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Churchills Generals - Keegan, John

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GENERALS

EDITED BY JOHN KEEGAN I


Brilliant as both a politician and a writer,

Winston Churchill was at heart a warrior.


While his foe Hitler hoarded information,
Churchill shared all intelligence with his
generals. Who,were these men who
then,
made up Churchill's inner circle? In
Churchill's Generals John Keegan, author
of such combat classics as The Face of
Battle and The Mask of Command,
has assembled an outstanding group of
military historians to examine the careers
of twenty of Churchill's leading
commanders.
The opening chapters look at three
generals— Ironside, Gort and Dill-
all unsuited by outlook, age and tempera-
ment to the caldron of warfare in
1940-41. Then, in December 1941,
Churchill replaced Dill with Alanbrooke,
probably the greatest Chief of the Imperial
General Staff ever produced by the
British Army— and the only brother of-
ficer Montgomery could bring himself to
admire.
It took longer to identify the effective
field commanders. Wavell had brains but
lacked battlefield ruthlessness. For a time
he was served in the Middle East by a
junior, O'Connor, who was a superlative
leader of troops. But the replacements
for O'Connor — Ritchie, Cunningham,
even Leese—were not of the same class.
Churchill experimented with a variety of
successors, notably Auchinleck. Eventu-
ally he hit upon a winning combination
—Alexander as theatre commander,
Montgomery as battle chief.
Britain's other war, in the Far East, nec-
essarily took second place to the war in
the West. Percival, who should not have
been appointed to high command, was
never forgiven for his surrender of Singa-
pore, and Churchill was slow to appreciate

(continued on back flap)


^
yn ^>>— ~v£jsL*^ - A^u^^t. '
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CHURCHILL'S GENERALS
CHURCHILL'S
GENERALS
EDITED BY

John Keegan

^V
GROVE WEIDENFELD
NEW YORK
Copyright © 1991 by George Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd.
All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in


any form, by any means, including mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording, or
otherwise, without prior written permission of the publisher.

Published by Grove Weidenfeld


A division of Grove Press, Inc.
841 Broadway
New York, NY 10003-4793

First published in Great Britain in 1991 by George Weidenfeld cv Nicolson Limited,


London.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication I )ata

Churchill's generals/edited by John Keegan— 1st American ed.


p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8021-1309-5
1. World War, 1939- 1945 -Great Britain -Biography 2. Generals-
Great Britain— Biography. I. Keegan, John, 1934-
D750.C53 1991
940.54'0941-dc20 91-11536
CIP
Manufactured in the United States of America

Printed on acid-free paper

First American Edition 1991

10 987654321
CONTENTS

List of Illustrations vii

List of Contributors ix

Glossary of Acronyms and Abbreviations xv

INTRODUCTION i

John Keegan

i IRONSIDE 17
Brian Bond
2 GORT 34
Brian Bond

3 DILL 51
Alex Danchev

4 WAVELL 70
Ian Beckett

5 ALANBROOKE 89
David Fraser
CONTENTS

6 ALEXANDER 104
Brian Holden Reid

7 AUCHINLECK 130
Philip Warner

8 MONTGOMERY 148
Michael Carver

9 WILSON 166
Michael Dewar

10 O'CONNOR 183
Barrie Pitt

11 CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE and LEESE 200


Michael Craster

12 HORROCKS 225
Alan Shepperd

13 HOBART 243
Kenneth Macksey

14 PERCIVAL 256
Keith Simpson

15 WINGATE 277
John W. Gordon

16 SLIM 298
Duncan Anderson

17 CARTON DE WIART and SPEARS 323


G. D. Sheffield

Index 351

VI
ILLUSTRATIONS

Between pages 182 and 183

Ironside on the day the war broke out {Robert Hunt Library)
Gort inFrance (Imperial War Museum)
Dill as Chief of the Imperial General Staff (Popperfoto)
Alanbrooke and Dill in Canada (Imperial War Museum)
Alexander (Popperfoto)
Wavell (Popperfoto)
Auchinleck with Churchill in the Western Desert (Popperfoto)
O'Connor after his return from captivity (Imperial War Museum)
Wilson (Popperfoto)
Ritchie, Norrie and Gott in the W estern Desert (Imperial War Museum)
r

Cunningham in East Africa (Imperial War Museum)


Montgomery and Alanbrooke in Italy (Imperial War Museum)
Leese explaining operations to Churchill and Alexander (Imperial War
Museum)
Montgomery with war correspondents in Normandy (Robert Hunt
Library)
Hobart (Imperial War Museum)
Horrocks and officers of the 51st Highland Division (Robert Hunt
Library)

Vll
ILLUSTRATIONS

Percival (Popperfoto)
Slim (Popperfoto)
Wingate in Burma (Popperfoto)
Spears in Damascus (Imperial War Museum)
Carton de Wiart (Imperial War Museum)
Churchill with the Anglo-American high command in North Africa
(Imperial War Museum)
Churchill, Montgomery and Alanbrooke at the Rhine (Imperial War
Museum)

vni
CONTRIBUTORS

DUNCAN ANDERSON is a Senior Lecturer in War Studies at the


Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. He has a Master's in War Studies
from Queen's University Ontario and a doctorate in History from the
University of Oxford. An Australian by birth, he has researched various
aspects of the war in the Pacific and contributed to several books on
the subject.

IAN BECKETT is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and Senior


Lecturer in War Studies at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.
He was born at Whitchurch, Buckinghamshire and educated at Ayles-
bury Grammar School and the Universities of Lancaster and London.
He is the author of a number of books, General Editor of the Manchester
University Press War, Armed Forces and Society series and Secretary to
both the Council of the Army Records Society and the Buckinghamshire
Military Museum Trust. He is married with two children and lives

in Wiltshire.

BRIAN BOND was educated at Worcester College, Oxford and lec-


tured in history at Exeter and Liverpool Universities (1961-6). Since
then he has taught in the Department of War Studies at King's College,

IX
CONTRIBUTORS

London and now Professor of Military History. His books include


is

The Victorian Army and the Staff College (1972), Liddell Hart (1977), British
Military Policy Between the Two World Wars (1980), War and Society in
Europe 1870-IQ70 (1984) and Britain, France and Belgium, igjg-iQ40 (1990).
He is currentiy a Council Member of the Army Records Society and
the Society for Army Historical Research, and is President of the British
Commission for Military History. He lives at Medmenham in Buck-
inghamshire.

FIELD-MARSHAL LORD CARVER started his military career


in 1935 in the Royal Tank Corps. Second World War he com-
In the
manded a tank battalion and an armoured brigade while still in his
war he commanded an infantry brigade and division,
twenties. After the
and held many important posts on the staff before becoming Com-
mander-in-Chief Far East in 1967, Chief of the General Staff in 1971,
and Chief of the Defence Staff between 1973 and 1976. His most recent
books are The Seven Ages of the British Army, Dilemmas of the Desert
War, Twentieth Century Warriors and Out ofStep.

MICHAEL CRASTER was educated at Wellington College, RMA


Sandhurst and Balliol College Oxford. Commissioned into the Argyll
and Sutherland Highlanders, he transferred to the Grenadier Guards
in 1970, and returned to Oxford to command the Officers Training
Corps in 1985. Most recently he has just completed a tour as the Defence
Attache in Vienna. Author of 75 Rounds a Minute, an account of the
2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards in 1914, he has also been responsible
for a number of articles in military journals.

ALEX DANCHEV is Lecturer in International Relations at the


University of Keele, and Alistair Home Fellow of St Antony's College,
Oxford, 1990-91. He has held Fellowships in the Department
of War Studies, King's College, London, and the Woodrow
Wilson Centre, Washington, DC. He is the author of two books on
Anglo-American relations during the Second World War, Very Special
Relationship (1986) and Establishing the Anglo-American Alliance (1990).
His forthcoming work includes an edited collection of international
perspectives on the Falklands conflict, A Matter of Life and Death,
and a study of the philosopher-statesman Oliver Franks, Founding
Father.
CONTRIBUTORS

COLONEL MICHAEL DEWAR was commissioned into the 3rd


Green Jackets, the Rifle Brigade in 1962 and served with his regiment
in Cyprus, Borneo, Germany, Northern Ireland, Berlin, Malaya and
the United States. In 1985 he was appointed to command the Light
Division Depot Winchester before becoming, on promotion, Colonel
in
Defence Studies between 1987 and retirement from the Army in 1990
to take up the appointment of Deputy Director of the International Insti-
tute for Strategic Studies.He has written extensively on defence issues:
his books include Brush Fire Wars -Minor Campaigns of the British Army
since igtf (1984), The British Army in Northern Ireland (1985) and The

Art ofDeception in Warfare (1989).

GENERAL SIR DAVID FRASER was commissioned in the


Grenadier Guards in 1941 and served with the 2nd Battalion in northwest
Europe and thereafter in Malaysia, Egypt, Cyprus, West Africa and
Germany, commanding a battalion, a brigade and a division. He was
Vice Chief of the General Staff, British Military Representative to
NATO and Commandant of the Royal College of Defence Studies
before retiring in 1980. Biographer of Alanbrooke (1982) and military
historian (And We Shall Shock Them, 1983), he is also a novelist (the
Treason in Arms series, five vols, 1985 et seq, and The Hardrow Chronicle,
four vols, 1990 et seq).

JOHN W. GORDON is Professor of History at The Citadel, Char-


leston, South Carolina, and has served as visiting professor at the US
Military Academy, West Point. He served in Vietnam in 1967-8 and
has since, in the US Marine Corps Reserve, been a battalion commander
and both a group and brigade operations officer. He received his doctor-
ate in history from Duke University, is the author of The Other Desert
War: British Special Forces in North Africa, ig40-ig4j (1987), and serves
as a member of the adjunct faculty, US Marine Corps Command and
Staff College.

JOHN KEEGAN was for many years Senior Lecturer at the Royal
Military Academy Sandhurst and is now Defence Editor of The Daily

Telegraph.His books include The Face of Battle, Six Armies in Normandy,


The Mask of Command and The Second World War. He was Lees Knowles
Lecturer in Military History at Cambridge 1986-7 and he is a Fellow
of the Royal Historical Society and the Royal Society of Literature.

xi
CONTRIBUTORS

KENNETH MACKSEY, MC, RTR, served in the Royal


Armoured Corps and Royal Tank Regiment from 1941 until retirement
in 1968 when he became a full-time military historian and author. Edu-
cated at Goudhurst School, at Sandhurst and at the Staff College, Cam-
berley, he saw military service in northwest Europe and various parts
of the Far East. Since 1980 he has been a consultant to the Canadian
Army in the writing of interactive military scenarios, of which First
Clash is the first of a series. He is the author of thirty-five books, includ-
ing Armoured Crusader: Major-General Sir Percy Unhurt: Guderian: Panzer
General; Kesselring, Maker of the Luftwaffe and Rommel, Campaigns and
Battles; besides histories of the Royal Tank Regiment and Royal
Armoured Corps.

BARRIE PITT served in both the European and Mediterranean


theatres in the Second World War. He edited the enormous partwork
History of the Second World War and was also editor-in-chief of Ballon'
tine's Illustrated History of World War II. His books include i<)i8 - The

Last Act, Churchill and the Generals, and the massive account of the
desert campaigns, The Crucible of War.

BRIAN HOLDEN REID is Lecturer in War Studies, King's Col-


lege, London, and since 1987 has been Resident 1 listorian at the British
Army Staff College, Camberley. He is the first civilian to work on the
Directing Staff for over 100 years and helped set up the Higher Com-
mand and Staff Course. A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and
Royal Geographical Society, from 1984 to 1987 Dr Reid was Editor
of the RU
SI Journal. He is the author ofJ. F. C Fuller: Military Thinker
and has edited (with John White), American Studies: Essays in
(1987),
Honour of Marcus Cunliffe (1991) and (with Colonel Michael Dewar),
Military Strategy in a Changing Europe: Towards the Twenty-First Century
(1991).

G. D. SHEFFIELD was educated at the University of Leeds and


King's College, London and now lectures in the Department of War
Studies at RMA Sandhurst.
His books include Warfare in the Twentieth
Century: Theory and Practice (co-editor, 1988) and From Vimy Ridge to
the Rhine (co-editor, 1989). He is working on a doctoral thesis on Officer-
Man Relations, Morale and Discipline in the British Army, 1914-18.
He is Secretary of the British Commission for Military History.

Xll
CONTRIBUTORS

LIEUTENANT-COLONEL G. A. SHEPPERD entered the


Army from Sandhurst in 1931, joining The Manchester Regiment and
served in the West Indies, Egypt and Palestine. During the War he
attended the Staff College, and after a period as Brigade Major he
was sent to the RAF Staff College, later returning there on the Directing
Staff. In the invasion of Normandy he was serving on HQ^rd British
Division, and was severely wounded. After the War he joined the Direct-
ing Staff of the Staff College, Camberley; but retired in 1947 to join
the Staff of the newly opened Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Here
he stayed for twenty-nine years. His books include The Italian Campaign
ig4j~45, Sandhurst, The Royal Military Academy and France 1940, Blitzkrieg
in the West.

KEITH SIMPSON was educated at the University of Hull and King's


College, University of London. He was a Senior Lecturer in War Studies
and International Affairs, Royal Military Academy Sandhurst 1973-86;
Head of the Foreign Affairs and Defence Section of the Conservative
Research Department 1986-8 and then Special Adviser to the Secretary
of State for Defence 1988-90. He is now director of the Cranfield Secur-
ity Studies Institute. His books include The Old Contemptibles (1981);

History of the German Army (1985); as editor with Ian Beckett,^ Nation
in Arms: A Social Study of the British Army in the First World War (1985)

and, as editor, The War the Infantry Knew IQ14-IQIQ (1987).

PHILIP WARNER joined the Army in 1939 after graduating from


Cambridge and served until 1945, mainly in the Far East. Subsequentiy
he was an Assistant Principal in the Treasury, a Lecturer for the British
Council in Spain, and a Senior Lecturer at the RMA Sandhurst, where
he founded the Communication Department. He is the author of forty-
five books, mainly on military history, including Auchinleck: The Lonely
Soldier (1981), Kitchener: The Man Behind the Legend (1985), Horrocks:
The General Who Led from the Front (1984), Passchendaele (1987), World
War II: The Untold Story (1988) and The Battle of France IQ40 (1990).
He is currendy working on a biography of Field-Marshal Earl Haig.

xm
GLOSSARY OF ACRONYMS
AND ABBREVIATIONS

Ranks and Units

AASF Advanced Air Striking Force


AAG Assistant Adjutant-General
AAI Allied Group of Armies in Italy

ABC American-British Conversations


ABDA American, British, Dutch and Australian Command

ALFSEA Allied Land Forces South East Asia (UK/USA)


BEF British Expeditionary Force
BGGS Brigadier-General, General Staff
BGS Brigadier General Staff
CIGS Chief of the Imperial General Staff
CAS Chief of the Air Staff
CBI China- Burma-India Theater (USA)
CCS Combined Chiefs of Staff (UK/USA)

CFF Commander of the Field Force


CGS Chief of General Staff
COS Chief of Staff
CRAC Commander Royal Armoured Corps
DMO Director of Military Operations
DMO & I Director of Military Operations and Intelligence
DMT Director of Military Training
DS Directing Staff (at Royal Military Colleges)
GOC General Officer Commanding
GSO General Staff Officer
IDC Imperial Defence College
JCS Joint Chiefs of Staff (UK/USA)
JSM (UK/USA)
Joint Staff Mission
LRDG Long Range Desert Group
MGGS Major-General, General Staff
MO Military Operations
MS Military Secretary, War Office

XV
GLOSSARY OF ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS

NCAC Northern Combat Area Command (Southeast Asia)


OTC Officer Training Corps
OSS Office of Strategic Services (USA)
RA Royal Artillery
RAC Royal Armoured Corps
RHA Royal Horse Artillery
RMC Royal Military College, Sandhurst
RTC Royal Tank Corps (later RTR)
RTR Royal Tank Regiment
SAS Special Air Service
SEAC South East Asia Command (UK/USA)
SHAEF Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces (UK/USA)
SOE Special Operations Executive
TA Territorial Army
Tac HQ Tactical HQ
VCIGS Vice Chief of the Imperial General Staff

Awards and Decorations

CB Commander of the Order of the Bath


CMG Commander of the Order of St. Michael and St. ( ieorge

CSI Commander of the Order of the Star of India

DSO Distinguished Service Order


GBE Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire
GCB Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
GCIE Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Indian Empire
GCMG Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St. George
GCSI Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Star of India
GCVO Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order
KCB Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
MC Military Cross
VC Victoria Cross

Miscellaneous

jWRE Armoured Vehicles Royal Engineers (sapper tanks)


BAOR British Army of the Rhine
CDL Canal Defence Light (fording tanks)
DDs Duplex-Drive ("swimming tanks")
MCC Marylebone Cricket Club
"psc" Passed Staff College (alumnus of Army Staff College)
WT Wireless Telegraphy

xvi
INTRODUCTION
JOHN KEEGAN

Churchill was a soldier. He had been commissioned from the Royal


Military College into the 4th Hussars, had charged with the 21st Lancers
at Omdurman, served in the South African Light Horse, held a com-
mission in the Queen's Own Oxfordshire Hussars Yeomanry and com-
manded the 6th Royal Scots Fusiliers in the trenches of the First World
War. 'They evidentiy will like vy much to have me', he wrote home
of his first evening in command. 'The general - Furse - is extremely
well thought of here and is a thoroughly frank & broadminded man.
. Most of the staff have met me soldiering somewhere or other, &
. .

1
we had a pleasant evening.'
Much of the British army had met Churchill soldiering - in India,
on the North-West Frontier, in Egypt and the Sudan, in South Africa,
on manoeuvres in England - and were familiar with the sight of him
in khaki. It was not, however, as a soldier that his brother officers thought
of him. He had been a minister and had sat in the Cabinet. He remained
a Member of Parliament. Above all, however, he had been a war corre-
spondent, a trade he had begun while still a subaltern. It had caused
resentment at the time, resentment which Churchill had returned when
he was denied facilities to write as he chose. In 1897 The Daily Telegraph
appointed him its correspondent with the Indian Army on the North-
INTRODUCTION

West Frontier. Shortly afterwards he wrote home to his mother,

The Simla authorities have been very disagreeable to me. They did all they
could to get me sent down to my regiment. I . . . invite you to consider what
a contemptible position it is for high military officers to assume - to devote

so much time and energy to harrying an insignificant subaltern. It is indeed


a vivid object lesson in the petty social intrigue that makes or prevents appoint-
ments in this country.

With entirely unconscious irony he added, 'Talk to the prince about


2
if; by 'the prince' he meant the future King Edward VII.

There was the nub of the military establishment's attitude to young


- and middle-aged - Winston. He relished the military' life, revelled
in action, romanticized the profession of arms, thought of himself as
a soldier, treading in the footsteps of his ancestor the great Duke of
Marlborough, yet nevertheless expected that as a junior officer he should
l
be allowed, as his biographer William Manchester puts it, to praise
or deprecate his seniors ... to write for newspapers while wearing
uniform' and generally to behave as if he were, like Marlborough, a
strategist and a warlord, without having borne any of the responsibility
that high command brings in its train. No wonder that a contemporary
of his wrote of Churchill in his Indian years that he was 'widely regarded
in the Army as super-precocious, indeed by some as insufferably bump-
3
tious'.

By the time the Second World War broke out, Churchill had added
greatly to his output of military writing but had also transformed his
reputation. The World Crisis, his history of the First World War, was
criticized for its egocentricity but was also recognized as a stirring and
powerful account of the conflict. His life ofMarlborough had won nothing
but praise. It was a great biography, a major contribution to the histori-
ography of the War of the Spanish Succession and an education -
for the author as much as his readers - in the arts of command and
diplomacy. His personal standing had also been changed utterly. The
appeasers in the Conservative Party might bear an unspoken grudge
that he had been proved right in his unflinching opposition to Hitler;
they no more dared voice it than did the backwoods Tories their disap-
proval of his youthful desertion of the party for the Liberals. Churchill's
party loyalty might have been compromised in the past. His patriotism
had never been in doubt and, now that circumstances had driven the
country to war with the dictators against whom he had railed so long
as a lonely voice, he had become the patriot, awaiting only the moment
INTRODUCTION

when circumstances would bring the victory in which he could rejoice


or the setback which would carry him to national leadership.
The moment came on 10 May 1940, the day on which Hider's Wehr-
macht opened its attack in the West. On the previous day Conservative
dissatisfaction with Chamberlain's conduct of the Norwegian campaign
had boiled over into an angry display in the chamber of the House
of Commons, which the Prime Minister had left to shouts of 'Go! Go!'
Chamberlain, persuaded that he no longer commanded the confidence
of his own party, and informed that neither the Liberals nor Labour
would join a National Government under his leadership, advised the
King that he must send for Churchill. On his return from Buckingham
Palace that afternoon, Churchill sent for the handful of men with whom
he proposed to form a War Cabinet. Martin Gilbert, his official biogra-
pher, recalls the letter he had written to his wife from the trenches
on having almost been killed by a German shell twenty-four years earlier,
which epitomized the spirit in which he set forth on his task: '20 yards
more to the left & no more tangles to unravel, no more hatreds and
injustices to encounter: joy of all my foes ... a good ending to a
chequered life, a final gift - unvalued - to an ungrateful country -
an impoverishment of the war-making power of Britain which no one
4
would ever know or measure or mourn.' How gifted was Churchill
to command the war-making power of Britain at the supreme crisis
in the nation's life?
Although Churchill had held all three service ministries, and the
Admiralty twice, had been a member of Lloyd George's and Chamber-
lain's War Cabinets, and had fought as a combatant on the North-West
Frontier, in the Sudan, in South Africa and on the Western Front,
the only campaigns in which he had been closely involved in the direction
of operations were Antwerp and the Dardanelles. The first had been
a brief and peripheral episode in 1914, but may be judged a success;
it had prevented the Germans capturing the Channel ports in the course

of their advance on Paris. The second had been a protracted and tragic
failure, which had forced Churchill to leave office and had over-

shadowed his reputation and his own thinking for years after. He con-
tinued to believe that the attempt to force the Straits by an amphibious
assault had been frustrated by a series of mishaps, and that Gallipoli
might have driven the Turks out of the war in 1915. His, however,
was an increasingly personal judgement. As the Gallipoli vision faded,
more and more observers concluded that it had been a doomed enter-
prise.
INTRODUCTION

Antwerp and Gallipoli are significant indicators of Churchill's stra-


tegic cast of thought, as deep involvement in the Marlburian
is his
epic. He saw Britain's 'war-making power' as essentially amphibian,
even though he was wise enough to perceive that the essence of war
in his own time was attritional. The tension between his emotional,
romantic vision of war as an escapade and his sombre, realistic apprecia-
tion of the relentiess material character had assumed in the modern
it

age was to dominate his direction of operations and later his strategic
diplomacy throughout the Second World War. His heart was fired by
daring lunges at the enemy's weak points: by O'Connor's offensive into
Italian Libya, by the expedition to Greece, by the torpedo attack on
the Italian fleet at Taranto, by Wingate's penetration of the Japanese
positions in Burma, by the idea of a drive towards Vienna through
the river valleys of Yugoslavia. His head told him that the power of
the German Reich had to be broken by other means: the defeat of
bombing of German cities, the invasion of
the U-boats, the strategic
north-west Europe. Throughout the war his conduct of operations was
to oscillate between the romantic and the realistic; he could rarely resist
an adventure but was consistently drawn back into the mainstream of
strategy by the promptings of his own common sense, reinforced, of
course, by the arguments and advice of his staff officers, of whom Alan-
brooke, as David FYaser describes in his chapter on the CIGS, was
to prove the most influential.
There are two other salient characteristics of Churchill's strategic
oudook. The first was his fascination with intelligence. Because of Bri-
tain's success - building on the achievements of the Polish and French
cryptographic services - in decrypting the German Enigma radio traffic
at an early stage of the war, its high command enjoyed an unprecedented
and, for a time, unique advantage in its ability to read the enemy's
'secure' communications. The Prime Minister accorded the crypto-
graphic organization, the Government Code and Cipher School at
Bletchley, even facility it required; and, at the outset, he insisted on
seeing its 'raw' product for himself. Only after he accepted that decrypts

unannotated or uninterpreted by experts were of limited value to


decision-makers did he agree that he should receive 'Ultra' messages
in their processed form. He nevertheless insisted on his daily quota
of Ultra material throughout the war (continuing to call it 'Boniface',
an early covername, long after 'Ultra' had come into general use), and
righdy so; by reading the most important of the daily decrypts, he made
himself better informed about the progress of the war than any other
INTRODUCTION

5
of the major war leaders of whose routine we have detailed information.
Churchill's other fascination was with 'special operations\ 'Now set
Europe ablaze' was his instruction to Hugh Dalton on 22 July 1940,
6
the day he set up the Special Operations Executive. SOE had two
functions: first, to conduct sabotage and subversion in the occupied
territories of Europe; second, to raise the conquered peoples of Europe
in guerrilla warfare against Hitler. Churchill had direct and extensive
experience of irregular warfare. He had fought Afghans on the North -
West Frontier, charged against Sudanese on the Nile, reported Spain's
war against the Cubans, negotiated with the leaders of the Irish Republi-
can Army and, above all, campaigned against the Boers, 'the most good-
hearted enemy I have ever fought against in the four continents in which
it has been my fortune to see Active Service'. His experience in the

Boer War had been formative. It had persuaded him that a people in
arms could disrupt the purpose of even the mightiest empire, and from
that conclusion he drew the belief that what the Boers had done the
Poles, Czechs, Belgians, Dutch and French might do likewise.
It was in that belief that he most clearly revealed his tendency to

romanticize war-making. For the truth was, of course, that the British
had been as 'good-hearted' as the Boers in their conduct of the campaign
in South Africa. They had, admittedly, confined the Boer women and
children in what they unfortunately called 'concentration camps', where
disease had run rife. They had, however, eschewed deliberate atrocity
and punished soldiers guilty of it. The army's good behaviour had
been in part guaranteed by the operation of a free press and the readiness
of 'pro-Boers' at home to publicize and castigate infractions of the law.
Ultimately, however, it had depended upon what the French call 'le
fair-play britannique'. The British themselves called the Boer War 'the
last of the gentleman's wars', a tribute as much to themselves as to
the enemy. What Germans under
Churchill failed to grasp was that the
Hitler were not prepared to play the gentleman. They were constructing
an empire in a hurry, freely invoked the continental laws of 'state of
siege' and conventions of right of conquest to impose their authority,
and even more freely broke all laws and conventions against those who
challenged it. Arbitrary arrest, imprisonment without trial, summary
execution, hostage -taking and, finally, mass murder were all methods
that the Germans were prepared to use. Except in Yugoslavia and the
rear areas of the Eastern Front, where terrain and recent traditions
of lawlessness favoured the guerrilla, they proved entirely successful
in suppressing disorder. A 'Europe ablaze' was to remain, throughout
INTRODUCTION

the war, a strategic chimera, despite the enormous resources which SOE,
at Churchill's bidding, devoted to encouraging conflagration.
The principal instrument of Churchill's waging of war on land was
therefore to be the British Army and his principal agents its senior
officers. The machinery for directing military operations was quickly
and efficiently rationalized by Churchill as soon as he assumed the
premiership. Before 10 May 1940, there had been three bodies charged
with strategic decision-making: the War Cabinet, the Standing Minis-
terial Committee for the Co-ordination of Defence, and the Chiefs of
Staff Committee. Churchill retained the first and the third, but abolished

the second, of which he had been chairman since April, replacing it


with the office of Minister of Defence, who was himself. The new Minis-
ter had no ministry; instead Churchill appointed, to work to him and
the War Cabinet, two new committees: the Defence Committee (Oper-
ations) and the Defence Committee (Supply). The Defence Committee
(Operations) was the key agency. It consisted of the Deputy Prime Minis-
ter, Attlee, the three Service ministers - Admiralty, War, Air - and

later the Foreign Secretarv, but was always attended bv the Chiefs of
Staff.
Churchill, as Minister of Defence, therefore stood at 'the focal point
at which the military and political elements of the High Command were
7
fused'. He often attended the meetings of the Chiefs of Staff Committee,
saw them again when they attended the Defence Committee (Operations)
and had instant access to them also through his own personal Minister
of Defence's office, formed from the military wing of the War Cabinet
secretariat, whose chief, General Tug' Ismay, was both a member of
the Chiefs of Staff Committee and chief of staff to the Prime Minister.
In practice, as time wore on, the War Cabinet was content to leave
the conduct of the war to the Prime Minister and the Chiefs of Staff
and did not wish to be brought into strategic discussions. The formal
Defence Committee eventually came less and less into the picture, and
was later superseded by what Churchill called 'Staff Conferences': meet-
ings of a few ministers with particular interests, together with himself
and the Chiefs of Staff. 8 Thus Martin Gilbert, Churchill's biographer,
on his method of making war. The picture is filled out by comments
from two of those closest to the Prime Minister during the war, General
and Sir John Peck, one of Churchill's
Sir Leslie Hollis, Ismay's deputy,
private secretaries. The Committee of
old system, represented by the
Imperial Defence which dated from before 1914, had seemed to Churchill
to represent, Hollis said, 'the maximum of study and the minimum
INTRODUCTION

of action'. It was all very well 'to say that everything had been thought

of. The crux of the matter was - had anything been done?' Churchill's
famous marginal minute, ACTION THIS DAY, exactly represented
his preferencebetween thought and He nevertheless accorded
action.
the greatest weight to correct thinking. Despite Alanbrooke's notorious
judgement that 'Winston had ten ideas every day, only one of which
was good, and he did not know which it was', Churchill was a formidable
strategic brain.

I have the clearest possible recollection [Peck wrote] of General Ismay talking
to me about a meeting of the Chiefs of Staff Committee at which they got
completely stuck and admitted that they just did not know what was the right
course to pursue; so on a purely military matter they had to come to Churchill,
civilian, for his advice. He introduced some further facts into the equation
that had escaped and the solution became obvious. The point
their notice
of the story is that one of the reasons
for the success of the working relationship
between Churchill and the Chiefs of Staff was their deep respect, even on
the frequent occasions when they disagreed with him, for his military talents
9
if not genius.

The difference between Churchill's and Hitler's methods of exercising


command scarcely needs emphasis. Hitler operated quite deliberately
a system of divide and rule. He kept ministers separate from service
chiefs, the service chiefs separate from each other and they in turn
own operational headquarters, the Oberkommando der
separate from his
Wehnnacht (OKW), so that no man in the Reich but he could claim
to have a comprehensive view of Germany's strategic situation. Indeed,
he did not attempt to conceal the principle by which he commanded:
Fuhrerprinzip was the political philosophy of the Nazi state and, in dis-
putes with his generals - Guderian and Manstein were the most disputa-
tious - he consistently dismissed objections to his decisions with the
rejoinder that they were ignorant of the relevant economic or diplomatic
context, which only he perceived. Churchill, by contrast, worked by
free debate between colleagues who shared full access to the widest
sources of information; access to Ultra had, for security reasons, to
be strictly limited but the Chiefs of Staff were among those who had
it.

What sort of men were Churchill's generals? In age, background,


education, training and experience they were remarkably similar, typical
products of their class and age. All those who held high command
or staff appointments had been born in the same decade, give or take
a year. Ironside, the oldest, was born in 1880, Slim in 1891. Almost
INTRODUCTION

without exception they had been trained at the Royal Military College,
Sandhurst or the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, the latter the
cadet school for gunners and engineers. All but Slim had been educated
at public schools - and a limited number of public schools with strong

military traditions at that: two at Eton, two at Wellington and two at


Cheltenham. None had been to university, although several spoke at
leastone foreign language: Ironside spoke seven, Alanbrooke and Spears
were bilingual in French, Percival spoke Russian, Alexander spoke Ger-
man and some Russian, Horrocks spoke French, German and some
Russian, and Auchinleck and Slim spoke, of course, Urdu, the official
language of the Indian Army; Slim also spoke Gurkhali and Auchinleck,
a gifted linguist, a number of north Indian dialects. Wavell kept up
the classical languages he had learnt at Winchester, anthologized poetry
and wrote a little of his own, as well as a number of thoughtful essays
on the profession of arms; Slim supplemented his income between the
wars by nam deplume journalism, at which he was successful; Alexander,
who had won the art prize at Harrow, painted occasionally and appre-
ciated pictures: he made the well-known landscape artist, Edward Seago,
his camouflage officer as a means of attaching him to his headquarters
in Italy during the Second World War.
The British generals of the First World War have been categorized,
a little loosely, as 'cavalry generals'. Those of the Second were almost
exclusively infantrymen or gunners, a reflection of the character of the
First World War in which they had all served. Some had served exten-
sively on the staff- Montgomery, for example, after having been gravely
wounded as a platoon commander in 1914. A high proportion, however,
had fought in the trenches and been highly decorated for bravery: Gort
had the VC, DSO and two bars and MC, and Alexander was widely
thought to have earned a YC; O'Connor had the DSO and bar and
the MCand had been nine times mentioned in despatches; even Percival,
upon whom obloquy descended after Singapore, could not be accused
of lack of physical courage: he had won the DSO and bar and MC
in North Russia in 1919. Many of them had been wounded at close
quarters. The story of Montgomery's wounding was particularly poig-
nant. Shot through the chest, he had been saved by a solder from his
platoon who had been killed dressing his wound and whose body had
then shielded him from most of the bullets a German sniper continued
to fire at him.
In their professional lives the experience of Churchill's generals was
also closely similar, as was to be expected of regular officers in the

8
INTRODUCTION

small army of a great empire. The


majority had been students at the
Staff College and later Directing Staff (instructors); Montgomery,
exceptionally, had been a student and DS at the Staff College, Camberley
and then a DS at the Staff College, Quetta, the Indian Army's senior
training establishment; Slim, reversing the pattern, had been a student
at Quetta and a DS at Camberley. Alexander had been a late student
at Camberley, when Montgomery was a DS (and later claimed to have
thought little new Im-
of his over-age pupil), but had then gone to the
perial Defence College, war school for senior officers founded in
a

1922, at the appropriate stage; most of Churchill's other generals were


also IDC graduates.
The value of the British staff colleges in the interwar years, it must
be recognized, however, was social rather than educational. They
brought together the most promising officers of their generation, ensur-
ing that they knew each other well thereafter; but, even in the two years
that the courses at Camberley and Quetta lasted, they taught far less
than the Prussian Kriegsakademie would have done (and the disguised
Reichsheer staff college was teaching) and taught what they did teach
less well. The aim of the Camberley and Quetta courses was to fit an
officer to serve as a Brigade-Major, the lowest level of operations officer
in the military hierarchy. The Kriegsakademie, by contrast, set out to
produce divisional chiefs of staff (the 'ia', German
or Eins A, as the
Army knew who would be qualified to rise to the highest staff
them),
appointments thereafter. The spirit of the German course was intellec-
concerned not to teach routines, 'staff duties'
tual rather than procedural,
as the British called them, but to inculcate powers of analysis and a
cast of mind that would ensure that all graduates should react con-
gruently when confronted by a similar military problem. The Kriegs-
akademie system, based upon replication of staff tasks, rigorous mutual
critique, 'staff rides' and and deep study of military
battlefield tours,
history, had been imitated by all other staff colleges, of which it was
the maison mere; as imitators, however, none had achieved its standards
of excellence. They were certainly not characteristic of either Camberley
or Quetta in the interwar years.
British officers, by contrast, had a far wider range of experience,
militaryand non-military, than their German contemporaries or those
of any other army, an advantage which went far to compensate for the
defects in their formal training. The small wars of empire gave them
frequent practice in the command of troops in action; the politics of
empire, which underlay such wars, accustomed them to co-operating
INTRODUCTION

with imperial civil servants in the implementation of strategies which,

though small in scale, were often complex in nature; while the varied
terrain and climate of the empire itself, and the absence of resources
and difficulties of supply in remote campaigning-grounds imposed an
excellent practical training in logistics.
One among Churchill's generals escaped categorization by training
or experience: Alan Brooke - or Alanbrooke as he became known after
assuming that tide in the peerage, whom David Fraser, a friend and
subordinate of the field-marshal, takes as the subject of his chapter.
Alanbrooke had both a mind and a character of exceptional quality;
significantly, he was the only brother officer whom the intractable Mont-
gomery could bring himself to admire. Montgomery knew that Alan-
brooke was more able than he, because Alanbrooke was demonstrably
the most able man in Churchill's military entourage. He was a superb
military technician, who had mastered the intricacies of artillery tactics
in the most complex artillery battles ever fought, those of the Western
Front of 1916-18. He was, however, far more than a technician. He
was also a large-minded strategist, who comprehended both the essen-
tials of Britain's interests in the waging of the Second World War and

the limits which Britain's strengths and weaknesses imposed on the


strategic choices which had to be made. He disapproved of 'sideshows',
so often Churchill's enthusiasm because sideshows, on paper, appeared
adventurous and romantic; on the other hand, he stoutly supported
Churchill in his objection to a premature launching of the cross-Channel
invasion, because he recognized how would be to a
injurious failure
Britain weakened by three years of war which the United States had
not undergone.

We have now reached a stage [he wrote in his diary in July 1943I when all

three Services, and industry supplying them, arc living beyond their means.
. Cuts must be made; unfortunately, while recognising that cuts must be
. .

made, Winston won't face up to reducing formations. It is useless retaining


emaciated formations which we cannot maintain, and I refuse to do so, and
10
that leads to differences of opinion of the severest nature with Winston.

Such differences he disguised from the Americans, however, thus acting


perfectly correctly as a shield to his master but a supporter of his policies
in the public forum.
Alanbrooke was seen at his best in his reaction to Churchill's sugges-
tion thathe should assume command in the Middle East in the summer
of 1942, after Churchill had rightiy concluded that Auchinleck was no

10
INTRODUCTION

longer fitted to command the Desert Army. Alanbrooke longed to accept


Churchill's offer of the command for himself. He nevertheless rejected
it. He had been Chief of the Imperial General Staff, in succession
to Dill, only since the previous November, but had already recognized
that he had a peculiar ability to protect Churchill from his worst strategic
excesses, those potentially most damaging to Britain's interests.
'I could not put the real reasons to Winston' for declining the appoint-
ment, he wrote in his diary on August 6 and went on:

Whether I exercised any control or not, I knew by now the dangers to guard
against. I had discovered the perils of his impetuous nature. I was now familiar
with his method of suddenly arriving at some decision as it were by intuition,
without any kind of logical examination of the problem. I had, after many
failures, discovered the best way of approaching him. I knew that it would
take at least six months for any successor, taking over from me, to become
as familiar with him and his ways. During those six months anything might
happen. I would not suggest that I could exercise any real control over him.
I never met anybody that could, but he had grown to have confidence in me,
and I had found that he was listening more and more to any advice I gave
11
him.

At this point, however, Churchill did not accept Alanbrooke's advice


to appoint Montgomery to command of Eighth Army. His preference
was for General 'Strafer' Gott, and it was only Gott's death the following
day, shotdown by a German fighter, that brought Montgomery to the
post.As commander-in-chief Middle East Churchill had already nomi-
nated Alexander who, after commanding ist Division in the Dunkirk
campaign, had just supervised the miseries of the retreat from Burma.
Montgomery may not have conformed to the Churchillian military ideal;
Michael Carver, who served under Montgomery, makes clear how
unorthodox he was. Alexander, in contrast, personified orthodoxy.
Handsome in person, graceful in manner, gracious in character, he
was also celebrated among his contemporaries for his physical courage,
and Churchill admired physical courage above almost all other qualities.
Some men held that the brave could do no wrong in his eyes; Auchinleck
was brave and Churchill had confided to Alexander a few days after
dismissing him the emotional trouble it had caused him. 'You know',
12
he said, 'it was like killing a magnificent stag.' Alexander, for reasons
that Brian Holden Reid makes plain, was to try Churchill's patience
by his conduct of the Italian campaign but no thought of dismissing
him ever seems to have entered Churchill's head. He felt something
of the same indulgence towards Gort, that paragon of courage, and

ii
INTRODUCTION

even thought of appointing him CIGS, though prudence checked him


at the last moment. Of Freyberg, another YC and a hero of the Darda-
nelles, he would hear no criticism at all; he called him 'the Salamander',
because like the mythical creature he could live in fire, and forgave
him even the loss of Crete, which may have been taking indulgence
too far. All these were warriors 'that even man at arms would wish

to be', or that Churchill in his romantic mood would wish to have


been; that they were not very good generals was a truth to which he
could blind himself.
Wavell was a moderately good general who failed to click with the
Prime Minister. Ian Beckett depicts how different the two men were
in temperament. Wavell was clever, thoughtful, well read; he escaped
the criticism levelled by Churchill at admirals as a breed: 'I do not
think that a sailor is well qualified for a command of this character
[the tri-service appointment in South-East Asia] . . . they rarely have
the time or opportunity to study military history and the art of war
13
in general.' Wavell had studied military history and written about
the art of war, notably in his Lees Knowles lectures at Cambridge on
'Generals and Generalship'. But that was perhaps the trouble; his gener-
alship smelt of midnight oil, and his personality had the faint, musty
odour of the bookish Wykehamist He lacked dash and was naturally
cautious; events thrust him into campaigns, like the intervention in
Greece, where caution was a desirable quality but dash would have
looked better. He never had adequate forces, except for the brief period
when he opposed only the Italians in the Western Desert; Churchill
perhaps unconsciously reproached him for not being a Rommel, a
general who also disposed of inadequate forces but maximized their
potential. On 3 June 1942, Churchill complained to his former private
secretary, Jock Colville, of Wavell's 'excessive caution and inclination
topessimism [which] he finds very antipathetic'.
Churchill ought also to have found Montgomery antipathetic. The
Prime Minister was cavalier, the future field-marshal Cromwellian -
both these loose words have meaning in their case. The soldier had
devoted his life to bringing his instincts under the command of his
will, until he allowed himself almost no room at all for friendship, for

imagination or for family feeling. Thehad tempered his


politician
instincts until he could find his moment, when they had burst forth
in a tempest of inspired activity, passionate, rhetorical and dramatic.
In some strange way, however, the two personalities were to mesh by
antithesis. Churchill was fond of saying that it was the role of the

12
INTRODUCTION

political leader to organize 'creative tension' between subordinates. No


more war leadership than that between
creative tension existed in his
himself and his leading general. Both were men of high self-conscious-
ness, of deep emotion. Both found it easy to believe that they were
right and others wrong. Churchill found no difficulty in praising Mont-
gomery in victory. Montgomery found it very difficult to accept Chur-
chilPs when victory hung in the balance. The most notorious conflict
of will between them occurred during the preparation for D-Day, on
19 May 1944, over the administrative arrangements for the landing.

One by one [records Nigel Hamilton, Montgomery's official biographer] Monty


ran through the battles he had won in the past two years: Alamein, Tripoli,
Mareth, Wadi Akarit, the assault upon Sicily, the invasion of the Italian main-

land - under the overall leadership of the Prime Minister. The invasion
all

of Normandy was all set; the men were confident they would succeed. Did
the Prime Minister wish to shake that confidence, to come between a general
and his men, his own staff in fact? 'I could never allow it - never', Monty
pronounced. 'If you think that is wrong, that can only mean you have lost
14
confidence in me.'

In another version of this incident, Montgomery took Churchill into


his study and which seemed 'a proper arrangement'.
sat at his desk,
The Field-Marshal told the Prime Minister that he could not address
15
his staff. 'He became tearful and gave in'. This is dramatic stuff.
The only trouble is that the witness of events in both cases is Montgomery
himself. Churchill, when he became aware of the accounts that were
circulating, wrote that 'This interview has been misrepresented'. It is

widely known that Churchill was given to tears. The likelihood that
he cried in frustration before his own appointee to high command reeks
of improbability.
It makes nevertheless for stirring biography. There were few other
dramatic relationships in Churchill's direction of high command.
Wingate, his personal choice to lead the 'deep penetration' Chindit
expeditions behind Japanese lines in Burma, was an unlikely candidate
for a senior appointment. He had been raised in the Plymouth Brethren,
had become converted to Zionism while serving in Palestine during
the Arab Revolt of 1936-9, had attempted suicide on one occasion and
was quite unclubbable; his military contemporaries regarded him as
a loner and an outsider. Churchill hoped to make a second Lawrence
of Arabia of him, but the truth was that he lacked, among other qualities,
Lawrence's intellect and imagination. There was no 'creative tension'

13
.

INTRODUCTION

between Churchill and Wingate; the relationship was that of master


and pupil.
With Slim, the Montgomery of the Far East, Churchill might have
established a creative relationship had the two men come to know each
other; Duncan Anderson's character portrait makes that clear. Distance
denied them the chance to become intimate. Slim was the opposite of
Auchinleck, a British officer who became one of the Indian Army. Once
transferred, he was virtually lost to sight by his contemporaries at home
and made his career by his own achievements against the Japanese.
Churchill, in any case, and though he kept the thought to himself,
had a low opinion of the British forces in the cast. Vfter the humiliation
of Singapore and the agony of the retreat from Burma, he associated
them with defeat. Only slowly did he recognize that in Slim he had
found a man of sterner mettle than Wavell or any of the other generals
who commanded on the road to Mandalaj
The worst of the eastern generals was, of course, Percival, whom
Churchill never forgave for his surrender of Singapore; the photograph
of Percival walking under the white flag to negotiate with his Japanese
opponent remains perhaps the most humiliating image of British defeat
ever to confront the public in the nation's history. Percival should not
have been appointed to high command; as Keith Simpson, who has
studied his career in detail, makes clear. I le was an able staff officer,
nothing more. He owed his elevation to Dill, then Chief of the General
Staff, whose talents were also those of a staff officer. Dill was appointed
by Churchill to succeed Ironside - emphatically not a staff officer, though
he might have made a magnificent commander of some desperate venture
- because Ironside had not only failed in his job but behaved
in the field
incautiously in his private life. There was absolutely nothing incautious
about Dill. Quite the contrary; Churchill's nickname for him, Dilly-
Dally, cut very close to the bone. Alex Danchev, who has written the
official biography of Dill, sympathizes with his subject but nevertheless
accepts the justice of Churchill's attitude. Dill was, in many ways, akin
to the generation of officers at the head of the French Army in 1940,
elderly in outiook and bureaucratic by habit. It was not entirely coinci-
dental that he hit it off so well with Marshall, the American Chief of
Staff, when he was appointed to head the British liaison staff in Wash-
ington after his removal as CIGS. Marshall, too, was a ponderous bur-
eaucrat; what allowed him to journey to the heights of American
government was that the United States needed such a man while it
was mobilizing its millions for war. Marshall, to do him justice, was
INTRODUCTION

a better judge of men than Dill. He singled out Eisenhower for advance-
ment from the start; it seems unlikely that Percival would have recom-
mended himself to him.
Of all Churchill's senior officers, the closest to him in experience
of life, and in temperament were two who never held high
in style
command, though they enjoyed his confidence in positions where politi-
cal and military responsibilities overlapped: Spears and Carton de Wiart,
whose dashing styles Gary Sheffield captures in his chapter. Carton
de Wiart was a VC and also a cosmopolitan, a sportsman and an aristocrat.
He was an inspired choice (not Churchill's) as head of the mission
to Poland, an inspiration to his immediate subordinates in the doomed
expedition to Norway, might have been a man of destiny in Yugoslavia,
had he not fallen by mischance into enemy captivity, and was an arrest-
ingly eccentric representative of British interests at the headquarters
of Chiang Kai-shek. Spears, also a cosmopolitan, was a close and old
friend of Churchill's, who admired greatly his dash, intelligence and
courage. He was not, however, the right choice to act in liaison with
de Gaulle. Though the two men at first got on well, Spears subsequently
took it upon himself to act for British interests, particularly in the Middle
East, with a robustness that alienated de Gaulle. They became in the
end enemies, a state of affairs that speaks for the unwisdom of Churchill's
choice in the first place.
The Churchill's appointments to high command was that
flaw in all

he would, had circumstances permitted, really have preferred to exercise


command himself, at all times and in all places. Churchill was a frus-
trated Marlborough, who itched to be both the general on the field
of battle and the presiding genius of the alliance. As it was, Ronald
Lewin notes, he succeeded in reducing 'the way of life of a Minister
of Defence and Prime Minister to that of an uninhibited eighteenth-
century aristocrat, the grotesque dressing gowns, the afternoon sleep
and the mandatory baths, the cigars, the brandy, the best of everything';
the saving feature of his style of command was that it was 'for all its
extravaganza, actually efficient'.
Churchill had learnt one overridingly important lesson from his Cabi-
net experience of the First World War: not to try to 'achieve a great
16
enterprise without having . . Plenary authority he
. plenary authority'.
had in full between 1940 and 1942; even after the intervention of the
Americans he continued to exercise it over all his generals, with the
possible exception of Montgomery. Montgomery enjoyed the advantage
of a run of unbroken success which he owed exclusively to his own

15
INTRODUCTION

talents. In the end, however, plenary authority told. Inter-Allied arrange-


ments subordinated Montgomery to Eisenhower on 10 September 1944.
Nine months later when victory in Europe came, Churchill was still
Minister of Defence, the longest serving of all Hitler's opponents and,
by any reckoning, the most implacable and successful of his foes.

NOTES
1 William Manchester, The Last Lion (London, 1983), p. 590.
2 Ibid., pp. 259-60.
3 Ibid., p. 260.

4 Martin Gilbert, Finest Hour (I ,ondon, 1983), p. 314.

5 Ronald Lewin, I Itra (iocs to ar (London, 1978), chapter 7, passim.


I \

6 J. G. Beevor, SOE (London. igSi), p. 12.


7 Ronald Lewin, Churchill as Warlord (London, [973), p. 34.
8 Gilbert, op. cit., p. 234.

9 Ibid., pp. 234-5.

10 Quoted Lewin, Churchill as Warlord, p. 205.


11 Ibid., pp. 157-8.

12 Nigel NicoteoTkyAlex (London, 1073), P- IS5«

13 Arthur Marder, Old Friends, New Enemies, vol. 2 (( heford, 1990), p. 233.

14 Nigel Hamilton,. Monty ^ vol. 2 (London, 1983), p. 592.

15 Lewin, Churchill as Warlora\ p. 240.

16 Ibid., p. 266.

16
I

IRONSIDE
Field-Marshal Lord Ironside

BRIAN BOND

In a diary entry written in June 1940, shortly before his retirement,


Ironside reflected that his dazzling career prospects had been diminished
in the decade 1926-1936 under the discouraging regimes of Milne and
Montgomery-Massingberd. The Army was in the doldrums and Ironside
felt unwanted; he became irritated at his inability to influence training

and organization and lost confidence in his future. Thus, when his
belated opportunity came in 1939 Ironside was probably past his best,
and moreover he was given an appointment - Chief of the Imperial
General Staff - for which he knew himself to be unsuited both by
1
temperament and experience.
Edmund Ironside was born in 1880, the son of a surgeon-major of
the Royal Horse Artillery who died when he was still an infant. His
mother eked out her pension by regular Continental travel and Edmund
showed an early aptitude in foreign languages, in seven of which he
became an interpreter. He was commissioned from Woolwich in time
to serve in the South African War with the Royal Field Artillery, and
shortly afterwards, disguised as a Boer transport driver, he accompanied
the German military expedition to South-West Africa where he did
useful work for British Intelligence, demonstrating his great resource-
2
fulness and linguistic skill. Six foot four inches tall and correspondingly

17
IRONSIDE

broad he was inevitably nicknamed 'Tiny'. He was the original of John


Buchan's soldier-hero Richard Hannay of The Thirty Nine Steps, Green-
mantle and Air Standfast. Not least among his distinctions Ironside repre-
sented Scotland at rugby.
In temperament Ironside was not so much the archetypal 'genrie giant'
as a supremely self-confident, forceful and opinionated commander.
He was more typical of his generation in being an open-air soldier
who intensely disliked the confines of desk work, particularly at the
abominated War Office. In general he held a low, if not contemptuous
view of politicians and, in the case of Hore-Belisha, was later to admit
in his diary that the War Minister's Jewish origins had increased his
antipathy.
Nevertheless after the First World War he was generally regarded
as an able and progressive officer. He was closely associated with the
radical advocate of mechanization and armoured warfare, 'Boney'
Fuller, and conducted and remarkably frank correspondence
a regular
on professional matters with Basil Liddell Hart. This correspondence
reveals a lively mind ranging widely over the trends in modern warfare
3
and ideas for improving the Army. As Ironside's career developed,
however, Liddell Hart was adversely impressed by his 'trade union'
attitude to promotions, evidenced by his keeping (and openly discussing)
a large ledger containing the names of all officers above him on the
Army List with his and other people's views of their performance, health
and prospects. Also, despite his facility with languages, contemporaries
such as his fellow gunner Henry Pownall noted his intellectual limi-
tations. Pownall rejoiced prematurely at his impending retirement in

June 1938, noting in his diary, 'It's a mercy his soldiering days are
over. . .There's always been more bluff and brawn than brain.' This
.

harsh judgement would be more widely endorsed after Ironside's term


as CIGS between September 1939 and May 1940.
Ironside passed through the Staff College at Camberley on the eve
of the First World War and served throughout on the Western Front.
He distinguished himself in successive staff and command appointments
culminating in command of 99 Brigade in the 2nd Division in the Spring
of 1918. In September 1918 he was appointed Brigadier General Staff
to the Allied expedition to Archangel but took over the command shortly
after its arrival, becoming General Officer Commanding in North Russia
in 1919 with the substantive rank of major-general. This placed him
among the three or four youngest major-generals in the Army. From
1922 to 1926 he was an inspiring Commandant at the Staff College with

18
IRONSIDE

'Boney' Fuller as his Chief Instructor, and then commander of the


2nd Division at Aldershot. Thereafter, like other precocious contempor-
aries who had received rapid promotion, he had to mark time - including
a disheartening period on half-pay - until his seniors such as Milne,
Massingberd, Harington and Deverell eventually retired.
When Ironside was appointed to Eastern Command in 1936 he had
more experience of senior command in war than almost any other serving
officer and, but for his age, still seemed a strong contender for command
of the Field Force in event of war. He found the Army at home in a
dire state of unpreparedness. 'We are in no state to go to war', a typical
diary entry reads, 'There are no men and there is no money for their
equipment and there is no will amongst the Cabinet Ministers to want
an Army We have nothing with which to fight - literally nothing
- and will not have anything for two years.' He concluded that the
absence of an Expeditionary Force was a godsend: nobody would dream
of sending such a derisory force to the Continent. As late as May 1938
he could write: 'Never again shall we even contemplate a Force for a
4
foreign country. Our contribution is to be the Navy and the RAF.'

It is necessary to devote some space to promotions because an import-


ant contention in this essay (as also in that on Gort) is that both officers
were given unsuitable appointments - square pegs forced into round
holes. This was an unintended consequence of Hore-Belisha's shake-up
of the high command in 1937 in the attempt to break up the prevailing
system of Buggins' turn and bring forward dynamic, progressive,
unorthodox leaders. It is also worth noting, in view of his later criticisms,
that Ironside welcomed Hore-Belisha's arrival at the War Office in May
1937: 'We are at our lowest ebb in the Army and the Jew may resuscitate
us He is ambitious and will not be lazy as some of the others were.
He starts in when
things are at their worst and will have to show results.'
He Lord Gort's appointment as Military Secretary as 'the
also greeted
3
best piece of news I had heard for many years'.
Towards the end of 1937 Hore-Belisha determined to remove Deverell
as CIGS and faced the critical question of who should succeed him.
Ironside was in the running but spoilt his chances by an unimpressive
performance as a Commander in the major exercise of 1937. For this
he was severely (and Liddell Hart thought unfairly) criticized in public
by Deverell from a draft prepared by Alan Brooke - no admirer of
Tiny's. It is interesting, however, that even Liddell Hart - Ironside's
strong supporter and Hore-Belisha's adviser at this period - thought
that he was better suited to be Commander-in-Chief in India with Wavell

19
IRONSIDE

as CIGS. Unfortunately the taciturn Wavell had made a very poor


impression on the War Minister and the appointment eventually went
to Gort. Ironically Gort would have preferred to hold a revived appoint-
ment General of the Forces so as to extend his active career.
as Inspector
Hore-Belisha's idea was that Gort would be the dynamic 'front man'
in pushing through radical reforms while Sir Ronald Adam as his deputy
would supply the brains in the sphere of strategy- a dubious arrangement
since it was Gort and not Adam who had to present the Army's case
6
in the Chiefs of Staff committee. Ironside told Hore-Belisha he had
chosen the right man and had never really pictured himself as CIGS,
for which the War Minister was greatly relieved. Vet within a few months
Ironside was privately recording his opinion that Gort was completely
out of his depth as CIGS.
Early in 1938 Ironside accepted the appointment of Governor of
Gibraltar and assumed it would end However, Gort
his military career.
and Hore-Belisha both held out the prospect of command in the Middle
East in event of war, and since Tiny was convinced that Egypt was
the hub of the Empire and the place where Britain's main military effort
must be made, this was an added attraction. Hore-Belisha also made
the 'preposterous' suggestion that the British Army might well be
7
employed in Spain and he (Tiny) would be on the spot to take command.
In December 1938 Hore-Belisha consulted Liddell Hart about recall-
ing Ironside from his exile on the Rock to be Inspector General of
Overseas Forces. Liddell Hart was doubtful because he thought there
would be confusion of responsibilities between this post and that of
CIGS. Sir John French had been Inspector General of Overseas Forces
before 1914 and Commander-in-Chief designate. The danger would
be that Ironside would regard himself as the virtual Commander-in-
Chief and Gort would be relegated to administrative duties. This was
all the more likely given Tim's dominant character and considerable

seniority over Gort. Nevertheless Hore-Belisha went ahead, giving Iron-


side the appointment in May 1939 and making Walter Kirke Inspector
General of Home Forces. As regards demarcation of duties he ruled
that both Inspectors would be 'outside the War Office' but able to come
8
inside as and when they needed.
Even if Ironside was not officially informed that he was C-in-C desig-
nate, it was a reasonable assumption to make and he behaved accordingly.
He continued to believe to the very eve of war that the Middle East
was the most likely destination of Britain's small and under-equipped
Field Force. Friction with Gort over their respective responsibilities

20
IRONSIDE

soon occurred and was gleefully recorded by Major- General Henry


Pownall, Director of Military Operations and Intelligence at the War
Office. On Tiny's appointment Pownall expressed the opinion that he
was quite unsuited to be a C-in-C on a modern battlefield. 'He would
do alright bush-whacking or knocking the Middle East about but he
is not intelligent, not enough so to deal with a first-class enemy.' Pownall

may have been prejudiced but Sir John Slessor, who had known Tiny
9
at various points in his career, recorded an almost identical view. The
only incident in Ironside's brief tenure of the Inspector-Generalship
that deserves mention here is his visit to Poland in July 1939 to assess
the Poles' military capabilities and intentions. He reported prophetically
that no Eastern Front really existed, that France would not attack the
Siegfried Line and that Poland would be quickly overrun. He urged
that an agreement with Russia was essential, but this advice was anathema
10
to the Prime Minister.
When war with Germany seemed certain at the end of August, Ironside
was so confident of being appointed C-in-C that he sent his assistant,
Colonel Macleod, to Aldershot to assemble his headquarters staff. After
an agonizing wait the bombshell exploded on 3 September: Hore-Belisha
appointed Gort commander of the Field Force for France and made
Ironside CIGS. The details of this dramatic incident need not be de-
11
scribed again here, but the circumstances and momentous con-
sequences deserve some discussion. Gort and Hore-Belisha had been
on extremely strained terms and both were delighted at the chance for
Gort to leave the War Office and take a command, for which he was
more suited. Tiny's chance of the command of the Field Force may
have been harmed by French hints that he would not be acceptable
- but their preference was for Dill rather than Gort. Hore-Belisha
was now stuck with Tiny for, as Sir John Kennedy put it, he had 'raised
a regular Frankenstein's monster in bringing Ironside back from the
12
dead'. Ironside had acommanding presence and a popular reputation,
and he was strongly supported by Churchill, now recalled to the Admir-
alty and a member of the War Cabinet. Churchill overcame opposition
- from Kingsley Wood and others - and Ironside was made CIGS.
This was a bad mistake for, as Ironside honestly admitted, 'I am not
suited in temperament to such a job as CIGS, nor have I prepared
myself to be such.' Indeed he had never before held a staff appointment
at the War Office. Furthermore, one must ask, since he had been passed
over as unsuitable in 1937, why (at the age of sixty) was he deemed
suitable in 1939? Ironside soldiered on in increasingly irksome conditions

21
IRONSIDE

but the error in appointing him must be borne in mind when we consider
his shortcomings as CIGS.
Eyewitnesses differ on Ironside's performance in the early months
of the war and particularly on his relations with Hore-Belisha. Sir John
Kennedy paints a generally attractive and positive picture of a rumbus-
tious bull-in-a-china-shop, courageous, self-confident and intolerant
of nonsense - political or military. Kennedy retails Tiny's version of
his haranguing the War Cabinet but he also records that, far from
impressing ministers, Ironside had annoyed them very much. 'His man-
ner with politicians was much too brusque; on the other hand it was
a joy to hear him give a straightforward military survey in a military
environment.' Francis de Guingand, by contrast, thought that so far
from 'nearly reducing H-B to tears', Ironside was very respectful towards
the minister and would not have dared to pound the table or harangue
13
him.
Ironside's view of strategic priorities at the outset of war may be sum-
marized briefly. Britain's first task in the West was to build up the
French order of battle with the Field Force eventually expanded to
some twenty divisions. The initial aim must be to withstand a German
offensive which Ironside (correctly) thought Hitler might be willing
to risk in the autumn of 1939. He continued to envisage the Middle
East as the main theatre in which Britain would ultimately launch an
offensive when she had assembled twelve divisions. Ironside described
Turkey as 'our front line and our bastion'. 'A door might open in Ruma-
nia or Italy; or we might have to send in small forces to put Poland
and Czecho-Slovakia back on their feet.' From the outset he was under-
standably unhappy about the lack of overall direction and the inefficient
organization of strategy and policy. After three weeks at war he com-
plained: 'The old gentiemen sitting here in London have no idea of
the seriousness of the position. How can we get a unified command
. . .

of operations? How are we to stop those stupid conferences of the Chiefs


of Staff and War Cabinets, discussing the little details of the nothings
14
that have happened?' Things would have to get worse in the months
before Churchill became Prime Minister, and Ironside scarcely survived
long enough to experience the benefits which ensued.
Ironside's lack of balance and gravitas are evident in the remarks
about Poland and Czechoslovakia quoted above. He also displayed insta-
bility on two important issues in the autumn of 1939. In September

Gamelin raised the possibility of an Allied advance from the defences


being prepared on the Franco-Belgian frontier to the line of the Escaut

22
IRONSIDE

(or Scheldt). Ironside wrote to Gort and spoke out in Cabinet against
this projected move: there was a danger of being caught in the open
by low bombing attacks, and the Escaut Line, unreconnoitred and unpre-
pared, would be linear and ineffective. Yet when Gamelin set out his
reasons for the projected advance on 26 September Ironside acquiesced.
No firm decision was taken and in the following weeks the General
Staff prepared a paper stressing the folly of the advance unless the
Allies could be sure of occupying defensive positions before the Germans
attacked. Dill and Brooke (the Corps commanders) were unhappy about
the project, as were some of the French field commanders. No new
arguments were advanced by Gamelin, but on 9 November Ironside
and Newall (the CAS) accepted his plan, to the dismay of the General
Staff. Ironside explained to the War Cabinet that Gort had been placed

under the French command and given the right of appeal to the Govern-
ment, but since he had not done so they would be ill-advised to inter-
15
vene. This was a curious line to be taken by the Cabinet's senior
adviser on military strategy, particularly as he knew that Gort was deter-
mined to play the part of a loyal ally.
The other issue concerned the main role of the RAF's bomber force
in the event of a German attack in the West; should it, in short, be
concentrated on close-support attacks on the enemy's communications
or should it be directed towards 'strategic bombing' of the Ruhr? Ironside

was acutely aware of the derisory provision for close Army-Air support
and was fighting for the Army to have control of its own aircraft. Yet
in discussions with the Air Staff and Churchill, and later with the French
war leaders, Ironside vehemently favoured bombing the Ruhr, declaring
repeatedly that it would be 'decisive', apparendy because he believed
the German generals were rigid and inflexible and would be unable
to readjust to this chaos in their rear. Slessor remarked that Ironside's
assessment went far beyond the Air Staff's claims for the immediate
effects of industrial bombing, while Gort was indignant that his CIGS
16
had sold the pass on so contentious an inter-Service dispute.
Ironside was increasingly depressed by the Cabinet's policy of 'wait
and see' and the endless, futile discussions. Even Chamberlain, for
whom he expressed considerable admiration, was described as 'just a
weary, tired old man, dominating at times all the other mediocrities
who bear the responsibility with him'. His diary entries on Hore-Belisha
17
become more frequent and more scathing. For his part, the War Minis-
ter told Liddell Hart that he wished he had chosen Ironside in the
first place rather than Gort. Despite his limitations he had much more

23
IRONSIDE

drive than any other soldier. He could always get a reasoned opinion
from Tiny. On 14 December, with the axe of dismissal poised over
his head,Hore-Belisha failed to take Chamberlain's hint that he could
18
have Gort and Ironside replaced if he lacked confidence in them.
Ironside played only a subsidiary role in the notorious box affair'
'Pill

which provided the pretext for Hore-Belisha's dismissal from the War
Office early in January 1940, so the matter can be covered more fully
in the essay on Gort. At the first hint of trouble between the War Minister
and the Commander-in-Chief on 19 November, Ironside warned the
former to be careful how he dealt with Gort. 'He was put in by the
King and must not be monkeyed about.' It seems clear from Tiny's
own account that on 28 November he volunteered to go and examine
the Field Force's defences for himself. The notion that he had been
sent out by the War Cabinet or Hore-Belisha only served to exacerbate
the paranoiac atmosphere at GHQ. Whether Ironside went out to France
with an open mind may be doubted: he certainly returned a staunch
supporter of the GHQ line that Gort had been insulted and that, 'H-B
must go'. On 3 December who was angry about
Ironside saw the King,
the dispute. A fortnight Tiny noted that in many ways it would
later

be a pity if H-B had to


go, but he found him impossible personally.
When he heard of H-B's resignation on 6 January he seemed genuinely
19
surprised but felt a sense of intense relief.

Ironside's role in advocating operations in Scandinavia between the


end of December 1939 and mid-March 1940 does not enhance his repu-
tation as a sound strategist; indeed it does much to justify Pownall's
linking his name with Churchill's as 'the Crazy Gang'. The opportunity
for British operations in Scandinavia was of course provided by Fin-
land's gallant resistance against the Russian invasion, but from the outset
Ironside saw assistance to Finland as no more than a pretext: the real
objectives were the occupation of the Swedish iron ore fields around
Gallivare and the distraction of German forces away from western Eur-
ope. Pownall was right to link the CIGS's name with Churchill's because
both men fretted at Britain's inactivity and longed to seize the initiative.
But whereas Churchill favoured the lesser plan of mining the Norwegian
leads to force German transport vessels into open waters and perhaps
provoke a full-scale reaction, Ironside favoured the major scheme of
a military expedition through Narvik along the electric railway into Swe-
den. Tiny believed that if Finnish would
resistance could be prolonged it

prevent a German advance in the Balkans. If Germany could be provoked


into armed intervention in Scandinavia the Middle East would be kept

24
IRONSIDE

quiet. An offensive through Narvik to Lulea (the Swedish port on the


Gulf of Bothnia from which iron ore was shipped to Germany in the
ice-free summer months) would offer the Allies a big return for little
expenditure. It presented a chance to seize the initiative and throw confu-
sion into German councils. On 26 December Churchill told Ironside
that his own scheme - of mining - would soon receive Cabinet
the leads
approval. He did not think the Germans would be able to take action
against Norway and Sweden before May and only then might Britain
have to send a force through Narvik to Lulea.
Ironside thought they had stumbled upon 'the one great stroke which
is open to us to turn the tables upon the Russians and Germans'. He
saw that Norwegian and Swedish co-operation was vital but assumed
that it could be obtained. He accepted that once an operation was started
in Scandinavia it was likely to grow into a major campaign, but in that
event it must be carried through 'despite all other demands made upon
our troops and material'. A few days later, however, he and the other
Chiefs of Staff warned the Cabinet against implementing Churchill's
plan until their own forces were prepared. 'It is like putting a stick
inside a hornets' nest without having provided yourself with a proper
veil', he wrote prophetically. Throughout January 1940 he continued
to advocate the larger scheme, making the assumptions that 'if we pushed
in a brigade to Gallivare' the Germans would be unable to react before
May, and also that the enemy was incapable of mounting more than
20
one operation at a time.
At the meeting of the Supreme War Council on 5 February Ironside
found Daladier 'genial' and the French delegation delighted at Britain's
willingness to shoulder the main burden of the Scandinavian enterprise.
Assuming Norwegian and Swedish acquiescence, the essence of the
plan was to push a strong force through Narvik and Trondheim:

We are supplying two divisions and two strong brigades, while the French
supply a brigade of Chasseurs Alpins, two battalions of the Legion and four
battalions of Poles. This will all pass across the Narvik-Lulea and we
line

shall sit down in strength upon our L. of C, making sure of Gallivareand


Boden. I can see a whole host of objections from the Scandinavians, but what
I most fear is a passive resistance - a strike amongst the officials of the railway.

If we bring this off we shall have carried out a great coup, which will upset
the even tenor of the German preparations. It may bring in Norway and Sweden.
I don't doubt that it will have an electrifying effect upon the Germans. They

will have to come out in the open and declare themselves for or against the
21
Russians.

25
IRONSIDE

Ironside showed awareness of the risks of the plan, but deemed them
worthwhile if the German supply of iron ore could be stopped. He
took it for granted thatFrance was secure and could only benefit from
the German diversion. This hair-raising scenario did not delight GHQ
in France. Pownall penned most devastating critique against 'those
a
master strategists Winston and Ironside': communications and logistics
would be a nightmare even if all went well; there was a real risk of
antagonizing Russia; the Germans could easily mount an attack on the
Western Front as well as in Scandinavia or the Balkans; and why should
the Norwegians and Swedes allow us to make their countries a battlefield
- if they were so pro-ally and anti-German, why did they not stop
22
the ore supply themselves or let us buy it at an enhanced price?
Ironside continued to support the scheme up to the last minute, despite
the opposition of other senior army officers involved in the planning
such as Kennedy and Ismay, and Newall (the CAS) who described
it as 'hare-brained'. Chamberlain, too, was 'horrified' at the political

risks involved, but the expedition was set to go ahead on 12 March


when Finland's timely collapse caused its postponement. 23
Making due allowance for Pownall's hostility to Ironside, his anger
at the CIGS's failure to keep GHQ
informed about the Scandinavian
project and its repercussions on the Field Force in France were justified.
As Pownall noted on 12 March, part of 5th Division had actually been
withdrawn from France with a view to despatching it to Norway, III
Corps had been held up in England, and the supply of ammunition
to France had totally ceased in February because it was needed else-
where. Pownall found consolation in the rumour that Ironside would
24
shortly be appointed Commander-in-Chief in India.
When Anglo-French operations in Norway eventually began in early
April the circumstances were entirely different to what Ironside had
envisaged: in a brilliant combined operation the Germans seized Bergen,
Trondheim and Narvik and soon achieved air dominance over the battle
zone. Ironside supported the expedition to take Narvik, but he was almost
alone among the decision-makers in realizing it would not be a 'walk-
over'. On 14 April Churchill, who from the outset had dominated the
British response, insisted against the CIGS's violent protests that the
rear half of the convoy carrying troops to Narvik be diverted to Trond-
heim. This predictably caused chaos and got the operation to seize
Trondheim through a pincer movement from landings at Namsos and
Andalsnes off to the worst possible start.

Ironside, whose previous relations with Churchill had been very good,

26
IRONSIDE

now became exasperated at the First Lord's attempt to supervise all

military operations as if he were a company commander. He also found


Churchill's see-saw changes of mood hard to cope with. The CIGS
justifiably felt that his proper responsibility for military advice could
not be exercised due to the frequent rambling discussions of the Chiefs
of Staff, the ill-named Co-ordination Committee and the War Cabinet.
As he noted on 19 April: 'Strategy is directed by odd people who collect
odd bits of information. This is discussed quite casually by everyone.'
Two days later he questioned the sanity of trying to run operations
by committee with every morning's Cabinet meeting taken up with
descriptions in detail of every little incident in the fighting. It was like
a lot of children playing a game of chances. 25
Perhaps Ironside's most important achievement in the Norwegian
campaign was to insist on the speedy evacuation of the Central Front
(Namsos and Andalsnes) on 26 April. British ministers were relieved,
but the CIGS was unhappy that he had felt obliged to force through
this decision without consulting the French. On 7 May he fairly summed
up the campaign as a muddle in every way. 'Always too late. Changing
plans and nobody directing. To bed very upset at the thought of our
incompetence.' He was obliged to admit that, contrary to his stereotyped
view, the Germans had displayed a remarkable ability to improvise. An
26
even greater shock was impending.
Ironside, like Gamelin, had at times hoped that the Germans would
attack on the Western Front in the winter months of 1939-40, and he
deluded himself, despite ominous signs, that French morale was sound.
As late as 31 March he expressed a poor opinion of German generalship
and staff work: an attack on the Western Front would be a terrible
gamble for them. In October 1939 he had mentioned the Ardennes as
a possible approach route for the Germans, but at that time their main
thrust (in planning) was directed at central Belgium and the Nether-
27
lands. It seems probable that in May 1940 the CIGS was as surprised

as the other Allied war leaders by the bold execution of the Manstein
Plan.
Ironside's role in the battle of France was not of great significance.
He knew his days as CIGS were numbered when Dill was brought
back from France in late April as VCIGS. Gort and Pownall at GHQ
had completely lost confidence in him. Lastiy, even before he became
Prime Minister on 10 May, Churchill was now presiding over both
the Chiefs of Staff and the Co-ordination committees as a virtual Minis-
ter of Defence. On 19 May, however, Ironside was instructed by the
IRONSIDE

War Cabinet to go over France and order Gort to retreat south-west


to
so as to link up with the main French armies supposedly assembling
for a counter-attack to smash through the Panzer corridor now stretching
tenuously to the Channel coast. Gort and Pownall quickly convinced
him that the War Cabinet was hopelessly out of touch with events and
that a retreat northward to the Channel ports offered the only faint
hope of escape. Ironside also witnessed the French commanders' moral
collapse and was sufficiently exasperated to shake General Billotte by
his tunic buttons. He believed that only a minute portion of the BEF
28
could escape.
On 27 May Dill replaced Ironside as CIGS. He welcomed the change
to a job more to his liking - Commander-in-Chief Home Forces -
further sweetened by Churchill's promise of a field-marshal's baton
in due course. The War Cabinet rightly believed he would infuse more
drive and purpose into defence preparations and, as seemed all too
likely, would be the best commander to lead the ill-trained, ill-equipped

and totally inadequate forces remaining in the United Kingdom against


an invading army.
Ironside understandably, though wrongly, assumed that Hitler would
have ordered thorough planning for the invasion, but he was more
realistic than the Chiefs of Staff in appreciating that the Germans would
be unlikely to attempt an invasion before achieving command of the
air. When command the most vulnerable area of
Ironside took up his
the coastline seemed to lie between the Wash and Folkestone, but after
the fall of France the whole of the southern coast was threatened. The

number of troops available was superficially impressive but there was


a dearth of guns and tanks, training was defective and the means of
mobility lacking. Initially therefore Ironside had no alternative to organ-
izing a largely static 'crust' of beach defences, with blocks and stop-lines
further inland and a small mobile reserve north and west of London
to counter-attack landings in East Anglia or on the south coast. In
the first half of June Ironside's difficulties were exacerbated by the
removal of some of his best units for the ill-fated second BEF.
Ironside presented his complete plans to the Chiefs of Staff Committee
on 25 June. They comprised five main elements. First, an extended
'crust' along the probable invasion beaches whose defenders would fight
where they stood to gain time and break up all penetrations. Second,
there would be blocks manned by Local Defence Volunteers (later
renamed the Home Guard) equipped with 'Molotov cocktails' and other
devices to use against tanks. Thirdly, small, local mobile reserves would

28
IRONSIDE

be mounted armoured fighting vehicles such as 'Ironsides'. Fourthly,


in
there was be a strong static defence line constructed to stop any
to
breakthrough from reaching London or the industrial Midlands. Lasdy,
there was the GHQ Reserve consisting initially of one armoured and
29
the equivalent of three infantry divisions.
On the following day Ironside's scheme was severely criticized by
Lord Hankey (Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster) and the Vice
Chiefs of Staff. They were alarmed at the implication that 'the main
resistance might only be offered after the enemy had overrun nearly
half the country, and obtained possession of aerodromes and other vital
facilities'. They also deplored the plan's lack of attention to the south
coast. This scheme they described as 'completely unsound' and 'nothing
30
short of suicidal'.
The Chiefs of Staff were more sympathetic to Ironside's problems
and confirmed that his plan of defence was 'generally sound', but they
required him to revise his paper clarifying his determination to resist
the enemy on the beaches and his intentions regarding the location
31
and use of reserves. Ironside and his chief of staff, General Sir Bernard
Paget, were exasperated by repeatedly being summoned to explain their
plans; and although Churchill nominally supported the Commander-in-
Chief, his memorandum of 28 June caused further confusion. In this
paper, in curious contrast to his recent and famous 'We shall fight
them on the beaches' speech, he wrote that 'The battle will be won
or lost, not on the beaches, but by the mobile brigades and the main
32
reserves.' By the end of June Ironside believed that the Chiefs of
Staff were confused about what the priorities for home defence should
be or what could reasonably be expected given the limited forces avail-
able. He was also aware of criticism from some of the senior commanders,
including Montgomery, Auchinleck and, above all, Brooke, who took
up Southern Command on 26 June. Brooke felt strongly that more effort
should be put into creating a strong reserve for mobile operations; he
also believed that the Germans' main thrust would come not across
33
the North Sea but across the Channel against the south coast. On
17 July Brooke seized his opportunity when showing Churchill the south
coast defences to convince the Prime Minister that a change of Home
34
Forces Commander was needed and that he was the man for the job.
Two days later Ironside's supersession by Brooke was announced. Iron-
side took his sudden replacement philosophically. Though sometimes
irritated by Churchill he had gready admired his courageous leadership
during the prolonged crisis since he had become Prime Minister. Chur-

29
IRONSIDE

chill in turn appreciated Ironside's performance as Commander-in-


Chief Home
Forces and the soldierly dignity with which he accepted
his supersession. He was promptly promoted field-marshal and in 1941
received a peerage.
Reviewing the Ironside Diaries in 1962, A. J. P. Taylor concluded:
'Few men have been less successful as CIGS, and none has been more
,3r>
conscious of it. Ironside was certainly aware of his shortcomings and
he had recognized from the outset that he was far from ideally suited
for the post. In conclusion, however, three points may be advanced
in mitigation of Mr Taylor's severe judgement. In contrast to the other
two services the Army was largely inactive during Ironside's period in
office. Similarly, with the notable exception of Churchill, Chamberlain's
War Cabinet took a predominantly passive and Micawberish view of
grand strategy that was alien to Ironside's restless temperament. Finally,
he had to function in a loose structure of decision-making through
a plethora of committees with ill-defined responsibilities which were
lacking in co-ordination and direction from the top. One may question
whether any other CIGS between, say, 1922 and 1945 would have done
36
better in these circumstances.

NOTES
Note. I have not been able to examine the original Ironside diaries which are
currently in the custody of his official biographer, Dr Wesley Wark, in Canada.
Dr Wark has kindly read and commented on this essay in draft but I remain
entirely responsible for its contents. I am also very grateful to Dr David Newbold
for permitting me to make use of the section of his doctoral thesis (on Britain's
preparations to meet a German World War
invasion on land in II) covering
Ironside's period as Commander-in-Chief Home Forces.

1 R. Macleod and D. Kelly (eds), The Ironside Diaries igjy-ig^o (1962), p.


365. (Henceforth referred to as 'Macleod'.)
2 Geoffrev Powell, 'John Buchan's Richard Hannay', History Today, August
1987.
3 B. H. Liddell Hart, Memoirs, vol. I (1965), p. 81. All other references are
to Volume
See also the Liddell Hart-Ironside correspondence in the
II.

Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives at King's College, London.


4 Macleod, pp. 24-5, 57-8.
5 Macleod, pp. 24, 26.
6 Liddell Hart, Memoirs, vol. II, pp. 21-3. R. J. Minney, The Private Papers
ofHore-Belisha (i960), pp. 68-70 (henceforth referred to as 'Minney').
7 Macleod, pp. 38-9, 52-3, 59-60, 64.

30
IRONSIDE

8 Liddell Hart, Memoirs, II, pp. 74, 239. Minney, p. 210.


9 Brian Bond (ed.), Chief of Staff. The Diaries of Lieutenant- General Sir Henry
Pownall, vol. I, IQ33-1Q40 (1972), pp. 203, 206, 215-16 (henceforth referred
to as 'Pownall').Pownall speculated that Hore-Belisha had deliberately
appointed Ironside in order to provoke Gort into resigning. For Sir John
Slessor's unflattering opinion of Ironside, see The Central Blue (1956),
p. 242.
10 Macleod, pp. 75, 81-2, 85.
11 See Pownall, pp. 222-3 ana Macleod, pp. 93-4.
*

12 Sir J. Kennedy, The Business of War (1957), pp. 18-20.


13 Kennedy, pp. 18-25. F. de Guingand, Operation Victory (paperback edition
i960), pp. 35-8. Minney, p. 234.
14 Kennedy, pp. 25-6. Macleod, pp. 103-10 passim.
15 Kennedy, pp. 27-31. J. R. Colville, Man of Valour, Field-Marshal Lord Gort
VC (1972), p. 153 (henceforth referred to as 'Gort'). Macleod, pp. 113, 136,

394. Slessor, p. 251.


16 Macleod, pp. 141-2. Slessor, pp. 246-7, 252. Gort, p. 175.

17 Macleod, pp. 125, 136, 158. Kennedy, pp. 40-1.


18 Liddell Hart, Memoirs, II, pp. 264, 269. Minney, pp. 266-7.
19 Macleod, pp. 164^7, 194-6.
20 Macleod, pp. 188-92. Pownall, pp. 280-8.
21 Macleod, pp. 215-16. See also R. A. C. Parker, 'Britain, France and Scandi-
navia, 1939-40' in History, October 1976, pp. 369-87.
22 Pownall, pp. 280-3.
23 Kennedy, pp. 48-9. Macleod, p. 228.
24 Pownall, pp. 288-93.
25 Macleod, pp. 257-9, 265, 268, 273.
26 Macleod, pp. 284-5, 2 9^-
27 Liddell Hart, Memoirs II, p. 265. Macleod, pp. 125, 204, 241.
28 Gort, pp. 172-3. Pownall, pp. 323-5. Macleod, pp. 277, 290-1.
29 Cab 79/5 COS(4o) 193rd Meeting, 25 June 1940. B. Collier, The Defence
of the United Kingdom (1957), pp. 129-30.
30 Cab 80/13 COS(4o) 490. Letter from Lord Hankey to the COS Committee,
25 June 1940. Cab 79/5 COS(4o) 195, 26 June 1940.
31 Cab 79/5 COS(4o) 197, 27 June 1940. Cab 80/13 COS(4o) 495, Memorandum
by the COS, 27 June 1940.
32 Cab 80/13 COS (40) 498, note by the Prime Minister to the COS Committee,
28 June 1940.
33 Sir A. Bryant, The Turn of the Tide (the Alanbrooke Diaries, 1957), pp.
189-90. Field-Marshal Viscount Montgomery, Memoirs (1958), pp. 68^70.
J. Connell, Auchinleck (1959), pp. 156-7.
34 Bryant, The Turn of the Tide, pp. 194-5. W. S. Churchill, The Second World
War, vol. II (1949), pp. 233-4.

31
IRONSIDE

35 The Sunday Observer, n November 1962.


36 Many authorities suggest that Dill would have been preferable to Gort
as CIGS in 1937 or to Ironside in 1939 but note Sir Alexander Cadogan's
diary entry for 29 April 1941: 'Dill is the most unimpressive - if charming
- personality I have ever come across. Almost I am persuaded to believe
in Ironside!' (D. Dilks (ed.), The Diaries of Sir Alexander Cadogan igj8-ig4^
(i97i),p.37 4 ).

CHRONOLOGY: EDMUND IRONSIDE


1880, May 6 Born in Edinburgh
1883^7 Tonbridge School
1887-9 Royal Military Academy, Woolwich; commissioned
Royal Artillery
1899-1902 South African War (despatches, Queen's Medal with
3 clasps, King's Medal with 2 clasps)
1908 Captain
1909-12 Brigade Major
1913-14 Staff College, Camberley
1914, October GSO3, 6th Division
1915 GSO2; marries Mariot Ysobel Cheyne (one s, one d);

awarded DSO
1916-17 GSOi, 4th Canadian Division; brevet Lieutenant-
Colonel
1918 Commands 99 Infantry Brigade, 2nd Division;
awarded CMG; promoted brevet Colonel
1918, October- C-in-C Allied Troops Archangel; promoted major-
1919, October general; knighted (KCB) 1918 (his account, Archangel
iqi8-iqiq, published 1953)
1920 Commands Ismid Force
1921 Commands North Persian Force
1922-6 Commandant, Staff College, Camberley
1926-8 Commands 2nd Division, Aldershot
1928-31 GOC Meerut District, India
I93I-3 Half-pay, Lieutenant, Tower of London
1933-6 Quartermaster-General, India; promoted General, 1935
1936-8 GOC Eastern District; awarded GCB 1938
1938-9 Governor and C-in-C, Gibraltar
1939, May- Inspector-General of Overseas Forces
September
1939, September 3 Chief of the Imperial General Staff
1940, May 27

32
IRONSIDE

1940, May 27 - C-in-C Home Forces; promoted Field-Marshal


July 19
1941 Created Baron Ironside of Archangel
1959, September 22 Dies in London

33
GORT
Field-Marshal Lord Gort

BRIAN BOND

The late Sir John Colville aptly called his biography of Gort Man of
Valour, for whatever his subject's limitations of mind and personality,
few ever questioned his outstanding courage. When
French Prime the
Minister Reynaud dared to do so at the height of Anglo-French friction
during the Dunkirk evacuation he received a furious rebuke from Sir
Edward Spears. Spears himself reflected:

It had never occurred to me nor, I fancy, to any of his contemporaries to


describe Gort as intelligent above the average. But, as far as that goes, Foch
was not intelligent either But he was an undoubtedly great man nevertheless,
. . .

for he had other qualities, steadfastness, resolution, courage, and so had Gort,
who in addition possessed the great virtue of loyalty.
1

Gort attained the heights of his profession as CIGS and Commander-in-


Chief of the Field Force (between 1937 and 1940) and at a comparatively
young age, but then suffered the common fate of British commanders
at the start of a war, being made the scapegoat for peacetime neglect
of the army and relegated to the sidelines.
John Standish Surtees Prendergast Vereker was born in 1886 and
succeeded his father as sixth Viscount Gort in the Irish peerage in
1902. He was educated at Harrow and Sandhurst and commissioned

34
GORT

into the Grenadier Guards in 1905. In the First World War he performed
excellently as a staff officer, particularly in the Operations Branch at
GHQ where he played an important part in planning the operations
in 1917. But it was as a battalion and brigade commander that he achieved
the truly outstanding reputation for bravery which ensured him a dis-
tinguished career in the post-war Army. In 1917 he was awarded the
DSO and bar when commanding the 4th Battalion Grenadier Guards
and was twice badly wounded. In March 1918 he displayed conspicuous
bravery at Arras in helping to check the German offensive and was
awarded a second bar. But his greatest exploit was on 27 September
1918 when, again badly wounded, he was awarded the Victoria Cross
as temporary commander of 3 Guards Brigade in the storming of the
Canal du Nord and the Hindenburg Line. He also won the Military
Cross and was eight times mentioned in despatches. As Gort's entry
in the Dictionary ofNational Biography sums up, he acquired 'a reputation
for the rarest gallantry, complete disregard of personal danger and power
to keep alive in his troops a spirit of endeavour untamed by loss and
2
strain'.

After the war Gort made steady, if not spectacular, progress. He


was an instructor at the Staff College in 1921, was promoted Colonel
in 1925, Commander of the Guards Brigade in 1930, Director of Military
Training in India 1932, and in 1936 returned to the Staff College as
Commandant. In 1937 Gort's career prospects were transformed when
Hore-Belisha appointed him, first, Military Secretary at the War Office
and, shortly afterwards, the youngest ever CIGS. He skipped the rank
of lieutenant-general to become a full general and in so doing passed
above many officers senior to him on the Army List including Dill,
Brooke and Wavell.
In early life Gort had acquired the ridiculous and inappropriate nick-
name of Tat Boy', but was later known familiarly as 'Jack'. In what
would now be termed his 'lifestyle' he was austere and self-denying,
indeed he seemed to delight in privations and expected others to do
the same. On his appointment to the Staff College in 1936 one colonel
remarked: 'He will have all the beds made of concrete and hosed down
with cold water nighdy.' His suggestion that officers might use their
leisure hours at Camberley learning to fly rather than following the
drag hunt was not widely appreciated. He also had a schoolboy sense
of fun which he never entirely grew out of. In his days as an instructor
at the Staff College in the early 1920s he had been a ringleader in
various rags, such as squirting hoses under the bedroom doors of those

35
GORT

who retired too early on mess nights, and - as will be seen later -
he was not above treating the War Minister to similar horseplay in 1939.
Gort had married Corinna Yereker in 1911 but this did
his cousin
not prove a successful partnership and the marriage was dissolved in
1925. While Lady Gort actually broke up the marriage, Gort himself
may have contributed. As his commander in the Shanghai Relief Force
in 1927, General John Duncan, revealingly wrote to his own wife:
He is a bit too intense for peacetime soldiering. He is a very fine soldier and
extremely able, but he is in a class by himself and works himself to death.
It may be the result of his domestic troubles, but if he was like this before
I can quite imagine his wife leaving him/

When Gort was rather surprisingly appointed CIGS in December 1937


his biographer assessed his qualities as follows:

there was no more honest man than Gort and ifnone would have called him
brilliant, his integrity, experience, shrewd common sense and that most worthy
of all qualities, true simplicity were a
. . . combination that was certain to attract
loyalty and might reasonably be expected to achieve success.

In the opinion of his contemporaries, however, he was regarded as an


4
ideal man to command a division.
In promoting Gort to the highest appointment in the Army, Hore-
Belisha hoped he would supply the drive for pushing through overdue
reforms while his character would appeal to the troops and enhance
the Service's reputation with the public. Sir Ronald Adam as his deputy
would supply the brains and adroitness necessary in the Chiefs of Staff
Committee and the Committee of Imperial Defence. Sir John Kennedy's
opinion, that 'In the War Office this fine fighting soldier was like a
5
fish out of water', may be too severe, but it soon became apparent
that Gort was not ideally suited to be CIGS. As we shall see, one of
Gort's salient characteristics throughout his life was an obsession with
detail, sometimes to the exclusion or neglect of the broader picture.

Nevertheless, Gort became CIGS at a time when the energetic and


ambitious Hore-Belisha - greatly aided by international events - was
bringing Army reform to the forefront of British politics, and he played
an important part in the great improvements that were accomplished
before the outbreak of war. This is not the place for a detailed account
6
of Hore-Belisha's reforms, but Gort's most important achievement,
helped by his able Director of Military Operations, Major-General
Henry Pownall, was to get the Army's continental commitment recog-
nized by the Government (finally achieved in February 1939), with the

36
GORT

resultant rush to get its equipment, weapons and transport modernized


- and part of the Territorial Army earmarked for development as its
eventual Reserve. Though he remained ignorant of the French Army's
weaknesses, Gort was convinced that Germany was Britain's most likely
enemy, that the Field Force must be made ready for despatch to France
and that the pre-1939 plan to send only two divisions was a completely
7
inadequate contribution to an alliance.
Quite apart from the blighting of individual careers, it was a tragedy

for the British Army that Gort and Hore-Belisha proved unable to work
amicably together. Pownall, a prejudiced, partisan admirer of Gort,
thought the two men could never get on: 'a great gentleman and an
obscure, shallow-brained charlatan, political Jewboy'. By the summer
of 1939 Pownall believed Hore-Belisha was trying to manoeuvre Gort
into resignation but he should refuse to budge; the War Minister's
Cabinet colleagues were allegedly sick of him and would surely oust
him from office after the general election - due in 1940. Gort and Pownall
disliked and resented many things about Hore-Belisha, but chief among
them were his flamboyant personality, his unorthodox style in conducting
Army business - particularly appointments - and his reliance for advice
on Captain B. H. Liddell Hart, The Times' military correspondent. For
his part, it seems unlikely that Hore-Belisha reciprocated Gort's ani-
mosity, but the CIGS's distrust and dislike of him clearly penetrated
even Hore-Belisha's thick skin. The unfortunate result was that for
several months before the outbreak of war Hore-Belisha and his chief
military adviser were barely on speaking terms and saw as little of each
other as possible. Hore-Belisha dealt increasingly with Gort's deputy,
Adam, and with junior staff officers such as Kennedy.
Thus peacetime civil- military relations in twentieth- century Britain
reached their nadir in 1939. To judge by the Pownall and Ironside
diaries, all the fault was on one side. But Gort's biographer corrects
this impression, pointing out that the CIGS offered his political chief
no affection or understanding and little credit for his many admirable
reforms. A less formal CIGS, capable of overlooking or even laughing
at the War Minister's irritating mannerisms and methods, might have
gained the latter's confidence and achieved a working relationship. 'Gort
stood firmly by his principles and it cannot be denied that he sometimes
8
confused principle and prejudice.'
Clearly the Army's deficiencies on the outbreak of war resulted from
years of inadequate funding and political neglect, and Gort as CIGS
could only to a very small extent be held responsible for them. Neverthe-

37
GORT

less he had failed to press the cause of mechanization and the formation
of armoured divisions; the handful of tank experts had been dispersed
and not given the key appointments either at the War Office or in com-
mands. Perhaps even more deplorable Gort, though a keen supporter
of inter-service co-operation, had failed to win any substantial increase
of air co-operation squadrons, much less to gain direct authority for
the future Commander of the Field Force over the bombers of the
Advanced Air Striking Force.
The Government's omission to appoint a Commander-in-Chief of
the Field Force before the declaration of war on 3 September 1939,
and the resultant confusion among the three possible choices (Dill,
Ironside and - least likely - Gort) have already been outlined in the
chapter on Ironside and need not be repeated here. Whether or not
Gort pressed for the appointment of Commander-in-Chief is uncertain,
but he was evidently delighted to escape from Hore-Belisha and the
War Office. Gort, like Alexander, made no secret of the fact that he
enjoyed the excitement of war. 'Here we go again, marching to war'
was his first remark on reaching the Staff College to form his head-
k
quarters, and he added I can't expect everybody to be as thrilled as
I am'. Middle-aged and with daunting responsibilities, his demeanour

struck observers as schoolboyish. Gort took Pownall as his chief of


general staff, thus, as in 1914, depriving the War Office of the experience
of the two officers most fully acquainted with the war plans and arrange-
9
ments for co-operation with allies.
Gort revered the memory of Marshal Foch for his offensive spirit
and his skill in leading the Anglo-French armies in the victorious
advance in 1918; he also respected General Georges, commander of
the French forces on the Franco-German frontier in 1939. But Gort's
command of the French language was poor, and in his determination
to be a loyal ally, conscious as he was of Britain's belated and meagre
contribution of troops, he tended to be too deferential towards the pro-
fessorial General Gamelin, Commander-in-Chief of the French Forces.
Indeed Gort was so eager to please and do as he was told that the
French tended to regard him as 'a sort of friendly and jovial battalion
commander'. Spears felt that the British Government should have
10
insisted that Gort be given a place on the Supreme War Council.
As it was, his position in the Allied command structure was a curious
one. Gort's headquarters had liaison with Gamelin's, but he was not
under Gamelin's orders. The British Field Force was included in the
First Army Group under General Billotte but - initially at any rate

38
GORT

- Gort was to receive his orders from Georges. Like his predecessor
Sir John French in 1914, Gort was granted the right to appeal to his
own Government should he consider that French orders (or, as it turned
out, lack of them) might endanger his troops. To make matters even
more confused, Gamelin and Georges were on very bad terms through-
out the months of the Phoney War and there were frequent rumours
11
that Gamelin would bypass Georges and issue orders direct to Gort.
Gort established his headquarters at the Chateau of Habarcq, west
of Arras. As he wrote to his daughter Jacqueline: 'I am off to a chateau
with no water, no light and no loo.' His staff appeared grossly inflated
because Gort had allowed for an eventual expansion to twenty divisions.
It was also dispersed over some fifty square miles as a precaution against
air attack. As
consequence communications within the Field Force
a
were extremely cumbersome: Montgomery described it as 'an amazing
12
layout'.
The two original Corps commanders, Dill and Brooke, expressed
criticisms of the Field Force's equipment, tactics and training, feeling
that Gort was too complacent and too obsessed with detail. In their
turn Gort and Pownall suspected the Corps commanders of 'bellyaching'
and defeatism. Too much of Gort's time was taken up with ceremonial
the French and in entertaining a stream of distinguished visitors
visits to

at GHQ, but in any case he believed in delegating a large measure


of responsibility for training to his subordinates. Montgomery made
some sharp criticisms of Gort's leadership in his Memoirs, but allowed
that he had an impossible task in running a great headquarters as well
as exercising direct command over the fighting and administrative forces.
The plan was for Gort to appoint two Army commanders under him
when four corps were assembled, but only three were in place by May
1940.
Montgomery was justly critical of the deplorable signal communica-
tions which rendered the complicated command structure even less
effective. As a result of the French obsession with security, wireless
communications within the Field Force were never efficient; and outside
it they scarcely existed. During the battle, harassed commanders were

heavily dependent on the civil telephone service which was frequendy


out of order and always insecure. Montgomery also believed that Gort's
failure to hold field exercises or even indoor war games on the sand
13
table resulted in a total lack of any common policy or tactical doctrine.
Numerous sources show that one of Gort's lifelong traits was an
obsession with detail which often struck observers as comical. Thus

39
GORT

Sir John Kennedy was taken aback when, at a senior officers' conference
with Hore-Belisha present, the first Gort raised was whether a
issue
tin hat, when it was not on a man's head, should be worn on the left

shoulder or the right. Brooke found him tirelessly occupied with tactical
questions such as the proper use of hand-grenades and the number
a patrol should cam. After a visit to the Maginot Line Brooke tried
to discuss the flaws in the French outpost system of defence, but Gort
replied, 'Oh, I have not had time to think of it but, look, what we must
go into is the proper distribution of sandbags.' Colville noted the officers'
puzzlement that a Commander-in-Chief should concern himself with
such details as the tear-off igniting paper on rockets, anti-freeze mixture
14
and night-flying pigeons.
On a much more substantial operational issue, Gort was unhappy
about Gamclin's proposal to abandon the frontier defences and advance
into Belgium to the line of the river Dyle ('Plan D') in event of a
German attack. Gort, Pownall and Ironside were all present at \ incennes
on 9 November when Gamelin explained his plans and the safeguards
against being surprised in the open. None of them objected. Gort sup-
pressed his reservations in the interests of Allied unity: he was under

French orders and would advance when told to without reference to


his Government. In retrospect this acquiescence in an extremely risky
plan was to be widely criticized as a dereliction of duty.
The final rift with Hore-Belisha resulted directly from the minister's
visit to the Field Force in mid-November. Sir John Kennedy has left

a hilarious but also slightly distasteful account of Gort's schoolboy-like


ragging of the fastidious Hore-Belisha who was trying out a pair of
fur-lined but, alas, not waterproof boots with a zip fastener up the back.
In foul weather Gort insisted that Hore-Belisha climb a very muddy
bank and stand shivering in a howling gale while the former explained
a First World War battle, and Pownall did the same a little later. When
they at last reached shelter in a chateau Gort opened a window letting
in a piercing draught and shouted jovially, 'Isn't it a grand day!' On
the way back Hore-Belisha was given bully beef sandwiches and when
the minister was eventually offered a decent meal Gort hung around
outside making jocular remarks. Even Pownall felt the joke had gone
on long enough and was embarrassed. Hore-Belisha endured this ordeal
remarkably well and as he was leaving said to Kennedy, 'I think Gort
16
realized that I am out to help him.'
Alas, Gort did nothing of the kind. On his visit Hore-Belisha had
asked to see the troops rather than the defences and so did not gather

40
GORT

a true picture of the work completed and in progress. He made no


criticisms to Gort, but on his return to London complained both in
the War Cabinet and the Army Council at the slow rate of construction
of pill-boxes. Gort was displeased to hear of this but what infuriated
him, a stickler for correct procedure, was that Hore-Belisha conveyed
verbal criticisms to Gort via the latter 's Chief Engineer at GHQ, General
Pakenham-Walsh. By the end of November GHQ was buzzing with
Hore-Belisha's 'crimes' against Gort; Pownall listed these 'crimes' in
his diary and determined that the War Minister must be removed. On
29 November Pownall confided to his diary:

It's all a disgusting business. A knife in the back of the man who should
be free, above all others, to think of beating Germans. We are now here all
facing West, to meet the more dangerous enemy there. I have written in full
to Grigg, who know what to do with my letter. We must now await CIGS's
will

visit and the result. Then, assuming a favourable outcome, we must counter-

attack on Hore-Belisha. The thing has come to a head and war cannot be
17
carried out thus.

Since our focus on Gort rather than Hore-Belisha, there is no need


is

to describe in detail the very effective campaign which speedily convinced


the CIGS, the King and the Prime Minister that the War Minister
was a liability and resulted in his resignation early in January 1940.
It seems unlikely that Gort himself intrigued against the War Minister,

but he had a trusted 'hatchet' man in Pownall and must have been
broadly aware of his clandestine efforts. Hore-Belisha wrote Gort a
conciliatory letter on 4 December, and after a visit from the Prime Minis-
ter in which he praised the construction of defences, the storm seemed
to be abating. On 27 December Gort wrote to reassure Chamberlain
that resentment of Hore-Belisha's misplaced criticisms was now over,
though he did hint that confidence and trust in the minister might
fail at a critical moment if criticism of armies in the field was not couched

in sympathetic language. But, in contrast to Pownall who rejoiced, Gort


was surprised at Hore-Belisha's resignation and seemed upset that he
18
might be suspected of causing it.
Major- General A. J. Trythall concludes an extremely interesting
article on Hore-Belisha with the speculation that Gort and Pownall

pushed what should have been a soluble misunderstanding over the


pill-box construction to a showdown because they feared that the War
Minister intended to dismiss them. Both generals certainly conveyed
this impression at the time but it is not certain that this is what chiefly

4i
GORT

motivated them. Ifit did, then they were surely mistaken. Hore-Belisha

had been monumentally tactless but repeatedly protested that he was


really trying to help Gort and the Field Force. Moreover, when
Chamberlain gave him an opportunity to remove Gort in mid-December,
Hore-Belisha assured the Prime Minister that he had complete confi-
dence in him. The final irony of the pill-box affair is that the frontier
1 ''

defences were irrelevant, since Gamelin's 'Plan D' for an advance into
Belgium had been approved by the Supreme War Council three days
before Hore-Belisha's visit.

months of 1940 Gort and Pownall were angry and alarmed


In the early
at the Government's apparent determination to become involved in

operations in Scandinavia and its corresponding neglect of the Western


Front. Senior officers from the War Office and even the Prime Minister
left the impression that the\ regarded the \\ estern front as secure and
thought no action was likely there in the foreseeable future. A brigade
was withdrawn from 5th Division for operations in Norway; the despatch
of III Corps to Prance was delayed and the supply of ammunition virtually
ceased. Ironside failed lamentabh to keep Gort informed of government
decisions, and the Chiefs of Staff even interfered with the Field Force's
leave arrangements without consulting Gort.""
However, critics such as Dill and Brooke felt that Gort accepted
these intolerable slights too equably and did not sufficiently stress the
likelihood of a German attack. His outlook was essentially that of a
k

regimental officer and a Guardsman at that. He found it repugnant


to question an order, express disagreement or complain.' The problem
which most urgently affected Gort in April and early May, however,
was his precise place in the Allied chain of command. Would Gamelin
allow Georges to exercise untrammelled command and would the latter
delegate responsibility for the co-ordination of the British and Belgian
armies to Billotte? Uncertainties remained until the Germans invaded
Belgium in the early hours of 10 May and the allies responded to the
21
plea for assistance by implementing 'Plan D'.
Given Gort's temperament and thirst for action his choice between
the roles of a commander-in-chief at headquarters and a field com-
mander actually fighting the battle from forward positions was a fore-
gone conclusion. Taking Pownall and other senior staff officers with
him, Gort immediately left GHQfor a Command Post at Wahagnies
near Lille. The separation of the Commander-in-Chief from his GHQ
for the critical phase of the campaign proved to be an administrative
disaster because communications between the shifting Command Post

42
GORT

and GHQ broke down almost completely. All reports of German move-
ments, for example, were sent to the Operations section remaining at
GHQbut it was often impossible to pass the information to the Command
Post. Even Gort's faithful lieutenant Pownall complained in his diary
on 14 May that his Commander had been away for eight hours that
day - 'too long at difficult times' - but he accepted that the Command
Post had to be as close to the fighting as possible. On 16 May Gort
added to thecommunications problems by taking the head of his Intelli-
gence Staff, Major-General Mason-MacFarlane, and his senior staff
officer (Gerald Templer) and putting the former in command of 'Mac-
force' to protect the right rear of the Field Force. Montgomery later
reflected that the distribution of staff duties between GHQ and the
Command Post was 'amateur and lacked the professional touch'. The
22
was equally severe.
verdict of the Official Historian
On 12 May General Billotte was appointed to co-ordinate the move-
ments of the First Group of Armies (including the British and Belgian
forces), but in the succeeding critical days he conspicuously failed to
do so as the allies first advanced to the Dyle line and then retreated
Franco-Belgian frontier while the Panzer columns drove westward
to the
behind them to the Channel coast. By 17 May Billotte could not commu-
nicate directly with Georges, and Gort had no land telephone lines
to either the Belgian or French First Army headquarters on either side
of him. Gort was obliged to send senior officers to Billotte to discover
his plans for the Allied retreat. On 17 May the British liaison officer
with French First Army accidentally overheard that, due to indiscipline
in the withdrawal, a serious gap had occurred in the French line and
there were no reserves to Gort and Pownall were reluctant to
fill it.

believe reports that the French senior commanders' morale was cracking,
but by 18 May the evidence was overwhelming. Gort visited Billotte
that day in a vain effort to cheer him up only to discover that his nominal
commander had no plan, no reserves and little hope. He could only
point to the map, count up to 'huit panzers' and say pathetically, 'Et
23
contre ces panzers je ne peux rien faire'. It was thus not surprising

that Gort and Pownall began to lose faith in the French high command
and to think about the necessity of saving the Field Force from the
impending debacle.
Such anxieties were strengthened on 19 May when the Panzer advance
severed the Field Force's line of communications with its bases in the
Biscay ports. Pownall twice telephoned an uncomprehending War Office
to warn that a retreat to the Channel ports might be unavoidable. Unfor-

43
GORT

tunately for Gort, Churchill and the War Cabinet were seriously out
of touch with fast-moving events and the following day (20 May) Ironside
arrived at GHQ
bringing orders that Gort was to march south-west
towards Amiens to re-establish contact with the main French armies
south of the narrow Panzer corridor. The CIGS was quickly persuaded
that such a move was impossible. Indeed by now Gort was having to
detach further improvised groups (Petreforce, Polforce and others) to
try to hold his southern perimeter from Arras along the canal line west-
24
ward to the coast.
On 21 May Gort ordered a small-scale counter-attack south of Arras
to hold up the German advance.""' French participation in this operation
was minimal but for a few hours it made encouraging progress even
against SS units and Rommel's 7th Panzer Division. Here was a tantaliz-
ing glimpse of what might have been had Gamelin retained a central
reserve. Two days later Gort was obliged to withdraw the Arras garrison
to prevent it from being cut off, but the French generals, notably Blan-
chard, interpreted this as an attempt to sabotage the counter-offensive
which Gamelin - and now his successor Weygand - were planning
to cut the Panzer corridor by a combined drive from north and south.
Despite his waning faith in the French high command, Gort was still
prepared to make two British divisions (5th and 50th) available for the
northern counter-attack, but in view of the increasing pressure on his
1

(and even more the Belgians ) eastward-facing front, he felt more and
more convinced that the main effort must come from south of the corri-
dor. In view of contemporary and subsequent French criticisms that
Gort never seriously contemplated joining in a counter-attack, it is worth
noting that Brooke was dismayed at Gort's slowness to recognize the
26
threat to his eastern flank where a Belgian collapse was imminent.
On the evening of 25 May Gort did heed Brooke's warning, moved
the two available divisions to the threatened sector and, without consult-
ing the French and in defiance of a War Cabinet order, unilaterally
cancelled his part in the projected counter-offensive. This was Gort's
most critical decision during the campaign - perhaps in his whole career
- and it was desperately uncongenial to him, the loyal ally and combative
general par excellence. Pownall has sympathetically recorded Gort's grow-
ing sense of anxiety, exasperation and impotence during the retreat,
and his biographer justly notes that, though his physical stamina was
unimpaired, 'his ability to exercise cool judgement in large matters was
27
not matched by a capacity to rise above the smaller worries'.
Nevertheless Gort had made the right decision. Blanchard, Billotte's

44
GORT

successor as co-ordinator of the First Group of Armies, accepted it

the following day, while the War Office gave him permission to withdraw
towards the Channel ports. Had the French forces from south of the
corridor been advancing, as was repeatedly claimed, Gort would have
been charged with ruining the only hope of thwarting a German victory.
I see no reason to alter the judgement I made in 1975, namely that:

The Weygand Plan had in fact already been dead for several days before
- inFrench eyes - Gort 'killed' it by his independent decision. Perhaps if
any criticism can be levelled at Gort on this score it is that he was doggedly
loyal to the ineffectual Blanchard and the French High Command for too
long. He might have decided even earlier to make for the Channel ports as
Weygand and Reynaud alleged that he had. By delaying this unpleasant decision
to the last possible moment he risked the encirclement of the BEF. Thanks
to Allied valour in defence - but also to the wrangles and contradictory orders
of the German High Command - the great majority of British troops were
28
successfully evacuated.

To end of the campaign Gort retained his capacity to inject new


the
zest into despairing French generals. One of his liaison officers describes
a remarkable interview in which Blanchard talked at length about French
plans, after which Gort responded by tapping Cambrai on the map with
a pencil and saying slowly and emphatically, 'Oui mon General, il faut
tuer les Boches et il faut les tuer ici.' Later Blanchard was heard to
remark to his chief of staff, 'Tiens, il a bien raison, Lord Gort' Pownall
admirably summed up Gort's performance in the campaign on 28 May:

With all his faults and fussinesses, he is a great gentleman and first-class

soldier. . . . The most trivial things have always preyed on his mind and
now he has a load that he can never shake off all the days of his life. The
Commander of the BEF that was driven into the sea in three weeks! So unde-
29
served a fate.

Gort had made up his mind to stay with his troops to face death or
capture but Churchill, after consulting Pownall, ordered him to return
to England and he did so on 1 June. He never entirely forgave this
order, believing that he was being widely criticized for deserting his
post for which the Prime Minister was to blame. This suspicion that
he was being made a scapegoat was accentuated by an enforced delay
in publishing his Despatches. He probably was justified in feeling that
Dill and Brooke were cool, if not actually hostile, towards him since
they left him to fret on the sidelines with the largely honorary appoint-
30
ment of Inspector General of Training.

45
GORT

In April 1941 Gort was made Governor of Gibraltar, usually a terminal


appointment for senior officers and one that irked him. Here, at least,
be legitimately indulged, for example in
his passion for detail could
getting the Rock's cavernous defences deepened and the air strip
extended. In fact Churchill had not forgotten him or written him off.

In November 1941 the Prime Minister toyed with the amazing idea of
re-installing him as CIGS in place of the exhausted Dill who was being
posted to Washington; and in March 1942 he flirted with the notion
- until dissuaded by Brooke - of appointing Gort to succeed Auchinleck
Middle East Command/
1

in the
The change when it came (in May 1942, after exacdy one year) was
less exalted but still important, namely Governor of beleaguered Malta.
The island was under relentless air attacks which had pounded the
docks to rubble and blocked the harbour with sunken ships. An amphi-
bious attack from nearby Sicily seemed imminent. Yet, with Rommel's
final offensive about to begin, it was vital that Malta hold out as the

base for attacks on Axis convoys. Shortly after his arrival Gort helped
to secure the safe arrival of a consignment of sixty Spitfires; then, by
concentrating all available firepower, Gort saved the supply ship Welsh-
man by bring down all the Stukas which attacked it. Not least impressive,
Gort supervised the distribution of scarce food and water supplies so
successfully that at the height of the crisis two hundred thousand people
were receiving rations each day. But Gort's outstanding achievement
was to impress on the islanders his own indomitable fortitude and cheer-
fulness in adversity. He became immensely popular. Indeed his entry
ofNational Biography rates the defence of Malta as his
in the Dictionary
outstanding achievement. His reward was a belated promotion to Field-
32
Marshal.
In 1944-45 Gort was High Commissioner and Commander-in-
briefly
Chief in Palestine. When his predecessor had been fired
informed that
upon he characteristically remarked that it looked like being fun; but
in reality he was terminally ill and had only just begun to gain the
respect of both Arabs and Jews, and to reduce terrorist activities, when
he was forced to come home. Apart from his daughter's happy marriage
to a fellow Grenadier and winner of the VC, William Sidney (later
Lord De L'isle and Dudley), Gort's private life had been rather unhappy;
his only son had committed suicide in 1941 and at the end of his life
he had no home of his own. Just before his death in March 1946 he
was awarded an English viscountcy, but this was a doubtful asset since
33
he had no heir and was too ill to take his seat in the House of Lords.

46
,

GORT

This essay has attempted to bring out Gort's qualities and limitations
as a general, but as a portrait of the man it is necessarily incomplete.
Several witnesses, for example, attest to his charm and magnetism but
these traits are not evident in his photographs and, as little survives
in theway of personal papers, have to be taken on trust by those who
did not know him. Though he has his supporters, who have praised
his performance both as CIGS and C-in-C, this essay inclines to agree
with his critics, such as Montgomery and Brooke, that he was promoted

above his mental ceiling. Nevertheless he strove to do his best and it

is not self-evident that alternative candidates in either post would have


done much better. The fairestconclusion may be that had he commanded
a division or corps in 1940, he would have done well in command of
an Army later in the war. This was the view of a soldier who did enjoy
this delayed ascent to the highest military command, Field -Marshal
34
Earl Alexander.
Gort's early death and the absence of substantial private papers meant
that his reputation - like Dill's - suffered an eclipse during the post-war
'battle of the memoirs' in which his severe critic, Montgomery, was
so prominent. But Gort's positive qualities emerged strongly with the
publication of the diaries of his staunch admirer, Pownall (Chief of Staff
vol. 1, 1972), and in the same year he was the subject of Colville's admir-
able - and on the whole admiring - biography (Man of Valour). This
essay opened with Spears' rebuke of a French Prime Minister for pre-
suming to query Gort's outstanding virtues of courage and loyalty, so

it may fittingly conclude with his acceptance of Weygand's apology on


the same score. 'We have a saying in England,' Spears told the General,
4
"a good man to go tiger shooting with" and Lord Gort is par excellence
35
such a one.'

NOTES
1 Sir Edward Spears, Assignment to Catastrophe (one-volume edition 1956),
pp. 168, 322. (Henceforth referred to as 'Spears'.)
2 Cyril Falls' entry in D.N.B. Supplement 1941-1950.

3 J. R. Colville, Man of Valour: Field-Marshal Lord Gort VC (1972), pp. 45-69


(henceforth referred to as 'Gort').
4 Gort, p. 77. C. N. Barclay, On Their Shoulders: British Generalship in the
Lean Years 19J9-1942 (1964), p. 36 (henceforth referred to as 'Barclay').
5 Sir John Kennedy, The Business of War (1957), p. 5.
6 See R. J. Minney, The Private Papers of Hore-Belisha (i960) and Brian

47
GORT

Bond, 'Leslie Hore-Belisha at the War Office, 1937-1940', in J. Gooch


and I. F. W. Beckett (eds), Politicians and Defence (1981).
7 Gort, pp. 88-92, 120-1.
8 Brian Bond (ed.), Chief of Staff: The Diaries of Lieutenant-General Sir Henry
Pownall, vol. I (1972), pp. 203, 210-11 (henceforth referred to as 'Pownall').
Gort, pp. 136-8. Kennedy, pp. 13-14.
9 Spears, pp. 43-4, 56. Barclay, p. 37. Brian Bond, France and Belgium igjg-ig^o
(i975)>PP- 38-40.
10 Spears, pp. 43-4,56.
11 John C. Cairns, 'Great Britain and the Fall of France', 'Journal of Modern
History, 1955, pp. 365-409.
12 Gort, p. 149. Viscount Montgomery, Memoirs (1958), p. 52.
13 Montgomery, pp. 52-6. Gort, p. 156.
14 Kennedy, p. 36. Gort, p. 156. Sir A. Bryant, The Turn of the Tide (1957),

pp. 75-80 (henceforth referred to as 'Brooke').


15 Bond, France and Belgium, pp. 53-5. Spears, p. 60. Gort, pp. 153-4.
16 Kennedy, pp. 36-7.
17 Pownall, pp. 259 ff and especially pp. 262-5.
18 Gort, p. 166. Pownall, p. 279. A.J. Trythall, 'The Downfall of Leslie Hore-
Belisha', Journal ofContemporary History, 1981, pp. 391-411.

19 Trythall, pp. 405-8. Kennedy, p. 43.

20 Brooke, pp. 75-80. Gort, pp. 172-3.


21 Bond, France and Belgium, pp. 103-4. Barclay, pp. 41-2. Montgomery, pp.
52-4-
22 Gort, pp. 190-1. Pownall, pp. 315-16. Montgomery, pp. 57-8. Brooke, p.
94m
23 Miles Reid, Last on the List (1974), pp. 31-2. Bond, France and Belgium,
pp. iio-ii.
24 Gort, pp. 199, 206-7. Barclay, p. 46. Pownall, pp. 323-4.
25 Brian Bond, 'Arras, 21st May 1940' in C. Barnett and others, Old Battles
and Xew Defences (1986).
26 Brooke, pp. 122-3.
27 Gort, pp. 214-15.
28 Bond, France and Belgium, pp. 136-7.
29 Reid, pp. 43-4. Pownall, p. 352.
30 Reid, p. 58. Pownall, pp. 357-8. Gort, pp. 224, 233, 235-7. Kennedy, pp.
04-5-
31 Brooke, p. 339. Martin Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill: Finest Hour (1983),

P- 1234.
32 Gort, pp. 247-54.

33 Gort, pp. 261, 267.


34 Gort, pp. 244-5.
35 Spears, p. 188.

48
GORT

CHRONOLOGY: JOHN GORT


1886, July 10 John Standish Surtees Prendergast Vereker born in
London
1899-1904 Harrow School (succeeds as 6th Viscount Gort in
Peerage of Ireland, 1902)
1904-5 Royal Military College, Sandhurst; commissioned
Grenadier Guards
1911 Marries his second cousin, Corinna Vereker (divorced
1925; two s, one d)

1914, August 5 Promoted Captain; to France as ADC to C-in-C


I Corps, Douglas Haig

1914-18 Serves continuously in France and Belgium


(despatches eight times, MC, DSO and two bars, VC)
1915 GSO3, 1 Corps
1916 Promoted brevet Major
1917, April To command, 4th Battalion Grenadier Guards
1918, March Commands 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards
1918, September 27 Wins Victoria Cross while in temporary command of
3Guards Brigade at storming of Hindenburg Line
1919-20 Staff College, Camberley
1921 Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel
1921-3 Directing Staff, Staff College
1925 Colonel
1926 Chief Instructor, Senior Officers' School, Sheerness
1927, January- August GSOi, Shanghai Defence Force
1927-30 GSOi, 4th Division
1930—32 Commands 4 Guards Brigade
1932-6 Director of Military Training, India; Major- General,
1935
1936-7 Commandant, Staff College, Camberley

1937, September- Military Secretary


December
1937,December 3- Chief of the Imperial General Staff; General;
1939, September 3 KCB, 1938
1939, September 3- Commander-in-Chief, BEF
1940, May 31
1940-1 Inspector-General of the Forces; GCB, 1940
1941, May 7- Governor of Gibraltar
1942, May 7

1942, xMay- Governor of Malta; Field-Marshal, 1 January 1943


1944, July

49
GORT

1944, October- High Commissioner and Commander-in-Chief,


1945, November Palestine; 1945, Viscount Gort in peerage of the United
Kingdom
1946, March 31 Dies in London

50
3
DILL
Field-Marshal SirJohn Dill

ALEX DANCHEV

Field -Marshal Sir John Dill enjoys an unusual distinction. He had


a longer, closer and more influential association with Churchill in the
central direction of the Second World War than any other general save
Brooke (and perhaps, in a different capacity, Ismay). It was throughout,
however, an association strikingly lacking in empathy or understanding,
etched in fundamental disagreement, and scarred by a mutual disaffec-
tion welling up at times into personal distaste.
Dill was appointed Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS) by
Churchill himself in the calamitous days of May 1940, on the very eve
of the evacuations from Dunkirk, when Churchill had been Prime
Minister for barely a fortnight and was by no means politically secure.
He needed, and fleetingly esteemed, Dill's 'abilities and strategic knowl-
edge'. This first, critical, period of their association coincided exactly
with Britain's darkest and loneliest hour, when Hitler's armies romped
through Europe with impunity, excising allies actual and potential, fatally
rupturing the Anglo-French alliance, threatening cross-Channel
invasion, slicing deep into the Soviet Union - and all before the Ameri-
cans had declared their hand.
Catapulted into the daily circus surrounding the Prime Minister,
Dill's relationship with Churchill, intimate yet uncomprehending, inter-
DILL

dependent yet adversarial, necessary yet unsatisfactory, was both rich


in paradox and deeply flawed. These proved to be enduring themes.
The tone of the relationship and the terms in which it has been remem-
bered were set by Churchill after only a few weeks. As early as July
1940 he sent to Anthony Eden, then Secretary of State for War, an
astonishing personal and professional indictment of his chosen CIGS.
'I do not think that we are having the help from General Dill which

we hoped for at the time of his appointment ... he strikes me as being


very tired, disheartened and over-impressed with the might of Germany.'
This already incorporated one of Churchill's most characteristic and
frequently repeated criticisms: of a caution, a pessimism, amounting
almost to defeatism. He once stigmatized Dill, to his face in Cabinet,
as 'the dead hand of inanition'. His memoirs abound with oblique but
insistent denigration of Dill's 'pessimism'. There is none of the personal
warmth of the references to one of Dill's colleagues on the Chiefs of
Staff (COS) Committee, his 'true comrade' Admiral Sir Dudley Pound.
Unlike another of the COS, Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Portal,
Dill would never have been a candidate for the Other Club, that tell-tale
mark of Churchillian favour. Like Clement Attlee, Dill may have been
'an admirable character', though even that appears to have been called
into question, but he was not 'a man with whom it is agreeable to dine'
- the exclusive criterion for Other Club membership.
At bottom, Dill was uncongenial to Churchill, who nicknamed him
'Dilly-Dally'. This may have chimed with the Prime Minister's scathing
opinion of the War Office as 'hidebound, devoid of imagination, extrava-
gant of manpower and slow', but it also encapsulated a personal judge-
ment about Dill himself.For Churchill the personal and the professional
were inextricably linked. Dill's eventual expulsion from the troglodytic
inner sanctum of the Cabinet War Rooms was therefore inevitable. With
good reason Churchill took some time to act, but by September 1941
one of his private secretaries noted: 'He has now got his knife right
into Dill and frequently disparages him.' In November Dill's 'retirement'
as CIGS was announced for 25 December 1941, his sixtieth birthday.
Churchill intended for him to become Governor of Bombay, 'a position
of great honour', luxurious, remote and inconsequential.
Excommunication in Bombay, 'followed by a bodyguard with lances'
(Churchill's bizarre promise), was not to be Dill's fate. No sooner had
he in practice ceased to be CIGS (1 December) than the Americans
entered the war after Pearl Harbor (7 December) and Churchill felt
compelled to take Dill with him on his post-haste embarkation to confer

52
DILL

with President Roosevelt in Washington (12 December). Dill's much

trumpeted sixtieth birthday was celebrated not in retirement in England,


nor in Bombay, but at a party given in his honour by the US Army
Chief of Staff in Washington. When the British contingent returned
home January Dill remained, in an unprecedented if indeterminate
in
position of enormous potential influence. Churchill's transparent pur-
pose had been frustrated. Dill was indeed removed from London, only
to be ensconced in the emerging centre of Allied decision-making. He
became Head of the British Joint Staff Mission in Washington and
senior British member of the Combined Chiefs of Staff committee, the
Anglo-American military body which directed the grand strategy of the
war. But the finest irony was also common knowledge in the US capital.
Dill's 'secret' role in Washington was as personal representative of the
Minister of Defence, and that office was filled by none other than
Winston Churchill.

John Greer Dill, for so many the epitome of the perfect English gentle-
man, was born in 1881 in Lurgan, County Armagh, Ulster, 'where in
those days the Pope was not very well spoken of, as he recalled much
later for the Pennsylvania Scotch-Irish Society. 'In my youth I have
seen Orangemen on side-cars driving down what they called Papish
and getting it
streets spoiling for a fight, Dill's was a lonely youth,
'

uncomfortably foreshadowing later developments. His father, manager


of the local branch of the Ulster Bank and descendant of a long and
worthy line of scholars and ministers, died early in 1894, when Dill
was just twelve; his mother, the daughter of a prominent Lurgan JP,
followed him a few months later. Dill and his elder sister Nina (who
was also to die prematurely, in 1921) were taken on by an aunt and
uncle, the Reverend Dr Joseph Grundy Burton, an energetic campaigner
against Home Rule, something of a raconteur, and a diligent parish
clergyman. Dill was swiftly despatched to Cheltenham College
(1895-1900), where again he made few friends and rose laboriously from
the bottom form to Upper V by the effluxion of time
Military, 'more
in each form than by reaching the top of it', according to a contemporary.
He passed into Sandhurst 154th out of 210, greatly relieved that he had
so much to
spare. At the Royal Military College his conduct was 'exemp-
marks uniformly mediocre.
lary', his

On leaving Sandhurst, Dill was commissioned into the 1st Battalion


(100th of Foot), The Prince of Wales's Leinster Regiment (1901) - a

53
DILL

southern Irish regiment, there being no other vacancies at the time


of the Boer War. 'It was a serious thing for a Black Northerner like
me to be thrown among a lot of gossoons [boys] from Kings County,
but we mixed, we got to love each other.' He soon sailed for South
where he appears
Africa, to have enjoyed himself. He read Dickens
and Thackeray and was periodically concerned to acquire
what he
euphemistically called 'curios', or more but was
straightforwardly 'loot',

disappointed to find nothing better than a bed, a jug, a basin and similar
items of furniture - 'hardly worth bringing home though it makes one
very comfortable out here'.
Boer War service was followed by his only period of regimental duty,
as Assistant Adjutant and then Adjutant of the ist Leinsters (1902-9).
It was during this period that he married Ada Maud, daughter of Colonel

William Albert le Mottee (late 18th of Foot), in Fermoy, County Cork,


the bride's home town. The marriage was precipitate and unsuitable.
Maud was a woman of nervous disposition, painfully shy, given to head-
aches, depression and excessive self-medication. She died, after a long
series of paralytic strokes, on 23 December 1940, two days before Dill's
fifty-ninth birthday, when he was CIGS. As to how deeply he was affec-
ted, testimony is conflicting. Brooke, his protege, friend and successor,
has left a harrowing vignette of Maud's paralysis in 1940: 'Every visit
home to his wife in Windsor was a desperate ordeal; she could not
make herself understood, he kept guessing at what she could mean,
usually unsuccessfully, and finally with a disappointed look in her eyes
she used to throw her head back on the pillow.' Yet Dill's immediate
reaction to Maud's death betrays a certain stoicism, even relief, and
he quickly recovered his equilibrium. As a widower, there was none
of Brooke's own unspeakable anguish, nor the driven quality of Mont-
gomery's subsequent regimen.
Then, in spite of the prurient interest, there was a second marriage
in October 1941 to a much younger woman: Nancy Furlong (nee Charr-
ington), widow of a member of Dill's staff at Aldershot in the late thirties

and daughter of a brewery magnate. Even the wedding provoked an


argument with Churchill. Dill asked for a week's leave; the Prime Minis-
ter preferred one day; they compromised on three. This time Dill made
a very happy marriage, in more than one sense. 'I don't think that Nancy
dislikes Washington and Washington certainly likes her', he wrote with
feeling in September 1942. 'She makes a great difference to my life
and keeps me young.'
Meanwhile, a sea-change had taken place in Dill's professional and

54
.

DILL

development. In 1913 he became a student at the Staff College,


intellectual
Camberley, under Sir William Robertson. This was perhaps the deter-
mining experience of his life. It was the impress and ambience of the
Staff College, coupled with the immediate praxis of the First World
War, which really launched Dill's career. A captain in 1914, he ended
the war a temporary brigadier, and on the evidence of the official his-
torian 'the real Operations brain in [Haig's] GHQ' -
a time he relived
when a British Expeditionary Force once again found the need to estab-
lish a GHQon the Continent.
On the outbreak of war in 1939 Dill, then GOC-in-C Home Command
at Aldershot, was given I Corps of the BRF. This was something of
a disappointment, the second in two years. In late 1937 he had been
interviewed by the reforming Secretary of State for War, Hore-Belisha,
for the post of CIGS. There can be little disputing Basil Liddell Hart's
post-war assessment that 'on his record, and strategic grasp, he was
the outstanding candidate'. Hore-Belisha nevertheless appointed the
eminendy unsuitable Gort, with whom he was soon scarcely on speaking
terms. Dill went instead to Aldershot. For some time it was understood,
not least by Dill himself, that he would command any future BEF.
In the event Hore-Belisha again preferred Gort, and appointed the
equally unsuitable Ironside as CIGS.
was phlegmatic. 'I have no Dill
real complaint', he wrote. 'I have lived long enough to know that these
things have a way of righting themselves if one leaves them alone.'
His exposure to Hore-Belisha, however, may well have coloured his
first reactions to Churchill. The politician's propensity to meddle, seen

by Dill as the fount of the Army's difficulties with Hore-Belisha, took


on an altogether new significance with the renaissance of the arch
meddler of the Dardanelles.
In a matter ofmonths things did right themselves. In April 1940 Dill
was summoned London. By common consent it was this belated recall
to
to the War Office, initially in the guise of Vice-CIGS, that infused
a disorientated department with purpose and authority. Dill wrote to
Gort of his first impressions:

The War Office is, as far as I can see, in complete chaos and the situation
inNorway as bad as I expected I'm not sure that Winston isn't the greatest
. . .

menace. No-one seems able to control him. He is full of ideas, many brilliant,
but most of them impracticable. He has such drive and personality that no-one
seems able to stand up to him Our Secretary of State [the short-lived
. . .

Oliver Stanley] is quite charming and has really good judgement but has never
been given a chance . .

55
DILL

He had immediately identified the salient issue. 'Standing up to Chur-


chill' would determine not only Dill's war-time effectiveness but also
to a considerable extent his post-war reputation.
Dill is held to have been an ineffective CIGS because he allowed
himself to be 'worn down' and possibly 'worn out' by Churchill; because
he failed to deliver what the faithful Ismay called 'the one thing that
was necessary, and indeed that Winston preferred - someone to stand
up to him'. These charges have taken deep root. The imputation of
congenital failure to stand up to Churchill has blighted Dill's career
and obscured his achievement. It is very largely the imputation of Chur-
chill's inner circle, perpetuated in a great outpouring of post-war remi-
niscence. But was the Prime Minister himself who framed its terms
it

and propagated the charge in his own war memoirs. To paraphrase


Balfour's celebrated remark about Churchill's earlier memoirs, Winston
wrote an enormous book about himself and called it The Second World
War. The seminal quality of this magnificently egocentric enterprise

is well established. Its distortions and suppressions are only now being
revealed. Not the least of these relate to 'Dilly-Dally'.
In reality Dill did stand up to Churchill, but not in the most effective
fashion. The most obvious problem was Churchill's peculiarly personal-
ized forensic approach to any operation which engaged his attention,
some generals.
together with the 'Parliamentary manners' so alienating to
As John Connell has explained, 'Churchill had matured in an atmos-
phere in which it is taken for granted that one Member may abuse . . .

another with unrelenting ferocity on the floor of the House and then
- his speech ended - walk out arm in arm with his opponent to a drink
in the smoking room or bar.' Dill experienced classic difficulties of
adaptation. One night in December 1940 he returned to the War Office
around midnight after a long meeting (a regular occurrence) and sought
out his sympathetic Director of Military Operations.

I saw that he was agitated. He said: 'I cannot tell you how angry the Prime
Minister has made me. What he said about the Army tonight I can never
forgive. He complained he could get nothing done ... he wished he had [the

Greek General] Papagos to run it. He asked me to wait and have a drink
with him after the meeting, but I refused and left Anthony [Eden] there by
himself.'

This characteristic episode also serves to highlight a less obvious but


no less intractable problem. It was Dill's misfortune to join the Chiefs
of Staff committee at a time when acquiescent colleagues, impossibly

56
. . .

DILL

scarce resources and an impetuous Prime Minister combined to make


the cautionary advice of the CIGS
once desperately necessary and
at

singularly unpalatable. Cautionary advice was anathema to Churchill.


Hence his public taunt of 'inanition' - an exquisite example of Parlia-
mentary manners.
Perhaps the most fundamental issue on which Dill stood up to Chur-
chill was that of strategic priorities. One damaging exchange was trig-

gered by Dill's 'grave pronouncement' on 'The Relation of the Middle


East to the Security of the United Kingdom' (6 May 1941). Dill's note,
which ran to some 1,000 words, was itself prompted by Churchill's
recent admonitions on the signal importance of Egypt to the British
war effort. Dill argued that 'the loss of Egypt would be a calamity which
I do not regard as likely and one which we should not accept without

a most desperate fight; but it would not end the war.'

A It is the United Kingdom


successful invasion alone spells our final defeat.
. and not Egypt that is vital, and the defence of the United Kingdom must
. .

take first place. Egypt is not even second in order of priority, for it has been
an accepted principle in our strategy that in the last resort the security of
Singapore comes before that of Egypt. . .

Ismay thought the Prime Minister 'shaken to the core'. On his own
testimony Churchill was 'astonished' to receive this note. He replied
a week later 'somewhat controversially', not to say contemptuously,

I gather you would be prepared to face the loss of Egypt and the Nile Valley,
together with the surrender or ruin of the Army of half a million we have
concentrated there, rather than lose Singapore. I do not take that view, nor
do I think the alternative is likely to present itself. . .

This was the nub of the between them. In early


strategic differences

1942, soon Washington, Dill wrote to Wavell: 'It is


after arriving in
odd that Winston should want me to represent him here when he clearly
was glad to get me out of the CIGS job. We disagreed too often . .

among other things, on what we should do for the Far East.' And again,
to Brooke: 'How I wish that I had had some support from our S of
S [Secretary of State: Margesson] during the last year of my time as
CIGS. It might have helped Britain too - Singapore would have been
reinforced and raids would have started months and months ago.'
In one of the many suppressions in his memoirs, Churchill's version
ran: 'Sir John Dill must have been himself conscious of the consensus

57
DILL

of opinion against him on this aspect, and having sounded his note
of warning he let the matter drop.' He was wrong on both counts, for
two days later, on 15 May, Dill dispatched a lengthy riposte in which
he attempted to elucidate his earlier arguments. With regard to strategic
priorities, Dill adduced one of Churchill's own memoranda, not a tech-

nique best calculated to please the Prime Minister. His immediate con-
cern, however, was that further reinforcement of the Middle East,
ardently sponsored by Churchill, would endanger the safety of the
United Kingdom. It was in this context that Dill responded to Churchill's
taunts: 'I am sure that you, better than anyone else, must realize how
difficult it is for a soldier to advise against a bold and offensive plan.
... It takes a lot of moral courage not to be afraid of being thought
afraid.' On this occasion Dill was prepared to resign if overruled; and

to appeal to the War Cabinet if that were refused. The Prime Minister
was induced to retract.
Disputation was Churchill's essential method of work. Dill recognized
this well enough and tried to protect commanders everywhere from
the consequences of a minatory summons to act or, often more disturb-
ing, to explain. Notoriously, the most unfathomable case was Wavell,
as C-in-C in the cauldron of the Middle East. 'Talk to him, Archie',
urged Dill, in vain. 'They are poles apart', he wrote. 'Wavell is very
reserved - "withdrawn" is perhaps a better word - whereas Winston
even thinks aloud.' One of Wavell's staff officers remembered the reac-
tion after his first, wounding, appearance before the Cabinet in August
1940. 'My Chief said that the PM had asked him down to Chequers
for the weekend but he would be damned if he would risk further
treatment of the kind to which he had just been subjected.' It was left
to Dill to mediate. 'Archie, no one would deny that you have had unbear-
able provocation. But he is our Prime Minister. He carries an almost
incredible burden. It is true you can be replaced. He cannot. You must
goto Chequers.'
At the same time Dill defended the Army as a whole and Wavell
in particular from 'unjust' and 'damaging' criticism. He and Eden even
threatened simultaneous resignation in support of Wavell. Churchill
remained unconvinced but was loath to make any change. Dill repeatedly
urged the Prime Minister to 'back him or sack him'. Eventually, finding
he had 'a tired fish on this rod and a lively one on the other', Churchill
exchanged the 'tired' Wavell for the 'lively' Auchinleck in June 1941.
Dill's advice to Auchinleck on taking over his command was embodied
in a letter of magisterial breadth and surprising candour:

58
DILL

From Whitehall, great pressure was applied to Wavell to induce him to act
rapidly. . . . The fact is that the Commander in the field will always
be subject
to great and often undue pressure from his Government. Wellington suffered
from Haig suffered from it: Wavell suffered from it. Nothing will stop
it:

it. In fact, pressure from those who alone see the picture as a whole and carry

the main responsibility may be necessary. It was, I think, right to press Wavell
against his will to send a force to Baghdad, but in other directions he was,
I feel, over-pressed.
You may be quite sure that I will back your military opinion in local problems,
but here the pressure often comes from very broad political considerations;
these are sometimes so powerful as to make it necessary to take risks which,
from the purely military point of view, may be seen as inadvisable. The main
point is that you should make it quite clear what risks are involved if a course
of action is forced upon you which, from the military point of view, is undesir-
able. You may even find it necessary, in the extreme case, to dissociate yourself
from the consequences.

Only in his own case did Dill deny to Churchill the disputation he
craved. He didmake unremitting efforts to convince by written exposi-
tion,addressing to the Prime Minister a stream of closely argued minutes
and explanatory notes. Too often, these efforts left Churchill unmoved.
They were poorly calculated to achieve their purpose, not only because
Churchill, 'averse to the exegeticaP, so rarely found a written case con-
vincing, but also because DilPs style entirely left out of account the
necessity to engage or enthrall. As Wavell put it, 'Winston is always
expecting rabbits to come out of empty hats.' It was not for want of
comprehension on Dill's part; he understood Churchill's requirements
as well as anyone. 'Finest hours' were beyond the Army's means in
1940-41. Nor was it sheer incapacity. Dill was by no means inarticulate,
as Wavell could be impenetrably inarticulate. Rather, it was a matter
of temperament. For Dill, disputing with Churchill would have been
an unwarrantable act of propitiation. He refused to pander to the Prime
Minister. He could contest Churchill and advise others, but in more
than one sense he could not help himself.
Dill's achievement as Churchill's CIGS from May 1940 to December

1941 was nevertheless considerable. It was above all Dill who responded
to the imperative of the moment and established the wearying but con-
structive adversarial relationship between Churchill and the Chiefs of
Staff on which Brooke, blessed with new allies and augmented resources,
so successfully built in 1942 for the duration of the war. In mid-1940
no one knew, and many doubted, whether such a relationship could

59
.

DILL

be made to work. The combination was unprecedented and unpropitious.


The need and pain of definition in 1940-41 are often forgotten. Dill's
tenure is elided with Brooke's. Churchillian history recognizes the prob-
lem, but credits Ismay alone with its solution. Yet the essential forerunner
of the matchless combination of Churchill and Brooke was the ill-

matched combination of Churchill and Dill. The prerequisite for


Brooke's acceptability and longevity as CIGS was Dill's purgatory. Dill
accustomed Churchill to the trammelling of professional advice. 'I live
k

a very hectic life', he wrote. Most of it is spent trying to prevent stupid


things being done rather than in doing clever things! However that
1
is rather the normal life of a Chief of Staff.

Dill's primary importance as CIGS therefore lay in the realm of con-


temporary attitudes and expectations. It was Dill who conditioned expec-
tations of the COS under Churchill. In 1942 these expectations crossed
the Atlantic to permeate another unprecedented combination, still less
propitious for being international: the Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS)
under both Churchill and Roosevelt. Here, too, Dill's very presence
was crucial to the establishment and successful operation of a genuine
Anglo-American alliance. Building on his experience of Churchill and
the COS, Dill found himself in a position to mediate between London
and Washington. His greatest sen ice to the alliance was to contain
its enormous fissile potential.

Dill's position in Washington was the subject of protracted Anglo-


American argument, resolved only in February 1942 with the President's
artful suggestion to the Prime Minister of a personal compact. The
crux of the matter was Dill's status. 'I have no objection to his represent-
ing the Joint Staffs [British COS] in London', wrote Roosevelt, 'but
I particularly hope that I can regard him as the representative of you
in your capacity as Minister of Defence. Perhaps this latter status could
be understood between you and me.' This intriguing suggestion quickly
elicited from Churchill an official directive for Dill. Part A was 'to
be announced':

1. You are appointed Head of the British Joint Staff Mission in Washington.
2. You will receive from the Chiefs of Staff committee in London their views
and instructions on war policy.

3. Assisted by the members of the JSM you will represent these views at the
meetings of the Combined Chiefs of Staff. . .

4. The Heads of the JSM will retain their responsibilities for represent-
ing the individual views of the 1st Sea Lord, CIGS, and CAS to their
American opposite numbers in so far as these do not conflict with your

60
. .

DILL

instructions. . .

5. You will sit when and


if you choose on the [new Combined] Munitions

Assignment Board and be responsible for representing our needs and policy.

Part B was for Dill's 'personal information and guidance', but was
by then very much an open secret:

You will in your contacts with the President of the US, with Mr Hopkins

and others represent me in my capacity as Minister of Defence. You will from


time to time receive from me such guidance as may be necessary to enable
you to represent my views; and you are authorized to correspond direct with
me as you think fit. . .

This directive conceded to Dill a measure of the independent authority


for which he had been arguing. First, since the CCS met in Washington
the British Chiefs of Staff could not be present in person. Each was
therefore represented by the head of his Service Delegation at the Joint
Staff Mission. Point four of Dill's directive provided for this to continue.
Dill himself retained a special link with Brooke as CIGS, but as the
Head of the JSM as a whole he represented not a single Service but
the collective COS. As senior British member of the Combined Chiefs
of Staff he acted as principal spokesman for the British side. Although
he no longer formally sat with the COS he, not they, dealt directly
with the Americans from day to day and at the regular weekly CCS
sessions. When the Chiefs of Staff of both sides did meet in person,
at the great allied Conferences, Dill continued to sit with them. Secondly,
representation of the Minister of Defence, already known to the US
Joint Chiefs of Staff, enhanced his status and utility within the CCS
forum and with the Americans individually, at the same time opening
alternative channels of influence. For example Dill could deal directly
with Admiral Leahy as Chief of Staff to the Commander-in-Chief, US
that is, the President. This he did only rarely. Of greater consequence
was Harry Hopkins, Roosevelt's frail Sancho Panza and already a firm
friend.
Hopkins cut an unlikely figure. 'I seem to turn out a mixture of a
Baptist preacher and a race-track he remarked approvingly of
tout',

a brilliant New Yorker profile. Churchill styled him 'Lord Root of the
Matter', correctly identifying his greatest gift. His functions were ill-
defined; but when access to the President at once conferred and signalled
power, Hopkins lived and worked at the White House and acted as
Roosevelt's familiar, at least until 1944, when his influence appears to
have waned. He and Dill could be of use to each other. In certain

61
DILL

respects they fulfilled analogous functions. Each habitually acted as


a 'buffer' between Churchill and Roosevelt. Hopkins monitored Chur-
chill at the White House; Dill contributed to Roosevelt's telegrams.

Occasionally they concerted their efforts. Each confided in the other


with calculated indiscretion, disseminating the confidences judiciously
on either side. It may well be that Dill did better out of this than Hopkins,
who received frequent and unsolicited communications from Churchill
himself. As a result Dill often found himself better informed than the
US Joint Chiefs of Staff. In one instance, almost a month after an import-
ant letter had been sent by the President to the Prime Minister, the
secretary of the Joint Chiefs circulated a copy to the committee with
the following admonition:

I have received it very confidentially from the British Staff Mission and am
sending it to you for your personal information. . . . Sir John Dill has suggested
to Mr Hopkins that copies . . . should be sent to the US Chiefs of Staff from
the White House, i ntil that occurs we do not officially haze the letter.

Dill was not slow to perceive the irony in this - nor to exploit the
opportunity it gave, especially in his relationship with Marshall.
If there was considerable scope in Dill's position in Washington,
there was also a frustrating hollowness at its centre. 'It is not much
k

fun', he reflected privately, to be acting as go-between after having


recently been one of the principals.' As he remarked to his son, 'I can
make suggestions but I can decide nothing. I have plenty of influence
but no power.' Dill's power-base purported to be the JSM. A nucleus
British Military Washington had been established after the
Mission in

secret American-British (ABC) Conversations of January-March 1941.


It amounted to only a handful of officers. In June 1941 they were rein-

forced by several dozen 'Military Advisors to the British Supply Council


in the US'. The Mission became a 'joint' one in embryo, with a Delega-
tion from each Sen ice. By the end of 1942 the 'Washington Whitehall'
of British representatives had mushroomed to over 9,000, of which
the JSM constituted almost one third: some 800 in the British Admiralty
Delegation; 1,200 in the British Army Staff; 650 in the RAF Delegation;
and 100 central staff. The JSM was by far the largest single mission
in Washington - Army numbers alone exceeded all save the Supply
Mission (1,800) - and quite eclipsed the 1,000 personnel directly tied
to the British Embassy.
The members of the JSM were representatives in the Burkean sense
of the word. In his famous speech to the electors of Bristol in 1774

62
DILL

Edmund Burke drew a distinction between a delegate, who merely mir-


rorsand records the views of his constituents, and a representative,
who exercises judgement according to his own conscience. The JSM
represented its 'constituents' in London in this sense. Dili's premiss,
as representative of both COS and Churchill, was Burkean.
To be sure, both COS and Churchill were apt to challengesuch
an interpretation. Churchill made an uneasy constituent. Apart from
his reservations about Dill, he always preferred to negotiate personally
with the principals, ideally face-to-face. To Marshall, unheralded, came
the characteristic exhortations so familiar to Dill as CIGS. 'I think your
idea splendid and real war ... I am sure you should come over here
at the earliest.' Understandably concerned any American
to forestall
exploitation of domestic differences between himself and the COS,
Churchill developed a morbid fear of the Chiefs of Staff of both nations
'framing up' against him. In his personal Anglo-American relations,
reticence and recalcitrance vied with the more familiar ardour and
impatience. Dill endeavoured to dispel the former and manage the latter.
He did wrest for himself some discretion; but it was contingent on
his perceived influence in Washington, above all on the knowledge of
his relationship with the man Churchill dubbed 'the senior American
officer', the US Army Chief of Staff and primus inter pares on the Joint
Chiefs of Staff committee, General George G. Marshall.
Dill and Marshall discovered an empathy unparalleled in Anglo-
American military relations. It was Marshall, the noblest Roman of them
all, who quickly came to embody a 'possible' America for Dill; and

Dill, 'the finest soldier and greatest gendeman I have ever known',

who embodied a 'possible' Britain for Marshall.


They first met at the Adantic Conference off Argentia, Newfoundland,
in August 1941. There is some evidence to suggest that Dill, like Brooke,
found Marshall wanting strategically. There can be no doubt of a mutual
and immediate personal attraction; but a clear-eyed awareness of their
respective national interests may well have predominated at this stage.
There was an obvious need for Dill to court Marshall just as Churchill
courted Roosevelt. Marshall was sensitive and broadly sympathetic to
Dill's predicament as CIGS; like Roosevelt, he may have felt impelled
to offer at least verbalencouragement. Marshall was also acutely aware
of manifold US deficiencies, in planning, in organization, in inter-
Service co-operation. cannot have escaped his attention that Dill was
It

uniquely equipped to furnish him advice and information privately,


in anticipation of getting further 'mixed up together'. This was to be

63
DILL

a continuing theme. For Dill to rely on Marshall was predictable and


inescapable, given Britain's progressive impoverishment. For Marshall
to relyon Dill was unanticipated and unintended, but no less real.
Throughout their Washington association there was a palpable sense
of collusion. 'I have so many battles to fight', Marshall dared to joke
with Dill, 'I am never quite sure whether I am fighting you, or the
President or the Navy!' It was this embattled Marshall who felt he needed
Dill, just as Dill needed him.
The day from the Atlantic Conference he wrote
after Dill's return
in most unusual terms 'I sincerely hope that we shall meet
to Marshall.
again before long. In the meantime we must keep each other in touch
manner upon which we agreed.' A few days later Marshall
in the frank
responded in the same sense. This exchange inaugurated a regular
correspondence, in itself an important channel of the flourishing but
still illicit common-law alliance.
They met changed circumstances, in December
again, in dramatically
1941 in Washington. Any reservations
Dill may have had quickly disap-
peared. 'Marshall improves greatly on further acquaintance', he advised
Brooke. 'His difficulties are immense, but he is straight, clear-headed
and undoubtedly dominates the conferences on the American side.'
So began almost three years of sustained intimacy - the pivotal period
of the world war - in which scarcely a day passed without some form
of communication between them. In March 1942 they began lunching
together regularly each week, accompanied on occasion only by their
wives. Strict confidentiality prevailed. Lunch immediately preceded
Combined Chiefs of Staff meetings. Its primary purpose was not social
but diplomatic: if possible to settle or diffuse, informally, any intractable
or explosive items on the weekly agenda. In this Dill and Marshall
enjoyed a quite astonishing degree of success. Lord Halifax, the British
Ambassador, rightly noted that CCS meetings tended to be 'formal in
character, most of the business being settled off the record beforehand'.
The lunches exemplified Dill's methods - private candour as a means
to public conciliation; openness to compromise as a prophylactic against
a strong ally becoming an overweening one; 'do as you would be done
by' (a suggestion to Churchill) as a precept for the combination to work.
Dill was not given to underestimating the difficulties. 'Standing where
I do,sometimes see tendencies on both sides to turn a blind eye to
I

the other's hopes, fears and ambitions.' The educative task he set himself
was better Anglo-American understanding within the CCS organization,
a task to which Marshall made a vital and reciprocal contribution. The

64
.

DILL

clearest demonstration of their approach was the quantum jump in infor-


mation available to each side. Dill showed Marshall virtually all the
COS telegrams he received, including those 'for his own information';
British staff studies of operationsand intelligence; many of the JSM
and his personal telegrams sent to London; and sundry private corre-
spondence with, for example, Brooke and Wavell. Churchill's 'hot ones'
were immediately discussed together or in Dill's absence simply taken
to Marshall's office by the senior secretary of the JSM, rather as if
the US Chief of Staff were on the British distribution list. Occasionally
Dill even fed him with Presidential communications which Marshall
had not yet seen. In this unorthodox manner Marshall was, in his own
words, 'kept au courant with what was going on'; a British view was
regularly inserted into the American policy-making process; unpleasant
surprises were avoided, controversies muffled or forestalled.
In return Marshall showed Dill much of his correspondence with
the other members of the Joint Chiefs, with the President and Hopkins,
and with commanders overseas, notably Eisenhower in Europe and Stil-
well in China. Dill was Marshall's sounding-board. Through Marshall,
he gained unique access to internal American deliberations. As early
as April 1942, the US Secretary for War noted, after inviting them both
to dinner: 'Dill and Marshall have become great friends and so . .

we could sit and talk over all kinds of things that the representatives
of different countries are not apt to talk about so freely.' Through
Brooke, Dill gained similar access to British deliberations. Both Brooke
and Marshall reposed complete confidence in Dill. Neither had the
same confidence in the other. Moreover both were profoundly wary
of their political leaders. The nemesis of 'wild ideas', be they prime
ministerial or presidential, haunted the military staff on each side. These
were the highly personal parameters that gave Dill the scope and the
opportunity to function as he did.
Dill is perhaps best seen as an amateur ambassador, complementing
and to some extent supplanting Lord Halifax. His unarguable success
in this role is the more what has always
striking for the absence of
been considered ambassador in Washington -
essential for a British
the confidence of the Prime Minister. So far from enjoying that confi-
dence, Dill was 'retired' as CIGS precisely because he had forfeited
it. One of the festering differences between them was removed with

the fall of Singapore in February 1942, after which Dill became if any-
thing more ardent for the Middle East than Churchill himself. Brooke
naturally took over as Churchill's most intimate adversary in daily (or

65
DILL

and as mediator between the Prime Minister


nightly) strategic debate,
and commanders everywhere. But new issues arose, and tension between
Churchill and his ambassador persisted.
The change wrought by Dill's removal to Washington was that the
tension became creative. To official America, Dill quickly came to be
seen as a guarantor: a guarantor of the British, against their notorious
and incorrigible duplicities; a guarantor of Brooke, against his overbear-
ing advocacy; and a guarantor of Churchill himself, against the 'fatal

lullaby' of his imperial pretensions and eccentric strategies. A fresh


gloss was put on a well-worn role. The essence of Dill's ambassadorial
work was attempting to prevent London doing 'stupid things' whilst
simultaneously attempting to persuade Washington that they were, in
fact, 'clever things'. Of especial concern, would the itch to do something

prove too strong for Churchill, particularly when he achieved his insist-
ent purpose of caballing with Roosevelt? 'The PM left last night', Dill

wrote in relief after one of the allied Conferences. 'His conduct has
been exemplar}' since he came to Washington . . . active but never too
wild.'
Dill's almost instantaneous emergence as guarantor was fundamental
to his influence on the alliance. Not only could Dill be trusted; he
could be trusted to deliver. He was efficacious - for the British and
American Chiefs of Staff, above all for Brooke and Marshall, uniquely
efficacious. It was Dill, in tandem with Marshall, who made the Com-
bined Chiefs of Staff work, in the words of an American observer,
'not as a mere collecting point for individual rivalries between services
and nations, but as an executive committee for the prosecution of global
war.' This was Dill's inalienable achievement, and the reason he was
considered bv the Chiefs of Staff of both nations as 'practically irreplace-
able'.

For Dill, promotion of the alliance would be of mutual benefit. Prob-


lems would be considered, by definition, Anglo-American problems.
Nor did this imply inattention to British interests. Just as Churchill
preached and Dill practised frankness, so it was for Churchill to promise,
but Dill to redeem, the expectant virtue of combination from the British
point of view: it 'makes us no longer a client receiving help from a
generous patron, but two comrades fighting for life side by side'. The

head of the British Admiralty Delegation reinforced the point at the


end of his tour in Washington in 1942. The combined system, he argued,
gave Britain 'the constitutional right to discuss her needs on equal terms,
instead of receiving gratefully such crumbs as may be left from the

66
DILL

rich man's table'. In the uncertain beginning of 1942, as the Adminis-


tration contemplated American unreadiness, as the Japanese eviscerated
Britain's Far Eastern empire, as British stock slumped - for the many
'anxious to cry us down', Dill remarked, 'Singapore was money for
jam' - anchored Churchill and the COS to the new system. The
Dill
British Joint Staff Mission in Washington was made indispensable to
the functioning of the war-time relationship.
Thepatron-client relationship, however, waxed rather than waned.
It undercut the contemporary rhetoric, very largely the Churchillian
rhetoric, of partnership or kinship. Even Dill could find his own position
'wearing and sometimes exasperating'. He grew very tired of 'begging
from the Americans', as he was wont to put it on such occasions. 'Indi-
vidually, they are charming and kindness itself, but to get all we want
out of them is not easy.' Dill chafed, not so much at relative British

weakness, as at personal powerlessness. He felt keenly, and rather exag-


gerated, the strict limits on his executive authority. Being able to 'make
suggestions but decide nothing' was intensely frustrating. In order to
get results he was dependent, as it seemed, on others: on the receptiveness
of London and Washington.
And yet he mastered that dependency. With characteristic reticence
he courted and won Marshall, and to a remarkable degree the rest
of official America. Marshall drew attention to Dill's 'translation' of
the American point of view to the British. In effect Dill interpreted
each side to the other. Hence his exhortations to frankness: to reveal
as much as possible of 'how minds are working', as he was fond of
saying, in order to remove suspicion and foster mutual understanding.
'Without him', ran the War Office epitaph, 'Britain could not have
understood America so thoroughly and quickly, nor America Britain.'
Dill died in harness on 4 November 1944, of aplastic anaemia. Four
days later a memorial service was held at Washington Cathedral. The
servicewas conducted by the Episcopal Bishop of Washington; the lesson
read by the US Army Chief of Staff. Afterwards a motorized cortege
proceeded along a route lined by thousands of troops to Arlington Natio-
nal Cemetery, the American Valhalla. The coffin, folded in a Union
Jack, with an unsheathed sword and a Field-Marshal's cocked hat on
top, was transferred to a gun carriage drawn by six grey horses. They
were led slowly to the crossroads of Roosevelt and Grant Avenues.
The US Joint Chiefs of Staff acted as honorary pall bearers. A simple
service was held at the graveside. Salutes were fired, the Last Post and
Reveille sounded. One witness wrote afterwards: 'I have never seen

67
.

DILL

so many men so visibly shaken by sadness. Marshall's face was truly


stricken. ... It was a remarkable and noble affair.'

The Joint Chiefs of Staff sent as a message of condolence to their


British counterparts an extraordinary tribute:

[We] with you the loss to our combined war effort


feel [we] share equally
resulting from the death of Field Marshal Sir John Dill. His character and
wisdom, his selfless devotion to the allied cause, made his contribution to
the combined British-American war effort of outstanding importance. It is
not too much to say that probably no other individual was more responsible
for the achievement of complete cooperation in the work of the Combined
Chiefs of Staff
... we have looked to him with complete confidence as a leader in our
combined deliberations. He has been a personal friend of all of us. . .

We mourn with you the passing of a great and wise soldier, and a great
gendeman. His task in this war has been well done.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
There is no biography of Dill. For a detailed and sympathetic study of his
American apotheosis, 1941-44, see Alex Danchev, Very Special Relationship
(Brassey's, 1986). A revealing picture of Dill and the British Joint Staff Mission
in Washington emerges from the diaries of its secretary, Brigadier Vivian Dykes,
also secretary to the Combined Chiefs of Staff committee: Establishing the Anglo-
American Alliance (Brassey's, 1990), edited by the same author.
On Dill as CIGS the most illuminating contemporary sources are the memoirs
of his Director of Military Operations, Major-General Sir John Kennedy,
The Business of War (Hutchinson, 1957) and the extensive documentation incor-
porated in John Connell's two-volume biography of Wavell: Wavell (Collins,
1964 and 1969). The 'Churchillian' view of Dill may be sampled in Ismay's
Memoirs (Heinemann, i960) and indeed in volume six of Martin Gilbert's
authorized biography of Churchill himself (Heinemann, 1983). Dill's achieve-
ment is reassessed by Alex Danchev in 'The Central Direction of War
1940-1941', in John Sweetman (ed.), Sword and Mace (Brassey's, 1986), and
'Dilly-Dally, or Having the Last Word: Field-Marshal Sir John Dill and Prime
Minister Winston Churchill', Journal of Contemporary History, January 1987.

CHRONOLOGY: JOHN DILL


1881, December 25 Born at Lurgan, County Armagh, Ireland
1887, September Methodist College of Belfast
1895, January Cheltenham College
1900, August 20 Royal Military College Sandhurst

68
DILL

1901, May 7 Commissioned 1st Battalion (100th Foot), the Prince of


Wales's Leinster Regiment (Dover)
1901, September 10 Boer War (South Africa)
1902, November 10 Assistant Adjutant (Fermoy; Shorncliffe; Blackdown)
(Lieutenant)
1906, August 15 Adjutant (Blackdown; Devonport)
1907, February 20 Marries Ada Maud le Mottee
1909, August 14 Brigade Signal Officer (Devonport; Birr) (Captain)
1913, January 22 Student, Staff College (Camberley)
1914, August 4 GSO3, Eastern Command
1914, November 5 Brigade Major, 25 Infantry Brigade (France)
1916, January 3 GSO2, 55th Division (Major)
1916, November 1 GSO2, Canadian Corps
1917, January 5 GSOi, 37th Division (temp. Lieutenant-Colonel)
1917, October 29 GSOi (Training), GHQ. France
1917, December 16 GSOi (Operations), GHQ. France
1918, March 27 Brigadier-General, General Staff (BGGS)
(Operations), GHQFrance (temp. Brigadier)
1919, March 1 BGGS, Staff College (Colonel)
1922, September 1 Commander, Welsh Border (TA) Brigade
1923, November 1 Commander, 2 Infantry Brigade (Aldershot)
1926, November 1 Army Instructor, Imperial Defence College
1929, January 19 GSO Western Command, India (Quetta)
1931, January 8 Commandant, Staff College (Major-General)
1934, January 22 Director, Military Operations & Intelligence (DMO &
I) (War Office)
1936, September 8 GOC Palestine & Trans-Jordan (Lieutenant-General)
1937, October 12 GOC-in-C, Home Command (Aldershot)
1939, September 3 Commander, I Corps, British Expeditionary Force
(General)
1940, April 22 Vice-CIGS
1940, May 27 CIGS
1940, December 23 Death of first wife
1941, October 8 Marries Nancy Charrington Furlong
1941, November 19 Retirement as CIGS announced; Governor-designate,
Bombay; promotion to Field-Marshal (effective 25
December 1941)
1942, January Head, British JSM Washington; senior British
member, Combined Chiefs of Staff
1944, November 4 Dies in Washington DC

69
4
WAVELL
Field-Marshal Earl Wavell

IAN BECKETT

Archibald Percival Wavell - 'Archie' to his friends and The Chief


to his admirers - was a most untypical soldier. Indeed, he once compared
himself to Lieutenant-General Sir Francis Tuker, writing of the latter
in January 1947 that Tuker had 'many more interests than soldiering,
in fact his defect as a soldier is probably the same as mine, that soldiering
rather boreshim and books and history and art interest him more'.
Wavell remarked much the same to Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Pow-
nall in 1942 and always maintained that he had had no particular inclina-
tion to be a soldier and had become one through the determination
of his father, who reached the rank of Major-General during the South
African War. Certainly his headmaster at Winchester believed that the
young Wavell had 'sufficient brains to make his way in other walks
of life' and Wavell never lost the interest in literature and the classics
cultivated at both Winchester and his earlier preparatory school at
Oxford.
Second World War Wavell became president of the Virgilian
After the
Society and he is possibly as well known today as the author of the
poetry anthology, Other Men Flowers, as he is as a wartime commander.
's

While Other Men s Flowers is an undemanding collection - Wavell knew


each by heart - it is still very suggestive of his wider horizons. As

70
WAVELL

a highly original trainer of troops in the 1930s, WavelPs training exercises


displayed classical and literary allusions such as 'Golden Fleece' in
August 1932, which was prefaced with a brief account of the legend
of Jason and the Argonauts. Wavell was Lees Knowles Lecturer at the
University of Cambridge in 1939 and might well have been appointed
to the Chichele chair in the History of War at Oxford but for the outbreak
of war.
Wavell was the author of a study of Allenby's campaigns in Palestine
and, later, Allenby's biographer, completing the second volume of the

biography while C-in-C in the Middle East. A period of half-pay in


the 1920s was alleviated by contributing articles to the Encyclopaedia
Britannica and most of WavelPs articles, lectures and addresses were
published in a series of books after the Second World War. His intellect
was also reflected in his attendance at the Staff College at the age of
only 26 when most of his fellow students were at least ten years older.
While GOC of 2nd Division he was also employed to rewrite volume
3 of Field Service Regulations, dealing with strategy, while it is significant
that the one appointment he coveted (but did not receive) was that of
Commandant of the Imperial Defence College.
Unfortunately, WavelPs undoubted gifts were undermined by what
Ronald Lewin has described as his 'shrouded personality'. In company
Wavell found congenial he could be light-hearted and amusing but,
more often, the impression created was one of grave taciturnity. He
appeared a man with little capacity for small talk who became almost
legendary for his silences. The detailed expositions of subordinates and
superiors alike were frequendy met with no more reaction than the
characteristically occasional response of 'I see'. The tireless self-suf-

ficiency of Wavell could inspire and the elephantine memory astound


but, equally, the near impenetrable mask could arouse suspicion and
hostility, especially among politicians. Sir Stafford Cripps was to remark

that 'the trouble about Wavell is that he is no politician'and WavelPs


relationship with the Attlee Cabinet while Viceroy was be marked
to
with as much mutual distrust as WavelPs earlier wartime relationship
with Churchill. Indeed, there can have been few more disastrous initial

meetings between two men than that between Wavell and Churchill
inAugust 1940.
WavelPs official biographer, John Connell, suggested that the ani-
mosity derived from WavelPs remembrance of Churchill's role as First
Lord of the Admiralty in the Curragh Incident of March 1914 when
the army was seemingly placed in the position of choosing whether
WAVELL

or not to coerce Ulster into accepting Irish Home Rule. Then a captain
at the War had chosen to stand by his duty and oppose
Office, Wavell
the pressures being put on him to defy government policy. However,
as Lewin has pointed out, there is no evidence that these events had
any bearing on those in the summer of 1940 when there was simply
no meeting of minds between the two men. Ironically, Wavell's third
Lees Knowles lecture had dwelt on the troubled relationship of soldiers
and politicians. Churchill hardly represented the ideal example of Abra-
ham Lincoln given by Wavell but Wavell also failed to heed his own
message that soldiers should be 'pliant' in dealing with politicians, a
failing he saw in the British CIGS during the First World War, Sir
W'illiam Robertson.
By 1939 when Wavell gave the Cambridge lectures he had already
enjoyed a distinguished military career, albeit one largely devoid of
fighting command after 1915. Wavell had been commissioned in his
father's regiment, the Black Watch, in May 1901, his period of training
at Sandhurst being truncated by the demand for officers in South Africa.
Wavell joined the 2nd Battalion in South Africa in September 1901 but

saw little action while serving on column and in garrison until peace
was concluded in May 1902. After home leave to recover from an injury
to the left arm sustained at battalion football - thereafter he could not
lift his arm higher than the shoulder - Wavell rejoined his battalion

in India. Known as Todgy', the stocky Wavell learned his trade in


the exacting school of the frontier, returning to England only in April
1908 to prepare for the Staff College entrance examination. He passed
in first for a competitive vacancy and, upon graduation, received one
of only two 'A' grades awarded his intake.
Chosen by the then Commandant, Robertson, Wavell then proceeded
to Imperial Russia where he spent almost twelve months learning the
language and observing Russian manoeuvres. Posted to the War Office
as GSO3 in March 1912, his first task was to prepare a handbook on
the Russian Army and, after a brief period with the Directorate of Mili-
tary Training, he returned to the Russian section of the Directorate
of Military Operations. He remained there until August 1914, attending
Russian manoeuvres in 1912 and 1913 (as he was to do again in 1936).
The outbreak of war saw Wavell temporarily placed in command of
the MO5 intelligence section at the War Office from whence he took
command of the intelligence section at GHQ in France. Notified of
appointment as intelligence officer to IV Corps in November 1914, Wavell
managed to escape what he regarded as dull routine by adroit manoeuvr-

72
WAVELL

ing with a friend who did want the post. As a result, Wavell got the
job of Brigade -Major to 9 Infantry Brigade.
While First World War staff officers generally have attracted criticism,
those who filled the appointment of Brigade-Major had a most exacting
job in constant touch with troops and the front line, far removed from
the image of 'chateau generalship'. Wavell was often in the trenches
and lost his left eye to a shell splinter on 16 June 1915. After convalescence
he undertook a series of staffappointments - GSO2 in GHQ; British
Military Representative to Grand Duke Nicholas of Russia in the Cauca-
sus; liaison officer between Robertson as CIGS and General Sir
Edmund Allenby as C-in-C of the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force
in Egypt and Palestine; and on the staff of the Supreme Allied War
Council at Versailles. Wavell then returned to Palestine as BGGS to
Sir Philip Chetwode's XX Corps in April 1918 and stayed until March
1920.
Promotion prospects were not good in the peacetime army and Wavell
was to spend a total of 22 months on half-pay between January and
November 1926 and between April 1934 and March 1935. There was
no opportunity to command his battalion, in which he had little seniority,
and he passed from the regimental list when appointed AAG at the
War Office in December 1921. He did not find the work conducive
and equally described his following appointment in MOi in 1923 as
a 'depressing period'. But there were compensations, for his appointment
as GSOi to Major-General Jock Burnett- Stuart's 3rd Division in
November 1926 gave Wavell the opportunity to participate in the work
of the experimental mechanized force placed under Burnett- Stuart's
overall direction. Wavell appreciated the value of armoured mobility
and was also to become a keen advocate of the value of air power but
it was infantry that he regarded as the backbone of an army. His own

progressive ideas for infantry training were subsequendy implemented


in his appointments as GOC to 6 Infantry Brigade from 1930 to 1934
and as GOC to 2nd Division from 1935 to 1937. Wavell's methods, on
which he lectured to the Royal United Services Institution, were highly
imaginative and stressed both mobility and flexibility for the infantry-
arm. In 6 Brigade, for example, Wavell experimented with Carden-Lloyd
carriers and in 2nd Division carried out the first long tactical advance
by infantry utilizing road transport, hiring Green Line buses to carry
a brigade from Reading to Petworth.
Wavell was offered the appointment of Director of Military Training
in May 1936 but declined as he preferred to remain with his division.

73
WAVELL

However, in September 1937 he proceeded to Palestine to succeed his


friend, Major-General John Dill, as GOC. The Arab Revolt had broken
out in the previous year but Wavell's time in Palestine was relatively
quiet and its chief significance lies in his selection of a young engineer,
Captain Orde Wingate, to raise the Jewish irregular Special Night
Squads to collect intelligence and subject Arab guerrillas to active har-
assment. Wavell always had a penchant for the unorthodox and was
to make note of Wingate's efforts. Similarly, he had given Lieutenant
Harry Fox-Davies the opportunity of testing raiding theories during
2nd Division exercises. Subsequently, Fox-Davies was summoned to
Cairo in 1941 to join the Long Range Desert Group, the formation
of which by Ralph Bagnold in June 1940 Wavell encouraged. In much
the same way, of course, Wavell sent Wingate to Abyssinia in 1940 and
brought him Burma in March 1942.
to
Wavell returned home in April 1938, his appointment as GOC of
Southern Command having been announced previously. The Secretary
of State for War, Leslie Hore-Belisha, sought to reform the Army and
W ar T

Office and had concluded that only wholesale changes at the top
would enable him to do so. Wavell among others was considered for
the post of CIGS but was thought more suitable for a command which
would provide II Corps for any British Expeditionary Force in future.
Wavell was still relatively unknown outside the Army but his reputation
was undoubtedly enhanced by his deliver} of the Lees Knowles lectures
on 'Generals and Generalship' in February 1939, although these do
not make for particularly stimulating reading today. The theme that
emerged was Wavell's belief that the general required 'robustness' and
was 'never to think the battle or the cause lost'. Ironically, while Wavell
himself derived wartime inspiration from poetry and literature and car-
ried a pocket edition of Mallory throughout the early part of the Second
World War, a German translation of 'Generals and Generalship' was
Rommel's constant companion in the desert.
Wavell was not destined to remain long at Southern Command, being
appointed to the new post of GOC Middle East in July 1939. Wavell
arrived in Cairo on 2 August to exercise a 'watching brief over British
and Imperial forces in Egypt, Palestine, Transjordan, Cyprus and the
Sudan. Already covering three million square miles, his sphere of com-
mand would automatically extend in wartime to encompass British
Somaliland, Aden, Iraq and the Persian Gulf. In concert with the naval
and air C-in-Cs, he would be expected to formulate co-ordinated war
plans with Britain's allies, which might conceivably include both Greece

74
WAVELL

and Turkey. In his first appreciation Wavell grasped the vital need to
dominate the Mediterranean but his total forces throughout the Middle
East barely reached 90,000 men. Of these, 27,500 were in Palestine
and 36,000 - comprising 7th Armoured Division and two brigades of
4th Indian Division - in Egypt. By contrast the Italians, who were likely
to present the most immediate threat if they sided with Germany, had
250,000 men in Libya and a further 290,000 in Italian East Africa.
Resources of all kinds were in short supply. Wavell had only five staff
officers in addition to an ADC and did not even possess adequate air
transport to enable him to travel around his command. In this particular
instance it may not have made much difference since Wavell was a
'complete Jonah in the air', with his wartime command punctuated by
mishaps and crash or forced landings.
a succession of aerial
The first was to prepare Egypt as a base for future operations
priority
and it was to ask for more resources that Wavell travelled to London
in August 1940. The Italians had declared war in June but had failed
thus far to make use of their superior numbers, although their forces
in East Africa did move against British Somaliland on 3 August. It
was a difficult moment for Britain's new prime minister. France had
collapsed, with immediate repercussions for the Allied position in the
Mediterranean but Britain itself faced possible invasion and the Battle
of Britain had begun, with Luftwaffe attacks on Channel shipping in
July. WavelPs Western Desert Force under Lieutenant-General Richard
O'Connor had immediately instituted aggressive patrolling on the
Libyan frontier but Churchill had already become restless with the
apparent lack of decisive action in the desert and with WavelPs pleas
for further supplies. Neither man really appreciated the difficulties faced
by the other and the series of meetings between 8 and 15 August proved
disastrous for their future relationship.
Wavell got agreement on tank reinforcements for the Middle East
but there were difficulties over whether a convoy should be run straight
through the Mediterranean, as Churchill advocated, or routed around
the Cape, as Wavell and others counselled. Churchill wanted the West,
East and South African forces gathering in Kenya to be employed at
once but Wavell believed they should not be used until properly trained
and acclimatized, and similar arguments surrounded the use of Austra-
lian and New Zealand forces presently stationed in Palestine. At this
stage of the war the administrative machinery for its strategic direction
was distinctly lacking in London with Dill, who had become CIGS
in May, and the other chiefs of staff all but overwhelmed in the midst

75
WAVELL

of what has been described as a 'daily circus' presided over by an imperi-


ous and untrammelled Churchill at the peak of his powers. The hapless
DilPs plea to Wavell, 'Talk to him, Archie', failed to break an increas-
ingly frostyatmosphere and WavelPs near total silence in face of Chur-
chill'sarguments had the worst possible impact on the prime minister.
On 15 August Churchill discussed with the Secretary of State for War,
Anthony Eden, WavelPs possible replacement. According to Churchill's
memoirs he concluded that it was best to leave Wavell in command
for the present. Wavell equally realized that he was not removed only
because Churchill 'could not find any good reason to do so'.
Wavell returned to Cairo on August and matters quickly deterior-
15

ated. British Somaliland had to be evacuated two days later with the
loss of 260 Imperial casualties compared to an estimated 1,800 casualties
inflicted on the Italians. Churchill instantly demanded the removal of
the local British commander, Major-General Godwin- Austen, but
Wavell refused, his signalled reply concluding with the statement that
'a heavy butcher's bill' was 'not necessarily evidence of good tactics'.

It roused Churchill to greater anger than anything Dill had yet experi-

enced. Further, on 23 August, Wavell received a directive drafted per-


sonally by Churchill seven days earlier for the CIGS and Eden, which
went into minute detail with regard to WavelPs tasks and deployments.
Wavell showed tact in replying in four different telegrams over four
days, writing later that 'I carried out such parts of the directive as were
practicable and useful, and disregarded a good deal of it.'
Whatever the pressures from London, Wavell had made up his mind
to launch an offensive in Libya and he directed preparations to be begun
on 11 September at a time when the Italians had actually begun to move
forward themselves, although they promptiy stopped after four days at
Sidi Barrani, a mere 70 miles inside Egypt. The promised new tanks
arrived later that month and deception plans - another penchant of
Wavell - were put in hand. Wavell also had the advantage of intelligence
derived from the interception of Italian codes and cyphers, although
it is important to emphasize that such intelligence and that derived from

'Ultra' still required to be interpreted correctly. Moreover, until March

1941 Middle East Command received only a digest of Ultra material


and direct transmission to Cairo was not arranged until after WavelPs
departure for India. Similarly, at this stage only Luftwaffe and not Ger-
man Army codes could be read: the latter only became available in
September 1941.
At the same time Wavell was concerned for the security of planning

76
WAVELL

in Cairo and resolved to keep his proposed operation - Compass -


secret. However, there is little doubt that Wavell also intended to ensure
Churchill would not interfere in the operational details and, despite
the latter's chafing at the lack of action by the 'Army of the Nile', Wavell
kept his silence. Indeed, was only because Eden, who arrived in Cairo
it

on 15 October, proposed to divert resources to a Greece threatened


by imminent Italian attack and a pro- German coup in Romania, that
Wavell was forced to reveal his plans. Characteristically, Churchill
wanted to know the precise date of Compass, for which he held out
greater hopes than Wavell was prepared to concede. A signal from Wavell
to Dill on 6 December cautioning, 'Please do not encourage optimism',
became known to Churchill, who expressed shock that Wavell might
be 'playing small' and 'not hurling on his whole available force with
furious energy'.
Wavell kept the secret to the last, O'Connor attacking on 9 December
in what was intended initially only as a five-day raid. In fact, it brought
immediate success with Sidi Barrani again in British hands within three
days. By 9 February 1941 when O'Connor's advance ended at El Agheila,
he had overrun the whole of Cyrenaica. With no more than two divisions
at any one time, O'Connor had routed ten advanced
Italian divisions,

500 miles and taken 130,000 prisoners, 400 tanks and 1,200 guns.
The victory, however, was not without controversy for Wavell had
decided even before Compass began that the 4th Indian Division must
be replaced by the less experienced 6th Australian Division to free the
Indians for the projected operations against Italian East Africa. The
switch, of which O'Connor was not informed until 11 December, delayed
his advance but Wavell was undoubtedly right in utilizing sea transport
momentarily available to send the Indians to East Africa where they
made a vital contribution. It seems unlikely that O'Connor could have

advanced any further than he did, although it has been suggested that
Tripoli might have been attainable. Compass had only been designed
to secure Egypt and the Italian invasion of Greece in October had under-
mined the venture thoroughly. Resources including air cover were being
diverted to Greece as early as November and the Cabinet Defence Com-
mittee took the decision to afford the Greeks maximum assistance
on 10 January 1941. It was only the refusal of the then Greek prime
minister, General Metaxas, to accept British aid that enabled O'Connor's
advance to continue beyond Tobruk. Once Metaxas died on 29 January
and his successor requested British aid, the desert campaign was at
an end. On 11 February Dill signalled that Greece must take precedence

77
WAVELL

over any attempt to reach Tripoli.


Greece added to Wavell's concerns for in February Lieutenant-
General Alan Cunningham had opened the British campaign in East
Africa by striking at Italian Somaliland from Kenya. It was a campaign
of which Wavell was to complain later of Churchill's persistent 'barrack-
ing'. Nevertheless, what John Connell has described as 'an immensely
complicated, delicate series of major operations, spread over a huge
area, inhibited by even kind of administrative, communications, trans-
port and climatic difficulty' was an immense success. Fighting continued
in Abyssinia until November 1941 but, for all intents and purposes, Mus-
solini's East African Empire had been destroyed by May. Cryptanalysis
played a vital role but so did Wavell's transfer of the 4th Indian Division
from Libya and encouragement of an Abyssinian revolt by responding
his
positively to a suggestion emanating from the Secretary of State for
India, Leo Amen, in July 1940 to employ Wingate to assist Colonel
D. A. Sandford in raising Abyssinian irregulars. Italian East Africa
also provided a significant proving ground for many future British com-
manders in Burma, including Slim.
It is as well to record the successes over which Wavell presided for

the involvement in Greece was to herald the beginnings of almost unin-


terrupted disaster. It was once assumed that Wavell was pushed into
the Greek campaign against his will, but it is now clear that he had
few doubts about the need to fight in Greece. Wavell appreciated that
Tripoli was unobtainable and, although it was apparent that German
reinforcements were arriving there in early February, it was believed
that these forces would be too weak to attack until mid-May at the
earliest. By all orthodox calculations this might have been correct but

for the fact that Rommel, who commanded the reinforcements, was
no orthodox general. Similarly, Ultra intelligence suggested that Greece
was in imminent danger of German intenention. While the British
could send relatively little assistance it was assumed that this would
prove sufficient, thanks to an exaggerated view of the value of the Greek
Army. Wavell was convinced that forward defence was the only option,
whatever the risks involved. His belief that the operation (Lustre) was
militarily viable as well as politically and psychologically necessary -
Britain had pledged to defend Greece in 1939 - thus steeled the Cabinet
for intervention. Eden concurred with Wavell's appreciation and the
other Middle East C-in-Cs acquiesced.
Once the German Greece and Yugoslavia on 6 April
blitzkrieg struck
1941 the exposed position of the British and Imperial forces committed

78
WAVELL

by Eden and Wavell to the defence of the so-called Aliakmon Line


became apparent. The tactical control of the battle was in the hands
of General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson but it was Wavell who bore
the brunt of Churchill's demands for daily information. It was a hopeless
venture from the beginning and evacuation began on 24 April, a propor-
tion of those taken off by the Royal Navy being diverted to Crete as
a matter of convenience. By this time, however, yet another crisis had
developed. Rommel had unexpectedly begun to advance in Libya on
31 March at a moment when the Western Desert Force - known as
XIII Corps since January - was severely depleted by the Greek
expedition.
Wavell was not well served by his Cairo and not perhaps suffi-
staff
ciendy ruthless to sack those who Thus, when he went
failed him.
to the Libyan front on 3 April he took O'Connor, now GOC in Egypt,
to replace Lieutenant-General Philip Neame commanding XIII Corps.
But Wavell was persuaded by O'Connor to leave Neame in place with
O'Connor merely in a temporary advisory capacity. It was the worst
possible compromise and both O'Connor and Neame were then captured
on the night of 6/7 April as the British front crumbled. Wavell retrieved
something from the ruins by taking the vital decision to try and hold
Tobruk.
On 18 April the Chiefs of Staff ruled that restoring the Libyan front
should take precedence over evacuation from Greece but it was a measure
of Wavell's burdens that when Rommel was making his first attack on
Tobruk's hastily improvised defences Wavell himself was urgendy
required in Athens. Within ten days of the Chiefs of Staff ruling Crete,
which had previously been regarded as a 'receptacle of whatever can
get there from Greece', became a new priority in view of Ultra intelli-
gence pointing to the imminence of a German airborne attack. Wavell
had certainly ignored the island despite repeated suggestions of its
importance ever since October 1940 but he did what he could now in
the time available. Moreover, it could be argued that the battle for Crete
was lost by tactical errors on the ground for which Wavell had no respon-
sibility.

Already alarmed by the discovery that Wavell had contingency plans


for the evacuation of Egypt - Wavell's belief in planning for the 'worst
possible case' was often interpreted as defeatism - Churchill found
Wavell's Cretan preparations lacking in drive. Wavell had also angered
Churchill by his reluctance to send troops from Palestine to restore
the situation in Iraq after a pro-German coup on 3 April had isolated

79
WAVELL

the British garrison at Habbaniya whereas the C-in-C in India, Claude


Auchinleck, had readily offered troops. Eventually the Chiefs of Staff
ordered Wave 11 to mount a relief expedition on 6 May. Equally, Wavell
was reluctant to become involved in any campaign in Syria where the
Vichy French authorities had allowed German aircraft to use airfields
for attacks on Habbaniya. Wavell's signal to Dill on 17 May opposing
the commitment of Free French forces with British forces in support
was ill received in London. Eleven days earlier Churchill had revived
the notion of removing Wavell and on 19 May he told Dill that his
mind was made up to exchange Wavell and Auchinleck.
What proved the final breaking point was the further development
of the desert campaign. With news of more German tanks reaching
Tripoli in late April, Churchill had rushed the 'Tiger' convoy through
the Mediterranean, a total of 238 new tanks for Wavell reaching Alexan-
dria on May. Churchill expected his 'Cubs' to be used immediately,
12

especially as Ultrahad revealed the parlous state of Rommel's logistics.


Wavell intended to go on to the offensive and launched Operation Brevity
on 15 May in anticipation of making good losses from the newly arrived
tanks. Unfortunately, Brevity failed as did a second operation - Battleaxe
- launched with the new tanks on 15 June. There were severe mechanical
defects in many of the new tanks and Ultra could not reveal either
the qualitative superiority of the Germans nor how Rommel would
deploy 88mm anti-aircraft guns in an anti-tank role to blunt the offen-
sives. Churchill showed no sympathy for Wavell's problems and was
critical of the choice of Lieutenant-General Beresford-Peirse to com-
mand Battleaxe. Wavell himself was much distressed by the debacle,
this being one of only two occasions during the war when he lost his

formidable self-control. Having reported failure to London, Wavell


received his telegram of dismissal on 22 June 1941.

Dill had wanted to bring Wavell back to England to rest but Churchill
apparently feared the possible consequences of having Wavell in London
and he was ordered to India direct to exchange places with Auchinleck.
Churchill had remarked on 19 May that Wavell would enjoy 'sitting
under a pagoda tree' but circumstances conspired to ensure that India
provided no respite once Wavell reach Delhi on 11 July. In September
he returned to London with much the same mission as that in August
1940, pleading for more resources and for the inclusion of Burma within
his sphere of command. He reiterated the latter request in November

80
WAVELL

but Burma only passed under his control after the Japanese attack
on Pearl Harbor. Wavell had gone on from London to Tiflis - he
covered almost 8,000 miles with 53 hours in the air in only ten days
- to consult with the Russians on the operation to expel German
influence from Iran. This well reflected the way in which the Middle
East and Central Asia were more traditional concerns of the Indian
Command than the eastern frontier. Thus, when the Japanese did
attack in December, neither Burma nor Malaya were well prepared for
defence.
Almost at once Wavell found his responsibilities widened, for the
Anglo-American Arcadia Conference in Washington followed up a
suggestion by Chiang Kai-shek to appoint a Supreme Allied Commander
for the South West Pacific theatre. The American Chief of Staff, Mar-
shall, suggested Wavell and this was agreed despite some British reserva-

tions. Wavell learned of his appointment on 30 December although


his new command, ABDA (American, British, Dutch and Australian)
Command did not formally come into existence until 3 January 1942.
Supposedly embracing all Allied forces in Burma, Singapore, Malaya,
the Dutch East Indies, the Philippines and (from 24 January) North-West
Australia, ABDA was a nonsense from the start. There could be little
effective co-ordination withAmerican forces in the Philippines even
from a headquarters established at Lembang on Java and Wavell did
not attempt to exercise operational control over the Philippines.
Nor, indeed, were there any disposable reserves and neither Wavell
nor the Chiefs of Staff had any clear idea of what forces were actually
available.
In the circumstances Wavell deserves some credit for managing to
create an Allied Command at all but, in reality, he was not the man
best suited to exercise such responsibilities. He knew little of the Far
East and consistently underestimated the Japanese even though he did
prepare a summary of their tactical methods in Malaya for the guidance
of his commanders in Burma. More important, his personality was not
conducive to working with difficult allies. Chiang Kai-shek, for example,
offered his Fifth and Sixth Armies for the defence of Burma but, as
Chiang unrealistically demanded a separate line of communications for
them, Wavell initially declined more than one Chinese division. Wavell
also had it in mind that only Imperial troops should be seen to defend
British territory but he failed to appreciate the need to save Chiang's
'face' when refusing the offer. His relationship with the Chinese
remained poor and he was also to fail in his relationship with the admit-

81
WAVELL

American Chief of Staff to Chiang, Stilwell.


tedly difficult
ABDA was disbanded on 22 February 1942 with the Japanese forces
threatening to overrun the Dutch East Indies. Malaya and Singapore,
of course, had already been lost despite Wavell's efforts to put heart
into the defence. It is arguable whether Wavell should have replaced
the GOC, Percival, and the Governor, Shenton Thomas, but it seems
unlikely this would have made any appreciable difference. What was
achieved, however, was in large measure due to Wavell's prompting,
notably compelling Percival to make proper plans for withdrawal into
Singapore island, for the island's defence and for demolition of instal-
lations. Wavell could not have saved Singapore but was correct in
endeavouring to do so even when this meant concurring with the Chiefs
of Staff decision to commit the 18th Division to Singapore in January
1942. Wavell himself visited Singapore for thelast time on 9 February

and was apparently tempted to stay and direct the defence himself in
what would have been a futile gesture. Unfortunately, while waiting
to be taken out to his flying boat on the night of 10 February Wavell
stepped off the seawall and fell heavily on rocks below. Flown back
to Java he insisted on returning to his desk despite the considerable
pain and the advice of his doctors. It is possible that this contributed
to his sometimes baneful influence on the campaign developing in
Burma.
In December Wavell had decided to put his Chief of Staff in Delhi,
Lieutenant-General Thomas Hutton, in command in Burma in the
hopes of instilling some organization in its defence. As in the case of
the Balkans, Wavell favoured forward defence. Still not fully appreciative
either of Japanese capabilities or of the poor quality of some Burmese
and Indian units in Burma, Wavell could not understand why Moulmein
was abandoned on 31 December or how the Sittang River line was lost
on 23 January 1942.
The possibility that Rangoon might also be abandoned appalled
Wavell since it was the only port through which the forces in Burma
could be adequately supplied and from which other supplies could be
sent on to China. Wavell, who had returned to Delhi from Lembang,
hastened to Magwe in Burma on 28 February to meet Hutton and the
Governor, Sir Reginald Dorman-Smith. Wavell lost his self-control
for the second time in the war and raged at Hutton in front of Dorman-
Smith and others. Wavell then went further south to meet John Smyth,
commanding 17th Indian Division, on 1 March. Smyth was a sick man
and Wavell replaced him but there was unnecessary vindictiveness in

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WAVELL

having Smyth stripped of his rank of Major- General and accused of


concealing his ill health when Wavell had previously ignored the latter
factor. Wavell also decided to accept the offer of the Chiefs of Staff
to send Lieutenant-General Harold Alexander to supersede Hutton.
Yet, despite Wavell sending the 63 Indian Infantry Brigade to Rangoon
and urging a counter-attack towards Pegu, Alexander was compelled
to abandon Rangoon after all within two days of his arrival on 5 March.
Indeed, Alexander was fortunate to avoid being captured.
The Burma campaign did not show Wavell at his best but while British
forces were still retreating towards Assam he directed his staff on 16
April to begin planning for a return to Burma. It belied StilwelFs impres-
sion that Wavell was a tired defeatist. It was, indeed, courageous since
it was hardly auspicious to contemplate a return when the enormous
logistic and administrative difficulties had to be surmounted. Moreover,
considerable internal unrest erupted in India itself after the leaders

of the All-India Congress were arrested in July, and 57 battalions had


to be deployed to internal security at a time when the Japanese appeared
to threaten a seaborne invasion of eastern India. Churchill, too, favoured
an offensive at an early stage and in mid-July the Chiefs of Staff approved
a plan put forward by Wavell for seizing Japanese airfields at Akyab
in the Arakan, which could be used for further operations aimed at
Rangoon. It was also intended to mount operations in northern Burma
for which the Chinese or, more specifically, Stilwell, also had ambitious
plans.
Both the British scheme - 'Anakim' - and StilwelFs ideas of re-
opening land communications between India and China were premature
given the resources available. Returning from meeting Churchill in
Cairo and accompanying the prime minister to Moscow in August,
Wavell referred to more limited plans September as 'Operation Fan-
in
tastical'. In the event, even these - for a combined land and amphibious

assault on Akyab - were severely modified when amphibious resources


were diverted to Madagascar. There remained just a land advance into
the Arakan by 14th Indian Division reinforced subsequently to a strength
of nine brigades. However, between December 1942 and May 1943 the
Arakan offensive floundered against new Japanese defensive bunkers.
Wavell allowed a complicated command structure to evolve in the Arakan
and he failed to stop increasingly costly frontal assaults on the bunkers.
He also permitted Lieutenant-General Noel Irwin of Eastern Army to
feed in brigades piecemeal. Again, he seems to have failed to perceive
Japanese capabilities.

83
WAVELL

In retrospect Wavell considered that it had been right to launch the


offensive because it yielded valuable lessons. The same might well be
said for his support of the Chindits and in Burma Wavell once more
V Force
revealed his liking for the unorthodox. In April 1942 he formed
from behind Japanese lines
as a unit capable of providing intelligence
and in May he attempted to deceive the Japanese, through the agency
of Peter Fleming, by planting false documents in an abandoned car
suggesting that large reinforcements were reaching India. He also
encouraged Ian Lyon's ideas for raiding Japanese shipping in Singapore,
And, of course, he had summoned Wingate.
a concept carried out in 1943.
Despite the abandonment of a Chinese offensive with which it was
designed to coincide, Wavell personally authorized the first Chindit
expedition on 5 February 1943. The value of long-range penetration
remains controversial, but the first Chindit expedition did prove that
troops could be supplied in the jungle by aircraft and the propaganda
value derived from Wingate helped offset the damage done by the Arakan
failure.

Churchill was certainly cheered by Wingate's operations and Wingate


was directed to accompany the prime minister to the Quebec Quadrant
Conference in August 1943. On the voyage as well as in London it
became clear that the Arakan failure rankled with the prime minister.
In Washington it was proposed that a new Allied Supreme Command
be established for South East Asia. Wavell endorsed this and apparently
expected to be appointed without realizing either that Churchill was
looking actively for ways of removing him or that he had lost the confi-
dence of the Americans. Back in England on 14 June Wavell was offered
the Viceroyalty of India in succession to Lord Linlithgow. There had
been other candidates but it was a neat way of replacing a man whom
Churchill now regarded as a 'busted flush'. WavelPs final despatch
as C-in-C showed some understandable irritation and resentment
against what he claimed as lack of support for both the Arakan and
Chindit operations. Once more his successor was Auchinleck, who
resumed his former appointment as C-in-C India.
Wavell was described by Eden's private secretary as a 'funny choice'
for Viceroy and the whole affair reeked of Churchillian expediency.
Certainly, Wavell was no better suited to dealing with Indian nationalist
politicians than with British politicians. Nor did Wavell share Chur-
chill's views on India's political future. As a member of the Viceroy's

Council since July 1942 Wavell was conversant with Indian political
affairs and his outlook was decidedly more liberal than that of Churchill.

84
WAVELL

Indeed, Churchill was apparently horrified by WavelPs sympathetic


treatment of Allenby's liberalism as High Commissioner in Egypt when
a manuscript of his second volume of Allenby's biography was circulated
in London in September 1943. Wavell favoured an early promise of
independence but Churchill was not seriously interested in pursuing
such a course.
Wavell found himself equally adrift when the Labour Party won the
1945 General Election. Wavell recognized the strength of the Muslim
League and of muslim opinion but Attlee's Cabinet appeared to be under
the spell of the Congress Party. His attempt to create a genuine coalition
administration in India failed at the Simla Conference in July 1945 and
the Cabinet would not endorse his 'Breakdown Plan' of 1946 for a
progressive evacuation and handover of power. On 4 February 1947
Wavell was summarily dismissed by Attlee, with only one month's notice
rather than the customary His successor, Mountbatten, possessed
six.

more natural charm with which to woo Indian politicians but he also
enjoyed wide powers and discretion denied Wavell. Ironically, Mount-
batten endorsed Wavell's belief that only a definitive timetable for with-
drawal and partition could solve the impasse. Wavell had worked hard
and sincerely in India, notably in tackling the Bengal Famine and in
laying plans for future economic development. Not for the first time,
the manner of his dismissal from an appointment was unworthy.
In the New Year's Honours had been promoted
List of 1943 Wavell
to Field-Marshal. He had August
actually requested this himself in
1942 on the grounds of his responsibilities and, while acknowledging
that he would enjoy the prestige, indicated that he felt it would help
with the Americans and Chinese. In his letter to Churchill, Wavell
listed those campaigns which he had directed since 1939. There were
no less than fourteen - Libya, British Somaliland, Eritrea, Italian Soma-
liland, Abyssinia, Greece, Crete, Iraq, Syria, Iran, Malaya and

Singapore, the Dutch East Indies, Burma and the Arakan. Of these,
the first nine had occurred within a period of seven months and hwe
of them simultaneously. As Wavell was the first to admit, not all had
been successes. Armies under his command had triumphed only over
Italians and Vichy French, Iraqis and Iranians; against German and
Japanese forces he had known only defeat. Nevertheless, his achieve-
ments had still been significant. Wavell had his qualities as well as
his defects and, in the last analysis, it was not his fault that he was
seemingly always waging what Ronald Lewin has described as 'a poor
man's war'.

85
WAVELL

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Books about Wavell
Collins, Major-General R. J., Lord Wavell (Hodder & Stoughton, London,
1948).
Connell, John, Wavell: Scholar and Soldier (Collins, London, 1964).
Connell, John (edited by Roberts, M.), Wavell: Supreme Commander (Collins,
London, 1969).
Fergusson, Bernard, Wavell: Portrait of a Soldier (Collins, London, 1961).
Kiernan, R. H., Wavell (Harrap & Co., London, 1945).
Lewin, Ronald, The Ch />f (Hutchinson, London, 1980).
Moon, Penderel (ed.), Wavell: The Viceroy's Journal (Oxford University Press,

Oxford, 1973).

Books by Wavell
The Palestine Campaigns (Constable, London, 1931).
Generals and Generalship (The Times, London, 1941).
Allenby:A Study in Greatness (Harrap & Co., London, 1940).
Allenby in Egypt (Harrap & Co., London, 1943).
Other Men's Flowers (Cape, London, 1944).
Allenby: Soldier and Statesman (Harrap & Co., London, 1946).
Speaking Generally (Macmillan, London, 1946).
The Good Soldier (Macmillan, London, 1948).
Soldiers and Soldiering (Cape, London, 1953).

CHRONOLOGY: ARCHIBALD WAVELL


1883, May 5 Born in Colchester
1893 Begins education at Summer Fields, Oxford
1896 Begins education at Winchester College
1900 Enters Royal Military College, Sandhurst
1901, May 8 Commissioned 2nd Lieutenant, The Black Watch
1901, September Serves in South Africa with 2nd Battalion, Black Watch
1903-8 Serves in India with 2nd Battalion, Black Watch
1904, April 13 Promoted Lieutenant
1909, January Enters Staff College, Camberley
1910, December Graduates from Staff College
1911, February Goes to Russia to learn language
1912, March Appointed GSO3 in Russian Section of Directorate of
Military Operations, War Office
1913, March 20 Promoted Captain
1914, November Appointed Brigade-Major, 9 Infantry Brigade, France
1915, April Marries Miss Eugenie Quick
1915, June 16 Loses left eye to shell splinter

86
WAVELL

1915, December Appointed GSO2 at GHQ, France and Flanders


1916, May 8 Promoted Major
1916, October Appointed British Military Representative at the
headquarters of Grand Duke Nicholas of Russia in the
Caucasus
1917, April Leaves Russia
I9i7,june3 Promoted to brevet Lieutenant-Colonel
1917, July Appointed liaison officer between Chief of the Imperial
General Staff and C-in-C Middle East
1918, January Appointed to staff of Allied Supreme War Council
1918, April Appointed Brigadier-General, General Staff to XX
Corps, Palestine
1919 Awarded CMG
1920, March Leaves Palestine and rejoins Black Watch in Germany
I92i,june3 Promoted Colonel
1921, December Appointed AAG in the Adjutant-General's
Department, War Office
1923, July Appointed GSOi in MOi at War Office
1926, January 12 Goes on half-pay
1926, November 2 Appointed GSOi to 3rd Division
1930, July 1 Promoted to temporary Brigadier and appointed GOC,
6 Infantry Brigade
IO/33> October 16 Promoted Major-General
1934, April 9 Goes on half-pay
1935, March 11 Appointed GOC, 2nd Division; awarded CB
1937, August 19 Appointed GOC in Palestine
1938, January 29 Promoted Lieutenant- General
1938, April 26 Appointed GOC Southern Command
1939, February Delivers Lees Knowles Lectures at University of
Cambridge
i939>Jury28 Appointed GOC Middle East and promoted to General
Awarded KCB
1940, February 15 Appointment designated C-in-C Middle East
I94i,june22 Dismissed as C-in-C Middle East and appointed C-in-
C India
Awarded GCB
1942, January 3 Appointed Supreme Allied Commander, South West
Pacific (ABDA Command) and hands over as C-in-C
India
1942, February 22 ABDA Command dissolved and reverts to C-in-C
India
1943, January 1 Promoted Field-Marshal
1943, June 14 Offered Viceroyalty of India

s?
WAVELL

1943, October 20 Sworn in as Viceroy


Awarded GCSI, GCIE and appointed PC
Raised to peerage as Viscount Wavell
1945 Becomes Chancellor of Aberdeen University
1946 Becomes Honorary Colonel of Black Watch
1947, February 4 Dismissed as Viceroy
Becomes Earl Wavell
1948 Becomes Constable of the Tower of London
1949 Becomes Lord Lieutenant of London
1950, May 24 Dies
1950, June 7 Buried at Winchester College

88
5
ALANBROOKE
Field-Marshal Viscount Alanbrooke

DAVID FRASER

General Sir Alan Brooke - later to be Field -Marshal Viscount Alan-


brooke - an artilleryman who had commanded with distinction II Corps
in the British Expeditionary Force in 1940, was appointed Commander-
in-Chief Home Forces soon after the Army's evacuation from Dunkirk,
at a time when invasion of the United Kingdom seemed to threaten
daily. In December 1941 he became Chief of the Imperial General Staff,
professional head of the British Army; and shortly after taking office
he also became Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee, in effect
the principal strategic adviser to the Government. He thus and without
question was the doyen of Churchill's generals.
Brooke was an Ulsterman, one of the Brookes of Colebrooke in Fer-
managh, member of a family of Irish Protestant soldiers and landowners;
twenty-six Brookes had served in the First World War, twenty-seven
served in the Second. He was brought up and educated in France,
bilingual, artistic and sensitive; and his quickness of wit and speech
often struck his contemporaries as having a spice of Gallic as well as
Irish in its flavour. His relationship with Churchill was uneven.
At one level the two men had a good deal in common. They shared
recollections of an earlier, close-knit professional Army in the Imperial
heyday. Both had served in and gready enjoyed the India of the Raj

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ALANBROOKE

as it once had been. Churchill treasured the memory of friendship in


youth with Brooke's brothers, in particular his adored elder, Victor
Brooke. They shared backgrounds of social confidence, even distinction,
with Churchill the grandson of a ducal house and Brooke the youngest
of one of the greatest landowning dynasties of Ulster. They shared
courage, self-confidence, sharp wits - and a good deal of intolerance
of dimmer minds. Yet at another level they looked at each other with
mixed feelings, right from the start of their supremely fruitful associa-
tion; and in each man admiration - at good moments affection - alter-

nated with exasperation and impatience. Brooke's private thoughts on


Churchill - modified but by no means extinguished by subsequent
reflection - held a good deal of continuing disapproval, while Churchill
by contrast seldom let the sun go down on his wrath; but when the
battle between them was on, it was often fierce.
Churchill had known what he was in for and had tried to evade
appointing Brooke CIGS. 'I know these Brookes', he said beforehand
vigorously, 'stiff-necked Ulstermen, and there's no one worse to deal
with than that!' Did the long-ago Ulster crisis of '14 and Churchill's
controversial part in it haunt him at such moments? Perhaps. But once
their professional relationship was under way Churchill's periodic anger
would be quickly succeeded by affectionate sentiment, as when he told
General Ismay, his principal staff officer and confidant, 'Brooke hates
me! I can see it in his eyes!', to be contradicted by Ismay - who had
run to Brooke and had his answer:
'The CIGS doesn't hate you! He loves you! But he will never tell
you he agrees when he doesn't!'
'Dear Brooke!' Churchill's eyes filled with tears.
There were many such occasions. And although the sparks flew right
to the end, Churchill said and assuredly meant of Brooke, 'I love that
man!'
Brooke, for his part, never wavered in his appreciation of what Chur-
chill meant to Britain in terms of leadership, rhetoric, imagination. 'That
man!' he used to murmur, tired and exasperated after some gruelling
encounter, 'That man!' and then, with a sigh, 'Yet what would we do
without him?' But his resentment - kept almost invariably under stern,
courteous control - was aroused by three facets in particular of Chur-
conduct of affairs.
chill's

he was provoked and exhausted by the Prime Minister's way


First,

of doing business; by his endless meetings at intolerable hours, his


seemingly total lack of consideration for others, his frequent late-night

90
ALANBROOKE

garrulity. This was understandable - but in the ultimate trivial, although


it did not seem so to tired and responsible men directing a world war.
The fact is that Churchill's was an indisciplined genius and he needed
a certain disorder and spontaneity in his personal dealings, a certain
self-indulgence in small things, if his imagination and energy were
to flourish.
Second, Brooke (and his colleagues on the Chiefs of Staff Committee)
were often angered by what they wrongly thought was Churchill's per-
sonal hostility in argument, the way he cross-examined and criticized
and and condemned what they put to him - and did so, often,
cavilled
with peremptory brutality - only to adopt their advice, exactly, next
day and advance their propositions as his own. In this Brooke failed
to recognize an essential, a natural difference. Churchill was a politician,
a parliamentarian. That was his strength - he may have loved to play
the commander, the generalissimo (and that was at times his weakness)
but his genius was for the political battle and in that battle loud argument,
hard verbal knocks, the challenge of opponents' motives, the use of
sarcasm and invective are the ordinary tools of the trade. Churchill
would have found it astonishing that such attitudes, transported to the
Chiefs of Staff Committee, could cause indignation or wounds. They
were his way of arriving at the truth, the solution. He had to test other
men's ideas by direct attack. Brooke seldom accepted this, but it could
not be otherwise. Yet this, too, was ultimately trivial, a matter of words
and manners, with the Prime Minister entirely within his rights to do
things in his own idiosyncratic way.
But the third cause of Brooke's resentment of Churchill was substan-
tive. Churchill's most provoking weakness in his direction of the war
was his passion for detail. This absorption in matters operational or
tactical - which he loved - led to a neglect of priorities and, often,
to a temporarily hazy view of strategy. It led, furthermore, to frequent
attempts at interference in the operational matters themselves, sometimes
with startling and deplorable consequences. If a battle was conceived
Churchill wanted to feel he had control of its every detail - and most
certainly of its starting date. If a new weapon was brought into service
Churchill was intrigued by it and would discharge periodic enquiries
and proposals about its use, by no means always helpfully. If statistics
were paraded Churchill would challenge them, even advance his own.
Brooke fumed at all this. He found Churchill's interventions sometimes
harassing (especially of commanders in the field), inappropriate to the
head of the Government, and more often than not inept and uncompre-

9i
ALANBROOKE

hending in themselves. The root of dissension between Brooke and


Churchill was the former's sense that the latter, instead of judiciously
adopting and holding to a line on grand strategy, at his worst jumped
with periodic inconstancy after novelties and fanciful ideas, making
work, confusing issues and wasting time.
'At his worst' - but not typically. Both men grew more and more
exhausted as the years passed, and with exhaustion irritation increased.
But in fact the partnership was admirable, perhaps more admirable than
either appreciated. Their personalities clashed at times, but their quali-
ties were complementary. Brooke was, like Churchill (although it was
concealed) emotional, but he was a realist, a pragmatist, a calculator.
His will was very strong. He was never prepared to accede to an idea
- or a campaign - unless he was personally convinced that it was the
best way, that it had at least a decent chance of success, and that the
fighting men attempting it were being committed to battle in as good
order as could be managed. That, he said and felt - more strongly
than he felt anything - was his responsibility as the professional head
of the Army. Although in fact very often acting as what later generations
would call a Chief of Defence Staff he, like his colleagues, utterly
opposed a suggestion that such should formally exist. He believed -
in this, a man of his time - that it was his position as head of the
Army and that alone which gave him the right and the duty to reason
thus. Brooke understood the political imperatives of grand strategy as
clearly as any man, but to agree an unsound operation for a political
motive however estimable would be to get soldiers killed unnecessarily;
and that he would not do.
Nor would Churchill, once convinced, wish him to. On a professional
issue of moment he never overruled the Chiefs of Staff. For Churchill's
heart was in exactly the same place as Brooke's. Churchill loathed the
casualties of war; like Brooke he was influenced, perhaps on occasions
over-influenced, by memories of the Somme and Third Ypres. Like
Brooke he preferred caution to risk. In one, fortunately fleeting, mood
he even shrank at the eleventh hour from the invasion of France, the
greatest Allied operation of the entire struggle. Churchill was a romantic,
an enthusiast of history who envisaged battle in highly coloured and
sometimes archaic pictures; but he was deeply sensitive to the human
aspects of war and he was the last man to seek to drive his Chiefs
of Staff towards recklessness or irresponsibility. Yet Churchill found
the minds of the Chiefs at times pedestrian, their perspectives narrow,
their vision disappointingly unimaginative - and on such occasions (and

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ALANBROOKE

plenty of others) he would goad and challenge, and scoff at excessive


and enquire why some different and more unconven-
logistic insurance,
tional or far-ranging scheme had not been considered. And in this
Churchill was not always wrong, for his own conceptual reach, at best,
far surpassed that of his professional advisers; including Brooke. In
the terms of the artist he was, Churchill could compose a picture and
convey the sense of distance and space and contrast which a great land-
scape presents; while, unfortunately, losing his way somewhat among
the figures in the foreground where his touch was often unsure. Brooke,
on the other hand, (also an artist) drew most exactly and precisely,
setting each part of the composition in very proper relationship to the
rest; but did not display superior (to Churchill) creative or innovative
instinct, that with which the greatest masters are credited. The talent
of each was indispensable.
An example of this can be adduced very early in their relationship.
Within days of Brooke's assumption of office Churchill (leaving Brooke,
the apprentice, behind) sailed on HMS
Duke of York to meet Roosevelt
in America. Churchill produced during that voyage a series of papers
for the comments of the Chiefs of Staff - papers on grand strategy
in thenew situation created by Japanese aggression (Japan had attacked
the American fleet at Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941) and by the
near-simultaneous declaration of war by Germany and Italy on the
United States.
Churchill's papers on that occasion must rank as some of the most
influential and prescient state papers of the war. In the European theatre
he concentrated attention on the Mediterranean, arguing the merits
of an ambitious 1942 campaign to win for the Allies the whole of North
Africa, and thus free passage of the Mediterranean. He realized that
any campaign in Europe, whether western or southern, must critically
depend on the security of the United Kingdom and of the Atlantic
sealanes. He appreciated that, for Germany, the crisis of the war was
bound to come in Russia; German initial successes there had been
dramatic but had stopped short of strategic decision and losses were
huge, the front enormous and demanding. While in the Pacific, against
the Japanese, Churchill envisaged a struggle for maritime supremacy,
the winning of which could lead to an Allied progress from island to
bombardment and the threat of invasion ever nearer
island, bringing air
Japan; one day decisively so. As for ultimate victory over Germany,

Churchill was clear in his papers that the German armies must be
defeated in Europe (unless inner convulsions brought the Reich to its

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ALANBROOKE

knees) and that this must be the aim of a return to the Continent -
probably after Italy had, somehow, been knocked out of the war. The
strategic situation was looking black for the Allies, but Churchill's eyes
were on the dawn.
Brooke agreed with the thrust of all this, but at that stage of the
war it needed the vision, the historical grasp of a Churchill to articulate
it, and it was this grand conceptual sweep which the Prime Minister,

in this superior to his professional advisers, was able to provide. Brooke's


part was to reduce the general to the particular, to point to the realities
in time, space and resources which set the limits of opportunity; and
to restrain - an unpopular task - Churchill's zeal that action be as
early as possible by adamant insistence that the Army could only under-
take successful operations when it was ready, and when the capacity
of the other two Services to support it was sure.

In their first year together the occasional clashes of view and will between
Churchill and Brooke generally concerned the Mediterranean; and these
took place against a background of difficulty in agreeing with the United
States how the war was to be carried on, a difficulty which was Brooke's
chief preoccupation. By a complex interaction of military and (largely
American) political factors the Allies had determined on an expedition
to French North Africa - Operation Torch. The Americans, or some
of them, regarded this as a distraction from the main task, the invasion
of Western Europe, but Brooke, at a series of conferences, played the
lead part in demonstrating that such an invasion was beyond Anglo-
American capacity, certainly in 1942 and (as later became very clear)
probably in 1943 as well. If the Anglo-American Armies were to fight
the Germans somewhere in the short term it had better be - it probably
could only be - in North Africa, where a British Imperial Army was
already engaged.
In this Churchill and Brooke were at one. But Churchill began to
attack on points of detail. First, he pressed the claims of opening (simul-
taneously) a campaign in northern Norway, an idea to which he often
reverted and which was, equally often, demonstrated as wholly impracti-
cable by Brooke. Second, and more he demanded ever earl-
troublingly,
ier offensive moves by the British imperial forces in the Western Desert
- the only British land theatre of operations against Germany. Thus
Churchill harassed Auchinleck, the Commander-in-Chief Middle East,
urging him to earlier action in the spring of 1942 than he thought right.

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ALANBROOKE

Brooke, as ever on such occasions, had to fight strongly for the man
on the spot. Commanders in the field, he had to make clear to Churchill
more than once, must be supported and encouraged; or dismissed. They
must not be directed in their professional judgements from London.
In the event Auchinleck's offensive of mid-1942 was pre-empted by Rom-
mel; and in a series of brilliant moves theGermans drove the British
from their positions at Gazala in May, took Tobruk and harried their
opponents back to Egypt. Brooke, in the summer of 1942, had the tasks
of consoling a prime minister under domestic criticism, of maintaining
Anglo-American planning unity for the agreed North African landings
in view of this disagreeable reverse at the other end of the Mediterranean;
and of sorting out the British Army - for Brooke, although he had
stoutly defended Auchinleck against the strictures of Churchill, was
by no means sure that changes in the high command in the Middle
East were not due.
In August 1942 these changes were made, and after a visit by both
Prime Minister and CIGS to Egypt Auchinleck was replaced by Alex-
ander and the Eighth Army was placed under the command of Mont-
gomery (Auchinleck had, for a while, been doing both jobs). These
appointments were not secured without a good deal of difficulty with
Churchill, who had strong reservations about Montgomery; indeed
Brooke, very much against his better judgement and most atypically,
had reluctantly agreed to Gott, a very experienced but overtired Desert
Corps commander, being given command of Eighth Army. When Gott
was killed in an air encounter, however, Churchill conceded and Mont-
gomery got the appointment which was to make him famous.
It was an appointment which greatly relieved Brooke. He had always

much admired Montgomery's abilities and he felt at last confident that


Eighth Army was in good hands; Eighth Army, or most of it, soon
felt the same. Alexander's appointment as Commander-in-Chief- nomi-

nally to be Montgomery's superior - was, on the face of it, curious;


he was younger and junior in service. But Brooke realized two things
about Alexander. First, that he would never interfere with Montgomery,
a master of battlefield detail in a way which Alexander had no aspirations
to be; and, second, that Churchill gready admired him and that Alex-
ander, thus, would be the perfect insulation between the Prime Minister
and the Army Commander who, at that time, was in direct charge of
the British Army's only effort against the Germans. In the huge Middle
East theatre it was Eighth Army that mattered.

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ALANBROOKE

The North African campaign ultimately followed the path envisaged


by Churchill and charted by Brooke. The Allies landed in North Africa,
and Tunisia was reinforced by large German forces; while, in the eastern
Mediterranean, Montgomery fought and won the battle of Alamein and
drove the German-Italian forces from Tripolitania, so that the united
Allies came to face the enemy in a Tunisian redoubt by the Spring
of 1943. But by that stage there had arisen between the Allies the question
'What next?' The British pressed for exploitation in the Mediterranean
of Tunisian victory and, once again, many Americans thought the British
sadly reluctant to face the task - and the casualties - of cross-Channel
invasion.
The British, the Americans sometimes and often thought, were
said
obsessed with the Mediterranean. Some they suspected, might
of this,

be Imperial nostalgia about the 'route to India' and British concerns


in the Near East. Some of it might be an unhealthy (in Washington's
view) preoccupation with the Balkans, with dreams of a southern Euro-
pean front which would, almost by definition, eliminate the chances
of a simultaneous major effort in the West. Some of it might even be
induced by suspicion of the future intentions of the Soviet Union -
a cardinal sin in American eyes, for this was the period when Roosevelt's
enchantment with Stalin was approaching its peak. Some of it might
derive from exaggerated respect for German ability after the nightmare
of 1940, and from grim recollections of losses in France and Flanders
between 1914 and 1918. For whatever reason the British - and this princi-
pally meant Brooke - were suspected of being lukewarm towards a major
Western European campaign, and thus of urging an essentially peri-
pheral effort in the Mediterranean. Even Churchill - although he
periodically grumbled that Brooke's proposals to invade Sicily or Sardi-
nia were insufficiently ambitious - was suspected by the Americans of
having too little heart in the cross-Channel business.
This was unfair, and Brooke took the lead part throughout the ensuing
months of 1943 in demonstrating its unfairness. He was in no doubt
that the culminating campaign of the war must follow a cross-Channel
invasion of Western Europe. But the conditions had to be right. The
first of these - too often, in his view, ignored - was that the German

Army must be so weakened before the campaign opened as to ensure


that the Wehrmacht could not build up forces in overwhelming strength
against a beachhead and lodgement. Brooke appreciated, as Churchill
sometimes failed to do, that with interior land lines of communication
and a good railway system the Germans could concentrate in East or

96
ALANBROOKE

West disturbingly fast. To pre-empt


that, two things were essential:

continued German and attrition in Russia, and continued


casualties
strategic air attack on European communications and German war-
making potential. Both demanded time; more time than existed between
victory in Tunisia (May 1943) and the end of that year. Invasion, Brooke
argued from that alone, could not come before 1944. The view was
unpalatable, but unanswerable; and any who contend with hindsight
that with the amphibious resources then available the Allies could have
invaded France from Britain in 1943 should consider the actual Nor-
mandy fighting in the summer of 1944 and ask themselves how it might
have gone had a much stronger German Army (1943/44 was a terrible
year for the Wehrmacht in Russia) been able to reinforce the western
from the eastern front far more powerfully than in fact occurred. That,
in 1943, could have been the situation; and Brooke would have none
of it.
But there were other factors. The American Army in Britain in 1943
had not and could not have achieved anything of the strength or skill
it was able to acquire during the additional months actually provided

before a 1944 D-Day. The Battle of the Atlantic was only won in mid-1943
- indeed the March sinkings were the highest of the war, and the idea
of cross-Channel invasion with a vulnerable Atlantic lifeline behind
it was not one Brooke or his colleagues could contemplate. Perhaps

most dramatic of all, the Mediterranean campaign offered the chance


of eliminating Italy from the war - a development envisaged by both
Churchill' and Brooke from the earliest days and which actually hap-
pened in September 1943. The consequence was massive reinforcement
of Italy by German forces, committing the Wehrmacht to a southern
front; and the replacement of Italian by German divisions throughout
the Balkans. To exploit Allied Mediterranean successes in 1943 was
not only necessary, in that no respectable alternative existed; it was also
highly beneficial to the Allies. It involved the invasion first of Sicily
and then of Italy. And it led to the Italian campaign.
Anglo-American differences continued to dog the Italian campaign;
and, in retrospect, some on the Allied side have argued that the diversion
to Italy of resources from other fronts told more against the Allies than
against the Germans. Brooke's view was clear. He regarded the Italian
struggle as definitely subsidiary to a Western European campaign, but
as playing a helpful part provided that it was conducted with sufficient
vigour, so that the Germans would always devote troops to it, feel threat-
ened by it (not least by Allied airfields opened increasingly northward

97
ALANBROOKE

towards a vulnerable Reich) and suffer casualties in it. This happened;


and Brooke (like Churchill) opposed the American plan - Operation
Dragoon - to remove divisionsfrom Italy and land them in the south
of France in 1944 to assist Eisenhower in north-west Europe. He reck-
oned that this was to give the Germans too easy a defensive battle in
Italy, to 'let up' on the pressure there - while making no significant
difference to a campaign in France by then, in the event, already won.
Eventually, however, Brooke counselled graceful acceptance of Dra-
goon, whenwas clear the Americans were set on it; and Roosevelt
it

argued that he had promised it to Stalin. Churchill disagreed, and fought


with greater ferocity to keep Alexander's forces undiminished. But
Churchill's motive was at once stronger and different in kind from
Brooke's.
For Churchill believed in a project which Alexander had now
advanced, whereby the Allied Armies in Italy would defeat the Germans
and advance by Ljubljana and the Julian Alps to the Danube, and then
march on Vienna. It was this dream, among others, which Dragoon
frustrated. This 'Vienna alternative' has acquired a good deal of retro-
spective merit, because it might have brought the Anglo-Americans to
central Europe before the Red Army - an idea only tentatively argued
at the time although undoubtedly in Churchill's mind, prescient as he

often though intermittently was on that subject. Brooke, however,


opposed the concept flatly. Militarily he regarded it as fantasy; the terrain,
the season of the year, and an unbeaten Wehrmacht in his view made
it so. And -
in this, more politically sensitive than his political master
- Brooke knew that to moot it to the Americans would provide yet another
piece of evidence that the British still had no stomach for fighting the

war in the West, were obsessed with southern and Danubian Europe,
had their priorities wrong. The concept was, in Brooke's mind, militarily
unsound and impossible of Allied acceptance. It would have required
a completely different and agreed Anglo-American assessment of the
strategic and political objects of the war. To Churchill's anger it died.
Before this, however, a mighty dispute had divided the two men on
a wholly different subject, with Brooke voicing the hostility of a united
Chiefs of Staff Committee to the Prime Minister's views. Early in 1944,
as the war in Europe moved towards its consummation, eyes were inevi-
tably turned more and more towards the Far East and to the question
of how finally to defeat Japan. That theatre had been one of American
primacy. The tide of Japanese aggressive expansion had been turned
by the American maritime victories of the Coral Sea and Midway. The

98
ALANBROOKE

British part had been to defend India - which had involved the loss
and would subsequently imply the reconquest of Burma. There were,
however, many other British possessions or associated territories in Japa-

nese hands. There were French and Dutch Colonial Empires, all occu-
pied by Japanese forces. There was an unbeaten Japan.
Brooke and his colleagues argued that when the war in Europe was
over, the British contribution should be to deploy the maximum land,
sea and air forces, massed together with the huge American amphibious
and battle fleets, advancing towards Japan by a series of stages - via
the Philippines, the Marianas, Formosa. The British Fleet and Armies
would be based in and sustained from Australia. This, they believed,
would be the great and final anti-Japanese effort. It could and should
be joined by the British Empire. Anything else would be peripheral.
Churchill disagreed fundamentally. In his view the British Imperial
effort should be based on India; should undertake and then exploit
the reconquest of Burma; should liberate, with British forces, Malaya
and other such dependencies; should, with a demonstrably British
endeavour, avenge the loss of Singapore; and should be and be seen
to be distinct and independent of the Pacific campaigns of the United
States. This quarrel between Brooke (and his unanimous colleagues)
and Churchill was the sharpest they fought, the only one which brought
them to the brink of resignation. It was solved by a certain compromise.
It did not adversely affect the brilliant campaign which drove the Japanese

from Burma. And it was ultimately made irrelevant by the collapse of


Japan, a collapse sealed but not solely procured by the atomic destruction
of Hiroshima, and which took place within months of victory in Europe.
It is easier to sympathize with Churchill than Brooke in the matter.

Churchill's eyes were on the reactions of the peoples of South East


Asia in the aftermath of war. Who should be perceived as victors?

In June 1944 Operation Overlord, the invasion by the Allies of north-west


Europe, at last took place. Brooke accompanied Churchill to visit the
beachhead six days after D-Day. He shared the Prime Minister's anxie-
ties at what seemed the periodic slow progress, the threat of stagnation.

He kept Churchill firm in support of Montgomery when the Americans


(and some dissident British voices) criticized his conduct of operations.
His heart lifted, with Churchill's, when the great moment of Allied
breakout ultimately came.
In the north-west European campaign itself, as 1944 was followed

99
ALANBROOKE

by 1945, and as the Allies erupted from Normandy, closed in on the


Reich, crossed the Rhine and advanced to final victory Brooke had

little conflict with Churchill. They shared anxiety at Eisenhower's stra-


tegy, fearing loss of opportunity, inadequate concentration and prolong-
ation of war. Both were influencedby Montgomery's impatient
in this
contempt of Eisenhower's generalship; and both, on occasion, did less
than justice to Eisenhower. Brooke recognized and periodically rebuked
Montgomery's egotism, his disservices to the cause of Anglo-American
understanding, but he accepted, on the whole, his military judgement
(although sceptical of the concept of Operation Market Garden, the
Arnhem by airborne
attempt to cross the Waal and the Nederrijn, taking
assault and debouching towards the Ruhr; Brooke believed such
ambitions were premature with the port of Antwerp still closed to the
Allies). Brooke and Churchill visited the front together to watch the

Rhine crossing in March 1945 and spent some days at Montgomery's


headquarters. The end was very near. Prime Minister and CIGS felt
very close.

We walked up and down in the moonlight [Brooke recorded]. It was a glorious


night and we discussed the situation. ... He was in one of his very nicest

moods and showed appreciation for what I had done for him in a way which
he has never done before.

They spoke of the early days, when victory seemed so remote as to


be unimaginable. Within months of that evening Germany had surren-
dered unconditionally; and within a few months more Japan had done
the same. By then the partnership had been dissolved by a general elec-
tion and Churchill was out of office.

As head of the British Army Brooke commanded the admiration - and


often induced the fear - of all. He was quick in mind, speech and
temper, master of his profession, uncompromising in upholding what
he believed right and intolerant of pettiness, procrastination or incompe-
tence. But, although formidable, Brooke was at heart a kind and sensitive
human being, one loved by his few intimates, one for the gentle and
understanding gesture where it was appropriate, one who took infinite

trouble with ostensibly unimportant people, one who could talk directly
and as one man to another with anybody of whatever degree, one totally

without pomposity. His integrity shone. Robert Casey, later, as Lord


Casey, Governor-General of Australia and a strict judge, wrote of
Brooke:

100
ALANBROOKE

I know of no Service Leader who contributed more to the winning of the


Second World War than he did, by his military capacity, by his judgement,
and by his complete honesty of thought and expression.

Brooke was a selfless man. On one occasion, however, he felt keenly


what seemed to him Churchill's lack of understanding and magnanimity.
Churchill had given Brooke clearly to understand that he was to have
the supreme command of the Allied Forces for the invasion of Europe
in 1944, Operation Overlord. Almost casually and certainly without
expression of regret Churchill told him, late in 1943, that he had agreed
with Roosevelt the command should be Eisenhower's. It was, by that
stage of the war, inevitable that an American would be appointed and
the character of Eisenhower in fact fitted the peculiar and primarily
diplomatic requirements of Supreme Allied Command particularly well.
Brooke's military judgement and generalship would have been superior
but his handling of Allies almost certainly would have not; although
they admired him the Americans were always wary of Brooke, feeling
uneasy that his speed and incisiveness were putting them at a disadvan-
tage, stealing a march. But Brooke felt the blow keenly; not least because
it would have meant escape from Churchill and Whitehall. He stayed
at his post, uncomplaining except in his diary. And he was at Churchill's
side until the last day.
Brooke - Field-Marshal Viscount Alanbrooke in the aftermath of
War - was the greatest Chief of the Imperial General Staff ever produced
by the British Army. It was his destiny to come to authority at exactly
the right hour; an hour when the country was in fearful peril, and
was being certainly sustained but sometimes endangered by the mercurial
genius of Churchill. Alanbrooke was the perfect complement to that
genius. He and Churchill formed an incomparable partnership in the
higher direction of the Second World War.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Butler, J. R. M., Grand Strategy (HMSO, 1954-64).
Churchill, W. S., The Second World War (Cassell, 1948-54).
Ehrmann, J., Grand Strategy (HMSO, 1956).
Fraser, D., Alanbrooke (Collins, 1982).
Gwyer, J. M. A., Grand Strategy (HMSO, 1964).
Home, To Lose a Battle (Macmillan, 1969).
A.,
Howard, M., Grand Strategy (HMSO, 1972).
Ismay, Lord, Memoirs (Heinemann, i960).

101
ALANBROOKE

Kennedy, J., The Business of War (Hutchinson, 1957).


Liddell Hart, B., Memoirs (Cassell, 1965).
Liddell Hart, B., History of the Second World War (Cassell, 1970).
Slessor, J., The Central Blue (Cassell, 1956).
Wilmot, C, The Struggle for Europe (Collins, 1952).

CHRONOLOGY: ALANBROOKE
1883, July 23 Born, Bagneres de Bigorre, youngest child of Sir
Victor Brooke, Baronet, of Colebrooke in Fermanagh
and Alice Bellingham, Lady Brooke
1902, December 24 Commissioned, Royal Artillery
1902-14 Service with Royal Artillery in Ireland and India
1909 Appointed to Royal Horse Artillery - Eagle Troop
1914, July 28 Marries Jane Richardson of Rossfad, Fermanagh
1914, September To France with Eagle Troop
1915, January Staff Captain RA, 2nd (Indian) Cavalry Division
1915, November Brigade Major RA, 18th Infantry Division
1917, February Staff Officer, Royal Artillery, Canadian Corps
i9i8,June GSOi, RA (Lieutenant-Colonel), First Army
1919 Student at Staff College, Camberley
1920-22 General Staff, 50th (Northumbrian) Territorial
Division
1923-6 Instructor, Staff College

1925, April Mrs Brooke killed in car accident

1927 Student, Imperial Defence College, London


1929, February-1932 Commandant, School of Artillery, Larkhill (Brigadier)
1929, December 7 Marries Benita Lees (nee Pelly)
1932 Instructor, Imperial Defence College
1934-5 Commander, 8 Infantry- Brigade (Plymouth)

1935, November Inspector of Artillery (Major-General)


1936, August Director of Military Training
1937 Commander, Mobile Division (Salisbury Plain)
1938 Commander, Anti-Aircraft Corps (Stanmore)
(Lieutenant-General)
1939, August Commander-in-Chief, Southern Command
(Salisbury)
1939, August 31 Commander II Corps, British Expeditionary Force
1939, September- France and Flanders
1940, May 30
1940, June 11 Knight Commander, Order of the Bath
1940, June 12-18 Returns to France, Commander-in-Chief (designate)
British Expeditionary Force (reconstituted)

102
ALANBROOKE

1940, July 19- Commander-in-Chief, Home Forces (General)


1941, December
1941, December 25- Chief of Imperial General Staff
1946, January 25
1945 Knight Grand Cross, Order of the Bath
1945, September 18 Created Baron Alanbrooke
1946, January 29 Created Viscount Alanbrooke
1946 Knight of the Garter
1963, June 17 Dies at Ferney Close, Hampshire

103
6
ALEXANDER
Field-Marshal Earl Alexander

BRIAN HOLDEN REID

In 1943 a young subaltern returning from the front line had an unexpec-
ted meeting with his Army Group Commander. Stricken with toothache
he was making his way wearily to the rear when a jeep pulled up. Sitting
at the steering wheel was a handsome, immaculate senior officer, who

could have been a film star at dress rehearsal inspecting the set. 'Hallo,

how are you?' he asked. was Alexander, then commander 15th Army
It

Group. When the subaltern informed him that he had toothache, Alex-
ander was most concerned; the subaltern also became concerned, for
the enemy were getting their range and artillery fire encroached on
their conversation. Alexander continued to chat nonchalantly. 'Sir', the
subaltern insisted, 'I really do think you should move out of range.'
'Yes, I suppose I'd better', Alexander replied without enthusiasm. He
climbed back into the jeep and drove on - nearer to the front line
and the enemy's artillery.
Every great soldier has an individual style of command - a unique
footprint that he makes upon the battlefield - which identifies him and
his methods at once. Alexander's style of command was singularly Bri-
tish. The immaculate clothes, fastidiousness of person, coolness under

fire and imperturbability were reminiscent of Wellington without the

wit. The effortless superiority, languid manner and polished manners

104
ALEXANDER

signalled that he was a perfect Anglo-Irish gentleman of a type that


had officered the British Army for centuries. In his zeal for the front
line he demonstrated not only a disdain for the 'chateau generalship'
of the First World War, but upheld the very best traditions of British
generalship. He was the spiritual heir of Marlborough and Wellington.
He was a general who kept his head while all others were losing theirs,
and like these ducal forebears, he too was a scion of the aristocracy.
Alexander's formative years were happy and comfortable. He cruised
confidentiy and smoothly through childhood and adolescence as he
was to do through adulthood. Born in 1891, the third son of the 4th
Lord Caledon, The Hon. Harold Rupert Leofric George Alexander
had the conventional upbringing of a young upper-class Edwardian
gendeman. Sent to St Michael's preparatory school (Hawtrey's) and
then in 1906 to Harrow, he proved an exemplary product of that illus-
trious school: well-liked, even admired; not for the last time in his
life, Alexander fitted the bill. He was a good all-roundshowed
athlete,
some and a touch of distinction as a miler. But he
talent at cricket,
was not over-blessed with intellect - though Alexander took away from
Harrow a taste for painting and Classical history and culture which
he was never to lose. In his penetrating discussion of the English national
character, 'The English Sense of Humour', Sir Harold Nicolson
observed that 'one of the most common defects of the English tempera-
ment is intellectual indolence. The average Englishman does not take
pleasure in cerebral effort as an end in itself.' Neither did Alexander.
He entered the Army Class and regarded himself as a man of action,
not reflection, of decision, not indecision, and he never had the slightest
doubt that he wanted to be anything else other than a soldier. In 1910
he entered Sandhurst, and the following year was commissioned into
l
the Irish Guards, the newest of the Guards regiments raised in 1900.
One of the most striking facets of Alexander's character was his lack
of inner conflict and self-doubt. He was to develop into the archetypal
Edwardian hero. He did not need to indulge himself in introspection
for the simple reason that it had never occurred to him that he needed
it. He fitted the pattern of regimental life as a hand fits a glove. 'Alex'

loved the regiment and the regiment loved him. Not overburdened with
duties he developed his taste for art and his considerable talent as an
artist. He contemplated retiring and making a career as a painter. All

the photographs of the young 'Alex' taken immediately before the out-
break of the First World War in 1914, reveal a shy, immaculately dressed
and exceedingly handsome young subaltern, not greatly troubled by

105
ALEXANDER

the strife inflicted on the world. Indeed, the best of these, in which
he leans languidly against a gun carriage with his fellow subalterns
at Wellington Barracks in August 1914, only reveals an impatience to
get to the front before the war ended. For every soldier war is the
acid test, not only of his professional skill, but of his character. The
British Army has traditionally placed the attributes of character above
those of the intellect. An officer could be a good soldier without being
clever, but a clever officer was rarely a good soldier. Alexander in his
diffident and unselfconscious way had developed an abundance of char-
2
acter - of atype cherished and praised by his fellow Englishmen.
In discussing the English national character, Nicolson delineated a
number of important features which described accurately Alexander's
own character. His good humour, tolerance and kindness, his deep
fund of common sense, were matched by a typical Englishman's dislike
of extremes, over-emphasis, and all forms of boastfulness. Alexander
also exhibited what Nicolson called 'A preference for compromise and
understatement. ... A dislike of appearing conspicuous or inviting ridi-

cule' and had pronounced 'respect for individual character rather


a
than individual intelligence' which manifested itself in the display of
an 'instinctive sense of human values which reacts unfavourably against
any deformation of those values'. Alexander had inherited or consciously
nurtured all of these characteristics. In 1914-18 his values were put to
the test and triumphantly vindicated. The test of war did not result
in trauma and crisis for him quite simply 'they were the happiest years
;

3
of my life'.

All of Alexander's soldiering in the First World War was spent on


the Western Front. He was to prove himself a regimental soldier of
great distinction. His wartime career began inauspiciously with a wound
in the thigh and hand at the First Battle of Ypres in November 1914.
On returning to active duty he was posted to the 2nd Battalion Irish
Guards which had been recruited since the outbreak of war. The bat-
talion's baptism of fire was the Battle of Loos in September 1915. Its
objective was the Chalk Pit Wood, which was taken by Alexander's
company. The most controversial aspect of the battle was the failure
to commit the reserves rapidly enough. Alexander sent back to the rear
a characteristically worded request, 'he would be greatly obliged if
they would kindly send some more men up, and with speed'. 'The
actual language was somewhat crisper', noted the regimental hist-
orian, Rudyard Kipling, but no less polite. The reserves were not forth-
coming, but recognition of Alexander's initiative and dispatch was,

106
:;

ALEXANDER
4
for he was awarded the Military Cross.
In the months preceding the Battle of the Somme in 1916, Alexander
was switched back and forth in temporary command of both the 1st
and 2nd Battalions, before returning finally to the 2nd as second in
command. In September 1916 he took part in the third phase of the
Somme Offensive and the battalion seized its objective, Lesboeuf. Once
more he called for reinforcements that were not there to be had but ;

once more also, his drive was rewarded, this time with the DSO. In
March 1917 he was given permanent command of the 2nd Battalion
he was only 26, but already an experienced veteran.
Alexander's tactical skills were revealed later that summer at Third
Ypres (Passchendaele) when after careful preparation and rehearsal,
the battalion seized its objective, the Broembeke, at the first attempt.
All of Alexander's talents were needed the following year even to keep
the battalion in being after the storm of LudendorfPs Spring Offensive
fell on the British Armies. Lord Ardee, commander 4 (Guards) Brigade

was gassed, and Alexander, at 27, assumed command. So great were


the brigade's casualties that by May 1918 companies were down to 40
men each but a worse fate was to befall the battalion Alexander was
; ;

to be taken from them, posted to command X Corps School. The batta-


lion said farewell, Kipling recorded, 'with an affection few Commanding
Officers have ever awakened'. Alexander took responsibility without
blinking, always remained 'both inventive and cordial' and 'would some-
times continue to dress the affair as high comedy'. The Great War
had bolstered Alexander's confidence, and with good reason; he waxed
5
his moustaches and walked with a jaunty air.
This histrionic side was fortified by a sojourn for two years in Latvia.
George Washington once remarked that bullets had a charming sound
for Alexander their sound was no less charming. He was bored without
the exhilaration of battle and through regimental connections volun-
teered to serve in Latvia against the Bolsheviks. He was to receive the
title of 'Relief Adviser' but took command of the Baltic Landeswehr,

consisting of German and Baltic soldiers, with a German chief of staff,


Baron Rahden. Such a command speaks volumes for his open-minded-
ness. He was wounded again, but not seriously, and drove the Bolsheviks
back into Russian territory. The New York Times correspondent, Walter
Duranty, wrote that 'Alex ... is the most charming and picturesque
person I have ever met, and one of the two soldiers I have known who
derived a strong, positive and permanent exhilaration from the worst
of danger'. As for Alexander himself, he had enjoyed himself, indulging

107
ALEXANDER

his taste for exotic headgear. On handing over command of the Baltic
Landeswehr in March 1920 he declared, 'You are gentlemen and sports-
men. I am proud to have commanded an Army composed entirely of
gentlemen.' He retained an interest in these men, and after 1945 suc-
ceeded in getting a number of them entry into the United States, safe
6
from the avenging hands of the Soviet Union.
In May 1922 Alexander was gazetted Lieutenant-Colonel at the age
of 31 (the average age to attain this rank in peacetime was usually 40-42).
His experience thus far had been exclusively of field commands. In
1926 he passed into the Staff College. He did not excel there, and two
of the Directing Staff instructors, Brooke and Montgomery, formed
the opinion that he was an 'empty vessel'. Indeed
Montgomery, desirous
to denigrateanybody associated with his wartime triumphs, later claimed
that the DS 'came to the conclusion then that he had no brains - and
we were right'. Such accusations were to surface in the following years
with increasing frequency; actually they are distorted, if not untrue.
Alexander's intellect was not his most conspicuous asset, but his attain-
ments as a practical soldier were, and so was his 'mass of common
sense', to quote another former Staff College instructor, General Sir
Robert Gordon-Finlayson. If Alexander never acquired a taste for staff
work, a stint at the Imperial Defence College and a posting as GSOi,
Northern Command, taught him the supreme value of making the best
use of able, staff- trained subordinates.

The last contributor} factor in Alexander's pre-war development as


a commander sprang from his appointment as commander of the Now-
shera Brigade on the North West Frontier. Alexander's career before

1939 was unrivalled in its diversity. Command of a brigade underscored


publicly a recognition that Alexander was one of the Army's future
commanders. Imperial policing was the traditional function of the Army,
and was the main school of its generals all the principal commanders
:

of the First World War had been nursed on 'small wars'. Imperial polic-
ing with its stress on improvisation, minor tactics and highly mobile
(horsed) operations suited Alexander's own, fairly unsophisticated mili-
tary oudook. He distinguished himself in two frontier campaigns in
Loe Agra and the Mohmand. When in 1938 the new CIGS,
1935, the
Lord Gort, was cutting away the 'dead wood' and looking for new,
vigorous general officers with established fighting records, the name
of Alexander could hardly be overlooked, and he was posted to command
7
1st Division. High command war seemed certain.
in the next
A variety of reasons may be advanced for the promotion of a particular

108
ALEXANDER

officer while another of equal or even better attainments is held back.


Sometimes an officer's 'background' is crucial; the British Army before
1945 was acutely class conscious, as to a lesser degree it still is; here
Alexander, as an aristocrat and a Guardsman, scored highly. But his
social graces would not have seemed so alluring without the added
lustre of his impeccable wartime record. Nothing succeeds like success,
and every command that Alexander had held redounded to his credit.
He had shown not only superlative abilities as a regimental soldier but
as a tactician. He was the aristocratic apotheosis of the 'real soldier'.
Unlike Montgomery, he was not gready affected by a disgust with the
style of command adopted by First World War generals. It had never

occurred to him not to apply his regimental skills to any level of command
that might be thrust upon him. Though he had not disclosed to his
teachers at the Staff College a penetrating intellect or quick-silver intelli-

gence, and later they (and their biographers) were to point this out
to his detriment, he nevertheless had a receptive brain. His common
sense was a formidable tool. Alexander absorbed impressions rather than
detailed formulae. Once absorbed he clung to them tenaciously. An
idea might come tohim slowly, but once grasped, he would develop
it remorselessly. Otherswould attend to the details. Alexander would
command. In the conduct of great campaigns this attitude would be a
source of both strength and weakness.
In the early years of the Second World War Alexander was the avail-
able man : the safe pair of hands, the cool Guardsman always in control.
'Alex' would sort it out. He perfected a style of operations for the conduct
of which British generals have always shown a special aptitude - the
art of retreat and evacuation. Yet the stigma of failure never hung about

him - the mud never stuck to his immaculate uniform. The 1st Division
took its place in France in the centre of the BEF's line in I Corps,
commanded by Lieutenant-General Michael 'Bubbles' Barker. During
the ill-fated advance to the Dyle in May 1940, and the subsequent retreat,
Alexander's tactics and dispositions were faultless. On reaching the
Dunkirk perimeter, he had 'Thus
his personal possessions destroyed.
my sole surviving possessions for the were my
remainder of the battle
revolver, my field glasses, and my briefcase.' In an unexpected move,
Montgomery then prevailed on Gort, the Commander-in-Chief, to
transfer command of I Corps, which was responsible for the perimeter's
defence, to Alexander. This move is surrounded by mystery and was
probably less neat than the transition described in Montgomery's
Memoirs. The Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, had given permission

109
:

ALEXANDER

to surrender, but Alexander on assuming command of I Corps stated


his intention 'at all costs to extricate his command and not surrender
any part of if.
Although Alexander was to share many greater triumphs, his behav-
iour in sitting out the final hours of daylight covering the concluding
phase of the Dunkirk evacuation was his 'finest hour'. He immediately
displayed 'grip' - that most cherished of all a British general's attributes.
He appraised that the perimeter could not be defended beyond 1-2 June.
'Consequently', he reported to his French colleagues, 'I have decided
to re-embark without delay.' Perhaps Alexander underestimated the
fighting power of the remaining French troops at any rate, the French;

considered his action entirely self-interested. Alexander took a small


boat along the beach. 'Is there anyone there?' he shouted. Repeating
8
the question in French, he received no reply.
Alexander's conduct at Dunkirk made his reputation as a field com-
mander. Confirmed in command of I Corps, he threw himself into prep-
arations to resist a German invasion. In the event, he was not to face
the Germans in the field again for another two years. The most formi-
dable foe he had to face before his next field command, in Burma against
the Japanese, was Alan Brooke. In October 1941 during Operation
Bumper, a large anti-invasion exercise in which Alexander commanded
the defending forces, Brooke gave public vent to doubts about Alexander
which he had long nursed in secret. He criticized him for 'sadly mis-
handling' the armoured forces. Alexander did not respond to this unfair
comment, for the same reason that he accepted a command in Burma
which no less an authority than Slim regarded as an impossible mission
'I will do my duty.' Alexander's mission was to salvage something from

disaster. He almost became its greatest victim. He underestimated the


speed of the Japanese outflanking advance (as he had overestimated
the German advance at Dunkirk). Alexander and his headquarters
escaped only thanks to the rigid adherence of the Japanese commander
in advancing on the city from the west; had he continued to block
the roads to the east, Alexander's career would have come to a premature
9
and inglorious end.
Conducting yet another long retreat brought out all that was phlegma-
tic and noble - and foolhardy - in Alexander. En route to a divisional

headquarters, Slim recalled that their car was machine-gunned by Japa-


nese aircraft. 'General Alexander, as usual, was quite unperturbed',
recalled Slim, 'and refused to take shelter in a trench, as I did very
briskly, preferring to stand upright behind a tree. I was very annoyed

no
ALEXANDER

with him for this . . . because we had been trying to stop the men doing
In dealing with his allies Alexander would need all his coolness
it.'

and patience. In this delaying action the suspicious and surly French
were replaced by the no less touchy Americans in the person of General
Joseph W.
Stilwell, a cantankerous braggart, whose not inconsiderable

intellectwas perverted by numerous phobias, not least that directed


against the egregious British. Alexander, who was instinctively repelled
by neurosis of any kind, dealt patientiy with Stilwell, but formed a low
opinion of American soldiers and their generals. Once formed, Alex-
10
ander did not shed such impressions easily.

Defeat independent command did not damage Alexander's


in his first
reputation, and nor did it draw prodigiously on the stock of admiration
that he had built up with Churchill since Dunkirk. Alexander had shown
too much obstinacy at Rangoon and not enough constancy during the
retreat. The objectives of the campaign kept changing, though these

had been handed down by his Commander-in-Chief, Wavell. The


enemy retained the initiative and maintained air superiority A deter- 7
.

mined counter-attack with the demoralized and ill-trained soldiers avail-


able was not a feasible proposition. Alexander had made the best of
11
a bad, probably impossible job.
Up to this point Alexander had to wage war always at a disadvantage,
whether material or moral. He had to help shoulder the baleful burden
of unpreparedness. He was now to enter a new world of material plenty.
On returning to England in the summer of 1942 he was appointed British
Task Force Commander for the forthcoming invasion of French North
Africa, Operation Torch. But within weeks an even greater challenge
was presented to him. Affairs were reaching a pitch of crisis in the
Western Desert. Auchinleck's victory in the confused action known
as First Alamein was little compensation for the defeats and humiliating
retreats forced upon Eighth Army earlier that summer. Both Churchill
and Brooke agreed that something was 'wrong' with the command in
North Africa. Auchinleck, still doubling as Commander-in-Chief and
GOC Eighth Army, was held accountable for this and in a reshuffle
of generals returned from whence he came as Commander-in-Chief
India. Alexander was posted to succeed him. Churchill had originally
canvassed Brooke himself as Commander-in-Chief; though tempted,
Brooke felt that he could not leave his present post as CIGS. He then
suggested Alexander to Churchill. The Prime Minister was increasingly
enamoured of Alexander, whom he regarded as his aristocratic beau
ideal of a general - a twentieth-century Marlborough with scruples.

in
ALEXANDER

Brooke's ambivalence towards Alexander had hardly diminished since


Bumper. Though recognizing that Alexander had a gift for making
divergent personalities work together harmoniously, when he had earlier
considered Alexander for the post of C-in-C, he dismissed the idea
because he 'has not got the brains'. Yet after the propitious death of
the original Eighth Army Commander designate, 'Strafer' Gott, in an
and Montgomery was sent out to take command, Brooke was
air crash,

Alexander would give Montgomery his head, carry trust


satisfied that
and smooth troubled waters. Always inclined to criticize Alexander what-
ever he did, within a year Brooke was complaining that he was not
12
'gripping' Montgomery sufficiently.
Alexander's appointment as C-in-C Middle East was the first stage
in a reordering of the command North Africa, which
relationships in
had become blurred and confused under Auchinleck's tenure. Alex-
ander administered to the sprawling bureaucratic jungle of GHQ
Cairo
a revitalization equal to that given to Eighth Army by Montgomery,
making it more responsive to the needs of the army in the field. He
oversaw a vast area stretching from the frontiers of Kenya to Afghanistan.
He was the ultimate authority. Montgomery should concern himself
with the defeat of Rommel's army. The policy would be agreed, and
Montgomery would be its executive instrument, responsible for battle-
field planning; Alexander was responsible for the overall strategy. His

main priority at the beginning of the campaign was protecting Montgo-


mery from excessive political interference, which he did skilfully. The
transfer of Auchinleck was largely prompted by political reasons and
Churchill's exasperation that Auchinleck refused to mount a counter-
offensive before September. Ironically the new men, free from the stigma
of defeat, claimed that an offensive could not be mounted until October.
Alexander diverted the stream of Churchillian thunderbolts onto himself
and away from Montgomery. The Second Battle of El Alamein did
not open until 23/24 October 1942, and victory was not clear until 4
November. Montgomery's behaviour during this period was self-confi-
dent and high-handed, and such a showman inevitably overshadowed
his C-in-C, who was a diffident and poor speaker and disliked self-
advertisement. But a study of Alexander's correspondence reveals that
Alexander was not reluctant to exert his authority as C-in-C; as far
as he was concerned, Montgomery could be as bombastic as he liked,
so long as he was successful. Alexander carried the primary responsibi-
13
lity.

Alexander and Montgomery were complementary the one charming,


:

112
: :

ALEXANDER

calm and phlegmatic; the other dynamic, arrogant and abrasive. Alex-
ander was not merely Montgomery's rubber stamp. Nowhere is this
more clearly seen than in his dealings with Major-General A.H. Gate-
house and Lieutenant-General H. Lumsden, both dismissed by Mont-
gomery during Alamein. Of the former, Alexander wrote to Brooke
that 'I think he is a borderline case. There is no doubt that he is slow
and stupid.' Alexander went on

Against this he has had more experience of actually fighting armour than anyone
else. He has the confidence of his subordinates. He handles artillery well.

His battle technique is to manoeuvre and win his battles by standing back
and knocking out the enemy by his gunfire. He is not a thruster.

This was a fairer assessment of Gatehouse's ability than Montgomery's


14
brusque 'useless'.
Alexander's natural diplomatic flair had served all well during the
Alamein campaign, not least himself. He had resisted the strong temp-
tation to interfere in the conduct of the battle. Montgomery had been
given his head and advanced prudently towards Tripoli. The 'tide' of
the Desert War had
January 1943 Roosevelt, Churchill
finally turned. In

and the Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS) met at the Casablanca Confer-
ence. Alexander was appointedGround Forces Commander in North
Africa, and in February, Commander 18th Army Group and Deputy
to the Supreme Commander, Eisenhower. While Montgomery advanced
to Tunisia, the forces which had been landed in Algeria, the First Army,
commanded by Lieutenant-General Sir Kenneth Anderson, had
advanced from the west, and run into difficulties. 'I am afraid you have
taken over a parcel of troubles!' wrote Brooke. 'I am very glad to feel
that you are there to take a grip of things.' The CIGS did not exaggerate.
The mountains of Tunisia presented a tactical problem quite different
from the Western Desert - of a type that Alexander had not encountered
since his days on the North West Frontier. The problem was complicated
because the Americans disliked the aloof, dour Anderson. Of affairs
in Tunisia, Alexander wrote to Brooke

I am frankly shocked at what I have found here - no plan, no policy, no


proper direction but complete disorganization. I cannot blame Anderson entirely
for this . . . but I do think he has been slow in getting things going . . . such
a job beyond his ceiling ... I only ask for
is a little time and average luck,
and they will soon get things ship shape here.

Alexander added: 'Eisenhower is such a nice chap and could not be


more frank, friendly and helpful.' The two men had first met the previous

"3
;:

ALEXANDER

summer and had immediately struck a sympathetic chord. To be accep-


table to theAmericans and show a willingness to understand their prob-
lems was an enormous asset to Alexander: but were the Americans
13
acceptable to him?
On 14 February Rommel routed the American II Corps in Kasserine
Pass. Inspecting the front, Alexander was shocked by what he found.
His worst suspicions were confirmed. The American troops, he wrote,
were Very shell and bomb conscious [their] training too defensive'
. . .

in the attack 'There is a great lack of urgency amongst all ranks and
. the value of surprise has been thrown away. It is NOT appreciated
. .

that if the first attack fails the next attempt will be more difficult. . .
.'

In a very long letter to Brooke, he confided that 'Unless we can do


something about American Army in the European theatre of oper-
it, the
ations will be quite useless and play no useful part whatsoever.' Accord-
ing to Alexander, the US II Corps was bereft of basic tactical skills
'In fact, they are soft, green and quite untrained. It is surprising them
that they lack the will to fight and I am afraid as a generalisation this
is true.' After Rommel withdrew from Kasserine, Alexander averred,

'I took infinite pains to lay on for them what should have been a first

class show in the Gafsa-Maknassy area ... I handed them a victory


on a plate, but their hands were too weak to take it.' As for the American
generals, Eisenhower, his chief of staff, Bedell Smith, and Patton, the
new commander of II Corps, 'they are not professional soldiers, not
as we understand that term'. But Alexander was too much of a gentleman
to descend into crude anti-Americanism, and his political sense re-
asserted itself:

We must tread very warily - if they think we are sneering at them - and
God forbid that - or that we are being superior, they will take it very badly,
proud people. We must take the line that we are comrades and
as they are a
brothers in arms, and our only wish is for mem to share the horrors of war
(and the handicaps) and reap the fruits of victory together.

This basic insight was to fertilize Alexander's career and harvest great
16
triumphs; but for the moment, the earlier doubts remained.
Whereas Montgomery and Anderson were given a wide latitude in

developing operational plans, Patton was required to submit all tactical

decisions to 18th Army Group HQfor consideration. Alexander's main


concern was to get Eighth Army north of the Gabes Gap and through
the Mareth Line. This would bring the two armies together and give
the opportunity of mounting a two-fisted offensive. Alexander had for

114
ALEXANDER

some time been attracted by an analogy popularized by Major-General


J.F.C. Fuller in the interwar years, of the boxer, feinting with one fist,

striking with another. This permitted a more flexible mode of operations


to develop than was permissible with Montgomery's 'master plan' which
emphasized a single punch.

In this region we must seize the various dominating ridges and gateways in
the mountains which give on to the plains before our armour can be usefully
employed for the decisive stage. We now hold the initiative and I intend
. . .

to keep it - punching here and there. [the enemy] is now. hurrying


. . . . .

reserves from this place to that plugging holes.

The enemy was to be worn down, distracted and then annihilated. This
was to be the object of Operation Vulcan - the drive to Tunis. Mont-
gomery attacked at Enfidaville, and though supposed to feint, vanity
and conceit persuaded him to transform his attack into a breakthrough
attempt; this was repulsed. Alexander drove to Montgomery's HQand
decided that elements of Eighth Army should be used to reinforce the
centre of First Army. On 6 May Operation Strike was launched by
a massive artillery bombardment down the Medjerda Valley, and within
twenty-four hours Tunis and Bizerta had fallen. The victory was entirely
Alexander's, yet he remained as modest and as unaffected as ever. The
sense of triumph only surfaced in his noble signal to the Prime Minister:
'Sir, it is my duty to report that the Tunisian campaign is over. All
enemy resistance has ceased. We are masters of the North African
17
shores.'
Amid the drama of the final stages of the North African campaign,
Alexander's attention was already distracted by the
initial planning for

Operation Husky - the invasion of Sicily called for by the CCS at


Casablanca. His conduct of this campaign has recently been criticized
for a lack of 'grip'. As Alexander had exercised 'grip' in his earlier

campaigns, this accusation requires careful analysis, as it also reflects


on Alexander's methods and his conduct of greater operations in Italy.
Alexander complained even before the Sicilian campaign was over that
'It was quite impossible for me to give the necessary attention to Husky

planning - I was hundreds of miles away at the front and far too busy
to come back to Algiers or to really give the required thought to such
a complicated affair.' Nonetheless, Alexander was optimistic. 'We have
two grand armies and lots of good young commanders.' Perhaps it was
Alexander's own methods that were at fault. In his diary, the British
Resident Minister in North Africa, Harold Macmillan, gave a vivid

"5
.

ALEXANDER

description of Alexander's HQ. 'The whole atmosphere of the camp',


he wrote, 'is dominated by his personality - modest, calm, confident.'
'Shop' was largely ignored.

The conversation is the usual tone of educated . . . Englishman ... - a little

history, a little politics, a little banter, a little philosophy - all very lightly
touched and very agreeable. . . . Very occasionally an officer comes in with
a message. . . . After pausing sufficiently for politeness the conversation . .

- the campaign of Belisarius, or the advantages of classical over Gothic architec-


ture, or the right way to drive pheasants in flat country [continues] - General . . .

Alex will ask permission to open his message - read it - put into his pocket
- continue the original discussion for a few more minutes and then unobtru- . . .

sively retire, as a man may leave his smoking room or library after the ladies
have gone to bed, to say a word to his butler, fetch a pipe, or the like.

'I have never enjoyed so much', Macmillan added, 'the English capacity
for restraintand understatement.' Nothing could be further from the
atmosphere of Montgomery's forward HQwith its intense air of monastic
dedication. Alexander was perhaps the last of the great British amateur
generals though a resourceful commander, able to tackle any problems
:

sent his way - the true 'all-rounder' - warfare was for Alexander a
tiresome distraction from better things. As Macmillan observed on a
later drive with him, 'he likes to talk of other things - politics, ancient
art (especially Roman antiquities), country He hates war.' As a
life.

gentleman rather reminiscent of Robert E. Lee in his command methods,


Alexander preferred to make suggestions rather than give orders. Mac-
millan thought them 'most effective. These are put forward with modesty
and simplicity. But they are always so clear and lucid that they carry
18
conviction.'
Alexander's style could be misinterpreted. 'He agrees, as he always
does when I suggest something to him', Montgomery observed in 1943.
A strong-minded, almost dictatorial commander like Montgomery could
misunderstand Alexander's self-effacing methods as evidence that he
lacked ideas of his own. Indeed for Brooke and Montgomery it was
not so much economy of force that characterized Alexander's campaigns,
as economy of mental effort. The Sicilian campaign does not show
Alexander's methods at their best. It reveals irresolution compounded
by prejudice. After his eclipse in Tunisia, Montgomery felt impelled
to assert himself,and rejected the original Husky plan which had pro-
jected twin landings byUS Seventh Army at Palermo and by the Eighth
Army at Catania. This operation, Montgomery wrote, 'breaks every com-
mon-sense rule of practical battle fighting and is completely theoretical'.

116
ALEXANDER

He also took the view that Alexander 'Must use experienced troops
to [the] utmost extent'. Here Montgomery played on Alexander's doubts
about the Americans. Distracted by other concerns, he agreed with
Montgomery that the two armies should land in a mutually supporting
operation, with Seventh US Army restricted to supporting the flank
of the Eighth Army. The main thrust, advancing north to Messina,
was reserved for the British.
Alexander's position was anomalous. The Supreme Commander,
Eisenhower, had not stamped his authority on the planning process,
and as his Deputy and Commander 15th Army Group, Alexander lacked
authority over the naval and air C-in-Cs, Cunningham and Tedder,
with whom he had to 'coordinate' plans. The landings were successful,
but Montgomery was held up in the mountains above Catania. Patton,
determined to demonstrate the fighting qualities of his troops, secured
Alexander's permission to advance on Palermo, and then drove on Mes-
sina, arriving a few hours before Montgomery. As Nigel Hamilton has
pointed out, Patton's advance in pursuit of geographical objectives was
a distraction from the decisive point, and permitting such a divergence
was typical of Alexander's indolent methods. This campaign 'now
ushered into Allied operations a political principle that committed the
Allies to failure upon failure', as no commander had either the tact
or military genius to command the coalition armies in the field and
reconcile their national rivalries. The conquest of Sicily had been
incomplete. The Germans had escaped Alexander could have prevented
;

this had he stopped Patton from moving on Palermo. Yet Alexander


had to respond to political requirements and the overall demands of
Allied unity, as he was to do again. This required above all that the
assuaging of public (especially American) opinion, the reassurance of
political leaders, and the soothing of commanders' egos, should take

precedence over the technical demands of the military art. Hamilton's


comment seems to imply that the Allies were defeated rather than victori-
ous. The Anglo-American alliance demanded a series of modest and
uninterrupted successes rather than spectacular victories pregnant with
disruption. These Alexander, a modest general, in both character and
19
attainments, was well equipped to provide.
Sicily was succeeded rapidly by the invasion of mainland Italy. Two
amphibious operations were mounted, Baytown by Eighth Army, which
was virtually unopposed, and Avalanche, which hurled Alexander into
another crisis. Modern critics condemn the Avalanche plan as thor-
oughly unsatisfactory, as indeed it was. Alexander accepted the plan

117
ALEXANDER

because the time factor forced him to accept a bad plan rather than
have no plan at all. Italy had to be invaded at the earliest possible moment
before the Germans could overrun the country. That the Allies failed
to gain this objective was through no fault of Alexander. As ever, he
willingly subjected himself to the tyranny of political requirements.
Nevertheless, he could not do the impossible. Amphibious landings are
the most complex in the military canon. Yet in the Mediterranean theatre
they had to be improvised hastily to seize unexpected opportunities.
Alexander could not resolve this contradiction.

The landings at Salerno by Lieutenant-General Mark Clark's Fifth


Army were hardly models of the planner's art secrecy had been com-:

promised, there had been no preliminary bombardment, the Allied forces


were unnecessarily dispersed and in his corps commander, Ernest J.
Dawley, Clark hardly had an inspiring figure. The Allies were almost
driven back into the sea. Alexander, who had weathered the typhoons
of Dunkirk and Rangoon, rose to the occasion he was always at his ;

best in a crisis. Visiting the beachhead he was impressed by Clark but


appalled by Dawley. Turning to the inexperienced Clark, he said quietly,
'I do not want to interfere with your business, but I have some ten

years' experience in this game of sizing up commanders. I can tell you


definitely that you have a broken reed on your hands and I suggest
you replace him immediately.' Alexander elevated suggestion to a high
military art, but some of his commanders, not least Clark, sometimes
failed to respond in the spirit in which they were offered. To Churchill,
he reported some of the common-sense suggestions which he had prof-
fered Clark: 'Hold what we have gained at all costs consolidating key
positions by digging-in. . Reorganize scattered and mixed units. Form
. .

local reserves and a strong mobile reserve as possible.' With such a


firm rock to lean on, the Allies could stick it out, and shortly Clark
20
would not only consolidate but by October occupy Naples.
Later that month Churchill telegraphed to Alexander: 'I have studied
the plan you have sent home and note that you have already accomplished
the first and second phase of it. I hope the third phase will be

accomplished by the end of the month and that we shall meet in


. . .

Rome.' The accomplishment of this phase was to be greatly troubled.


Field-Marshal Albert Kesselring, following Hider's orders, constructed
a defensive line from Gaeta to Ortona - the Gustav Line - in order
to hold the Allies south of Rome. On the Allied side, the operation
was transformed from a lightning campaign to seize opportunities into
a protracted campaign designed to distract the greatest number of Ger-

118
;

ALEXANDER

man divisions before Overlord. In such difficult mountainous terrain,


dissected by lateral river lines - as Graham and Bidwell point out,
surely the worst the British Army had fought over since Wellington
crossed the Tras os Montes in 1813 and Roberts set off from Kabul to
Kandahar - became a battle of attrition. Alex-
the war in Italy inevitably
ander's problem was compounded by a numerical deficiency: 18 Allied
divisions to 23 German. Furthermore, at Tehran the Allies agreed that
Operation Anvil, the invasion of southern France, should be nourished
by forces already based in the Mediterranean. By Overlord it was hoped
that Rome would have fallen, with Alexander's armies advancing as
far as the line Pisa-Rimini. The Italian campaign, however, could not
21
be fought according to timetable.
On returning from Tehran in December 1943, Brooke visited the
Italian front, and was depressed by what he saw. 'Alex fails to grip
the show', he wrote, but as the strategic aim of the campaign was con-
tinually being altered there was little of substance that could be gripped.
A more serious source of weakness was that Alexander lacked a properly
organized HQj his improvised tactical HQwas not sufficient to control
two international armies. At the end of the year General Sir Henry
Maitland Wilson was appointed Supreme Commander Mediterranean,
Alexander was relieved of the post of Deputy and given the title of
Commander of the Allied Group of Armies in Italy (AAI). On New
Year's Day 1944 John Harding arrived as his new Chief of Staff. Harding
had the kind of cool and penetrating intellect that Alexander lacked
the two were complementary and formed a potent partnership. But his
insistence on 'gripping' problems rather than letting sleeping dogs lie,
as was Alexander's inclination, was apt to stir up more problems than
22
it resolved.
On Christmas Day 1943 Alexander accepted somewhat reluctantly yet
another scheme for an opportunistic amphibious landing - Operation
Shingle, a landing of two divisions at Anzio. They could turn Kessel-
ring's long and vulnerable flank up the 'thigh' of Italy. Alexander, the
metaphorical boxer, was preparing to knock his opponent off balance.
'The only method of progress is to concentrate on each dominating
position in turn and so the advance will go slowly step by step', he
assured the CIGS. Alexander was convinced that the longer the Ger-
mans remained south of Rome, the greater ultimately would be the
defeat that could be inflicted upon them. He would batter his way through
the Gustav Line, drawing in as many German divisions as possible,
so that a complete collapse could only be avoided by transferring yet

119
ALEXANDER

more divisions from France. If the US VI Corps advanced audaciously


from Anzio into the German rear, Kesselring's entire army could be
destroyed. But the risk was great. US VI Corps only fielded two divisions.
Churchill was also concerned to ensure 'equality of hazard and sacrifice
between British and American troops' under the new British-dominated
command system. 'I do not like the idea that the first and most risky
operation in the Mediterranean under British Command should fall
exclusively on American troops.' Though Alexander was content that
'This is pretty well fifty
7
fifty', he failed to make his intentions clear
to his American subordinates. Clark virtually undercut his design by
telling Lucas, VI Corps commander, to act cautiously on landing at
23
Anzio.
The on the Gustav Line resulted in the Three Battles of
assault
Cassino, astride the Liri Valley, which were an ordeal for the troops,
as they resembled the battles of attrition of the First World War. The
monastery at Monte Cassino came to assume symbolic importance -
of German resolve and defensive skill. The 'maximum use of artillery
to cover even small attack has avoided exceptionally heavy casualties',
Alexander informed the CIGS. By Third Cassino 1,060 guns were
supplemented by medium and heavy bombers. This emphasis on fire-
power was to a large degree self-defeating. The greater the firepower
deployed, the greater was the destruction of the terrain, and thus the
more mobility was impaired. The operational design was turned on
its head. Instead of US VI Corps seizing the Alban Hills, forcing Kessel-

ring to loosen his grip on the Gustav Line, and trapping them in an
envelopment as Fifth Army advanced up the Liri Valley towards Rome,
Alexander now had to mount a costly offensive to ease pressure on
the beleaguered Anzio beachhead. The Third Battle of Cassino ended
with the destruction of the monastery and the neighbouring communica-
tions, but failed to capture the high ground. Despite 4,000 casualties
for littlegain, Maitland Wilson urged that the offensive continue. Alex-
ander, remembering the ghastly winters of 1916 and 1917, ordered a
24
cessation; hewould wait for better weather.
These battles form the prelude to Alexander's greatest triumph -
Operation Diadem, culminating in the fall of Rome. This campaign
was the most mature example of Alexander's two-handed punch. It aimed
at nothing less than the complete destruction of the German Tenth
Army south of Rome. After Third Cassino Alexander and Harding
took stock. 'We have had a hard and trying time since I last saw you',
Alexander informed Brooke, 'we were a bit rushed into the Anzio landing

120
.

ALEXANDER

- it was put on in 3 weeks, no time to get out a good Corps Commander

and Staff, like Dick McCreery. I had to be content with Lucas . .

- he proved to be an old woman.' Amphibious operations, he argued,


had to be tailored to the strategic aim. His experience had been the
opposite : 'here is so much craft - now make the best of it\ The entire
strategic concept had to be revitalized.

I am regrouping the whole of our forces. The main reason want Oliver
is I

[Leese] to lay on, stage, mount and run the break into and I hope - through
Minouri in the Liri Valley. Between ourselves, Clark and his Army HQ_ are
not up to it, it's too big for them.

Alexander's suspicion of American military capacities had resurfaced


after Shingle, though he gave no hint of it during his dealings with
Clark. 'Have been all round the front with Alex', Clark wrote, 'and
he seemed greatly pleased and very flattering in his remarks on the
25
Fifth Army.' Alexander, it seems, was not incapable of dissimulation.
Diadem opened on 11 May 1944. A greatly strengthened Eighth Army
smashed through the centre of the Gustav Line and in an 'end-run'
overran the Hitler Line that lay behind it. The pivot, or 'left hook',
was to be US II Corps, which was to envelop the enemy's left flank,
advance on the town of Valmontone, south-east of Rome in the enemy's
rear, and block his retreat. This seemed certain once the US VI Corps
had broken out of the Anzio bridgehead and advanced towards the
Alban Hills on 23-26 May. Alexander always assumed that if a plan
could go wrong, then it would; this expectation was to be confirmed
during Diadem. The root of the matter was quite simply that the Allied
Armies in Italy were structurally incapable of fulfilling a strategic design
as ambitious as that set down by Alexander. His international force was
riddled by jealousy, suspicion and intrigue. The two-handed-punch
concept demanded the intimate co-operation of his two Army com-
manders, Clark and Leese, both vain prima donnas. Alexander's combi-
nation of tact and diplomacy eased these tensions under circumstances
in which Montgomery's firmer methods might have been a recipe for
disaster. But he still tended to give Leese the benefit of the doubt.
Clark's jealousy, therefore, was not completely without justification.
Clark was obsessed by two things seizing Rome before Eighth Army
:

and before Overlord. Behind his charming, facile and superficially


accommodating exterior lurked a rampant Anglophobia. 'I feel there
is some inclination on the part of Alexander to commence alibiing for

his Eighth Army', Clark confided to his diary. 'Alexander is worried

121
ALEXANDER

that I have sabotaged his directive to attack Valmontone. I have not


done so.' In fact Clark had: his sabotage lay not so much in his later
claims that there were too many roads in the Valmontone area, or that
US II Corps was too weak to carry out a large-scale envelopment, and
hence that his concentration towards Rome was justified, for these claims
are not without foundation; his error lay in a fundamental misunder-
standing, Clark supposed that the object of battle was not the destruction
of the enemy's army but the seizure of geographical objectives. This
appears to be a major weakness of several American commanders in
the Second World War. All Clark's thoughts were concentrated on the
glory of seizing Rome, and no doubt the greater glory of Mark Clark.
Valmontone was not occupied until after rather than before the fall
of Rome. Diadem may be added to the ignoble catalogue of Allied
victories which failed to bring the battle of annihilation to a final climax
with a crushing and decisive encirclement, followed by a devastating
pursuit. If the tables had been turned it is difficult to imagine the
Wehrmacht (or the Red Army) permitting the enemy to escape. 26
The failure of Diadem to annihilate the German Tenth Army could
be put down to weaknesses inherent in Alexander's consultative style
of command, in which major differences were tacitly swept under the

carpet. might have been better for all concerned if Mark Clark had
It

publicly declared his hand so that Alexander knew where he stood,


rather than merely confided his frustrations to a diary; Alexander's
habitual courtesy made such confrontations virtually impossible. In his
Cyropaedia, Xenophon described Proxenus the Boeotian, 'a good com-
mander for people of a gentlemanly type', who 'imagined that to be
a good general ... it was enough to give praise to those who did well
and to withhold it from those who did badly'. Alexander fitted this
pattern exactly. But those who demanded more 'grip', like Brooke,
tended to underestimate his difficulties, and the impossibility of com-
manding an international force like an extension of the British Territor-
ial Army. As always, Alexander had to make the best of a bad job.

As General Jackson observes, 'He was too experienced to be ruffled


by misfortune.' A photograph was taken of Alexander on 7 June, three
days after the fall of Rome. He stands by the roadside, determined,
hands on hips, elegant, poised, his eyes focused on the distant horizon,
thoughts revolving with some exasperation, like a latter-day Robert E.
Lee, around the problem of how to bring the enemy to battle once
more; for though he won victories, the destruction of the enemy eluded
27
him.

122
ALEXANDER

Concentrating his thoughts on how to defeat the enemy north of


Rome, Alexander faced an additional problem. The ghost of Anvil,
now rechristened Dragoon, returned to haunt him. Earlier efforts to
exorcise the ghost - such as Harding's recommendation that it be abol-
ished - had only stirred up the murky demons of Anglo-American suspi-
cion. As an alternative toAnvil/Dragoon Alexander, in a paper drafted
by Harding, argued that the Germans would be forced to reinforce
their armies in Italy if AAI bounced through the Gothic Line, Kessel-
ring's new defensive position, seized Bologna and drove towards Vienna
through the Ljubljana Gap. The CCS were not persuaded; instead
he lost a US Corps and the Free French Corps. 'It seems to me that
it would be criminal to throw away such a wonderful opportunity of

bringing off a really great coup', Alexander wrote. As for his armies,
'the whole forms one closely articulated machine capable of carrying
out assault and rapid exploitation in the most difficult terrain. Neither
the Apennines nor even the Alps should prove a serious obstacle to
their enthusiasm and their skill. Here Alexander could be forgiven
'

some pardonable exaggeration, but he rather glossed over the formidable


topographical problems facing AAI, which would worsen as it advanced
northwards. The plan was too ambitious and could the more easily
be dismissed by the Americans as impracticable. As Alexander wrote
to Brooke, his armies had been 'torn to pieces by the demands for
Dragoon. . .Everyone was sympathetic and helpful and I returned
.

to Italy with hopes - I won't say with high hopes.' These hopes were
28
not to be fulfilled in his next major offensive.
In September 1944 Alexander launched Operation Olive. He did not
outnumber the enemy, still fielding 18 divisions against 23 German.
Leese planned a concentrated blow without the co-operation of Clark,
whom he disliked. Clark complained that Alexander was deliberately
letting German reserves build up on the Fifth Army front, to smooth
the path for Eighth Army's advance. The contrary was true. Alexander
saw one more opportunity for a double envelopment before winter closed
in. By drawing the German reserves against the Eighth Army, Fifth

Army would be permitted to strike against Bologna from the west. By


the end of September, Leese had broken through the Gothic Line,
but the rain-drenched valleys were as unsuitable for armoured warfare
as the mountains, and both armies plunged into a muddy quagmire,
exhausted before they could reach Bologna. Once more Alexander would
wait for the spring.
The autumn of 1944 brought Alexander a field-marshal's baton for

123
ALEXANDER

his victories in Diadem, and in November he was promoted Supreme


Commander Mediterranean, to replace Maidand Wilson who was sent
to Washington head the British Military Mission. Clark succeeded
to
Alexander in the now restored 15th Army Group. Within a month Alex-
ander dispatched a long 'Memorandum on the Command and Staff
Organization in the Mediterranean Theatre of Operations', arguing
that to bring the enemy to battle on ground on which he must stand
and fight, was dependent on mobility and economy of force. To achieve
this, the Mediterranean theatre must be expanded beyond Italy to

embrace Austria and Yugoslavia. To continue to engage the enemy along


a series of short river lines would be to fight him at a disadvantage.

If we provide ourselves with the means to engage the enemy anywhere on


a front extended from the Dravina through Istria to the Adige line and thence
across the Alps to the Swiss frontier, the economy of force which the enemy
can effect by withdrawing to the Adige will be counteracted and our mobility
will again have full scope.

Alexander, distant from London, had miscalculated the prevailing mood


in the Anglo-American alliance, and failed to grasp what Brooke had
already appreciated, namely that Churchill's support for such a grand
design was almost a sine qua non of a plan's rejection. Moreover, Brooke
resented this unwelcome intrusion into the planning process; he
regarded it as a red rag to the American bull which would render all
efforts at changing Eisenhower's 'broad front' advance into Germany
29
the more difficult.

The finale of Alexander's military career was prefaced by a short


prelude in Athens. The Greece at the end of 1944 was relished
crisis in

by Alexander, jumping and out of tanks, snipers' bullets flying in


in
the streets, urgent decisions required on the spot - he was in his element.
Tightening the British grip in Athens ensured that whatever happened
in Eastern Europe in lieu of an advance on Vienna, Greece would
not be counted in the Communist camp.
The most acute student of Alexander's campaigns, General Jackson,
considers the spring offensive of 1945 a 'masterpiece'. When Brooke
visited Italy en route to Moscow in December 1944 he was pessimistic.
'Alex is getting stuck in the Apennines with tired forces and cannot
spare any for amphibious operations. ... It is therefore hard to estimate
what the situation will be when Alex can find forces, namely in February.'
After the Yalta Conference he was instructed to exert pressure but seize
any opportunities that presented themselves. Alexander responded,

124
ALEXANDER

despite these difficulties, with the complete military victory that had
eluded him the year before. The plan was initiated by a deception scheme
that persuaded von Vietinghoff, who had succeeded Kesselring, to move
his reserves to the Adriatic coast to throw back into the sea an amphibious
landing which Alexander lacked the forces to launch. By thinning the
westerly end of the line, Fifth Army would strike west of Bologna, while
Eighth Army would smash through the Argenta Gap. The victory was
completed south of the Po - the Fifth and Eighth Armies joining hands
at a town called Finale. An armistice was agreed with the defeated

German forces commencing 2 May 1945. 30


Though the Second World War was over, Alexander's career was
not. Asked by Churchill to assume the responsibilities of Governor-
General of Canada, he later entered the political arena in 1952 as Minister
of Defence, finally retiring to his brushes and easel in 1954. Though
the most noble in character of Churchill's generals -
selfless, diffident,

he cared nothing for praise - he was also the most enigmatic. He had
none of Montgomery's iron dedication to the profession of arms, Slim's
intellect, or Auchinleck's instinctive grasp of the ebb and flow of battle.
Yet he rose to the pinnacle of his profession, and would have been
CIGS, if Churchill had not persuaded him to go to Ottawa instead.
Liddell Hart once wrote perceptively that 'Alexander was a born leader,
not a made one. He won men's confidence at first sight. He was "good
looking" in every sense, yet self-effacing to the point of handicapping
his own powers.' Not subscribing to the view that Alexander lacked
brains, Liddell Hart believed that Alexander, though highly intelligent
with an open mind, was fundamentally a lazy general: 'success came
so quickly and continuously that there was no compelling pressure to
set him to the grindstone of hard application' despite his eminence
;

'he might have been a greater commander if he had not been so nice
31
a man, and so deeply a gentieman'.
The on Alexander's generalship was that he was not
final verdict

a great soldier, though he was a strategist of some insight. Alexander


was not a great diplomat, though he had a remarkable facility for making
divergent and powerful personalities work together. Alexander was not
a great battlefield commander, though he never lost a battle. Alexander
could never be said to be a master of detail, nor a managerial wizard,
though his armies operated over the most difficult terrain encountered
in the European theatre of operations, and yet they were universally
regarded as well administered. Like another successful commander con-
sidered unintelligent by several critics, George Washington, the whole

125
ALEXANDER

of Alexander's talents were greater than the sum of their parts. Judged
by the demanding standards of his Edwardian ideals, the career of
Alexander was a very great success.

NOTES
The author is grateful to the Trustees of the Liddell Hart Centre for Military
Archives, King's College, London, for permission to quote from copyright
material in their possession,
i Harold Nicolson, The English Sense of Humour and Other Essays (London:
Constable, 1956), p. 44.
2 Nigel Nicolson, Alex : The Life ofField Marshal Earl Alexander of Tunis (Lon-
don: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1973), pp. 15-22; Norman Hillson, Alexander
of Tunis (London : W.H. Allen, 1952), pp. 10-14.

3 On Holden Reid,
the British Army's attitude to the intellect, see Brian
(London: Macmillan, 1987), p. 82; H. Nicol-
Jf.F.C. Fuller: Military Thinker
son, The English Sense ofHumour, p. 33.
4 Rudyard Kipling, Irish Guards in the Great War (London: Macmillan, 1923),
II, p. 13.

5 Ibid., II, p. 215.

6 Ibid., II, p. 117m: W.G.F. Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as Military Commander


(London: Batsford, 1971), pp. 59, 64; Alexander to Liddell Hart, 2 July
1957, Liddell Hart Papers 1 7 30.
7 David Fraser, Alanbrooke (London: Collins, 1982), p. 162; Nigel Hamilton,
Monty, I, The Making of a General, 1887-1942 (London: Hamish Hamilton,
1981), p. 583 (this quotation is reported in an interview with Lieutenant-
General Sir Ian Jacob) Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as Military Commander,
;

pp. 71, 72, 88. If Montgomery had such a low opinion of Alexander, it
was rather odd that he found it most valuable to take a number of students
from the Staff College, Quetta, to study his methods in this campaign on
the ground.
8 N. Nicolson, Alex, pp. 104-14 Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as Military
;
Com-
mander, pp. 103, 105-9; Hamilton, Monty, I, pp. 389-90; Montgomery of
Alamein, Memoirs (London: Collins, 1958), p. 64.

9 John North (ed.), The Alexander Memoirs 1940-45 (London: Cassell, 1962),
pp. 75-81; N. Nicolson, Alex, p. 23; Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as Military
Commander, pp. 113, 118-19; Arthur Bryant, The Turn of the Tide (London:
Collins, 1957), p. 257; Field-Marshal Viscount Slim, Defeat into Victory (Lon-
don Papermac, 1986 edn), pp.
: 14-15.
10 Ibid., p. 55 ; Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as Military Commander, p. 123.

n Ibid., pp. 137-40.

12 Fraser, Alanbrooke, pp. 271-2, 285-6, 347.


13 N. Nicolson, Alex, pp. 153, 155, 157, 160-6.

126
ALEXANDER

14 Alexander to CIGS, 10 Dec. 1942, Alanbrooke Papers 14/63.


15 CIGS to Alexander, 20 Feb. 1943; Alexander to CIGS, 27 Feb. 1943, ibid.,
14/63.
16 Notes on Recent Operations of US II Corps, 3 Apr. 1943; Alexander to
CIGS, 3 Apr. 1943, ibid., 14/63 ; Fraser, Alanbrooke, p. 315.

17 Brian Holden Reid, 'J.F.C. Fuller's Theory of Mechanized Warfare', The


Journal of Strategic Studies, I (1978), p. 296 ; Jackson, Alexander of Tunis
as Military Commander, pp. 95, 204; Alexander to CIGS, 20 Mar. 1943,
Alanbrooke Papers 14/63 Hamilton, Monty, ; II, Master of the Battlefield (Lon-
don Hamish Hamilton, 1983), pp. 237-41.
:

18 Alexander to CIGS, 19 May 1943, Alanbrooke Papers 14/63 Harold Macmil- ;

lan, War Diaries: The Mediterranean, 1943-1945 (London: Macmillan, 1984),


pp. 47, 154, 374 (entries for 21 Mar., 18 July i943> 29 Jan. 1944).
19 Montgomery to Alexander, 13 Mar., 7 Apr. 1943, Alexander Papers PRO
WO214/20; N. Nicolson, Alex, pp. 195-8 Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as ;

Military Commander, pp. 211-18; Hamilton, Master of the Battlefield, p. 270.


20 Dominick Graham and Shelford Bidwell, Tug of War: The Battle for Italy,
1943-45 (London Jonathan Cape, 1986), p. 139; Alexander to Prime Minis-
:

ter, 16 Sept. 1943, Alexander Papers PRO WO214/20.

21 Prime Minister to Alexander, 2 Oct. 1943, ibid., PRO WO214/13; Graham


and Bidwell, Tug of War, p. 109.
22 Fraser, Alanbrooke, p. 394; Michael Carver, Harding ofPetherton (London:
Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1978), pp. 121, 123; N. Nicolson, Alex, p. 242.

23 Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as Military Commander, pp. 259-60; Alexander


to CIGS, 23 Oct. 1943, Alexander Papers PRO WO214/13 ; Carver, Harding,
p. 125.

24 Alexander to CIGS, 25 Sept. 1943, Alexander Papers, PRO WO214/13;


Carver, Harding, p. 133.

25 Alexanderto CIGS, 22 Mar. 1944, Alanbrooke Papers 14/65; Martin


Blumenson, Mark Clark (London Cape, 1985), p. 210. :

26 Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as Military Commander, pp. 287-92; Graham


and Bidwell, Tug of War, pp. 335-40, who emphasize other opportunities
for encirclement; Blumenson, Clark, p. 211; N. Nicolson, Alex, pp. 248-54,
based on interviews with Clark, tends to give him the benefit of the doubt.
27 Xenophon, The Persian (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1949), II,
Expedition
6, pp. 91-2; Jackson, Alexander of Tunis as Military Commander, p. 282.
28 Alexander to CIGS, 8 June 1944; Alexander to Maitland Wilson, 13 June
1944, Alexander Papers PRO WO214/15; Alexander to CIGS, 21 Sept. 1944,
Alanbrooke Papers 14/65.
29 Memorandum on the Command and Staff Organization in the Mediter-
ranean Theatre of Operations, Dec. 1944, Alanbrooke Papers 14/66; Jack-
1

son, Alexander of Tunis as Military Commander, pp. 305-9.


30 Fraser, Alanbrooke, pp. 469, 480.

127
ALEXANDER

31 Extracts from an article written by BHLH in June 1946, Liddell Hart Papers
1/7/54A.

CHRONOLOGY: HAROLD ALEXANDER


1891, December 10 Born in Chesterfield Gardens, Mayfair, London
1902 Sent to St Michael's, Westgate-on-Sea, preparatory
school (Hawtrey's)
1906 Harrow
1910 Sandhurst
1911, September 23 Commissioned as Second Lieutenant, 1st Battalion
Guards
Irish

1914 Lieutenant
1914, September Legion of Honour
1915, February Captain
1915, August Transferred 2nd BattalionIrish Guards

1915, September Awarded Military Cross (MC)


1915, October Temporary Command 1st Battalion Irish Guards
1916, September Awarded Distinguished Service Order (DSO)
1917, October Commander 2nd Battalion Irish Guards
1918, March Temporary Command 4 Guards Brigade
1918, October Command X Corps School
1919, March Allied Relief Commission, Poland
I9i9,july Commander Baltic Landeswehr
1922, May Lieutenant-Colonel, commander 1st Battalion Irish
Guards
1926 Staff College (Colonel ; temporarily reduced to Major
while student)
1927 Commander Regimental District Irish Guards
1930 Imperial Defence College
i93i Marries Lady Margaret Bingham, younger daughter of
Earl ofLucan
1932 GSOi Northern Command
1934, April BrigadierCommanding Nowshera Brigade
1935 Loe Agra and Mohmand Campaigns
1938 Major-General Commanding 1st Division; ADC to
King George VI
1939, May 1st Division sent to France
1940, May Advance to Dyle retreat
; to Dunkirk
1940, May 31 Commander I Corps and Dunkirk perimeter
1940, June 2 Final evacuation at Dunkirk
1940, December Lieutenant-GeneralGOC-in-C Southern Command
;

1942, New Year Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB)

128
ALEXANDER

1942, February Commander, Army in Burma


1942, March Evacuation of Burma
1942, May Burma Army arrives in India
1942, July GOC First Army
1942, August Commander-in-Chief Middle East
1943, February General C-in-C 18th Army Group Deputy Supreme
; ;

Commander
1943, May Fall of Tunis

1943, June C-in-C 15th Army Group


1943 July Invasion of Sicily; Governor of Sicily
1943, September Operation Avalanche - Salerno
1944, January Operation Shingle - Anzio
1944, January-March Three Battles of Cassino

1944, May Operation Diadem


1944, June Fall of Rome; opposes Operation Anvil
1944, September Operation Olive
1944, November Field-Marshal Supreme Allied
; Commander
Mediterranean
1944, December Visits Athens during Greek crisis

1945, April Final offensive in Italy


1945, May Unconditional surrender of German forces in Italy

1945, October Hands over command in Italy

1946, New Year Created Viscount Alexander of Tunis Knight of the


;

Garter
1946, April Governor- General of Canada
1946, August Colonel of the Irish Guards
1952, January Created Earl Alexander of Tunis
1952, February Minister of Defence
1954, October Resigns from Cabinet
1957-65 Lieutenant of the County of London
1958 Order of Merit
1969, June Dies

129
7
AUCHINLECK
Field-Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck

PHILIP WARNER

Field-Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck was one of the most capable


generals of the Second World War but through a combination of misfor-
tunes was unable to stay to the end at the operational centres where
the ultimate accolades w ere
r
to be won. Like his contemporary Wavell,
he was faced with virtually impossible tasks and then, having failed
to complete them to Churchill's satisfaction, he was moved out to what
appeared to be a backwater appointment, that of Commander-in-Chief
India. In the event, his presence in this post had a greater effect on
the outcome of the war than is generally realized, for he mobilized
the resources of the subcontinent with great skill, thus enabling India
to send invaluable troops and supplies to several fronts. The final irony

of his career was that he was required to preside over the partition
of the country which he loved and was unable to slow down government
policy sufficiently to prevent widespread bloodshed.
Surprisingly he never became embittered, even though his wife left
him and colleague, he was childless, and he watched others
for a friend
receive the credit he had earned. A lesser man might have been consumed
with envy or self-pity, the Auk, on the other hand, could have been
the subject of Kipling's poem 'If, able to '. meet triumph and disaster/
. .

And treat those two impostors just the same.'

130
AUCHINLECK

Claude John Eyre Auchinleck was born in Aldershot on 21 June 1884,


the eldest son of Colonel John Auchinleck R.A. His father died of
pernicious anaemia when the boy was eight, and his mother was left
to bring up four children with no other resources than an army pension
of £90 per annum. However, army wives were used to coping with
unexpected disasters in the course of their husbands' careers, and Mary
Auchinleck faced her problems cheerfully and was soon supplementing
her slender means by doing a little part-time nursing when the children
were at school. The Auchinlecks were a closely knit family and these
early struggles undoubtedly helped to create the stoic attitude which
characterized Auchinleck in the future. He was devoted to his mother.
Ironically, it was his fervent wish to give her a memorable holiday that
caused him to take her to Hyeres in the south of France for the first
visit abroad he had been able to afford for her (although he was then

in his mid-thirties), and this produced a meeting with his future wife
and a marriage that was to end in disaster twenty-five years later.
As the son of a deceased officer, Auchinleck was eligible for a Founda-
tion place at Wellington College, Berkshire, which he entered at the
age of twelve. Foundationers had their fees reduced to £10 a year, but
even that sum was a struggle for his mother to find. Conditions at home
and at school were spartan and were even more so when he went to
stay with his mother's relations in Ireland. This upbringing seems to
have instilled in Auchinleck an indifference to personal comfort which
was useful in his military career, but which irritated Churchill when
he came to visit Auchinleck in Egypt many years later. Although not
distinguished academically, Auchinleck did well at Wellington and was
awarded the Derby Gift, a prize for industry and good conduct. The
sum was approximately £50, a marvellous bounty for a boy who had
never seen so much money. It proved very useful in the next stage
of his career, for he had now passed into Sandhurst. By a further stroke
of luck he had reached a high enough position in the entrance examin-
ation to be accepted for the Indian Army. Forty-five places had been
allocated and Auchinleck took the forty-fifth. The number of places
in the Indian Army fluctuated from year to year. When, a few years
later, Montgomery tried for the Indian Army, there were only thirty-five

places and his position in the order was thirty-sixth.


In India Auchinleck joined the 62nd Punjabis and soon showed a
marked aptitude for learning local languages. His ability to converse
fluently with his soldiers, and his understanding of their dialects, cus-
toms and religions helped to create a mutual respect. There were, of

131
AUCHINLECK

course, many other Indian Army officers who acquired a close under-
standing of the customs and language of the soldiers under their com-
mand, but few made as great an impression as the charismatic
Auchinleck. It was said that he was never happier than when in a frontier
village talking and reminiscing with former soldiers of the Indian Army.
His early days on the frontier, where constant alertness and keen obser-
vation were essential for survival, also helped to develop an instinct
for sensing impending trouble. Up on the frontier, warfare large or
small was regarded as a way of life and a tribesman would take a shot
at someone he did not know, or even someone he did, without giving
much thought to the matter. The price of life, rather than the price
of peace, was eternal vigilance.
On the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, the Indian government
offered four divisions to Britain for service overseas. The first three
went to France, but the fourth, which contained Auchinleck's regiment,
was a reserve division which was not mobilized till 28 October. Although
it too was earmarked for France, it was diverted en route to be deployed

along the Suez Canal, ready for a possible Turkish invasion. The Turks,
who had entered the war on the side of Germany, were under the impres-
sion that if they entered Egypt the entire country would rise and over-
throw the British government. This ambition gave Auchinleck his first
experience of battle it was in February 1915. He was now a captain
;

and, after his regiment had checked the Turkish attempt at crossing
the Canal, he led a counter-attack which captured the forward Turkish
trenches. The Turks surrendered and the battle was over. After some
further skirmishes in the region, the 62nd Punjabis were sent to Basra
as part of the 6th Indian Division. From Basra they were sent upstream
(the Tigris) and were soon involved in heavy fighting in appalling con-
ditions. Continuous rain had turned the entire area into a sticky swamp
and the bitterly cold wind seemed as dangerous an enemy as the Turkish
machine-gunners. Nearly half the regiment became casualties. Auchin-
leck had now fought in mountains, on torrid plains, and in liquid mud.
In the future he would experience snow and desert sand. Subsequently,
when he became a general, he would know from first-hand experience
all the conditions in which his soldiers might have to fight, except jungle,

and he demonstrated later that he understood that also.


The Mesopotamia (Iraq) campaign has tended to be dismissed by
historians as a 'sideshow', not comparable with the great battles in
France. In terms of numbers this is true but for the individual soldier
with a bullet coming in his direction it makes no difference whether

132
AUCHINLECK

he is part of a patrol or a D-Day size army. After a fierce battle in


1916, the 62nd Punjabis were down to 247 men and, as the commanding
officer had been wounded, Auchinleck took his place. In the later stages
of this campaign the 62nd saw plenty more fighting and was also tor-
mented by the diseases and pests which affect armies in the field. Lice,
bugs and fleas not only produce disease but they also disturb sleep
and thus impair efficiency and judgement. Auchinleck had ample oppor-
tunity of observing the importance of rest, hygiene, medical supplies
and good food for troops in the field, even though most of his deductions
would be made from their absence, rather than their presence. He also
learnt much about faulty tactics and the stupidity of sending infantry
to charge machine-guns sited in well-positioned trenches. He resolved
that if he reached high command himself he would avoid all pointless
bravado attacks, knowing only too well that these are often ordered
because a general can think of nothing better and is afraid that if he
waits until a more promising opportunity occurs, he will be considered
to be lacking in offensive spirit. Later, in the Western Desert, he showed
moral courage in holding to his convictions even though urged by Chur-
chill and others to take the offensive without adequate training, prep-

aration and material. Unfortunately it cost him his command.


In the 1920s Auchinleck was a student at the Staff College at Quetta,
held various staff appointments, attended the Imperial Defence College
(now called the Royal College of Defence Studies), and commanded
his battalion when it was stationed at Jhelum. In the early 1930s he
was back at the Staff College at Quetta, now as an instructor and a
full colonel. In 1933 he was given command of the Peshawar Brigade,

which was engaged in quelling disturbances originating in Afghanistan.


Subsequently the frontier was enlivened by the Mohmand operation
of 1935, when tanks were used for the first time in India. Auchinleck
received both the CSI and another mention in despatches for his skill
in handling the Mohmand campaign.
After a period of leave, he was once again promoted, this time to
become Deputy Chief of the General Staff, India. His new post took
him away from the area where he could make his own simple, clear-cut
decisions in the future he would be dealing with committees and policy-
;

makers, many of them having ideas widely differing from his own.
Among this tasks were the modernization of the Indian Army and at
the same time supervising its 'Indianization'. The latter meant replacing
British officers by Indians; it was easy enough to get rid of the former
but finding replacements for them of equal standards of training and

133
;

AUCHINLECK

experience was far more of a problem.


On the outbreak of war in 1939 Auchinleck was given command of
3rd Indian Division with the brief of preparing it for war. At that time
few people in India regarded the war as a serious threat to their existence
even if it it would be confined to Europe, they believed.
continued
From thiscomplacent atmosphere Auchinleck was relieved to be posted
to England in January 1940 it was to take command of IV Corps and
;

prepare it for taking up position in France around Lille in six months'


time. In the event, six months later, the only British troops in France

were prisoners of war.


IV Corps was a mixture of Regular and Territorial Army units, mostly
untrained. Its component parts were scattered over Britain from Peebles-
shire to Dorset. Travelling to visit the various parts of his command
was made doubly difficult by weather which many described as 'the
worst in living memory'. Nevertheless the Corps began to take shape
and there were hopes that, by the time it reached France, it would
be reasonably efficient. But on 9 April the Germans, who had a non-
aggression treaty with Denmark, invaded that country, which capitulated
within hours. On the same day, German forces seized Oslo, Stavanger,
Bergen, Trondheim and Narvik. The war which had been nicknamed
by American journalists 'the phoney war', had now become real. The
Norwegians, who had also been neutrals, were able to put up a stronger
resistance than the unfortunate Danes. Their country is three times
as large as Britain but at that time had a population of only three million.
Half the land is over three thousand feet above sea level and only thirty
per cent of the total area is cultivated. Bodo and Narvik are both within
the Arctic circle.
Although the Germans had prepared the way for their Norwegian
venture by training and equipping suitable troops and establishing a
network of fifth columnists, they did not complete this campaign without
loss, particularly in naval forces. After the initial surprise, the Allies
decided that their best policy would be a counter-attack and the most
suitable objectivewould be Narvik. Other ports would be captured later
if matterswent well.
This somewhat optimistic plan proceeded more slowly than expected,
so after two weeks the Chief of Staff decided that Mackesy, the local
commander, should be replaced by Auchinleck. The basis of this
decision seems to have been that because Auchinleck was accustomed
to mountainous terrain on the North West Frontier he would find himself
equally at home among the snow-covered peaks and valleys of Norway.

134
AUCHINLECK

Auchinleck thereupon drew up a minimum shopping list of military


requirements. He assumed that air cover would be though
available,
of course it was not, but the 'minimum requirements' he were
listed

so obviously impossible that they indicated that to attempt the campaign


with anything less would be a waste of time, material and lives. In the
event, it proved to be all three of them. Auchinleck's calm, deliberate
attitude annoyed Churchill, at that time First Lord of the Admiralty,
who had high hopes of a successful Norwegian campaign. Churchill's
attitude to Auchinleck was ambivalent: he admired him as a soldier
and as a man, but he found that Auchinleck's determination not to
make a bad situation worse - as he saw it - was infuriating.
In fact the campaign developed much as Auchinleck had envisaged.
The expedition set off with inadequate equipment. Auchinleck had
insisted it must take 3.7 anti-aircraft guns. These were loaded on to
one ship and their ammunition on another. When the latter was sunk,
the guns were useless no one had thought of dividing guns and ammu-
:

nition equally between the two ships. They did not set off for Norway
until 7 May. On the third day of the four-day journey, a message was
received to say that the Nazis had now launched an attack through the
Low Countries towards France. Nevertheless, when Auchinleck landed
on the nth he had no orders to cancel his instruction to capture Narvik;
in any event, he did not become the official commander until the 13th.
On 18 May Admiral of the Fleet Lord Cork and Orrery, who was
the overall commander of the expedition, received a message from Lon-
don that a total evacuation of Norway might be a possibility. Meanwhile,
in France Lord Gort, the British Commander-in-Chief, was on the
point of telling London that a retreat to Dunkirk might now be essential
if any part of his force was to be saved. Cork then sent a message

to London saying Narvik had still not been captured and, even if it
were, it would be of no use in the immediate future. This was followed
by a telegram from Auchinleck specifying minimum requirements for
this stage in the battle but saying that he would do his best with the
inadequate material and forces he possessed. On 24 May, Lord Cork
received a telegram from the War Cabinet saying that the Norwegian
force must be evacuated, as it was now urgently required for the defence
of the United Kingdom. By 7 June the evacuation was complete.
The Norwegian campaign had done nothing for Auchinleck's repu-
tation either way. The few tactical moves he had been able to make
had been effective enough, but he realized that - short of a miracle
- the enterprise was doomed from the start. The only positive gain

135
AUCHINLECK

was that had enabled him to observe British and French troops on
it

active service. Many of these were inexperienced and, though the poten-
tial was there, it would require long and hard training. Of the two

forces, the French had impressed him most. The report to the War
Cabinet, in which he conveyed this information, was not well received,
and it was suggested that the long period he had spent in India had
given him a false perspective. Nevertheless he was immediately instructed
to form V Corps, for the defence of Southern England. Although a
Corps normally contains three divisions, this one was composed of two
only, the maximum number which could be equipped with material
in England the equipment for the remaining twenty-two potential div-
:

isions had been left behind in France. The defence of Britain therefore
rested on some fort}' thousand men; the area they had to cover was
not less than one hundred miles.
On 19 July, Auchinleck was again promoted, this time to GOC South-
ern Command. His former command was given to Major-General (now
Lt-General) B.L. Montgomery, and from then on clashes between the
two were continuous. Auchinleck was aware that Montgomery's defiance
and insubordination were deliberate, rather than accidental, but he hesit-
ated to dismiss him and create a crisis at such a dangerous time. He
decided to exercise great patience with Montgomery, although he had
to reprimand him for various unorthodox practices, such as arranging
the transfer of officers from other formations (whose commanders were
extremely annoyed) by making direct approaches to the Adjutant-
General. Auchinleck's anti-invasion policy was to meet the Germans
on the beaches and destroy them there and then Montgomery disagreed
;

and wished to keep his main strength in reserve until the Germans
had landed a substantial force, which he would then, theoretically, des-
troy; he accepted Auchinleck's orders under protest. Four years later,
when the Allies invaded France, Rommel wished to attack them as they
landed, but von Rundstedt believed it would be better to destroy them
when they were ashore. Fortunately for the Allies, von Runstedt's views
prevailed and were obviously wrong.
Not least of Auchinleck's achievements at this time was the manner
in which he organized and inspired the Home Guard. With his encour-
agement it became a strong military asset, very different from the
traditional 'Dad's Army' concept.
By November 1940 the immediate threat of invasion seemed to have
passed. The Middle East, which contained most of the Allies' oil sup-
pliers, now seemed more vulnerable than the United Kingdom. Surpris-

136
:

AUCHINLECK

ingly, Churchill authorized the despatch of tanks and arms to the Medi-
terranean area, even though the defences of Britain were far from
adequate. In November Auchinleck was appointed Commander-in-
Chief India and promoted to full general; his post of GOC Southern
Command went to Lieutenant-General Alexander.
Auchinleck's transfer to India indicated the importance which the
War Cabinet now attached to that country. It could clearly be a source
of many divisions of trained troops, all equipped from local manufactur-
ing resources. It could also act as a deterrent to the Japanese, who
were becoming increasingly belligerent, now that their European allies,
Germany and Italy, appeared to be so consistently successful. But India
could also be an area of much trouble. The country was known to
be full of agitators and demagogues, who might choose this awkward
moment to create the maximum problems for the British government
in India. If they should manage to subvert portions of the army, a highly
dangerous situation would be created. To avert this, a man who was
honoured and liked was needed to command the Indian Army. There
was no more suitable person than Auchinleck, even though his removal
from the front line to the support area seemed surprising.
One of Auchinleck's first moves in his new post was to despatch
a force to Iraq, where it placed a vital part in crushing the Rashid
Ali rebellion. This prompt action pleased Churchill, who was deeply
concerned about the possibility of German forces obtaining a foothold
in such a vital strategic area. Churchill had felt that Auchinleck's 'mini-
mum requirements' for the Norway campaign indicated a cautious out-
look: now he saw that he had a clear, realistic mind and could act
quickly when he thought it necessary. In his history of the Second
World War, Churchill wrote

When after Narvik he had taken over Southern Command I received from
many quarters, official and private, testimony to the vigour and structure he
had given to that important region. His appointment as Commander-in-Chief
in India had been generally acclaimed. We had seen how forthcoming he had
been in sending troops to Basra and the ardour with which he had addressed
himself to the suppression of the revolt in Iraq.

This revised opinion now made Churchill decide that Auchinleck should
replace Wavell as C-in-C Middle East as soon as possible, even though
he had been in India for only a short time. On 21 June telegrams were
sent to Wavell and Auchinleck informing them of his decision to change
them over. One can understand Churchill favourable results were badly
:

137
AUCHINLECK

needed and he felt that Wavell was now too exhausted to achieve them.
Churchill was, of course, under great pressure himself, both from his
own Parliament and from German air raids which had been killing
about a thousand people a night.
Sir John Dill, the CIGS, wrote to Auchinleck, warning him that
Churchill would expect good results early and if he could not provide
them he must explain why very diplomatically. Unfortunately Auchinleck
was a soldier, not a diplomat, and his insistence on making decisions
for military, rather than political, reasons would soon begin to alienate
Churchill's sympathies.
From then on, Auchinleck's military fortunes began to decline. The
area in which he was expected to campaign was new to it was
him;
also vast, being approximately the size of India. His opponent was one
of the most talented German generals, Erwin Rommel. Nevertheless
he was fully He
began by once more stating
capable of winning victories.
his minimum requirements. Although these were met in numbers of
men, tanks and guns, none were of the calibre necessary to defeat Rom-
mel's forces. The troops he received from England were inexperienced
in war and would requiretraining and acclimatization before they could
be of any use in the desert; the army he had inherited from Wavell
was tired, and inclined to be dispirited. The guns he possessed were
totally inadequate for destroying German tanks. His own tanks were
far inferior to the German panzers. His experienced eye told him this,

and it was confirmed by reports from units in the field.


Unfortunately for Auchinleck, Churchill was receiving information
from the most closely guarded secret source in the war - Ultra, of
which the story has now been told elsewhere. Ultra intercepted Rommel's
pathetic laments to his higher command, his sad reports of the inad-
equacy of his numbers of tanks, troops, guns and aircraft. The War
Cabinet, one of the few bodies entitled to receive this information,
believed every word of Rommel's hard-luck story, apparently unaware
that no field commander ever had enough troops or material. The Ger-
man High Command was not deceived it knew that Rommel had the
:

efficient PzIII and PzIV tanks and 88 mm guns, all of which were far
superior to anything the British army possessed. The most iniquitous
aspect of this situation was that, during W'avell's last, unsuccessful cam-
paign, one of Rommel's tanks had been captured intact and shipped
back to England for detailed examination. Although the armour of the
tank was case-hardened and therefore capable of resisting everything
which British anti-tank guns could launch against it, this fact was not

138
AUCHINLECK

appreciated until nine months later. In the interval Auchinleck had been
prevailed upon to launch an offensive which after initial success had
achieved little. Auchinleck was fully aware that unless he had superiority
in quantity to overcome his army's deficiencies in quality, any further
offensive action was doomed.
This eminently sensible policy infuriated Churchill, who was unaware
of the facts behind the situation - facts which should have been made
clear to the War Cabinet by technical intelligence. He began to feel
that he had made a mistake in appointing Auchinleck, who was not
going to be the forceful, adventurous commander he required. Even
Auchinleck did not know why his tanks and guns were so inferior to
the Germans', but he did know that if he went into battle as Churchill
was constantly urging him to do, the result would be catastrophe. Meth-
odically he began to build up an army which would bring victory and
satisfy Churchill.

The jackals were now beginning to snap around Auchinleck's feet.

The disgust with which he had viewed the idlers of Cairo in their
huge, unnecessary and cumbersome bureaucracy had caused him to
make sweeping changes. He had left his wife in India, so that he would
not be distracted in any way from his demanding task, and even this
was seen as a character fault. A fact which was overlooked was that
he had authorized the formation of the SAS (Special Air Service), which
had taken a dramatic toll of German aircraft while they were still on
the ground. Surprisingly, the man criticized by Churchill for being
unenterprising was considered by many to be too favourable to unortho-
dox and venturesome units. But with the hindsight of history we can
see that his policy of giving opportunity to new ideas, while refusing
to throw away lives by reckless moves urged upon him by the government
at home, saved many Western Desert.
lives in the

An had been launched by the Eighth Army in


offensive (Crusader)
November 1941 but after initial success, which included the relief of
Tobruk, was forced back to the Gazala line. During the next four months
Churchill constantly urged Auchinleck to take the offensive once more,
even though three divisions and a substantial part of the Desert Air
Force had been sent to other theatres, and promised equipment was
still lacking.
Eventually, when Auchinleck, still with misgivings, was ready to begin
his own offensive in May, Rommel struck first. His equipment
skill, his
and his generalship proved too much for the Eighth Army, which
through June 1942 was gradually torn to pieces. By the 25th of that

139
AUCHINLECK

month Auchinleck had decided to take over command in the field him-
self. At this moment he showed what a skilful fighting general he was.

On i July, Rommel was stopped at El Alamein.


A few weeks later, Auchinleck was accused, mainly by Montgomery,
of having a defensive, defeatist attitude to the war. The injustice of
this slander was almost ludicrous. Rommel's advance to Cairo had been
stopped by Auchinleck by lively, aggressive tactics ; his efforts to break
through were frustrated at every point. At the end ofJuly Rommel admit-
ted in his despatches that he had been outfought. 'I could weep', he said.
But Auchinleck's magnificent performance was not enough to satisfy
Churchill, who felt that as Rommel had been checked now was the
time to put in a counter-attack and drive him right back to beyond
Benghazi. Auchinleck was too wise to make such a foolish move.
Experience had shown him that once the Eighth Army left its tight
position, Rommel's superior armour and guns would slice it to pieces.
Then Rommel would come back once more and there would be nothing
to hold him at Alamein this time.
Auchinleck did not rule out an offensive in the near future, but before
he could launch it he would need to rebuild his battered army with
more troops, tanks and guns. This would take time. When, in August,
Churchill flew out to visit Auchinleck in the field, he asked him point-
blank how long it would take to prepare for a new offensive. Auchinleck
replied, 'Six weeks.' Churchill, already annoyed at having to come out
to see Auchinleck, who had steadfastly refused to leave his command
and come home, was far from pleased. The spartan conditions in
Auchinleck's field headquarters did not please him either. He decided
that Auchinleck must be replaced by a more forceful, more amenable
commander. He proposed therefore to appoint Auchinleck to a new
Middle East Command made up of Palestine, Syria, Iraq and Persia.
Alexander should replace him as Commander-in-Chief Middle East
and Major-General 'Strafer' Gott should take over the Eighth Army,
which Auchinleck had been commanding personally for the critical July
battles. Unfortunately for this plan, Gott was then killed in an air crash.
Asked whom he would now recommend to command Eighth Army,
Auchinleck suggested Montgomery. At the same time he himself was
not prepared to accept the ramshackle command in the Middle East
which he had been offered.
Undoubtedly Auchinleck was too high-minded for his own good.
He should have been more sympathetic to Churchill's predicament and
given him forecasts which, even if he could not fulfil them, would be

140
AUCHINLECK

useful for Churchill to brandish in the faces of his critics in Parliament.


They would be useful to impress Stalin, whom Churchill was to
also
see in mid-August. The Americans would welcome assurances too. But
Auchinleck was too honest to promise pie-in-the-sky. He had already
made plans to destroy Rommel's next attack, which he guessed would
come of the Alamein position, at Alam-el-Halfa. By the
in the south
time that attackcame on 30 August, Auchinleck had departed, but his
plan was used by Montgomery. It proved a resounding success, although
it too was criticized by Churchill for not being sufficiently offensive.
Subsequently, on 23 October, Montgomery would use yet another of
Auchinleck's plans to obtain a final victory at El Alamein. By that time
he would have collected forces far in excess of Auchinleck's 'minimum
requirement' ; twice asmany men, twice as many aircraft, twice as many
tanks and twice as many guns as the Germans had. Even more to the
point, three hundred of those tanks would be Shermans, more than
a match for Rommel's Panzers. Even so, the victory was held long
in the balance.
An last days in the Middle East
unsavoury feature of Auchinleck's
was that Montgomery producedmendacious account of the final inter-
a
views between the two men. Auchinleck, he claimed, had plans to retreat
up into the Nile valley, regarding Alexandria and Cairo as virtually
lost. This confirmed Churchill's view that he had been right to replace

Auchinleck, but was a wild distortion, as Montgomery was forced to


admit later. There were, of course, 'worst possible case' contingency
plans for the Eighth Army if Rommel had been able to break through
the Alamein position in July 1942, but they had been made before the
battle, not after it. July was the turning point of the desert campaign.

With Germany now running deeply into trouble in Russia, it was unlikely
that Rommel would ever receive the arms and men he was begging
for the Russian front had priority.
:

Churchill's decision to replace Auchinleck in favour of Alexander,


and to bring in Montgomery to command the Eighth Army, had certain
points in its favour, brutally unfair though it was to Auchinleck. At
that time British troops in the Middle East were so accustomed to moving
back and forth across the desert that they had come to accept it as
inevitable. Wavell's offensive had failed and Auchinleck, though he
had eventually held Rommel at Alamein, still had to live down the fact
that his own last offensive had ended in stalemate. Enormously impress-
ive though Auchinleck's bearing and personality were to those who came
in contact with him, the Eighth Army at this time probably needed

141
AUCHINLECK

a new, flamboyant, public relations expert head. Montgomery had


at its

no inhibitions about building on another man's success and claiming


it all as his own, but he was also capable of inspiring the army while

at the same time impressing Churchill. Montgomery never had to fight

a desperate defensive battle and probably could not have done so on the ;

other hand, when it came to politics and public relations, Montgomery


was in the highest class. Unfortunately he became so besotted with his
own grandeur that he was unable to see any general, British or American,
as his equal, or to reflect that on his climb to eminence he had behaved
with contemptible unscrupulousness to a fellow soldier.

After handing over, Auchinleck returned to India to work on the dis-


patches which he had been unable to complete during the last campaign.
He assumed that his military career was now over and would
that he
be retired as painlessly as possible. Had this occurred, and he and
his wife returned to England or some other place of retirement abroad,
he might not have lost her to a colleague, as happened three years later.
Churchill had not lost faith in Auchinleck completely. In February
1943, he suggested that Auchinleck should be offered the Persian com-
mand he had refused earlier. But neither this nor another plan to give
Auchinleck a command in Burma took shape . Unfortunately for Auchinleck
Churchill and Brooke discussed both proposals with Montgomery, and
that was the end of the matter. Monty gave a suitably damning account
of the state of the Eighth Army when he had taken it over. It was an
awkward moment for Montgomery, but he was equal to it. If Auchinleck
once more had an active command, he would still be in contention
for the post of Supreme Commander Land Forces Europe, on which
Monty- had his eye firmly fixed. As a result, Auchinleck was offered
the post of Commander-in-Chief India, which he had held before;
this time it would be without responsibility for the Burma theatre,
which would now come under the newly-created South East Asia
Command.
But even without an active command in SEAC, Auchinleck's responsi-
bilitieswere enormous. The task of arranging the supplies for SEAC
fell to him, as also did that of those for the Chinese in Burma. His

new job soon brought him into contact with Orde Wingate, whose Chin-
dit expedition into Burma seemed to Auchinleck badly conceived and

organized. Events, of course, proved him right, but his efforts to instil

a little basic common sense into Wingate's higher flights of fancy made

142
AUCHINLECK

him once again unpopular with Churchill. However, his achievements


in mobilizing the resources of India to support the war effort, and his
organization of the training of armies probably contributed more to
final victory- than he could have produced from an active command.

Sadly, the worst was still to come. On i June 1946, he was promoted
Field-Marshal, a rank he could well have reached two years earlier,

but his pleasure in this was clouded by the fact that his divorce came
through at the same time. He never married again and, as his wife
soon found life with her new consort impossible, both lived to the end
of their days - some thirty years later - less happily than if they had
stayed together.
With the war and the Japanese threat removed, India looked
over,
forward to her long-promised independence. The new Labour govern-
ment in Britain, under the premiership of Clement Attlee, held the
view that the transfer of power should take place as soon as possible.
However, there were problems in India which well-meaning but
uniformed politicians at home could not easily understand. There were
over 350 million Hindus in India and 76 million Muslims. So far no
constitution had been devised which was acceptable to both parties.
Auchinleck sincerely hoped that the Indian Army, which represented
stability and impartiality (Hindus and Muslims had served alongside

each other during the war in perfect amity), would remain intact. It
was not to be. Jinnah, the Muslim leader, and Nehru, for the Hindus,
were in no mood for compromise. Partition was envisaged as the only
practical solution. Auchinleck viewed the prospect gloomily: it seemed
a recipe for disaster. However, as sporadic rioting continued and the
whole country seemed likely to erupt in scenes of violence, a date was
fixed for the independence; it was to be not later than June 1948. The
announcement was made on 20 February 1947; on the same day Attlee
announced that Admiral Lord Mountbatten of Burma would take over
from Wavell as Viceroy, and be responsible for a smooth transfer of
power.
Talks with Jinnah and Nehru immediately convinced Mountbatten
that an independent united India was impossible : it must be partition
or anarchy. He advised Attlee that the transfer could not be delayed
till1948 but must be brought forward to December 1947. As unrest
grew, he decided that even that date was too far ahead. It must come
forward to mid- August 1947; the 14th was eventually the chosen date.
Auchinleck's last service to India was to try to warn Mountbatten and
the Cabinet that partition and the splitting of the army would lead to

143
AUCHINLECK

civil war. But even he did not visualize a figure as high as four million
which eventually resulted.
for the casualties
Attlee now Auchinleck that the King had already agreed to offer
told
him a peerage, if he would accept it. Auchinleck refused, feeling that
to be honoured for presiding over the dissolution of the army to which
he had devoted his life was absurd. In any event he had scant regard
for titles. He knew he had earned his rank by merit, but had no wish
to become a peer - 'There are too many of them, at least that sort
of peer.'
He died in 1981 at the age of ninety-six, never expressing bitterness
over the blows life had dealt him. He had received a DSO, and six

mentions in despatches 'for gallant and distinguished service', but he


placed no value on the certificates for these honours, most of which
he burnt when he England to settle abroad. No doubt he would
left

have accepted a peerage if it had been offered directly by King George

vi or Queen Elizabeth II, but to receive the offer from a go-between


such as Attlee or Mountbatten made it unacceptable; it was a reminder
of events he felt represented a betrayal of trust. This was regrettable,
because his presence in the House of Lords, and in other places where
he could have expressed opinions based on experience, would have been
invaluable.
The verdict? As a soldier he was a complete professional and highly-

talented. He had a distrust of politicians which is shared by many sol-


diers, and he would not compromise his principles or adopt methods
which appeared to him to be dishonest. He could not accept the thesis
that the end justifies the means from his background, upbringing and
;

training, honesty was not merely the best policy, but the only policy.
In later life, inevitably, he took a sympathetic view of Churchill's reasons
for dismissing him from his post in the Middle East. He also commented
politely that Montgomery was an excellent general, but that they had
'a different way of doing things'. Montgomery remained convinced of
his own rightness and infallibility to the end. Auchinleck could never
have wished to resemble Montgomery or envied him his achievements.
He lived and died according to his own code of honour.
It has been suggested that Churchill's failure to use Auchinleck's

abilities to their best advantage was his greatest mistake. The proponents

of this view claim that Auchinleck would have handled the Italian cam-
paign better, would not have taken so long to reach Caen after the
D-Day landings, and would never have made the supreme blunder
of Arnhem. As a counter-argument, it has been suggested that Mont-

144
;

AUCHINLECK

gomery's less than distinguished performance in the Normandy battles


was due to inferior equipment, rather than incorrect tactics. And
Auchinleck, it has been suggested, would have lost the political battle
of wits to the Americans.
The facts are that Auchinleck would not have lost any battle of wits
with the Americans because there would not have been one. Mont-
gomery's waspish attitude to his allies infuriated them and made them
stubborn. Largely for this reason, Eisenhower refused to be diverted
from his disastrous broad-front advance which enabled the Russians
to reach Berlin, Prague and Vienna before the Allies. Montgomery had
a record of upsetting Americans, whether Mark Clark, Patton or Collins
Auchinleck, by contrast, could even get along with 'Vinegar Joe' Stilwell,
something which even Americans found near-impossible. The British
generals who men like Auchin-
got along best with the Americans were
leck, Slim and Alexander,men recognizable for their integrity and
modesty. The American Army had its own share of prima donnas and
knew how to identify them when they saw them. Montgomery's firmness
and flamboyance were no doubt excellent assets for winning the war,
but they were counter-productive with his American allies. With Auchin-
leck in command of 21st Army Group, SHAEF (Supreme Headquarters
Allied Expeditionary Forces) could well have worked more harmoni-
ously. But he was not, and we shall never know what might have been.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Very little has been written specifically on Auchinleck although there are many
references to him in more general books. Apart from Auchinleck: The Lonely
Soldier (London, 1981) by Philip Warner, there are Auchinleck : A Critical Biogra-

phy (London, 1959) by John Connell and The Auk : Auchinleck, Victor ofAlamein
(London, 1977) by Roger Parkinson. Recommended reading are Sir David
Hunt, A Don at War (London, 1966) and Major-General Sir Francis de
Guingand, Generals at War (London, 1964).

CHRONOLOGY: CLAUDE AUC


1884, June 21 Born at Aldershot
1896-1901 Wellington College
1902, January- RMC, Sandhurst
December
1904, April Joins 62nd Punjab Regiment
1906^7 Frontier duties at Gyantse, Tibet

145
AUCHINLECK

1912 Assistant Recruiting Officer, North Punjab


1914, October 28 62nd Punjabis sail for France, but diverted to defend
Suez Canal
1915, December 31 62nd land at Basra for Mesopotamian campaign
1916, March 8 Attack on Dujaila Redoubt. After heavy casualties and
death of Lt.-Col. Commanding, Auchinleck takes
command
1916, April 29 Townshend surrenders Kut
1916, August- 62nd in operations to recapture Kut. Auchinleck
1917, March temporary Regimental Commander 8 February 1917
Operations north of Baghdad
1919, August GSOi, operations in Kurdistan
1921 Marries Jessie Stewart of Kinloch Rannoch, Scotland
1929-30 Commanding Officer i/ist Punjabis. Promoted full

Colonel
1938 Commander, Meerut District. Member, Expert
Committee on the Defence of India (Chatfield
Committee)
1940, January Returns to England to take command of IY Corps.
Promoted Lieutenant-General
1940, April Appointed GOC-in-C Northern Norway
1940, May 27-8 Allies capture Narvik
1940, June 3-7 Allied evacuation of Norway

1940, June 14 Takes command of V Corps, Southern Command


1940, July 19- GOC-in-C Southern Command
November 21
I94ijune30 Arrives in Cairo to take over from Wavell as C-in-C
Middle Eastern Command
1941, November 18- 'Crusader' (Sidi Resegh offensive). Rommel pushed
1942, January 6 back to El Agheila. Tobruk relieved, Benghazi, Bardia

and Halfaya retaken, Cyrenaica cleared of Germans


1942, January 29 Rommel retakes Benghazi. Ritchie falls back on Gazala
line

1942, March 7 Auchinleck ordered to London - refuses and continues


to refuse early offensive

1942, March 20 Cripps and General Nye visit Auchinleck in Cairo on


Churchill's orders. They confirm sense of
Auchinleck's plans
1942, May 26 Rommel attacks Gazala Line
1942, May 29- 'Cauldron' and 'Knightsbridge' box battles. Ritchie
June 14 orders withdrawal from Gazala line
1942, June 14 Auchinleck orders line west of Tobruk to be held

146
AUCHINLECK

1942, June 20 Ritchie decides to fall back beyond frontier to Mersa


Matruh
1942, June 21 Tobruk captured with loss of 33,000 Allied prisoners

1942, June 25 Auchinleck dismisses Ritchie and personally takes


command of Eighth Army
1942, July 1-27 First Alamein checks Rommel, then counter-attacks,
causing havoc, notably among Italians. British positions
strengthened
1942, August 5 Churchill decides to replace Auchinleck with General
Alexander as C-in-C, with Gott in command of Eighth
Army
1942, August 7 Gott killed, Montgomery chosen as Eighth Army
commander
1942, August 8 Auchinleck notified, by letter, of his dismissal
1942, August 12 Montgomery arrives in Cairo. Takes over command of
Eighth Army on next day, though official handover date

fixed for 15th

1942, August- Auchinleck in India without formal position, having


1943 J un e refused Iraq-Persia command
1943, June 18 Appointed C-in-C India for the second time, with
effect from the 20th, with Wavell as Viceroy

1946, June 1 Promoted Field-Marshal. Divorce from wife


announced
1947, February 20 Announcement by British government for date of
transfer of power - not later than June 1948.
Mountbatten succeeds Wavell as Viceroy
1947, June 4 Mountbatten advances date again to 14 August 1947
1947, August 14-15 Last Indian Army order. Indian Independence and
Partition

1947, September 27 Auchinleck offered peerage, which he refuses


1947, October Auchinleck prevents Jinnah's attempted takeover of
Kashmir, which accedes to India

1947, December 1 Leaves India


1948-67 In Italy, London and Beccles. Moves to Marrakech in

1967
1981, March 23 Dies at his home in Marrakech

147
8
MONTGOMERY
Field-Marshal Viscount Montgomery

MICHAEL CARVER

Winston Churchill was no great admirer of generals, at least not those


of his generation. His experience in the First World War, and in the
second up to the Battle of El Alamein, gave him good reason for that.
He thought them too cautious, always demanding more and more
resources, human and material, before they were prepared to put matters
to the test of battle, with the result that, by that time, the enemy had
built up his resources too. In recounting his arguments with Auchinleck
on this score, in his history of the Second World War, he quoted the
tale of the man who prepared powder to blow down the throat of a

bear 'But the bear blew first'. He took a romantic view of war and
preferred generals of a heroic hue like Alexander. In his life of his
great ancestor Marlborough, he wrote that war's 'highest solution must
be evolved from the eye and brain and soul of a single man', and,
dismissing the efforts of 'almost any intelligent scribe [who] can draw
up a lucid and logical treatise full of laboriously ascertained facts and
technical phrases on a particular war situation', he asserted that 'Nothing
but genius, the daemon in man, can answer the riddles of war, and
genius, though it may be armed, cannot be acquired, either by reading
or by experience.'
It was ironic therefore that the general who gave him, at last, the

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victories that he, and the nation of which he was Prime Minister, so
sorely needed, made
caution and calculation the bedrock of his military
art. The essence of it was that one should not commit oneself to a

battle until one has assembled the forces, land and air, and the logistic
resources to support them, which will make it possible to penetrate a
vital point of the enemy's defence, and then to keep up the pressure

by feeding in more forces, so that one retains the initiative and forces
the enemy to 'dance to one's tune'. Before starting that process, one
must do one's best to deceive one's opponent as to where the blow
will fall, so that he dissipates his defence. But one must not allow that

to lead one into a dissipation of one's own forces, so that the main
thrust is so weakened that either it fails to penetrate, or having done
so, cannot be developed.
Montgomery was fortunate in that, except for the brief interlude of
his command of the 3rd Division in the British Expeditionary Force
in France and Belgium in 1940, circumstances favoured the application
of his principles. From assumed command of Eighth
the time that he
Army in Egypt in August 1942 end of the war, he enjoyed
until the
an overwhelming superiority of resources over the enemy, and was hardly
ever liable to have his plans or operations seriously disturbed by a coun-
ter-thrust. Nevertheless he was not always able to put his principles
into practice what Clausewitz called 'the friction of war' interfered
:

with that and Montgomery's conduct of battles did not always, or even
;

often, coincide with the principles he espoused. Indeed, he was not


consistent in his exposition of them.
How did this most professional of British soldiers come to reach
the pinnacle of his profession? Bernard Law Montgomery was born
on 17 November 1887 in St Mark's Vicarage at Kennington in South
London, the fourth child of the Reverend Henry Montgomery and his
wife Maud, who was still only twenty-two. She was the daughter of
Dean Farrar, best known for his sickly sentimental children's story,
Eric or Little by Little. Henry Montgomery had been his curate and
became engaged to Maud when she was fourteen, marrying her as soon
as he could
legally do so two years later.
WhenBernard was two, his father was sent to Tasmania as Bishop
and remained there for eleven years. It was a formative period in the
future field-marshal's life. His father spent much of his time away from
home, travelling round his huge diocese, leaving Maud to run the house
and family, which she ruled with a rod of iron. Her youngest child,
Brian, born after their return to England, wrote that 'She longed to

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organize and control both people and events She developed a passion
for order and method, all governed by a strict routine and subject to
the absolute priority of religious practice and a strict morality', character-
istics which her son Bernard inherited and was to develop to the full
in later life. Meanwhile their strong wills clashed, Bernard rebelling
against her authority, while the trouble he caused her, on top of her
struggle to make ends meet and cope with all her domestic problems,
meant that she displayed less affection towards him than she did to
the rest of her large brood. He became a loner and his feeling of rejection
was to affect his ability in later life to establish harmonious relationships
with others.
There is no certainty about what motive lay behind Bernard's decision,
on entering St Paul's School in London as a day boy aged fourteen
in January 1902, to join the Army Class, and, in spite of opposition
from his parents, to persist in his choice. Defiance of his mother may
have influenced him; but it may just have been that, uninterested in
any form of intellectual activity and keen on sports and an outdoor
life, the army seemed to offer an attractive alternative to the church.

Faced with the possibility that he might fail the entrance examination
for the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, he belatedly applied himself
to serious work and entered on 30 January 1907, having
the college
passed in 72nd out of 177 cadets. His performance there was not remark-
able, except for a serious misdemeanour. He set fire to the shirt-tails
of a cadet, who suffered severe burns as a result, for which Montgomery
was reduced in rank and held back for a term, before being commis-
sioned into the Royal Warwickshire Regiment on 19 September 1908,
joining the 1st Battalion on the North-West Frontier of India in
December. There he took his profession seriously, while maintaining
his enthusiasm for ball games, and, when his battalion returned to Eng-
land at the end of 1912, he was appointed Assistant- Adjutant at the age
of twenty- five.
When the First World War broke out in August 1914, the battalion
was sent to France, Montgomery commanding a platoon. In the First
Battle of Ypres in October, he was severely wounded after he had led
his platoon in a gallant attackon the village of Meteren, for which
he was promoted captain and awarded the Distinguished Service Order,
a rarity for a platoon commander of twenty-six. He was lucky not only
to survive at the time, but because a severe wound at that early stage

of the war led to his service on the staff for the rest of it. Had he
returned to a battalion in the front line, his chances of survival would

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have been small, and his experience in succession as a brigade -major,


GSO2, first at a divisional then at a corps headquarters, and finally,

in 1918, as GSOi, virtually chief of staff, of a division, provided him


with an experience at different levels of command of planning and
executing operations involving all arms, which was the foundation of
his military expertise. The 1918 experiencewas especially formative. In
a series of successful offensive operations, from August until the armis-
tice, he proved what meticulous planning and carefully controlled

execution could achieve, in contrast to his experience on the Somme


and at Passchendaele. Ingrained in his attitude to war, henceforward,
was that soldiers' lives must not be squandered in ill-planned, sloppily
executed operations, based on failure to take all relevant factors into
account; but that results could not be achieved without casualties, from
which he would not flinch if they promised results. To send men to
their death for no gain, or through failure to think the problem through,
or as a result of inefficiency in execution, was unforgivable.
That experience was to be distilled after the war in a succession of
appointments, in which training played a prominent part, notably as
an instructor at the Camberley Staff College from 1926 to 1929, having
been a student there himself in 1920, and as a senior instructor at the
Quetta Staff College from 1934 to 1937. He excelled as an instructor,
analysing the problem with remorseless logic, simplifying and explaining
it with terse clarity and mastery of detail; and, while encouraging his

students, accepting no excuse for idleness or loose thinking. In between


these posts, he commanded the 1st Battalion of his regiment in Palestine
and Egypt. Soon after return from Quetta to command a brigade at
Portsmouth, he suffered a shattering blow in the sudden death of his
wife, whom he had married ten years before. She had transformed
his life, introducing him to a cultural circle as strange to him as he
must have appeared to them. With her death, leaving him with a nine-
year-old son and two stepsons in their twenties, both in the army, he
shut himself up again behind the mask he had worn before his marriage.
Nineteen thirty-nine found him in Palestine again, this time as a
major-general, commanding the 8th Division, faced with enforcing
order on the Arabs who were rebelling against Jewish immigration and
the British 'mandatory' authority which reluctantiy permitted it. He had
not been there long before he fell ill, possibly the result of his war
wound. In July he was sent home by sea, which effected a miraculous
cure. He had already been selected to command the 3rd Division in
October, and, when war clouds gathered in August, the influence of

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the corps commander, Alan Brooke, who had been a fellow instructor
at Camberley, was brought to bear to ensure that he should immediately
assume command of the division, which he took to France with the
rest of Gort's British Expeditionary Force.
Alan Brooke's confidence in Montgomery was fully rewarded when
the crisis came in May 1940. He had not wasted the 'phoney war', but
had trained his division to a high pitch, so that its move up to the
River Dyle was a textbook example of good planning and march disci-
pline. It was in this period that he developed his strict routine, including
his insistence on an early bed and not being disturbed. He exuded
an aura of self-confidence and calm, however depressing the news.
The division saw little active fighting before the BEF began its with-
drawal, in the course of which Montgomery executed a remarkable move
at short notice from one flank to the other. After his division had been

withdrawn into the Dunkirk perimeter, Alan Brooke was ordered back
to England and Montgomery took over command of II Corps, before
he himself was evacuated on 1 June, reverting to command of the 3rd
Division on his return.
Montgomery's experience in France convinced him that a purely
defensive attitude was fatal, and he resisted orders to commit his division
to manning coastal defences or 'stop-lines' behind them. He sought
a mobile counter-attack role, enlisting the support of Churchill himself,
bypassing his superiors to their annoyance. When he took over V Corps
from Auchinleck in July 1940, becoming a subordinate of the latter
who had succeeded Alan Brooke at Southern Command, he took the
same line, which brought him into a head-on clash with Auchinleck.
At that stage Montgomery was being unrealistic in thinking that an
infantry division with hardly any tanks could conduct anything other
than a very local counter-attack. However he must be given credit for
recognizing, when he was transferred to command XII Corps in May
1941, that the threat of invasion had passed and that it was more important
to instil an offensive spirit into the army and to organize and train
it to attack. In order to succeed in that, he realized that he had to

pay great attention to morale and to convince soldiers that they could
defeat the Germans.
Once more he showed his excellence and energy as a trainer, ruthlessly
weeding out the inefficient or unfit. His unorthodox methods and pen-
chant for self-advertisement incurred criticism in many quarters. But
the reputation he had established, and the confidence which Alan
Brooke, promoted from Commander-in-Chief Home Forces to Chief

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MONTGOMERY

of the Imperial General Staff on Christmas Day 1941, reposed in him


meant that, when Alexander was chosen to succeed Auchinleck as C-in-
C Middle East, after the withdrawal of Eighth Army to the Alamein
Line, Montgomery was selected to replace him in command of First
Army, earmarked to take part, under Eisenhower's command, in
Operation Torch, the Anglo-American invasion of French North Africa.
No sooner had that decision been made than Gott, chosen to command
Eighth Army, was killed, and Montgomery, on Alan Brooke's insistence,
was flown to Cairo to take his place.
Fortune, which had been kind in some ways but cruel in others,
now favoured him. He took over the army's most important command
when everything was turning in its favour and in circumstances which
related fairly closely to his previous experience and expertise. The front
was limited and, not having a wide open flank, less likely to be subjected
to the bewildering uncertainties of desert warfare than at any time since
the war there had started against the Italians in 1940. The strength
of both the army and the and quantity, had been
air force, in quality

substantially improved. It was much easier for him than it had been
for his predecessors to be 'well-balanced', one of the criteria on which
he laid great emphasis. He arrived brimming with confidence that he
knew all the answers, treating Auchinleck, his old sparring partner,
and almost every old desert hand with contempt. He was fortunate to
find, ready to hand and keenly attuned to all the nuances of the situation,

an old acquaintance in Freddie de Guingand, whom he could appoint


as a stop-gap chief of staff until his favourite nominee, Frank Simpson,
could be summoned. Luckily for him Alan Brooke would not release
Simpson and de Guingand was to prove invaluable to Montgomery
until the end of the war.
One of the answers he thought he knew was that he should have
a corps de chasse, equivalent, as he wrongly imagined, to Rommel's Afrika
Korps. The latter was in fact Rommel's spearhead for all purposes,
not just a formation to be let loose when the infantry, in his case mostly
Italian, had broken the enemy's line. One of Montgomery's first acts

was to get GHQ, presided over by Alexander, to organize X Corps


for that purpose, reluctantly having to accept that Lumsden, the cavalry
commander of 1st Armoured Division, who had been in the desert since
January 1942, should command it instead of one of his nominees, brought
out from England, as Leese and Horrocks were, forty-eight and forty-^
seven years old respectively. Montgomery was nearly fifty-five, old by
Second World War standards.

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MONTGOMERY

His first impact was on the staff of Eighth Army Headquarters, and
itwas electric. Having taken over command before he had been author-
ized to do so, he cancelled all existing plans without bothering to look
at them. He told Churchill a few days later that he had found that
'Itwas intended in face of heavy attack to retire eastwards to the Delta.
Many were looking over their shoulders to make sure of their seat in
the lorry, and no plain plan of battle or dominating will-power had
reached the units.' He was forced to retract that accusation when he
published it in his memoirs, but it was not far off the mark. His decisive
contribution was to realize that, if the recentiy arrived 44th Division,
which was being held back as an insurance for the defence of the Delta,
were sent up to reinforce Eighth Army, he would have enough troops
to hold a continuous line of defence as far south as the ridge of Alam
Haifa. He could then safely discard Auchinleck's plan for a series of
'boxes', based largely on artillery, scattered about the desert, between
which the armoured brigades would fight a mobile battle. He had no
intention of fighting a mobile battle, at which Rommel was an expert
and he was not. Alexander agreed, and Montgomery's decision bore
fruit in the successful Battle of Alam Haifa at the end of September,

which halted Rommel's attempt to reach the Nile and proved to be


the final turn of the tide in the desert war.
But it was not as immediately decisive as Montgomery hoped. He
had planned to cut off Rommel's thrust with a counter-attack by Frey-
berg's New Zealanders, reinforced by brigades of the 44th, and then
launch Lumsden's corps de chasse in a wide sweep round Rommel's
rear; but the New Zealand attack petered out ineffectively and Mont-
gomery, the realist, saw that his army needed more thorough training
before it would be able to respond to his demands. Pretending that
he was satisfied with the outcome, he turned his attention to the major
set-piece battle he would have to wage to penetrate Rommel's defences,
the minefields covering which would have become more intricate by
the time that Eighth Army would be ready to assault them in the next
full-moon period. Daylight attack by infantry in the desert was near
suicidal.
His first plan, explained to his corps commanders on 14 September,
envisaged that Leese's XXX Corps would force gaps through the mine-
fields in the northern half of the front in one night, through which
the two armoured divisions of Lumsden's X Corps would pass. The
latter itself on ground of its own choosing'
corps would then 'position
astride the enemy's supply routes, forcing Rommel's tanks to attack

154
MONTGOMERY

and be destroyed Horrocks's XIII Corps would force


in the process.
a gap in the south and pass his one armoured division, the 7th, doyen
of desert rats, through to draw off some of Rommers tanks from Lums-
den. Montgomery stressed that X Corps must be through the minefields
by dawn of the first day and must not become embroiled in fighting
in the early hours before getting there.
He immediately instituted a thorough training programme for all the
troops involved, particularly in the complicated operation of making
gaps through the minefields. As the weeks passed and the enemy thick-
ened and developed them, Leese's infantry division commanders
expressed doubts as to whether they would be able to ensure free passage
to Lumsden's tanks before dawn on the first day, unless the latter partici-
pated in the fighting to clear the gaps, while Lumsden made it clear
that hehad no intention of doing so. Reacting to this, Montgomery
changed his plan on 6 October, giving Lumsden the less ambitious
task of holding off the enemy armour, while the infantry 'crumbled'
his infantry. He did not, however, clarify the issue as to whether Lums-
den's armoured divisions were to expect that the infantry divisions would
have cleared a passage for their tanks to the far side of the minefields
or should be prepared to fight their way had not
out, if the infantry
done so. If he expected the latter, it was unfortunate that he did not
change the command arrangements. The superimposition of one corps
on another, both commanding troops fighting in the same area, was
undoubtedly one of the principal causes of the problems that were to
arise in the battle. However Montgomery was clearly right to insist that
the attempt to break through should be made in one night. When it
had not succeeded even by the end of the second night, Montgomery
was quick to change to a different method that of making a succession
:

of thrusts in different sectors, each drawing counter-attacks by Rommel,


which wore down the latter's forces until he had almost nothing left
with which to prevent the final breakthrough in the centre of the northern
sector. The battle had not followed Montgomery's 'master-plan'; but
he had won it by his thorough preparation, his determination, his clear-
headed realism and the flexibility with which he applied it, as well as
by his considerable superiority in resources of all kinds, including in
the air.

Elation at victory after so many disappointments obscured criticism


of deficiencies in his exercise of command in the subsequent six months.
Over-insurance and caution contributed to his failure to prevent Rom-
mel from withdrawing the remnants of his German forces not only

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MONTGOMERY

from El Alamein, but also from a series of delaying positions all the
way back to the Tunisian border. Beyond it, a model defensive victory
at Medenine on 6 March 1943, to which Montgomery's contribution

was to act prompdy on Ultra information to reinforce Leese, who com-


manded the battle, was followed by the attack on the Mareth Line,
which was not a battle of which Montgomery could be proud. Neither
in concept nor, initially, in execution did it follow any of the principles
by which he maintained that battles should be fought. He himself was
not consistent on that issue. The recipe he had given at a study period
which he conducted at Tripoli in February 1943 was

Careful planning of the break-in battle. You must be so positioned at the close
of this phase that you have the tactical advantage. Rapid switching of the thrust
line as opposition grows too stiff on any one
Axes of operations must
axis.

be so thought out that the enemy is main


led gradually to believe that your
subsequent effort is going to be in a definite area. Having thus deceived him,
you put in a really hard blow at some other point, which is so selected that
he will be thrown off balance.

That is what happened at El Alamein, although his original intention


had been more like what he wrote in a letter to Alanbrooke, criticizing
the way Anderson's First Army was being handled on the approach
to Tunis. 'The attack plan for the major effort on First Army's Front
is NOT the way that I fight the Germans', he wrote. 'My experience

is that the way to beat him is to concentrate all your strength and hit

him an almighty crack; then, through that place, while the enemy is
reeling under your blow, you burst through with armoured and mobile
forces the armoured forces have got to be prepared to fight their way
;

out, dealing with any jagged edges that remain.' Mareth was not fought
according to either of those recipes. He underestimated both the enemy
and the difficulty of attacking across a wet watercourse, and did not
allot sufficient strength to either of the widely separated attacking forces.
He must be given credit for reacting quickly to the initial failure; but
the fact that his first plan failed meant that he had to stage another
set-piece attack at Wadi Akarit. The only excuse for his lapse in commit-
ting first the New
Zealand Division and then the completely green 56th
to a hopeless front assault at Enfidaville in the final stage of the campaign
is that he was by then preoccupied with revising the plan for the landings

in Sicily.
There no doubt that he was right to raise serious objections to
is

the plan which Eisenhower inherited from the planners in London.

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MONTGOMERY

Emphasis on the early capture of ports and airfields led to a dispersion


which would have prejudiced the success of operations once the troops
were ashore, particularly if the Germans reinforced the island, as they
were likely to do once Tunis had fallen. But the tactless way in which
Montgomery raised his objections added to the foundation he had
already laid in antagonizing the Americans. Although it was right to
demand a greater concentration, it is less certain that his insistence

that the whole force, his own Eighth Army and Patton's Seventh (with
only one corps), should land in the southeast corner was the best choice.
If the latter had been landed concentrated near Palermo, the Germans
might not have been able to withdraw all their forces to the mainland,
although it could have led to their concentration against Patton before
Montgomery could help him. Montgomery's attempt to take over some
of the routes assigned to Patton was bound to ensure that the latter
did nothing to help Montgomery and to go off on his own towards
Palermo. The campaign in Sicily served one valuable purpose for Mont-
gomery personally. The fact that his army was concentrated in a re-
stricted area and moved slowly in fair weather gave him the opportunity
to see and be seen by soldiers of all ranks. That had not been possible
since the training period before El Alamein. It fostered the image of
acommander who was close to his troops.
The failure of Alexander, under Eisenhower, to exercise a firm com-
mand over either Montgomery or Patton encouraged the former, after
another over-insured operation to cross to the mainland, to complain
about the lack of direction from above. He was not at his best in Italy,

fundamentally perhaps because he did not believe in the campaign at


all.He thought it a blind alley. Ever since El Alamein, his thoughts
had returned to the English Channel. Soon after the battle, he had
suggested to Alanbrooke that it was illogical for Eighth Army, supplied
by a long line of communication round the Cape to Egypt, to advance
westward through North Africa, when Eisenhower's forces could be
supplied and reinforced by a much shorter one. That had earned him
a sharp rebuff. Italy seemed to Montgomery to lead nowhere. He was

constantiy demanding a clear aim and plan, which the campaign never
could provide. Its justification was that it drew off German forces that
might otherwise be used to reinforce France. To do that, they had
to be attacked, and, paradoxically, the further south in Italy they were,
the more effective was the containment policy. It was an attrition cam-
paign like that on the Western Front in the First World War. At times
Montgomery took the over- optimistic view that, if McCreery's X British

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MONTGOMERY

Corps and the bulk of the logistic support then being supplied to Mark
Clark's Fifth US Army, in which it served, were transferred to him,
he could outflank the Germans holding up Clark and reach Rome before
midwinter. At others, he took the pessimistic line that nothing much
was likely to be achieved, given the strength of the German resistance,
the terrain and the weather. It was therefore with no real regret that
he handed Eighth Army over to Oliver Leese on the last day of 1943,
and flew to England to assume command of 21st Army Group.
Montgomery's claim to rank among the great commanders must rest
on his victory at El Alamein and the success of the landings and subse-
quent operations in Normandy. In both, the effort he devoted to prep-
aration was as important as his actual conduct of operations. It involved
planning, from the general concept to intricate detail, training and inspi-
ration. The last, on the second occasion, extended beyond the soldiers
he commanded to the people, of all kinds and at all levels, of the nation
that supported them. As before Alam Haifa and El Alamein, he spread
the supreme confidence he had in his own ability to choose the right
solution, and impose it on both his own forces and on the enemy, on
those he commanded and those who supported them or were only specta-
tors. That confidence stemmed from his insistence on getting the 'mas-

ter-plan' right. Although he was fond of emphasizing that morale was


the most important single factor in war, he knew that morale could
not be maintained unless everyone, from the top to the bottom, was
confident that they could succeed. For that, the strategy, the 'master-
plan', had to be sound, the tactics adapted to the circumstances and
the soldiers thoroughly trained to implement them.
He started with the intermediate stage between strategy and tactics,
operations at formation level. Before leaving Italy, he had flown to Algiers
to see Eisenhower, who had told him that he would have command
of all the land forces, British, Canadian and American, involved in
the Normandy landings until Eisenhower himself could transfer his
headquarters from England to France, at which stage Omar Bradley
would be promoted from command of First US Army to that of 12th
US Army Group alongside Montgomery's 21st, which would then be
commanding the First Canadian and Second British Armies. It was
a highly significant decision by Eisenhower, which, given the friction
that Montgomery had already caused, did him great credit. The accounts
of the participants at that meeting conflict as to the degree of knowledge
both obtained of the draft plan prepared by the Anglo-American staff
under the British General Morgan, and of their reactions to it. Each

158
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MONTGOMERY

claims to have been the originator of dissatisfaction at the limited


strength, and therefore of the width, of the planned initial assault, deter-
mined by the number of landing-craft which the Anglo-US Joint Chiefs
of Staff had said could be available. Wherever the credit may lie, both
were agreed on the issue and persuaded the Joint Chiefs that a combi-
nation of deferment of the target date from May to early June 1944,
allowing for production of more craft, and postponement of the contro-
versial Operation Anvil (later Dragoon) in southern France would make
it possible to increase the initial assault force to five divisions, supple-
mented by the airdrop of three more. That, combined with a change
in the command organization, so that each corps would retain responsi-
bility for the same area, from the initial landing through to follow-up

forces, undoubtedly laid sound foundations for the operation.


The danger in all amphibious operations, as Sicily had shown, was
that so much attention needed to be paid to the very difficult problems
of landing on a defended shore that what happened thereafter took
second place. Montgomery did not make that mistake. As early as 7
January 1944, at a meeting with Bradley, Dempsey and their chiefs of
staff, he declared that the task of Bradley's First US Army would be

'the capture of Cherbourg and the clearing of the Cherbourg peninsula;


subsequently to develop operations to the south and west', and that
of Dempsey's Second British Army 'to operate to the south to prevent
any interference with the American army from the east'. At a later confer-
ence he said

We must blast our way on shore and good lodgement before the enemy
get a
can bring up sufficient reserves to turn us out ... we must gain space rapidly

and peg out claims well inland .once we get control of the main enemy
. .

lateral Granville-Vire-Argentan-Falaise-Caen and have the area enclosed in

it firmly in our possession, then we will have the area we want and can begin

to expand.

The first would be the break-out of Patton's Third


step in expansion
US Army its ports for American use,
into Brittany, in order to secure
after which the Allied armies would sweep eastward, the left pivot being
advanced from Caen to Cabourg. They should be lined up ready to
cross the Seine by about the beginning of September. That lodgement
area, particularly in the open terrain between Caen and Falaise, would
provide sites for airfields for fighter-bombers, redeployed from England,
to support the advance beyond the Seine. Montgomery hoped that
Dempsey would capture Caen early on, preferably on D-Day, 6 June,

159
MONTGOMERY

and thrust rapidly south from there to Falaise, thus forming the left

flank of the shield to hold the Germans off Bradley. At no time was
it ever suggested, as his critics then and since have claimed, that Dempsey
would attempt to break out towards the Seine while Bradley was still

involved in clearing the Cotentin peninsula.


In the event the enemy's resistance proved tougher than some
expected, and the slow progress in establishing the lodgement area forced
Montgomery methods he had oudined at his study period
to use the
in Tripoli rather than the 'almighty crack' he had recommended in
his letter to Alanbrooke. He made several attempts at such a 'crack',
of which the most spectacular was Operation Goodwood on 18 July,
designed to take Dempsey's armoured divisions from Caen to Falaise.
Its failure to do so raised stemming
criticism to the level of hysteria,
largely from Eisenhower's frustrated staff and senior air force officers,
stuck in England under bombardment from Vi cruise-missiles. Mont-
gomery must bear some of the blame for that in raising their expectations,
partly in order to persuade the senior airmen, Tedder and Harris, to
support it with the latter's heavy bombers, partly by making a falsely
over-optimistic report of its initial success. In the event it did not matter,
as Bradley's postponed attack further west led, at last, to the break-out
and the unleashing of Patton.
Montgomery's strategy had worked, although it had taken longer and
cost more than he had anticipated. He had certainly hoped to secure
Caen and Falaise early on, but he was not going to be forced into
expensive attempts to do so, if they were liable to prejudice his ability
to follow the general pattern of his original strategy. For that, he had
to conserve the resources of the Second British Army, which he had
not reckoned on expending at the rate they had been in the initial stages.
Because the close-in fighting in the Normandy bocage lasted longer
than expected, Dempsey's resources of British infantry, a wasting asset,
were dwindling; while, because there had been little in the way of mobile
operations, he had a surplus of tanks at that stage. Regardless of pressure
from the airmen, the Americans, Churchill and others, Montgomery
had to keep up pressure in the east, if the German panzer divisions
were not to be transferred to the west and frustrate his basic strategy.
The idea that a break-out southwards from the American sector was
a concept dreamed up at this stage by Bradley and Patton, in frustration

at the lack of progress in Dempsey's sector, is disproved by ample evi-


dence. Montgomery was a realist. He did not shrink from accepting
casualties; but he did not believe in inflicting them on his soldiers to

160
MONTGOMERY

no good purpose. He refused to press on with attacks, as Haig had


done in the First World War, when they were clearly getting nowhere.
Above all, he was sensitive to the morale of his soldiers. He knew there
were limits, beyond which he could not push them without a serious
risk that their performance would rapidly deteriorate. That applied as
much to those formations new to battle as to the veterans from North
Africa. The quality of his divisions, and of their commanders, was
very varied, and he knew it. He never had any illusions about anyone.
He also knew that, for all the fuss the airmen made about the need
to acquire the area south of Caen it would make little
for airfields,
difference to the air situation. Thewere able to dominate
air forces

the skies from bases in England, and would not have been able to operate
from airfields in that area until his forces had got well beyond it until ;

in fact the break-out occurred.


The Germans had been forced by Hitler to play into his hands. By
forbidding any withdrawal and fighting the battle forward, including
the fatal counter-attack towards Mortain, Hitler ensured that the Battle
of Normandy decided the Battle of France. The French should be grate-
ful. Although the Normandy battlefield area suffered terrible destruc-
tion, the rest of France was largely spared, operations between the closing

of the Falaise-Argentan gap and France's eastern borders being limited


to a virtually unopposed pursuit. The first controversial issue which
arose concerned the closing of that gap. Montgomery had initially

intended to close the pincers nearer to the Seine, but was persuaded
by Bradley to agree to the shorter hook, from which the remnants of
the German army, only 20,000 men, 24 tanks and 60 guns, escaped.
Patron, having been refused permission to cross the inter-army group
boundary north of Argentan, disobeyed Bradley and set off towards
Paris. It was perhaps a pity that Montgomery, who was still in overall
command, although Eisenhower was with Bradley, did not stick to his
original intention; but at that stage he no doubt realized that there
were limits to the extent to which he could impose his will on the Ameri-
cans.
A more important issue was that of the strategy to be pursued beyond
the Seine. From the end, in August 1944, of the Normandy campaign
onwards, Montgomery urged that a force of at least forty divisions,
most of which would have been American, should be concentrated in
a thrust aimed north of the Ardennes to the north of the Ruhr. It should
have priority, including that of logistic support, over all other operations;
and the army groups involved should be under one commander, who

161
MONTGOMERY

he assumed (and the Americans suspected that he did) would be himself,


although at one stage he offered to serve under Bradley, if Eisenhower
accepted the principle of the strategy. Montgomery contended that, by
failing to accept his proposal,Eisenhower forfeited the opportunity to
exploit the victory in Normandy and to finish the war in 1944. Once
Patton had started to head for Metz and Nancy from Paris, Eisenhower
was unable and Bradley unwilling to restrain him and make the major
American effort in the north. Eisenhower did give Montgomery's 21st
Army Group, and Hodge's First US Army on his right, priority as
far as Belgium but thereafter Bradley's effort diverged and was dissi-
;

pated between Hodges's thrust towards Aachen and Patton's towards


Metz and Nancy, so that the momentum of the thrust in the north
petered out.
It is by no means certain that Montgomery's claim was valid. The
chances of success would have been greatest if, after the capture of
Brussels, Eisenhower, accepting Montgomery's strategy, had allotted
to 21st Army Group the task of clearing the Channel ports and the
Scheldt estuary, while giving the task of thrusting north of the Ardennes,
to cross the Rhine north of the Ruhr, to Bradley's 12th Army Group,
headed by Patton's Third US Army and supported by the whole of
the Allied Airborne Army. Neither Montgomery nor Churchill would
have liked that relegation of all the British formations to such a subsidiary
role, the one to which in fact Crerar's First Canadian Army was
restricted.
Montgomery's decision to launch Operation Market Garden has
righdy been criticized. The original concept was limited to protection
of the left flank of a major thrust by Dempsey's Second Army; but
when the switch of priorities and of US forces after Brussels made
that impractical, Montgomery gave way to pressure from the frustrated
Browning in an attempt to force Eisenhower's hand. Its failure gave
a handle to his critics, who could deride his concept of bringing the
war to an end by 'a pencil-like thrust towards Berlin'. Neither before
nor after Arnhem had that been his concept. He consistently pressed
Back on his
for a single concentrated thrust of at least forty divisions.
'almighty crack' line, he claimed that such a strategy had always been
successful. His claim cannot be upheld. In both world wars there were
coundess examples of single thrusts, however concentrated and strong,
attracting the enemy's reserves and thus being brought to a halt. Given
the forces that the Germans were able to assemble for their Ardennes
offensive, it is at least arguable that, at any rate after the Allied pause

162
MONTGOMERY

in Belgium, they could have used sufficient strength to halt a single


concentrated thrust, if not on the Rhine, at least into bridgeheads on
the far side. The which had been generally successful was
strategy
one of alternating thrusts, delivering a blow in an unexpected area when
the enemy's reserves had been attracted elsewhere and tied down there
by a previous thrust. That was how the battles had been won at El
Alamein, in Normandy, and at Mareth after the failure of a single thrust:
in fact by the methods Montgomery had outlined at Tripoli. Mont-
gomery's tactless and arrogant manner, seen at its worst over the
Ardennes offensive, defeated his own purposes. Once over the Rhine,
he might have achieved his desired strategy of heading straight for
Berlin, if he had accepted that two army groups could operate side
by side north of the Ruhr without a single overall commander.
Whether Stalin would have let Anglo-American forces reach Berlin
before he had surrounded it, and, whether, given the Yalta agreement,
it would really have transformed the political development of post-war

Europe if they had got there first, as Montgomery and some of his
admirers claimed, is very doubtful.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Montgomery, Field Marshal The Viscount, Memoirs (Collins, London, 1958).
Hamilton, Nigel, Monty : The Making of a General, 188J-1Q42 (Hamish Hamilton,
London, 1981) Monty : Master of the Battlefield, ig^2-ig44 (Hamish Hamilton,
;

London, 1983) Monty : The Field Marshal, ig44~igj6 (Hamish Hamilton, Lon-
;

don, 1986).
Lewin, Ronald, Montgomery as a Military Commander (Batsford, London, 1971).
Moorehead, Alan, Montgomery (Hamish Hamilton, London, 1946).
Chalfont, Alun, Montgomery ofAlamein (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1976).
Montgomery, Brian, A Field Marshal in the Family (Constable, London, 1973).
de Guingand, Major-General Sir Francis, Operation Victory (Hodder & Stough-
ton, London, 1946).
Carver, Michael, El Alamein (Batsford, London, 1962).
Lamb, Richard, Montgomery in Europe, ig^-4^ (Buchan & Enright, London,
1983)-

CHRONOLOGY: BERNARD MONTGOMERY


1887, November 17 Born at St Mark's Vicarage, Kennington
1907, January 30 Enters Royal Military College, Sandhurst

163
MONTGOMERY

1908, September 19 Commissioned 2nd Lieutenant Royal Warwickshire


Regiment
1914, October 13 Wounded in First Battle of Ypres. Promoted Captain

and awarded the Distinguished Service Order


1915, February 12 Brigade -Major 112 Infantry Brigade (later 104)
1917, January 22 GSO2, Headquarters 33rd Division
I9i7,july6 GSO2, Headquarters IX Corps
1918, March Promoted Brevet-Major
i9i8,July 16 GSOi Headquarters 47th Division. Temporary
Lieutenant-Colonel
1918, September 5 Commanding Officer 17th Battalion Royal Fusiliers
1920, January 22 Student, Staff College, Camberley. Brevet-Major
1921, January 5 Brigade -Major 17 Infantry Brigade (Cork)
1922, May 24 Brigade -Major 8 Infantry Brigade (Plymouth)
1923, May GSO2, Headquarters 49th Division (TA) (York)
1925, March Commander A Company, 1st Battalion Royal Warwicks
(Shornecliffe)
1926, January 23 Directing Staff, Staff College, Camberley. Lieutenant-
Colonel
1927, July 27 Marries Bern Carver (nee Hobart)
1928, August 18 Son, David, born
1931, January Commanding Officer 1st Battalion Royal Warwicks
(Palestine and Egypt)
1934, June 29 Senior Directing Staff, Staff College, Quetta.

Colonel
1937, August 5 Commander 9 Infantry Brigade (Portsmouth).
Brigadier
1937, October 19 His wife dies
1938, December GOC 8th Division (Palestine). Major-General
1939, August 28 GOC 3rd Division (England and BEF)
1940, July 22 GOC V Corps (England). Lieutenant-General
1941, April 27 GOC XII Corps (England)
1942, August 13 GOC Eighth Army (Egypt)
1942, November 11 Promoted General. Created Knight Commander of the
Order of the Bath
1944, January 3 Commander-in-Chief 21st Army Group (England)
1944, September 1 Promoted Field-Marshal
1946, January 1 Created Viscount Montgomery of Alamein
1946, July Chief of the Imperial General Staff
1946, November Created Knight of the Garter
1948, October Chairman of the Western Union Chiefs of Staff
Committee

164
MONTGOMERY

1951, April Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe, NATO


1958, September 18 Retires. Publishes memoirs
1976, March 24 Dies at Isington Mill

165
9
WILSON
Field-Marshal Lord Wilson

MICHAEL DEWAR

The mourners who attended Field-Marshal Lord Wilson's memorial


service in January 1965 at Westminster Abbey must have been conscious
of the fact that Churchill was lying in state in Westminster Hall only
yards away. Wilson died aged eighty -three, Churchill at ninety. Unlike
most of Churchill's generals, Wilson was of the same generation as
the Prime Minister. This, perhaps more than any other factor, accounted
for the mutual understanding the one had for the other.
Henry Maidand Wilson was born in September 1881, educated at
Eton and the Royal Military College Sandhurst and commissioned into
the Rifle Brigade in March 1900. He served as a junior officer in the
South African War and in a succession of staff appointments during
the First World War. There followed a period as a company commander
at Sandhurst in the early 1920s before Wilson commanded the 2nd Bat-
talion of the Rifle Brigade in India. In 1930 his considerable experience
as a Staff Officer was put to good effect when he was promoted full

Colonel and appointed a senior instructor at the Staff College, a post


he filled with great distinction. After commanding 6 Infantry Brigade
he was promoted Major- General in April 1935 and then promptly put
on half pay for two years until given command of the 2nd Division
in Aldershot in August 1937. This must have been a frustrating time

166
WILSON

for Wilson, who was already a good deal older than his fellow divisional
commanders. However, he put all this behind him when he went to
Cairo in June 1939 as Commander-in-Chief of British Troops in Egypt
in the rank of Lieutenant-General.
In appearance Wilson cut an impressive figure. At over six feet tall
and no lightweight, it was probably inevitable that he should acquire
the nickname 'Jumbo' early in his military career. He was a man who
inspired confidence and who by 1939 had accrued a considerable wealth
of military knowledge and experience, particularly as a staff officer and
a trainer. In character he was steadfast, imperturbable, unflappable -
very much a soldier's soldier. He had made a popular commanding
officer of the Rifle Brigade, where his first concern had always been
his Riflemen; he had always been good with people and was much
loved by those who worked closely with him. His confidential report
covering the period April 1929 to March 1930 whilst he was commanding
officer of iRB read in part: 'An exceptional officer in every way. I have
never met a Commanding Officerwho has, to a great extent, the respect
and affection of both officers and men of his battalion. . Possibly
. .

his most outstanding characteristic is his gift of getting the best out
1
of everyone, both juniors and seniors.' It was signed by Lieutenant-
General Walter Leslie, Commander Lahore District. More than any-
thing else, Jumbo Wilson got things done - nothing was too difficult
- and he was not afraid to speak his mind.
So at the outbreak of war in September 1939 Wilson, at the age of
fifty-eight, found himself in what, at the time, must have seemed to
him something of a military backwater. His old command, the 2nd Div-
ision, departed for France with the British Expeditionary Force. But
whether by luck or design, he was in many ways just the man for Egypt.
During the first nine months of the war, until Italy joined the Axis
in June 1940, Wilson was heavily involved in the minefield of Egyptian
politics. The Egyptians, realizing that the Italians were playing a waiting

game, decided to sit on the fence themselves. Whilst they were not
prepared to commit themselves as an active ally, they maintained for
the most part close and friendly relations with Wilson and his staff.
A commander who was less of a diplomat than Wilson would surely
have come to grief during this delicate period in Anglo -Egyptian rela-
tions.
At the same time Wilson prepared the Army of Egypt for operations
Western Desert. Despite the somewhat cum-
against the Italians in the
bersome system of command in the Middle East - Wavell was C-in-C

167
WILSON

Middle East and O'Connor was in command of the Western Desert


Force - Wilson played a leading role in the planning of the operations
against the Italians. He decided to take the offensive from the outset.
Thus when on 10 June Mussolini declared that he would be at war
with Great Britain from midnight, at one minute past midnight British
troops and aircraft crossed the frontier into Italian-occupied Cyrenaica.
After initial British successes, the strategic picture was drastically altered
by the collapse of France which allowed the Italians in Libya to release
their forces on the Tunisian frontier to reinforce Cyrenaica. The result-
ing Italian offensive met with limited initial success, penetrating as far
as Maktila about sixty miles into Egypt where it fizzled out. This was
at great cost to the Italians and at remarkably little to the Western Desert

Force - 150 casualties between 11 June and 16 September - whilst over


700 Italian prisoners were taken and the enemy admitted 3,500 casualties
during the same period.
It was Wavell who, with Eden's backing, actually decided that the

time was right for a counter-offensive. Enemy forces around Sidi Bar-
rani were estimated to total six divisions, of which four were Italian
and the remainder Libyan troops. The Western Desert Force consisted
of the 7th Armoured Division and the 4th Indian Division. Odds were
about 2.5 to 1 in favour of the enemy but the British had several crucial
advantages, for many of which Wilson was in large part responsible.
He had insisted on an intensive programme of all-arms training by
the 4th Indian and 7th Armoured Divisions, debunking the fashionable
but dangerous doctrine that tanks could win battles by themselves. He
had given the 7th Armoured Division generous periods of time to over-
haul and service their vehicles, immediately recognizing the importance
of this one area in which the British had a numerical superiority of
275 to 120 tanks. Rightly he saw this capability as being crucial to the
outcome of any future test of arms.
Wilson had also encouraged the formation of long-range patrols into
the desert by a Major Bagnold of the Royal Tank Regiment, which
brought back valuable information on Italian dispositions and intentions
and which were the forerunners of the legendary Long Range Desert
Group. But his greatest contribution to the success of the December
offensive was his insistence on complete surprise. Wilson was arguably
one of the first commanders during the Second World War to appreciate
the importance of deception and surprise in warfare. He adopted elabor-
ate measures to ensure that complete secrecy was maintained. Troops
were moved into their assembly positions under the impression that

168
WILSON

they were about to take part in a major exercise. Wilson himself main-
tained as normal a routine as possible and did not leave Cairo until
the afternoon of 9 December, the day the attack was launched. Two
days later the ItalianArmy had been broken at Sidi Barrani, the British
taking 38,000 prisoners, 400 guns and 50 tanks. Wilson capitalized on
this early success, so that by 7 February all of Cyrenaica was under
British control. A campaign which had started with a limited objective
ended after an advance of 500 miles in two months. The tally was now
130,000 prisoners of war, 400 tanks and 1,290 guns whilst British casual-
ties totalled 500 killed, 1,375 wounded and 55 missing.
Although executive command was always in the hands of O'Connor,
Wilson had played a major part in the planning of the initial stages
of this offensive and in the direction of operations during the first few
weeks. After this great victory he was appointed the Military Governor
and Commander in Cyrenaica.
His tenure, however, was short-lived. On 22 February Wilson was
handed a letter from Wavell telling him that he would be commanding
the British Imperial Force that was about to be sent to Greece. The
letter ended: '. . . I am very sorry at having to push this on you at
such short notice but you, with your and strategical knowledge
tactical

and the prestige of your recent successes are undoubtedly the man for
the job, and it will greatly relieve my mind to know that you are there;
2
both the CIGS and I agreed that it was the only solution.'
In 1939, faced with growing German intrigue in the Balkan region,
the Chamberlain government had, together with France, issued a guar-
antee of Greek independence. Although by 1941 the Greeks were more
than holding their own against the Italians on the Albanian front, White-
hall - thanks to Ultra - was becoming aware of the movement of German
ground and air forces into Bulgaria. Eden, backed by Wavell, signalled
to Churchill that 'assistance to the Greeks, who are fighting and threat-
3
ened, must have first call on our resources'. British involvement would
be a demonstration of good faith to both the United States and Turkish
governments that Great Britain was honouring its undertakings to
Greece and at the same time retaining a foothold on an increasingly
Nazi-dominated European continent. But there were daunting military
risks to this political gesture, which Wilson was amongst the first to
recognize. The weakening of our forces in Libya, which were facing
an Italian Army recently bolstered by the arrival of Rommel and a single
German division, made little sense, whilst the force being sent to Greece
promised not to be strong enough to defeat the likely German tank

169
WILSON

and air threat. Moreover success in Greece was only possible if the

Greek Army honoured their undertaking to withdraw from Macedonia


to the line of the River Aliakmon which the combined British and Greek
Armies might have some chance of holding against the German threat.
(In fact by 2 March both Wavell and Eden knew this withdrawal was
not being made.) Nevertheless Churchill decided to back the judgement
of the man on the spot. On 15 March the Prime Minister signalled
Cairo, While being under no illusionswe all send you the order "Full
4
Steam Ahead".' Wilson did what he was told.
The Imperial Force consisted of 1 Armoured Brigade, the New Zea-
land Division, the headquarters of the Australian Corps and 6th Austra-
lian Division. Itwas hoped that reinforcements consisting of the Polish
Independent Brigade Group and 7th Australian Division would arrive
in due course. Whilst this force was in transit, Wilson flew to Athens
in civilian clothes to discuss the deployment of Imperial forces with
the Greek Government. He made it clear that in his view the Albanian
front represented a serious distraction which tied down 300,000 Greek
troops and deprived the Allies of any reserves for the eastern and central
Macedonian sectors of operations. In fact only three Greek divisions
were made available to Wilson. This combined force, under Wilson's
command, became known as 'W' Force. He was also anxious about
the state of Greek morale when battle was joined with the Wehrmacht.
Nevertheless despite difficulties he accepted his orders as a soldier is

bound to do. He realized that the outcome of the impending battle


depended on three main factors the reaching, occupation and fortifica-
:

tion of the Aliakmon Line before the German onslaught; the willingness
of the Greeks to abandon their forward positions and adopt a more
realistic strategy and the timing of the German attack - which could
;

be delayed by bad weather. Undaunted, Wilson drew up his plans. By


2 April he had deployed most of the limited forces available to him
along the Aliakmon Line in such a way that British and Greek formations
were interleaved with each other. By so doing Wilson hoped to infect
the Greek forces with some of the metal of Imperial forces.
On 6 April 1941 Germany declared war on Greece and Yugoslavia
simultaneously. In the air this meant that the 320 aircraft of the Italian
forces were supplemented by 400 Luftwaffe bombers and 380 fighters
and reconnaissance planes. Air Vice Marshal D'Albiac commanding
the RAF element in Greece could muster barely 80 aircraft by this
time, approximately a third of which were committed to the Albanian
front. On the ground, after the capitulation of the Greek Army of East

170
WILSON

Macedonia Thrace on 9 April, the five divisions of 'W Force faced


in
the full might of von Weich's Second Army, comprising three corps
totalling eight infantry divisions, three motorized divisions and two
panzer formations deploying over 200 tanks. Over the next few days
as the fighting increased Wilson was told by Wavell that he could offer
little hope of any further reinforcements from Egypt owing to the mount-

ing pressure being exerted by Rommel in Cyrenaica. In view of the


general situation Wilson decided to develop his plans for a withdrawal
to amore defensible position. His first intention was to link up with
Greek forces which would abandon Albania and Western Macedonia
and, together with 'W' Force, establish a line across central Greece
from Mount Olympus in the east through the Pindus mountains to
the Adriatic.
But by now 'W' Force was sustaining serious losses, the state of morale
of the Greek forces falling back - at last - from Albania was not reassur-
ing, formal resistance in Yugoslavia was fast collapsing and the Germans
had almost complete control of Macedonia. It now appeared doubtful
if his latest planned fall-back position would be tenable. Wilson decided

to withdraw to a line that could be held by 'W' Force alone. This he


called the Thermopylae Line. It would involve a rapid retreat of 100
miles, with German air superiority making the operation extremely
hazardous. On 13 April Churchill sent a signal to his commander in
Greece : 'It is impossible for me to understand why the Greek Western
Army does not make sure of its retreat into Greece. ... All good wishes
5
to you in this memorable hour.' Wilson's decision to retreat to the
isthmus Thermopylae was approved. The successful completion of
at
this operation was much to the credit of the staff officers and men
concerned and not least to Wilson, who had the courage to follow his
own instincts and judgement when he must have felt terribly isolated.
Enemy air superiority had made the retreat a hellish manoeuvre to carry
out.
Whilst
involved in a
W in its new positions, Wilson was heavily
Force reorganized
number of crucial conferences that sealed the fate of the
Imperial presence in a rapidly collapsing Greece. Some Greek troops
had actually been demobilized, others sent on leave. On 18 April the
Greek Prime Minister Korysis, unable to face the ruin of his country,
killed himself. On the 19th Wavell, who had flown in from Cairo, after
conferring with Wilson and the Greek Government, decided on the
evacuation of Imperial forces.
It was at this stage that the relationship between Churchill and Wilson

171
WILSON

received a temporary setback. The Prime Minister had signalled Wavell


in Cairo on the 15th: We have no news from you of what has happened
on the Imperial front in Greece.' On the 19th he followed this up with
another signal to Wavell copied to Wilson deploring the lack of any
reports '
. . . from General Wilson or from you. . . . This is not the
way the Government should be treated. It is also detrimental to the
Service as many decisions have to be taken here and we are in constant
relations with the Dominions and with foreign countries. . .
.'
The signal
went on to demand a short, daily report on what is happening
'
. . .

6
on the front of the British and Imperial Army'.
General Wilson was, understandably, put out by the implied criticism.
Wavell lost no time in replying to London that, although he agreed
that communications had been bad, this was not the fault of the force
commander. Signal links had broken down; two of the three liaison
officers had been wounded; the single flight of Lysander army co-
operation aircraft had been out of action since 7 April and the critical
situation inevitably resulted in Wilson giving priority to more immediate
matters.
Despite fierce fighting involving 4 and 6 New Zealand Brigades in
particular - and which on both
resulted in considerable loss of life

sides on the 24th and 27th - the bulk of the Imperial Forces had been
evacuated by 29 April. An estimated 43,000 troops were brought safely
out of Greece. The original strength of 'W' Force is normally put at

57,660 thus much more than the original estimate of about thirty per
;

cent were rescued, but at a heavy price in equipment and shipping.


The impact of Wilson's 'W' Force had not proved negligible. Britain
had been seen to honour her undertakings and the lesson was not lost
on America. Indeed it has been claimed that the German need to mount
a campaign against Yugoslavia and Greece caused the invasion of Russia
to be put back from May to June with critical results, as this delay
cost Hitler his chance to occupy Moscow and possibly destroy the Stalin
government. This is, of course, to argue with the benefit of hindsight;
but Jumbo Wilson, to the end of his days a Rifleman first and foremost,
liked to compare his campaign in Greece to that of Sir John Moore
in 1808-9, which prevented Napoleon from completing the conquest
of Spain, even if the cost was another desperate evacuation operation
and ultimately the loss of the commanding general's life at Corunna.
The entire Balkans expedition, including operations in Albania and
Yugoslavia, absorbed twenty-seven German divisions including seven
armoured, over a critical period. The Greek campaign also gained a

172
WILSON

valuable breathing space which allowed British and Imperial reinforce-


ments to reach the Middle East from East Africa, India and Great Bri-
tain. For Wilson, the campaign ended in predictable but honourable

defeat, though not through any fault of his own. The task had been
an impossible one from the outset but he had tackled it with a brave
heart and considerable military skill. He wrote to his wife Hester on
i May 1941: 'So ended a military adventure which I hope I will not

participate in again. The political considerations overrode the military


ones and led us into a gamble based on the uncertain quality of Balkan
7
allies.'

As soon as General Wilson returned to Cairo from Greece, Wavell


appointed him Commander of British Troops in Palestine and Trans-
Jordan. He arrived in Jerusalem in early May to find that the Iraqi
Army was laying siege to the RAF station at Habbaniya. Since early
1941 the political situation in Iraq had steadily worsened
Prime as the
Minister, Rashid Ali, began collaborating openly with the Germans,
supported by a substantial part of the Iraqi Army. In March the Regent
of Iraq had fled the country, and Rashid Ali had seized power. In the
face of these events Wilson organized a small column which made its
way by desert route from Palestine to the relief of Habbaniya and the
occupation of Baghdad. This was accomplished in co-operation with
the Habbaniya garrison and a brigade which had been sent from India.
Wilson's force was in Baghdad by 31 May when an Armistice was signed.
The assistance given by the Vichy French in Syria to German aeroplanes
using Syria as a staging post on their way to support the Rashid Ali
caused Churchill to instruct Wavell to occupy Vichy Syria
revolt in Iraq
and Lebanon. If either country were occupied by the Axis, they would
clearly constitute a threat to British forces in the Middle East and result
in the isolation of Turkey. Most of the 7th Australian Division, 5 Indian
Infantry Brigade and the Free French Middle East contingent were
available for operations.Wilson decided on a three-pronged advance
northwards along the coast to Beirut. This was not, however, a straight-
forward military undertaking. De Gaulle had arrived in Jerusalem at
the end of May and he had some very definite ideas not only about
the role of the Free French but also as to how the Vichy French were
to be treated.
Lebanon on 9 June and very
Allied troops crossed the frontier into
soon encountered stiff from Vichy French forces some bitter
resistance ;

fighting took place between Free and Vichy French. Damascus was taken
on 3 July and Beirut surrendered on 12 July after Wilson had threatened

173
WILSON

to bomb the city. It had been a most unpleasant and messy campaign.
Badly handled, the affairs in both Syria and Iraq could have landed
the British Government in a great deal of trouble. Faced with these
events Wilson demonstrated his not inconsiderable abilities as a negotia-
tor and diplomat. De Gaulle was, even at this stage, notoriously difficult
to deal with Wilson seems to have handled him with consummate skill.
;

Despite his direct manner and bluff exterior those who had served with
Wilson when he was an instructor at Staff College in the early 1930s
knew him as a man who was capable of wise and balanced judgement
and a degree of tact and sensitivity which was put to good use in negotia-
tions with the Vichy French after their surrender in Syria and Lebanon
and before their repatriation to France.
Early in July 1941 General Wavell was replaced by Auchinleck as
Commander-in-Chief Middle East. W
r
hy did Auchinleck not choose
Wilson for command of the Eighth Army? In a letter to Dill (then
Chief of the Imperial General Staff) on 16 August 1941 he wrote 'Cunn- :

ingham .ought to fit the bill very well at GOC-in-C Western Desert.
. .

