PEOPLE
GAINING CONFIDENCE TO DO MORE
16 Nov 2006
More than 30 years ago, Permanent Secretary (Finance) Teo Ming Kian started his career in the public sector as a defence engineer in the Ministry of Defence (MINDEF).
As a fresh graduate excited about dealing with the latest technology, he remembered the shock of seeing his "dilapidated office" in the old Tanglin Complex.
"My office came with bathtubs, but they were not filled with foam," said Mr Teo. "They were filled with stacks of files, because there was just simply no place for keeping files."
Mr Teo was sharing his memories with 300 guests at a dinner celebrating 40 years of logistics in MINDEF, held on 6 Nov at the Combat Service Support Command in Kranji Camp III.
Permanent Secretary (Defence Development) Tan Kim Siew was the guest of honour.
In his speech, Mr Teo recalled the early days of defence engineering, when he had "to try and convince others that designing and producing our own weapons was the right way to go".
"Not only do we get successive generations of increasingly capable weapon systems," said Mr Teo, "we have built up a design and manufacturing capability, and a dare-to-try mindset; and it gave us the confidence to do a lot more."
This hard-won confidence also gave MINDEF logisticians the courage to "do things ourselves so that we're not held hostage".
He cited an instance when they walked out of negotiations with a "tremendously arrogant" foreign supplier.
"The importance of logistics, or what many today refer to as 'supply chain management', cannot be overstated," said Mr Teo.
"Whether as a force-multiplier for the Singapore Armed Forces, or as a competitive edge for our economy, logistics will remain crucial for us in the future, as it has been for us in the past."
As a fresh graduate excited about dealing with the latest technology, he remembered the shock of seeing his "dilapidated office" in the old Tanglin Complex.
"My office came with bathtubs, but they were not filled with foam," said Mr Teo. "They were filled with stacks of files, because there was just simply no place for keeping files."
Mr Teo was sharing his memories with 300 guests at a dinner celebrating 40 years of logistics in MINDEF, held on 6 Nov at the Combat Service Support Command in Kranji Camp III.
Permanent Secretary (Defence Development) Tan Kim Siew was the guest of honour.
In his speech, Mr Teo recalled the early days of defence engineering, when he had "to try and convince others that designing and producing our own weapons was the right way to go".
"Not only do we get successive generations of increasingly capable weapon systems," said Mr Teo, "we have built up a design and manufacturing capability, and a dare-to-try mindset; and it gave us the confidence to do a lot more."
This hard-won confidence also gave MINDEF logisticians the courage to "do things ourselves so that we're not held hostage".
He cited an instance when they walked out of negotiations with a "tremendously arrogant" foreign supplier.
"The importance of logistics, or what many today refer to as 'supply chain management', cannot be overstated," said Mr Teo.
"Whether as a force-multiplier for the Singapore Armed Forces, or as a competitive edge for our economy, logistics will remain crucial for us in the future, as it has been for us in the past."
ALSO READ IN PEOPLE
He’s got that fighting spirit
04 May 2026
Ju-jitsu fighter and SEA Games gold medallist PTE Jedd Tan beats the odds to achieve his dream.
Reaching his flow state
15 Apr 2026
From training in uniform to racing on the water, national canoeist CPL Tristan Loo powers through NS and elite sport with discipline and determination.
From PES C to command school
14 Apr 2026
Despite being assigned PES statuses that disqualified them from holding combat roles, 3SG Joel Quek and OCT Braden Phua strived to “up-PES” as they felt they had more to contribute in NS.



