation/9190.aspx
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