The South Africans who will be under him know him well and think
a lot of him, which cannot fail to help. ... In view of the PM's strong
advocacy for Wilson for the Western Desert, I have sent him a private
wire today telling him that my final choice is Cunningham. ... I am
8
quite sure that Jumbo [Wilson] is best where he is.' On 2 July Churchill
had urged the new C-in-C to consider Wilson for command in the
Western Desert. 'It is much to be regretted,' Churchill later wrote,
9
'that this advice, subsequentiy repeated, was not taken.'
Wilson was in many ways the obvious choice for command of the
Eighth Army. He had a high reputation as a tactician and he had gained
valuable experience of tank warfare in the Western Desert during the
successful winter campaign of 1940-41. Planning for the 'Crusader' cam-
paign of November 1941 started in August, by which time Wilson had
brought his operations against the Vichy French in Syria to a successful
conclusion. He could have been moved. The precise reasons for passing
Wilson by for this key appointment will never be known for certain.
It may be that Auchinleck thought it preferable to appoint the victor

of East Africa rather than the man who had been unlucky enough to
be given the Greek command. It is more likely that he thought Wilson
was too old at sixty for field command.
Meanwhile Wilson got on with the business of bringing Syria into
the orbit of defence of the Middle East. The time that he had available
to prepare for attack from the north depended upon the outcome of

174
WILSON

the battle being fought in south Russia where the wing of the
right
German armies were pressing on into the Donetz Basin; it was not

outside the bounds of possibility that it might reach the Caucasus the
following spring. By this time Wilson's command had been redesignated
the Ninth Army. The entry of Japan into the war on 7 December meant
that he was soon becoming aware of the diversion of men and resources
to the Far East. This did not make life any easier when, after the fall
of Tobruk in June 1942, he had to prepare contingency plans for the
defence of Palestine against attack by Rommel across the Sinai.
During the first week in August 1942 Wilson met Churchill for the
first time in Cairo. Out of their meeting, at which Smuts, Wavell and

Alanbrooke were also present, came changes in the Middle East Com-
mand structure: Alexander took over as C-in-C Middle East, Mont-
gomery the Eighth Army and Wilson was appointed C-in-C to the new
Persia/Iraq command created in view of the advance of the southern
wing of the German armies towards Stalingrad and the Caucasus. His
tasks were, first, to safeguard at all costs the oilfields and oil installations
in Persia and Iraq from land and air attack and, second, to guarantee
oil supplies from Persian Gulf ports to Russia to the maximum extent

possible. With no prospect of operations before the spring, Wilson spent


the last months of 1942 planning the deployment of the Tenth Army
to meet the German threat from Russia. But the Russian counter-offen-
sive in front of Stalingrad changed everything. The Persia/Iraq Com-
mand lost its operational importance, and in late January 1943 Wilson
was again recalled to Cairo where Churchill told him that he wanted
him to take over the Middle Eastern command. Alexander was to be
appointed Deputy C-in-C to Eisenhower in North Africa to take charge
of operations to capture Tunis.
As C-in-C Middle East, Wilson's tasks were, in order of priority:
to maintain the Eighth Army and support its operations until Tunisia
was finally cleared of the enemy; to take measures conforming to
all

the requirements of General Eisenhower for mounting that part of the


operation for the attack on Sicily which would be launched from Middle
East Command; to make preparations to support Turkey; and to make
plans for amphibious operations in the eastern Mediterranean.
In April 1943 Wilson travelled to Ankara to finalize the details of
Allied aid to Turkey in the event of a German invasion. It was this
sort of quasi- diplomatic role that suited Jumbo Wilson so well. He got
on easily with people he was a
; and Churchill undoubtedly recog-
'fixer'

nized his talents in this direction. On 16 June Wilson was summoned

175
WILSON

to Tripoli to meet King George vi who had come to North Africa on


a tour of inspection. After lunch on that day Montgomery and Wilson
were knighted in the field.
The news of the Italian Armistice on 8 September placed a greater
emphasis on resistance movements in Greece, Yugoslavia and Albania.
The Italian defection from the Axis left far fewer occupying troops
on the ground and larger areas of countryside ripe for guerrilla warfare.
Thus the combined Chiefs of Staff laid down on 24 August that 'Op-
erations in the Balkans Area will be limited to supply of Balkan guerrillas
by air and sea transport, to minor commando forces and to the bombing
10
of strategic objectives.' Fitzroy MacLean, who spent this period com-
manding the British Mission to the Yugoslav partisans, was struck by
11
Wilson's appreciation of the potential of guerrilla warfare. He got
on well with Tito, guiding difficult meetings in the right direction and,

with the aid of the occasional apposite joke, managed to keep those
present in good humour.
That autumn Wilson approved the occupation of the Dodekanese
Islands, the Italian garrisons of which had - with the exception of one
small island - quietly surrendered by 18 September. Churchill, on hear-
ing of Wilson's plan, had sent him a signal on 9 September: 'Personal
from Prime Minister to Commander-in-Chief Middle East. Good. This
12
is the time to play high. Improvise and dare.' But the loss of the
Dodecanese touched a raw nerve with the Germans, who were stung
into counter-action. Kos fell to a German counter-attack on 3 October
which the Italian garrison, although stiffened by the Durham Light
Infantry, refused to oppose and Leros was retaken on 12 November.
The failure of the Aegean adventure was a grave disappointment to
Wilson. Churchill had signalled him again on 13 September:

From Prime Minister for General Maitland Wilson. Personal and Most Secret.
The Capture of Rhodes by you at this time with Italian aid would be a fine
contribution to the general war. Let me know what are your plans for this.
Can you not improvise the necessary garrison out of the forces in the Middle
East. What is your total ration strength. This is the time to think of Clive
13
and Peterborough and of Rooke's men taking Gibraltar.

There were not, however, sufficient landing craft available at the time
in theMediterranean for such an undertaking. The Dodekanese adven-
ture had always been marginal, Rhodes was out of the question. Wilson
would dearly have liked to carry out Churchill's cherished wish to cap-
ture Rhodes, but Roosevelt consistendy refused to allow any forces to

176
WILSON

be diverted from Eisenhower and Overlord. The bleeding of the eastern


Mediterranean of resources brought Churchill into the most acute dif-
ferences he ever had with Eisenhower, but at the same time it brought
Wilson even closer to the Prime Minister.
Wilson met Churchill in Tunis in December 1943 where the Prime
Minister informed him that Eisenhower was to command Operation
Overlord the following spring and that he was to succeed Eisenhower
as Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean in January 1944.
At the time Wilson took over command, two major operations were
imminent the Anzio landings on 22 January and a second operation,
:

codenamed Anvil, against the southern coast of France then scheduled


for May. The Anzio bridgehead once established, though secure, failed
to achieve the hoped-for break-out. Wilson felt that Allied resources
in the Mediterranean could not support two major operations and at
the same time hold a reserve in case it was required for Turkey. So
he sought a broader directive that required him to contain the maximum
number of German divisions in south Europe using the forces earmarked
for Anvil. Thus he hoped to continue to concentrate his main effort
in Italy but to keep the enemy guessing by posing various potential
threats elsewhere. In so doing he was walking a political tightrope:
Stalin expected Overlord and Anvil to take place simultaneously in the
spring; the French were anxious to have French troops on French soil
as soon as possible Churchill and the British chiefs of staff wanted
;

to kill Anvil stone dead, whilst the Americans wanted to keep it alive.
Through all this Wilson was conscious, more than anything else, of
being an Allied C-in-C.
On 7 March 1944 he received a three-page signal from Churchill
accusing him of being too neutral as an Allied commander and not
resolving strategic differences with the Americans sufficiently robustly.
It is much to Wilson's credit that he withstood these conflicting pressures

and retained the complete confidence of his staff. Churchill failed to


understand the delicate balancing act involved in running an Allied
staff. Had he fully appreciated the complete fusion of staff and working

relationships which Wilson had managed to achieve he would not have


objected, as he did in one of the many telegrams he sent to Wilson,
to the spelling of the word 'theater' rather than 'theatre' in messages
sent out from Allied Forces HQ. Wilson's solution to the conflicting
requirements of the Allied governments was to let Anvil die naturally
which, without an additional transfusion of landing craft, was going
to happen anyway. Once Rome had been taken then it might be advan-

177
WILSON

tageous to switch the main thrust elsewhere. Meanwhile Wilson deter-


mined to concentrate all his efforts and resources on Italy.

The attempt to break the stalemate in Italy commenced on n May


1944 and, after vicious righting around Cassino, II and IV US Corps
drove over the Alban hills on 1 and 2 June to overlook Rome. Allied
troops entered the city on 4 June. Wilson, as he had promised, then
turned his main efforts to Anvil. The landings by the Seventh US Army
on 14 August in the South of France were a testimony to the high standard
of teamwork that had been achieved between the three services of Britain
and the US - with the added complication of having II French Corps
under command. The German Nineteenth Army was severely mauled,
some 50,000 prisoners being taken by the end of September. Yet Wilson
had firmly opposed Anvil from the outset and Churchill saw it as an
extravagant and unnecessary diversion. He, and Wilson with him, would
have much preferred to have increased Allied strength in Italy and
pressed on up through Austria and Hungary, whilst exploiting Tito's
successes in the Adriatic. Anvil prevented this strong thrust into Europe,
so keenly sought by Wilson and the Prime Minister. It is interesting
to speculate what effect such a strategy might have had on the shaping
of postwar Europe.
During the last three months of 1944, Wilson was managing the Eighth
and Fifth Armies battling northwards in Italy, the Seventh Army in
the South of France, SOE operations in Yugoslavia and special forces
operations in Greece. At the end of October, after the German with-
drawal from Athens, he returned to Athens and was presented with
the Freedom of the City, a city which he had left in very different
circumstances three years previously. The fact that he was still in the
Mediterranean, indeed had been since 1939, perhaps explains more than
anything else why he never caught the public imagination in quite the
same way as Monty or Alexander or Alanbrooke or Wavell, all of whom
achieved higher-profile roles. Wilson's contribution in the Middle East
and Mediterranean was solid rather then spectacular. But that was in
keeping with his character and exactiy as he would have wanted it
described himself.
Wilson handed over command of the Mediterranean theatre to Alex-
ander on 12 December 1944. Churchill's especial trust in the faithful
Wilson was exemplified when he appointed him as his personal represen-
tative in all military matters to the President of the United States. On
21 November 1944 Churchill had cabled Wilson: 'I can find only one
14
officer with the necessary credentials and qualities, namely yourself.'

178
WILSON

As such he became head of the British Joint Staff Mission in Washington


in January 1945. Here he represented Churchill and Attlee in the highest
matters of state until early 1947. His main achievement in Washington
was the maintenance of a happy and effective working relationship with
the Americans. Sending Wilson to Washington was an astute move by
Churchill.
What can we make of this great wartime commander whom history
has largely passed by? umD0> Wilson was surprisingly lacking in
'J

panache. He seemed to make very little attempt to put himself across


to the general public. Instead he simply got on with the series of formi-
dable jobs assigned to him. Not surprisingly he was a product of his
generation and, in this respect, held fundamentally differing views to
some of the younger wartime generals who had been affected so much
by the thinking of Fuller and Liddell Hart. Wilson, must be remem-
it

bered, like Churchill had fought in the Boer War. That is not to suggest
for a moment that he lacked the capacity for innovative thinking. One
only has to look at his desert campaign of 1941 to witness daring initiative
and bold decision. But it may account for a certain wisdom and a degree
of caution arising from a lifetime of rich and varied experience. Wilson
was at his best guiding meetings, cementing relationships, smoothing
ruffled feathers, engineering acceptable compromises and persuading
the reluctant.He was even, steadfast and cheerful in adversity and a
man to be trusted. He made no pretence to be an intellectual and was
more impressive in direct confrontation than on paper. He chose his
words carefully and was a shrewd judge of character and circumstances.
His decisions were on the whole sound, though some of his arrangements
for operations in the Dodekanese have aroused criticism.
Churchill undoubtedly had a high regard for Wilson and would have
liked to have seen him appointed to command the Eighth Army rather
than Cunningham in 1941. It is pointless to speculate what might have
been. It is probably fair to say that Wilson was the right man for the
difficult, if unspectacular, problems of Syria, the Lebanon, Palestine,

Iraq and Persia. He was certainly the right man for command in the
Mediterranean and for Washington. Many other senior officers would
undoubtedly have been disheartened by what was probably the most
enduring theme of his years in wartime command: a continual lack
of resources. Wilson was always faced with a more important theatre
which had first call on resources the defence of Great Britain when
:

he was in Egypt, of Egypt when he was in Greece, of the Far East

179
WILSON

when he was in Palestine, and finally by the strains which Overlord


imposed on Italy, Anvil and the Dodekanese.
From his arrival in Egypt in 1939 to his return to England in early

1947 from Washington, Jumbo Wilson spent eight years overseas. Few
wartime commanders gave such unstinted and unremitting service.Of
all Churchill's generals, his relationship with the Prime Minister was
probably the closest. Though he is unlikely to be remembered in history
as one of the great wartime field commanders, he deserves to be remem-
bered, like Eisenhower, as a leader who moved nations to work together
in a common cause.

NOTES
1 From copy of original report in Wilson Family Papers.
2 Original letter from Wavell to Wilson, Wilson Family Papers.
3 Wilson, Eight Years Overseas, p. 66.

4 Text from original signal in Wilson Family Papers.


5 Text from original signal in Wilson Family Papers.
6 Cited in John Connell, Wavell - Soldier and Scholar (1964), p. 417.

7 Wilson Family Papers.


8 Cited in John Connell, Auchinleck (1959), pp. 285 and 286.
9 Churchill, Second World War, vol. Ill, p. 354.
10 Wilson, Eight Years Overseas, p. 179.
11 Fitzroy Maclean, Eastern Approaches.
12 Text from original signal in Wilson Family Papers.
13 Text from original signal in Wilson Family Papers.
14 Churchill, Second World War, vol. VI, p. 230.

CHRONOLOGY: HENRY MAITLAND WILSON


1881, September 5 Born at Stowlangtoft Hall, Suffolk
1895, September Starts at Eton
1899, January Starts at Royal Military College, Sandhurst

1900, March 10 Commissioned into the Rifle Brigade

1901 Serves with 2nd Battalion The Rifle Brigade in South


African War
1902 Serves with 2nd Battalion in Cairo
1902, March 18 Promoted Lieutenant
1908, April 2 Promoted Captain
1911, October Appointed Adjutant, Oxford University Officer
Training Corps

180
WILSON

1914, October Appointed Brigade -Major 48 Infantry Brigade (16th


Irish Division)

1914, December 1 Marries Hester Mary, daughter of James Digby


Wykeham
1915, September 1 Promoted Substantive Major
1915, December Posted to France with 48 Infantry Brigade
I9i6,june Appointed GSO2 41st Division
1917, October Appointed GSO2 New Zealand Division and awarded
DSO
1919, January 1 Promoted brevet Lieutenant-Colonel and attended
Staff College
1920, January Appointed Company Commander RJV1C Sandhurst
1923, August Appointed Second-in-Command of 2nd Battalion The
Rifle Brigade in Aldershot

1927, January Appointed Commanding Officer of 2nd Battalion in


Landi Kotal, North West Frontier
1928 Moves with 2nd Battalion to Jullunder
1930 Promoted full Colonel and appointed Chief Instructor
at Staff College

1934, January 16 Promoted Brigadier and appointed Commander of 6


Infantry Brigade

1935, April 30 Promoted Major-General


1935-37 Spends two years on half pay
1937, August 18 Appointed Commander 2nd Infantry Division
1939, June 15 Promoted Lieutenant- General and appointed
Commander British Troops in Egypt
1941, February 22 Appointed Commander of Greek expedition
1941, May 6 Appointed Commander of British troops in Palestine
and Trans-Jordan
1941, December Appointed Commander Ninth Army in Syria and
Palestine
1942, August 21 Appointed Commander Tenth Army in Persia and Iraq

1943, February Appointed Commander-in-Chief Middle East


1944, January Appointed Supreme Allied Commander in the
Mediterranean
1945, January Promoted Field-Marshal
1945, January 12 Appointed Head of British Joint Staff Mission in
Washington DC
1946, March 12 Created 1st Baron Wilson of Libya and Stowlangtoft,
County Suffolk
1947, April 23 Departs Washington DC for Great Britain
1947 Appointed President of the Army Cadet Force
Association

181
WILSON

1955 Appointed Constable of the Tower of London


i960 Retires as Constable
1964, December 31 Dies peacefully at home

182
Ironside at the foot of the
Duke of York's Steps on
his way to the War Office
on the day war broke out.
The swagger and air of
determination are
characteristic of 'Tiny'.
Left Gort and Gamelin
before the German atttack
West. Neither
in the
commander-in-chief
survived the debacle, but
Gort, unlike Gamelin,
retained his power of
decision during the crisis.

Right Dill as Chief of the


Imperial General Staff.
He did not satisfy
Churchill in this post but
came into his own as
Head of the British Joint
Services Mission to
Washington and
confidant of Marshall, the
American Chief of Staff.

Below right Alanbrooke,


as Chief of the Imperial
General Staff, and Dill in
Canada before the first
Quebec Conference,
August 1943. Alanbrooke's
ability to talk Churchill
out of his wilder ideas was
the most important of his
many contributions to the
higher direction of the
war.
Alexander as a field-marshal. His
fighting record, good looks and
aristocratic sang-froid made him
the personification of the soldier in
the eyes of Churchill, who spared
him criticism even during the
slowest stages of the Italian
campaign.

Wavell, though the most


intellectual of Churchill's
generals, was temperamentally
out of tune with the Prime
Minister and had the
misfortune to command
campaigns where the
advantage lay with the enemy.
Auchinleck with Churchill in the Western
Desert just before his removal from
command. Churchill said that dismissing
him was 'like killing a magnificent stag'.
Above O'Connor in Scotland in 1944 after
his return from captivity. His offensive
against the Italian army in Libya in 1940
produced the first British victory of the
war and established him as one of the
army's best liked and trusted
commanders.
Wilson - his elephantine size
Left 'Jumbo'
was complemented by a shrewd brain and
massive calm, displayed at their best in his
management of politico-military relations
in the Middle East.

Above right Ritchie (centre) with Generals


Norrie and 'Strafer' Gott in the Western
Desert. Ritchie had the misfortune to
command against Rommel at a low ebb of
British fortunes.

Right Cunningham, brother of Britain's


leading admiral of the Second World
War, achieved outstanding success in
defeating the Italians in East Africa but
was outgeneralled in the Western Desert
by Rommel.
Montgomery, in characteristically
didactic pose, with war
correspondents in Normandy, June
1944. His pedantic attention to detail
and lack of self-doubt were among
his most important battle-winning
qualities.

Hobart, the tank pioneer, advocate of


specialized armour and commander
of 79th Armoured Division.
Temperamentally an outsider, and an
impossible subordinate, he made
crucial contributions to the success of
D-Day.
Horrocks and officers of the 51st Highland
Division in Germany, March 1945. His
vivid personality was an inspiration to all
under his command during the most bitter
fighting of the North West Europe
campaign.
Percival, before his defeat in Malaya and
surrender of Singapore to the Japanese.
Official Britain never forgave him for
these humiliations.

Slim was, with


Montgomery, the most
consistently successful of
Churchill's field
commanders. Unlike
Montgomery, he
possessed a natural
authority and humanity
which impressed all who
served with him.
Wingate was the strangest of Churchill's generals, a Zionist, a failed suicide,
a rebel against convention but a tactical visionary whom Churchill believed
might have been a second Lawrence of Arabia.
The legendary Carton de
Wiart,who supplied
Evelyn Waugh with many
of the traits for his
fictional General Ritchie-
Hook. Among much else
in his fiery military
record, he was wounded
seven times on Sundays.
Left The cosmopolitan Spears had three
careers, as a soldier, a successful
businessman and a gifted writer. De Gaulle
succeeded nevertheless in trying the
patience of this natural Francophile.

Churchill surrounded by the grandees of


the Anglo-American high command,
including Alanbrooke (second left),

Alexander and Montgomery


(fifth left)
(right), North Africa, June 1943. The group
also includes Generals Eisenhower and
Marshall.
Churchill, Montgomery and Alanbrooke taking tea on the banks of the Rhine. The end of the
war, in the direction of which all three had been involved since the outbreak, lay in sight.
10

O'CONNOR
General Sir Richard O 'Connor

BARRIE PITT

At the end of October 1940 Mr Churchill was experiencing deep frus-


tration and was thus in a mood of mounting anger. The Battle of Britain
had by now passed its crisis point leaving the RAF the undoubted victor,
the army which had escaped from Dunkirk was in the process of re-
organization and re-equipment as far as was possible and positioned
to defend the island's shores should Hitler continue with his plans
for invasion but Britain's only truly professional army, though separated
;

from their enemy by nothing except empty desert, was apparentiy content
to assume a defensive posture, with no intention of taking the initiative
against an equally quiescent foe.
Western Desert Force consisting of the 7th Armoured Division and
the 4th Indian - the only two divisions in the British Army outside
India which could now lay serious claim to a high degree of expertise
- was deployed in Egypt doing little, so far as he could see, but use
up petrol and vehicle mileage in endless training exercises, and watch
the advanced camps of the Italian Tenth Army. The previous month
the forward divisions of this 80,000 strong army commanded by General
Berti, under the watchful eye of the Commander-in-Chief, Italian Army
in Libya, Marshal Rodolfo Graziani (himself continually goaded by
Mussolini) had moved ponderously across the Libya-Egypt border,

183
O CONNOR

flooded down the Escarpment on to the coast road more by its weight
than its energy, and then crept reluctantly eastwards - watched curiously
by the British reconnaissance units in the vicinity - until they reached
Sidi Barrani.
Here, apparently exhausted by their
efforts, they rested, pushing for-

ward only few miles during the next week as far as Maktila. They
a
then brought up another army but this time of civilians - labourers
and engineers who set about constructing a series of fortified encamp-
ments on an arc curving south-west from Maktila as far as Nibeiwa
nearly twenty miles away, and a second group on top of the Escarpment
around Rabia and the Sofafi positions. Along the line of the coast between
Solium and Sidi Barrani they also began the construction of a metalled
road and a continuous water pipeline, and soon the former was in use
bearing thousands of tons of supplies, brought up and fed into the
encampments. It seemed that these were intended to become a permanent
feature of the desert scene - and so far as Mr Churchill could see
the British Commander-in-Chief, General Sir Archibald Wavell, was
prepared to sit still and allow it to happen
What made the situation even more difficult to accept, was the fact
that at Wavell's urgent representations Churchill had himself recently
taken the decision to send a supply convoy out to the Middle East carry-
ing over 150 tanks, 100 pieces of artillery, nearly 1,000 machine- and
anti-tank guns and as much ammunition as could be crammed aboard
- and this at a time when the Battle of Britain had not been won, and
men all over England were drilling with pikes instead of guns, armbands
instead of uniforms, flags instead of artillery.
Churchill had even overridden Admiralty advice and ordered that
the convoy should risk the Mediterranean passage in order that the
arms should be at Wavell's disposal as quickly as possible. And what
was he doing with them? Nothing except make futile gestures against
the Italian Empire in Ethiopia (which in Churchill's opinion could well
be left to 'wither on the bough') and sit and watch Graziani's men
. . .

consolidate their positions.


In some desperation Mr Churchill had sent the Secretary of State
for War, Mr Anthony Eden, out to visit Wavell at the beginning of
October to find out what was happening, but when on 28 October Italy
invaded Greece, Mr Churchill decided to wait no longer and that the
time had come for Draconian measures. If Wavell would not use the
men and weapons he had received in the Western Desert, then they
should be taken away from him and sent to support the Greeks in their

184
O CONNOR

hour of need; and he would brook no argument.


Faced with this ultimatum, Wavell now had no choice but to reveal
to Mr Eden that plans were, in fact, well advanced for an attack on
the new Italian encampments, but security considerations had made
it necessary for the details to be known only to the chief protagonists
of the attack, Generals Maitland Wilson and O'Connor.
Relieved, Mr Eden flew home and on 8 November was able to tell
Mr Churchill the news - to which the reaction was far better than
could have been expected. If slightly put out by Wavell's secrecy, he
'purred like six cats' as the details of the plans were unfolded, ordered
a 'Staff study' to be made to ensure that every means of exploitation
would be available to follow up any unexpected success, and after assur-

ing Wavell that security on the project would be as strict in Whitehall


as it had been in Cairo, sent for the career details of the man who
would command the operations on the ground.

Richard Nugent O'Connor was born in 1889, the son of a major in

the Royal Irish Fusiliers,was educated at Wellington College and Sand-


hurst and in 1909 had been commissioned into the Cameronians (Scot-
tish Rifles). He was thus twenty-five years old when the First World
War began, and he saw such service on the Western Front and in Italy
that when it ended he had been awarded the Distinguished Service
Order and bar, the Military Cross, the Italian Silver Medal for Valour,
and had been mentioned in despatches nine times. He had also com-
manded tHe 1st Battalion the Honourable Artillery Company at Passch-
endaele as a lieutenant-colonel, a rank he was not to hold again (having
reverted to captain at the end of the war) until 1936 when he was given
command of the 1st Cameronians; he was almost immediately to be
promoted further to take command of the Peshawar Brigade facing the
Khyber Pass at a time of some anxiety in the area.
After two years of extremely active service there, he was promoted
major-general to command the 7th Division in Palestine, an appointment
which also carried the post of Military Governor of Jerusalem. This
was the time of the Arab Revolt against ever-increasing Jewish immi-
gration into the country as a result of Nazi persecution, and the role
of British troops there was to attempt to keep the peace. They were
thoroughly hated by both sides. At the time the northern half of Palestine
was garrisoned by the 8th Division commanded by Major-General Ber-
nard Law Montgomery, and between them they exercised such control

185
O CONNOR

that both service and civilian casualties were kept to a minimum, and
the Jewish settlements at least could expand.
Then in June 1940 Mussolini declared war on Britain. Within twenty-
four hours reconnaissance patrols of the nth Hussars had torn gaps
in the wire fencing that the Italians had erected all along the border
with Egypt, and captured over fifty astonished Italian soldiers - and
O'Connor had received a cable from the commander of British troops
in Egypt, Lieutenant-General H. Maitland Wilson, ordering him to
proceed immediately to Mersa Matruh, to take command of all forces
in the frontier area and undertake the task of protecting Egypt from
Italian attack.
These instructions, O'Connor later recalled, he received 'with sur-
prise, and of course pride', adding 'My recollection is that I was given
very sketchy instructions as to policy. I did not object, really, as I don't
mind being left on my own.'
The two men made an almost ludicrous contrast - Jumbo Wilson
massive, heavy in jowl, deep-voiced, slow and almost majestic in gesture,
filling his chair and the space to his desk almost to overflowing; O'Con-
nor small, bird-like, sitting nervously on the edge of his chair rather
like a shy schoolboy at his first interview with his housemaster. His
voice was light and clear, only the medal ribbons on his chest belying
his gentie manner and reminding the observer that here was a pro-
fessional soldier of thirty years' very distinguished sen ice.
A professional soldier, too, of considerable intellectual achievement.
The delicate head held and logical brain which saw to the heart
a cool
of a problem with a certainty and speed which could make other quite
sound soldiers appear slow-witted the slight body had already uncon-
;

cernedly endured battle in Alpine snows, in Ypres mud and the heat
of India, and the gentle manner masked a will and determination as
firm as any commander in history. Here was a clear example of the
British regular soldier in the mode long ago established by Sir Garnet
Wolseley - small, neat and highly professional.
By the middle of June 1940, O'Connor was established at his head-
quarters at Maaten Baggush, thirty miles east of Mersa Matruh, assessing
the forces now under his command, studying the intelligence reports
of those against whom his mission was to protect Egypt, and also the
land over which he might have to control battles. Three weeks after
he had taken command, an astonished subaltern commanding a recon-
naissance patrol already fifty miles into enemy country, met his general

in his staff car coming from even further west, and when his superior

186
O CONNOR

back at base remonstrated with O'Connor, O'Connor apologized; but


as his need grew to know even more about the ground which might
become his battle area, neither the brigadier's remonstrance nor O'Con-
nor's polite acceptance prevented him from going even deeper into enemy
territorywhenever he felt it advisable.
Then September Graziani's elephantine invasion began its ponder-
in
ous roll forward and O'Connor employed Fabian tactics of withdrawal
with his reconnaissance and infantry units, designed to exact the highest
possible price for every foot of ground yielded. To the south, he kept
the tank squadrons of the 7th Armoured Division out of sight, poised
to strike up and cut the supply and communication lines
to the sea
of the forward Italian divisions when they were sufficiently extended.
The time for this thrust up to the coast, O'Connor considered, would
be when the advancing Italians reached Mersa Matruh - surely the
minimum target for such a massing of armed force. Then the Italian
advance slowed and stopped just past Sidi Barrani, the Italian civilians
appeared and work began on the arc of encampments a bare fifty miles
into Egypt, and it became obvious that for the
there was to moment
be no further thrust towards Mersa Matruh, or the continuation of
Mussolini's by now much-vaunted Drive to the Nile.
'It was all', wrote General O'Connor as he withdrew the tanks of

the 7th Armoured Division and redeployed the Support Group, 'rather
a disappointment.'

The - and
task of throwing the Italian divisions back over the border
even further - was from then on, and despite Mr Churchill's
if possible
doubts, the overriding objective of Western Desert Force and its com-
mander. The nub of the problem was the disparity in the size of the
forces that would be engaged.
Quite soon O'Connor knew that five Italian divisions occupied the
camps in front of him; one Blackshirt division in Sidi Barrani, two
Libyan divisions divided between Maktila on the coast and the two
Tummar camps, a mobile group at Nibeiwa and a Metropolitan division
in the Sofafi and Rabia camps. In reserve was a Blackshirt division
at Buq Buq, while further back at Solium, Bardia and Tobruk lay the
equivalent of four more divisions ; units of the Regia Aeronautica in
the region gave them a superiority in numbers of aircraft over the RAF
of about five to one.
O'Connor's own forces in the desert consisted of only the 7th

187
O'CONNOR

Armoured Division and the 4th Indian, plus 'Corps' troops and the
Matruh garrison. In manpower they amounted to some 36,000 men
(against 80,000 enemy in the immediate area of attack) but in addition
to high morale, these possessed some real advantages. The two armoured
brigades of the 7th Armoured could put nearly 200 light and 75 cruiser
tanks into battle, and only 60 of the Italian tanks opposite - Mus or
M13S - were in any way comparable. The eighty guns of the 1st and
4th batteries of the Royal Horse Artillery with the Support Group of
7th Armoured were all 25-pounders - more than a match for the Italian
75 mms defending the camps; and altogether 7th Armoured and 4th
Indian would be putting eleven highly trained infantry battalions into
battle, with, of course, all the ancillary engineer, transport, ambulance,
recovery and repair services.
But it was with the 'Corps Troops' that the most potent weapon in
O'Connor's arsenal lay, for in addition to three more batteries of 25-
pounders, one batten of 6-inch howitzers and one of 4.5-inch, they
included the 7th Royal Tank Regiment which possessed forty-eight
heavy T (Infantry) tanks - the Matildas. The Italians had nothing even
faintly comparable and, so O'Connor had every reason to believe, not

the slightest inkling of their presence in the Delta. As for air cover,
by stripping every available plane from every base in Wavell's command
- which stretched from Aden to the Sudan and from Iraq to Egypt
- the RAF would be able to put up 48 fighters (two squadrons of Hurri-
canes and one of Gladiators) and 116 bombers - a mixture of Blenheims,
Wellingtons and Bombays - plus two squadrons of reconnaissance air-
craft directiy under O'Connor's command as Army/ Air Co-operation.
Nevertheless, though quality was undoubtedly a high card on O'Con-
nor's side, quantitywas so much on Graziani's that two other factors
must be brought - surprise and exact planning. In pursuit of
to play
the first, the RAF wore its pilots to exhaustion and its planes to shreds
keeping the Regia Aeronautica away from the area between Maaten
Baggush and the border, so that for twenty-four hours a day stores,
ammunition and equipment could be moved forward to huge camou-
flaged Field Supply Depots. As for planning, O'Connor himself and
the three senior officers of his staff, Brigadiers John Harding, 'Sandy'
Galloway and Eric Dorman-Smith, devised and oversaw exercises both
on paper and over ground marked out to resemble the Italian encamp-
ments, and gradually evolved a plan to take the fullest advantage of
their own strengths and the enemy's weaknesses. The plan was for
a 'Five-Day Raid' which would destroy the enemy presence on Egyptian

188
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soil,and leave open the possibility of further exploitation if circumstances


permitted. The raid would be codenamed Operation Compass, and be
launched through the Enba Gap - the space between the bottom of
the Escarpment and the Nibeiwa encampment.
By oioo on the morning of Monday 9 December, the men and the
machines were all in place and ready to move off through the gap.
From away to their right they could hear the sounds of bombing as
the RAF attacked Nibeiwa, and shelling much further away as the Royal
Navy attacked Maktila and the northernmost of the Tummar camps.
The noise of aircraft was to be kept up all night even when they had
run out of bombs, simply to keep Italian attention away from their western
approaches.
The orders were given, the long columns crept forwards, 4th Indian
infantry and the Matildas curving around to reach the northwestern
corner of Nibeiwa by dawn, Support Group infantry and guns atop
the Escarpment in a screen to cut off the Rabia and Sofafi garrisons
from the battle about to open below them; 4 Armoured Brigade tanks
and armoured cars crept north to cut the Sidi Barrani-Sollum road,
7Armoured Brigade waited in the gap as reserve.
O'Connor and his staff waited and watched from their advanced HQ
on the edge of the Escarpment above Bir Enba itself. They could hear
no sign of activity of any kind from Nibeiwa or further north, only
the sounds of RAF or Royal Navy bombardment coming to them across
the desert. Unlikely though it seemed, they had moved over 30,000
men and all their weapons and equipment nearly 100 miles forward
from the Delta without the enemy detecting even a concentration of
force which might threaten them, let alone an intrusion into their midst
of one armoured and one infantry division.
Before dawn the only fully dressed Italian troops in Nibeiwa were
the sentries and the cooks preparing breakfast - all shocked out of
their minds as the first rays of the sun hit the camp at the same time
as a deluge of shells fell among the positions on the eastern face of
the camp, directing all eyes that way. As saw the
a result, few actually
line of Matildas come over from the main entrance
a crest half a mile
at the north-west corner, to smash their way with almost contemptuous

ease through the road-block and the main gates, then fan out across
thecamp area like avenging furies.
The Italian artillery reacted quickest, but they had first to swing their
guns around - for no one among the Italians had dreamed of an attack
coming from the rear - and when they did, their shells bounced off

189
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the Matildas' armourhowl away into the desert beyond. Impervious


to
and implacable, the tanks ground forward, crushing the gun-crews,
knocking the guns off their bases, then when all of them had been
silenced, turning their attention to the slit trenches and sunken tents

in which the Libyan and Italian infantry were frantically dressing and
groping for their weapons. Few had any opportunity to fire them for
hard on the heels of the tanks came the Camerons and Rajputana Rifle-
men of ii Indian Brigade, herding those who surrendered in time back
towards the entrance, dealing swiftly with the few who showed any
sign of resistance.
Within two hours, Nibeiwa was taken. Dead and wounded lay among
the debris and litter of the battle, more than 4,000 officers and men
were huddled together in sullen and shaken groups of prisoners, twenty-
three Italian tanks, scores of lorries and machine-guns and a positive
Aladdin's cave of gorgeous uniforms, bottles of Italian wine, mountains
of spaghetti and huge cheeses were there for the victor's taking.
But the victors had other duties to attend to. The battles for the
two Tummar camps were tougher than that for Nibeiwa for the supreme
advantage of surprise was gone. But in the end the Matildas were as
irresistible as ever, the Britishand Indian infantry as swift and implac-
able, and by the time the early dusk had fallen, only one section of
Tummar East was still holding out, and they surrendered the following
dawn. Maktila and Sidi Barrani were by now surrounded, 4 Armoured
Brigade had cut the Sollum-Sidi Barrani road, while to the south at
the top of the Escarpment the Support Group still watched the Rabia
and Sofafi camps from which there had been no sign of activity all
day, and not even much in the way of curiosity about what might be
happening to their compatriots below.
To General O'Connor, who had left his HQ
soon after the first
attack had gone in and been closely attending all phases of the day's
actions, it was evident that the highest of his hopes was in the process
of being realized; he could now expand his plans for the future. By
the evening of 10 December, the main problem posed him by the erstwhile
garrisons of the arc of Italian camps from Sidi Barrani down to Nibeiwa
was how to feed, water and despatch 38,000 officers and men back
towards the Delta and prison-camps while at the same time continuing
his own advance to the Egyptian border. First Buq Buq and then Solium
must be taken by the armoured brigades, while the Support Group
rounded up the Sofafi and Rabia garrisons. It was while redeploying
his forces to bring all this about that O'Connor received an order so

190
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unwelcome - indeed, so apparently unrealistic - that he could hardly


believe it.

On General WavelPs direct order, 4th Indian Division was to return


to the Delta with all its weapons and transport for despatch down into
the Sudan, where yet another attempt to invade the Italian East African
Empire was to be launched. Their place would be taken as soon as
possible by the three brigades of the 6th Australian Division composed
of men, the bulk of whom though undoubtedly keen, tough and extremely
fit, had hardly been in the army long enough to complete their basic

training.
'Itwas a tremendous shock,' O'Connor was to write later. I '
. . .

had had no previous intimation of it and it came as a bolt from the


blue.'
But it be obeyed and as quickly as possible at least 4th Indian
had to ;

Division's transport could be used to clear some of the enormous build-


up in the prison cages.
Meanwhile, the sheer impetus of the success ensured more. The Sofafi
and Rabia garrisons - to O'Connor's annoyance - were not cut off
from the frontier, but instead, with little more than a token defence
of their positions against the Support Group, collected together and
trudged away to the west, and very soon it was obvious that other Italian

garrisons had thesame idea. Soon the garrisons of Solium, Fort Capuzzo
and Sidi Azeiz were all streaming north into the fortress of Bardia
and although Sidi Omar was not so quickly evacuated, its defence against
two squadrons of RTR and 7th Hussar tanks lasted only ten minutes.
By now the perimeter around Bardia had been strengthened, its garri-
son had swollen to 45,000 under the command of General Annibale
Bergonzoli ('Electric Whiskers') who had already sent to Mussolini
the categorical assurance : 'In Bardia we are and here we stay.'

But by 20 December, had arrived and begun


16 Australian Brigade
the siege process, a week later 17 Brigade moved up alongside, and
twenty- two Matildas circled around to the north of the port with Support
Group infantry. At dawn on 3 January, Bangalore torpedoes tore gaps
in the chosen sector of the perimeter fence, all Western Desert Force's
remaining guns crashed out, and to add to the roar the Royal Navy
joined in from the north and east. Australian engineers went in first
to check passages through minefields, the huge Australian infantry
stormed forward (singing 'South of the Border'), more engineers threw
bridges across the ditch and over them waddled the Matildas. Over
400 prisoners were taken in the first twenty minutes - and by noon,

191
O'CONNOR

the astonished and overworked rear echelons were struggling to cope


with 30,000.
The only severe resistance was encountered in the southern section
where 17 Brigade, who had marched nearly fifteen miles before reaching
the battle area, came up against Italian gunners who fought well, and
against whom there were no more Matildas to send. There was some
bitter fightingamid the wadies and it was not until the following morning
that the last line of defence posts was stormed - but by that time, the
Australian thrust in the centre had reached the heart of the fortress
around Bardia itself.
At 1100 hours the drive into the town was launched, the six Matildas
now left ground forward with Australian infantry alongside and often
in front and, with very little in the way of armed resistance, the attackers
found themselves with a repetition of what was becoming O'Connor's
chief problem. Columns of men marched towards them to surrender,
led this time by 'dapper officers wearing swords, pith helmets or "Musso-
lini caps", knee boots, shaven and scented'. All that now remained

was the mopping-up, and by the next morning Bardia was in Australian
hands, 40,000 prisoners had been taken and 400 guns captured.
One Italian who was not taken was 'Barba Elettrica' Bergonzoli, who
had prudently departed for Tobruk quite early in the proceedings but ;

it was unlikely that he had arrived in that area much before General

O'Connor, whose plan now included an attempt to take Tobruk 'on


the bounce'.
He was frustrated by lack of transport. Seven Armoured Brigade
had swept through El Adem and cut the western approaches to Tobruk
before the last Italians in Bardia had surrendered, and 19 Australian
Brigade (not used at Bardia) was sealing in the eastern side of the
Tobruk perimeter twenty-four hours later. But it was not until 9 January
that enough men and material had been brought up (quite a lot in
captured Italian Lancia lorries, driven and maintained quite often by
their original drivers who were most willing to help in any way they
could) to invest the entire thirty-mile perimeter of Tobruk. It was now
evident that a deliberate phased attack would have to be mounted.
It beganat 1540 hours on 21 January, and by that evening the Austra-
lians of 19 Brigade had taken both Fort Pilastrino and Fort Solaro,
while those of 16 and 17 Brigades had driven along the perimeter to
take all the defence posts - underground and encased in solid concrete
- in the eastern half, and cut and occupied the Tobruk-Bardia road
from the eastern perimeter to the central crossroads overlooking the

192
O'CONNOR

airfield and the port itself. They had also captured the fortress com-
mander, Generale Petassi Mannella and all his staff, but were now
so tired that they dropped immediately they stopped moving, and slept
where they dropped. Not that the Italians in the neighbourhood bothered
them during the night, for they were being beaten not only by Australian
vigour and elan, but by their own propaganda. During the previous
weeks, in order to avoid having to take more vigorous action himself,
Marshal Graziani had repeatedly painted a picture of overwhelming
British strength in Egypt - which included one of his more ludicrous
flights of fancy, 'the omni-present Camel Corps'. Now the men in

Tobruk who had fled there from the previous encounters embroidered
their accounts in the same vein. They were unlikely to give accurate
numbers to add to their embarrassment, even if they knew them.
The following day when the Australian forward patrols probed down
towards the port of Tobruk, quite expecting some form of resistance,
the first enemy soldiers they saw ran forward to help them remove a
roadblock, and within minutes they were being guided to a large building
where Admiral Massimiliano Vietina was anxiously waiting to surrender.
Long before noon, the Italian flag had been hauled down from above
the headquarters building, and an Australian slouch hat hoisted in its
place. Another 27,000 prisoners had been taken and an acceptable
number of guns and vehicles - and food and drink in such quantity
that for the first few hours many monumental thirsts were slaked with
champagne.
Once more, Generale Bergonzoli had vacated the scene early on and
was quickly in Benghasi, and General O'Connor was following, urging
7 Armoured Brigade forward into the Djebel towards Martuba, and
4 Armoured to the south to cut the road north from Mechili where
an Italian armoured brigade had been reported. As for infantry, three
days after the Australian 19 Brigade had stormed through the Tobruk
defences, they were driving and marching (for transport was desperately
short now and what there was, was worn out) towards Derna where
the next line of Italian defences lay, while the other Australian brigades
rested and tried to cope with yet another vast batch of prisoners.
During the last week of January 1941 O'Connor was almost totally
concerned with the enormous logistical problems which would face an
attempt - and he was determined to make one - to press on into the
great Cyrenaican bulge and destroy the rest of the Italian Tenth Army
there. The Royal Navy were breaking records running petrol and sup-
plies into Tobruk, offloading them and speeding them on their way

193
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to the front, and the formation of three more Field Supply Depots was
proceeding at Tmimmi for the infantry, twelve miles south for 7th
Armoured and one out further to the south-west of Mechili should
any attempt to cut along the bottom of the bulge be necessary. By 2
February Brigadier Dorman-Smith had returned from Cairo with assur-
ances from General Wavell that any further advance would receive his
blessing and that the required stores - some 3,000 tons plus 1,000 tons
of water - would be arriving at their destinations in about twelve days,
during which time the troops could enjoy some rest and the tanks could
receive some maintenance (though the fifty cruisers left in 7th Armoured
Division were all long past their time for complete overhaul, their track
mileage having been in some cases exceeded by eighty per cent).
But on the same day the Australians along the coast walked into
Giovanni Berta and found no one there to oppose them, a patrol of
nth Hussars probed into Chaulan and found it deserted - and the follow-
ing day the Australian brigades reported that they were out of touch
with the enemy along their entire front. Graziani had lost his nerve
and ordered the evacuation of all Italian forces out of the Cyrenaican
bulge, back towards Tripoli.
Thus, instead of twelve days, XIII Corps - as Western Desert Force
had recently been rechristened - had less than three hours' rest, repair
or maintenance. They spent the remainder of 3 February frantically
collecting fuel, ammunition, spare tank tracks and as much basic food
as they could find, then worked all night repairing their vehicles while
their unit commanders studied the orders which O'Connor and his
staff dashed off, delivered themselves or sent by despatch rider.
The armoured brigades had concentrated around Mechili (4
Armoured in some disfavour as the Italian armoured brigade - to O'Con-
nor's intense fury - had been allowed to slip away). Their task now
was to get their fifty cruisers and ninety-odd light tanks stocked with
food and water for two days and as much ammunition as they could
cram aboard, and then to put themselves across the coastal road running
down the Gulf of Sirte from Benghazi in order to block the Italian
army's only escape route. The distance was some 130 miles, the route
totally unreconnoitred. It was to prove worse than any of them had
ever experienced, with the result that more and more tanks were forced
to drop out with every mile covered.
However hard the tank drivers tried to raise the speed, it became
obvious that they would never reach the road in time. So the armoured
cars were sent off ahead, and after them all the wheeled traffic - infantry

194
O'CONNOR

lorries, Royal Horse Artillery batteries and scout cars - which could
travel faster than the tracked vehicles. The armoured cars of nth Hussars
and King's Dragoon Guards were at Msus by 1500 hours on 4 February
to chase an astonished Libyan garrison away. By midnight the leading
wheeled vehicles led by Lieutenant-Colonel Jock Campbell of the RHA
- with headlights ablaze to avoid danger from Thermos bombs - arrived,
and during the morning of 5 February the tanks appeared. One small
force was sent due west through Sceleidima towards Ghemines, the
rest followed the armoured cars first down to Antelat, then due west
to form the block across the road at Beda Fomm.
Incredibly, they arrived in time. The Hussars reached the road just
after midday, Rifle Brigade companies filled the gap between the road
and the coast by early afternoon, the batteries of the Royal Horse Artillery
were in position behind them with their ammunition stacked around
them by 1600 hours - and half an hour later the head of what proved
to be the leading column of the Italian Tenth Army came bowling uncon-
cernedly along the road towards them.
At the same time as 7th Armoured Division were grinding their way
along the base of the bulge, the Australians, by superhuman efforts, were
clawing their way around the coast, through Appollonia, Cyrene, Barce,
El Abiar - andat last Benghazi came in sight. Their transport was in

as bad shape as that of the rest of O'Connor's force, but somehow they
manhandled it across broken bridges, over blown and cratered roads,
over wadis, through minefields and along the sides of hills, their forward
patrols always in danger of ambush by Italian rearguards who would slip
away after the first exchange of fire. Only the Australians with their tough
physique, coupled with the determination to uphold the military repu-
tation their fathers had won at Gallipoli and their respect for O'Connor,
could have covered that awful ground in the time. But they did, and
the northern arm of O'Connor's pincer movement closed down on the
rear echelons of Bergonzoli's command as they prepared to evacuate
Benghazi, and chased them into the maelstrom developing to the south.
The Battle of Beda Fomm was fought on 6 February by a tiny but
resolute blocking force, acutely conscious of the fact that they were
short of food and ammunition, and were to all intents and purposes

out of fuel. They must win or starve - and starve to death as


either
there was nothing for them to live on in the desert behind them. Fortuna-
tely, their antagonists were convinced that they were faced by an enor-

mous force of highly efficient armour and infantry (not to speak of


the Camel Corps) equipped with vast numbers of the most modern

195
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and sophisticated weapons. The Italians also suffered from the disadvan-
numbers cramped into a small - and certainly very thin
tage of large
- space; and by the end of that day they were being chivvied from
the rear by the fearsome Australians.
Pressure from behind bulged the head of the column, but Italian
infantry there were shot flat by the Rifle Brigade companies and the
moment Italian armour put in an appearance, they were hammered by
Jock Campbell's guns. By the afternoon, the tanks of 4 Armoured Bri-
gade were cruising along their flanks, shooting up any sign of organized
resistance. When darkness fell, although the British were worried about
their almost empty ammunition boxes and pouches, the Italians were
approaching despair enormous odds they imagined they faced.
at the

At dawn on 7 February, one more attempt by Italian tanks was


mounted. It came perilously close to success did they but know it; but
in the end the last five M13S were stopped by the last RHA anti-tank
guns - manned by a major, his batman and the battery cook firing
their last rounds. And as the exhausted British riflemen and tank crews
watched the vast column of men stretching back for miles out of view,
wondering what would happen now, a startling change came over the
scene. 'First one and then another white flag appeared among the host
of men and vehicles. More and more became visible, until the whole
column was a forest of waving white banners.' The last of the Italian
Tenth Army was surrendering to XIII Corps, commanded by Lieuten-
ant-General Richard O'Connor.
O'Connor and Eric Dorman-Smith had spent the day of the battle
organizing and urging on anything they could find in way of supplies.
On the morning of 7 February, after breakfasting each on a cold sausage,
they drove down in time to watch the Italian surrender, and in due
course visited the building where Italian senior officers were being gath-
ered.
'You were here too soon, that is all,' Bergonzoli had said after the
capture. 'But we gave battle at once. . . . And always, here as everywhere
!'
else, we were grossly outnumbered
No one bothered to disabuse him, but the fact was that his Tenth
Army had been destroyed by a force which had never exceeded 35,000
officers and men, and had advanced 500 miles in ten weeks in vehicles
old and battered before the advance started. Over 130,000 Italian and
Libyan soldiers had been taken prisoner, 180 medium and about 200
light tanks, 845 guns and an uncounted number of wheeled and soft-
skinned vehicles captured.

196
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In those ten weeks, 500 British and Australian soldiers had been
killed, 1,373 wounded and 55 were missing, later posted 'believed killed'.
'I think thismay be termed a complete victory as none of the enemy
escaped,' O'Connor commented, and later sent a cable to Wavell which
.'
began 'Fox killed in the open. . .

But in O'Connor's opinion it need not end yet. Despite their exhaus-
tion, thirst and hunger, his men were so buoyed up by victory that
they could hardly be held back when the whole of Libya, and certainly
the port of Tripoli, was surely theirs for the taking. Eighty per cent
of their vehicles were in serious need of repair, but if stores came up
they would work on them until the wheels turned and if necessary drag
them forward. So, giving them his thanks, O'Connor sent Dorman-
Smith hot-foot back to Cairo to assure Wavell of their eagerness to
advance further, and to ask him to hasten the arrival of the most essential
materials.
But when Dorman-Smith arrived all maps of North
at Wavell's office
Africa had gone and in their place huge map of Greece. Wavell,
hung a
whose eyes had long been fixed on the Balkans and who never thought
North Africa of vital importance, was giving his support to Anthony
Eden's wish to send the most powerful force which could be raised
across the Mediterranean. XIII Corps would advance no further than
El Agheila.
It was O'Connor, but he organized defensive
a great disappointment to
positions as quickly as he could, then reported back to Cairo where
he was found to be suffering from stomach complaints and went into
hospital. The front of Cyrenaica was stripped of the most experienced
men - including all of the 6th Australian Division - and sent to Greece
where in due course they were destroyed in the disaster which followed.
And two months later Rommel, who had arrived in Tripoli on the day
of Beda Fomm, drove the original units of his Afrika Korps forward
at the light screens of British troops at El Agheila, and so rapidly and
efficiently did they move that within six days they were approaching
Mechili, while chaos reigned throughout the British ranks behind them.
Wavell had himself visited Barce on 2 April, appreciated the disaster
which loomed and sent for O'Connor to come as quickly as possible
to help General Neame, who was now in command, to sort some order
out of the chaos. But it was too late and - tragically for the British
- both Neame and O'Connor were taken prisoner by a small striking
force Rommel had sent out in advance of his main strength.
As soon as their identities had been established, Neame and O'Connor

197
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were flown and by 20 April they had both arrived at the Sulmona
to Italy,
prisoner-of-war camp
in the Abruzzi, east of Rome. Here O'Connor
remained until the Italian armistice of September 1943 when he managed
to escape from the camp and make his way southwards, disguised in
costumes from the wardrobe of the camp dramatic society.
Once home he received the knighthood he had been awarded in
1941, and confirmation of his rank of Lieutenant-General. But his
absence from the field during those crucial twenty-six months barred
him from the highest command which would certainly have been his
otherwise, although he did command VIII Corps during the bitter fight-
ing around Caen after D-Day, later to break through the German
defences east of the Orne and reach the Seine. This was the last of
his important war-time operations, although he did become Com-
mander-in-Chief of Eastern Command in India, then of the North West-
ern Army. He returned to England in 1946 and spent the last two years
of his service as Adjutant-General to the forces.
Honours came to him from his own country and abroad; he was
ADC to King George vi from 1946 to 1948 and he was an honorary
LLD of St Andrew's University. But he will always be remembered
as the man who won the first spectacular victory for British arms of
the Second World War.
Although he was in no way bitter about it, O'Connor remained con-
vinced that had Wavell had the vision to see the opportunities that success
offered Western Desert Force during the first three days of Operation
Compass, and had left 4th Indian Division with him, sending up the
Australian 6th Division as reinforcement instead of replacement, then
the advance into Cyrenaica would have been that much faster ;
4th Indian
Division's expertise and would have lifted them to
especially transport
Benghazi well before the end of January, and they could have been
around the corner and on their way to Tripoli before Hitler decided
to intervene, let alone actually despatched Rommel and the first of his
panzer units.
The Ifs of history are of course imponderable. But one certainty
is that the loss, so early, of Richard Nugent O'Connor from the higher
direction of Britain's war effort was as unfortunate for us as it was
for him.

198
;

O CONNOR

CHRONOLOGY: RICHARD O'CONNOR


1889, August 21 Born (father Major M.C. O'Connor, Royal Irish
Fusiliers)

1903-8 Wellington College


1908-9 Royal Military College, Sandhurst
1909, September Commissioned The Cameronians (Scottish Rifles)
1914-18 Western Front commands Honorable Artillery
;

Company Infantry Battalion, Italy; DSO and bar, MC,


Italian Silver Medal for Valour, mentioned in

despatches nine times


1919-31 Student and Instructor, Staff College, Camberley
Company Commander, RMC Sandhurst; regimental
duty
1932-4 GSO2 War Office
1935 Student, Imperial Defence College marries Jean Ross
;

(d 1959)
1936-8 Commander, Peshawar Brigade, North West Frontier
of India
1938-9 Military Governor ofJerusalem; major-general
1939 Commanding 6th Division, Palestine
1940-1 Commander, Western Desert Force ; lieutenant-
general ; CB 1940, KCB 1941
1941, February Commander, British Troops, Egypt
1941, April- Prisoner-of-war, Italy escapes
;

1943, December
J 944-5 January Commander, VIII Corps, Britain and NW Europe
1945-6 Commander, Eastern and North-Western Commands,
India; promoted general, 1945
1946-7 Adjutant-General; GCB, 1947
1948 Retires
I95I-4 Colonel of The Cameronians (Scottish Rifles)
1955-64 Lord Lieutenant, Ross and Cromarty; Lord High
Commissioner, Church of Scotland, 1964; marries
Dorothy Russell, 1963
1971 Knight of the Thistle
i98i,Junei9 Dies in Scotland

199
II

CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE
AND LEESE
General Sir Alan Cunningham
General Sir Neil Ritchie and
Lieutenant- General Sir Oliver Leese

MICHAEL CRASTER

Probably the single most famous Army in popular British military history,
the Eighth Army has come to occupy a unique place in our military
mythology. It overshadows even the Fourteenth Army, a fact sourly
recognized in the nickname 'The Forgotten Army' adopted by the latter,
and this despite the fact that other Armies in other theatres fought battles
of equal skill and savagery and had victories of great consequence.
In part the Eighth Army owes its fame to the timing of its most celebrated
victory; the Second Battle of El Alamein on 23 October 1942 came at
amoment when the fortunes of the Allies appeared to be at their lowest.
The Japanese were sweeping all before them in the Far East, the entry
of the Americans into the war had not yet been marked by success
of arms, and a victory was desperately needed for the sake of national
morale. It is a measure of that need that this victory effectively over-

shadowed the memory of all that had gone before in the desert, so
that to the man in the street there was really only one battle of Alamein
Auchinleck's battle ofJuly 1942 was forgotten.
Above all, however, the fame of the Eighth Army is due to Mont-
gomery, the man who commanded it in this historic battle. This was
a deliberate policy on Montgomery's part, for publicity was always his
forte. The extent to which his image-building came to dominate both

200
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

official and popular thinking is perhaps best exemplified in the War


Office decision, taken after the war, to allow only those who served
in the Eighth Army at Second Alamein and after to wear the figure
8 on their campaign ribbon, despite the fact that the Army was formed
in September 1941. But if Montgomery built up the fame of the Eighth
Army, his success had a less positive effect on the reputations of those
officers who preceded and followed him at its head. For the Eighth
Army actually had five commanders (six if one includes Auchinleck)
in the short years of its existence, from its inception in the Western
Desert Force to its final demise as British Troops Austria the day before
the entry into Vienna in 1945. Of these five it was Montgomery who
came to personify the Army in the public imagination.
Of the remainder three were removed from positions of senior com-
mand ('sacked' in popular parlance) in circumstances which have given
rise toconsiderable controversy ever since. Two of them, Cunningham
and Leese, had already proved extremely successful commanders in
other theatres, while the third, Ritchie, went on to become, subsequently,
a very competent Corps Commander in north-west Europe. These were
men who were well regarded in their time, and of whom much was
expected ; failure was not in their vocabulary. In examining their cases
therefore it may be possible to draw some lessons from them, to find
a common thread that links them together. Thus the purpose of this
chapter is not simply to provide a sympathetic rehabilitation but to use
their stories to illustrate the pitfalls of high command using the ex-
perience of some of Churchill's less celebrated, but none the less able,
generals.
The origins of the Eighth Army lie in the Western Desert Force,
the troops allocated to the defence of Egypt against the Italian threat
from Libya. Already a multinational force, containing British armour
and Australian, Indian and New Zealand infantry under the command
of Lieutenant-General Richard O'Connor, these were the troops that
carried out the astonishing offensive of December 1940 when the Italian
Tenth Army under Graziani was driven back from Sidi Barrani on
the eastern side of the Egyptian frontier to eventual annihilation at Beda
Fomm on 7 February 1941. At a cost of less than 2,000 casualties, of
whom 500 were killed, O'Connor with four divisions had defeated an
army of ten divisions, capturing 130,000 prisoners, 380 tanks and 845
guns. The offensive was not allowed to continue into Tripolitania
because troops were required for the abortive campaign in Greece and
O'Connor's were the most experienced and most readily available. Thus

201
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

a great opportunity was lost XIII Corps, as the Western Desert Force
:

had been renamed on i January 1941, was disbanded, its units and
personnel dispersed and a static area command, Cyrenaica Command,
set up with new and inexperienced units to defend the recently captured
territory.

The failure to allow O'Connor to continue into Tripolitania had


allowed the first elements of the German reinforcement for Libya, under
Lieutenant-General Rommel, to land unopposed a week after Beda
Fomm. British Intelligence assessments considered no German advance
would be possible before mid-April at the earliest, but Rommel, never
one to be hampered by what others considered as difficulties, attacked
on 31 March. By 14 April Tobruk was invested in a siege that was to
last 7! months and by 28 April the British were once more standing

on the defensive on the frontier of Egypt. Both Neame, the Area Com-
mander, and O'Connor, recalled by Wavell from his new post as GOC
British Troops Egypt to help him, were captured. The Axis forces'
shortage of fuel, together with the presence of a lively garrison in Tobruk
dangerously close to their lines of communication, led to a lull in the
This lasted effectively until 15 June, when XIII Corps, com-
fighting.
manded by General Beresford-Peirse, mounted Operation Battleaxe in
an attempt to throw the Axis forces back from the frontier as far as
Derna, and so relieve Tobruk. The attack was not a success, largely
because of the haste with which it had been prepared much of the
;

equipment had only just arrived in the theatre, and there had been
insufficient time to prepare it for battle and to weld together the new
teams that were to man it.

The fact that Battleaxe took place when it did was principally the
result of the constant goading of Wavell, the Commander-in-Chief,
by Churchill himself. Wavell was having to cope simultaneously with
the aftermath of the Greek operation, a pro-German revolution in Iraq
that threatened Britain's oil supply, and a planned invasion of Vichy-
French Syria. Churchill's eyes were, nonetheless, fixed firmly on the
Western Desert where 'a victory ... to destroy Rommel's Army would . . .

at least save our situation in Egypt from the wreck'. In his bitter disap-

pointment at the failure of Battleaxe Churchill relieved Wavell on 5


July, replacing him with Auchinleck. However, recognizing at the same
time how much he had asked of the former, he also sent out Oliver
Lyttelton to take care of political affairs and appointed an Intendant-
General to oversee the rearward logistics.
Thus in principle the Commander-in-Chief was freed to concentrate

202
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

upon the matter hand - the defeat of the Axis in the field. The
in
emphasis from London was still on victory in the desert. The other
operations were sideshows in comparison, because until the enemy were
driven out of North Africa the Mediterranean was not safe for Allied
shipping; until the Cyrenaica airfields at least were in Allied hands
air cover could not be provided for the Malta convoys; and Australia

was pressing the British government hard for the relief of the Australian
Division currently penned up in Tobruk. There were therefore from
the outset very strong pressures on Auchinleck's approach to operations
in the desert, which made it imperative for him to find the right Com-
mander for his army in the field. His choice fell upon General Alan
Cunningham.

General Cunningham had just completed a successful campaign against


the Italians in Ethiopia where, with a mixed force of Commonwealth
troops, principally South African and East African, totalling approxima-
he had defeated the Duke of Aosta and his force of some
tely 77,000,

280,000 European and native troops in an advance that had taken him
from Kenya to Addis Ababa between February and May 1941, and had
culminated in the restoration to the throne of Haile Selassie. A gunner,
and the brother of the distinguished sailor Admiral Cunningham - who
was at this time Commander-in-Chief Mediterranean Fleet and would
subsequently, as Admiral of the Fleet Viscount Cunningham of Hynd-
hope, become First Sea Lord - General Cunningham had had a fine
record in the First World War and a successful career between the
wars. From the outbreak of hostilities in 1939 he successively commanded
no fewer than three TA divisions before being appointed to succeed
General Dickinson in command of the Commonwealth Forces Kenya,
in November 1940. His Ethiopian Campaign had been greeted with
acclaim by a British public that felt itself starved of military success,
and it was the dash and elanhe had shown in East Africa that
that
led Auchinleck to ask for him.There was a feeling that such qualities,
so admirably displayed by O'Connor, were essential if the British were
to succeed against Rommel - a man in whom the same qualities were
all too apparent.
There was nothing, however, in General Cunningham's background,
training or experience that particularly equipped him to lead a large
armoured force in the desert. In this he was typical of most of the
British commanders of his generation, including his Commander-in-

203
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

Chief, brought up on the experience of First World War and the small
colonial campaigns that had succeeded Unlike their opponents the
it.

British had never fully grasped the nettle of conversion from horsed
cavalry to armoured fighting Although British theorists led
vehicles.
the world in their discussions of armour and its tactical use, it was
pre-eminently the Germans who had put those theories into practice,
and had then applied them in war. The results had been experienced
in France in 1940, and in the Western Desert in 1941. In effect, O'Con-
nor's campaign in 1940 against the Italians had been merely an extension
of the small wars of the colonial era; speed, manoeuvre, and surprise
against an ill-coordinated and poorly-sited enemy had enabled him to
defeat the Italians in detail and hustle them to the gates of Tripolitania.
But unlike his successors, he had not had to face a really well-trained,
well-motivated armoured force, whose commander was steeped in both
the theory and the practice of armoured warfare.
Not only was General Cunningham thus confronting a new environ-
ment and new techniques of which he knew very little, he also had
to meet a dauntingly tight timetable. Churchill maintained his relentless
pressure on Auchinleck. New equipment was continuing to flow into
the Middle East from the factories of Britain. The desert forces were
being given top priority for materiel and, with his inimitable conviction
that equipment once delivered was immediately ready for action and
his refusal to accept that timewas needed for training and conversion,
the Prime Minister was demanding an early offensive. Auchinleck had
set the date at November. The operation was to be called Crusader,
and Cunningham received his briefing on 2 September. He had two
months in which to form and train his army.
The army was to be called the Eighth Army. It was formed officially
as such on 26 September. It would have two Corps, XIII to be commanded
by General Godwin-Austen, who had been one of Cunningham's divi-
sional commanders in East Africa, and XXX, to be commanded by
General Willoughby Norrie. XIII Corps was to be an infantry Corps,
containing two Divisions (1st New Zealand and 4th Indian) and a Guards
Brigade. XXX Corps was to be an armoured Corps, containing 7th
Armoured Division of three armoured Brigades, and a support Group
of guns and lorried infantry. There were tanks in the infantry Corps
but they were T tanks, designed for infantry co-operation, and con-
sidered not suitable for use in decisive tank-versus-tank encounters.
In contrast to the German practice of mixed battle-groups of armour
and infantry, therefore, the British had opted for the organization put

204
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

forward by the proponents of the theory that tanks alone could win
battles, by being massed in sufficient strength to defeat the enemy's
armour and then going on to defeat his infantry and artillery in
detail. The problem at this stage in the desert conflict, as Crusader

would show, was that the British lacked, at all levels, the training and
experience in armoured warfare necessary if theory was to be put into
practice.
The task that faced Cunningham was a formidable one. He had to
take on the preparation and planning for a major battle that had already
been started before he arrived. He had to come to terms with a wholly
new environment and which he
a series of military disciplines with
was completely unfamiliar, he had to take command of a force several
times larger than any he had commanded hitherto, and he had to impose
his authority upon subordinates whose knowledge and experience of
both techniques and terrain were far greater than his own. He had
very little time in which to do all this, and the consciousness that the
eyes and hopes of everyone at home were pinned upon him increased
the pressure immeasurably. It was an unenviable position, but one which
Cunningham approached with resolution and energy.
Crusader was timed to start on 18 November, and, as laid down by
Auchinleck, had as its main purpose 'to drive the enemy out of North
Africa, first by capturing Cyrenaica and secondly by capturing Tripolita-
nia'. One of the principal aims, constantly urged by the Prime Minister,

was the relief of Tobruk, now in the seventh month of its siege, the
original defenders, 6th Australian Division, having been relieved in
September by 70th Division. Rommel's attention at this time was concen-
trated entirely on Tobruk. He now commanded all Axis forces east
of the Cyrenaica bulge his Panzer Gruppe Afrika consisted of Crue-
;

well's Afrika Korps, containing 15th and 21st Panzer Divisions and Div-
ision ZBV (subsequently better known as 90th Light Division),
Navarini's XXI Corps of four Italian Divisions, and the Italian Savona
Division. Also in Cyrenaica was Gambara's XX Mobile Corps. At the
start Rommel was guarding the frontier with the Savona
of the battle
Division, investing Tobruk with Navarini's Corps, and preparing the
Afrika Korps for another attack on the fortress. His desert flank was
covered by Gambara's two divisions, the Ariete Armoured at Bir Gubi
and the Trieste Motorized at Bir Hacheim. His tank strength was 174
medium tanks in the Afrika Korps, and 146 in XX Mobile Corps. In
addition he had 96 of his 50mm anti-tank guns and 12 of the dreaded
88s with the Afrika Korps, and 23 of the 88s with the Savona Division.

205
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

The British order of battle has already been described. Cunningham's


plan was designed to force Rommel to a decisive tank battle, with the
relief of Tobruk as an inevitable, but almost incidental, consequence.
To achieve this, Nome's XXX Corps, with its 491 tanks, was to make

a left hook around the frontier defences and occupy Gabr Saleh. The
theory was that Rommel would be unable to ignore this threat and would
be bound to engage it with the bulk of his armour, thereby bringing
on the classic battle of tank fleets. In the meantime Godwin-Austen's
XIII Corps would envelop the frontier defences, and await the successful
outcome of XXX Corps' encounter after which it would be able to move
forward to raise the siege and then continue to drive the Axis back
to Tripolitania. It was a plan that was not without its critics; Norrie
argued most forcibly that his Corps should not be called upon to halt
at Gabr Saleh, a point of no particular significance either strategically
or tactically, but should be allowed to push on towards the coast until
it made contact with the enemy; Godwin- Austen put forward most

strongly the case that his flank must be protected by some at least of
XXX Corps' armour. In attempting to meet these objections Cun-
ningham flawed his whole concept by splitting his armour.
The British attack took Rommel by surprise. Concentrating on his
own attack on Tobruk he initially refused to believe that he was faced
with a major offensive, but allowed Cruewell to send one battle group
south to investigate. Initially XXX Corps' advance was unopposed, spirits
were high and euphoria ran through the Army. There being no contact
at Gabr Saleh, Cunningham allowed Norrie to exploit north. The result
was a further fatal division of the armour, as 22 Armoured Brigade
became drawn into a battle with the Ariete Division at Bir Gubi and
4 Armoured Brigade remained tied to the flank of XIII Corps, leaving
7th Armoured Division to continue alone to the airfield at Sidi Rezegh,
which reached by 20 November. The perilous consequences of this
it

divisionwere not seen by the army commander, who was greatly cheered
by the tank battles of that day, authorizing XIII Corps to start their
advance, and 70th Division to break out from Tobruk on 21 November.
There was an illusion of victory, marked by an unfortunate press release
in Cairo, all too quickly shattered as Rommel and his two Panzer div-
isions came into the battle, first holding the sortie from Tobruk and
then driving the British off Sidi Rezegh on 23 November. On 24
November he mounted his astonishing counter stroke through the rear
of XXX Corps' position, driving the British east and south-east, throw-
ing the British command structure into chaos as XXX Corps' HQtook
206
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

refuge in Tobruk and elements of XIII Corps in disorder started what


became known as the 'Matruh Stakes'.
Already on 23 November Cunningham, swinging from the euphoria
of victory to the despair of imminent defeat, had asked the Commander-
in-Chief to come up to discuss the situation with a view to a possible
withdrawal. On his arrival Auchinleck judged that Rommel must be
in no less difficult a predicament than the British, particularly because
of his logistic situation; accordingly he ordered the Eighth Army to

stand fast and continue the offensive wherever possible. At the same
time he concluded that Cunningham should be relieved, as he was
no longer able to carry on the battle, a view shared by many of the
senior commanders and staff officers on the spot. It was not an easy
decision, but one that had to be made if anything was to be rescued
from the ruins of Crusader. On 25 November, therefore, Major-General
Neil Ritchie, the erstwhile Deputy Chief of the General Staff in Cairo,
7

command, and Cunningham flew back to the Delta.


arrived to take over
Cunningham was certainly not the first, and equally certainly not
the last army commander to be relieved of his command in battle. It
was, however, particularly unfortunate that a man who but a short time
before had won such a glittering victory should have been exposed to
such public humiliation. As has been said, the task that he faced was
one of great difficulty. A man who
had been fighting a major campaign
since February, and who was called upon to take up the burden of
Crusader without any respite, would have required great reserves of
energy and will-power. Cunningham continued the fight to the finish,
but it would appear that his reserves had been exhausted, leaving Auchin-
leck with no alternative but to relieve him. It was not, however, the
end for Cunningham. A fine-looking man, with great charm and auth-
ority, he became the Commandant of the Staff College, Camberley

shortly after leaving North Africa, and after a number of senior appoint-
ments he finally retired from the Army in 1948 having been the High
Commissioner and Commander-in-Chief for Palestine.
There has been much discussion as to whether he should have been
chosen in the first place, in view of his lack of experience of local con-
ditions, and whether perhaps someone like 'J umD0 Wilson (who was '

Churchill's preference) might not have been a better selection. The


debate serves to highlight the controversy over Auchinleck's selection
of his subordinates. He did not always choose wisely. For him the prob-
lem of selection was exacerbated by the fact that, as a product himself
of the Indian Army, he had very little personal knowledge or experience

207
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

of the majority of the senior officers of the British Army. Here was
where the strong guidance of the CIGS was needed, but for once it
was not forthcoming. Perhaps of greater significance on this occasion,
however, was the fact that Auchinleck had great difficulty in accepting
that those whom he had chosen were not up to the task that he had
given them. It was this very trust and loyalty, given to those who served
him, that made 'the Auk' the deeply loved commander that he was;
no one would willingly abuse this trust and loyalty, but sometimes they
imposed a duty greater than their recipients could perform. It was a
mistake that was about to be repeated.

The Eighth Army's second commander, Major-General Xeil Ritchie,


was in direct contrast to his predecessor. Tall and impressive, he has
been described as the image of a British general, and yet (with the
exception of a very brief period after Dunkirk when he was charged
with the formation of a new 51st Highland Division to replace that cap-
tured at St Yalery, a period cut short by his being posted to the Middle
East to join Wavell's staff) he had commanded nothing larger than
a battalion. Commissioned into the Black Watch in December 1914 he
had had a distinguished regimental record in the First World War,
most of it in the Middle East. He had served on the staffs of Alanbrooke,
Wavell and Auchinleck, and was thought of highly by all of them as
an 'able and cool-headed staff officer'.
In November 1941, when Auchinleck was looking for a new Army
Commander in a hum", Ritchie appeared to be an excellent choice for
a temporary appointment. To appoint one of the Corps Commanders
would be to reproduce the problem at a lower level, at a time when
all were heavily involved in the day-to-day battle; Auchinleck was no

more inclined than before to accept Jumbo Wilson; and he rejected


Ritchie's own suggestion that a new man should be sent out from Eng-
land (pending whose arrival Auchinleck himself would assume com-
mand) on the grounds that a new man could not arrive in time and
would, in any case, be unfamiliar with the operational situation. The
feasibility of this proposition was clearly demonstrated seven months
7

later when Ritchie himself was dismissed and Auchinleck fought First
Alamein, but in November 1941 the Commander-in-Chief had other
ideas. In any case this was only a temporary appointment to tide the
Army over a moment of crisis, after which a permanent commander
could be brought in. Ritchie's lack of experience could be made up

208
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

by Auchinleck himself, as exemplified by his presence at Eighth Army


Headquarters for the first ten days of Ritchie's command, when Auchin-
leck effectively commanded the battle that led to Rommel's withdrawal
(starting on 8 December), with Ritchie acting as his deputy.
By Boxing Day Rommel was back at Agedabia, and by 6 January
1942 he was at El Agheila. Cyrenaica was in British hands again, and
it was time for a brief period of rest and reinforcement before the offen-

sive was continued. It was time also to consider the appointment of


a permanent Army Commander more qualified in age and experience,
to take over the Eighth Army. Here, however, there was now a problem;
because the Prime Minister in announcing Ritchie's original appoint-
ment had not said that it was temporary, it had been accepted by the
world at large as permanent, and to return him to Cairo now would
cast serious doubts on the achievements of Crusader. And so Ritchie
stayed, partly perhaps because Auchinleck, having once reposed his
confidence in a man, was very loath to relieve or replace him without
the strongest grounds for doing so (and Ritchie's performance so far
had seemed perfectly satisfactory) and perhaps partly, it has been sug-
;

gested, because it gave Auchinleck a direct access to the battlefield,


and to the challenges of command in battle, which were more properly
denied to him as Commander-in-Chief.
It was indeed only a brief period of respite. To the complete surprise

of the British, Rommel attacked again on 21 January, having been rein-


forced by the acquisition of 45 tanks landed on 19 December, some
in Benghazi just before the Axis left the port. British intelligence had
totally failed to detect this build-up (a failure which cost the Director

of Military Intelligence in Cairo his job), and in the resulting offensive


Rommel drove Ritchie right back to Gazala. All the infrastructure that
had been building up in the desert in preparation for the British advance
into Tripolitania was overrun, while the logistic echelons of the fighting
formations streamed back eastwards in the celebrated 'Gazala Gallop'
or 'the Second Benghazi Handicap'. In the course of the retreat Ritchie
issued tactical orders directly to 4th Indian Division, countermanding
those of Godwin- Austen, the Corps Commander (a move for which
Auchinleck himself subsequently took responsibility), as a result of
which Godwin- Austen asked to be relieved of his command. Auchinleck
had flown up to Ritchie when he heard of Rommel's advance and had
stayed with him, although on this occasion even he had not been able
to stop the Germans. By 4 February, therefore, the Eighth Army found
itself back at Gazala - Rommel had been unable to pursue them further,

209
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

having outrun his supplies - with an Army Commander who had clearly
been 'bounced' and who did not appear to enjoy the full confidence
of his subordinates. It was a fraught situation. But Auchinleck still could
not bring himself to let Ritchie go, despite the urgings of his Chief
of Staff, Dorman-Smith, who had been charged by the Commander-in-
Chief with visiting the Army and taking soundings.
The campaign in the desert perfectly exemplified that description
of war as being long periods of boredom interspersed with brief spells
of intense fear. Because of the logistic problems of maintaining an
offensive over such a hostile terrain in which even' necessity, both per-
sonal and military, had to be carried by the participants, the early battles
in particular frequently came to a halt because one or other of the comba-
tants had outrun their supply systems. Rommel was particularly vulner-
able in this respect, and it was above all Auchinleck's appreciation of
his opponent's predilection for operating with a haughty disregard for
the niceties of logistic support that enabled him to detect the moment
of crisis. There ensued now, between February and May 1942, another
of those pauses, as both sides attempted to recoup their losses and prepare
for the next round. Ritchie was concentrating on developing the area
of Gazala as a springboard for another offensive to recapture Cyrenaica,
an offensive for which Churchill back in England was pressing hard.
Auchinleck was under a constant bombardment of letters and telegrams,
urging action which would take the pressure off Malta. Mindful of
the lessons of Crusader and the subsequent withdrawal, as well as of
the loss of reinforcements and of some of his seasoned troops and squad-
rons to the Far East where the war with Japan was proceeding disas-
trously, the Commander-in-Chief resisted the pressure, urging the need
for proper training, a proper supply situation and above all an adequate
superiority in armour. He considered that a date around 1 June was
practicable, or perhaps August. Churchill was appalled and in the result-
ant storm Auchinleck was very nearly replaced ; faced with an ultimatum
to attack in June or resign, he set a date to coincide with the passage
of the June dark-period convoy to Malta. All of which came to naught,
because by mid-May it became clear that Rommel was himself planning
an offensive that would anticipate that of the British. Ritchie therefore
turned his attention to the preparation of his army and the Gazala area
for a defensive battle.
The Battle of Gazala started on 26 May. In it the Eighth Army was
defeated and driven back to El Alamein, and Tobruk was lost. As a
result both Army Commander and Commander-in-Chief were replaced.

210
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

Ritchie, as Army Commander, has borne the bulk of the criticism, which
stems ultimately from the belief (held by Ritchie himself) that in view
of his juniority and lack of experience of both the desert and higher
command he should have been replaced once the Crusader crisis was
over. Much has been written on the subject, most recently in his defence,

but there can be no doubt that this is the key to the issue.
Ritchie had laid out his forces in a linear defensive position on the
line Gazala to Bir Hacheim, along a thick 'mine marsh' that was covered
by the famous 'boxes', each one manned with guns and infantry. Behind
it was to be a reserve of armour, able to respond to any breakthrough

and ready to move at the critical moment to influence the battle. It


has been suggested that this was a particularly dangerous disposition
of forces in the desert, and that Ritchie should have adopted instead
something approaching the method employed by O'Connor in the early
days of the war, when he covered the frontier with a screen of forward
patrols and held the bulk of his forces well back. This ignores the
fact that Ritchie had been preparing the area for an attack, so that to
pull back as suggested would have been to hand over the vast supply
dumps at Belhammed and Tobruk, as well as Tobruk itself, to the
first serious incursion to be made by Rommel. However, Ritchie did

adopt a curious command structure for his defensive line; instead of


giving all all the armour
the static defences to one Corps (XIII) and
and mobile forces to the other (XXX), he simply drew a Corps boundary
down the middle of the position and allotted all his forces north of
that line to XIII Corps, and all those south of it to XXX Corps, which
also commanded all the armour widely dispersed throughout the south
of the area. He axiom that an obstacle
also ignored the well-tried military
that is not covered by no obstacle; there was no possibility that
fire is

the scattered 'boxes' could cover the full length of the mine-marsh,
which would therefore have no more than a delaying effect on any
enemy.
In numerical terms the two sides were not ill-matched. Rommel had
561 tanks, of which 280 were German medium tanks. The British had
850, of which 167 were the new Grants that shook the Germans so
seriously when they first encountered them. The British Crusader tanks
had not been a success, noted for their unreliability above all, and their
low track-mileage life which restricted training. Nonetheless it does
seem that contrary to popular mythology the tanks were well matched
in terms of armour and armament, perhaps even with a slight advantage
to the British. Where the Germans scored, and scored heavily, was

211
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

in their skilful and aggressive use of the ample supply of anti-tank


guns which they held, both the 50mm and the 88mm. The British fre-
quendy mistook the effects of these guns, deployed forward with the
German tanks, for the effects of the tank guns, which gave rise to the
prevalent belief in the superiority of the German armour. It was particu-

larly unfortunate that the British never managed to deploy their excellent
3-inch anti-aircraft gun (the direct counterpart to the 88) in the same
way.
Rommel's advance on 26 May caught the Eighth Army unprepared.
Despite the warnings from Intelligence (perhaps because in the past
it had proved so hopelessly inaccurate) the Army was not in its battle
stations. Thus wrong-footed on the first day, it never properly recovered
its equilibrium for the rest of the battle. Using the Italians to mask

the Gazala position the German commander headed south through the
desert, hooking round the Free French at Bir Hacheim, and striking
north through the rear of the British positions. His route took him
through both 1st and 7th Armoured Divisions, but because they were
so widely dispersed he was able to engage and defeat their brigades
in detail. The speed of his advance was such that at Bir Gubi half
the garrison was still at Tobruk, swimming, so that there were insuf-
ficient men left to fire all the guns; while the headquarters of 7th
Armoured Division was overrun and Messervy, the Divisional Com-
mander, captured (although he subsequently escaped). It was a very
confused situation in which the Army Commander, often wildly out
of date because of the problems of communications, command and con-
found himself quite unable to grip the battle. By the third day
trol,

Rommel had been brought to a temporary standstill by a combination


of the stubborn resistance of the British and his own supply problems,
caused by his long and vulnerable lines of communication around Bir
Hacheim. He therefore took refuge, with his customary ingenuity, in
the shelter of the British minefields, in what became known as the Caul-
dron. Here he established a defensive position while clearing corridors
through the mines to enable him to dramatically shorten his supply
lines.

It was a crucial moment, on which Ritchie failed to capitalize. This


was committee meetings between the senior mem-
a time of interminable
bers of the Eighth Army. Apart from reaching agreement that Rommel
appeared to be beaten these meetings had little constructive result. 150
Brigade, in its 'box' threatening the Cauldron position, was annihilated
by the Germans without any effective effort being made for its relief

212
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

or reinforcement; the counter-attack on Rommel in the Cauldron was


ill-coordinated, having two joint commanders com-
instead of a single
mander, and signally defeated ; the future of Bir Hacheim could not
be decided, until eventually after ten days of siege the garrison was
ordered to evacuate. By n June the situation was critical.
On 12 June, when Auchinleck flew up to visit Ritchie he found the
commander calm and resolute. Nonetheless it was not a good day; by
that evening Rommel had smashed through both the British armoured
divisions north-west of El Gubi, and the British tank strength had now
been reduced to seventy. With the evacuation of the Knightsbridge box
on the following day the Eighth Army was being pressed steadily back
against the coast. Ritchie had had very serious problems of control;
given the speed at which events in the desert were moving, every attempt
he made to correct the situation or to retrieve the initiative was already
irrelevant or out of date by the time that it was implemented. Throughout,
however, he had remained steadily optimistic. Now he began to look
over his shoulder. On
June he outlined to Auchinleck his plan to
14
evacuate the Gazala defences and to establish a new defence in the
area west of the Egyptian frontier. This inevitably meant giving up
Tobruk, but at this point the Prime Minister intervened once again,
with a telegram to the Commander-in-Chief making it clear that Tobruk
must be held at all costs.
There is much discussion about the rights and wrongs of what ensued,
and Ritchie is commonly blamed both for deceiving Auchinleck and
disobeying his orders, although it is clear that Ritchie himself felt that
his intentions were known and understood by his superior. In any event
Auchinleck's instruction to hold the Tobruk-El Adem line was too late,

already overtaken by Ritchie's orders for a general withdrawal, and


by 18 June Tobruk was invested once again. This time, however, it
was no longer the fortress it had been, many of its defences dismantled,
or filled in for the convenience of the base depot it had become and

many of mines lifted to be used in the desert 'mine marsh'. Hastily


its

garrisoned by the 2nd South African Division, and attacked by every-


thing that Rommel could spare or scrape up, Tobruk fell to the Axis
on 21 June. On 22 June Auchinleck flew up to visit Ritchie again, and
sanctioned a further resumption of the 'Gazala Gallop' back to Mersa
Matruh, to give the Eighth Army a chance to regroup and reorganize.
But Rommel was never one to give his opponent an opening, and by
25 June he had closed up once again and was offering battle. It was
at this point that Auchinleck, for the second time, stepped in and relieved

213
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

the Army Commander, this time doing what many had argued that
he should have done on his previous visit, and assuming command
himself.
Ritchie had been a contrast to his predecessor in many ways. Tall,
where Cunningham was short, bluff, jovial, the successful staff officer
rather than the successful commander, they shared nonetheless the com-
mon disability of never fully coming to grips with their command. In
Cunningham's case he was the new boy; new to the desert and new
to this type of warfare. In Ritchie's case he knew the theatre, and many
of the personalities, but he was at the disadvantage of being seen to
be the junior, put in to do his master's bidding and never fully succeeding
in establishing his authority in his own right. Both Cunningham and
Ritchie were members of that select band of British commanders in
the first part of the war who had to hold the ring while the country
girded itself for total war. As such they had to fight their battles as
best they could with what they had and with what they knew. It was
with the benefit of their experience that subsequent commanders went
on to win. Both Cunningham and Ritchie also were victims of Auchin-
leck's weakness in the selection of key subordinates - and of that loyalty
which prevented him from rewarding perceived shortcomings early on
with dismissal, as more ruthless men would certainly have done. But
in the case of Ritchie, as with Cunningham, failure in the desert did
not mean the end of his career. He went on to be a Corps Commander
in Normandy and eventually retired in 1951 as a full General, head
of the British Army Staff in the Joint Services Mission to the USA.
Like Macaulay's schoolboy all the world knows that Auchinleck, hav-
ing relieved Ritchie, took command of the Eighth Army himself, fought
Rommel Alamein and was himself
to a standstill in the First Battle of
then sacked by Churchill at the beginning of August. Montgomery was
appointed to take over the Eighth Army, which he did with alacrity,
assuming command forty-eight hours early and setting about restoring
morale everywhere. In the process he brought in his own men to key
positions of influence and authority, among them Oliver Leese.

Commissioned Coldstream Guards in 1914, Leese had fought


into the
throughout the First World War in France and Flanders, being wounded
three times and being awarded the DSO as a platoon commander on
the Somme. He returned from being Chief Instructor at the Staff Col-
lege, Quetta, in time to be the Deputy Chief of Staff to Pownall with

214
:

CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

the BEF Dunkirk, and was subsequently appointed in June 1941 to


at

form and command the Guards Armoured Division. It was from this
post that he was summoned by Montgomery in early September 1942
to command XXX Corps, one of the three corps in Eighth Army and
the one that was earmarked to play the major part in the forthcoming
battle, Second Alamein. Leese stayed with Montgomery as Corps Com-

mander throughout the rest of the North African campaign and the
invasion of Sicily, finally returning to England with his corps head-
quarters almost exactly a year later at the end of August 1943. Throughout
that period he worked extremely closely with his Army Commander
who clearly looked upon Leese as his best Corps Commander, using
him to achieve the breakthrough at Alamein, lead the drive to Tripoli
and command the British element of the Sicily invasion force. It was
therefore hardly surprising, when Montgomery was selected to command
21st Army Group preparing for D-Day, that Leese should have been

appointed to take over the Eighth Army from him.


Thus, unlike Cunningham and Ritchie, Leese came to his Army com-
mand with the benefit of experience, and experience not only of the
theatre in which he was to fight but also of the type of operations that
were being undertaken. Admittedly Cunningham had operational
experience as a formation commander, but he had not gained it in the
Western Desert or armoured warfare. Ritchie had even less relevant
experience. Leese was an infantryman who had raised and commanded
an armoured division (although not in action), and who had then gone
on to command a corps for a year under an extremely successful general,
during which time he had fought both armoured and infantry battles
in terrain as diverse as the Western Desert and the towns of Sicily.
This in itself, however, is not sufficient to explain the success that he
enjoyed. The rest must lie in the character of the man. Harold Macmil-
lan, who was at that time Minister Resident Mediterranean, and who
liked Leese, wrote of one visit to the Eighth Army when he was being
driven by the Army Commander
Everywhere the general is received with smiles and greetings. He is indeed
a very popular figure, and I told him that he conducts the whole affair like
an election campaign. It is a remarkable contrast with the last war. Then a
general was a remote, Blimpish figure in white moustache, faultlessly tailored
tunic, polished bootsand spurs, emerging occasionally from a luxurious cha-
teau,and escorted as a rule in his huge limousine Rolls by a troop of lancers.
Now an Army Commander is a youngish man, in shorts and open shirt, driving
his own jeep and waving and shouting his greetings to the troops as he edges

215
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

his way past guns, tanks, trucks, tank-carriers etc, in the crowded and muddy
roads, which the enemy may be actively shelling as he drives along.

It is in this perception of Leese, tied to his generalship, that the explana-


tion of his success lies.
Leese took over the Eighth Army on i January 1944. Alexander was
Commander-in-Chief Allied Forces Italy with two Armies under him,
the American Fifth under Mark Clark, and Leese's Eighth. The British
Army contained a remarkable diversity of nationalities, numbering
among its Corps,in addition to the V (General Allfrey) and XIII (General
Kirkman), a Polish Corps (brought out from Persia by General Anders)
and a partly trained Canadian Corps while
; its Divisions included New
Zealanders, Indians, Frenchmen, South Africans and Greeks. It was
indeed a true successor to the polyglot army of the desert that found
itself bogged down on the line of the River Sangro, on the right of
the Allied line. The aim of the German commander, Kesselring, was
to hold the Allies on the Gustav Line, of which the pivot was Cassino.
To do this he had twenty-one divisions opposing the Allies' eighteen.
By the end of February- 1944 the second Battle of Cassino had finished
in failure, and it was clear that a new approach was needed. The outcome
was Operation Diadem, the first of the two major transfers of the Eighth
Army across Italy which Leese undertook in complete secrecy, enabling
him to hoax the Germans and achieve surprise. By 13 March the entire
Army was moved west, to concentrate with the Americans on the breach-
ing of the Gustav and Hitier Lines, and when Operation Dickens, the
third Battle of Cassino, also ended in failure on 24 March the planning
and preparation for Diadem moved into top gear. The operation started
with the fourth Battle of Cassino on 11 May and by 19 May, when Cassino
finally fell, the Eighth Army was on the Adolf Hitler Line. On 23 May

the Canadians broke through this line also, and the advance was on,
with Mark Clark making a beeline for Rome in a move that was to
have serious consequences for the subsequent prosecution of the war
in Italy, providing the opportunity for the majority of Kesselring's forces
to escape the Allied pincer and re-form on the line Florence-Rome.
In the reasons that Leese gave for the success of Diadem, in a letter
Montgomery, may be found a clue to his own generalship
to his old tutor
the operation, he said, was 'carefully prepared plenty of time to
. . .

rehearse, everyone knew what they were doing; maximum concentration


of artillery fire and armour'.
Rome had fallen to the Allies on 4 June. By this time it was clear

216
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

that a strong rivalrywas growing between the two Army Commanders.


Mark Clark was determined that no opportunity should be missed to
enhance the reputation of the Fifth Army, and this led on occasion
to friction which hampered co-operation. On 14 July Leese felt impelled
to walk out of the French celebrations because of the situation in which
he felt his Army was being placed. Tied in with the loss of seven Allied
divisions the same month for use in the Normandy landings and in
Operation Anvil, the landings in the south of France, and with the
switch of popular attention from the Italian campaign to north-west
Europe which led to a growing conviction amongst those in Italy that
they were being viewed as a sideshow, it became clear by the beginning
of August that it was time for a new initiative. The Allies were fighting
outside Florence, but it seemed possible that with their reduced numbers
they might well have difficulty in achieving the required breakthrough
and still have the strength for successful exploitation in the difficult

country that lay north of Florence. Leese, in concert with his Corps
Commander, Kirkman, therefore put forward a plan that would allow
the Eighth Army to use its advantage in tanks, artillery and aircraft
by switching its main thrust to the Adriatic coast. This plan eventually
came to fruition as Operation Olive.
Conceived as it was by the Army Commander, it took some time
to convince Alexander and his staff of the feasibility of the proposal.
Prolonged persuasive argument carried the day, however; perhaps not
the least attractive aspect of the plan was that it would lead to the separ-
ation of the two Armies and their mutually antipathetic commanders.
By 12 August, therefore, the Eighth Army had started the second of
the switches across Italy for which its commander became so renowned.
Once again it was achieved with the minimum of fuss and the maximum
of surprise, and when the attack was launched on 26 August it quickly
met with success. By 30 August the Eighth Army had closed up to
the Gothic Line, and by 19 September the line had been forced and
the breakout into the Po Valley had started.
Once again the Army was advancing, but Leese was to see only a
little of this phase. On 28 September it was announced that he was

to go to South East Asia, to serve under Mountbatten as commander


of the army group that was to recapture Burma. It was a fitting climax
to an extremely successful tour, in which he had taken over an army
bogged down in the memories of its past successes, the realities of the
Italian winter and the strength of the Gustav Line, had revitalized it
and removed the tarnish that was beginning to gather on its image by

217
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

restoring to it its self-confidence. His success was marked by the visits

of King George vi and the Prime Minister, who were both treated
to grandstand views of the operations and who were able to take back
a personal knowledge of the real situation, while their presence had
an inestimable effect on the morale of the troops. It had been a tour
de force and was achieved by methods in direct contrast to those of
his predecessor, although he always owned to having learned so much
from Montgomery. An excellent trainer of men himself, Leese was fully
in sympathy with the view that meticulous preparation was the key to
success in battle. Italy was a battlefield that lent itself to this approach.
Always described as a 'slogging match', the campaign was one in which
there was little scope for the Rommel-style lightning sweeps of the desert.
Leese had shown himself to be a very competent desert fighter, but
it was in the more mundane fighting up the spine of Italy that he finally

came into his own as an Army Commander.


It was therefore all the more appropriate that he should have been

chosen as the commander of nth Army Group, and become Com-


mander-in-Chief Allied Land Forces South Last Asia (or C-in-C ALF-
SEA), as that was a task in which his skill as a manager of resources
was sorely needed. It was unfortunate that the environment into which
he was thrust was peopled with personalities of a type with which Leese
was to find himself unable to come to terms.
Arriving in Kandy, Ceylon, on 10 November 1944, at the headquarters
of Mountbatten's South East Asia Command (SEAC), Leese found him-
self immersed in a world with which he had little sympathy. It seems
clear that from the outset he and the Supreme Commander were unlikely
to see eye to eye, and it was with a sense of relief that he escaped
three days later to hisown headquarters at Barrackpore, outside Calcutta.
He had taken over the command of nth Army Group from General
Gifford, sacked by Mountbatten after the Battle of Imphal. His command
included Fourteenth Army, under the redoubtable Slim, XV Corps
under General Christisen, an old friend, Northern Combat Area Com-
mand (NCAC) under the American general Sultan, and the Chindits
under General Lentaigne. His task was the reconquest of Burma.
SEAC's objectives for 1945 were a campaign to establish a presence
in central Burma, and the capture of Akyab in the Arakan. The more
that Leese considered this the more convinced he became that a great
deal more could be achieved provided that sufficient air and sea trans-
port was made available. He therefore set himself the target of 'Rangoon
before the Monsoon' and proceeded, with his usual energy, to do every-

218
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

thing possible to make ithappen. By 3 January Akyab was in British


hands, and SEAC was poised for the next step. At this stage Leese
was working flat out to ensure that the resources required for the advance
on Mandalay and Rangoon were available. In January he arranged that
General Browning (Chief of Staff to Mountbatten) should return home
to plead - successfully - before the Chiefs of Staff the need for transport
aircraft to replace those removed by the Americans in response to the
renewed Japanese threat in Chunking. He spent many, many hours
in the air himself, gathering together the scattered threads of his enor-
mous command; in one 61-day period he spent thirty-three days flying,

during which he covered 36,000 miles in a total of 211 hours. At the


same time he brought out many of his old Eighth Army staff to work
for him, a move that was not at all popular and did much to alienate
the old Far East hands.
The was a command in total contrast to that which had pertained
result
in Italy. There he had had complete confidence and trust in his superior,
and had had the confidence and trust of his subordinates. Now he
was trying to force the pace, in accordance with the instructions that
he had received in London before travelling out, with a commander
whom he neither liked nor particularly trusted, and subordinates who,
in some cases, resented the intrusion of this outsider with his desert
ways - and staff. Slim in particular, who might have seen himself as
a contender for Leese's post although he was never considered for it,
was sensitive about what he perceived as the downgrading of the per-
formance of his cherished Fourteenth Army; an inevitable consequence
of the introduction of so many of Leese's own men into key posts was
a tendency for Eighth Army ways to be introduced.
It was against this background that the advance to Mandalay began

on 19 February 1945. By 5 March Meiktila had fallen, but on 16 March


Browning came to Leese with a report on Slim's physical condition
which led Leese to establish a small Tac HQof ALFSEA with Four-
teenth Army headquarters. On 20 March Mandalay fell, after a remark-
able final stand by the Japanese in the fort, reminiscent of scenes from
the Indian Mutiny in the nineteenth century. All attention was then
turned to the possibility of the capture of Rangoon, and this also fell,
on 3 May, in a truly joint services operation that included a parachute
drop, a seaborne assault and an attack on land. It was a fitting climax
to the career of a general who had now been fighting successfully for
two and a half years, but Leese turned immediately to the next task,
the capture of Malaya, and it was here that he ran into trouble.

219
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

Slim was in need of a rest - indeed he had Leese


said as much to
in the when he had stated that he
course of the battle for Mandalay
wanted four months' leave as soon as Rangoon was taken. Leese's view
was that someone else should command the Malayan operation, leaving
Slim to mop up in Burma; this would mean Slim leaving Fourteenth
Army, which Leese considered should be taken over by Christisen. He
discussed the idea with Mountbatten who concurred, but said that he
thought Leese should convey the message personally. Leese therefore
flew up to see Slim, who immediately considered that he had been sacked
(although Leese had no authority- to take such a course, as Slim must
have known) and proceeded to use his not inconsiderable influence
to have the decision reversed. When Leese saw Mountbatten on 21 May
the Supreme Commander refused to back his Army Group Commander,
and asked him to reinstate Slim - and seeing no way out, Leese agreed.
Tension between Mountbatten and Leese, which had been growing
steadily ever since Leese made it clear that he considered SEAC was
not prosecuting the war as efficiently as it might, made the situation
impossible, and on 7 June Mountbatten wrote to Alanbrooke, the CIGS,
asking for Leese to be sacked. Alanbrooke concurred and on 2 July,
while on leave in Kashmir, Leese received a letter from Mountbatten,
delivered personally by a member of the supremo's staff, telling him
of the decision. Leese returned to England forthwith, handing over
his command to Slim who, ironically, found himself thereby forced
to relinquish the command of Fourteenth Army.
Leese was an extremely able and charming man, who won the affection
and respect of all those who worked for him in Eighth Army. An old-
fashioned guardsman, straight as a die, he was not prepared for the
more devious world of Kandy and Calcutta and was unable to strike
up the same rapport which had smoothed his path elsewhere. In part
this was his own fault, the result of the resentment caused by the import-
ation of so many who were seen as outsiders the other side of the ;

argument is that he would have been most unlikely to have achieved


all he did within the timetable he had set himself had he not surrounded

himself by those who knew his modus operandi and brought with them,
perhaps, a greater sense of urgency. But it was an unhappy episode
that reflected little on any of those involved - except perhaps
credit
Leese himself, who would never discuss the matter, and therefore left
the other protagonists to make their own running.

Three generals, therefore, all men of ability and stature, who achieved

220
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

success in battle but suffered the humiliation of public dismissal. For


Ritchie failure was not critical, and he was able to go on and achieve
success in a subsequent operational command. For Cunningham, com-
ing immediately on the heels of his Abyssinian triumph, it was more

traumatic, but he also recovered and went on to greater things. For


Leese, who had risen the highest and had the furthest to fall, it was
the end of the line, and after a year as GOC Eastern Command he
retired, still a Lieutenant-General.
The careers of these three generals with the Eighth Army are them-
selves illustrations of the way Britain fought the Second World War.
Cunningham and Ritchie were of the old school, the old-style general
whose task (carried out successfully) was to hold the ring, making the
best of what there was while the country geared itself up for victory.
Leese, although of the same generation (he was three years older than
Ritchie, and seven years younger than Cunningham, but all had fought
in the Great War), was the new breed, fighting with the resources of
men and material that had been denied to the others, with an army
accustomed to success. Cunningham and Ritchie were overfaced. Their
task was too great for them, but had they been given Leese's experience,
which amounted to a carefully graduated military education, and the
tools of the trade, perhaps they also would have been more successful.
Ritchie, for example, went on to be an entirely competent Corps Com-
mander after D-Day.
The moral of their story would appear to be that a commander must
choose his subordinates, monitor their progress closely and not be
blinded by personal loyalty if they do not match up to the task - this
Auchinleck, despite the warning of his staff, could not bring himself
to see through to its logical conclusion. The case of Leese shows that
high command - really high command - requires a deal of political
sensitivity and a strong sense of self-preservation for successful survival.
Leese, however, was more concerned with the success of the war effort
than his personal career. All three men, therefore, were victims of that
peculiarly British vice - the virtue of gentlemanliness ; Cunningham
and Ritchie above all of Auchinleck's, Leese of his own.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Barnett, Correlli, The Desert Generals (new edition, Allen & Unwin, 1983).
Carver, Michael, Alamein (Batsford, 1962).
Macmillan, Harold, War Diaries (Macmillan, 1984).

221
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

Lewin, Ronald, Slim (Leo Cooper, 1976).


Nicolson, Nigel, Alex (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1973)
Ryder, Rowland, Oliver Leese (Hamish Hamilton, 1987).
Warner, Philip, Auchinleck (Buchan and Enright, 1981).
Ziegler, Philip, Mountbatten (Collins, 1985).

CHRONOLOGY: ALAN CUNNINGHAM


1887, May 1 Born into a distinguished Scottish family

1904 Enters the Royal Military Academy Woolwich


1906, December 20 Commissioned into the Royal Field Artillery

1915 Posted from India to the Western Front, where he


serves until the end of the Great War, ending as
Brigade-Major RA, mentioned in despatches five times
and awarded the DSO and MC
1928, July 1 Promoted brevet Lieutenant-Colonel
1937 Attends Imperial Defence College
1937, December 17 Promoted Brigadier and appointed Commander Royal
Artillery 1st Division

1938, September 1 Promoted Major-General, and appointed Commander


5th Anti-Aircraft Division, followed by 66th, 9th and
51st TA Divisions (UK)
1940, October 29 Appointed GOC East Africa, acting Lieutenant-
General
1941, May 16 Awarded KCB
1941, September 10 Appointed GOC Eighth Army
1941, November 26 Replaced as GOC Eighth Army
1942, November 11 Commandant Army Staff College
1943, July 23 Promoted Lieutenant-General and appointed GOC
Northern Ireland
1944, December 1 Appointed GOC-in-C Eastern Command
1945, November 21 Promoted General and appointed High Commissioner
and C-in-C Palestine
1948 Retires ; appointed GCMG
i95i Marries
1983, January 30 Dies

CHRONOLOGY: NEIL RITCHIE


1897, July 29 Born in Liss, Hants
1914, December 16 Commissioned into the Black Watch from RMC
Sandhurst
1915, September Wounded at Loos

222
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

1917 Awarded DSO in Middle East with 2nd Battalion Black


Watch
1918 Awarded MC in Middle East
1937 Marries
1938 Commanding Officer 2nd Battalion The King's Own
Royal Regiment
1940 Brigadier General Staff, II Corps, BEF
Brigadier General Staff, Southern Command
GOC 51st Highland Division. Major-General
1941 Deputy Chief of the General Staff, Middle East
Command
1941, November 26 GOC Eighth Army
1942, June 25 Relieved of command and returned to UK
1944 GOC XII Corps, Europe. KBE
1945 GOC-in-C Scottish Command
1946 General
1947 C-in-C South East Asia Land Forces. KCB
1949 Commander British Army Staff, Washington DC
i95i Retires. GBE
1952 Moves to Canada to work for Mercantile and General
Insurance Company of Canada
1983, December 11 Dies in Canada

CHRONOLOGY: OLIVER LEESE


1894, October 27 Born in London
1914, August Commissioned into the Coldstream Guards from Eton
OTC
1914, October 12 Sails for France to join 3rd Battalion Coldstream
Guards
1914, October 20 Severely wounded, invalided home
1915 Posted to 2nd Battalion Coldstream Guards, France
1916, September 15 Awarded DSO on the Somme, and severely wounded
1919, August Adjutant 3rd Battalion Coldstream Guards
1929, November 11 Brigade-Major 1st Guards Brigade
1933 January 18 Marries. Promoted brevet Lieutenant-Colonel
1936, October 1 Commanding Officer 1st Battalion Coldstream Guards
1938, September 29 Chief Instructor Staff College Quetta
1940, May Promoted Brigadier and appointed Deputy Chief of
General Staff BEF
1941, February GOC 15th Scottish Division. Major-General
i94i,Junei9 GOC Guards Armoured Division
1942, September 11 GOC XXX Corps North Africa. Lieutenant-General
223
CUNNINGHAM, RITCHIE AND LEESE

1943, December 24 GOC Eighth Army Italy


1944, July 26 Knighted in the field by King George vi
1944, November 12 C-in-C Allied Land Forces South East Asia
1945, July 3 Relieved of command
1945, October GOC-in-C Eastern Command
1946, December 4 Retires
1964, April 30 Wife dies
1965 President of the MCC
1978, January 22 Dies in Wales

224
12

HORROCKS
Lieutenant-General Sir Brian Horrocks

ALAN SHEPPERD

Brian Gwynne Horrocks, like many young men of his generation, fol-
lowed his father into the Army. He was
born on 7 September 1895 at
Ranniket, a hill station in India, the son of Minna and William Horrocks,
a surgeon in the Royal Army Medical Corps. William was a man of
parts who is best remembered as the Director of Army Hygiene in the
First World War, for which he received had a very
a knighthood. Brian
happy childhood and his schooling followed in the same manner; first
to the Bow School at Durham, followed by three years at Uppingham.
Here he drifted happily into the Army Class. But games took up most
of his time and he passed into the Royal Military College one from
bottom. The eighteen months' course ended in the middle of July 1914;
for Horrocks this date was particularly significant. While he had joined
in many sports, the result of his work was hardly good enough to earn his
commission. Furthermore he had been to the races at Gatwick, put his
all on an absolute certainty and failed to get back to Camberley on the

railway without a ticket. The College authorities were not pleased and
Horrocks spent the whole of his last term on restrictions. Now mobiliza-
tion had taken place on 4 August and all who had completed the course
found themselves Second Lieutenants and posted to their regiments.
Within a fortnight Horrocks was in France with a draft for the 1st

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HORROCKS

Battalion Middlesex Regiment. This was just before the Battle of the
Aisne, and soon he was commanding 16 Platoon with Sergeant Whinney
in Captain Gibbons' Company. 'Both first class at their jobs/ as Horrocks
later wrote, October at the beginning of the Battle of Ypres,
but 'on 21

my platoon was surrounded by the enemy and I was wounded and taken
prisoner. The war for me was over and my active military career had
stopped for four years.' His wounds in the lower stomach for a long
time prevented his being able to walk, and in the hospital near Lille
the Germans treated the British soldiers in a most inhuman manner,
never changing the blankets or the blood-stained garments in which
they had been wounded.
Horrocks' experiences over the next four years, the innumerable
escape attempts, the constant movement and tougher camps,
to other
the long periods in solitary confinement are covered in Philip Warner's
biography, Horrocks - The General who Led from the Front. As Horrocks
himself put it, 'I had learnt in a hard school to stand on my own feet
and make my own decisions, often in a split second. I had also acquired
the useful habit of thinking things out from the enemy point of view
so that I might always be one jump ahead.' In addition he had become
fluent in French and German as well as acquiring a knowledge of Rus-
sian, having lived for several months in a hut with a number of Russian

officers. All this in retrospect Horrocks felt was on the plus side. Then
there was the innate good humour of the ordinary British soldier, which
Horrocks never forgot. 'I always tell young officers there will be moments
when your soldiers will drive you almost mad, but never forget this
- that we are privileged to command the nicest men in the world.' Nor
did he forget what the Feldwebel of the Imperial Guard said who escorted
him Germany. 'All front line troops have a respect for each other,
into
but the farther from the front you get, the more bellicose and beastly
the people become.'
When the war ended and at the age of twenty-two Horrocks was
on leave in England. Young and physically fit he was indeed, but his
nerves were in rags. Four years' back pay were spent in six weeks and
the only redeeming feature was the attitude of his parents. His wise
old father insisted that he should get these four years out of his system
in his own way; and how wise he was. Meanwhile the revolution in
Russia was reaching its climax, although the British were still involved
in helping theWhite armies against the Bolsheviks. With his knowledge
of Russian Horrocks volunteered, and with a party of a dozen officers
embarked for Vladivostok.

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HORROCKS

When they eventually reached this Siberian port they found conditions
almost beyond belief, as was full of refugees who had fled eastwards.
it

Only two British battalions remained to support the two Missions, one
at Omsk dealing with equipment and training, the other a railway Mis-

sion trying to sort out the chaos on the long lines of communication.
With the first-class officers and non-commissioned officers on loan,
and the large quantities of surplus equipment, all should have been
well. But from the start the White Russian officers were suspicious
and resentful of any outside help, an attitude that had already begun
to sour relationships with the British. Within three days of landing
the party of fourteen officers and a platoon of British soldiers set off
for Omsk, some three thousand miles distant, on a train with twenty-
seven wagons full of shells. Horrocks was interpreter and records the
innumerable attempts by local station masters to remove wagons halted
for fictitious repairs. The journey took just over a month and all the
wagons arrived intact. Horrocks was sent as second in command of
a Non-Commissioned Officers' School in Ekaterinburg (now Sverd-
lovsk) about 800 miles further west. This charming town was where
the Tsar and his family had been murdered. Russian suspicion, how-
ever, had grown and it was eventually decided that the Mission must
be withdrawn. At their own request Horrocks and George Hayes
stayed on as Liaison Officers with the First Siberian Army. In October
1919 they were back in Omsk. Here they joined up with Major Vining
and the Mission helping to run the railway. With the front having dis-
integrated and in the intense cold they joined the milling crowds of
refugees trying to get eastwards by rail. In earlyjanuary 1920 they reached
Krasnoyarsk, which it was discovered had fallen days earlier to the
Reds.
Horrocks' second period as a prisoner of war lasted for nearly ten
months. The British officers refused to work with the Reds and were
separated from the White Russians, who were dying by the hundreds
each day. Then just as word came that the British were to be repatriated,
Horrocks 'began to feel very ill, a high temperature, constant sickness
and a burning thirst. This was the blackest moment of my life, for
in the anxious eyes of the others I could read one word - typhus.'
In thetown there were said to be 30,000 cases of typhus - naked corpses
stacked on the platforms, frozen bodies piled into sledges on the streets,
and in the hospitals patients lying in ranks in their clothes on the floors
with the corridors used as lavatories. Horrocks was more than fortunate
being able to wake from six days of unconsciousness in an abandoned

227
HORROCKS

school, with one heroine of a Russian nurse for 125 patients. Tied down
to the bed Horrocks woke to find his friend George Hayes beside him
- a brave man who came daily. Somehow Hayes had managed to get
milk and white bread, to supplement the black bread and thin soup,
which undoubtedly saved his life.
The journey back started in the middle of March, but only reached
Irkutsk. Then after two months the party set off for Moscow. Here
they were put into the Ivznoffsky Monastery with over 450 other pris-
oners, and kept on a starvation diet. But for the visits of Madame Carpen-
tier and her daughters, who brought bread and potatoes twice a week,

they would have starved. Then news of their repatriation came without
any warning, and the next day the British left for Petrograd. 'Our depar-
ture/ Horrocks wrote, 'was entirely spoilt for me at any rate, by the
sad white faces of our fellow prisoners . their fate was all too certain.'
. .

It was only when Horrocks reached London and met his parents

that he realized how they had suffered through his having disappeared
for over a year and literally passed out of their lives. He was now twenty-
six years old with little chance of a successful army career, although
in retrospect he thought the experiences he had gained were an excellent
preparation for the stress and strain of command in war. For the next
few years his regiment was busy on security duties before being posted
to Aldershot in October 1923. The Army was seriously under strength
and forced into the realm of make-believe by the shortage of equipment.
Guns were represented by flags and defended posts marked out by
white tape, while a marching column was often represented by men
carrying poles with flags stretched on to show the space taken up.
Bored with this kind of training Horrocks took up modern pentathlon,
which gave him an outlet for his skills as a runner, horseman and shot.
Hard training brought success in both the army and national champion-
ships, and he was chosen to take part in the 1924 Olympic Games. Here
the standard was exceptionally high and he had only modest results.
With the years passing by, his father realized that Brian would soon
pass the age of entry to the Staff College at Camberley. And without
the magic 'psc' after one's name it was virtually impossible to reach
high command Army. The proposition was put tactfully but very
in the
firmly to Horrocks that promotion was very difficult to get and, without
the Staff College, virtually impossible. Horrocks took the advice and
worked hard for the examination in 1927. Then shortly before the date
of the examination the battalion was ordered to China where General
Chiang Kai-shek had established a nationalist government - a very inter-

228
HORROCKS

esting posting for a young officer! Again Sir William stepped in and
Horrocks agreed to seek permission to stay behind to take the examin-
ation. This he successfully passed, but not high enough to be accepted
straight away. In fact he had now to obtain a nomination, and encouraged
by his father he attended specialized courses and eventually joined the
College for the course of 1931-33.
Meanwhile early in 1927 Horrocks was appointed adjutant of the 9th
Middlesex whose headquarters were at Willesden. The life of a territorial
battalion was centred on the drill hall headquarters. Training was spread
over the Saturdays and other evenings as well, together with the annual
camp in the summer. There was little equipment and to attend the
rifle range was a rare adventure. What was needed of the regular Adjutant
and senior Warrant Officer was endless enthusiasm, combined with
a cheerful and imperturbable manner. Horrocks soon found himself
at one with his completely new responsibility. After all, in a war, these

were the men who in the final analysis win or lose the battle. To know
them and work with them gave him an entirely new outlook on the
whole question of leadership. This was also the time when Horrocks
married a girl who had known him since childhood, Nancy, the daughter
of Brook and the Hon. Mrs Brook Kitchin. They were married at the
Savoy Chapel early in 1928 and their daughter was born the following
year. Philip Warner writes of them,

Both have always been inclined to undervalue themselves, Horrocks because


he saw himself as a not very bright philistine who had been lucky to have
the success he had, Nancy because she regarded much less talented
herself as a
person than she was. He was an orthodox though humane Conservative; her
views were well to the left of his. But they had much in common.

Joining as a student at the Staff College 1931 course at Camberley, Hor-


rocks was indeed lucky to have as commandant Major-General John
Dill, who 'was a man of the highest charm and with
integrity, great
a first class brain'. He also had humour. It was Dill who
a sense of
developed the syndicate system of working which still flourishes at Cam-
berley and many other staff colleges. Syndicates are groups of about
ten officers who work on a problem together. Eventually a collective
view is produced which is then presented by one member, explaining
the syndicate conclusion and at the same time summarizing any opposing
points that have emerged. It certainly teaches the students to listen care-
fully to everything that is said and ultimately to present a balanced

and rational viewpoint.

229
HORROCKS

On the two-year courses there were senior and junior terms, and
although the work was hard and often intensive, there was time for
sport and a social life as well. Amongst Horrocks' contemporaries were
many officers who later commanded divisions in the war. Of the senior
people two names stand out, Captain M.C. Dempsey MC and Captain
W. H. E. Gott MC, who both rose to high rank. Horrocks was kept
busy, took part in games and did his share in entertaining, rather more
than his captain's pay could afford. But the two years were a turning
point in his whole career. When the postings came out he learned with
some dismay that he was destined for a desk job in the War Office,
as Staff Captain in the Military Secretary's Branch. However the work
turned out to be stimulating and obviously of importance, as he dealt
with promotion of officers up to the rank of lieutenant-colonel. What
he did not realize at the time was that such a post in the MS Branch
was not given lightly. He had taken over from Myles Dempsey and
two years later, in 1936, he took over the post of Brigade Major of
5 Infantry Brigade in 2nd Division in Aldershot from the same officer.
The position of Brigade Major is a coveted appointment for a staff
officer and Horrocks now came under the influence of Wavell, who
commanded the division. Although not easy to get on with, and regarded
by some as often lacking in tact, Wavell had a flair for training his
division in highly imaginative exercises. Horrocks regarded him as hav-
ing the finest brain of anyone he had ever met. Horrocks absorbed
much of this and - being an extrovert and close to the soldiers, which
Wavell never was - he applied it in his own manner. Horrocks had
his own way of getting jobs done, as the Acting Adjutant of one of
the battalions in Aldershot recalls. He was sitting in his office one after-
noon when he became aware of the Brigade Major's presence. 'What
about your mobilization scheme ?' enquired Horrocks politely. The Act-
ing Adjutant explained that the Adjutant was on a course and that the
scheme was locked in the safe. 'Oh,' said Horrocks, 'that's fine. I should
like to have a look at it - perhaps tomorrow afternoon.' The resulting

rewrite of a dusty document, produced for the previous occupants of


the barracks, solved the problem satisfactorily for all concerned; even
if the Assistant Adjutant had to sit up all night to produce it

Horrocks' next posting came as a complete surprise, as he was sent


back to the Staff College as one of the directing staff under the Comman-
dant, Major-General Paget. The date was 1938.
Horrocks later wrote of Paget as having a very strong character and
as being one of the most honourable men he had ever met. He also

230
;

HORROCKS

paid great attention to detail. The work was hard and the hours long,
and at the outbreak of war the length of the course was reduced to
six months and the pressure increased. This was in the first place to
cater for Territorial Army officers selected as likely staff officers in
the expanding Army; young barristers, schoolmasters and others includ-
ing five Members of Parliament such as Selwyn Lloyd, later Foreign
Secretary, and Walker-Smith, afterwards Minister of Health. Towards
the end of Camberley Horrocks became concerned with
his time at
planning the courses, and the more he knew the Commandant the more
he admired his sterling qualities. Then early in May 1940 Horrocks
was handing over to his successor, as he had been told verbally that
he would get command of 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment in France,
when news of the German invasion through Holland reached him. This
was on the morning of 10 May. Realizing the urgency of reaching France,
Horrocks was en route for Southampton in the Commandant's car within
a couple of hours.
Three days later he took over the battalion at Louvain. Within an
hour or so he was told that the Divisional Commander had arrived
at his headquarters. 'I saw a small, alert figure with piercing eyes sitting

in the back of his car -man under whom I was to fight all my
the
battles during the war, and who was to have more influence on my
life than anyone before or since.' Montgomery was a controversial figure
his methods of training and command were unorthodox, and although
he was regarded as highly efficient, he was often spoken of as a showman.
Horrocks felt rather uneasy about the interview, for this was probably
what it was, butall went smoothly. The Middlesex Regiment was the

division's machine-gun regiment and Horrocks had ample opportunity


of getting to know his Divisional Commander. He quickly noticed that
throughout the withdrawal to Dunkirk Montgomery had his meals at
regular hours and never missed his normal night's sleep.
Horrocks's time as commander of the battalion lasted seventeen days.
For the whole of this time the battalion was in action and never once
had they been concentrated. Horrocks saw Montgomery every day, often
several timesand he had his orders direct from the divisional com-
mander. Montgomery's orders were always clear and used the minimum
number of words. He himself was always the same, confident, cheerful
and apparently quite fresh. He considered that 3rd Division was the
best in theArmy, and that he was the best divisional commander. By
Horrocks reached Dunkirk he had come to the same conclusion.
the time
Horrocks was now in temporary command of 11 Brigade of 4th Division,

231
HORROCKS

but there was little that could be done as the withdrawal over the beaches
had already begun. He had his personal share in the adventures of
those desperate days and finally reached Ramsgate in a small Dutch
cargo boat, in which he had manned the forward anti-aircraft Lewis
gun.
Within a few days Horrocks was ordered to take command of 9 Bri-
gade of 3rd Division, and found himself responsible for the coastline
from Rottingdean to Shoreham. Horrocks, mindful of his training at
the Staff College, found it Germans had
difficult to believe that the

the experience to mount a was what he had


seaborne invasion. Yet this
to believe could happen almost at any moment. So he laid plans to
get the earliest warning, by having signallers at the end of each pier.
Here an experienced officer who actually saw an invasion fleet approach-
ing would signal back by WT
and line to his brigade headquarters
and fire a white signal rocket. The troops, however, were trained in
short mobile exercises so as to keep them alert and active. Horrocks
himself slept next to his operations room, and one night the brigade
major rushed in to say that a white rocket had just gone up from the
end of a pier. 'Shall I send the code word, sir?' Horrocks was in a
quandary, but still felt that there must have been some mistake, as there
had been no message and the other posts had seen nothing. It turned
out that the rocket had been fired by a ship passing in line with one
of the piers - a lucky decision, but it owed much to careful planning.
Shortly after this the division was withdrawn into a counter-attack role,
and it was during the exercises at this time, particularly in the area
of Beaminster in Dorset, that the brigade worked with the Home Guard.
Horrocks noted their keenness and enthusiasm and his own embarrass-
ment at conferences when he was confronted by rows of be-medalled
senior officers serving as privates in the Home Guard.
Then in January 1941 he was appointed Brigadier General Staff of
Eastern Command, and in the five months he stayed there he organized
large scale exercises. He was, however, delighted to be promoted in
June to the acting rank of Major- General in command of 44th (Home
Counties) Division. This was a well-established Territorial Division
which guarded the area most threatened by German invasion, from
the Isle of Thanet to Dover and Folkestone. Also it came under Mont-
gomery. The well-remembered orders that Montgomery insisted upon,
banning wives from the operational areas, and his methods of staging
conferences after the big training exercises, were marks of this extraordi-
nary leader. Horrocks remarked also on his uncanny knowledge of the

232
HORROCKS

personalitiesunder his command, describing how he would often ring


Horrocks up to make the most searching enquiries of some second
lieutenant he had seen on training. In the end Horrocks was forced
to keep a book with all the details of every officer in his division by
the phone - something that caused Montgomery great amusement.
On 20 March 1942 Horrocks was cross-posted to take over the 9th
Armoured Division. The standard of individual training was excellent
but Horrocks knew that he had to make the division into a proper fighting
formation, and being an infantry officer this was a tough job. Within
a couple of days of his arrival he called the officers to a cinema and
addressed them. He told them that he had just had a look at the vehicle
parade state and it informed him that only about half of the vehicles
were capable of moving at all. 'You', he said, 'know all about mechanical

things. As an infantryman, I don't: however in the infantry division


I have just come from, almost all the vehicles are serviceable. Perhaps
you would care to explain why so many of yours are not.' A Royal
Mechanical and Electrical Engineer Officer stood up to answer this
question, and was promptly but politely told that perhaps he would
be better employed making sure the vehicles would perform, than
explaining why they could not.
Many officershad to come to see 'a bloody infantryman whom they
had never heard of,' and now were telling each other how lucky they
were to have such a spirited general in command. Horrocks made no
secret of the fact that these two periods - the time under Wavell in
Aldershot and that under Montgomery - were those in which he had
learned most of his practical soldiering. Now he was learning about
armoured fighting, where all orders were given by from a tank WT
- lessons that stood him in good stead later on. At 7 pm on 15 August
1942 the division was training in the north of England when Horrocks
got a cryptic message to report to London overnight. Within thirty-six
hours he was airborne from Lyneham in Wiltshire as the sole passenger
for Cairo. In the Middle East Montgomery had just taken over the
Eighth Army at a critical time. What he wanted urgently was someone
loyal and reliable, someone whom he knew and who would work directly
under him - Horrocks was that man.
Horrocks arrived three days after Montgomery; three days that had
seen dramatic changes in the Eighth Army. For Montgomery had issued
firm orders that there was to be no more withdrawal and that he would
defeat Rommel's attack on ground of his own choosing. Then, and
in his own time, Eighth Army would attack and 'we are going to finish

233
HORROCKS

with this chap Rommel once and for all' He gave Horrocks his apprecia-
tion of how Rommel would move his Afrika Korps round the southern
flank, where the reinforced XIII Corps (commanded by Horrocks) would
be holding the Alam Haifa ridge. Here the tanks of two armoured div-
ision and all the anti-tank guns would be dug in and the Germans
would be trapped and finally driven back.
Montgomery stressed several times that Horrocks must not 'get unduly
mauled in the process/ as he then planned to form a strong mobile
reserve consisting largely of armoured divisions. Then when this was
ready he would 'hit Rommel for six out of Africa'. A factor here was
that the Grant tank was only just becoming available. The sixty Grants
in 22 Armoured Brigade were the only tanks that could compete with
the highly superior Mk III and Vis of which Rommel had 234 tanks.
Later some more Grants arrived and were sent to 10th Armoured Div-
ision. Although Horrocks's orders were quite clear, he had difficulty

with several of the tank commanders who wanted to rush in at the


slightest opportunity. At one stage in the battle Horrocks was told to
attack into a gap in the German position with 2nd New Zealand Division.
Major-General Freyberg, who was a long way senior to the new corps
commander, objected, saying that he would use the newly arrived brigade
from 44th Division. In the end the attack was launched by the Maori
brigade and the British brigade, but suffered heavy losses. On 7 Sep-
tember the battle was over. Hounded by the RAF and continually shelled
day and night, the Germans had failed to break through, and XIII
Corps had not been mauled.
Before the battle of Alamein, X Armoured Corps was formed of two
armoured divisions, 2 Armoured Brigade and the New Zealand Infantry
Division. Initially Horrocks had been chosen to command, but his suc-
cess with XIII Corps where he was popular, combined by his lack of
experience in the desert with armour, made him suggest that Major-
General Herbert Lumsden, a 12th Lancer with an admirable record,
should get the command. Montgomery listened to Horrocks and Lums-
den got the command. XIII Corps' part in the battle was to draw off
German forces by appearing to be the main thrust in the south, while
the breakthrough took place in the northern sector. To begin with all

went well, but the clearing of the minefields took longer than expected
and the whole impetus seemed totally bogged down. More and more
of XIII Corps' troops were switched north, and when the end came
and the tanks were through the minefields and into open country with
Rommel pulling back, Horrocks was left with a skeleton corps. This

234
:

HORROCKS

situation did not last long, however, as he was given command of X


Corps, which during the advance into Libya had been kept in reserve
to guard against any Axis breakthrough on the southern flank. When
the battle against the Mareth line became bogged down, Montgomery
decided to make a sweeping movement round the German flank. Hor-
rocks had his chance. The plan was for X Corps and the New Zealand
Division to set off on a 150-mile sweep, ending by an approach through
a difficult gap in the mountains. Then they would face the formidable
strength of two Panzer divisions and the 164th Light Division. Philip
Warner writes

The Desert Air Force supported it by pounding the Germans on a scale hitherto

unknown. AFrench force under General Leclerc secured a vital pass. The
New Zealanders fought like tigers. And the British units pressed on with relent-
less determination. This wide flanking move, pushed through with tremen-
. . .

dous drive and tenacity, was one of the most desperate assaults of the war.
Assisted by relentless air attacks, it crunched its way through the German
divisions, who had been astonished to find this apparently invincible juggernaut

bearing down on their flanks.

The battle of Gabes, or rather Wadi Akarit Gap, followed. At first

all went well, but when Horrocks tried to take over the breakthrough
the leading elements of his X
Corps ran into an undisclosed anti-tank
ditch covered by 88mm guns and were held up. Eventually the armour
got through, but only because the Germans pulled back. Of Horrocks's
last battle in North Africa he wrote : 'The next few days were among
the most unpleasant of my life.'

Montgomery had already left for Cairo to discuss plans for the
invasion of Sicily. Just before he left he had told Horrocks to work
out a plan to break through to Tunisia by a strong attack up the coast,
taking the view that First Army would be unable to break through from
the other direction. Both Freyberg and Tuker of 4th Indian Division
hated the idea because it would mean heavy casualties. When Mont-
gomery returned he was in a very irritable state. He didn't like the
plans for Sicily and now found nothing had been done in his absence.
Horrocks was hauled over the coals and told to get on with the battle
as ordered. Before he left the caravan, however, he pointed out the
effect on Eighth Army and suggested that it would be better if the attack
was made from First Army's front where the ground was more suitable.
Three days later he was called by WT
to report at Eighth Army head-
quarters. Here sitting outside the caravan was Admiral Ramsay, an old

235
HORROCKS

friend from the Dover days, who said, 'You are in for a bit of fun,
my boy!' Inside Generals Alexander and Montgomery were studying
a map. Montgomery turned and said, 'The whole weight of the final
attack is being shifted from here round to the First Army front.' To

Horrocks's complete surprise he was ordered to take 4th Indian Division,


7th Armoured Division and 201 Guards Brigade and assume command
of IX Corps in General Anderson's army. Evidently General Crocker
who commanded IX Corps had been wounded and would be out of
action for several weeks. So Horrocks was off the same day to a very
different kind of army, where moreover there was quite genuine dislike
of Eighth Army for having stolen all the limelight. General Anderson
cheerfully added 4th British Division and 6th Armoured Division,
together with a number of Churchill tanks.
Horrocks decided to attack on a very narrow front with the infantry
leading, preceded by the whole of Tedder's Tactical Air Force and
an immense weight of artillery. Everything went like clockwork and
in two days Tunis had fallen and 6th Armoured Division was on its
way to cut off the Germans trying to escape into the Cap Bon Peninsula.
As Horrocks pointed out, the final surrender in North Africa was marked
by two particularly fitting scenes. The original Desert Rats, the 7th
Armoured Division, were in at the final kill and the German 90th Light
Division insisted on surrendering to the New Zealanders.
Horrocks had now reached the highest point of his military career.
In under four years he had risen from a lieutenant-colonel to a corps
commander and lieutenant-general; earning his map round in Belgium
to keep his soldiers in the picture, or getting the twelve matrons of
the base hospitals in Tripoli to send their nurses to join in the twice-
weekly dances for other ranks only, he had always kept the men under
hiscommand in mind. Called out to Egypt by Montgomery he was
now firmly established commander to be trusted. Moreover he
as a
was popular with those under his command, inspiring confidence and
focusing their loyalty. Many men he knew by name and wherever he
went he was recognized as a commander who believed in his soldiers.
Now his corps was detailed to land at Salerno under Mark Clark, and
he went to Bizerta to watch 46th Division rehearsing their assault. At
the same time a new form of US smokescreen was to be tried out.
While visiting the divisional commander the air-raid siren sounded
and the party went out into the street to watch the smoke billow over
the town. Suddenly a German fighter broke through the smoke with
its guns blazing. Horrocks was hit in the chest, and the bullet passed

236
HORROCKS

through his lungs and intestines and came out by his spine, while another
hit his leg. No one else was touched.
Fourteen months later Horrocks was pronounced fit - or at least
he was sufficiently fit to persuade the doctors to mark him fit He had
!

been lucky not to have been killed, and had survived numerous oper-
ations by Colonel Carter, a leading US surgeon in Tunisia, and then
Edward Muir at the Cambridge Hospital at Aldershot. Throughout
these testing times his ADC, Harold Young, had been with him, proving
an invaluable asset. On 2 August 1944 Montgomery sent his aircraft
to take him out to France, where he was badly needed to take over
XXX Corps. Having struggled through the Bocage country many units
were beginning to lose morale and now faced a prominent feature, Mount
Pinqon, which completely dominated the countryside. One of Horrocks's
former ADCs, Captain R. Denny of the I3th/i8th Hussars, leading two
troops of tanks, discovered a very narrow track which apparently led
to the top of the hill and which seemed undefended. Six tanks succeeded
in climbing up and were eventually joined by the 4th Wiltshires, who
fought their way up in the dark.
This feat transformed the entire situation and soon the Germans
were being forced back through Falaise. The race through northern
France and into Belgium began, but Horrocks, having just given his
orders for crossing the Seine at Vernon, became ill. Sick and feverish
he got back to his caravan and into bed. Efforts to delay a visit from
Montgomery the following day only resulted in his turning up within
a couple of hours. 'Ah yes, Jorrocks,' he said, 'I guessed something
was wrong as soon as I got your message. But don't worry. I shan't
invalid you home,' and he gave orders for the caravan to be moved
alongside his own at his headquarters. Meanwhile Eisenhower had
decided to advance on a 'broad front', and Montgomery was left to
thrust up the flank with his own resources.
On 26 August Horrocks was sufficiently well to be given the task
of leading the spearhead corps. Montgomery must have felt he had
no one else with the necessary dash and experience, certainly no one
he could trust to do exactly what he was told. Horrocks now moved
into a tank as his tactical headquarters from which to control the advance.
By 3 September with XII Corps on his left and an American division
on his right he reached Brussels - six days to cover 250 miles. Supply
was now a serious problem and Horrocks sent Pip Roberts with nth
Armoured Division to occupy the docks in Antwerp. Had he ordered
the division to carry on past Antwerp to cross the Albert Canal and

237
HORROCKS

advance some fifteen miles, he would have blocked the Beveland isthmus
and cut the German escape route. But Horrocks had his eyes fixed
on the Rhine and certainly did not appreciate the cost of clearing the
Germans overlooking the Scheldt would cause the Allies 12,800 casual-
ties, half of whom would be Canadians.

Meanwhile Montgomery had launched the battle for Arnhem, with


the British and American parachute divisions operating along the long
road through Nijmegen. XXX Corps had the task of reaching the British
parachutists, who it was expected would capture the bridge at Arnhem.
If the Germans had been in full retreat all would have been well. As
it was, units were being rushed up to reinforce those already on the

ground and progressively everything went wrong for the Allies. Finally
by the night of 25/26 September, and despite their heroic efforts, the
remnants of the parachutists at Arnhem had to be withdrawn. Struggling
forward on the single road, which had been cut several times by German
attacks, XXX Corps had failed to reach them in time. It seems almost
incomprehensible that the presence of armoured units near Arnhem
should not have been known, and to have attempted to advance such
a distance on the frontage of the width of a single road now seems
crazy. Yet it was a near thing and, in spite of almost everything going
wrong, XXX Corps only just failed. Horrocks blamed himself for not
having insisted on having a high-ranking Dutch officer at his head-
quarters, who might have advised a left hook well west of Nijmegen.
Early in December 1944 XXX Corps was pulled out of the line to
prepare for the Battle of the Reichswald, and Horrocks was staying
with Queen Elizabeth of the Belgians on the outskirts of Brussels.
On 16 December a staff officer from Second British Army rang with
the news of the German break-out on the American front in the
Ardennes. XXX Corps was moved to cover Brussels and on the 25th
Horrocks was sent on leave to England by Montgomery. His first words
were, 'Jorrocks, I want you to fly home tomorrow.' Horrocks was comple-
tely taken aback. 'May I ask why I am being sacked?' 'Don't be stupid,'
Montgomery replied tersely. 'You're not being sacked. I want you to
go home and have a rest before a big battle I've got in store for you
as soon as we've cleared up this mess here.' Horrocks' protests were
useless and off he went on leave. On his return the interrupted prep-
arations for the Battle of the Reichswald were resumed. This was
designed to destroy all the German forces between the Rhine and the
Meuse, and XXX Corps was lent to the First Canadian Army for the
operation. The battle was codenamed Veritable. It lasted from 8 February

238
HORROCKS

to io March 1945 and Horrocks admitted that it was the greatest battle
that he had ever fought.
The battle started with an attack by five divisions through the Reichs-
wald Forest. Away to the right and forty-eight hours later, General
Simpson's Ninth US Army were to advance north in a pincer movement.
To keep secret the assembly of 200,000 men with 1,400 guns, and to
control the forward reconnaissance, required the most rigid planning.
To begin with, all the preparations went smoothly. With a severe frost
through January the ground was frozen hard and ideal for the launching
of armour. Then, disastrously, a heavy thaw set in early in February
and turned the ground into a soggy mass. On 9 February the Germans
blew a dam which prevented the Americans advancing from the south
for fourteen days. Meanwhile the Germans realized that the thrust of
XXX Corps was the main attack and had assembled no less than nine
divisions against it. Now after a week's bitter fighting II Canadian Corps
came in on the left and the battle intensified. Reinforcements of the
nth British and 4th Canadian Armoured Divisions and 43rd Wessex
Divisions were brought in, and the Americans finally succeeded in
advancing. The German withdrawal across the Rhine (complete by 10
March) brought to a close one of the fiercest battles of the war. First
Canadian Army had suffered 15,634 casualties, two-thirds of which were
British troops, while the Germans lost about 44,000 men, a half taken
prisoner. During the battle Horrocks' sickness had returned, but as
a general who was always well forward 'smelling out the battle' he had
kept going. None but his senior staff realized what was wrong, and
in the mud and rain only his loss of temper showed.
The crossing of the Rhine followed, but this time XXX Corps were
not in the lead. Elaborate precautions were again taken to control the
forward reconnaissance and to prevent the Germans knowing the cross-
ing points. Finally smoke was used to cover the near bank of the river.
The crossing opened on the evening of 23 March and the main difficulty
was in building the Class 40 bridges over the 1,500-foot span of water
under the inevitably heavy shellfire. Horrocks has described the com-
of building four bridges by 8,000 sappers under the Chief
plexities
Engineer of XXX Corps. The first, a Class 9, was completed at 0100
hours on 26 March; while the others, all Class 40, were opened by
29 March.
The advance into Germany brought bitter counter-attacks on XXX
Corps' front. Every crossroads was contested and every bridge was de-
stroyed. All except one. This was over the River Ems. The bridge had

239
HORROCKS

been prepared with marine demolition charges and covered by 88mm


guns. Captain Liddell of the Coldstream Guards carried the bridge
by running forward alone and cutting the wires connected to the charges.
Then still unwounded he waved his company to advance with their
supporting tanks. The German garrison lost 40 killed, 10 wounded
and 42 taken prisoner. Only one guardsman was killed and four
wounded. Horrocks visited the position the next day and got Liddell
to show him what had happened. Horrocks put Liddell in for a VC;
unfortunately he was killed eighteen days later, before it was awarded.
The capture of Bremen took five days. Horrocks had been not at
all enthusiastic about the task and discussed it with Montgomery. Mont-

gomery listened carefully, then told Horrocks exactly what should be


done. As Horrocks said, 'The four decisions which he then took cleared
up the situation completely, and as far as I was concerned Bremen
was finished. He later wrote, 'It was in Bremen that I realized for
'

the first time just what the Germans had suffered as a result of our
bombing. It was a shambles: there didn't seem to be a single house
intact in this huge great port.'
Close to Bremen the British had uncovered Sandbostel, one of the
horror camps, the discovery of which shocked the whole world. Horrocks
was appalled at what he saw, and was physically sick when he visited
the survivors at close quarters. He had no love for Germans since his
harsh treatment at Lille in 1914; but this was something quite different.
He was so angry that he ordered the burgomasters of the surrounding
towns and villages to send a quota of women to clean up the camp
and look after these unfortunate beings who were dying at an alarming
rate. A few days later Horrocks took the surrender of the Germans

in the Corps Ems area, and later wrote,

When all was ready I came in and seated myself all alone opposite the two

Germans. After issuing my orders for the surrender I finished with these words.
'These orders must be obeyed scrupulously. I warn you we shall have no mercy
if they are not. Having seen one of your horror camps my whole attitude

towards Germany has changed.' The chief of staff jumped up and said, 'The
army had nothing to do with those camps.' 'Sit down,' I replied, 'there were
German soldiers on sentry duty outside and you cannot escape responsibility.
The world will never forgive Germany for those camps.'

Sydney Jary commanded 18 Platoon of the 4th Somerset Light Infantry


through the whole campaign, and has written, 'In close country, forests
and street fighting the platoon commander became the linchpin.' After

240
HORROCKS

Bremen, Horrocks caught sight of Jary and hailed him with, 'Glad
to see you're still alive, Jary!' Horrocks was a general who knew and

respected his men - he was that kind of man.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Barnett, Correlli, The Desert Generals (Allen and Unwin, 1983).
Collier, B., The Defence of the United Kingdom (1957).
De Guingand, Major-General Sir Francis, Operation Victory (Hodder and
Stoughton, 1947).
Ellis, L. F., 77?^ War in France and Flanders igjg-40 (1953).
Ellis, L.F., Victory in the West, vol. II (1968).
Horrocks, Lieutenant-General Sir Brian, A Full Life (Leo Cooper, 1974).
Horrocks, Lieutenant-General Sir Brian, with Major-General H.E. Essame
and Eversley Belfield, Corps Commander (Sidgwick and Jackson, 1977).
Montgomery, Field-Marshal Lord, Memoirs (Collins, 1958).
Official Histories (all HMSO).
Playfair, I.S.O. and Maloney, C J.C., The Mediterranean and the Middle East,
vol. Ill (i960), vol. IV (1966) and vol. V (1973).

Warner, Philip, Alamein (Kimber, 1979).


Warner, Philip, Horrocks (Hamish Hamilton, 1984).

CHRONOLOGY: BRIAN HORROCKS


1895, September 7 Born at Ranniket, India
Educated at Bow School, Durham, Uppingham and
Royal Military College, Sandhurst
1914, August 8 Commissioned and joins 1st Battalion the Middlesex
Regiment
1914, October 21 Wounded and taken prisoner by the Germans
1919, February To Russia to help the White Russians
1920, January Taken prisoner by the Bolsheviks, for ten months

Promotions
1917, January Captain
1935, January Major
1937, July Lieutenant-Colonel
1940, June Colonel
1940, June Brigadier
i94i,June Major-General
1942, August Lieutenant-General

241
HORROCKS

Postings

1927, January- Adjutant, TA


1930, December
i93i,January- Staff College course
1932, December
i934,January- Staff Captain, War Office
1936, February
1936, February- Brigade-Major, Aldershot Command
1938, January
1938JUIV-1939, GSO2, Staff College
October
1939, October-1940, GSOi, Staff College
April
1940, May Commands 2 Middlesex Regiment, British
Expeditionary Force
1940, June Brigade Commander, British Expeditionary Force
1940, June- Brigade Commander
1941, Februan
1941, February-June Brigadier General Staff, Home Forces
i94i,June- Divisional Commander
1942, August
1942, August- Corps Commander
1943, August
1944, August- Corps Commander
1946, Februan
1946, Februan GOC, Western Command
1948, March GOC-in-Chief, BAOR
1949 Becomes sick and is invalided

Later Career
Appointed Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod in the House of Lords, where
he remained for seventeen years. He also took up journalism, producing many
articles. Horrocks became nationally famous through his television presen-
tations of battles he had taken part in and others as well, and he also took
part in sound broadcasts. As an author he wrote A Full Life, which was published
in i960, with an extended edition in 1974, and Corps Commander in 1977. He
also introduced and edited an extensive series of regimental histories. Horrocks
became a director of the Bovis Construction Company, and he sened on and
advised many Sendee charities.
Sir Brian Horrocks died on 4 January 1985, and a memorial service was
held in Westminster Abbey on 26 February 1985.

242
13

HOBART
Major- General Sir Percy Hobart

KENNETH MACKSEY

Among some random jottings made by Lieutenant Percy Cleghorn Stan-


ley Hobart in 1913 appears in isolation the terse remark 'Winston Chur-
:

chill, spiritual kinship with Hobart.' There is nothing to explain why


he wrote Their paths would not cross for another twenty years. Sol-
it.

diering, riding and shooting were about their only interests in common
- although each could be pretty difficult to cope with when they chose
and both were extremely ambitious. Yet Hobart had no pronounced
political interests and usually went out of his way to avoid politicians
- until the 1930s, that is, when he began to meet Churchill in his Wilder-
ness years when the latter brooded in limbo while Hobart's career seemed
to stretch promisingly ahead.
To begin with, Hobart's career was orthodox enough for one of the
select Sappers who graduated from the Royal Military Academy to be
posted to the elite 1st Bengal Sappers and Miners in India. It was a
unit which produced many distinguished officers more than half of
;

those in his daybecame generals. But unorthodoxy soon crept in, allied
to a considerable intellect, and an abruptness of argumentative manner
which daunted those exposed to its fire. Not for nothing was his brother
in the Indian Civil Service known as 'the civil' and he 'the uncivil'.
Yet he was a picked man whom everybody expected to go far.

243
HOBART

The outbreak of war in 1914 almost put a stop to that, for although
inadvertently he missed the opening mobile phase in France, he was
in the thick of it in March 1915 at Neuve Chapelle. There he demonstrated
characteristic ruthless determination to get into the fight and an un-
limited courage and resourcefulness, which won him a Military Cross.
That was only a beginning. In the next three years the hottest part
of the battlefield was wherever 'Hobo' could be found - at Aubers Ridge
in May 1915 and Loos in September. By September, however, he had
joined the staff of an Indian Army infantry brigade and with them went
to Mesopotamia in 1916 to take part in the abortive attempt to relieve
the besieged British garrison at Kut al Almara.
open desert bounding the River Tigris, Hobart was to absorb
In the
the problems of mobile warfare in undeveloped country when logistic
support was deficient. He would show immense disgust at the gross
mismanagement of the campaign and severely criticize, to their face,
senior officers whose tactical handling of troops fell below standards
which demanded what he called 'brilliance'. Promoted to Brigade Major,
he built a reputation for excellent staff work in the advance to Baghdad
in 1917 - and then nearly threw it all away when making an unauthorized
flight along the Euphrates in March 1918. Shot down and captured

behind the Turkish lines, he was lucky enough, with his pilot, to be
rescued by a patrol of armoured cars sent over fifty miles to find him,
and to avoid court martial for disobedience. Restored to his brigade
in time to take part in General Allenby's masterpiece of an offensive
at Megiddo, he was posted as a GSO2 to a British division after an
outburst of insubordination which yet again got him into hot water.
In 1923 Hobart took a plunge that only a few officers with prospects
were prepared to take. He volunteered to join the newly formed Royal
Tank Corps at a moment when, in India, he had been completely re-
habilitated to favour by his admirable staff work during the punitive
raid on Wana in 1921. In 1919 he had attended the Staff College at
Camberley and associated with instructors and students with whom his
fate was to be closely linked in the future - with Charles Broad, the
future Lord Gort, Henry Maitiand Wilson, Alan Brooke and, from
the next course, Bernard Montgomery. In 1923, wearing RTC badges,
he took up the appointment of an instructor himself at the Staff College,
Quetta, where he became responsible for tank matters. There he identi-
fied himself with those who belligerentiy claimed that 'the future lay
with the tank', learning from correspondence with Colonel J. F. C.
Fuller, the tank's greatest advocate, in England, what limited progress

244
HOBART

was being made in making the vital experiments upon which that future
depended. By the end of his tour at Quetta he had achieved two important
goals. He had formulated clear concepts about future tank doctrine.
And, scandalizing some members of the military fraternity in 1927, he
had appeared as co-respondent in a divorce case in connection with
one of his students whose wife, in due course, he would marry.
That same year, when he was posted to England to join 4th Battalion
RTC, he also acquired a brother-in-law, Bernard Montgomery, who
married his sister. After his own marriage at home and a short spell
back in India with armoured cars, he was returned to England in 1931,
just in time to take command of 2nd Battalion RTC in revolutionary
exercises on Salisbury Plain when Broad commanded an entire tank
brigade by voice radio. Hobart's contribution to those exercises and
to the series of experiments then going on into mechanized warfare
was dynamic and inspiring. It set him apart from the other commanding
officers, and was a prelude to his becoming, in 1933, the next Inspector

of the Royal Tank Corps with the rank of Brigadier, and thus automati-
cally the commander of the 1st Tank Brigade when it was formally
established in 1934.
The 1st Tank Brigade was in the forefront of armoured warfare devel-
opment on the eve of rearmament by the major European powers when
the Germans were in process of creating a secret Panzerrvaffe (Tank
Arm) in contravention of the Versailles Treaty. Intently watched by for-
eign observers, Hobart was to head the Tank Brigade with distinction
and dash throughout the crucial experimental exercises of 1934 during
which an Armoured Division of all arms was improvised. It was a period
overlain by vitriolic military and political controversy, when the tradi-
tional horse- and foot-orientated arms of the Service were compelled
by tank enthusiasts, such as Hobart, to come to terms with the inevitability
of mechanization. Although soldiers with modern, open minds wel-
comed the changes that Hobart and his keenest collaborators pressed
upon the Army, older diehards resisted him bitterly for all they were
worth. In their opposition they were only too happy to bring up against
him the scandal of his marriage, as well as his all too frequent explosive
outbursts whenever frustrated by bigots and blind conservatives. In 1935,
as clear intelligence about the Panzerwaffe came to hand and the struggle
within the War Office for funds for new tanks (allied to mechanization
of the cavalry) was intensifying, Hobart met Churchill at a Tank Corps
dinner and formed an association with the man for whom he felt 'spiritual
kinship'.

245
HOBART

The following year, when Churchill was collecting material for his
campaign against Fascism and Nazism, he met Hobart clandestinely
to hear about the current state of the tank art. He would have been
told about the total lack of modern tanks, and how long it might be
before the inferior, cheap models then on order, might be produced.
Hobart would have spoken about the slow, thickly armoured tanks for
support of infantry and why infantry-minded generals were giving them
priority of production over the faster, less well protected cruiser tanks
which Hobart (and the Germans) backed as the tools of strategic, deep
penetration operations for achieving stunning decisions in the land
battle.There is no record of their meeting. But it is almost certain
that Hobart would have painted for Churchill a scenario he had pre-
sented to the CIGS of playing on the enemy's nerves,

with threats of an armoured force in his rear, near mobilisation centres . .

and when the preparations for our main strategic stroke are ready, then we
strike in combination with all our forces. Tank thrust in this case will be

at a vital point, and pushed really home, i.e. we must accept our losses. But

here, as at all times, tanks


1

true role is to ATTACK WEAKNESS. Use the


Line of Least Resistance: Speed; Surprise.

Four years later, after the Germans had demonstrated the devastating
effect of this strategy-, Churchill was to admit that 'I knew about it but
it had not altered my convictions as it should have done'. Churchill
spoke for most officers and the generals who stubbornly clung to out-
moded technology and techniques and who, at the first convenient
opportunity in 1938, shunted off the 'difficult' Hobart with his forcefully
argued 'heresies' and his petrol engines to a backwater in Egypt. Effec-
tivelyremoved from the mainstream of combat development philosophy
to the arid wastes of the desert, he was tasked to raise an armoured
division which, as the 7th in 1940, was to win eternal fame for its brilliance
in battle as first of the Desert Rats.
Yet train them as he would to a marvellously high pitch of battle
worthiness (despite their obsolete vehicles) and although he established
a valid doctrine of mechanized warfare in the desert which was to with-
stand the test of battle, Hobart never commanded them in action. Instead
the same Henry Wilson who had been a fellow student at Camberley
in 1919, reported adversely upon him - as one whose 'tactical ideas
are based on the invincibility and invulnerability of the tank to the exclu-
sion of the employment of other arms in correct proportion'. 'Being
self-opinionated and lacking in stability', he went on, 'I do not consider

246
HOBART

that Major-General Hobart can be relied on to discard his own ideas


and carry out instructions from his superiors in a spirit of loyalty or
co-operation.' And the report was endorsed by another old friend,
General Sir Archibald Wavell (whose wife was among the ladies who
thoroughly disapproved of the Hobart marriage). Wavell sent Hobart
back to England where, in 1940, he was forced into retirement - on
the very eve of the German victory over France and Britain by means
of the strategy and tactics deemed false by Wilson, Wavell and many
others.
With the invasion of Britain seemingly imminent in May 1940, Hobart,
at the age of fifty-five, was among the first to join the Local Defence
Volunteers. He was promoted at once to the rank of Lance-Corporal
and charged with the defence of his home village, Chipping Campden.
At once Chipping Campden became a hedgehog of bristling defiance,
too small for long to hold Hobart, who was soon made a Deputy Area
Organizer of what, in due course, would be renamed the Home Guard.
But this was a very temporary appointment. For in September Churchill
was turning his attention to the tank situation, the poor state of which
concerned him deeply. He was looking for a man to put in supreme
charge, one who would steer tank philosophy, design and procurement
onto the right lines and raise and train the men, the units and formations
which would serve them in battle. Convinced by now that it would
be armoured divisions on the German model which must be at the
core of formations which, one day, would reconquer Europe, Churchill,
with his ingrained scepticism of generals, remained to be convinced
would tackle the job with radical enthu-
that those presently in control
siasm. Churchillmentioned the difficulty to General Frederick Pile,
a Tank Corps officer who was commanding Anti-Aircraft Command
at the height of the Battle of Britain.
'I told him', said Pile, 'we had a superb trainer of tanks in Hobart
but he had just been sacked. He asked me to get him to come and
see him.' This Pile managed to do after resistance by Hobart, who
was insistent upon his honour first being reinstated. By the time the
meeting took place on 13 October Hobart had prepared, circulated to
and received comments from select Royal Tank Regiment (previously
Corps) generals on his proposals for 'an Armoured Army'. His aim
was to create wholly Armoured Battle Formations which were aggressive
'and not tied to or clogged by Infantry formations'. He wanted ten
armoured divisions and 10,000 tanks, a huge training programme under
a GOC-in-C Armoured Army who would have the full support of the

247
HOBART

Army Council and be a member of it himself. He


emphasized the need
to train with the RAF and a requirement, as part of an Armoured Army,
of mobile anti-aircraft formations, motorized artillery, infantry,
engineers and parachutists.
Churchill gave him a good hearing but seems not to have assimilated
the proposal for anArmoured Army since, six days later, he was minuting
the CIGS, General Sir John Dill, and referring only to command of
an armoured division for Hobart. On the other hand he strongly refuted
DilPs note setting out 'the case for and against General Hobart', pointing
out 'we cannot afford to confine Army appointments to persons who
have excited no hostile comment in their career'. A week later, however,
when Dill interviewed Hobart and offered him an armoured division
he said he would prefer he took on the job of Commander of Armoured
Forces, an appointment which fell well short of what Hobart had in
mind for a GOC-in-C. For Dill concurred with a brilliant fellow Gun-
ner, General Alan Brooke, that the Hobart proposal, like a similar one
for Anti-Aircraft Command previously led by Brooke, was unworkable.
Brooke, as GOC-in-C Home Forces, insisted that it was his job to
train the Army in Britain and that Dill's preference for a Commander
Royal Armoured Corps (CRAC), responsible only for expanding and
training the tank formations and units without the scope and sweeping
powers Hobart demanded, was correct. Dill asked Hobart to fill this
appointment as Lieutenant- General, but Hobart refused and in a further
meeting with Churchill in November explained the difficulties of such
a job. He declined to take it and suggested either Broad or Pile as
the only generals he knew with the necessary qualifications.
In the end, after a round of awkward negotiations, the job of CRAC,
without a charter, was given to another Sapper, Giffard le Q. Mattel,
who had considerable experience of tank technology but, on his own
admission, no flair for command. And although Martel was to make
the best of a bad job in what he called 'a delicate position' between
the War Office, Home Forces and the Royal Armoured Corps, he did
indeed encounter most of the difficulties Hobart had foretold until the
appointment of CRAC was abolished in 1942. Meanwhile Hobart was
given the nth Armoured Division to raise and train with characteristic
fireand purpose - to the chagrin of Martel when they frequendy clashed
over doctrine and technology.
It is one of the minor tragedies of Hobart's career that he was unable

to separate professional differences from personal ones. With Alan


Brooke he had been in disagreement over the composition and handling

248
HOBART

of the so-called Mobile Division (later the ist Armoured Division) of


which Brooke had been given command when it was formed in 1937.
Therefore, when Brooke seemed to be at odds with him again in 1940,
he took it as a personal grudge. This, in fact, was unfounded - as
a very friendly letter from Brooke to Hobart, explaining his reservations
about the Armoured Army within the Army, shows. And as would subse-
quent events. Differences with Martel over policy also produced personal
rancour, which surfaced in a number of ways and places, not least
in the Tank Parliaments which Churchill founded in 1941 'to consider
tank and anti-tank questions'. Martel resented these parliaments as
venues where uninformed criticism of the RAC might take root in unwel-
come decisions by the Prime Minister. Beforehand he would convene
a meeting with the armoured division commanders to settle agreed
answers to the matters on the agenda, thus defeating Churchill's aim
of encouraging free debate. Martel, in post-war disclosures, made out
that was Hobart alone who refused to comply with this procedure.
it

But it has been made equally clear by others among Martel's generals
that they too had misgivings about Martel's competence. For his part,
Hobart regarded Churchill as Britain's saviour and was determined
to support to the hilt the man who had brought him back to a task
for which he was fully qualified and more foresighted than anybody
else.

By common consent, Hobart's training of nth Armoured Division


was something apart. This was recognized by Brooke, during large-scale
exercises in 1941 and by the chief umpire of one of those exercises who
happened to be Hobart's brother-in-law and immediate superior in com-
mand of XII Corps, Lieutenant-General Bernard Montgomery. But
those who wished to be rid of Hobart, including Martel, still plotted
for his removal until, again, the matter came to Churchill's attention
and provoked his demand to inspect nth Armoured Division at short
notice. A snap concentration of the division which happened to be spread
all over the country when the order came, imposed enormous strain

upon so large a formation, but was accomplished in incredible speed


and good order. It vastly impressed the Prime Minister, who sent a
laudatory message of congratulations. Regretfully Hobart had to admit
that it looks 'as if I have become a bone of contention - or rather a
symbol of policy - between W.O. and Govt. Rather as it was in 1937'.
He noted, too, that he appeared to be 'hanging on to Winston's coat
tails', though there was nothing he could do about that since the same

people also plotted against Churchill. But it was noticeable how friendly

249
HOBART

Brooke was and how Montgomery appeared 'less bumptious' and 'to
be growing up and looking towards greater horizons. A formidable '

trio was assembling into what would become a great team, although

Hobart had two more threats to his position yet to defeat.


In 1942 another attempt was made to unseat him from command of
nth Armoured Division, this time on legitimate medical grounds. But
once more Churchill came to the rescue. In a celebrated letter, he wrote

I am quite sure that if . . . I upon his controlling the whole of


had insisted
the tank developments, with a seat on the Army Council, many of the grievous
errors from which we have suffered would not have been committed. The
High Commands of the Army are not a club. It is my duty ... to make sure
that exceptionally able men, even those not popular with their military contem-
poraries, should not be prevented from giving their sendees to the Crown.

Nevertheless Hobart was, with good reason, removed from command


of nth Armoured when it was booked in September 1942 to go to Tunisia.
He had been sick and he was fifty- seven, too old for so exacting a
job. Bitterly disappointed he had to make do with raising yet another
new armoured division, the 79th, the fourth tank formation he had
created without so far having seen one fire a shot in anger.
While Hobart's career was again in flux, the war was in transformation
and to a large extent at the hand of his principal military mentors as
well as Churchill himself. Alan Brooke, who had taken over from Dill
as CIGS at the end of 1941, was now firmly in the saddle, playing a
dominant role in the formulation of British and Allied strategy. It was
he who had managed to send Montgomery to Egypt where, in October
1942, he was to win the Battle of El Alamein and start the Allies on
the road to Berlin. And a few months later, as his attention now focused
on the prospect of invading Hitler's Fortress Europe, Brooke called
for Hobart in response to what he called 'a happy brainwave'.
In March 1943 Brooke was on the verge of disbanding, for lack of
resources, 79th Armoured Division - as the last to come, it had to
be first to go. But this presented the opportunity to convert Hobart's
command into developing and training the specialized armoured devices
which, like a siege train of old, would be vital in leading the amphibious
assault ashore through the maze of enemy concrete and steel obstacles
which barred the way to the green fields beyond. At the same time
it would place in a leading role one of the greatest and most forceful

armoured innovators and trainers of the day. When after a day's con-
sideration Hobart accepted the CIGS's invitation it was with an

250
:

HOBART

impassioned request that the job should be, as well as training, an opera-
him overseas into a combat theatre, 'which you seem
tional one, to take
so anxious to prevent me doing'. And Brooke had laughed and replied
that when the new devices were used in the field it would be natural
for Hobart to supervise their handling. With that concession Brooke
ensured not only Hobart's absolute loyalty in the testing years ahead,
but also abolished the need for Hobart ever again to hang on ChurchilPs
coat tails or mistrust the CIGS.
Once given his head, with the well-advertised support of the CIGS,
Hobart became an power-house of creative energy. From
irresistible

the moment his staff and the units which remained or came under
his command got to hear under a cloak of deep secrecy what their
tasks were to be, his enthusiasm enwrapped them all. But heaven help
anybody, such as the Directorate of Research, who stood in the way
of progress and Hobart's inflexible determination. The historian of the
4th/7th Dragoon Guards recalled the day Hobart let them into the secret
'This was a tremendous day. Up to now we have been pushing forward
blindly life appeared to have no particular object.
. . . Now in a . . .

flash our eyes were opened. We had a goal one that would take . . .

us all our efforts to attain.'

Their goal, along with many other British, Canadian and American
armoured regiments, was to crew swimming tanks (called DDs) which
would spearhead the invasion by landing ahead of the infantry. Other
regiments would be set the task of manning Crabs and AVREs, which
would comprise Specialized Armoured Assault teams tasked to come
ashore behind the DDs and clear lanes through the obstacles and mine-
fields, at the same time blasting concrete emplacements whose weapons

were intended to secure the defences against demolition. The Crabs


were ordinary gun tanks fitted with a rotating flail device which beat
the ground ahead to detonate mines and pulverize wire. The AVREs
(Armoured Vehicles Royal Engineer), which were manned by Hobart's
old Corps (and not allowed to forget it), were heavy Churchill tanks
equipped with a Spigot Mortar which fired the Petard, an explosive-filled
canister used for demolitions. But AVREs were also loaded with all
manner of explosive devices and, in addition, could carry externally
great bundles of wood (called fascines) to fill anti-tank ditches; twenty-
foot assault bridges to span obstaclesand a four-inch explosive-filled
which could be thrust 400 feet into a minefield
iron tube, called a Snake,
and detonated for instant lane clearance. There were also Churchill
Crocodile flame -throwing tanks of deadly and terrifying effect, which

251
HOBART

could be used in a number of roles additional to support of lane clear-


ance. And finally the CDL (Canal Defence Light) tank with its thirteen-
million candle power searchlight intended to turn night into day and
blind the enemy gunners
after dark a machine of great ingenuity but
;

of dubious operational effectiveness which eventually was hardly used


at all.

Each of these pieces of armour had to be developed to


specialized
a high standard of reliability while their crews were trained to a peak
in less than a year. At the same time the techniques for employing
them had to be worked out with the Royal Navy, whose landing craft
would transport them to the beaches, and with the infantry and other
arms who would have to work with them intimately in the assault. It
was among Hobart's greatest contributions to the success of every oper-
ation in which his Tunnies' took part, that he and his staff managed
to work out techniques and drills which, in simplicity and sense, appealed
to the Navy and the other arms. It was due to his resolve that only
a few staff officers lasted long under his regime, so ruthless was he
in sacking those who appeared to fail. But hard as it was to stay with
him for long, results were terrific. As each fresh problem was discovered
in the course of a never-ending series of experiments, trials and exer-
cises, Hobo would be there sniffing out the difficulties, leading the
way in seeking solutions, and badgering the War Office and Ministry
of Supply to meet his insistent demands.
By the end of 1943 most of the major problems had been solved and
the invasion plan was taking shape. In the New Year there arrived in
Britain the commanders who would lead the Allied invasion, including
Montgomery to command the initial assault. High among his priorities
was a meeting with his brother-in-law to discuss armoured tactics and
what the Funnies would do.
'I've been summoned by the Great Man Monty for 11 a.m. on Sat.',

wrote Hobart to his wife on 5 January 1944. 'Bowler-Hat? He doesn't


like "old" men. (However I think the War Office would want to keep

me on in a new job which they are being forced into making, and
for which they can't think of anyone with the particular experience).'
He had no need for worry on that score. Montgomery was only too
pleased to have Hobart as his Specialised Armour Advisor and, as time
went by and their collaboration flourished, would undoubtedly (admit
it though he would not) consult his brother-in-law on much else besides.

A 79th Armoured Division 'cell' was set up at HQ


21st Army Group

where the staff noticed how receptive everybody was to Hobart's ideas

252
HOBART

and the manner which they paid attention when a comment was
in
prefaced by: 'My GOC
said. .' It was furthermore noticed how often
. .

Hobart's appreciation of how a battle might be shaped, foreshadowed


what actually took place. But the most important aspect of this close
accord between the brothers-in-law was the creation of the iron triangle
of three of Churchill's most highly favoured generals in key positions
on the eve of the great invasion, with Brooke the man at the apex to
apply firm handling to Montgomery and Hobart.
Henceforward Hobart could play a hand of even greater strength
than when he first took over the Funnies. He was to be found at many
great conferences and meetings, for example with all the top American
commanders - Eisenhower, Bradley, Hodges - as well as Crerar of
First Canadian Army and Dempsey of Second To them he British.
would explain and try to sell the various items in what became known
by some as his Noah's Ark - and he would be disappointed that the
Americans were only interested in the DDs and rejected, to their later
detriment, the other 'animals'. Whenever in the closing stages of the
run-up to D-Day some crisis would arise (as, for example, the serious
problem created by discovery of blue clay on some Normandy beaches
into which vehicles would sink) he would instantly form special Wings
to find a solution, calling upon who helped
the proven, reliable agencies
and supplied him throughout the ministries and industry. And when
Eisenhower made his brave decision, despite a marginal weather fore-
cast, to attack on 6 June, Hobart was on hand to hear it and give advice
to Montgomery.
The rest is history. Where Specialised Armour was used on 6 June
in mass in the forefront of the landings, complete success was achieved,
regardless of stiff opposition there deep penetrations inland were made.
;

Where, on the tragic Omaha beach, few DDs managed because of rough
seas to swim ashore, the American infantry suffered terribly, nigh unto
failure, and only a toehold was purchased. And in the days to come,

throughout the grim fighting in the Normandy bocage, it was 79th


Armoured Division's Funnies which repeatedly played crucial roles by
adapting their characteristics to changing circumstances. The process
of educating formation and unit commanders in the correct and profit-
able employment of specialized armour, which was all too frequently
abused by the tank-ignorant - the infantry in particular - was unremit-
ting. Likewise the development and employment of new types of special-

ized armour was constant - such as obsolete tanks modified to carry


infantry safely under armour through the enemy fire to the objective;

253
HOBART

and of Buffalo amphibious carriers to lift infantry, supported by DDs,


in the amphibious assaults on the islands guarding the River Scheldt
and, later, across the rivers Rhine and Elbe. And always the latest gad-
gets, such as night vision and electronic navigation devices, were being
investigated and put to use.
Hobart's path to Berlin was that of 79th Armoured Division's units
in the pursuit from Normandy to the Rhine, in the clearing of Brest,
the Channel ports and the Scheldt estuary, the fierce fighting in the
Reichswald, the crossing of the Rhine and the final pursuit to the Baltic.
Always he was commuting between his own headquarters, Montgomery's
and the leading formations and units. At times, such as at Boulogne,
he was personally involved in the fighting. Inexhaustibly he would visit
troops before and after combat, assuring himself they knew their task,
probing their experiences, putting right what was wrong, learning fresh
lessons, encouraging the efficient and brave, remorselessly sacking those
who failed to meet his own standards. In some ways he was a rather
lonely man whose contacts with even the elite close staff he assembled
was virtually professional only. It was only in his daily letters to his
wife that he was able intimately to discuss numerous subjects other
than those military.
As Churchill's days as Prime Minister drew to a close, Hobart would
arrange with Brooke a way of projecting 79th Armoured Division into
the future, earmarking Funnies for the culminating stage of the war
against Japan and laying plans for continued research into specialized
armour after the war. In a great moment on 26 March he would boat
across the Rhine in one of his Buffalos with Churchill, Brooke, Mont-
gomery and Dempsey aboard. 'The old man greeted me warmly but
did not say much', he wrote. 'It's difficult to talk against the noise of
the craft. . . . Alan Brooke . . . bid me to come to lunch with him when
I come over - so perhaps I'll be able to ask if there's any chance of
my further employment.' There was, although not as a professor of
history at Oxford University despite sponsorship by Churchill, Brooke
and Montgomery.
There is no record of whether he met Churchill again after the war or
if there were any contacts other than the matter of the professorship. Each

would serve in his own way but henceforth in different circumstances


to those of their first meeting in 1935. For now it was Churchill whose
prospects were good, while Hobart moved into a relative scate of limbo
as Colonel Commandant of the Royal Tank Regiment before moving into
the shades. He died on 19 February 1957, fiercely combative to the end.

254
HOBART

BIBLIOGRAPHY
For the most part this chapter is based upon Armoured Crusader: Major- General
Sir Percy Hobart by Kenneth Macksey, as well as on The Tank Pioneers by
the same author. Many other books refer to him quite frequently, notably
Churchill's History of the Second World War and histories of the 7th, nth and
79th Armoured Divisions.

CHRONOLOGY: PERCY HOBART


1885 Born
1902 At Royal Military College, Sandhurst
1906 Commissioned into the Royal Engineers and posted to
1st Bengal Sappers and Miners
1915-18 Regimental duty in France but on the staff from August

1915 in France, Mesopotamia and Palestine


1919 Staff College, Camberley, and on staff until 1927 in
various appointments, including Instructor at Staff
College, Quetta
1923 Transferred to Royal Tank Corps
1931 Commands 2nd Battalion Royal Tank Corps as
Lieutenant-Colonel
1933 Inspector RTC as Brigadier and thereby also
commander 1 Tank Brigade in 1934

1937 DMT as Major-General


1938 Commands Mobile Division in Egypt until relieved of
command in 1939 and retired in 1940
1940, May Joins Home Guard as Lance -Corporal
1941 Commands nth Armoured Division
1942 Commands 79th Armoured Division
1945 Commands Specialised Armoured Experimental
Establishment
1946 Retires
1957 Dies

255
14

PERCIVAL
Lieutenant- General Arthur Percival

KEITH SIMPSON

At 1810 hours on 15 February 1942 in the Ford factory on Singapore


island an exhausted Lieutenant-General A. E. Percival signed terms
of surrender with Lieutenant-General Tomoyuki Yamashita of the
Imperial Japanese Army which ended the seventy-day campaign in
Malaya and Singapore. It was the greatest capitulation of British military
arms since the surrender at Yorktown in 1781 during the American War
of Independence. At Singapore a British Commonwealth Army of
130,000 surrendered to a Japanese Army of less than 30,000. The cam-
paign had been a series of physical and psychological shocks for the
British from beginning to end, starting with the loss of the Royal Navy's
capital ships the Prince of Wales and the Repulse and culminating in
the discovery that 'fortress' Singapore was a myth.
Churchill was profoundly depressed by the humiliating circumstances
of the surrender at Singapore. It appeared to Churchill that whilst the
Americans gave the impression of fighting to the last in the Philippines
and the Soviets were waging a total war of defence, a numerically larger
British Army had surrendered to a smaller and weaker Japanese force
having suffered relatively few casualties. Percival had refused to indulge
in any last-minute false heroics and had thus failed to meet Churchill's
ultimate test of a military commander. As Churchill later observed, 'I

256
PERCIVAL

have always followed, so far as I could see, the principle that military
commanders should not be judged by results, but by the quality of
1
their effort.' But was Percival responsible for the British defeat in
Malaya and Singapore or was he a convenient scapegoat for a wider
failure of British leadership and responsibility ?
But for the outbreak of the First World War Percival would not have
become a professional soldier. In 1914 he was working in the City of
London when he volunteered for the Army at the age of twenty-seven.
He was a fine athlete, immensely fit and hard working. In 1915 Percival
went to France as a lieutenant with the 7th Bedfordshire Regiment,
served as a company commander on the Somme and was awarded the
Military Cross. In October 1916 he was given a regular commission
in the Essex Regiment, and then rejoined the Bedfords, eventually being
promoted to the temporary rank of lieutenant-colonel and given com-
mand of a battalion in 1917 and then for a brief period a brigade in
1918. Percival ended the war a highly decorated officer, described in
his confidential report as very efficient, beloved by his men, a brave
soldier and recommended for the Staff College.
In 1919 Percival volunteered for service in north Russia and went
as second-in-command of the 46th Royal Fusiliers. In 1920 he served
as a company commander and then as an intelligence officer with the
Essex Regiment in Ireland fighting the IRA. Percival qualified for the
Staff College in 1923, where he was picked out for accelerated promotion.
A staff job in Nigeria was followed by regimental service with the
Cheshires in 1929, and in 1930 he was sent as a student to the Royal
Naval College at Greenwich. A year later Percival was appointed an
instructor at the Staff College where he soon came to the attention
of Dill, the Commandant.
Dill regarded Percival as an outstanding
instructor and and wrote in his confidential report of 1932,
staff officer
'He has an outstanding ability, wide military knowledge, good judgement
and is a very quick and accurate worker.' Significandy, Dill noted,
'He has not altogether an impressive presence and one may therefore
2
fail, at first meeting him, to appreciate his sterling worth.' Lieutenant-
General Sir Ian Jacob knew Percival at this time, and later recalled
that he was a very pleasant man, highly intelligent, and unquestionably
3
brave, but quiet, 'not the man for a whirlwind'.
During the next ten years Dill was to be Percival's patron, advancing
his career through a series of recommendations, and wherever possible
appointing Percival to serve on his own staff. After Percival's time as
an instructor at the Staff College Dill recommended that he should

257
PERCIVAL

be sent as a student Defence College. Percival attended


to the Imperial
the Imperial Defence College in 1935 after two yearscommanding 2nd
Cheshire Regiment. In 1936 whilst Dill was Director of Military
Operations and Intelligence at the War Office he helped secure
Percival's promotion to Colonel and his appointment as GSOi Malaya
Command. In November 1937 Percival was promoted Brigadier and given
command of a brigade at Aldershot, but Dill as GOC Aldershot per-
suaded Percival instead to accept the appointment as his BGS (Brigadier
General Staff).
In 1939 when Dill was appointed to command I Corps in the BEF
Percival went with him to France. Although Dill failed to persuade
Gort to appoint Percival as MGGS
(Major-General General Staff) to
the Third Army in February 1940, he did secure Percival's promotion
as a major-general and the command of the 43rd (Wessex) Division
in England. When in April1940 Dill returned to England to become
Vice CIGS he secured Percival as one of the three Assistant CIGS
co-ordinating the Operational and Intelligence Directorates. But in the
summer of 1940 Percival asked to be transferred to a field appointment
and took command of the 44th Division. He remained with this command
until April 1941 when Dill appointed him GOC Malaya in the temporary
rank of lieutenant-general, promoted over the heads of many senior
and more experienced officers.

Dill's patronage of Percival was based upon a clear assessment of


Percival's worth as an efficient and who was
intelligent staff officer
an indefatigable worker and who, like Dill, was utterly dedicated to
his military profession. In April 1941 Percival must have appeared to
Dill to be the obvious candidate to be GOC Malaya. The previous
incumbent had been short-toured because he was thought to be worn
out and had had an uneasy relationship with the RAF and the colonial
administration. Dill was aware, therefore, that it was necessary to appoint
as GOC Malaya an officer who was tactful and diplomatic, and who
could work with the other two services, Commonwealth representatives
and the colonial administration. Percival had worked with them all as
a student at Greenwich and the Imperial Defence College, and then
as GSOi Malaya Command. Percival's previous experience in Malaya,
and the fact that in 1937 he had written an appreciation of the defence
of Malaya and Singapore, was another factor influencing Dill. Dill was
only too well aware of the inadequate military forces available in Malaya
and Singapore and the increasing threat posed by the Japanese. He
was unable to persuade Churchill to substantially reinforce Malaya and

258
PERCIVAL

Singapore, and Dill probably concluded that the next best thing was
to appoint as GOC a first-class staff officer with previous experience
of the area. Dill was an intellectual soldier whose metier was the staff,

and his decision to send Percival to Singapore was in the finest traditions

of that model of a modern general staff, the German General Staff.

(In 1918 Ludendorff was unwilling to send substantial German reinfor-


cements to bolster the Turkish Army, but he did send Hans von Seeckt,
an outstanding staff officer with operational experience, as Chief of
Staff to the Turkish Army.)
On 1 December 1941 Dill admitted to Alan Brooke, another of his
proteges and his successor as CIGS, that he had done practically nothing
to meet the Japanese threat. According to Brooke, Dill told him that
'we were already so weak on all fronts that it was impossible to denude
4
them any further'. In sending Percival to Malaya Dill had sent a clever
staff officer, but someone who was totally inexperienced in the command
of troops in war at an operational level. Major-General John Kennedy,
who worked with both Dill and Brooke as Director of Military Oper-
ations, claimed that after Brooke had been appointed CIGS he had
'expressed his concern that officers were being promoted to high com-
mand because they were proficient in staff work - which was quite
wrong - and urged that fewer mistakes of this nature should be made
5
in the future'.
Percival took up his new appointment with little enthusiasm or confi-
dence, writing in his postwar account : 'In going to Malaya I realised
was the double danger either of being left in an inactive
that there
command for some years if war did not break out in the East or, if
it did, of finding myself involved in a pretty sticky business with the
,6
inadequate forces. . . . Sticky business indeed, because when Percival
arrived in Malaya in May 1941 he found that his freedom of manoeuvre
to influence strategy, the operational deployment of his troops or attitudes
of mind was very limited. For the previous twenty years successive British
Governments and the three services had debated how best to deter Japan
in the Far East and how to defend Malaya and the Singapore naval
base. The debate and the decisions taken, or more accurately the
decisions deferred, reflected the economic circumstances of the moment,
the threat level and fierce inter-service rivalry. The original plan had
been to send a fleet to the Far East in the event of a crisis, and the
naval base at Singapore was constructed to meet that requirement.
Effectively from 1935 it was unlikely that a large fleet would be sent
because of the increasing threat posed by the Germans and Italians.

259
PERCIVAL

Japanese military expansion Far East and the development of


in the
air power meant that by 1937 Malaya Command had concluded that

to defend the naval base at Singapore the whole of Malaya had to be


defended. The RAF claimed that they could defend Malaya against
any Japanese air attack and seaborne landings and after 1939 a
series of airfields were constructed in north-east Malaya for that purpose.
By the time Percival arrived the defence of Malaya and Singapore
was the worst kind of compromise. The primary deterrent of the 1920s
had been a fleet sent from Europe, but by 1941 this had dwindled to
the deployment of a small force of two capital ships, eventually to consist
of the Prince of Wales and the Repulse. The RAF never had sufficient
aircraft to station in Malaya and after 1939 the defence of Britain and
the requirements of the Middle East had priority. In December 1941
the RAF had in Malaya 158 obsolescent aircraft instead of the agreed
minimum of 336 modern aircraft. The army had always been the poor
relation in any defence planning, tasked with local defence of the naval
base and internal security. By 1941 it faced the prospects of having to
deploy inadequate forces throughout Malaya to defend RAF airfields
and potential landing areas, and provide a force to move into southern
Siam immediately following any Japanese aggression.
Although the Chiefs of Staff in August 1940 recommended reinforcing
Malaya and Singapore, Churchill resolutely opposed them. Churchill's
priority was always the Mediterranean and the Middle East, where he
believed the war would be won or lost. Churchill was determined to
take the offensive in theMiddle East and all military resources were
to be concentrated This issue by 1941 became one of
in that theatre.
the main reasons why Churchill was to lose confidence in Dill as CIGS.
Churchill underestimated the Japanese, overestimated the deterrent
value of a token British naval force, and believed that the existing garri-
son and 'fortress' Singapore would provide enough time for reinforce-
ments to arrive in the event of hostilities. Churchill's policy was also
determined by his strategy of persuading the United States to guarantee
the British position in the Far East. American reluctance to give any
military guarantees meant that Japan had to be seen to be the aggressor,
which further restricted the options facing the military commanders
7
in Malaya.
When Percival took up his command in May 1941 he found that the
operational deployment of his troops was determined by three factors.
Many of his troops were dispersed to guard static positions, particularly

the RAF's exposed airfields in northern Malaya. Secondly, he had to

260
PERCIVAL

provide a strike force capable of seizing the Kra isthmus in southern


Siam after it had been established beyond all reasonable doubt that
the Japanese were the aggressors but in sufficient time to prevent them
moving south into Malaya. Thirdly, any military preparations he under-
took had to cause the least inconvenience and disruption to the Malayan
economy, which was crucial to the British war effort. Percival's apprecia-
tion of the scale of the problem he faced in 1941 was undoubtedly
influenced by the study he had carried out in 1937. Percival was only
too well aware of the vulnerability of Malaya and Singapore to Japanese
sea and airborne attacks and the failure of London to provide the
necessary reinforcements, particularly in tanks, which he had
recommended in 1937. As Percival noted after the war, his appreciation
made in 1937 'did not differ very materially from that adopted by the
Japanese when they attacked Malaya four years later'. Percival also claims
that when he had joined Dill at Aldershot in 1938 he had warned him
that Singapore, far from being impregnable, 'would be in imminent
danger if war broke out in the Far East unless there was an early
realisation in high places of the complete change in the problem of
8
its defence which was then taking place'. It is reasonable to
assume that Percival's 1937 appreciation at the very least made him
pessimistic in 1941 about his chances of successfully repelling a Japanese
attack.
As GOC Malaya, Percival found himself a member of a top-heavy
civil -military command October 1940 the C-in-C Far
structure. Since
East had been Air Chief Marshal Brooke-Popham, who was responsible
for co-ordinating service policy throughout the Far East. An elderly
officer with a somewhat Colonel Blimp image, 'Brookham' had a back-
ground as an RAF administrator and staff officer. With a small staff,
he had been able to do little to improve the situation in the Far East.
In November 1941 he was replaced by Lieutenant-General Pownall, but
Pownall never reached Singapore until 27 December, and then the whole
command structure in the Far East was re -organized yet again, with
Wavell appointed to the ABDA Command and Pownall as his chief
of staff. So at a crucial period before and immediately after Japan
attacked, Percival found himself with a 'lame duck' C-in-C and then
a commander who could only give intermittent direction and advice
between his other onerous duties.
Until the Japanese attack the civil authorities could restrict military
preparations because of the economic importance of Malaya to the war
effort and because they believed the war would never happen. The

261
PERCIVAL

Governor of Singapore, Sir Shenton Thomas, was an affable and stolid


administrator, but not someone to respond quickly and decisively to
a crisis. Percival may have felt uneasy in his company as Shenton Thomas
had been Governor in 1937 when Percival had been a staff officer. From
the beginning of the war in Europe, relations between the civilians,
civil servants and the businessmen and the military was strained. Percival

found himself checked at every turn by the civil authorities but appears
to have been unwilling to precipitate a crisis over his military require-
ments. A further complication to civil -military relations had been the
appointment of Duff Cooper as Resident Minister in the Far East, sent
to improve high-level co-ordination. On the outbreak of war Churchill
instructed Duff to form a War Council in Singapore consisting of Shen-
ton Thomas, Brooke-Popham, Percival, Air Vice-Marshal Pulford,
Vice-Admiral Layton and Bowden representing the Australian Govern-
ment. The War Council became another cog in an already cumbersome
machine, consuming the time of busy men like Percival and producing
inevitable friction. At a service level Percival had good relations with
Pulford of the RAF and Layton of the Royal Navy. The irony for Percival
was that when he arrived in Malaya both he and the army were very
much the junior members of the service team, and yet within the first
week of the campaign following the loss of the Prince of Wales and
the Repulse and the effective withdrawal of surviving RAF planes from
Malaya to Singapore, his command became almost solely responsible
for its defence.
If the civil-military command was top heavy Percival found that his
own command be desired. By December 1941 the army's
left a lot to

strength would rise to some 80,000 men made up of British, Australian,


Indian and Malay formations. was not a homogeneous force and,
It

although well equipped with transport, was short of anti-tank and anti-
aircraft guns and was without tanks. Many of the formations were made
up of young recruits with little training and the most experienced officers
and NCOs had been posted to the Middle East. Apart from the Singapore
garrison, Percival had two main field formations in Malaya. The III
Indian Corps in the north, deployed to defend the RAF's airfields and
coastal landing areasand with the additional task of occupying the Kra
isthmus after a Japanese attack, and the 8th Australian Division in the
Port Dickinson area. Apart from the considerable geographical distances
involved and the difficult nature of the terrain, Percival found he had
other problems of command. Radio communications were poor and
the telephone system unreliable. Because of the shortage of aircraft

262
PERCIVAL

Percival relied upon flying in small privately owned planes or used


a car. found himself acting both as GOC and as army commander
He
with a completely inadequate staff. And then there were his difficulties
with Lieutenant-General Heath, commanding III Indian Corps, and
Major-General Gordon Bennett, commanding the 8th Australian
Division.
'Piggy' Heath had commanded the 5th Indian Division in Eritrea
and had been the victor at Keren. A soldier's soldier, he lived for the
Indian Army. His relations with Percival were strained from the very
beginning. Heath was senior to Percival in age and experience and
it cannot have been easy for him to serve as a subordinate. Percival

was sceptical about the fighting value and professionalism of Heath's


III Indian Corps and believed Heath had an 'Indian Army complex'.

After the initial disasters which overwhelmed some of the Indian


units Heath urged Percival to withdraw to a position in Johore rather
than fighting a delaying battle further north. Percival lost confidence
in Heath as a Corps Commander, but lacked the ruthlessness to replace
him.
Bennett was a soldier suffering from extreme paranoia who was a
rasping, bitter, sarcastic man, given to expressing his views with great
freedom. One of Australia's most distinguished citizen soldiers of the
First World War, he was prejudiced against regular officers, his own
officers, regular or citizen, and disliked and distrusted the British. In
fact he was the last Australian officer who should have been appointed
to such a sensitive command involving close co-operation with Common-
wealth forces. Percival was only too well aware that Bennett, although
nominally his subordinate, had a directive from the Australian Govern-
ment which gave him considerable freedom of action. This combined
with his outspoken comments and at times irrational behaviour made
him found Percival
a difficult subordinate for Percival. In turn Bennett
'unassuming, considerate and conciliatory', which were not qualities
likely to impress him. Soon after Percival arrived in Malaya Bennett

noted that 'he does not seem strong, rather the Yes man type. Listens
a lot but says little.' And later noted in his diary, 'My estimate of him
was right. Weak and hesitant though brainy.' Unfortunately, Bennett
conveyed these impressions to the press in August 1941 when he said
9
that Percival was 'clever but weak'. Bennett loathed and despised Heath
and was to write of him height of the crisis in Johore on 27
at the
January 1942 : 'He should have been relieved of his command long
ago in my opinion but apparently has had some hidden power or

263
PERCIVAL

10
influence, as he sways Percival very easily.' When the Australian CGS
visited MalayaAugust 1941 he asked Percival whether he was satisfied
in
with Bennett. Although Percival was given the opportunity to replace
Bennett he decided to let him stay on. Once again Percival appears
to have avoided taking an unpleasant but necessary decision.
Shortly after assuming command Percival had been instructed to make
a review of the forces required for the defence of Malaya. After undertak-
ing an exhaustive survey of the probable battle area in northern Malaya,
Percival submitted his requirements to the Chiefs of Staff in August
1941. He asked for a further seventeen infantry battalions, two tank
regiments and two heavy anti-aircraft regiments. The Chiefs of Staff
replied a month were unavailable. With the forces
later saying they
he had available in northern Malaya Percival decided he had no option
but to defend the scattered and badly positioned RAF airfields. PercivaPs
dispositions meant that in northern Malaya, astride the trunk road on
the west coast, stood only two brigades, less than one fifth of his total
force. Furthermore, the nth Indian Division was given two roles, one
offensive, the other defensive. An alternative defence plan would have
meant abandoning the defence of the indefensible airfields, putting
blocking positions along the trunk road at known and con-
bottlenecks,
centrating most of the infantry for offensive operations. Although Perci-
val was restricted in his freedom of action, he appears to have done
little to take obvious defensive measures or prepare for a more aggressive

defence of northern Malaya.


Brigadier Simson, the Chief Engineer Malaya Command, claimed
that during the summer of 1941 he made a number of specific recommen-
dations to Percival and his staff for the construction of defences in
northern Malaya, including training in anti-tank and jungle warfare,
11
all of which were ignored. It is difficult to explain Percival's attitude
except that he was representative of most senior officers and colonial
it was vital not to disrupt the Malayan economy
officials in believing that

and that construction of defences would affect native morale, and in


a general underestimation of the Japanese. What struck Brigadier Sim-
son as Percival's most serious mistake was the presumption that the
Japanese could not land on the east coast of Malaya between November
12
and March because of the northeast monsoon. Percival admits that
this fallacy had already been exposed in his own 1937 study, but he
had, nevertheless, concluded that it was 'unlikely that the Japanese would
select a date for their attack during the period December-February
when the monsoon is at its height as it would involve running consider-

264
PERCIVAL

13
able risks'. And Percival was not a commander who would run risks,

so he was unlikely to imagine a potential enemy commander doing so.

From 6 December were


1941 the military authorities in Singapore
aware Japanese convoys were heading from Indo-China towards Siam
and Malaya. But over the next forty- eight hours the British military
authorities were paralysed by their own caution. Brooke-Popham was
very conscious of his instructions from London not to use military force
until the Japanese had demonstrably been proved to be the aggressor,
which of course gave them the initiative. Brooke-Popham finally can-
celled the plan whereby the nth Indian Division would have moved
into Siam to occupy the Kra isthmus. Instead it was ordered to occupy
a defensive role at Jitra on the west coast road.
Within seventy-two hours of the initial Japanese landings in Siam
and along the north-east coast of Malaya the British had suffered three
major defeats. By the evening of 10 December the Japanese had destroyed
the bulk of the RAF's planes in northern Malaya and Pulford withdrew
his surviving aircraft to Singapore. The two Indian brigades defending
the airfields were forced to abandon them to the Japanese after being
badly mauled. With the effective withdrawal of the RAF the army was
to fight the rest of the campaign in Malaya without proper air support.
On 9 December Churchill's naval deterrent, Force Z, the Prince of Wales
and the Repulse, were sunk by Japanese aircraft off the eastern coast
of Malaya. This was a tremendous psychological shock to everyone
in Singapore and London and gave the Japanese control of the seas
off the eastern coast of Malaya which, combined with their air superior-
ity, enabled them to carry out further seaborne landings. The third
disaster for the British was the effective destruction by the Japanese
of the nth Indian Division.The Japanese foiled a British attempt using
a small forcefrom the nth Indian Division to block them at the Ledge
in southern Siam. The Japanese then pushed south with tanks and
penetrated the defensive positions of the nth Indian Division, and over
the next twenty-four hours the division retreated in some chaos.
The Japanese successes were based on their aggressive tactics
initial

and offensive spirit. In comparison, the British appeared lethargic and


pedantic, always literally on the defensive. Percival in Singapore had
great physical difficulty in commanding and controlling the battle in
northern Malaya. Heath's III Indian Corps headquarters at Kuala Lum-
pur was two hundred miles away, and the Siam border was another
two hundred and fifty miles further north. Neither Percival nor Heath
could really influence the battle, and at the height of the battle for

265
PERCIVAL

JitraHeath was in Singapore. Following the series of disasters in north-


ern Malaya Percival was forced to reconsider his strategy. Pulford and
he decided that the Japanese had to be held as far north as possible
to enable the remaining RAF airfields to be protected, which would
allow the surviving RAF planes to give air cover to the reinforcements
which would be arriving by sea. As Percival was to write after the war,
'I held the view that the first step towards recovery of any sort was
to regain control of the air and that this could only be done by bringing
in more fighters. I was prepared to make almost any sacrifice to get
these fighters in safely and to get them into the air.' 14 This influenced
PercivaPs decision to keep two of his brigades in eastern Malaya where
they were supposed to protect the remaining airfields. This turned out
to be a waste of resources and in retrospect Percival should have used
these two brigades to reinforce his position in the west.
Percival's strategy depended upon a number of assumptions. The
Japanese had to keep their advance to the tempo of the gradual British
withdrawal - they didn't. Heath's III Indian Corps had to fight a carefully
co-ordinated withdrawal slowing down the Japanese and inflicting the
maximum number of casualties - they didn't. Sufficient reinforcements
had to arrive in time, properly equipped and trained to be used in a
decisive counter-stroke against the Japanese before Singapore itself was
invested - they didn't. After the defeat at Jitra Percival found that Heath
disagreed with the strategy of gradual withdrawal, preferring instead
to break contact with the Japanese and withdraw much further south
to a prepared defensive position. Percival lost confidence in Heath and
later recalled: 'all the way down the peninsula, I had a feeling that
unless I issued definitive orders as to how long such and such a position
15
was be held, I should find that it had been evacuated prematurely.'
to
The Japanese were able to advance faster than the British could reinforce
Singapore, or Percival could deploy troops and aircraft to stop them.
Instead of being able to concentrate sufficient forces for a counter-stroke,
Percival was forced to feed reinforcements into his existing formations
in a piecemeal fashion. Despite the seriousness of the situation in the

Far East Churchill bent all his energies into winning the war in the
Mediterranean. From 18 November Churchill had concentrated on Op-
eration Crusader, Auchinleck's offensive in North Africa, and he was
then distracted by Rommel's counter-offensive. Although Churchill did
sanction reinforcements for Malaya, he appears to have adopted a policy
of damage limitation.
Whilst Heath's III Indian Corps was withdrawing south, Percival was

266
PERCIVAL

preparing his defensive positions in Johore. But according to Brigadier


Simson, Percival refused to allow the construction of defensive works,
telling Simson on 26 December that 'Defences are bad for morale -
16
for both troops and civilians.' At a conference of senior commanders
on 5 January 1942 it was decided that III Indian Corps would withdraw
into a defensive position in Johore after denying the Japanese the airfields
at Kuala Lumpur and Port Swettenham. Bennett had proposed that
his 8th Australian Division should hold the position in the west, but
PercivaPs plan was that III Indian Corps would be responsible for the
defence of western Johore whilst Gordon Bennett's 8th Australian Div-
ision would be responsible for the east.
Percival's carefully constructed plan was thrown on
into confusion

7 January when the Japanese attacked with tanks at the Slim River and
virtually destroyed the nth Indian Division. On the same day Wavell
arrived in Singapore and on 8 January he visited the front. Wavell
was more impressed with Bennett than he was with Heath or Percival,
and was encouraged by Bennett's plan for a vigorous defence of Johore.
On the evening of the 8th Wavell summoned Percival and without any
discussion handed him the new plan for the defence of Johore. The
plan was effectively Bennett's original proposal and it must have shocked
Percival, indicating as it did that he had lost Wavell's confidence. Pow-
nall noted in his diary for the 8th that Wavell was 'not at all happy
about Percival, who has the knowledge, but not the personality to carry
through a tough fight'. Pownall hoped that 'it won't mean that I have
to relieve Percival pro tern, until someone tougher than he can come
17
from elsewhere. But it might so happen.'
Percival had the unenviable task of implementing a plan imposed
on him by Wavell, and entrusting its execution to a subordinate in whom
he lacked confidence. Furthermore, Wavell's plan involved a messy
exchange of forces, with Bennett temporarily losing a brigade of his
8th Australian Division but leaving the 9th Indian Division and an
Indian Brigade placed under his command. Bennett's command, known
as Westforce, was deployed to defend north-west Johore with III Indian
Corps to the rear. Percival was forced to act directly as an army com-
mander. 'As our area of manoeuvre was becoming so restricted, I felt
that the time had now come to exercise more direct personal control
18
of the operations than had previously been possible.' This was the
last thing Percival was capable of doing, and in just over a fortnight

from 14 to 31 January the Japanese took the initiative, and after a series
of seaborne landings down both the west and east coasts, and by penetrat-

267
PERCIVAL

ing the British defences and outflanking them, forced Percival to with-
draw from Johore onto the island of Singapore. Bennett misappreciated
Japanese intentions in the west, and on 15 January Japanese troops turned
Muar. In order to take direct control of the battle Percival
his left flank at
was forced to motor long distances to conferences in the forward area,
combining his duties as GOC Malaya with those of an army commander.
At these conferences Percival arrived tired and worn out and usually
failed to take control. As the British official historian Woodburn Kirby
noted, 'Bennett would then take the floor putting forward impracticable
proposals until Heath would break in with a sensible suggestion based
on sound militarv considerations, which Percival would accept and act
>19
upon.
Percival appears to have been unwilling to consider in advance any
plan for a withdrawal of his forces from Malaya onto Singapore island
or to take the necessary measures for the defence of the island. Wavell
took the initiative from 10 January, prodding Percival in a series of
letters and meetings. Although Percival claimed in his postwar account
that he had issued orders as early as 23 December to establish defensive
positions on the north of the island, little seems to have been done.
Wavell met Percival at Singapore on 20 January- to discuss with him
how the island should be defended if the battle for Johore was lost.
Wavell had concluded that the eventual Japanese attack would be
made on the north-west coast and suggested positioning there the
freshest troops, but Percival, despite his postwar claims to the contrary,
was to remain convinced that the Japanese would land in the north-east.

Wavell decided to defer to the judgement of the commander on the


spot, which seems rather inconsistent given his earlier decision to over-
20
rule Percival's plan for defending Johore. As the troops were with-
drawn from Malaya across the causeway onto Singapore island on 30-31
January, they moved straight to the areas Percival had allotted them
for the defence of the island. Percival had decided to conduct a forward
defence, with Bennett's division holding the coast along the north-west
of the island and Heath's III Indian Corps with the recently landed
18th Division holding the north-east coast. Percival allocated only one
brigade as his reserve and the troops deployed along the coast had
to prepare their own defences. There was considerable chaos, confusion
and panic on the island, which had suffered badly from Japanese air
raids, and the morale of the civilian population was low. Commanders
and troops were tired and dispirited and whilst the military believed
that the civil authorities had done little to prepare for a siege, the civil

268
PERCIVAL

authorities felt the military had misled them and failed in their duty.

The Japanese began the assault on Singapore on the night of 8 Febru-


ary in the north-west against Bennett's 8th Australian Division. For
the next eight hours the Japanese were able to exploit their landings
and penetrate the Australian position. Percival later explained that his
inactivity was due to a reluctance to use his only reserve brigade before
he was certain that he was not facing a Japanese feint whilst the main
attack took place in the north-east. 'I had learnt on exercises we had
held in England not to commit your reserve until you are quite certain
21
you are dealing with the real thing.' Unfortunately for Percival the
Japanese attack was the real thing and due to a series of errors
Bennett's 8th Australian Division abandoned a defensive position to
its which allowed the Japanese to penetrate to the centre of the
rear,
island. Percivalfound himself coming under pressure from Churchill,
who sent Wavell a signal on io February calling for a fight to the finish.
By 12 February Percival was forced to withdraw all his troops to a defens-
ive perimeter around Singapore city. On 13 February Percival held a
conference with his military commanders to discuss the shortages of
water and food and the poor morale of the troops. Both Heath and
Bennett advocated capitulation, but Percival decided to keep fighting,
heeding Churchill's instructions and Wavell's orders. But at a final

conference on 15 February Percival once again canvassed the opinions


of his military commanders and having put everyone on record decided
to capitulate.
By the criteria of what makes an effective military leader, Percival
was a failure. His physical appearance was unprepossessing, being de-
scribed at the time as 'a tall thin person, whose most conspicuous charac-
22
teristics were two protruding rabbit teeth'. His friend and biographer
John Smyth has admitted that 'It is probably the case, too, that appear-
ances in a higher commander are important. If the commander looked
the part, as Bill Slim did with his jutting jaw and bull-dog build, or
as Monty did . . . then the effect on the troops was psychologically good.
23
Percival lacked these superficial qualities. . .
.'
Pownall described
Percival as someone 'who has the knowledge but not the personality
to carry through a tough fight,' and thought he was 'an uninspiring
24
leader and rather gloomy. . .
,'
Ian Morrison, a journalist, observed
Percival throughout the campaign in Malaya and thought that he was

a man of considerable personal charm, if one met him socially. He was an


able staff officer with a penetrating mind, although a mind that saw the difficul-

269
PERCIVAL

ties to any scheme before it saw the possibilities. But he was a completely

negative person, with no vigour, no colour, and no conviction. His personality


was not strong, and as a leader he did not appeal either to the troops (to
whom he was unknown except by name) or to the general public. 25
In his diary and private correspondence Bennett was very critical of
Percival, who he thought had good brain and sound judgement
'quite a
but very weak. ... He wants the armyto fight and to stop retreating,
but lacks the personality to make it fight or even to remove officers
who lack the fighting spirit.' 26 In his account of the campaign published
later in the war, which was an apology for his own behaviour in leaving
Singapore without permission just before the capitulation, Bennett was
more generous, writing 'In my opinion, the system was more to blame
:

than the individual. General Percival had a brilliant career. He was


very active and energetic, playing a good game of tennis which would
be the envy of many younger men. He knew Malaya and its problems
. . .

and was probably the best selection for the appointment to command
27
the land forces there.'
Percival appeared on numerous occasions to be unable to come to
a decision or propose decisive action, particularly vigorous counter
measures against the Japanese. Bowden, the Australian Government's
representative on the War Council, observed that Percival had 'no answer
to Japanese infiltration tactics but to retreat, and I do not remember
his ever proposing any counter-offensive action. Other incidents have
28
suggested lack of decision.' Shenton Thomas gives an account in
his diary of a meeting of the War Council on 14 December 1941 at
which Percival circulated a memorandum setting out the arguments
for and against withdrawal from Penang but with no final conclusion
or recommendation. To Shenton Thomas, 'defend to the last' meant
exactly that, but Percival qualified it with 'but to the best of our ability'
29
although well knowing that his ability could not be sustained. Major
Wild, one of Heath's staff officers, observed Percival during the final

days on Singapore. 'I had become inured during the past week to seeing

General Percival's painful inability to give a decision, and on three


occasions to make any reply whatever, when points of operational import-
30
ance were referred to him. .'
. .

There was always something of the perpetual Staff College instructor


about Percival even when he was supposed to be exercising operational
command. Duff Cooper told Churchill that Percival wasn't a leader,
'he cannot take a large view ; it is all a field day at Aldershot to him.
He knows the rules as well and follows them so closely and is always

270
PERCIVAL

waiting for the umpire's whistle to cease-fire and hopes that when the
moment comes his military dispositions will be such as to receive appro-
31
val.' Bennett watched Percival undertake a reconnaissance in Johore
on 10 January 1942 : 'This recce reminded me of peace-time army exer-
cises without troops. There was much walking about from one point
of vantage to another, much discussion on the relative fields of fire
32
etc.' Contemporaries agreed with Woodburn Kirby, who thought that
Percival as a military commander had 'neither the drive nor the ruthless-
33
ness which was needed. . .
.'
Harrison, the GSOi of the nth Indian
Division, told Smyth in 1970 that Percival 'lacked the quality of ruthless-

ness', and Thyer, the GSOi of the 8th Australian Division, concurred :

'He lacked that ruthlessness that a commander needs in a tight


place. A man of the highest principle, he was a wee bit too tender-
34
hearted.'
PercivaPs self-effacement, modesty and even timidity is revealed in
his postwar account of the campaign. He was unwilling to criticize the
authorities in London and Delhi for their part in the disaster. Discussing
the muddle and hiatus in the higher direction of the war in December,
when Pownall replaced Brooke-Popham followed by the appointment
of Wavell, Percival diffidently wrote : 'I have no wish to suggest that
any of these changes were wrong or that things should have been
arranged otherwise, but it cannot be denied that the general effect was
far from healthy.' Commenting on the untrained reinforcements of 45
Indian Brigade, which arrived at the end of December, Percival hastily
qualified his criticism by writing, 'In making these statements I have
no wish blame anybody for sending these troops to Malaya. After
to
all it was better than having none at all.' And again at the end of January,

with reference to Indian and Australian reinforcements, 'I have no wish


to blame the authorities either in India or in Australia for sending these
35
untrained men.'
Percival was physically brave, physically fit, and a first-class staff
officer in peacetime but without experience of command in war. He
was uninspiring, gloomy, with a personality that saw difficulties rather
than opportunities ; weak and hesitant and at times unable to reach
a decision ; lacking the necessary aggressive qualities and ruthlessness
to be a military commander in war. Percival failed to meet Wavell's
criteria for military leadership, spelt out in the first of his Lees Knowles
lectures atCambridge in 1939 'I hold to be the first essential of a
:

General, the quality of robustness, the ability to stand the shocks of

271
PERCIVAL

war. ... All materials of war, including the General, must have a certain
36
solidity, a high margin over the normal breaking strain.'

In apportioning blame for the events in Malaya and Singapore which


culminated in the eventual capitulation, contemporary participants and
witnesses at all levels speak and write of its 'inevitability'. Pownall made
a judicious assessment ten days after the surrender:

There is no doubt we underestimated the Jap. But suppose we'd made a better
shot and got the Jap at his true worth, would it have made any real difference ?
I very much doubt it. Our policy was to avoid war with Japan as long as we

could (or make America cause it, if it was to happen) and we gambled on
that policy succeeding (or if it didn't succeed on America bearing the brunt).
With all our other commitments I don't believe that however highly we had
rated the Japs as fighters we could have caused thereby to improve the condition
37
of our services in the Far East. We just hoped it wouldn't happen and it did.

Ultimate responsibility for this strategy' lay with Churchill. Ronald


Lewin, the military historian and biographer of W^avell, almost exoner-
ates Percival for his role in the disaster. 'Nobody can carp with any
justice at an officer who is posted to a position for which he is not
suited : the responsibility lies with his superiors or the military secretariat
38
. . . and it was cruel fate that put him in charge of Singapore's defences.'
Percival cannot be held responsible for the strategic, political and
military decisions taken with regard to the defence of Malaya and
Singapore, but he can be criticized for his failings as a military com-
mander. Once the campaign had begun, the Japanese advantage in sea-
power and airpower was overwhelming, but at no time did the Japanese
have more than one third of the ground forces that were at Pefcival's
disposal. For the Japanese the campaign until the very final moment
of the British capitulation was a close-run thing, and it is possible that
a military commander of Montgomery's or Slim's calibre might have
prolonged the defence of Malaya permitting the necessary build-up of
reinforcements in Singapore for a decisive counter-stroke. Pownall
admitted that 'We were frankly out-generalled, outwitted and out-
39
fought.' In the opinion of Woodburn Kirby, Percival failed to take
the only two decisions which might have bought the time required for

sufficient reinforcements to reach Singapore. He failed to concentrate


his forces in the vital area west of the central range in Malaya, and
he failed to construct field and anti-tank defences at bottlenecks along
the north-south communications and to cover the three approaches to
40
Johore Bahru with permanent defences on which to retire. Another

272
PERCIVAL

military historian, Major-General Sixsmith, censored Percival for his


inability to make up his mind on what he wanted to do or to impress
his will on the battle.

There no evidence that he ever directed his commanders' minds towards


is

any plan that might regain the initiative, or to any area in which a decisive
battle might be fought. Instead the only plan in their minds was to hold on
as long as possible. ... In the record Percival gives of his conversations with
his subordinate commanders it is noticeable that the suggestions always came
from them. It was never that he told them what to do but that they toldhim
41
what they must do.

Dr Norman Dixon has attempted a psychological explanation of Perci-


val's failure as a military commander. He believes that Percival had
pathological-achievement motivation which is associated with a weak
ego and feelings of dependency and that he was driven by the fear
of failure. According to Dixon, such personalities 'are so to speak, driven
from behind rather than pulled from in front. They have to achieve
not for the satisfaction which achievement brings but because only by
doing so can they bolster up their constantly sagging self-regard'. Dixon
suggests that if Percival had gone ahead and erected defences in Malaya
or Singapore it could have meant admitting to himself the danger in
which he stood. He concluded that Percival's refusal to prepare defences
in Johore and Singapore was the behaviour of someone who tried to
42
avoid the unpleasant consequences of failure by not really trying.
Percival neither had the temperament, the experience, the ability nor
the necessary robustness to meet the appalling challenge he faced in
1941 as GOC Malaya. The Chiefs of Staff had regarded the Far East
as a dormant theatre and as such had sent the second eleven to fill
command appointments. As Wavell told Shenton Thomas on 10 Febru-
ary 1942, he had considered after his previous visit whether to relieve
43
Percival, but had concluded, 'it's not easy to get leaders nowadays'.
Percival remained in command to the bitter end, and after other senior
commanders had left, including those from the Royal Navy and RAF,
he took the responsibility of surrendering to a numerically inferior and
racially despised enemy.

NOTES
1 Winston S. Churchill, The Second World War, vol. IV, The Hinge of Fate
(1951), p. 128.
2 Sir John Smyth, Percival and the Tragedy ofSingapore (1971), p. 259.

273
PERCIVAL

3 Raymond Callahan, The Worst Disaster : The Fall ofSingapore (1977), p. in.
4 Arthur Bryant The Turn of the Tide igjg-iQ4j (1957), p. 277.
(ed.),

5 Sir John Kennedy, The Business of War (1957), p. 198.


6 Lieutenant-General A. E. Percival, The War in Malaya (1949), p. 27.

7 For the background to the British debate over the defence of Malaya and
Singapore and Churchill's policy, see Major-General S. Woodburn Kirby,
Singapore: The Chain of Disaster (1971); Callahan, The Worst Disaster Louis \

Allen, Singapore IQ41-1942 (1977) and H. P. Willmott, Empires in the Balance:

Japanese and Allied Pacific Strategies to April IQ42 (1982).


8 Percival, War in Malaya, pp. 17 and 23.
9 A. B. Lodge, The Fall of General Gordon Bennett (1986), p. 48.

10 Ibid., p. 119.
11 Ivan Simson, Singapore : Too Little, Too Late (1970), pp. 30, 33-8, 42, 54-6.
12 Ibid., p. 48.

13 Percival, \\ ar in Malaya, p. 57.

14 Ibid., p. 207.
15 Percival, 'Comments', 30 November 1953, Percival Papers, Imperial War
Museum.
16 Simson, Singapore, p. 69.

17 Brian Bond (ed.), Chief of Staff : The Diaries of Lieutenant-General Sir Henry
Pownall, Vol. 2, igjo-igjj (1974), p. 76.
War in Malaya, p. 21.
18 Percival,

19 Woodburn Kirby, Singapore, p. 205.


20 See Woodburn Kirby, Singapore, pp. 220-1 and Lodge, The Fall of General
Gordon Bennett, pp. 135-7.
21 Percival, War in Malaya, p. 272.

22 Ian Morrison, Malayan Postscript (1942), p. 158.

23 Smyth, Percival, p. 258.

24 Bond, Chief ofStaff, p. 76.


25 Morrison, Malayan Postscript, p. 159.

26 Lodge, The Fall of General Gordon Bennett, p. 181.


27 Lieutenant-General H. Bennett, Why Singapore Fell (1944), p. 21.

28 Lodge, The Fall of General Gordon Bennett, p. 181.


29 Brian Montgomery, Shenton of Singapore : Governor and Prisoner of War
(1984), p. 94.
30 Lodge, The Fall of General Gordon Bennett, p. 181.

31 Callahan, The Worst Disaster, p. 249.


32 Bennett, Why Singapore Fell, p. 102.
33 Woodburn Kirby, Singapore, p. 129.
34 Smyth, Percival, p. 261 and Lodge, The Fall of General Gordon Bennett, p.

181.

35 Percival, War in Malaya, pp. 187, 207 and 235.


36 Field-Marshal Lord Wavell, Soldiers and Soldiering (1953), pp. 14-16.

274
PERCIVAL

37 Bond, ChiefofStaff, p. 92.


38 Ronald Lewin, The Chief: Field-Marshal Lord Wavell, Commander-in-Chief
and Viceroy, igjg-ig4y (1980), p. 165.
39 Bond, Chief ofStaff, p. 85.
40 Woodburn Kirby, Singapore, pp. 251-4.
41 Major- General E. K. G. Sixsmith, British Generalship in the Twentieth
Century (1970), p. 271.

42 Norman Dixon, On the Psychology ofMilitary Incompetence (1976), pp. 234-48.

43 Montgomery, Shenton ofSingapore, p. 131.

CHRONOLOGY ARTHUR PERCIVAL :

1887, December Born


1902-6 Educated at Rugby School
1906-14 Clerk in an iron-ore merchants office, City of London
1914 Volunteers for the army, Inns of Court OTC
1915 Captain 7th Bedfordshire Regiment, France
1916 Military Cross, Regular Commission, Essex Regiment,
temporary major
1917 Second-in-Command 7th Bedfordshire Regiment
1918 Acting Lieutenant-Colonel, CO 2nd Bedfordshire
Regiment, temporary brigade commander, awarded
DSO
1919 Second-in-Command 46th Royal Fusiliers, North
Russia, bar to DSO
1920-22 Company Commander and Intelligence Officer 2nd
Essex Regiment, Ireland
1923-4 Student at the Staff College Camberley, promoted
major in the Cheshire Regiment
1924-8 Staff Officer, Nigeria, brevet Lieutenant-Colonel
1929 Company Commander 2nd Cheshire Regiment
1930 Student at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich
1931-2 Instructor at the Staff College
1932-4 Lieutenant-Colonel commanding 2nd Cheshire
Regiment, Malta
1935 Student at the Imperial Defence College
I 93^7 Colonel and GSOi, Malaya Command
1938-9 Brigadier, General Staff, Aldershot Command
1939-40 Brigadier, General Staff, I Corps, BEF
1940, February-April Major-General commanding 43rd (Wessex) Division,
UK
1940, May-July Assistant CIGS

275
PERCIVAL

1940, August- Major-General commanding 44th Division, UK


1941, April
1941, April- Temporary Lieutenant- General, GOC Malaya
1942, February Command
1942, February- Prisoner of war
1945, August
1946 Retires from the Army with honorary rank of
Lieutenant-General
1949 Publishes The War in Malaya
1950-55 Colonel of the Cheshire Regiment
1966, January 31 Dies

276
15

WINGATE
Major- General Orde Wingate

JOHN W. GORDON

The news, flashed to London, managed to be tragic even in that wartime


season of death. Patrols had finally reached the jungle crash site. Their
reports confirmed the worst: at the age of forty-one Orde Charles
Wingate - major-general and leader of the daring 'Chindit' special
operations behind the Japanese lines in Burma, and previously missing
- was dead, killed in the crash of his American B-25 bomber on 24
March 1944.
To Winston Churchill, Wingate 's death was a blow that deprived
British arms of a 'man of genius who might have become a man of
destiny'. In a theater in which the defeat-retreat cycle had so far been
the bitter rule, he had to Churchill seemed the one commander able
to hit back at and best a jungle-wise and seemingly unstoppable enemy.
Indeed, by early 1944 he appeared to some a sort of 'new Lawrence'
- this time 'of Burma'. The admirers of this new Lawrence (Wingate
was in fact distantly related to T. E. Lawrence 'of Arabia') also included
some Americans President Franklin D. Roosevelt and members of
:

the US Joint Chiefs of Staff. These men, meeting Wingate for the first
time at the Quebec (Quadrant) Conference in August 1943, had detected
flashes of brilliance and they liked the fiery intensity with which this
British soldier briefed his new plan for Burma. And so, as Churchill

277
WINGATE

was left to conclude, Wingate had been rather more than merely a theorist
of small, long-range raiding units. With his death, a 'man of the highest
quality . [had been lost and] a bright flame
. . extinguished'. . . .

Something close to this view prevailed out in the jungles of central


Burma and deep in the enemy's rear. With the monsoon rains soon
to blow in, the 20,000 British, Gurkha, and West African soldiers com-
prising Special Force - the Chindits - felt their own sense of loss.
Deployed in their fan of separate columns or holding a series of strong-
points sustained by air-dropped supplies, these troops could only specu-
late as towhat might follow the death of the chief by whose ideas they
were inspirited, forged into an operational force, and brought to battle.
And at least to some degree these thoughts were shared by their American
comrades-in-arms of Operation Galahad (to give it its codename) -
the brigade-sized US Army force, officially the 5307th Composite Unit
(Provisional) but labelled in the press as 'Merrill's Marauders'.
A rather different picture of Wingate obtained, however, among the
more conventionally minded staff and command elements at head-
quarters from army corps up to theater level. To these, Wingate seemed
an arrogant, out-of-control visionary whose ideas about warfare in the
enemy's rear were unworkable. Short in stature and wiry, almost simian
in appearance, W'ingate glared out at those who questioned his theories
from baleful blue eyes. His trademarks were famous - and, to many,
offensive. The Old Testament beard, the W
olseley-era pith helmet
T

(which even the theater commander, Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten,


pronounced as having come either 'from a museum or an ancestor'),
the studied, deliberate casualness about hygiene (it was suggested that
he had a particular jungle -filthy uniform that he saved for special
occasions) all seemed too much a part of a cultivated image of ascetic
toughness, too much playacting.
Most of all, however, Wingate's unorthodox}' was dangerous. He was
unstable it was known that he had tried to kill himself in Egypt two
:

years before. Thereafter, as his fortunes improved, his direct access


to and ability to influence first General Sir Archibald Wavell, at that

point the theater commander-in-chief, and then the Prime Minister


himself, had succeeded in diverting men and resources away from the
conventional formations that really counted. Events had shown in stark
clarity, it was argued, that his long-range penetration scheme consumed
men an appalling rate. The numbers spoke for themselves. Of his
at
First Chindit operation only two-thirds of the force had actually
managed to make it back to friendly lines of these, riddled with dysen-
;

278
WINGATE

tery, typhus and malaria, only a fraction could be declared fit for duty
again.
But the dilemma posed by these two conflicting views - Wingate as
brilliant eccentric leader of unconventional operations on the one hand,
or dangerous maverick on the other - transcends the contentious person-
ality and theatrics which sparked animosity in others. The problem is

a larger one. It touches on the whole issue of the special-operations


approach as a way of dealing with a distant and difficult theater, to
which the Allies were increasingly reluctant to send resources in demand
elsewhere. Finally, to look at Wingate is also to look at the British style
of warfare. For, while virtually all major combatants in World War
II experimented to some degree with so-called 'special forces', it was

the British experiment with them that holds pride of place both as to
scale if that war in so many respects was
and expectations. Moreover,
a golden age for the employment of special forces, Orde Wingate must
be seen as Winston Churchill's paramount theorist and most committed
advocate of their use. This is not to suggest that there was any lack
of leaders who excelled at the conduct of these sorts of operations.
Certainly none could exceed in daring and flamboyance the leader and
founder of the Special Air Service, David Stirling. Only Wingate, how-
ever, both planned and then carried out behind-the-lines special opera-
tions at the level of general officer. To do so he had made and won
his case before not just the Allies' highest planning apparatus, the Com-
bined Chiefs of Staff, but also the two leaders of that successful coalition,
Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt.

Wingate's family background and early career were largely conventional.


Born in India in 1903, Wingate was fourth-generation military; his
father, maternal grandfather, and great-grandfather all having served
as officers in the British or the Indian service. He attended Charterhouse
as a day student and, at the age of eighteen, entered the Royal Military
Academy, Woolwich. Bored by team sports and the structured curricu-
lum, his cadet career at Woolwich was little more distinguished than
his schoolboy one at Charterhouse. He was commissioned - after a
first-year incident in which he successfully stared down upperclassmen
bent upon hazing him - into the Royal Artillery in 1923. The example
of his eminent colonial-soldier cousin, General Sir Reginald Wingate,
former Sirdar or Commander-in-Chief of the Egyptian Army, Gover-
nor-General of the Sudan and High Commissioner for Egypt, helped

279
WINGATE

to spark youthful ambition. Wingate followed up a course in Arabic


by assignment as a company commander in the Sudan Defence Force.
This gave him the chance to participate in a Royal Geographical Society-
sponsored expedition in search of the 'lost oasis' of Zerzura, a legendary
place believed to exist somewhere in the vastness of the Libyan Desert.
Wingate's quest to find Zerzura was unsuccessful ; indeed, no such
oasiswas ever found. He had also bucked the tide of progress by insisting
upon the use of camel transport, whereas Major Ralph Bagnold and
other British explorers had already shown the superiority of motor
vehicles in such desert penetrations. On the other hand, the effort won
Wingate a brief moment of glory and whetted his appetite for more.
Now thirty-two, Wingate returned to England, married eighteen-
year-old Lorna Paterson and settled down to prepare for the qualifying
examination for the Staff College. When he passed but failed to gain
admission, he resolved to take drastic measures. It was his boldness
in confronting the Chief of the Imperial General Staff that secured
for him not the Camberley billet but the next best thing a general-staff:

appointment in 1936 with the British forces attempting to maintain order


in Palestine.
This was Wingate's first big break and the point of departure for
his advance into the arena of unconventional operations. Such advance
would proceed in a kind of three-phase progression through the last
eight years of his life, 1936 to 1944. But the first phase was Palestine.
In it would come his first meeting with Wavell, the future commander
who would ask for him in the Middle East and in India, and with
Winston Churchill, who would ensure that WavelPs plans for Wingate
were supported at all levels. In short, Palestine, because it changed
Wingate's thinking and gave him the opportunity to show what he could
do, was the key to much that happened later. Present as well were those
elements which would reappear frequent trouble with his superiors
:

and their staffs, a willingness to jump the chain of command should


it suit his purposes to do so, and an acute sense of military politics

and of the nature and realities of irregular operations.


Almost from his arrival he was won over to the Zionist cause. This
conversion was attributable neither to Jewish ancestry (there was none)
nor to the odd religious streak that stemmed from his evangelical Ply-
mouth Brethren upbringing. Rather, it was his belief that it was his
destiny to lead some wronged and beleaguered people to victory, that
must account for it. He soon commenced organizing and training and
then leading into combat a force of special patrols. These were called

280
WINGATE

the Special Night Squads : along with the Haganah and the Palmach,
they are the rootstems of the present-day Israeli Army. His charter to
employ them came from Wavell, only recently appointed commander
in Palestine, who had already given thought to the potential of 'motor
guerrilla' and other irregular forces. In the months that followed, raids
and ambushes carried out by the Special Night Squads became success-
ful to the point that they turned the tide of Arab attack. Arab harassment

of Jewish settlements fell off drastically, and sabotage of the Haifa oil
pipeline all but stopped.
This work won Wingate a DSO, mention in dispatches and trouble
with his superiors. Leave in London gave him the opportunity to submit
a paper on unconventional operations to Basil Liddell Hart, military
theorist and defense correspondent of The Times, who in turn passed
it on to Winston Churchill. Wingate's first meeting with the future
Prime Minister came at a dinner party late in 1938. Already journalists
and others familiar with Wingate's role in Palestine professed to be
'struck by his resemblance to Lawrence of Arabia', and Wingate's first-
hand accounts easily held Churchill's attention. All in all, the evening
could not have hurt the cause of establishing Wingate's credentials as
a promising leader of unconventional operations.
Thus Wingate's conduct and had won him the
abilities in Palestine

favorable attention of Wavell and Churchill. was these two figures,


It

more than any others in the British command, who were about to play
the crucial early role in guiding their nation's experiment with special-
operations forces. Two decades before, both had known Lawrence well
- Wavell had been an observer of Lawrence's
as a staff officer to Allenby
role in 1917-18, and Churchill as Colonial Secretary during the Iraqi
troubles of the early 1920s had appointed Lawrence a special advisor.
But if Wavell and Churchill saw him as playing a Lawrentian role in
some future campaign, it did little to comfort Wingate during a period
of considerable frustration. Even after the outbreak of war in 1939, adver-
saries - who hinted that he had 'gone over to the Jews' - kept him
tied down in dead-end assignments.
Certainly the slowness to employ Wingate in a role better suited to
his demonstrated abilities cannot be attributed to any reluctance on the
part of the British Army to experiment with unconventional operations.
Not only was there the 'Lawrence legend' - the example of T. E. Law-
rence as a master of guerrilla operations and the 'only old-style hero'
of the 1914-18 war. There was also the existence of staff plans that con-
sidered the potentialities of unconventional operations. Even after the

281
WINGATE

abrogation of the 'Ten-Year Rule' (that there would be no major war


in Europe following 1918), the legacy of the era of 'imperial policing'
and the long absence of a clear-cut Continental mission made the British
Army receptive to ideas for peripheral ventures. These attacks-on-the-
cheap did not fail to weigh the use of guerrilla activities. In 1935, for
example, after the Italian invasion of Ethiopia, British military authorities
in Egypt had commenced development of a plan for fostering a 'desert
revolt' among Libya's disaffected Senussi tribesmen. The idea was to
divert Italian forces away from a putative invasion of Egypt. Known
as the 'Arab "G" Expansion Scheme', the plan probably owed more
than a little to the fact that Lawrence's book, Seven Pillars of Wisdom,
was published that year and instantly proved a bestseller. Three years
later, a General Staff Report, 'The Raising of Insurrections Possibility :

of Guerrilla Activities', looked at such operations as applied to Europe.


At the same time a process of reformation of the infantry arm was also
under way. The result was to give small units of infantry far greater
effectiveness. They acquired greater operational flexibility through the
use of 'fire and maneuver' and more firepower through the adop-
tactics,

weapons and lightweight explosives. A decen-


tion of portable automatic
tralization of command and control was effected through radio
communications and the enhancement of the role of junior leaders -
a development initiated by the Germans in World War I. Although
overshadowed by the process of mechanization and the building of an
armored arm, these infantry developments were crucial to the advent
of special forces.
Wingate's participation in this process began in autumn 1940, with
the arrival of orders taking him to the Middle East. This step - and
the start of Wingate's second phase of involvement with the special-
operations process - was once again the work of Wavell, by now Com-
mander-in-Chief Middle East. Indeed, by the end of summer 1940,
the British experiment with these operations was about to get under
way in serious fashion, and Wavell's ideas regarding its direction were
clear and well formed. As he envisioned them, special-operations forces
- or simply 'special forces', to use the term that now came into vogue
- were to raid, harass, operate with indigenous guerrillas, or gather
intelligence on the flanks or in the rear of the enemy. The assumption
was that such operations, difficult and hazardous, particularly when
carried out in depth or in exotic terrain such as jungles, mountain or
desert, fell outside the normal range of capabilities expected of a conven-
tional unit. Moreover to take a standard unit and give it the additional

282
WINGATE

training and equipment necessary to perform the specialized mission


seemed a bad bargain, since to do so would pull it away from regular
duties. On top of that there was a powerful elitist factor present in :

the wake of Dunkirk, and with perhaps a psychological need to out- tough
a militaristic and obviously competent foe, it was argued that only the
best - the fittest, the toughest, the wiliest - could successfully endure
the rigors and dangers of special operations. Special forces were seen,
then, as being both elite and special elite because of their highly selective
:

recruitment and arduous training; and special in the military sense


that they performed deep-penetration tasks not regularly assigned to
conventional units.
The Germans, not the British, had been first to try their hand at

special forces in this war. Certainly Nazi ideology appeared to glorify


the notion of war as conducted 'by small teams of young heroes, airmen,
tank-crews, [and] stormtroops . . . "supermen" who would [win] by dar-
ing and violence. . .
.' But the so-called 'Brandenburg' units which the
Nazis formed and employed in Poland in 1939 were essentially saboteurs
operating in civilian clothing. Rather than uniformed soldiers carrying
out direct-action missions, the Brandenburgers remained part of the
Abwehr or intelligence establishment. German faith in the blitzkrieg

and its balanced, all-arms taskforce approach as the decisive element


in ground combat ruled out any substantial expansion of the special-
warfare effort until after Axis military fortunes began to decline.
From the beginning, the British effort was far larger and of a funda-
mentally different character. It commenced in June 1940 on a two-
pronged basis two thousand miles apart. One prong was in Britain itself
and centered around the seaborne light- infantry raiding forces called
Commandos the other was in Egypt, where forces able to penetrate
;

and exploit the desert were formed. The formation of the Commandos
owed much to Churchill's backing and the 'lessons' which he drew
from Pitt's 'conjunct operations' in the age of sail. Churchill also labored
under the misconception that German success in the Battle of France
had been due to the role of elite 'stormtroops' which had ranged against
rear areas, sowing demoralization. With the Battle of Britain about to
begin, he decried his generals' 'dull mass' military constructism and
demanded special units, made up of picked men of the 'hunter class',
who could mount hit-and-run raids against the Axis-held coasts of
Europe. The removal to these units, which were given the Boer War
term 'Commando', of some of the most promising junior officers and
soldiers, only fuelled the animosity with which conventional soldiers

283
WINGATE

regarded the greater publicity and separate establishment accorded these


formed the Special Operations Executive
special forces. Churchill also
(SOE), intended as an instrument for fostering resistance movements
within the Axis-occupied countries. Its purpose, in the Prime Minister's

view, was to make 'stabbing attacks between the chinks of the enemy's
. . .

military and economic armour' - in short, sabotage. (Two years later,


the SOE would serve as a model for the creation, under General William

J. Donovan, of the US Office of Strategic Services (OSS), units of


which Wingate would encounter in Burma.) Thus, Churchill envisioned
in his first weeks as Prime Minister a full and active program of special
operations, ranging from Commando raids to sabotage operations.
But it was the other locus of the special-operations effort, the Middle
Eastern one, that Wavell called Wingate to join. By that time, in Egypt,
where an Italian invasion from Libya appeared imminent, Wavell had
already given his powerful support to desert-explorer Bagnold's plan
to form a special unit called the Long Range Desert Group (LRDG).
These operations in the desert campaign were to prove very successful,
most famously 'L' Detachment, Special Air Service, under Major David
Stirling. But all that was in the future. What Wavell needed to do now
was to add to Italian difficulties in Africa by any means possible. One
of the most immediately available was to expand an already successful
special-operations program under way in Libya. At about the same time
that Wavell directed the LRDG to switch over from intelligence-gather-
ing to an aggressive campaign of 'beat-ups' against enemy outposts in
the interior of the Libyan desert, the necessary steps were completed
to bringabout a native guerrilla war against the Italians in Ethiopia.
This was to be a British-fostered partisan revolt along the lines of
the Arab 'G' Expansion Scheme of five years before. The difference
was that the arena was not Libya but Ethiopia, and the leader not some
Senussi sheikh but the exiled Emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie. The
essence of Wingate's role in this was to be the military advisor and
leader of a guerrilla campaign - in his words, a 'patriot revolt' - centered
around Haile Selassie. The plan was While two British
classically simple.
forces thrust into Italian East Africa from opposite sides, Wingate with
the Emperor would take a column of guerrillas across the Sudanese
border and into Ethiopia. Wingate's immediate goal was to establish
a lodgement in the mountains by which to rally the native tribesmen.
When these had flocked in sufficient numbers to join their emperor,
the whole array would descend upon the capital, Addis Ababa, com-
pounding Italian problems as it proceeded.

284
WINGATE

The execution of the plan taxed Wingate to the fullest. A cadre of


British officers and NCOs arrived to help train the native irregulars.
But Wingate himself had little real authority, the logistical support was
meager, and a bitter rivalry soon developed between Wingate himself
and the other principal British leader.
His campaign commenced in January 1941. Its prospects improved
considerably when news arrived of the dramatic British successes in
the desert campaign far to the north, and Italian morale in East Africa
began to plummet. Wingate's greatest single success occurred when
he, by audacity, determination and considerable logistical improvisation,
employed his Gideon Force to baffle and disrupt the enemy garrisons
blocking the road to Addis Ababa. One by one their key outposts were
abandoned, and the Italians fell back. This effort - not without its analo-
gies to Lawrence's campaigns of 1916-18 in which, at more than one
point, more enemy troops were involved in trying to hunt down the
guerrillas than were actually facing the main British army - helped
open the way for British conventional forces to take back Haile Selassie's
capital from the Italians. When the triumphal re-entry came, early in
May 1941, the fighting for East Africa was largely concluded, although
here and there mopping up continued into the summer.
This triumph preceeded the lowest point of Wingate's life, a point
when he came close to ending his life. Given leave in Cairo (and reduced
from acting colonel back to major), he wrote a blistering report in which
he exposed all the organizational shortcomings that had so hampered
Gideon Force. Not unexpectedly, the report produced a small but power-
ful upheaval at GHQ Middle East. Even Wavell, ever Wingate's friend,
took him to task for the intemperate and bitter tone of the document.
Nor did Wingate's idea for a thrust from the Tibesti Mountains and
north into Libya gain support. In fairness, the plan was not without
its technical flaws. As Wingate explained it to desert explorer Bagnold,

the idea was to use RAF support to sustain a brigade-sized force as


it moved up through the desert. Bagnold pointed out that the air force

lacked the numbers of aircraft needed to make such a plan work. And
although he himself had already sent an LRDG raid into the region,
and General LeClerc's Free French (with LRDG support) would push
into it as the desert campaign drew to a close two years later, there
was no way that Wingate's plan was at that moment supportable.
In any case, Wavell's own days in the Middle East were now at an
end. In June 1941, hard on the heels of the failure of his efforts to
smash Rommel and the German reinforcements sent to shore up what

285
WINGATE

remained of Mussolini's African empire, Wavell was reassigned by


Churchill to become Commander-in-Chief India. Wingate's patron was
gone, removed to a distant theater by order of his other patron, the
Prime Minister. To Wingate's feelings of despondency, rejection and
despair must be added his physical condition. On top of the intense
mental and physical strain of Ethiopia, Wingate was also suffering from
malarial fevers that pushed his temperature up to 104 degrees. Rather
than report to sick-bay and receive the proper attentions of a military
doctor, Wingate chose instead to visit a private physician - on the
grounds that he had to avoid at all costs being shunted off to convales-
cence in some rear area. The result was that he greatly exceeded the
normal dosage of atabrine (quinacrine hydrochloride). For whatever
reason, alone in his hotel room, he finally stabbed himself in the throat
with a sheathknife. He was saved because he fell unconscious before
he could finish the job and, when help arrived, the bleeding was stopped
before it was too late.
Months of recuperation followed, during which he was sent home
to England. By the time a medical board declared him fit for duty again,
his career was once more on its positive slope of fortune. He gave invited
lectures on the Ethiopian campaign (for which he received a bar to
the DSO he had won in Palestine), and was touted for a slot with
the SOE. Friends gained the Prime Minister's promise to make sure
that Wingate received fair treatment from the Army in his next assign-
ment. They need not have worried. In December 1941 there occurred
the event which propelled him into the last phase of his special-warfare
progression and to the final campaign that would claim his life Japan's
:

entry into the war. In the weeks ahead, the forces of Imperial Japan,
having smashed the US Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor and gone on
to take Guam, Wr

ake and other important points, moved forward towards


the conquest of Malaya and the Philippines with seemingly inexorable
momentum. Singapore fell in February 1942. The week before, Wavell
had sent the War Office a radio signal requesting that Wingate be
assigned to his command.
If the subject of that signal, Wingate, had regarded the command
structure for Ethiopia as complex and convoluted, his arrival in this
new theater in March must have given him pause. To begin with, there
were the very different goals of the two principal allies involved, the
United Kingdom and the United States. The chief British objective,
as the Japanese continued to expand westward onto the Asian mainland,
was to ensure the security of India. The Americans, on the other hand,

286
WINGATE

entertained notions that Chiang Kai-shek could be made into a full


partner and his Nationalist Chinese army an effective fighting force.
This might draw enemy forces away from the US Marines spearheading
the central Pacific drive as originally laid out in War Plan Orange,
and might make it possible to use China as a base from which to mount
operations against Japan itself.

But any clash of strategic views was as nothing compared to the clash
of personalities. Were Wingate altogether the egotist and offbeat eccen-
tric his enemies made him out to be, then his arrival into this new

arena put him in good company. Topping the list was the chief American
representative, Lieutenant-General Joseph W. Stilwell. At the age of
sixty, Stilwell was fluent in Chinese and an 'old China Hand' of long

standing. He was also a first-rate tactician whose utter lack of tact placed
him among the poorest choices when it came to the diplomatic task
of waging coalition warfare. His dislike of the British approached the
pathological. Moreover, 'Vinegar Joe' inherited an unworkable com-
mand structure that puthim in charge of (to use the US designation)
the vast China-Burma-India Theater (or CBI). In addition to his CBI
responsibilities (split between the British headquarters at New Delhi
and the Chinese one at Chungking), Stilwell also had simultaneously

to serve as Chiang's chief of staff, administer all US lend-lease aid,


and ensure construction of the Ledo-Burma road as a supply line for
same. Almost from the outset he proved unequal to the task of coping
with high-level administration. He was at his best when in the field
inspiring Chinese soldiers to fight. He did not get on well with Wavell,
before the war regarded as one of the most innovative thinkers in the
British Army but whom Stilwell regarded as being 'tired' and unwilling
to push aggressively against the enemy. The American general affected
an outdated campaign hat and a primitive 'field-soldier' style of living
that transcended even Wingate's. His predilection for spending excessive
amounts of time in the field inspiring Chinese units led one American
officer to complain that Stilwell was 'the best three-star company com-
mander in the whole damn theater'.
Eventually, in reaction to problems with Stilwell and the Chinese
and the shifting strategic fortunes of the theater, the British created
an entity called Southeast Asia Command or SEAC, of which Stilwell
became the deputy. By then Wavell had, of course, been replaced by
General Sir Claude Auchinleck (with whom Churchill had already re-
placed him once before, in June 1941, in Cairo) as Commander-in-Chief
India. Wavell was made Viceroy. As C-in-C, Auchinleck's responsibility

287
WIN GATE

was to train and equip the Indian Army for combat. The actual conduct
of operations against the Japanese was vested in SEAC. The Supreme
Allied Commander for SEAC was Admiral Lord Louis Mount-
in 1943
batten. Although nearly twenty years younger than his American deputy,
the two generally got on well together, Mountbatten being - along with
Wingate - one of the few British officers that Stilwell permitted himself
to respect. But all that was in the future. For the moment, the CBI
theater was one in which the Japanese were on the attack, and the various
high-level figures involved, American and British, were desperate to
sort things out and find some means of stopping them.
Thus when Wingate arrived in March 1942, his orders from Wavell
were to report to the Bush Warfare School and take over guerrilla oper-
ations against the Japanese. He was also restored to his temporary rank
of colonel. Despite its name, the Bush Warfare School was less a school
than an organization for mounting unconventional operations. Wingate
briefly contemplated the insertion of cadres of its British personnel into
China, for the purpose of leading indigenous guerrillas against the Japa-
nese. Indeed, i^xe years before, a US Marine Corps major, Evans Fordyse
Carlson, had been the first Western officer to slip through the Japanese
lines and reach Mao Tse-tung's force of Chinese Communist guerrillas.
Carlson's detailed report, which reached President Roosevelt, not only
inspired interest in guerrilla schemes in China but also assisted Carlson's
proposal to form special battalions of Marine Raiders (of which he com-
manded one, with the President's son, James, as his executive officer).
British and American under SOE, OSS and Naval
guerrilla cadres,
Group-China auspices, would over the next two years undertake oper-
ations in China.
But the immediate and essential requirement was to stop the Japanese
in Burma. In the wake of the fall of Rangoon and just before the disas-
trous retreat of British and Chinese forces (two divisions under Stilwell)
from Burma in May, W ingate carried out a detailed reconnaissance
r

of as much of the country as he could. This reconnaissance became


7

the basis of Wingate's theory of how to beat the Japanese. His thinking
at this point was a logical extension of his experiences with the Special

Night Squads and Gideon Force. It also reflected an important shift:


he no longer wanted control of mere guerrilla operations conducted
behind enemy lines he wanted instead to create special long-range
;

penetration forces that would slip into Burma to maraud, ambush and
stir up trouble in enemy rear areas. These 'Long Range Penetration

Groups', as he contemplated them, would like guerrillas rely on the

288
WINGATE

tactic of hit-and-run. The units themselves, however, would be made


up not of guerrillas, with their free and easy ways, but of soldiers acting
with the discipline, training and reliability of regular formations.
Wingate recognized that possession of Burma gave the Japanese not
just access to the world's largest rice exports, but also drove a wedge
between India and China. But Burma's geography looked promising
for the sort of operation he had in mind. Three principal north-south
river systems drained south out of valleys cut in mountain and hill-range
ramparts: in the east, closest to China and to Thailand, the Salween;
in the center the Irrawaddy; and in the west, closest to India, the Chind-
win. One aspect of all this seemed particularly obvious to Wingate:
any Japanese effort to effect a major breakthrough along the 700-mile
India-Burma front would have to be fed by supply lines that used these
river valleys these supply lines were therefore vulnerable provided they
;

could be reached. To put together a force capable of operating deep


in enemy rear areas meant, however, removing men and resources from
the conventional effort; there was resistance. Wingate's ability to per-
suade Wavell, still the C-in-C and as supportive of unorthodoxy as
ever, proved the essential element in overcoming opposition. In the end
he got most of what he wanted. The Long Range Penetration Groups
were the result. They were given the formal tide of 77 Indian Infantry
Brigade, with Wingate as their brigadier.
These 3,000 men were the troops that eventually became known as
the 'Chindits' - an anglicized mispronunciation of the term for the
statuary lions that guarded Burmese temples. Wingate's original idea
was that his unit should be made up solely of volunteers. When it proved
impracticable to man his entire force in this way (although volunteers
from the Bush Warfare School did form the nucleus), he accepted exist-
ing units and set out to meld them into one organization. In this way
he took a battalion each from the Burma Rifles, the Gurkhas, and the
King's Liverpool Regiment. Wingate spent the summer of 1942 training
this force for an operation originally intended for the late autumn. It
was Stilwell's intention to push the Chinese to attack down into north
Burma, while at the same time British sea, air and land forces would
attack into the central and southern zones of Burma. The role of the
Chindits would be to support both the Chinese and the British efforts
by disrupting the Japanese lines of communication. Wingate divided
his force into separate columns, conditioned them to the jungle's harsh-
ness by a relentless program of forced marches, and practiced the radio
co-ordination and receipt of the air-dropped supplies by which each

289
WINGATE

column would be sustained behind the lines.


By the time he was ready to go, the operation was on the back burner.
There were a variety of reasons: Chiang's heel-dragging; the lack of
progress of the British offensive into south Burma and the claims of
;

Stilwell's supposed subordinate, Major-General Claire Chennault,


USAAF, famous as the founder of the Thing Tigers', that airpower
rendered a ground offensive unnecessary. In two hours of discussion,
however, Wingate persuaded Wavell to let him go ahead with the Chindit
part of the plan. In the final analysis, it was his argument that such
an attack would divert the enemy and help to buy time that carried
the moment.
And so, early in 1943, the Chindit columns, supported by pack mules
and even elephants, began slipping into enemy territory. Three months
later (and some eight hundred men fewer) they returned, having
molested the Japanese all the way to the far side of Burma's second
river, the Irrawaddy. The key rail line linking Mandalay to the interior

town of Myitkyina was cut in a number of locations. Not only was that
important artery severed (if only briefly), but a full program of ambushes,
mines implanted, and sudden attacks plagued the whole Japanese road-
and-trail network through which it ran. When the enemy set off in
pursuit, the Chindit columns - their moves co-ordinated by Wingate
by radio - slipped off into a new part of the jungle. At the point when
they had crossed the Irrawaddy, however, luck and the men's strength
began to wane. Hunger, thirst and disease rather than enemy action
at last forced Wingate to order the move back to India. Only by breaking

up into small groups and swimming first the Irrawaddy and then the
Chindwin was the enemy cordon evaded. Those too sick or too wounded
to keep up were - in accordance with the Chindits' hard rule - left
behind in the jungle.
Wingate, emaciated, bearded, wearing his battered pith helmet and
lugging a rifle and a map case, emerged from the jungle to find himself
and his men heroes. Press coverage gave full play to these men who
had raided deep into enemy territory and survived to tell the tale. The
Prime Minister was so taken with Wingate's feat that he wanted him
made the commander of the whole British offensive into Burma.
Wingate, he said, 'is a man of genius and audacity . .and no mere
.

question of seniority must obstruct the advance of real personalities


to their proper stations in war'. And while the CIGS and his staff
finallydissuaded him from making such an appointment, they could
only acquiesce in Churchill's insistence that Wingate be flown back

290
WINGATE

immediately for a private meeting.


This was the immediate backdrop to Churchill's decision to take
Wingate to Quebec in August 1943. When Wingate got back to London
and had his meeting, so powerful was the impression he made that
the Prime Minister decided on the spot that the Chindit leader must
be taken to the Quadrant Conference so that the Americans could see
him. Arrangements were made forthwith so that Mrs Wingate could
accompany her husband as part of the official party travelling across
the Atlantic aboard the Queen Mary. On the sea journey Wingate honed
his new plan for an expanded long-range penetration effort in Burma.
This time the Chindits would vault over the enemy, flying in by transport
plane and glider rather than walking in as before. His idea was to insert
behind the enemy eight full brigades, which would use their engineers
to clear jungle airstrips. A line of strongholds, kept fed and munitioned
by airdrop, would be established in Burma's river valleys. These pos-
itions would be held against enemy counter-attack other groups of
;

Chindits, lurking outside the barbed-wire perimeters, would be available


to fallupon the Japanese from behind even as they attacked. By the
time the party arrivedat Quebec, Wingate, put through his paces by

the CIGS and other senior officers, had evolved his plan to the point
that he was more than ready to take on any doubters in the American
camp.
For that reason - and because his plan seemed a good compromise
between ChurchilPs proposal for a thrust towards Singapore and the
Americans' counterproposal for retaking Burma to secure land commu-
nications with China - Wingate's briefing met with success. His plan
also appeared to provide a way of waging warfare on the cheap, when
both allies increasingly felt their resources being drawn to other fronts.
The Americans pledged themselves to provide the bulk of the aircraft
and gliders needed to support the airborne component of Wingate's
concept. They committed themselves as well to providing a 'good faith
intention' ground element. This was the force, of brigade size, that
was designated 'Galahad' and later called the 5307th Composite Unit
and, later still, 'Merrill's Marauders'. It would be organized and trained
by Chindits along Chindit lines, and sent into combat in early 1944.
As to the air component which the Americans promised to provide,
this comprised, in addition to the glider-towing C-47S and light liaison
aircraft, an actual close -support striking element - thirty P-51 Mustang
fighter-bombers and twenty B-25 Mitchell medium bombers. The
whole force, consisting of nearly 300 aircraft, was designated No. 1

291
WINGATE

Air Commando, US Army Air Forces. Its commander was a fighter


pilot with experience in North Africa, thirty-year-old Colonel Philip
Cochran.
Cochran, who had been handpicked by the USAAF's chief, General
Henry H. Arnold, did not meet Wingate in person until a month after
Quadrant. He was at first suspicious of the Chindit leader. A short,
cocky 'hot pilot', Cochran had sung in a dance band during his fraternity
days at Ohio State University he ; initially affected trouble understanding
Wingate's 'exaggerated' British accent. In subsequent meetings, how-
ever, the two achieved a meeting of minds that produced a rare harmony
of co-operation between air and ground efforts. The importance of

the Air Commando to Wingate's fortunes was immense. Without the


planes his force remained essentially light infantry raiders with nothing
in the way of hitting power beyond the weapons they carried in their
own hands. With them, the Chindit columns had at their disposal a

flying artillery which could be radioed down to fall upon any Japanese
position that stood in their way.
Wingate, meanwhile, set about preparing his ground force for the
push into Burma; 77 Brigade remained the nucleus of this expanded
effort. Joining the original Chindits were some six additional brigades
as well as separate forces or detachments; the whole, supported by artil-

lery and the USAAF No. 1 Air Commando, became officially 'Special

Force', or 3rd Indian Infantry Division. In view of the expanded size


of the Chindit enterprise, Wingate was given the rank of an acting
major-general. He divided the command-and-control apparatus of
Special Force into Rear, Main, Launching, and Tactical Headquarters
elements, of which this last, the Tactical Headquarters, would of course
go into Burma with the columns.
Wingate's Second Chindit expedition was set for spring 1944. It was
to be one part of a three-part operation. In the north, Stilwell's Chinese
divisions (X Force) were to thrust into Burma from India, covering
engineers who constructed both a road and an oil-carrying pipeline.
In the south, the British XV Corps, commanded by Lieutenant-General
command of the Fourteenth Army),
William Slim (soon to be elevated to
would push and the British IY Corps would advance
into the Arakan,
across the Chindwin. The role of Special Force was to support both
Stilwell and Slim by the establishment of air-supplied strongholds
astride the key Japanese supply lines. Other forces would fan out to
raid and disrupt. Galahad, initially under the control of Special Force,
was tobe passed to Stilwell, who would likewise use it in Chindit-like

292
WINGATE

missions on his own front. The main


goal of Special Force was to
establish a force in the enemy one that, because of its air resupply,
rear,

could be sustained against even the most concerted enemy counter-


attacks. It was Wingate's contention - anathema to the ears of more
conventional soldiers - that the Chindit presence, permanently main-
tained rather than merely hit-and-run raiders and so deep in the vitals
of the enemy, would engender paralysis. Overall control of the whole
offensive, including X Force, Galahad, Chindits and the two army corps,
would be carried by Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten, newly arrived
as Supreme Allied Commander, SEAC.
In the event, while these preparations were being made, the Japanese
themselves gave thought to offensive operations. Concluding that
Wingate's First Chindit expedition of the previous spring had been only
the preliminary move to a British offensive to retake Burma, the Japanese
decided to mount a spoiling attack into north-west India. Such an attack
would buy time and perhaps also stoke the fires of the Indian nationalist
movement. Another Japanese offensive would thrust up from Burma
towards the east China air bases from which Chennault's bombers were
now able to threaten Japan itself.
The Allies' second offensive into Burma opened in February 1944.
Three months Galahad - or what was left of it - took the airfield
later,

at Myitkyina. Three months later still, the Japanese finally evacuated


the town of Myitkyina itself, after some of the hardest fighting of the
campaign. In this grand climax to the campaign, Stilwell had won his
objective. And in those same months, while the Chindits were airlifted
into establishing their strongholds in Myitkyina, endured privations,
fought the Japanese in a score of battles, and reached and then far
exceeded the agreed limit for time spent in the jungle, the Japanese
themselves mounted two offensives. One objective, far to the north,
was Chennault's forward airfields in eastern China those they easily
;

reached. The other objective was Imphal, just across the Indian border
from Burma. Slim, now Fourteenth Army commander, used a kind
of draw play to lure the Japanese into the flat terrain around the town.
He was able to use his superiority in supporting areas to fight battles
of annihilation. In the hard fighting for Imphal and Kohima to the
north, the Japanese wasted their strength in the end, they had to with-
;

draw back into Burma. This made possible new Allied offensives, one
against the Burma Road itself, and, early in 1945, Slim's push to retake
Mandalay and then Rangoon itself. These various battles resulted in
the annihilation of an entire Japanese field army. By that time, of course,

293
WINGATE

Stilwell had been relieved, both the Chindits and Galahad been dis-
banded, and Wingate was long since dead, killed just three weeks after
Special Force had commenced its airlift.

Given the controversy that Wingate so often attracted, what, in the end,
had his contribution to this final outcome really been ? First of all, as
the general who achieved the victory in a theater often forgotten by
the people at home, it would seem reasonable to begin with the assessment
provided by Field-Marshal Sir William Slim. Commenting some years
after thewar on the whole issue of special forces, Slim stated that 'The
last war spawned a surprising number of special units and forma-
[had]
tions each trained, equipped, and prepared for some particular type
. . .

of operation. These did not give, militarily, a worthwhile return for


the resources in men, material and time that they absorbed.' Such groups
became 'super-soldiers' they consumed good men, scarce equipment,
;

and generous amounts of training time, yet carried out only a limited
number of operations. This induced a kind of cult of special forces
and jealousy in non-special ones, and reinforced the notion that only
units of this type could be used for certain operations. The overall
effectwas 'undoubtedly to lower the quality of the rest of the army
- both by skimming the cream off it, but [also] by encouraging the
idea that only specially equipped corps d'elite could be expected to
undertake . . . those most obviously demanding and hazardous missions,
such as long-range penetration.'
Slim's words have been more word on
or less accepted as the last
the subject ever since. And would seem to overlook several
yet they
specific contributions of Special Force and its Chindits. Wingate's forces
successfully forced the Japanese, at least for a time, to keep their forces
divided. His First Chindit campaign in 1943 managed to tie down the
best part of two Japanese divisions. In 1944, his Special Force, plus
the actions of the Chinese and Galahad in the north, kept a full enemy
division busy and not available for the thrust towards Imphal. And if

Slim first turned the tables on the Japanese when he lured them into
the offensive against Imphal, it must be remembered that they had the
year before resolved to make such attack only when the First Chindit
thrust into Burma had convinced them of the need for a pre-emptive
strike.

Moreover, many of the methods and tactics which Slim used in the
attainment of a victory by his conventional forces had been evolved

294
WINGATE

and practiced by Special Force. Special forces are useful laboratories


for tactical experimentation what works for them may prove to have
;

application on a wider basis. Both the air resupply effort which so aided
Slim around Imphal, as well as the techniques for coping with Japanese
roadblocks, had earlier been perfected and practiced extensively by the
Chindits.
In addition, the First Chindit campaign did much to break the spell
of Japanese invincibility in the jungle. The standard formation, it was
true, had to learn to beat the enemy on their own terms, but the overall
effect of the Chindits was to encourage the whole army. Special Force
was an early means of bringing troops to bear on the enemy, when
the geography and road network of Burma offered no other alternative.
This was possible because Wingate had achieved a workable appli-
cation of special operations to the jungle environment of Burma. His
thinking had passed through the evolutionary stages of the Special Night
Squads, Gideon Force in Ethiopia, and come to the situation in Burma.
He grasped that the need was less that of using indigenous partisan
groups, such as were employed by the SOE and OSS units which sup-
ported Special Force; instead, the need was to have standard units
carry out guerrilla tactics. Wingate sensed that the Japanese Army, only
partially mechanized in the European fashion, had perfected in its long
bitter campaign in China a robust light-infantry approach which it had
successfully adapted to jungle warfare. At the same time, its frugality
did not free it altogether from the tether of its supply lines. Just as
Lawrence in the desert against the Turks had seen that '[a]rmies were
like plants . . . firm-rooted, nourished through long stems . . .', so
Wingate saw that the Japanese 'long stems' ran up through Burma's
river valleys. In the First Chindit operation he had raided against these.
In the Second, his thinking had progressed to a much larger role. Sus-
tained by air, Special Force would set its barbed-wire fortresses in the
jungle astride these enemy supply routes and strangle them.
No other special operations endeavor of the war rivalled in scale
or ambition the one that Wingate successfully argued before presidents
and prime ministers. No other special force leader achieved the rank
of general officer and controlled twenty thousand men in the field and
in the enemy's rear. What Wingate put together gave the Allies an expan-
sion of capability. It made central and northern Burma into an additional
arena, rather than keeping Allied operations restricted to the immediate
India-Burma front.
What Wingate did cannot be measured merely in numbers ofJapanese

295
WINGATE

troops tied down or in tonnages of supplies intercepted on the enemy's


lines of communication. His role was greater; it might have been greater
had he not been killed. Among the components of Wingate's general-
still

ship were detailed planning, the ability to get the plan across and inspire
men to risk their lives in earning it out, and a vision of how to employ
a radio-based command-and-control system that made full exploitation
of Allied airpower. Where Wingate was flawed was at the level that
military officers today usually refer to as the 'operational art' - the level,
that between tactics, with its focus upon a single battle or engagement
is,

and the employment of relatively small forces, and the overall level
of strategy, with its focus upon the playing out of the war within a
particular theater. The operational art, rather, concentrates upon specific
campaigns and the employment of forces larger than a single division
in order to achieve outcomes useful to the overall strategy. It is thus
a sort of bridge between tactics and strategy. The reason that Wingate's
generalship must be regarded as being flawed at the operational level
is that he fundamentally misjudged Japanese vulnerabilities to his plan

for 1944. There is no evidence to suggest that Japanese operational capa-


bilities were terminally crippled by the very costly insertion of Special

Force so deep in their rear.


Where Wingate's generalship approached genius was at the strategic
level of seeing and contributing a way whereby the Japanese could be
made to fail. The fact that conventional military means eventually
triumphed over the Japanese suggests that Wingate's approach, with
its high demands in resources and men, will always remain a contro-

versial one. His special gift was the combination of clarity of vision,
character, and charm (often reserved only for the powerful) that enabled
him to put his ideas across forcefully and persuasively in the highest
circles. His ability- to think in terms of employing special forces to achieve

strategic ends, and to exert command of those forces in the field, has
not since been matched.

CHRONOLOGY: ORDE WINGATE


1903, February 26 Born at Naini Tal, United Provinces, India
1916 Enters Charterhouse School
1921 Enters Royal Military Academy, Woolwich
1923, August Commissioned into Royal Artillery

1926, October War Office-sponsored Arabic language course, School


of Oriental Studies, London

296
WINGATE

1928, April Company commander, Sudan Defence Force


1929, June First-class interpretership in Arabic

1932, February Royal Geographical Society camel expedition to find


'lost oasis' of Zerzura in Libyan Desert
1935, January Returns to England. Marries Lorna Paterson
1935, December Adjutant, 71 Field (Artillery) Brigade, Territorial Army,
Sheffield. Passes examination for Staff College but fails
to gain admission

1936 Joins British forces in Palestine. Organizes Special


Night Squads. DSO and mentioned in dispatches
1938, November 30 Meets Churchill for first time

1940, November Appointed military advisor and leader of guerrilla


campaign in Ethiopia

1941, January Ethiopian campaign begins. Wingate employs Gideon


Force
i94i,May5 Victorious entry to Addis Ababa. Receives bar to DSO
i94i,July4 Attempts suicide, Continental Hotel room, Cairo
Returns to England for medical recuperation
1942, March 22 Arrives in Burma, with rank of Colonel, to begin
unconventional operations training at Bush Warfare

School, Maymyo
1942, July 77 Indian Brigade formed (later known as Chindits),
with Wingate as Brigadier
1943, February First Chindit expedition commences (three months
behind Japanese lines)

1943, August Awarded second bar to DSO


1943, August 5 Churchill takes Wingate to Quebec for Allied
conference (Quadrant) and presentations before
Roosevelt, Marshall, Mountbatten and Combined
Chiefs of Staff
1943, September In charge of Special Force, including enlarged Chindit
forces; made acting Major-General
1944, February 5 Second Chindit expedition begins, one part of a three-
part operation with Stilwell and Slim
1944, March 24 Killed in jungle air crash behind Japanese lines

297
i6

SLIM
Field-Marshal Lord Slim

DUNCAN ANDERSON

While he was Governor-General of Australia Field-Marshal Lord Slim


wrote Defeat into Victory, an account of the Burma campaign of 1942-45.
It was a publishing sensation. The first edition of 20,000 sold out within

a few days. Defeat into Victor)' was quite unlike the memoirs produced
by other generals in the aftermath of 1945. The reader looked in vain
for a 'Great Captain' striding across the stage of history, deploying
accordance with some brilliantly conceived and imple-
his divisions in
mented masterplan. Instead he encountered an ordinary man, one often
assailed by self-doubt, who made mistakes (sometimes with near-disas-
trous consequences) and did not consider himself particularly brave.
Slim attributed his success to others. He claimed that he had simply
had the good fortune to lead an exceptionally able 'team' - by which
he meant the entire Fourteenth Army.
After its publication in 1956, Defeat into Victory was accepted as the
classic account of the Burma campaign. Despite, or perhaps because
of, his characteristic modesty and understatement, Slim was rapidly
elevated to the status of military hero. The Official History of 1958
pronounced Slim almost solely responsible for the victory of 1945. James
Lunt, a veteran and recent historian of the Burma campaign, went one
step further by comparing Slim favourably with Cromwell. Slim had

298
SLIM

all the latter's military virtues but 'certainly more humour, and I suspect,
more humanity'. Comparisons of a similar order have been made by
Sir Geoffrey Evans and Ronald Lewin, both of whom wrote full accounts
of Slim's career. Slim possessed all the qualities that the ancient Chinese
philosopher Sun Tzu had outlined for his 'Heaven-born captain' -
the ever-victorious general.
Slim would probably have been embarrassed by the hagiographic ten-
dencies of his later biographers. He is now so thoroughly enshrined
in the pantheon of great generals that it becomes hard to square his
present reputation with the lukewarm reception he met with on his return
to England in 1945. Montgomery and Alexander were the men of the
moment, elevated in the popular imagination by a sustained publicity
campaign. When Alfred Wagg's A Million Died appeared in 1943 - the
book on the Burma campaign - Slim warranted no more than an
first

amusing passing anecdote, but an entire chapter was devoted to Alex-


ander as the proclaimed hero of the retreat. Wagg's book established
a pattern of historical interpretation. There were books on Stilwell,
Mountbatten, Wingate and the Chindits, but none on Slim, who
appeared only as a footnote to the lives of others. The film industry
followed suit. During the first fifty minutes of Burma Victory, screened
in November 1945, familiar faces flash onto the screen - Mountbatten
raises morale, Wingate plays hob with the Japanese communications,
Stilwill takes Myitkyina and builds the road, Leese plans the offensive.
Slim makes a brief appearance in the film's last ten minutes, but the
producer has felt it necessary to supply a potted history explaining just
who Slim is and the role he played in Burma. Returning veterans of
the Fourteenth Army sitting in the audience were puzzled by what they
felt was a complete distortion of the scenes they had actually witnessed,
not least by the minor walk-on part ascribed to Slim. They knew from
their experiences that Slim had been the vital presence responsible for
the real-life 'Burma Victory'.
The celluloid industry is notorious for its distortions of historical
reality, but Burma Victory merely mirrored the interpretation of events
accepted in the corridors of power. On 6 April, just after Slim had
won a crushing victory at Meiktila, Churchill wrote to his wife that
'Dicky, reinforced by General Oliver Leese, has done wonders in
Burma.' A not unreasonable tribute, apart from the fact that one very
obvious name was missing. Churchill had arrived at a fixed view of
the Burma campaign, in which Slim played little part. Alexander had
brought the Army out of Burma in 1942, Orde Wingate had breathed

299
SLIM

life and fight into it in 1943 and 1944, and Dicky' Mountbatten and
'

Oliver Leese had planned and executed its brilliant offensives in 1945.
For much of the war Churchill had been only dimly aware of Slim's
existence - and what he did hear was probably not particularly favour-
able. He had thought highly of Wingate, whom he had selected for
high command in the Far East, and took the news of his death on
24 March 1944 very badly. 'This is a very heavy blow to me, for you
know how much I have counted on this man of genius, who might
well have been a man of destiny.' His opinion of the far less flamboyant
Slim was very different. The following summer, when Alanbrooke pro-
posed that Slim should be promoted to command ALFSEA, Churchill
replied, with a quip redolent of Samuel Johnson 'I cannot believe that
:

a man with a name like Slim can be much good.' It was said in jest,
but revealed a certain state of mind. Slim had not been one of Churchill's
generals.
Itwas one thing for a general to escape popular recognition, another
for him to be overlooked by the very man responsible for keeping his
finger on the pulse in wartime Britain. To understand Slim's low profile
at this time we need, however briefly, to reject the perspective of Defeat

into Victory : here Slim, writing with hindsight, tended to view his early
disappointments and failures as the necessary prelude to his later success,

part of the learning process which ultimately made him the general
that he became. It is all when Wingate was killed
too easy to forget that
in March 1944 Slim had only one victory to his credit, a minor action
against the Vichy French in Syria in July 1940, and that the list of
his defeats was very long. Slim's personal faith in his Army was more
than counterbalanced by the serious doubts voiced in Whitehall: and
when success finally did come, it was easier for the government to attri-
bute that success to the new men they had appointed - Leese and Mount-
batten. Only one anecdote survives from Slim and Churchill's first
meeting in the summer of 1945. In a mood of post-lunch expansiveness,
Churchill was holding forth on his chances in the forthcoming general
election when Slim punctuated his speech with the laconic comment,
'Well, prime minister, I know one thing. My army won't be voting for
you.' Churchill had been sufficiently impressed by the man not to allow
party politics to interfere with his judgement, and went on to appoint
him C-in-C Allied Land Forces South East Asia. But his recognition
of Slim's qualities had come very late in the day.
Slim was very different from Churchill's other generals. Unlike Alex-
ander, Alanbrooke and Auchinleck, he was not a scion of the Anglo-Irish

300
SLIM

ascendancy, nor could he trace his singularly unimpressive family name


back into the annals of the Norman conquest, as could Montgomery
and Wavell. His father was a Birmingham ironmonger, and Bill Slim,
like many a bright son of a lower-middle -class family with aspirations,
gained a scholarship at the local grammar school. His first job was
that of teacher in an elementary school in the slum districts of Birm-
ingham, followed by a post as junior clerk in a metal-tubing firm. It

was precisely the wrong kind of background from which to embark


on an army career. Had he been higher up the social scale, Sandhurst
and a commission as an officer would have been a natural and well-worn
path to tread. Had he been a working-class lad, he could have joined
up as a private soldier. But although young men from the respectable
lower-middle class had little to do at this time with the regular army,
many of them did have an intense interest in military affairs. Slim,
like many of his peer group, had been brought up on popular military

histories, had served in his school cadet corps and had continued part-
time military activity almost as a matter of course in a territorial unit
- in Slim's case Birmingham University's OTC. Slim, and the hundreds
him, greeted the outbreak of war in August 1914 with enthusiasm.
like

War meant temporary commissions as second lieutenants and escape


from the deadly routine of the junior clerk. Most of Slim's contempor-
aries in the OTC did not survive the war : thosewho did were usually
so sickened by the experience that they severed all connections with
the army.
Slim was fortunate in having a 'good' war. In July and August 1915
he had seen eighteen days' intense fighting with the Warwicks at Galli-
poli, had been severely wounded, and had been laid up in England

until the autumn of 1916. He had then been sent to Mesopotamia and
saw another four months' active service until in March 1917 he was
wounded in an action for which he was awarded the MC. He was then
invalided to India where he spent the war as GSO3 at Army HQwith
the rank of acting captain. Slim had acquitted himself well in combat,
but the periods of action, although intense, were not prolonged. More-
over, he had been at Gallipoli when morale was still high and victory
seemed attainable. He had arrived in Mesopotamia just at the point
at which the new commander General Sir Frederick Maude was getting

a grip on an army demoralized by the fall of Kut-el-Amara. Slim later


wrote: 'Maude was in charge and there was not a man in the Force
who did not feel the renewed energy and hope that were vitalizing the
whole army. To watch an army recovering morale is enthralling; to

301
SLIM

feel the process working within oneself is an unforgettable experience.


Once again victor}' seemed within reach, and it was. Maude went on
the offensive on 13 December 1916, Kut was retaken on
23 February
and Baghdad fell on 11 March. It had been a very different experience
from the bloody stalemate of the Western Front.
Slim had proved a good junior officer. His physical courage was
amply demonstrated by leading his men in headlong charges against
heavily defended Turkish positions. The injur}- he received at Gallipoli
by rights should have crippled him for life, but, as his biographer Ronald
Lewin points out, his year-long struggle to overcome his debility attests
to both his physical and moral stamina. Slim also revealed a natural
talent as a manager of men. The first story in his Unofficial History,
'The Incorrigible Rogue', gives the reader some insight into Slim's
techniques. Many officers would have dismissed the 'rogue', the ex-
tramp Richard Chuck, as a hopeless case. He does the bare legal mini-
mum of work and presents an exterior of dumb insolence and stupidity,
to the extent that his platoon commander wants him discharged as men-
tally deficient. But Slim perseveres with the man: he recognizes that

Chuck is playing a clever game in order to secure a medical discharge,


and lets him know he is on to him. From this point a mutual respect

develops - there are many similarities between them. Both men loathe
k
military bull', both have a profound contempt for staff officers whose
rigid adherence to routine makes the proper business of the soldier
more difficult, and Slim turns a blind eye to Chuck's numerous infrac-
tions of military discipline. Chuck is never a 'good soldier', but Slim
creates in his the conditions in which Chuck can emerge as
company
man. There was many a Richard Chuck in Slim's
a first-rate fighting
company - unwilling conscripts who had no desire to fight. Slim's
management of them was an excellent testimony to his qualities as a
junior officer.
All this was impressive, but scarcely exceptional. At the end of the
war there were hundreds of gallant and competent junior officers like
Slim who had come from non-military backgrounds and who now
wished to continue with military careers. Many were to be disappointed.
In 1916 as a means of staying on in the post-war Army Slim had trans-
ferred to the West India Regiment, the only regular unit in which it
was reported an officer without means could live on his pay. But Britain
had another Army, the Indian, in which this was also possible; here
advancement might be secured even by an officer from the lower middle
classes of Birmingham. In March 1917, after being wounded for the

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SLIM

second time, Slim had been invalided and had been employed
to India,
as GSO3 on the staff. He had worked professionally, had impressed
his superiors, and in February 1919, in the face of War Office objections
as to its impropriety, he transferred to the Indian Army.
The next twenty years can be quickly summarized 1920-26 Adjutant :

6th Gurkhas 1926-28 student at Staff College, Quetta 1929-33 Staff


; ;

Officer, Army HQ; 1934-36 Indian Army DS Staff College, Camberley;

1937 student, Imperial Defence College; 1938 lieutenant-colonel 7th


Gurkhas; 1939 commandant, Senior Officers School, Belgaum. How
should one interpret this career? It contains three different kinds of
postings: regimental, staff and education, both as a student and an
instructor. Slim's appointment to the 6th Gurkhas was the longest period
of regimental soldiering in his career. It served to integrate him into
the Indian Army - he learned its languages and customs. Operations
on the North West Frontier, although of little apparent relevance to
modern warfare, also gave him valuable combat experience.
additional
The periods on the staff (adding up to more than seven years if one

includes his employment during the closing phases of the First World
War) gave him a profound insight into administrative problems. Unlike
many successful generals who seem to take administrative and logistic
support for granted, Slim in later years always took pains to ensure
that his staff officers knew that their contributions had been invaluable.
In his educational appointments Slim was both a good student and a
good teacher - he could absorb large quantities of information and
analyse it with subtiety. But although he had a good analytical mind,
there is no evidence that Slim was at the forefront of military innovation
during the 1920s and thirties. His biographer, Ronald Lewin, mentions
that Slim met the armoured warfare theorist Percy Hobart at Quetta
in 1926, but the recollections he records of contemporaries at Camberley
and later at the Imperial Defence College would suggest that Slim was
viewed as a something of an old-fashioned traditionalist. What does
emerge is once again Slim's ability to manage men - this time in the
role of communicator. Even those who regarded his lectures on warfare
on the North West Frontier as outmoded still praised the style of their
delivery. Slim was less interested in the theory than the reality of war
less concerned with speculating how he might employ future develop-
ments in military equipment than with making the best out of what
was currendy available.
Despite a solid and impressive track record, Slim's lieutenant-
colonelcy came late in the day. He was already in his forty-seventh

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SLIM

year and only the intervention of General Sir John Coleridge, whom
Slim had first met at 1917 and who was now GOC Northern
Army HQJn
Command India, swung the board in his favour. Other officers in the
Indian Army with exemplary First World War records had achieved
as much, and perhaps more than Slim - men such as Christopher Maltby,
Lewis Heath, John Smyth and Arthur Barstow. But their careers had
ended less fortunately; Maltby and Heath languished in Japanese capti-
vity, Barstow had been killed during the retreat to Singapore, and Smyth

had been relieved of command after the disaster at the Sittang bridge.
Slim's relatively slow career progress, paradoxically, proved ultimately
lucky. Those of his contemporaries who enjoyed rapid promotion found
themselves suddenly facing the onslaught of a first-rate enemy, whereas

Slim, during the months of the war, was consigned to back-


first thirty

waters. His opponents - the forces of the Italian and French empires,
and the Persian Army - were reluctant to fight. Although a number
of actions occurred - Ethiopia between November 1940 and January
1941, Syria in July 1941, and Persia a month later - they were not of
sufficient seriousness to jeopardize the outcome of war. Mistakes could
be made without serious consequences, and these thirty months proved
an invaluable training exercise.
Slim's first command was the newly formed 10 Brigade, destined
to become part of 5th Indian Division. After eleven months' basic training
at Jhansi in Uttar Pradesh, in August 1940 10 Brigade was ordered
to the Sudan. Three months later it launched the first British offensive
of the war, an attack to retake the fort of Gallabat, captured by the
Italians back injury, and to capture the neighbouring fortress of Metema,
just inside the Ethiopian border. For Slim it was a vitally important
This was the first time he had overall control.
battle in every respect.
Anthony Eden, Secretary of War, had personally wished him luck while
on a recent visit to Khartoum, and Slim, still an obscure brigadier,
felt the full psychological pressure of his new responsibilities.
Things went badly wrong. Serious mistakes were made - not least
by Major-General Lewis Heath, the divisional commander, who insisted
on replacing an Indian battalion by a British battalion in each of his
brigades. Slim found himself commanding the 1st Essex, who lacked
the experience of training alongside Indian forces and were unable to
shake off the attitudes acquired by years of colonial policing. At first
success seemed possible a surprise aerial attack by the available handful
:

of Wellesley bombers and Gladiator fighters was backed up by a twelve-


tank squadron which advanced to take Gallabat. But even this success

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was deceptive. Nine of the twelve tanks were knocked out by mines
or hidden boulders - something which could have been avoided by
a proper reconnoitering of the ground in advance. Several tank crew
members were shot by the advancing Garhwalis, who were unfamiliar
with the tankers' uniform and mistook them for the Italian enemy. Slim's
armoured force had been put out of action by his own infantry.
The assault on Metema was the next phase of the operation. When
the ist Essex moved forward and crowded into Gallabat, the fort became
a sitting target for Italian bombers and fighters - a possibility Slim should
have anticipated. His own aircover, sporadic at best owing to poor liaison
with the RAF, was rapidly wiped out. Despite Slim's efforts to keep
his men together, Essex battalion panicked and fled. Bitter recrimina-
tions followed. Slim had relieved the commanding officer, but Essex
officers blamed the battalion's dishonour on Slim's poor planning and
bore him a long-lasting grudge. Slim accepted full responsibility. He
blamed himself for lacking the initiative to attempt a further assault
on Metema with his two remaining battalions: Metema garrison, he
reasoned, was probably just as badly shaken as the Essex and hence
vulnerable to attack. As he later pointed out, he had 'taken counsel
of his fears' at this time. On learning that Metema garrison had been
on the very point of surrendering, he resolved to be more bold in the
future.
The disaster at Gallabat might have ruined Slim's career once and
for all - but within the space of six months he found himself acting
major-general in command of his own division. His promotion was
the result of a series of fortunate accidents, set in train by a near disaster.
In mid-January 1941 Slim was wounded in an Italian strafing attack.
He was evacuated back to India and relegated, as he saw it, to the
staff, where he was employed in preparing contingency plans in the
event of Iraq's defection to the Axis. The came on 2 May when
crisis

elements of Iraq's Army loyal to the pro-Axis prime minister attacked


the British base at Basra; an expeditionary force under Lieutenant-
General Quinan was despatched from India, and Auchinleck chose Slim
to act as his chief of staff. Within days of Slim's arrival the commander
of one of Quinan's divisions, the 10th Indian, fell ill, and on 15 May
Quinan appointed Slim to the unexpected vacancy.
Slim commanded the 10th Indian Division for a little over ten months.
It was a happy time for him. There were no repeats of Gallabat, and

his former humiliating experiences at the hands of Italian colonial troops


the previous November had taught him to adopt a more aggressive

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SLIM

approach in battle. Within six weeks of his appointment he led the ioth
in a successful attack on the Vichy French colonial garrison at Dier-ez-
Zor in eastern Syria. Working closely with his brigade commanders
he devised a daring two-pronged assault - a thrust from the south against
the most heavily defended sector of the town, while another column
made a wide sweep through the desert and attacked the less heavily
defended northern side. Communication with the column proved diffi-
cult and logistics were nightmarish. At a critical moment the column
actually ran out of fuel and movement was only maintained by draining
petrol from vehicles on the lines of communication. In the event the
attack went in later than planned but was completely successful. Resis-
tance was light - so light, in fact, that the daring manoeuvre was probably
unnecessary. But it served to restore Slim's self-confidence and provided
useful experience for the next campaign, the occupation of Iran, which
proved to be a perfect training exercise. Slim's division carried out
its objective - the seizure of the Pai Tak pass and the occupation of
Kermanshah - with exemplary efficiency, and raced on to occupy Hama-
dan before the Russians, advancing from the north, could reach it.
Although there had been little actual fighting Slim had learnt how to
move a division rapidly through mountainous country, experience which
was to prove useful in the very near future.
By the spring of 1942, Slim and ioth Division were back in Iraq
- consigned to backwaters, so it seemed, for the foreseeable future.
But Slim's abilities had not passed unobserved in higher quarters, where
various proposals were being made for his future employment. Wavell,
now C-in-C India, put forward Slim's name, along with that of another
officer, as possible candidates for his Chief of Staff. But Auchinleck,

now C-in-C Middle East, demurred, arguing that neither officer had
'the reputation, personality, and experience which would give the Indian
Army full confidence in their ability'. To Auchinleck, Slim seemed
nothing more than a competent second-division player. Meanwhile in
now embattled Burma, Major-General Bruce Scott and Major-General
'Punch' Cowan, former officers of the 6th Gurkhas, were trying to
persuade their newly-arrived army commander, Lieutenant-General
Harold Alexander, to ask Whitehall to appoint Slim as Burma Corps
commander.
It was an appointment one would not have wished on an enemy,

let alone an old friend. So far the campaign had already destroyed

the career of one commander, Lieutenant-General Tom Hutton, and


looked certain to destroy others. On the eve of his departure to take

306
SLIM

over command of the Army, Alexander himself had been warned by


Mountbatten in no uncertain terms of the dangers which lay ahead.
'You must tell Winston that you will go out to Burma and fight as
hard as you can, but that in your opinion there is no way of halting
the advance until it has petered out in the gateway to India ... if they
[Whitehall] regard this as a defeat for which you are responsible, it

willdamage you irretrievably. These considerations were far from Scott


'

and Cowan's minds when they pressed for Slim's appointment. They
had first-hand knowledge of his abilities, and knew that if anyone could
retrieve the situation, it would be Slim. Alexander acted on their advice
and on n March 1942 Slim flew into Magwe.
Burma was a peculiarly fitting trial for Slim's abilities, calling into
play all the skills he had acquired during his military career. He had
already experienced the problems of operating over long distances -
in theMiddle Eastern theatre, supply lines of over a thousand miles
had not been uncommon. He was also used to managing without air
cover, adequate equipment, reliable intelligence or proper supplies. The
problems posed by an unfriendly, often hostile population, were not
new to him, nor were the stresses of working in a primitive, undeveloped
environment. Many other British Army officers would have been
daunted by a situation which Slim regarded as commonplace. However,
he was faced by two factors which were new to him - a defeated and
demoralized Army and a first-rate enemy which had the initiative.
Slim had ideas on how to deal with both these difficulties. He needed
to convince the troops of Burma Corps that there was now someone
in control who could win. Within hours of his arrival he was visiting
Scott's and Cowan's units, talking to as many officers and men as he
could - something he continued to do throughout the campaign. The
memoirs of many Burma veterans attest to the impact of Slim's presence.
A few words could have the most extraordinary effect on morale. Slim
intended to consolidate Burma Corps and launch a counter-attack at
the first opportunity, but first of all he needed reliable intelligence.
His solution - thePegu Yoma intelligence service, a force of improvised
cavalry patrols - came straight out of the nineteenth century. Slim also
collected as much information on Japanese methods of operation as
he could, not only from his own officers but also from his Chinese
allies. His first visit to Alexander's headquarters was spent in earnest

conversation with a Chinese general who had fought at Changsa in


1938, the only defeat the Japanese had suffered until that time. From
these sources Slim devised a plan for countering the classical Japanese

307
SLIM

attack of wide outflanking movements through the jungle. Units were


to be deeply echeloned. When the Japanese got behind the first echelon,
the second would launch an attack on the rear of the Japanese positions.
The British were, as he was painfully aware, at a profound disadvantage
they were road-bound, whereas the lightly equipped Japanese could
move across the country at amazing speeds. As yet it was a problem
which he had neither the time nor resources to overcome.
Slim acted on Burma Corps like a tonic. His diagnosis of its problems
was correct, his remedies were sound. Yet even after his arrival, the
corps continued to stagger from defeat to defeat. Slim was only a corps
commander, subject to confusing and often contradictory' orders issued
by Alexander's headquarters. Any thoughts about the relationship
between the two men in this tense situation must remain tantalizingly
speculative. It is perhaps not insignificant that both Slim's and Alex-
ander's memoirs are brief and oblique in their respective comments.
Alexander makes only a passing reference to Slim, while Defeat into
Victory contains only two anecdotes relating to Alexander, both describ-
ing his reckless courage when under fire - a quality admired but not
exactly approved by Slim. The tributes to leadership which one might
expect are conspicuous by their absence.
Alexander's handling of the campaign at Army level proved little short
of disastrous. Only a few days before Slim arrived, Burma Corps had
almost been trapped through his insistence on holding Rangoon in the
face of overwhelming odds; luck rather than good generalship had
averted disaster. Admittedly, Alexander's task was not easy - Wavell
proved a hard master, and he was faced with the often incompatible
demands of two difficult allies - Chiang Kai-shek and General 'Vinegar
Joe' Stilwell. Yet as army commander it was his job to resist pressure
and to make finely tuned and often difficult decisions. Instead he tended
to waver and delay, allowing the campaign to drift. As corps commander
Slim desperately needed clear and attainable objectives. Was he to attack
the enemy, retain territory, or keep Burma Corps intact and withdraw
to India ? Such clear direction was never given.
Time and again Slim saw his carefully laid plans for counter-attacks
rendered impotent by directives from Army HQ. On 30 March he was
ordered to launch an offensive down the Irrawaddy Valley south of
Prome, in order to relieve pressure on the Chinese who were under
attack at Toungoo in the Sittang Valley. Slim knew his corps wasn't
ready. He predicted that the attack would end in failure, and it did.

The only hope he had of stemming the Japanese advance was to keep

308
SLIM

the two divisions ofBurma Corps together, but Alexander's capitulation


to Sino-American pressure meant that units were constantly being
detached to support the Chinese. As late as 20 April Slim was still
hoping to launch a Napoleonic master-stroke - an offensive by his entire
corps and a Chinese division down the Irrawaddy Valley to halt the
Japanese advance, followed by a rapid change of axis across the Pegu
Yomas to fall on the rear of the Japanese in the Sittang Valley. The
Chinese withdrew before the offensive could be launched. The retreat
continued, and on 25 April Alexander finally issued the order for a
withdrawal to India, which, in the acid words of Burma veteran James
Lunt, was 'the only far-reaching decision Alexander made'.
Alexander's responsibility as army commander now lay in maintaining
the efficient functioning of the rear areas for as long as possible, supervis-
ing an orderly withdrawal, and ensuring the successful demolition of
access routes. It was Slim's task to keep the frontline forces intact and
conduct rearguard operations. The conduct of these two aspects of the
retreat is instructive. The rear areas rapidly fell apart, the administrative
troops degenerating into bands of pillaging brigands. Confusion reigned
supreme. Major Michael Calvert waited for days for Alexander's order
to demolish a vital railway bridge - an order which never came. Conver-
sely, Major Tony Mains, acting under Alexander's explicit orders, de-
stroyed a stockpile of fuel outside Mandalay which was almost essential
for the successful withdrawal of Slim's 7 Armoured Brigade. Years
later Slim had still not forgiven the unfortunate Mains.
The retreat of the frontline forces, however, proceeded with almost
clockwork precision. A brilliant rearguard action at Kyaukse delayed
the Japanese, and at Monywa and Shwegyin, Slim extricated his forces
from near disaster with considerable skill. Once contact was broken
with the Japanese at Shwegyin, the retreat became as much a race against
the monsoon as against the advancing Japanese. Slim marched back
with his exhausted and now disease-ridden columns up the Kebaw Valley
to the relative safety of Tamu
on the India-Burma border. Thin and
ragged as they were, they still weapons like soldiers.
carried their
By rights, Slim's conduct of the two-month retreat should have earned
him recognition in the highest quarters as a general of first-rate ability.
Yet in the event it was Alexander as army commander whom the waiting
press men interviewed, Alexander who was the hero of A Million Died,
Alexander whom the BBC extolled as 'a bold and resourceful com-
mander, [who] has fought one of the great defensive battles of the war'.
Stilwell knew better. He had seen both generals under stress and knew

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that 'good old Slim' rather than 'Alex [who] has the wind up' was the
real hero of the piece. 'Vinegar Joe' lived up to his name in his acerbic
dismissal of Alexander's BBC publicity as 'crap'.
Alexander gave Slim no share in the praise. We have no record of
his feelings about Slim after the retreat: but seems no accident that
it

both Lieutenant-General Noel Irwin, the commander on the India-


Burma border, and Churchill himself, with whom Alexander subse-
quently stayed, seem to have formed a very low opinion of Slim without
having met him personally. By May 1942 a pattern had emerged which
would dog Slim until the end of the Burma campaign. Although he
was held in the highest esteem by the officers and men he commanded,
others took the credit for any achievements there had been while passing
the blame for the many disasters onto his shoulders. Irwin, who from
April onwards had watched the rabble of rear-echelon units enter
Burma, held Slim responsible, and told him so in no uncertain terms
on their first meeting. Their relationship never really improved from
this point. It is perhaps not without significance that Irwin had been
an officer in the 1st Essex. Slim angrily denied the charge of incompe-
tence and rounded on Irwin with a counter-accusation of negligence
towards the men of Burma Corps, who were at that time bivouacked
on the hillsides without any cover during the monsoon season. Fourteen
years after the event in Defeat into Victory Slim did nothing to hide
the anger he still felt.
The next year was one of the most difficult in Slim's life. After conva-
lescing, Wavell appointed him to command XV Corps, but had also
appointed Irwin to command Eastern Army. Slim's corps, which during
the summer of 1942 was responsible for the seaward defences of Calcutta,
was shortly transferred westwards to the Ranchi Plateau for training.
Irwin evidently had little confidence in Slim's ability as a commander
on the battlefield. In September 1942, when Wavell ordered Eastern
Army to advance into the Arakan and recapture Akyab, Irwin determined
that Slim would have no part in the operation, and instead commanded
it himself from Eastern Army HQjn Barrackpore. At first the operation

proceeded smoothly, if uninspiringly. Major-General Lloyd's 14th Div-


ision advanced slowly down the Arakan against negligible opposition
until on 10 January 1943 it ran into a strongly defended Japanese position
at Donbiak. At Irwin's insistence Lloyd proceeded with piecemeal frontal
attacks, all of which were beaten back. Finally on 10 March Irwin sent
Slim to the Arakan, not to take command but merely to report on the
situation.

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To Slim, the problems were immediately apparent. Lloyd's divisional


headquarters was trying to command nine brigades - clearly a corps
headquarters was needed. Morale was low, the troops were jumpy, and
the sporadic assaults were doomed to failure. Irwin ignored Slim's
report, sent him back to Ranchi, and continued to fight the battle on
the pattern he had established. On 24 March the Japanese, moving north
through supposedly impenetrable mountains around Lloyd's flanks,
burst onto the coastal plain to the rear of his positions. Lloyd ordered
his brigades to retreat northwards. Irwin's patience at last snapped. He
countermanded Lloyd's withdrawal order, sent him back to India, and
he himself took command of the Arakan front, in the meantime ordering
Major-General Lomax to advance with a reserve division. On 3 April,
shortly after Irwin handed over operational command to Lomax and
returned to Barrackpore, the Japanese struck again, cutting off two Bri-
tish brigades. The situation was now desperately serious, with a full-scale
disaster in the offing. On 5 April Irwin finally ordered Slim's XV Corps
HQ to Chittagong, but with instructions not to take over administrative
control and to assume operational control only when ordered to do
so. The situation was absurd. Slim was sorely tempted to intervene,

but, impressed with Lomax's handling of the battle, refrained. It was


not until 14 April that Irwin finally conferred operational control on
Slim.
The Arakan campaign was now beyond redemption. It had degener-
ated into a grim struggle to rescue British battalions now hopelessly
scattered amidst Japanese troops along the coastline. Irwin had been
responsible for this shambles, but with shameless effrontery he now
attempted to blame Slim for the disaster. On 8 May he wrote caustically
to his corpscommander: '17 Bns. have been chased about by possibly
commentary on the present fighting'. On the same
6, a sad but realistic
day Irwin informed Wavell that the 'commanders are far from being
much good'. By 12 May Slim had successfully extricated the British
troops, who were now back in the positions they had occupied nine
months earlier. Two weeks later, Slim received a final shaft from Irwin
- a letter severely criticizing his conduct of the battle and intimating
that he would be relieved of command.
Twenty-six May day Irwin's letter arrived, was the most
1943, the
For a short while it looked as if that career
significant in Slim's career.
was now in shreds. But Irwin had lost touch with events. In far-away
Washington, Wavell (recently recalled from India), Churchill and Alan-
brooke were in conference, planning a major shake-up of Eastern Army.

3"
SLIM

Irwin, rather than Slim, was blamed for the Arakan disaster, and later
that day he received a telegram informing him of his dismissal. Irwin,
who, despite all his faults, could take it on the chin, immediately sent
a telegram to Slim 'You're not sacked -
: 1 am.'
Slim had survived, but for some months continued to regard himself
as a commander under sentence. But by now
the nadir of the campaign
had been reached, and during these months Slim's position steadily
improved. Irwin's replacement, General Sir George Gifford, was very
much like Slim in temperament and outiook. Five months later, when
Lord Louis Mountbatten arrived to take over as supremo of a new South
East Asia command, Gifford became Commander-in-Chief of nth Army
Group. Mountbatten had clear ideas about how the campaign should
be fought. He stressed offensive action, and announced that in future
fighting would continue during the monsoon season. Many Burma veter-
ans were horrified by the suggestion, but Slim was not, and his support
won him promotion to command of the new Fourteenth Army. It was
well deserved. After suffering a series of defeats by the Japanese, Slim
may not have rated himself highly as a military strategist. But there
are defeats and defeats. Once he had taken command of the retreat
in March 1942 there continued to be defeats, but there were no more
disasters.
Arakan, where Slim transformed potential disaster into orderly defeat,
was merely the prelude to an extraordinary metamorphosis virtually
unparalleled in military history. Many armies have risen, phoenix-like,
from the ashes of defeat - the Prussian Army after 1806, the US Army
after 1861 - but none so spectacularly as the Eastern Army in the summer
of 1943. Within a short space of time an utterly defeated and demoralized
army went on to win a series of remarkable victories, all the more out-
standing given that circumstances could scarcely have been less favour-
able. Slim confronted one of the world's most forbidding theatres of
operation - seven hundred miles of virtually trackless, disease-infected
jungle-clad mountains, swamped for half the year by the monsoon rains.
The Eastern Army came at the bottom of the priority list for supplies
and manpower. Exceptional ingenuity was required to function at all
under such conditions. Defeat into Victory amply testifies to the resource-
fulness of Slim's crew, who managed to bring under control tropical
diseases such as amoebic dysentery and malaria (which at one stage
laid low eighty per cent of some units, including Slim himself) and
who bulldozed the jungle to create roads, airfields and bases. Slim stood
behind this achievement, partly because he knew how to pick the right

312
:

SLIM

men for the job, more significantly because he fostered the right atmos-
phere for determined endeavour. Manpower and other resources might
be short, but Slim remained absolutely inflexible in his insistence on
adequate medical supplies, viewing physical health as the key to morale
and success. Although his troops shunned anti-malarial drugs with the
common suspicion that they caused impotence, Slim ruthlessly enforced
their administration. 'God helps those who help themselves' became his
and their motto. Jute was transformed into parachutes, 'bithness' - strips
of locally manufactured and bitumized hessian - became their effective
substitute for an all-weather road surface. And later the banks of the
Chindwin were transformed into an ad hoc boatyard for the construction
of a sizeable flotilla of wooden barges and gunboats.
Admittedly, other armies were at the same time testifying to the tri-

umph of the human will over circumstance in equally daunting locations


- forexample the Americans and Australians in the steamy jungle-clad
terrain of the south-west Pacific. Yet few generals can ever have had
to bind together a more heterogeneous and less enthusiastic army than
the one Slim found himself commanding, where the British rubbed
shoulders with Indians, Gurkhas, East and West Africans. Most of the
British were homesick conscripts, unwilling to risk their necks for an
empire in which they had long since lost faith. Few Indians felt any
residual loyalty to the Raj, and were scarcely keen to help the British
reimpose their rule over Burma. The East and West Africans can have
had even less motivation to fight.
It was here that Slim revealed his greatest strengths as a general.

Morale was the key - he needed to convince his Army both that the
Japanese could be beaten, and should be beaten. In some ways the first
task was the easier. Once his Army had become used to living and
operating in jungle territory, the myth of the invincible Japanese jungle-
warrior was soon exploded. From the autumn of 1942, when XV Corps
had moved to Ranchi, Slim set up a highly realistic training programme
units were sent into the jungle for weeks at a time and learned to fight
in it. In jungle warfare, everyone was in the front line. Slim's men
learnt Japanese tactics of jungle attack rather than British tactics of
defence they were to get behind the Japanese first and surround them.
:

Training could inspire confidence, but not motivation. From past


experience, Slim had learned that the best approach was the most simple
and direct - to talk to as many troops as he could, man to man, cutting
through the traditional barriers of military hierarchy. It was also the
most time-consuming. Slim reckoned that this exercise took up a third

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SLIM

of his time. But was time amply well spent. Virtually alone amongst
it

British generals of the Second World War, Slim possessed the common
touch - the ability to communicate high ideals in simple language. He
convinced his soldiers, whether Hausa riflemen, Harijan Pioneers, or
British gunners, that they were all integral and essential parts of a great
war machine - the Fourteenth Army. The aim of this Army was neither
the protection nor the reconquest of an empire, but the destruction
of the embodiment of human evil - the Japanese Army. It was a goal
in which all the various races and religions of Fourteenth Army could
bury their differences.
When it came to putting theory into practice, Slim took things steadily
and carefully. Failure at this stage would have been psychologically
disastrous, and his initial limited attacks, often deploying entire brigades
against single Japanese companies, were designed to ensure success.
Once confidence had been built up, patrols could subsequently be sent
ever further into Japanese-controlled areas. By the end of 1943, troops
in the Far East were feeling far better about themselves than they had
six months earlier. The rate of sickness had fallen, rations had improved,
and the jungle and the Japanese no longer seemed quite so formidable.
Although still virtually unknown in England, the man who had orches-
trated this transformation was now known throughout Fourteenth Army
as 'Uncle Bill', a nickname which combined both affection and respect.
Slim was responsible for the Army's revitalization but ultimately had
little say in its large-scale deployment. By the autumn of 1943 various
plans were on the table in Delhi, London and Washington they boiled :

down one or
to a choice of two approaches - either an overland advance
from north-east India or a maritime attack somewhere on the south-west
coast of Burma. Slim, like most of the strategic planners, favoured the
latter course - but the necessary shipping would not be available for
months to come. By autumn two limited operations were under way
- an advance by the three divisions of Slim's XV Corps into the Arakan,
and an advance by StilwelPs Sino-American force in the north-east
to take the city of Myitkyina and eventually link up with the Burma
Road. But the Japanese commander, Lieutenant-General Shozo Kaw-
abe, also had plans afoot. The autumn months saw Lieutenant-General
Renya Mutaguchi's Fifteenth Army building up its strength to four
divisions containing over 100,000 men in all. They were preparing for
a large-scale invasion of north-east India via the British bases of Imphal
and Dinapur. If successful, this new Japanese assault would not only
destroy Slim's forces in the area, the IV Corps of Fourteenth Army,

3H
SLIM

but would also cut Stilwell's lines of communication with India. It might
also provide the spark which the Japanese still hoped would ignite an
explosion of nationalist, anti-British sentiment throughout the subconti-
nent.
Between December 1943 and March 1944 opposing Allied and Japanese
plans produced three overlapping campaigns - Stilwell's drive for Myit-
kyina, the second Arakan, and the struggle for the Imphal plain - all
conducted more or less simultaneously along a 700-mile front. Slim's
capacity was now tested to the limit as he flew from one area to another
dealing with crisis upon crisis. Each area imposed different burdens.
Stilwell was in charge of battle in the north-east, and Slim had complete
confidence in his abilities. The problems came from a different quarter.
Major-General Orde Wingate, at WavelPs personal request, had arrived
in the Far East early in 1943 to form and command the Chindits, a
long-range penetration group which, by the summer, had started to
operate behind Japanese lines. Slim was singularly unimpressed like :

the cavalry raids of former centuries, the Chindits were all flash and
dash, but produced no long-term results. But Wingate had found a
powerful backer in Churchill, whose taste for the heroic almost guaran-
teed his approval of Chindit tactics. By late 1943 the Chindits had risen
in strength to six brigades, the equivalent of three infantry divisions.
Wingate, by this stage entertaining delusions of grandeur, envisioned
the Chindits elevated from a minor supporting role to that of star of
the show: transported and supplied by air, they would sweep through
south-east Asia and singlehandedly retake Singapore. On 4 December
he demanded that Slim transfer one of Fourteenth Army's reserve div-
isions to his command, threatening political repercussions if he did
not comply. Slim stood his ground and Wingate backed down. A more
ambitious and less determined general than Slim might have given way
at this point: the subsequent drain on the overstretched resources of
Fourteenth Army could well have tipped the balance in favour of the
Japanese in the battles at Imphal and Kohima. Slim consigned the Chin-
dits to a far more reasonable and limited role, supporting Stilwell's
forthcoming offensive.
On 5 March 1944, the eve of the Chindits' airlift Burma,
into northern
Slim and Wingate once again confronted each other - for the last time
- in a brief encounter which speaks volumes about their respective quali-
ties. A last-minute intelligence report, indicating that the Japanese had
detected the Chindits' landing zones and were preparing ambushes,
threw Wingate into a state of near-hysteria. He insisted on the postpone-

315
SLIM

ment of the operation, but Slim, whose long experience had rendered
him both less credulous and more daring, ordered the operation to
proceed. As he had suspected, the report was inaccurate. Within a few
days Wingate was dead - killed in an aircraft crash. His place in the
pantheon of great Second World War generals was now secure. It might
have been less secure had not Slim, only a few days earlier, made his
lastmajor decision for him.
Meanwhile, Slim's problems on the other two fronts had multiplied.
By 4 February, 5th and 7th Indian Divisions had advanced nearly forty
miles into the Arakan and had reached the Moungdow-Buthidaung
road - the scene of very heavy fighting the previous year. The Japanese
now struck. A 6,000-strong task force moved ten miles north-east
around the British left and then wheeled south, striking deep
flank
into the British rear areas. To an onlooker, it must have seemed omi-
nously like a replay of last year's catastrophe. But this time British morale
was high and Slim was in control. Though the speed and force of
the Japanese assault took him by surprise, Slim quickly got a grip on
the situation: he ordered units to hold their positions and to wait for
air supplies. From 6 to 24 February Japanese attacks repeatedly targeted

in on the British headquarters area at Sinzweya, the so-called 'adminis-


trative box'. Now Slim's earlier insistence that rear-area troops - office
workers, clerks, babus - should be trained to fight with the same facility

as front-line units, paid off. The box held, two fresh British divisions
advanced from the north, and the Japanese were crushed, losing more
than 5,000 men. Slim was elated, viewing it as 'a victory about which
there could be no argument'. This was true enough, but retrospectively
it was scarcely the kind of victory on which one could rest one's laurels.

Slim had committed four divisions to a battle which the Japanese had
intended primarily as a diversion. The Imphal was now left danger-
front
ously weak, and it was here that the Japanese launched their main thrust.
Since December 1943, intelligence reports had been piecing together
a fairly accurate picture of Japanese intentions. Slim predicted that the
Japanese would strike across the Chindwin, and he planned to fight
a defensive battle on the Imphal plain, where IV Corps' superiority in
armour and artillery would be telling. Timing was all. A rapid withdrawal
to the plain of IV Corps' divisions, currently spread out in the mountains
to the south, would soon signal to the watching Japanese that he had
divined their plans. If he left the withdrawal too late, there was every
chance that the outlying divisions might be cut off and defeated. Here
Slim once again erred on the side of caution - as he himself confessed

316
SLIM

in Defeat into Victory. The Japanese attack came far earlier than antici-
pated - on the 4th, rather than the 15th, of March. Three separate battles
quickly developed. Seventy miles south of Imphal, 17th Indian Division
was soon cut off on the Tiddum road, and fighting for its life as it
withdrew northwards. Meanwhile fifty miles east of Imphal, Japanese
troops were pressing back the 20th Indian Division along the Tamu
road. The most serious threat of all developed fifty miles north of Imphal.
The Japanese 31st Division was closing in on the lightly defended village
of Kohima. Dimapur, the rail-head and supply base of the Fourteenth
Army, only thirty miles to the east, now lay within striking distance.
On 29 March the Japanese finally cut the Imphal-Kohima road, isolating
IV Corps in Imphal. Things looked bad for the British. A year earlier,
defeat would have seemed inevitable, but now the Japanese faced an
enemy made formidable by both training and leadership under an astute
general. Slim's strategy was simple - consolidation of his troops on
the Imphal plain to await reserves. The Japanese would waste their ener-
gies in a battle of attrition. The plan worked, and Kohima was held,
but was a close-run thing. Between 5 and 20 April, Japanese attacks
it

were and unrelenting. The day was saved by the arrival at Dimapur
fierce
of XXXIII Corps, who advanced south and broke into the town. Fifty
miles south of Kohima, the siege of Imphal continued into the last
week of June, when XXXIII Corps were finally able to hack their way
through the last remaining road-blocks. By this time the Japanese supply

situation had become desperate. They had failed to capture any of the
British bases, and with the breaking of the monsoon in mid-June, their
own supply chain through the mountains from the Chindwin had become
untenable. On 5 July, retreating under British counter-attack, they were
forced to withdraw to the Chindwin.
For the Japanese the battle had been a disaster. One hundred thousand
men had crossed the Chindwin in March: July witnessed the sorry
return of only 35,000, all of them emaciated by hunger and tropical
disease. It was the greatest land defeat as yet suffered by the Japanese,
and their generals paid the price in full, dismissed wholesale, from
General Kawabe all the way down through the chain of command.
Yet Japanese resilience seemed unlimited. By the autumn of 1944 they
had rebuilt their armies in Burma to a strength of more than 250,000
men. The new commander, General Kimura, deployed relatively small
armies on the north-eastern and Arakan fronts, and concentrated his
Burma to crush Fourteenth Army when it came south
forces in central
of the Chindwin. Kimura intended to impose upon Slim essentially

317
SLIM

the same sort of battle as Slim had imposed on Kawabe. Rather than
holding the southern banks of the Chindwin, Kimura pulled his forces
back behind the half-mile -wide Irrawaddy. As the British advanced,
he reasoned, their supply lines would fail, and their already weakened
divisions would now thoroughly exhaust themselves in the conflict.
Kimura had already devised a name for this climactic confrontation:
'The Battle of the Irrawaddy Shore'.
For Slim the battles of Imphal and Kohima had at last brought recog-
nition of a sort. In December 1944 he and his corps commanders were
knighted. But this recognition had been tardy. In London the command
of Fourteenth Army continued to be criticized for unimaginative and
over-cautious tactics. Slim was viewed as a reliable general, one who
could stave off disaster but who lacked the foresight and flair to carry
off a decisive and exciting victory. Changes had also been afoot in the
organization of British Army command - changes which did little to
aid Slim's task. In November 1944 General Sir Oliver Leese, the former
Eighth Army commander, took over from General Gifford. Slim and
Gifford had got on well together, but the relationship between Slim
and Leese bordered on the openly hostile. Slim's final operations were
carried out with scant regard for both Leese and the Eighth Army men
who now filled the offices of SEAC HQ.
Slim almost fell into trap. By this stage, he had reached
Kimura's
the point where he could second-guess Kawabe's tactics, unaware that
Kawabe had been replaced by Kimura in the high-command shake-up.
He was preparing himself for a climactic battle on the plains between
the Chindwin and the Irrawaddy around Shewbo on the supposition
that the last thing the Japanese would do was give up ground. Their
forces would be approximately equal - some five divisions apiece.
Although Fourteenth Army had technically twice the strength of the
Japanese forces, only a small proportion, even with air supply, could
be maintained south of the Chindwin. Superior air power and armour
would win the day.
Slim's suspicions grew as the spearhead of IV Corps, 19th Division,
advanced rapidly south against unexpectedly light opposition. By 16
December suspicion had hardened into certainty. Over the next forty-
eight hours, without consulting Leese, Slim changed tactics in a last-
minute and brilliantly daring operation. Leaving a dummy IV Corps
headquarters near Shewbo to maintain radio contact with 19th Division,
which continued to advance towards the Irrawaddy, Slim secredy moved
the bulk of IV Corps 100 miles to the west; during the next two months

318
SLIM

he sent it down a bullock-cart track which ran 150 miles south-east

to Pakokku on the Irrawaddy, nearly 50 miles south of the main Japanese


defences, and only 50 miles west of Meiktila, the main Japanese supply
and communication centre in central Burma. In the meantime, 19th
Division, supported by XXXIII Corps, had closed in on the northern
bank of the Irrawaddy in the Mandalay area. On 12 February it carried
out a series of bloodily contested crossings. The Japanese, obsessed
with the danger to Mandalay, dismissed a report of massive columns
moving through the jungles on their left flank as nothing more than
yet another Chindit-style long-range penetration raid. On 13 February
IV Corps struck. It crossed the Irrawaddy with negligible opposition,

and by 4 March its armoured columns had taken Meiktila. General


Kimura, already hard-pressed around Mandalay, rushed forces south
to deal with the new threat, and two separate battles developed - a
house-to-house struggle for Mandalay, which fell to 19th Division on
21 March, and the battle to retake Meiktila, which the Japanese gave

up on 28 March after suffering heavy losses.


Slim's brilliant manoeuvre had shattered the Japanese defences in
central Burma, and the remnants of their divisions now withdrew in
confusion along the Irrawaddy. Slim did not give them time to consoli-
date. From 1 April to 1 May, Fourteenth Army spearheads raced south-
wards, slashing through the Japanese rearguards. Kimura's last and
sole hope lay in the onset of the monsoon, which might break and
slow down the British advance before it reached Rangoon. Heavy rain
set in on 2 May while Fourteenth Army was still fifty miles north of
the city, but by this stage it no longer mattered. On the previous day,
XV Corps had landed south of Rangoon and the Japanese had evacuated
the city. On 6 May Fourteenth Army and XV Corps linked up a few
miles north of the city. To all intents and purposes, the Burma campaign
was now over.
Slim's revitalization of the Army had proved him to be a general of
administrative genius ; his conduct of the Burma retreat, the first and
second Arakan, and Imphal-Kohima, had shown him to be a brilliant
defensive general; and now, the Mandalay-Meiktila operation had
placed him in the same class as Guderian, Manstein and Patton as
an offensive commander. Given the pattern of Slim's career, there was
achievements would be followed, not
a certain predictability that his
by recognition, but by dismissal. On 7 May, Leese flew into Slim's
HQ at Meiktila with the astounding news that he was to be relieved
of command of the Fourteenth Army and transferred to a much smaller

319
SLIM

residual force tasked with mopping-up operations. Slim chose not to


accept the post, viewing for what it was - effective dismissal. Over
it

the next two weeks, as news spread throughout Fourteenth Army, a


storm of protest erupted. Troops became mutinous, officers threatened
to resign, and Leese, who backtracked in embarrassment, found himself
dismissed instead. On i July, shortly after his first meeting with Chur-
chill, Slim was appointed to the now vacant position of Commander-in-

Chief, Allied Land Forces SEAC. At long last he had achieved a position
from which no one, not even Field-Marshal Montgomery, could relegate
him to the wings. He had now become one of Churchill's generals.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Allen, Louis, Burma: The Longest War 1941—45 (London, 1984).
Barker, A. J., The March on Delhi (London, 1966).
Brett-James, Antony, Ball of Fire: the Fifth Indian Division in the Second World
War (London, 1951).

Brett-James, Antony and Evans, Lieutenant-General Sir Geoffrey, Imphal


(London, 1962).
Callahan, Raymond, Burma 1942-45 (London, 1978).
Calvert, Brigadier Michael, Slim (London, 1973).
Connell, John, Auchinleck (London, 1959).
Evans, Lieutenant-General Sir Geoffrey, Slim as Military Commander (London,
1969).
Fraser, David, Alanbrooke (London, 1982).
Gilbert, Martin, Winston S. Churchill, vol. VII, Road to Victory 1941-1945 (London,
1986).
Jackson, General Sir William, Alexander of Tunis as Military Commander (Lon-
don, 1971).
Kirby, Major-General S. W., The War Against Japan (5 vols, London, 1957-69).
Lewin, Ronald, Slim: The Standardbearer (London, 1976).
Lunt, Major-General James, A Hell ofa Licking (London, 1986).
Mains, Lieutenant-Colonel Tony, The Retreat from Burma (London, 1986).
Masters, John, The Road Past Mandalay (London, 1961).
Moon, Penderel (ed.), Wavell, The Viceroy's Journal (London, 1973).
Nicolson, Nigel, Alex (London, 1973).
North, John (ed.), The Alexander Memoirs 1940-45 (London, 1962).
Perrett, Bryan, Tank Tracks to Rangoon (London, 1978).
Slim, Field-Marshal the Viscount, Defeat into Victory (London, 1956) ; Unofficial
and other broadcasts (London, 1957).
History (London, 1959); Courage,
Tulloch, Major-General Derek, Wingate in Peace and War (London, 1972).

320
SLIM

CHRONOLOGY: WILLIAM SLIM


1891, August 6 Born at 72 Belmont Road, Bishopston, Bristol

1908, September King Edward's School, Birmingham


1909 Uncertified elementary teacher working in various
Birmingham slum schools
1911 Junior clerk at Stewarts & Lloyds, Ltd, Birmingham
(manufacturers of metal tubes)
1912 Enrols in Birmingham University OTC
1914, August 22 Gazetted 2nd Lieutenant 9th Battalion Royal
Warwickshire Regiment
1915,August 8 Wounded at Gallipoli - evacuated to England

1916, September 2 Gazetted temporary Captain - posted to Mesopotamia


1917, March 11 In advance guard which captures Baghdad - in
subsequent operations north of city Slim is awarded

MC
1917, March 29 Wounded again - evacuated to India

1917, November Appointed GSO3 Army HQIndia


1918, November Appointed GSO2 - temporary Major - Army HQ_
India
i9i9,May3i Transfer from British to Indian Army and gazetted
Captain Indian Army
1920, March 27 Posted Captain i/6th Gurkha Rifles
1926, January 1 Marries Aileen Robertson, daughter of Rev. John
Anderson Robertson, minister of Church of Scodand
1926, February Student at Staff College, Quetta
1928 Staff, Army HQ, India
1933, May 19 Gazetted Major
1934 Indian Army Instructor, Staff College, Camberley
1937 Student, Imperial Defence College
1938, May 2 Gazetted Lieutenant-Colonel - appointed to command
2/7UI Gurkhas
1939, April Appointed to command Senior Officers School at

Belgaum
1939, September Promoted to Brigadier - posted to command 10 Indian
Brigade at Jhansi

1941, January Wounded yet again by Italian aerial attack in Eritrea


- evacuated to India
i94i,Junei Promoted acting Major-General - operations in Iraq,
Syria and Iran
1942, March 14 Promoted acting Lieutenant-General - appointed to
command Burcorps
1942, May Appointed to command XV Corps in India

321
SLIM

1943, October Appointed Commander-in-Chief Eastern Army (name


changed to Fourteenth Army)
1944, December 15 Knight Commander of the Bath
1945, July 1 Promoted General
1945, August Appointed Commander-in-Chief Allied Land Forces
South East Asia
1946 Commandant of Imperial Defence College - created
GBE
1947 Deputy Chairman of British Railways
1948 Chief of the Imperial General Staff
1949, January 4 Promoted Field-Marshal
1952 Created GCMG
1953, May 8 Sworn in as Governor-General of Australia
1954 Created GCYO
1956 First publication of Defeat into I tctory

1959 Created Knight of the Garter


i960 Elevated to peerage as Viscount Slim of Burma
1963 Constable and Governor of Windsor Castle
1970, December 14 Dies in London

322
17

CARTON DE WIART
AND SPEARS
Lieutenant- General Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart
and Major- General Sir Louis Spears

G. D. SHEFFIELD

The military careers of Adrian Carton de Wiart and Louis Spears offer
many points of comparison. They came from similar backgrounds. Both
achieved high rank and a degree of fame at an early age, and both
served as the head of a military mission. Above all both Spears
and Carton de Wiart enjoyed the trust and confidence of Winston
Churchill, who
during the 1939-45 war appointed them to positions
of some responsibility; positions to which, however, they were not
entirely suited.

By the evening of 2 July 1916, the second day of the Somme offensive,
the British 19th Division had succeeded in capturing most of the village
of La Boisselle, which the Germans had turned into a miniature fortress.
At 6 pm on that day, the Divisional commander, Major-General Tom
Bridges, visited the front line and appointed the commander of the
8th Gloucesters, Captain (temporary Lieutenant-Colonel) Adrian Car-
ton de Wiart DSO, to command the troops of 57 Brigade in the village,
the other three battalion commanders having either been killed or inca-
pacitated. La Boisselle was under intense enemy artillery fire, and on
the morning of 3 July the Germans began to mount heavy counterattacks.

323
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

By Carton de Wiart's men were having to contend with 'probably


12:30
the most intense fighting the Division had up to that moment
experienced'. The British had been forced to give ground before
the advancing Germans, until they were deployed behind a hedge
running through the approximate centre of the village. It was later
stated that 'It was owing in great measure to his [Carton de Wiart's]
dauntless courage and inspiring example that a serious reverse was
averted.'
Carton de Wiart was a striking-looking man, who wore a black eye-
patch and was missing one hand. He strode up and down the line under
heavy encouraging his men, apparently oblivious of the danger.
fire

At one juncture, he counter-attacked a potentially serious German thrust


with all his available reserves, which amounted to a sergeant with half

a dozen men. The principal weapon in such close-quarter fighting was


the Mills bomb. Carton de Wiart could be seen leading parties of
bombers, pulling out the firing pins with his teeth and hurling them
with his good hand. The German attack was checked at the hedge.
By mid-afternoon on 4 July, after a prolonged struggle to bomb the
German defenders out of the ruins of the village, La Boisselle had
once more passed back into British hands. For this action, Carton de
1

Wiart was awarded the Victoria Cross.


The fight of 3-4 July 1916 is an excellent illustration of Carton de
Wiart's methods as a commander and a soldier. He was outrageously
brave and believed in 'leading' in a literal sense; not for him were
the comforts of so-called 'chateau generalship'. His impressive list of
wounds (variously numbered as eight or eleven) testify to the risks to
which he regularly and willingly exposed himself. Carton de Wiart was,
in short, a fighting general. It was ironic that most of his post-1918
military career was to be spent in a series of quasi-diplomatic posts
in which abilities other than those of courage and leadership were to
be required.
Adrian Carton de Wiart was born in Brussels on 5 May 1880, and
his early childhood was spent in Egypt. He was educated in England.
On the outbreak of the Boer War in 1899 he abandoned his studies
at Oxford and enlisted as a trooper in Paget's Horse, a newly raised
regiment of volunteers. In the Boer War, 'Trooper Carton' - he used
a nom de guerre to surmount the problems of being under-aged, and
having foreign nationality - first revealed his almost suicidal courage.
Although he was badly wounded in a skirmish and was temporarily
invalided out of the Army, Carton de Wiart ended the war as a subaltern

324
;

CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

in a regular cavalry regiment, the 4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards.


The next twelve years were spent in peacetime soldiering in England,
India and South Africa. In 1914 he applied for secondment to the Somali
Camel Corps, for his father was unable to continue to pay him an allow-
ance, and thus he could no longer afford to live the
from inexpensive
far

life of a cavalry subaltern in England. On 23 July 1914 Carton de Wiart

left England. While he was at sea war broke out with Germany, and

he arrived in Somaliland to join a collection of disgruntled subalterns


all desperately trying to get back to Europe. In the meantime, there

was a campaign to be fought against Mahomed bin Abdillah Hassan,


the 'Mad Mullah'. On 18 November 1914 he was hit four times while
leading a group of Somali troops in an assault on an enemy-held fort.
The future Lord Ismay, who was also present, recalled that Carton
de Wiart ran towards the fort, but was hit in the arm and the ear,
having already been wounded in the eye, but he 'did not check in his
stride'. For this action Carton de Wiart was awarded the DSO, although

he modestly omitted any mention of his decorations from Happy Odyssey,


2
his autobiography published in 1950.
Carton de Wiart returned to England, where, in a nursing home
in Park Lane, his left eye was removed in January 1915. This hospital
was to become very familiar to Carton de Wiart over the next four years
he was wounded so often that, as he was to write, he 'became one
of their most regular customers even silk pyjamas with my name
. . .

on were reserved for me'. In February 1915 he joined the 4th Dragoon
Guards in the trenches near Ypres, where they were serving as infantry.
Three months later, on the night of 10-11 May 1915, he was wounded
once again, this time in the hand. Carton de Wiart reinforced his repu-
tation for utter fearlessness by pulling off two of the fingers on his
shattered hand, after a surgeon at the dressing station had refused to
amputate them. Later his hand was removed altogether. Nonetheless,
the one-handed and one-eyed Carton de Wiart had returned to the
front in time for the opening of the Battle of the Somme in July 1916.
Although he survived the fight for La Boisselle unscathed, given Car-
ton de Wiart's style of leadership it was inevitable that sooner or later
he would again be wounded. On 23 July 1916 he was hit in the head
by a machine-gun bullet at High Wood. He had a spell recovering
in the Park Lane hospital before returning to France. This was to be
the pattern for the rest of Carton de Wiart's Great War career a bout ;

of active service would be temporarily interrupted by a more or less


serious wound, which would be followed by his return to France, where

325
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

the cycle would begin again. His talent for leadership was recognized
by promotion to Brigadier-General, and he commanded 12, 105 and
113Brigades in 1917 and in 1918. Despite his elevation Carton de Wiart
retained the mentality of a front-line soldier and he continued to add
3
to his collection of wounds.
By World War, Carton de Wiart was a celebrity
the end of the First
in the Army, admired by men ranging from Sir Hubert Gough to the
soldiers of the 8th Gloucesters (who nicknamed him 'Nelson'). Carton
de W'iart's eyepatch and missing hand enhanced his dashing appearance
rather than detracted from it and he looked every inch a hero. Not
surprisingly, he was lionized by Society. In 1916, Cynthia Asquith noted
in her diary that she had called on Tom Bridges and his wife, Florrie,
'and with them - great excitement - was the hero of the war, Carton
4
de Wiart'. Thus it was not altogether surprising that Carton de Wiart
should come to the attention of Winston Churchill, the Minister of
War in Lloyd George's peacetime coalition, although the two men did
not actually meet until the end of 1919. A man of Carton de Wiart's
stamp was just the type to appeal to Churchill, and Carton de Wiart
was appointed as second-in-command, and later head, of the British
Military Mission to Poland.
In the years immediately following the First World War Churchill
was obsessed with the idea of opposing the Bolshevik regime in Russia
which threatened to spread revolution to the rest of Europe. Churchill's
aim was to use Poland as a weapon against Lenin. His plans met con-
siderable opposition, not least from the Prime Minister, Lloyd George.
Indeed, on 25 January 1920 the British Government took a decision
not to provide Poland with military aid that could be turned against
5
Russia. One is tempted to see the dispatch of such a well-known 'fire-
eater' as Carton de W'iart as a substitute for more tangible assistance.
Certainly, a man of his personality and reputation 'possessed all the
qualities which were best designed to appeal to the Polish officers among
whom he was sent. He was wealthy, aristocratic, cosmopolitan, Catholic,
heroic, and indefatigably foolhardy .... According to the ethos of the
6
day, he was more Polish than the Poles.'
Carton de Wiart arrived in Warsaw on 12 February 1919, by his own
admission almost totally ignorant of Poland. He soon discovered that
Poland was engaged in five wars Germans, the Bolsheviks,
: against the
the Ukrainians, the Lithuanians and the Czechs. As might be expected,
Carton de Wiart managed to get involved in the fighting. Among other
adventures, he was on board a train when it was attacked by Cossacks,

326
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

and was involved in two plane crashes. During the decisive battle of
Warsaw, he commuted back and forth from the front line every day.
However, the British Military Mission had little or no influence over
the course of the war. Clearly, Carton de Wiart found the British attitude
embarrassing, and he attempted to persuade his political masters to throw
their weight behind the Poles. On one occasion, just before the Cabinet's
of January 1920, he claimed in the course of the same
fateful decision
argument that the Poles were capable of both capturing Moscow and
7
coming to The best that can be said is
terms with the Bolsheviks.
thatCarton de Wiart's charm, charisma and courage helped to counter-
balance the generally unfavourable perceptions of Britain held by men
such as Pilsudski and Paderewski at a time when Britain seemed to be
pursuing an Eastern European policy that was consistently anti-Polish.
One unexpected result of Carton de Wiart's time in Poland was that
he fell in love with the country. He left the British Army in 1924 and
settled on an estate in the Pripet Marshes. There he lived the feudal
existence of a Polish landowner, indulging to the full his love of shooting.
Except for an annual visit to England, he remained in Poland until 1939.
On the eve of the Second World War Carton de Wiart was once
again appointed as head of the British Military Mission to Poland. On
24 August 1939 he had an interview with the Polish Commander-in-
Chief, Marshal Smigly-Ridz. Carton de Wiart had a low opinion of
Smigly-Ridz's and on hearing the outlines of his strategy, he
ability,

reacted with some alarm. As he recalled in his memoirs, 'I found myself
in strong disagreement with his proposal to fight the Germans as soon
8
as they had crossed the frontier into Poland.' Carton de Wiart had
even suggested that the Poles should abandon the Vistula river line
and the capital, Warsaw, in order to defend the line of the Bug. What
both the Poles and Carton de Wiart failed to reckon with was the power
of the German blitzkrieg.
In his memoirs, Carton de Wiart interpreted Smigly-Ridz's strategy
in a curiously simplistic way, stating that the marshal feared he would
be accused of cowardice if he decided to fight in the interior of the
9
country. In fact, as a recent work has demonstrated, Polish strategy
was inspired by a mixture of economic, political, diplomatic and military
motives, the basic concept being to hold the Germans on the frontier
in order to buy time for mobilization. That Carton de Wiart should
offer such a naive interpretation is perhaps evidence of his unsuitability
for a role which took him away from the environs of the battlefield
and demanded a grasp of the higher direction of war, although Carton

327
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

de Wiart's judgement was coloured by what he described as Smigly-


10
Ridz's 'decision to desert his Army' in September 1939, when the
Polish commander crossed into neutral Romania.
The Poles were in an unenviable position in September 1939. They
were outnumbered and outclassed by the German armed forces, and
had to face the possibility of attack from four directions. The Poles'
only real hope of survival lay in a prompt Franco-British offensive against
Germany's western frontier. In late August 1939 Carton de Wiart found
the Polish population excessively optimistic about the outcome of the
war, but as the campaign began to go badly, Poles began to ask what
had happened to the promised Allied offensive. Thus, for the second
time in twenty years, Carton de Wiart found himself in the invidious
position of acting as the military representative of a power friendly to
Poland but unwilling to provide anything more than moral support.
His instructions from London made this very clear: 'In view of the
difficulties of rendering direct military support by British Armed Forces
to the Poles, the question of inspiring confidence is of the greatest
importance. This task was made no easier by the behaviour of the
. .
.'

British government; they did not declare war until forty-eight hours
after the German invasion began on 1 September, and then made only
the feeblest of military responses. On 5 September Carton de Wiart
signalled that the events of the last few days had

caused the greatest mistrust of our intentions and this will continue to exist
until positive action is taken by the British forces to relieve pressure on the
eastern frontier. The dropping of pamphlets by British bombers in [sic] Germany
has caused considerable concern in Poland as they see no useful purpose and
they feel we are not serious in our intentions and are merely waiting until
11
Poland is overrun when we shall agree to some kind of peace.

For the British Military Mission, the campaign was a nightmare of retreat
under heavy air attack. Forced to move out of Warsaw in the first week
of the campaign, Carton de Wiart was unable to write a formal letter
until 16 September. By then his staff had swollen to 63 strong, and
as they made their way towards the Romanian frontier they were
impressed by two things the efficiency of the enemy intelligence service,
:

and the devastating impact of the Luftwaffe. The wife of one of his
staffwas killed in an air raid. For Carton de Wiart, this was one of the
events which led him to believe that he had seen 'the very face of war
change - bereft of romance, its glory shorn, no longer the soldier setting
12
forth into battle, but the women and children buried underneath it.'

328
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

On 17 September Soviet forces crossed into Poland. Typically, at


the moment when any remaining illusions as to the outcome of the
campaign were finally dispelled, Carton de Wiart made a serious offer
to stay with Smigly-Ridz and fight on with him on Polish soil. Britain
might have deserted Poland in its hour of need, but Carton de Wiart's
personal code of honour would not allow him to follow suit. Smigly-
Ridz's abandonment of his army, while condemned in the roundest
terms by Carton de Wiart, almost certainly saved the latter from a point-
less death. Carton de Wiart eventually returned to Britain via Romania.
The British Military Mission were able to draw some accurate lessons
from the Polish campaign. Aside from the shortcomings of Polish stra-
tegy and communications, it was the fearful potency of armoured and
mechanized forces, and above all, airpower that made a deep impression
on Carton de Wiart and his staff. In a letter of 16 September he wrote:
'The dominant factor is the air superiority of the Germans, which quite
apart from the material damage it has done, has severely shaken [Polish]
morale .that of
. . included.'GHQ
13
The depth of Carton de Wiart's
respect for the Luftwaffe was to be revealed in Norway, in the spring
of 1940.
In April 1940 Carton de Wiart was faced with the greatest challenge
of his career an independent command of troops on active service.
:

Carton de Wiart might appear an unlikely choice for command of


'Mauriceforce', the Central Norwegian Expeditionary Force. He was
aged sixty, had never been to Staff College, and his last experience
of command had been in 1918, when he had been only one brigadier
in an army of sixty divisions. He did, however, have two factors in
his favour ; a formidable reputation and personal experience of German
operational methods. As GOC of Mauriceforce his path once again
crossed with that of Winston Churchill, the First Lord of the Admiralty,
who as Chairman of the Military Co-ordination Committee bore a large
measure of responsibility for planning the campaign.
On 9 April 1940 the Germans invaded Norway and Denmark. The
Allies responded by landing troops of their own in Norway. The most
important objective was Narvik in the north of the country, but prep-
arations were also made to seize Trondheim, the 'strategic key' to central
Norway. Carton de Wiart, who was at that time commanding a Territorial
division, the 61st, was appointed to command Mauriceforce on 12 April.
Operation Maurice was intended to secure the Trondheim area, in parti-
cular road and rail communications. The British naval action off Narvik
on 13 April gave the impression that the German garrison of the port

329
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

was demoralized and that one brigade, half of the British force intended
to capture it, could be sent south to Namsos, 60 miles north of Trond-
heim, to co-operate with a third force. This was Morgan's 148 Brigade,
which was landed at Andalsnes to the south of Trondheim, and it was

intended that the would be taken by an attack from the flanks.


city
14
This was to be combined with a naval assault on Trondheim itself.
Carton de Wiart arrived to take up his command in his usual spectacu-
lar fashion. As his Sunderland flying boat arrived off the Norwegian

coast on 14 April, the aircraft was attacked by German fighters. Repairing


to the destroyer HMS Somali, he met the noted writer Colonel Peter
Fleming, and the explorer Captain Martin Lindsay, who had already
reconnoitred Xamsos. Their report was not encouraging. Deep snow
would make movement from the port difficult, and there was little possi-
bility' of concealing large bodies of troops from aerial reconnaissance.

In order to minimize the threat from the air during disembarkation,


the troop-ships were sent 100 miles north to Lillesjona. Mauriceforce
assembled over the next few days in Xamsos, as parties were landed
under the cover of darkness. Up to this point, Namsos had not been
subjected to heavy air attack but on 19 April General Audet's newly
arrived brigade of French Chasseurs Alpins revealed their presence by
opening up on German aircraft with machine-guns. To Carton de
Wiart's fury, this alerted the Luftwaffe to the Allied presence, and at
10:15 German aircraft re-appeared. As bombs rained down onto Namsos,
the General coolly lit a cigarette and gave vent to his feelings about
the Chasseurs: 'Damned Frogs - they're all the same. One bang and
they're off!' The raid had two consequences. Namsos was badly
damaged, which posed difficulties of resupply and reinforcement, and
from that point onwards Mauriceforce received constant attention from
15
the Luftwaffe.
Carton de Wiart's original instructions had been to attack Trondheim
in co-operation with a direct assault on the town from the sea, and
accordingly he pushed Phillips' 146 Infantry Brigade forward to Verdal
and Steinker, 50 miles from Trondheim, which they reached on 19
April. The ill-equipped Chasseurs Alpins were left at Namsos. The British
were scarcely better off in terms of equipment and the men and their
officers were inexperienced, although Carton de Wiart had great respect
for Brigadier Phillips. Worst of all, air cover could only be provided
spasmodically from British aircraft carriers, ensuring that Carton de
Wiart's men were subjected to seemingly ceaseless pounding from the
air. Sickleforce fared little better. Consisting of two brigades under

330
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

Major- General Paget, it was landed at Andalsnes, south of Trondheim,


on 18 April. They found themselves under pressure from German forces
advancing from the Oslo area which prevented them from performing
their role as the southern arm of a pincer movement. Unfortunately,
the achievements of Paget and Carton de Wiart were overestimated in
London. On 19 April Churchill proposed the effective abandonment
of the direct naval assault on Trondheim (Operation Hammer), largely
in the light of 'The considerable advance made by Carton de Wiart
yl6
[and] the very easy landings we have had at Andalsnes. [sic] . . .

It was now proposed that the two arms of the pincer movement would

constitute the main assault on Trondheim. To Carton de Wiart, although


there was delay in informing him of the abandonment of Hammer,
ithad become increasingly clear that his chances of taking Trondheim
were minimal. On 21 April Carton de Wiart's men, extended south to
Verdal, were attacked by German naval and ground forces and forced
to withdraw. On the 22nd he signalled that he had ordered Phillips'
Brigade to 'retire by the Steinker-Namsos road', rather than let them
endure the ordeal of shelling and air attack any longer. He had taken
a deliberate risk in pushing Phillips south, but it was a risk worth taking.

I had hoped by pushing Phillips' Brigade south as far as I did and [sic] if
a heavy raid on Trondheim had taken place I might have made a dash for
Trondheim but now I clearly cannot do this - and I must try to extricate
Phillips. When I get them back to Namsos there is cover nowhere for them. I
should be grateful if you will let me know what your policy will now be. I
much regret to give you such a gloomy view of the situation but it is a true one. 17

Carton de Wiart was a man of renowned courage and coolness, not


given to panic. His constant repetition of the aerial threat and his recom-
mendation of evacuation can only have underlined the seriousness of
the situation to the authorities in London. On 27 April the decision
was made to pull out and, in three hours on 2 May 1940, Carton de
Wiart's force was evacuated by the Royal Navy.
Carton de Wiart emerged from the Norwegian campaign with his
reputation largely intact. His personal example had been superb. His
demeanour under air attack was as calm as it had been under shellfire
on the Somme twenty-four years earlier. Carton de Wiart had failed
to take his objective, but there is little doubt that his only chance of
capturing Trondheim had rested in a combined attack with Hammer-
force or Sickleforce. Since neither materialized, it is unfair to apportion
him more than a small share of the blame. Carton de Wiart emerges

33i
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

with considerable credit for his reiteration of the unpalatable facts -


that the expedition had been cobbled together and was ill-prepared,
and that in the face of German air superiority the British cause was
doomed. To some extent, his war record protected him from accusations
of faint-heartedness, but it took considerable moral courage for a man
of his type to insist from the very beginning that the campaign was
unwinnable. Most importantly, Carton de Wiart retained the confidence
of Churchill, who was notoriously intolerant of failed generals.
Norway proved to be Carton de Wiart's last active military command,
7

but in April 1941 he was appointed to head the British Military Mission
to Yugoslavia. While flying over the Mediterranean his aircraft crashed
off the North African coast, and for the next two years Carton de Wiart
was a prisoner of war of the Italians. He was thrown into the company
of other captured British generals, and on 25 March 1943, at the age
of sixty-three, he escaped through a tunnel, and remained at large with
Sir Richard O'Connor (the victor of Operation Compass in 1940) for
eight days. Despite being recaptured, Carton de Wiart was not destined
to remain a prisoner for long. In August 1943 General Zanussi, the
principal assistant to the Italian Chief of Staff, was dispatched to Lisbon,
to speed up the process by which Italy was to conclude an armistice
with the Allies. Carton de Wiart accompanied him as a token of good
faith. As has often been remarked, the choice of the easily recognizable

Carton de Wiart for a supposedly clandestine mission was a somewhat


strange one. One inevitable result of this episode was a reinforcement
of the Carton de Wiart legend; it was widely supposed that he was
18
the mastermind behind the Italian armistice.
In October 1943 Churchill appointed Carton de Wiart as his personal
representative to the Chinese leader, Chiang Kai-shek, a task to be
combined with that of acting as liaison officer between Chiang and
Mountbatten (Supreme Commander South East Asia). Carton de Wiart's
mission was not to prove an easy one. China was a diplomatic battle-
ground between British and US interests. In 1939 Britain had been
the Western power with the greatest influence in China, although under
some pressure from the US. The following five years saw a dramatic
reversal in this relationship, with the US assuming the role of the domi-
nant Western power in China. This was mirrored by the differing British
and American perceptions of the importance of China to the war effort
against Japan. Broadly speaking, the US regarded the operations in
Burma mainly from the point of view of providing bases for the supply
of China, while the British were dedicated to the re-conquest of a part

332
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

of their Empire. However, was recognized that in order to harmonize


it

had to pay something more than mere


inter- Allied relations, the British
lip service to the importance of keeping Chiang in the war. Thus in

August 1944 we find Churchill sourly commenting on British troops


being 'misemployed' in Burma, fighting 'under the worst possible con-
ditions' to protect the American air route over the 'Hump' 'into their
19
very over-rated China'. American suspicions of British imperialistic
designs added a further dimension to the problem.
The situation demanded someone who could both work with the
Americans and protect British interests from American encroachment.
An example of the weakness of the British position, which added to
Carton de Wiart's difficulties, is the fate of a proposed operation by
SOE to train pro-British guerrillas in the Hong Kong area. This, it

was hoped, would facilitate the re-imposition of British rule in the Crown
Colony in the aftermath of a Japanese surrender. Carton de Wiart had
been given a role in the co-ordination of the plethora of British sub-
conventional activities carried on in China, but he concurred in a
decision taken jointly with the Ambassador and GOC China to abandon
this plan on the grounds that 'our military position in China is now so
precarious' that Chinese and, above all, American sanction was necessary
forboth military andpoliticalreasons.CartondeWiart'stransportproblems
might serve as a parable of the decline of British influence and indepen-
dence in China. He was provided with a series of British Wellingtons,
which crashed with monotonous regularity. Eventually he was given
20
an American Dakota aircraft this gave two years of perfect service.
;

Carton de Wiart's stance towards Chiang was generally favourable.


In late 1944 he was alarmed by the Japanese offensive which appeared
to put Kunming, with its vital airbase, and possibly even Chungking,
at risk. Thus he sided with the Americans against Mountbatten over
21
the issue of withdrawing Chinese troops from Burma. If this can be
seen as the judgement of the man 'on the spot' of the magnitude of
the Japanese threat, his casual dismissal of the importance of Mao Tse-
tung and the Chinese Communists might be seen as confirmation of
one historian's judgement that Carton de Wiart was 'almost as politically
naive as he was brave'. Carton de Wiart had a rather simplistic view
of Communism and dismissed Mao simply as a Moscow-trained fanatic.
In January 1945 he reported in person to the British War Cabinet. His
report, which lasted for only six and a half minutes, ignored the Commu-
nists altogether and was, according to one who was present, uninforma-
22
tive. Carton de Wiart, like Churchill himself, was essentially a

333
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

Victorian, a man whose opinions were formed during the heyday of


Empire. Before 1943 he had never visited China and his knowledge
of the country can be judged by the fact that he had imagined it as
being 'full of whimsical little people with quaint customs who carved
lovely jade ornaments and worshipped their grandmothers'. The
appointment of Carton de Wiart as his personal representative in China
23
was one of Churchill's more eccentric decisions.

Edward Louis Spiers (he changed the spelling of his surname in 1918)
was born in Paris on 7 August 1886 and he spent much of his childhood
with his grandmother in France. Young Louis grew up to be bi-lingual,
and, like Adrian Carton de Wiart a few years earlier, had to learn the
ways of an English schoolboy when he came to England to be educated.
Spears decided on a military career, and entered the British Army
through the Militia in 1903. In 1906 Spears was gazetted into the 8th
King's Royal Irish Hussars, and four years later he transferred to the
nth Hussars. Spears's interests were not confined to those traditionally
associated with cavalry subalterns. He translated and expanded upon
a French manual which was published as Cavalry 7 act i ail Schemes (1914).

He also translated a study of the Russo-Japanese War, and became


keenly interested in the use of modern weapons. Spears's unusual
linguistic were recognized by the War Office when he was
talents
24
seconded from his regiment and employed to devise bi-lingual codes.
On the outbreak of war in August 1914, Spears was initially attached
to the Grand Quartier General (French High Command), but on 14 August
he was attached to General Lanrezac's French Fifth Army. Spears's
task - that of liaising between Lanrezac and Sir John French, Com-
mander-in-Chief of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) - was of
the utmost importance. The German Schlieffen Plan aimed to encircle
the French armies and destroy them in a classic Kesselschlacht, or 'caul-
dron battle'. The position of Fifth Army and the BEF on the Allied
left flank placed them opposite the line of march of von Kluck's German
First Army, on the extreme right flank of the German Army in other ;

words, the BEF was deployed in the most important, and vulnerable,
sector of the front. Spears's problems in co-ordinating the two armies
were greatly increased by the relationship of the two army commanders.
At a meeting on 17 August, Lanrezac quickly concluded that French was
an unreliable fool. As Spears wrote in his reminiscences of the campaign,
'It was of course the armies that paid the penalty. They were incalculably

334
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

weakened in the trials they were so soon to face together, by the lack of
understanding between their leaders.' The two armies, who depended for
their very survival on their close co-ordination of effort, thus set out
25
to fight an enemy without 'a single will and a closely knit plan'. The
gulf between the two armies had to be bridged largely through the efforts
of Spears. It was an awesome responsibility for so junior an officer.

On 23 August this mutual suspicion and misunderstanding almost


resulted in the destruction of the BEF at Mons. Although the BEF
had not yet been fully engaged, events on Fifth Army's other flank
had left Lanrezac dangerously exposed. French travelled to confer with
Lanrezac, expecting the On the way, he
latter to take the offensive.

met Spears. In background of domestic


a peasant's cottage, against a
activity, Spears tried to impress on French that the Intelligence Bureau

of Fifth Army believed that the BEF was about to be outflanked by


the Germans, and 'Unless the French armies, by a vigorous offensive,

Army —
interfered with this manoeuvre, its full force would fall on the British
'Unfortunately, in Spears's opinion, Lanrezac was highly
unlikely to carry out an offensive move. To his horror, French decided
to abandon his attempt to reach Lanrezac. 'Perhaps I was not emphatic
enough', wrote Spears years later, 'I was only a subaltern, and much
26
intimidated at having to deal with such important people.'
Spears was able to assuage his conscience later that day after he dis-
covered that Fifth Army was retreating along the length of its front.
Faced with the strong possibility of envelopment and destruction,
Lanrezac's decision to withdraw was a sensible one. What was inexcus-
able was his failure to take prompt action to inform the British, or even
grant Spears an interview. Fortunately Spears was briefed by Fifth
Army's intelligence chief and, at about 7 pm, Spears set off for French's
HQ at Le Cateau. There he gave French the grim news that the BEF

were now marooned some nine miles ahead of Fifth Army. French
retired with Murray, his Chief of Staff, and a period of agony began
for Spears. He could clearly see that if French persisted with his plan
to advance, 'the British Army would be engaging in a Balaclava adventure
on a huge scale' with Spears himself cast as Nolan. Spears's relief can
be imagined when Murray emerged to say that French had cancelled
his orders for an advance to the north.
The next twenty-four hours was to see the BEF win a defensive
victory at Mons, but strategically the Germans remained on the offensive.
On the night of 23 August Lanrezac decided to continue his retreat.
Spears was horrified at the implications for the BEF. 'To retire without

335
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

consulting them was abandon them to certain destruction. Yet that


to
was apparently exactly what he [Lanrezac] was proposing to do.' Once
again Spears was the bearer of bad news to Sir John French, having
rushed by motorcar over to Le Cateau once again, the BEF was ordered
;

to retreat. Spears was to play an important role in many of the battles


on the Western Front, but none of his interventions were quite as vital
as those during the Battle of Mons. 'The British Army was saved by
the skin of its teeth, more, perhaps, by the efforts of Spears, a subaltern,
2/
than by any other single man.'
Spears continued in the capacity of a liaison officer for the next three
years with the French Tenth and Sixth Armies. In January 1917 he was
appointed as liaison officer between GHQ and Franchet d'Esperey's
Groupe desArmees du Xord. In his two volumes of memoirs of the 1914-18
war, he discussed the role of the liaison officer.He considered that
the liaison officer lived a more interesting life than that of the average
trenchbound subaltern. He was required to have a sound knowledge
of a whole range of subjects, from logistics to grand strategy, and rubbed
shoulders with the mighty. But liaison work also had its disadvantages.
It was a physically gruelling and lonely job, and the liaison officer could

easily become unpopular, regarded as too pro-French by the British


and too pro-British by the French. The job of a liaison officer was
a highly responsible one. He might be called 'upon without warning
not only to explain a situation but to interpret it, to foretell how a general
would act, what the result of an operation was likely to be.' This consti-
tuted a heavy burden. One of the worse experiences of Spears's life

occurred on the night before the beginning of the Nivelle Offensive


in April 1917,when he was irrationally tortured by guilt at his contribution
to a plan which he, correctly, foresaw would end in disaster. It should
not be forgotten that at this time Spears was only thirty-two years old,
28
and less than three years before had been a lieutenant.
Spears ended the war as a Brigadier-General and head of the British
Military Mission to Paris, a position which he held until 1920. This
represented a move away from the battlefield to a diplomatic role, liaising
between the British and French Ministers of War. Not the least of the
benefits that Spears gained from the First World War was the friendship
of Winston Churchill. They had met socially before the war, but their
friendship was sealed in December 1916, when Churchill visited the
Front just after having been excluded from office. Spears was 'entirely
captivated' by Churchill, and quickly became a confidant. In return,
Churchill greatly admired the courage and achievements of the younger

336
:

CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

man. In October 1916, after hearing that Spears had again been wounded,
he wrote to him in typically Churchillian, but nonetheless sincere, terms
'You are indeed a Paladin worthy to rank with the truest knights of
29
the great days of romance.' This was to prove a lasting friendship,
which had the profoundest effects on Spears's life and career.
With the encouragement of Churchill, Spears left the Army in 1920
and devoted himself to politics and business. Spears proved to be a
sturdily independent MP, championing some unpopular causes. He was
chairman of the Anglo-French Committee of the House of Commons,
and came to be regarded as an apologist for the French, becoming
known as 'the Member for Paris'. Although Spears remained deeply
attached to Churchill he was accepted by the wider circle of anti-appease-
30
ment MPs who regarded Churchill with suspicion. On the outbreak
of war in September 1939 Spears found it difficult to obtain active
employment, his contribution to the war effort being confined to the
clandestine training of liaison officers. However, fifteen days after the
arrival Downing Street Spears found himself
of Winston Churchill in 10
in Paris as thePrime Minister's personal representative to Paul Reynaud,
31
the French Prime Minister.
In June 1940 Spears was forced to witness the death of a country
he knew and loved. In the process, many of his deeply held convictions
about France and the French were challenged. Shortly after his arrival
in France on 25 May 1940 he attended a meeting of the French War
Committee. Spears was aware that the military situation was poor: that
a strong German armoured force had attacked through the supposedly
impenetrable Ardennes and had raced to the coast, cutting off the Anglo-
French forces that had advanced into Belgium. As an experienced liaison
officer Spears was not surprised when Reynaud complained that 'British
Generals always made for harbours', but he was not prepared for the
stark evidence of defeatism in the French Army, which extended up
to the highest levels. A staff officer from Blanchard's army group in
Belgium concluded a report with the categorical statement that he
believed 'in an early peace'. This was followed by a bitter 'monologue'
from Weygand, the French Commander-in-Chief, which ended with
a proposal that Blanchard should abandon his attempt to break through
to the south through the German cordon, and instead fall back on the
Channel ports. Spears successfully argued against this course of action.
However, the fact that Weygand had suggested the cancellation of a
major action on the basis of the unsubstantiated report of a junior officer
produced 'real doubts concerning Weygand's capacity' in Spears's mind.

337
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

Spears found the contrast between the present situation and 1914-18
to be both sharp and poignant. In both the first and last years of the

Great War the Allies had been placed in perilous positions. Then the
had been evident. But in 1940 Spears was faced with alarm-
will to resist

ing evidence of the low morale and poor performance of large sections
of the French Army. He had greatly admired the French poilu of the
Great War, and the seemingly effortless German triumph in 1940 'had
32
been to me very like a personal humiliation'.
On the evening of 26 May, the defeatists in the French War Committee
won a further victory, when the possibility of an early peace was dis-
cussed. Spears's tactics were to counter anti-British feeling and to sup-
port Reynaud against the defeatists by convincing and sundry of
all

Britain's determination to right on, and that France's best hope of ulti-
mate survival lay with continuing the war, from the French Empire,
if not in metropolitan France. Spears had a difficult task. Liaison between

the BEF and French forces was extremely poor, and both sides suspected
that the other was not pulling its weight. Naturally, Spears found this
situation extremely galling; little notice appeared to have been taken of

his experience of liaison work in the First World War. The British
evacuation from Dunkirk and the refusal to commit greater numbers of
fighter aircraft to the Battle of France were understandable and sensible
from London's point of view. The French, naturally, did not see these
British decisions in such a favourable light. Spears made his own contri-
bution to Anglo-French mistrust by making tactless remarks: for
instance, on 6 June he replied to Weygand's criticisms of the RAF with
33
a scathing comment on the total absence of French pilots from the skies.
Spears's role in the events that led to the break-up of the Anglo-
French alliance was that of a minor actor and major chronicler. At
the vital conference between Churchill and Reynaud at Tours on 13
June 1940 Spears was shocked by what he saw as Reynaud's collapse
of will. Reynaud asked that France be released from an earlier agreement
not to make a separate peace. Churchill, while making clear his oppo-
sition to this course, was still reluctant to give a categorical refusal.
On Spears's prompting, the British adjourned for a walk in a garden
to discuss the proposal. When they returned Churchill again missed
the opportunity to express his complete refusal to countenance such
a move. Paul Baudouin, Secretary to the French Cabinet, was thus
able to spread his version of the meeting, which was that Britain had
given consent to France making a separate peace. In part this was based
on a deliberate misunderstanding of Churchill's (admittedly erratic)

338
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

French. On learning of this from de Gaulle, Spears chased the Prime


Minister to the airport and 'got from him an absolute and categorical
confirmation' of his opposition to France making a separate peace. How-
ever, itwas Baudouin's version which was widely believed. Reynaud,
too, cannot be excused from some of the blame as he consistently failed
34
to refute Baudouin's tale.

If Spears had effectively countered Baudouin's distortion, the path


of Anglo-Vichy relations might have been somewhat smoother. On 16
June the British gave their assent to the French concluding an armistice,
but only on condition that the French fleet sailed to British ports. Camp-
bell (the BritishAmbassador) misunderstood his instructions and made
it appear that assent had been superseded by the extraordinary British

offer of union with France made later that day. (Spears played a minor
role in this stage of the drama he held the paper on which Reynaud
;

took down details of the offer, which de Gaulle, Under-Secretary in


the Ministry of National Defence since 5 June, telephoned through from
London.) However it appeared to the French that 'the British position
had moved from assent on 13 June to categorical refusal on 16 June,
whereas in fact it had moved in that time from refusal to conditional
assent'. This further 'evidence' of British perfidy strengthened the hand
of the French defeatists. Petain emerged at the head of a new govern-
ment, which made peace with the Germans. The relationship between
Britain and the Vichy regime, which was always going to be a difficult
35
one, began on a note of exceptional bitterness and distrust.
As early as 11 June Spears had begun to look upon de Gaulle as
the only man who offered hope for the future of France. On 16 June
de Gaulle told Spears that he, de Gaulle, feared he would be arrested
on Weygand's orders. As a result Spears made the decision which was
to constitute his greatest contribution to the struggle against Hitler.
He decided to help de Gaulle escape to England. In doing so he was
taking a gamble. De Gaulle was no longer a minister, simply a very
junior brigadier ; technically, if he issued a call for resistance while
Petain was negotiating an armistice, he would be in rebellion. was
It

by no means clear whether de Gaulle would receive a friendly welcome,


and in fact the British attitude towards the Free French and the Vichy
36
regime was to be highly ambivalent over the next two years. However,
Spears decided that 'To help de Gaulle was the only way of pursuing
. . .

the mission the Prime Minister had entrusted to me.' After considerable
cloak-and-dagger activity, de Gaulle went to the airport on 17 June
1940, ostensibly to bid Spears farewell. At the last moment, Spears pulled

339
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

de Gaulle aboard. As Churchill wrote, de Gaulle 'carried with him,


37
in this small aeroplane, the honour of France'.
The precariousness of de Gaulle's position on arrival in London
perhaps helps explain the storminess of his relationship with Spears.
Spears's role in promoting and establishing de Gaulle in the summer
of 1940 can hardly be overestimated. It was Spears who was instrumental
inpersuading Churchill to reverse the Foreign Office's decision to ban
de Gaulle from broadcasting to France. On 28 June 1940 Spears was
appointed head of the 'Spears Mission' to liaise with de Gaulle. For
a man who believed that 'France cannot be France without greatness' 38
and who regarded himself as the upholder of French honour, the posi-
tion of being a pensioner of the British, and protege of Spears, was
an embarrassing and humiliating one. Incidents such as the failure to
inform him in advance of the British attack on the French fleet in July
1940 reinforced de Gaulle's consciousness of his ignominous position.
De Gaulle's policy was dedicated to establishing himself as the leader
of a sovereign state, the theoretical equal of Britain and the USA. In
order to make this pretension credible, he needed to establish his control
over as much of the Vichy-controlled French Empire as possible.
However, de Gaulle had more than merely short-term aims he also ;

had an eye on France's post-war position. In particular, he had grave


reservations about British intentions towards the Levant, suspecting that
Britainwas preparing to use war-time conditions to seize these French
39
mandates. This paranoia about the threat of British imperialism
blinded him to other, more important factors, such as the strength of
anti-French feeling among the Levantine natives, but de Gaulle's fears
about the British had some basis in reality. The British were committed
to pursuing two policies that were mutually incompatible. On the one
hand, they were committed to supporting the Free French, and maintain-
ing French presence in the area ; on the other hand, they were also
committed to a Free French declaration of independence for the Levant,
given in 1941 in an attempt to create an anti-Vichy fifth column. The

French had established two republics were only nominally indepen-


that
dent, but the British, for reasons of sentiment and the desire to maintain
good relations with the Arabs, wanted to give the republics real power
- which would inevitably be at the expense of the French. De Gaulle
was dedicated to countering any British moves in the Levant that he
considered detrimental to French interests, and in July 1941 this led

him into a headlong clash with Spears.


July 1941 was the turning point in Spears' relations with de Gaulle,

340
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

and in his whole attitude to France. Overnight Spears turned 'definitely,


if not violently, francophobe'. The roots of Spears's disillusionment
with de Gaulle went back at least to the spring of 1941, when he began
to suspect that the Frenchman was more concerned about establishing
the Free French position in the Levant than in contributing to the overall
Allied cause. By June he was able to write that 'the Cross our Com-
40
manders have to bear is the Cross of Lorraine'.* However, it was
the affair of the Syrian Armistice that brought Spears's simmering dis-
content to a head. Since the Fall of France in 1940 the Vichy adminis-
tration in the Levant had observed a precarious neutrality, and until
June 1941 the overstretched British had left Syria and Lebanon alone.
During the Iraqi campaign of May 1941, the Vichy government had
allowed Iraq-bound German aircraft to refuel in Syria. Spears had pre-
viously warned of the danger of a Levantine 'Trojan Horse' in the
British rear and had forcefully demanded that Wavell, the British Com-
mander-in-Chief, take some form of preventative measures. Iraq
brought the dispute between Spears and Wavell to a head. Spears took
his case to Churchill, who ruled against Wavell. Operation Exporter,
the invasion of the Vichy territories by British Empire and Free French
forces, began on 8 June 1941.
Spears's victory over Wavell was in many ways a pyrrhic one. In
the short term, Spears 'succeeded in alienating just about everybody
in Cairo' including Wavell, and the Prime Minister reinforced Wavell's
authority by ordering that all communications 'should in future go

through the Commander-in-Chief if they touched military matters'.


Spears took this decision from Churchill badly, regarding it not only
as a blow to his prestige and authority in the Middle East but also
as an unexpected slight from an old friend. Spears even went as far
41
as to consider resigning. The campaign also dealt a fatal blow to his
relationship with de Gaulle. On 14 July General 'Jumbo' Wilson, the
commander of the expedition, signed an armistice with the Vichy author-
ities at Acre which virtually ignored the Free French and, in de Gaulle's

words, 'amounted to a pure and simple transference of Syria and Leba-


non to the British'. As Dr Gaunson has argued, the Acre agreement
was the result of 'an unhappy coalition of circumstances and human
limitations' rather than a deep-laid British plot. De Gaulle did not
42
see it in these terms.

* The cross of Lorraine was the symbol of the Free French. This comment is often
erroneously attributed to Churchill.

341
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

Spears, too, considered the terms of the armistice 'quite preposterous'


and had indeed in June succeeded in getting Wilson and de Gaulle
to agree on armistice terms. These had been rejected, officially because
Spears was trespassing on Wavell's territory in acting as an intermediary,
but also because Spears's tactless behaviour had offended Middle East
Command. In meetings on 20 and 21 July 1941 the incandescent de
Gaulle let his frustration boil over in interviews with Spears and Oliver
Lyttelton, the Minister of State. Perhaps the low point of Anglo-Free
French relations was reached when de Gaulle handed Lyttelton a paper
'which could only be read as terminating alliance between Free French
and Great Britain'. This 'ingratitude' was for Spears the final straw.
That very afternoon he was party to a decision that the British should
43
be prepared to replace de Gaulle and possibly even incarcerate him.
What had triggered this 'conversion'? Gaunson has suggested that
throughout his life Spears had been a dedicated Francophile. His disgust
at the moral decay he saw in 1940 had been temporarily counter-balanced

by de Gaulle's heroic and lonely stand against the Nazis. But the realiza-
tion that de Gaulle's ambitions for France, if not for himself, took priority
44
over everything else, caused a violent revulsion against his former idol.

A more prosaic explanation might be that Spears was offended that


his protege, the man he had physically rescued from the defeatists in
June 1940, had chosen to take an independent path. Spears's feelings
for de Gaulle were fully reciprocated. The Englishman rose 'to the top
of de Gaulle's rather crowded private demonology'. It is clear that de
Gaulle believed that, detestable as Spears was, ultimately his policies
were dictated by Churchill. On 2 June 1945, de Gaulle gave a press con-
ference in which he attacked British policy in the Levant, slipping in a
bitter reference to his former friend: '[Spears] has represented his
country at Beirut for three years. It is difficult for me to imagine that dur-
45
ing those three years he followed any policy but that of his government.'
The breach between Spears and de Gaulle exacerbated, rather than
created, the Anglo-French tension over the Levant. Spears's behaviour
towards both de Gaulle and Catroux, the Free French Delegate-General
in the Levant, was on occasion extremely high-handed. Since de Gaulle
was able to match Spears blow for blow in bitterness and tactlessness
this gave inter-Allied relations an edge which would otherwise have
been missing. Spears's enthusiastic espousal of the Arab cause in the
summer of 1941 gave the personality clash an ideological element. Ara-
bism replaced Francophilia as the driving force behind Spears, who
seems to have been unhappy without a 'cause' to support. This lethal

342
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

brew of personal animosity and deeply held conviction helped to produce


one of the most serious inter- Allied clashes of the Second World War.
It would be wrong to see Spears's role as purely destructive. He was

firmly convinced that his policy of promoting Arab independence was


in the national interest, given that the official British policies were in
practice unworkable. Too often, he was placed in the position of Solo-
mon, adjudicating between the French and the natives. Thus it was
inevitable that he would alienate one side or the other. His decisions
were not invariably in favour of the natives. In March 1942 he declined
to support a Syrian anti-colonialist body. As Kersaudy comments, the
Free French would have been amazed had they known of this 'To :

them, the name of Spears was the very synonym of anti-French agitation
46
in the Levant'. Spears was able to justify his general policy by referring
to Churchill's somewhat ambiguous statements of British policy, and
by the fact that his knighthood and promotion to Minister to the Repub-
lics in 1942 implied official approval of his policies. While his friendship

with the Prime Minister shielded him from his (British) enemies many,
including the Foreign Office, regarded him as an obstacle to the im-
provement of relations with de Gaulle. In November 1943 the Lebanese
parliament in effect declared the French mandate at an end, and the
French responded by overthrowing the government of the Republic.
The hand of Spears was (probably justifiably) seen behind the Lebanese
move. Harold Macmillan attributed the problems in part to the fact
47
that 'Spears is out for trouble and personal glory'.
On several occasions, notably in October 1942, Spears had come close
to dismissal. Finally, in November 1944 Churchill, who had recently
returned from the Liberation parade in Paris intoxicated by the revival
of his old love for France, removed Spears as Minister. Spears's friend-
ship with Churchill had undoubtedly protected him in previous years,
and Churchill came to regret his dismissal, which soured, at least for
a time, their relationship. Whatever damage Spears had done to Anglo-
French relations, and it has been suggested that de Gaulle's 'non' to
British membership of the EEC in 1967 was in part a legacy of the
bitterness of these years, the impact on Spears himself is plain. A member
of his family was to write 'His experience in the Middle East was
:

so traumatic, and his disillusionment with the French (and in particular


with de Gaulle) so profound, that the wounds he suffered between
48
1941 and 1944 never properly healed.'

Having been present at the naval bombardment of Sabang and the sur-

343
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

render of Singapore in 1945, Carton de Wiart was retained by Attlee


as the Prime Minister's representative in Chungking until 1946. Carton
de Wiart then returned home and lived in retirement in Ireland until
his death in 1963. He married twice, in 1908 and 1951, and had two
daughters by his first marriage. Spears lost his parliamentary seat in
the Labour landslide of 1945, and concentrated on his business career,
playing a major role in the formation of the Institute of Directors. In
1918 he had married Man Borden, a successful American novelist, who
was to run an ambulance service in both world wars. Spears married
for the second time in 1969 and died in 1974.
Spears and Carton de Wiart were both somewhat short-tempered,
peppery individuals, not perhaps ideal material for diplomats. The title
of Carton de Wiart's autobiography, Happy Odyssey, gives a fair indication
of his attitude to war. In many ways, his military values belonged to
a century earlier than the twentieth. John Keegan's description of the
style of leadership of the quintessential Heroic general, Alexander the
Great - 'exemplary, risk-taking, physical, passionate' - seems equally
applicable to Carton de Wiart.To borrow another phrase from Keegan,
Carton de Wiart's 'wound history is a sort of shorthand index of his
style of leadership'. Ismay recalled a conversation in which Carton de
W'iart ascribed his wounds to bad luck rather than excessive risk-taking,
but as Ismay commented, 'The men whom he led told a different story'. 49
A style of leadership which led to him being wounded four times while
in command of a brigade did not easily adapt to the very different
demands of diplomacy. While his physical courage and martial prowess
may have been useful in Poland in 1920 when his role was in effect
limited to impressing the natives, rather different skills were needed
inChina in 1944-46. Carton de Wiart was glad that Churchill gave
him an active role in the war effort but there is no doubt that he would
have preferred a field command, a position for which, if not for his
age, he would have been better suited.
The lasting monument to Carton de Wiart is probably the character
of Ritchie-Hook in Evelyn Waugh's Sword of Honour trilogy. Spears
is likely to be remembered for his volumes of memoirs, which remain

some of the most useful and well written to have emerged from the
two world wars. Unfortunately, were not entirely
his literary successes
matched by diplomatic triumphs. Unlike Carton de Wiart, Spears was
frustrated in his desire to command men in battle, and appears to have
transferred his aggression to the diplomatic arena. Even while remem-
bering that Spears was faced with the problem of operating within the

344
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

parameters of ill-thought out and contradictory British policies, and


that de Gaulle would have been a troublesome and cantankerous ally
no matter who had been British representative, it is clear that Spears
was the wrong man to have in the Levant after July 1941. Spears offered
extremism when compromise, or at least fudge, was needed, and one
is forced into the conclusion that Churchill would have been wiser

to have removed Spears from his position as soon as Spears fell out
with de Gaulle. Ultimately, one must question Churchill's wisdom in
placing and maintaining both Spears and Carton de Wiart in positions
to which they were temperamentally unsuited.

NOTES
(All books published in London unless stated.)
1 A. Carton de Wiart, Happy Odyssey (Jonathan Cape, 1950), pp. 70-4; T.
Bridges, Alarms &
Excursions (Longmans, 1938), pp. 156-60; E. Wyrall, The
History oftheigth Division IQ14-18 (Edward Arnold, n.d.), pp. 40-9, 246.
2 Carton de Wiart, pp. 47-53; Lord Ismay, The Memoirs ofLordlsmay (Heine-
mann, i960), pp. 25-6.
3 Carton de Wiart, p. 54; obituary, The Times, 6 June 1963.
4 H. Gough, Soldiering On (Arthur Barker, 1954), p. 149; Wyrall, p. 239;
C. Asquith, Diaries 1915-18 (Hutchinson, 1968), p. 244.
5 N. Davies, 'Lloyd George and Poland 1919-20', Journal of Contemporary
No. 3, 1971, pp. 140-1.
History, vol. 6,
6 N. Davies White Eagle Red Star (Macdonald, 1972), p. 94.
7 M. Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, vol. IV, Companion, Part 2, Documents
July 1919-March 1921 (Heinemann, 1977), p. 994.
8 Carton de Wiart, p. 155.
9 S. Zaloga and V. Madej, The Polish Campaign igjg (New York: Hippocrene
Books, 1985), pp. 24-7.
10 Carton de Wiart, p. 159.
n Public Record Office (PRO) WO 216/47; WO 202/114.
12 Carton de Wiart, p. 156.

13 PRO WO 202/125.
14 For Norway 1940, see T. K. Deny, The Campaign in Norway (HMSO,
D. Macintyre, Narvik (Evans Bros, 1959).
1952) (British Official history) ;

15 Carton de Wiart, pp. 168-9 D. Hart-Davis, Peter Fleming - A Biography


'>

(Jonathan Cape, 1974), pp. 225-6.


16 W. S. Churchill, The Second World War, vol. 1, The Gathering Storm (Cassell,
1953 edn), p. 565.
17 PRO WO 168/97.
18 Carton de Wiart, pp. 180-234; J. Hargest, Farewell Campo 12 (Michael

345
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

Joseph, 1943); H. Macmillan, War Diaries 1943-45 (Macmillan, 1984), p.


196.
19 M. Victor}' 1941-45 (Heinemann,
Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, vol. Y\',Roadto

1986) p. 936. For the background to the Anglo-American struggle for


influence in China, see C. Thorne, Allies of a Kind: The United States,
Britain and the WarAgainstJapan 1941-45 (Hamish Hamilton, 1978).
20 Thorne, pp. 557-8 Carton de Wiart, pp. 247-8.
;

21 Thorne, p. 557 P. Ziegler, Mountbatten (Fontana edn, 1985), p. 289.


;

22 Thorne, p. 560; Carton de Wiart, pp. 268-71; D. Dilks (ed.), The Diaries
ofSir Alexander Cadogan 1938-45 (Cassell, 1971), p. 694.

23 Carton de Wiart, p. 235.

24 For Spears's early life and personal details, see E. L. Spears, The Picnic
Basket (Martin Seeker and Warburg, 1967) and his obituary' in The Times,
28 January 1974.
25 E. L. Spears, Liaison 1914 (Heinemann, 1930), pp. 73-9.
26 Ibid., p. 135.

27 Ibid., pp. 148, 172; I. Terraine, Mons: Retreat to Victory (Pan edn, 1972),
P . 89.
28 Spears, Liaison HJ14, pp. 51-2, 117-20, 340-1; E. L. Spears, Prelude to Victory

(Jonathan Cape, 1939), pp. 47-50, 482.


29 M. Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, vol. Ill, 1914-16 (Heinemann, 1971), p.
600; vol. Ill, Companion, Part 2, Documents, p. 1578.

30 N. Nicolson (ed.), Harold Nicolson i Letters and Diaries 1930-39 (Fontana,


1970), pp. 371-2.
31 C. Andrew, Secret Sen-ice (Heinemann, 1985), p. 457; E. L. Spears, Assign-
ment to Catastrophe (Reprint Society edn, 1956), p. 178.

32 Spears, Assignment, pp. 182, 189-96, 376.

33 Ibid., p. 388; B. Bond, France and Belgium 1939-40 (Davis-Poynter, 1975),


p. 132.

34 Spears, Assignment, pp. 504-22; M. Gilbert, Winston 5. Churchill, vol. VI,


Finest Hour 1939-41 (Heinemann, 1983), pp. 526-38.

35 Spears, Assignment, pp. 584-92; R. T. Thomas, Britain and Vichy: The


Dilemma ofAnglo-French Relations 1940-42 (Macmillan, 1979), pp. 18-22.
36 See Thomas, Britain and I tchy.
37 Spears, Assign ment, pp. 608-11, 619.
38 C. de Gaulle, War Memoirs, vol. 1: The Call to Honour 1940-42 (Collins,

1955), P- 9-

39 For Anglo-Free French rivalry' in the Levant, see A. B. Gaunson, The


Anglo-French Clash in Lebanon and Syria, 1940-45 (Macmillan, 1987) and
F. Kersaudy, Churchill and de Gaulle (Collins, 1981).

40 E. L. Spears, Fulfilment of a Mission (Leo Cooper, 1977), p. 292; Gaunson,


pp. 27, 29.
41 Gaunson, pp. 193-5.

346
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

42 de Gaulle, p. 194; Gaunson, pp. 44-5.


43 Spears, Fulfilment, pp. 123, 134; C. de Gaulle, War Memoirs, vol. 1: The
Call to Honour ^40-42, Documents (Collins, 1955), pp. 190-1 ; Spears, Fulfil-
ment, pp. 137-8.

44 Gaunson, pp. 66-8; E. L. Spears, Two Men Who Saved France (Eyre and
Spottiswoode, 1966), p. 144.
45 Kersaudy, p. 192; C. de Gaulle, War Memoirs: Salvation 1Q44-46, Documents,
p. 260.
46 Kersaudy, p. 195.
47 Macmillan, p. 295.
48 D. Hart-Davis, Editorial note in Spears, Fulfilment, p. xi.
49 J. Keegan, The Mask of Command (Jonathan Cape, 1987), pp. 77, 61; Ismay,
P-353-

CHRONOLOGY: CARTON DE WIART


1880, May 5 Born in Brussels
1899, June Goes up to Balliol College, Oxford
1899 (late) Enlists as trooper in Paget's Horse
1900 Wounded in South Africa
1901 Commissioned into Imperial Light Horse
1901, September 14 Commissioned into 4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards
1901, March Joins regiment in India
1904-8 ADC to Sir Henry Hildyard, Commander-in-Chief
South Africa
1908 Marries Countess Frederica, daughter of Prince
Fugger Babenhausen
1910-14 Adjutant of a Yeomanry regiment, the Royal
Gloucestershire Hussars
I9i4,july23 Sails to join Camel Corps in Somaliland

1914, November 17 Takes part in action against Dervishes for which he


is awarded the Distinguished Service Order

1915, January 3 Left eye removed as a result of wound received on 17


November 1914
1915, February Joins 4th Dragoon Guards near Ypres
1915, May 9 Wounded during 2nd Battle of Ypres
1915, December Left hand amputated as a result of wound received on
10May 1915
I9i6,july2 Commands 8th Gloucesters at La Boisselle in an
action for which he is later awarded the Victoria Cross
1916, September Wounded at High Wood
1917, January 11 Appointed to command 12 Brigade
1917, November 23 Wounded

347
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

1918, April 7 Appointed to command 105 Brigade


1918, April 20 Wounded
1918, November 19 Appointed to command 113 Brigade
1919, February 12 Arrives in Warsaw as Head of British Military Mission
to Poland
1923, May 1 Placed on half-pay
1924 Mission to Poland ends. Retires from the Army and
settles in Poland
1939, July Appointed Head of British Military Mission to Poland
1939, August 24 Interview with Smigly-Rydz
1939, September 1 German invasion of Poland commences
1939, November 29 Appointed to command 61st Division

1940, April 14 Arrives in Norway as Lieutenant-General commanding


Central Norwegian Expeditionary Force
1940, May 5 Arrives back in England after evacuation of CNEF
from Norway
1940, May 14 Reappointed to command of 61st Division
1941, April 5 Ordered to fly to Yugoslavia as Head of British Military
Mission but later shot down and captured by Italians
1943, March 25 Escapes from POW camp with Lt.-Gen. Sir Richard
O'Connor. They remain at liberty for eight days
1943, August 28 Arrives in England from Lisbon after release by Italians
1943, October 18 Sets out from London to take up position as Churchill's
personal representative to Chiang Kai-shek
1944, July 25 Present at naval bombardment of Sabang
1944, December Reports to War Cabinet on situation in the Far East
1946 Retires from post in China

1949 Wife dies


1950, July Publishes memoirs, Happy Odyssey
Marries Mrs Joan Sutherland
1963, June 5 Dies in Countv Cork, Eire

CHRONOLOGY: EDWARD SPEARS


1886, August 7 Born
1903, November 14 Joins Kildare Militia (3rd Battalion Royal Dublin
Fusiliers)

1906, May 23 Gazetted into 8th Hussars


1906 Publishes Lessons of the Russo-Japanese War
1910 Transferred into nth Hussars because of ill-health
1914 Publishes Cavalry Tactical Schemes
1914, August 5 Temporary Captain

348
CARTON DE WIART AND SPEARS

1914, AugUSt-1917, Liaison officer with French Army


May
i9i7,May5 Appointed Head of British Military Mission in Paris

1918, January 1 Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel


1918, January 23 Temporary Brigadier- General
1918, March Marries novelist Mary Borden
1919 Awarded CBE
1920 Retires from Army
1921 Awarded CB
1922-4 National Liberal MP for Loughborough Division of
Leicester
1930 Publishes Liaison 1Q14
I93I-45 Conservative MP for Carlisle
1939 Publishes Prelude to Victory (memoir of 1917 Nivelle
Offensive)
1940, May 25 Arrives in France as Churchill's representative with
Paul Reynaud, French Prime Minister
1940, May 26 Promoted to Major- General
1940, June 17 Returns to England with de Gaulle
1940, June 28 Appointed Head of British Mission to de Gaulle
1940, September 23 Present with de Gaulle at Dakar fiasco
1941, April 1 Arrives in Cairo with de Gaulle
1941, July Head of Spears Mission, Syria and Lebanon
1942, March 21 Returns from London as First Minister to the
Republics of Syria and Lebanon
1942, March Knighted
1944, December 5 Resigns as First Minister in the Levant
1945 Honorary Major-General
1945 July Loses parliamentary seat in General Election
1953 July 1 Created 1st Baronet
1953-4 President, Institute of Directors
1954 Publishes Assignment to Catastrophe, his memoir of the
French campaign of 1940
1966 Publishes Two Men Who Saved France, a study of Petain
and de Gaulle
1967 Publishes The Picnic Basket (volume of memoirs and
essays)
1968, December 2 Wife dies
1969 Marries Nancy, daughter of Major-General Sir
Frederick Maurice and Spears's long-serving secretary
1974, January 27 Dies
1977 Fulfilment ofa Mission, Spears's account of his Middle
East sojourn, is published posthumously

349
INDEX

Adam, Sir Ronald, 20, 37 Alexander, Harold, 1st Earl Alexander of


Addis Ababa Tunis (Field-Marshal)
Ethiopian campaign (1941), 203 appointments and career
Wingate's patriot revolt, 284, 285 Athens, service in (1944), 124
Aerial warfare Burma, command in (1942), no
Chindits, support for, 291-2 Dunkirk (1940), 109-10
Cyrenaican airfields, 203
Field-Marshal (1944), 123

Ethiopian campaign, in,


First World War service, 106, 107
304, 305
Latvia, service in, 107
Habbaniya, attacks on, 80, 173
Lt.-Colonel (1922), 108
Ironside's views, 23
.Mediterranean Supreme Commander, 124
Malayan airfields, 260
Middle East C-in-C, 95, 112
Malta convoys, cover for, 203
North Africa, Ground Forces
Norway, aerial threat (1940), 330, 331
Commander, 113
Tunis, in battle for, 236
North-West Frontier, service in 1938, 108
Western Desert, cover in, 188, 189
Staff College, at (1926), 108
Afrika Korps
chronology of life of, 128
all-purpose spearhead, as, 153
Churchill, relations with, 11, 111
component forces in 1941, 205
criticisms of, 108, 110
El Agheila, advance on, 197
and experiences
military strategy
Akyab, 83, 218, 219, 310 American troops, view of, in, 114
Alam Haifa, battle of Anglo-American force in Italy, view of, 121
forces in, 234 Burma withdrawal, 309
strategy, 154 decorations, 106, 107
Alamein, battles of, see El Alamein, battles of diplomacy with Allied forces, in
Alanbrooke, Viscount, see Brooke, Alan HQ, Macmillan's description of, 115-16
Francis, 1st Viscount Alanbrooke Imperial Defence College, at, 9
Albanian front, 169 Italian campaign, 115-23

351
INDEX

Alexander, Harold, ist Earl Alexander of Allied views on mounting, divergent, 98,
Tunis (Field-Marshal) - ami. 123, 177

military strategy and experiences - ami. effect of, 178


political constraints, 117, 118 Mediterranean forces, use of, 119
retreat and evacuation, art of, 109 postponement, purpose of, 159
style of command, 104-5. I22 An/io landings, rig, 120-21
tactical skills, 109 Arab revolt against Jewish immigration, 185
Tunis and Bizerta victories, 115 \rabs, British relations with (1940), 340
other generals, contacts with \rakan campaign
Brooke, 112 Japanese assault (1044), 316
Clark, 123 Sum's advance (1943), 314
Eisenhower, 113 Slim's assessment. 310-11
Montgomery, 112-13, 1 1
^> — 17. 157 \\ swell's plan, 83

Patton, 157 \rchangel, \llied expedition to (igi8), 18


Slim, 308 Ardennes
personal life German breakthrough (1040), 337
artistic activities, 8, 105 German offensive (11)44), 162, 163, 238
birth and education, 105 Vrmoured \rnrj , 1 lobart's proposal for,
character, 11, 105-6, 125
common sense, reputation for, 108, 100 \rnhem, battle tor, 100, 162, 238
languages, command of, 8 Vdantic sealanes, 93
political career post war, 125 Vuchinleck, Sir ( llaude (Field-Marshal)
Aliakmon Line, 79, 170 appointments and career
Amphibious assaults 1 England posting (1940), 134
\k\ab, 83 Field-Marshal (ig4b), 143
problems of, 159 1\ ( .orps, command of, 134

vehicles and training (1943-4), 250, 251. 254 V ( iorps, formation of, 136

see oho An/io; D-Day; Salerno 1lome Guard, organization of, 136
Andalsnes, Norway 26, 330, 331
, India, C-in-C (1940), 130, 137
Anderson, Sir Kenneth Arthur Noel (I t- India, Deputy CIGS (1935), 133
General), 156, 230 Middle Fast, C-in-C (1941), 137
Anglo-American alliance Norway, GOC-in-C (1940), 134-5
Alexander's view of American troops, m, 114 Peshawar Brigade, command of, 133
American \iew of British attitude to Quetta, student at Staff College, 133
European invasion, 96, 98 Southern Command, GOC, 136
British generals in favour with Americans, bibliography, 145

MS chronology of life of, 145-6


China, diplomatic differences over, t^2 Churchill, relations with
Chindits, US support for, 29] Auchinleck's stoicism, effect, 131
Far East, plans for Auchinleck's failure to satisfy Churchill,
in 1942, 286-7 130, 135
in 1944, 98-9 Middle East situation, misunderstanding
Greece, effect of British action in, 172 over, 139
Italian campaign, 117, 121 revision of Churchill's opinion, 137
Middle East war strategy, 124, 141 criticisms of, 140, 141
Montgomery, US relations with, 145, 157 India, experience in
North African landings, 95 accepted for Indian Army, 131

Operation Anvil Dragoon, see Anvil C-in-C (1943), 142


Dragoon, Operation modernization of Indian Army, 133
Operation Overlord, see Overlord, Middle East field headquarters, 140
Operation military strategy and experiences
Operation Torch, see Torch, Operation anti-invasion policy (1940), 136
Southern and Western Europe, conflicting 'boxes' plan at Alamein, 154
priorities, 98 French and English troops, opinions of, 136
'Vienna alternative' plan, 98 Indian Army, training and equipment of,

Anglo-French alliance (see also France), 338 287-8


Anvil/Dragoon, Operation Mesopotamia, lessons learned in, 133

352
INDEX

Middle East, preparation of army for war Bremen, capture of, 240
in, 139 British Army
Sandhurst, career at, 131 civil/military relations (1939), 37
subordinates, selection of, 207-8 class consciousness tradition, 109
other generals, contacts with diversity of nationalities within, 216
Montgomery, 140, 141, 152, 153 imperial policing duties, benefits of, 9-10,
Wilson, 208 108
Wingate, 142 mechanization, see Mechanization of British
personal life Army
birth and education, 131 officers contrasted withGerman officers, 9
diplomacy, shortcomings as to, 138 personnel, character valued above intellect,
linguistic ability, 8, 131 106
peerage, refusal of, 144 pre-war unpreparedness, 19, 37
personality, 144-5 special operations, see Special forces
stoicism, origins of, 131 Army, formations of (see also Indian
British
troops, relations with, 132 Army)
Australian forces Army groups
Divisions nth Army Group, 218, 3:2
6th Division, 77, 191, 197, 205 21st Army Group, 158, 162
7th Division, 173 First Army, 156, 236
8th Division, 269 Second Army, 158, 159, 160, 162
Brigades Fifth Army, 120, 178
16th, 191 Seventh Army, 178
19th, 192, 193, 195 Eighth Army, see Eighth Army
Western Desert Force, in, 201 Ninth Army, 175
Fourteenth Army (Eastern Army), see
Baghdad, 244, 301 Fourteenth Army
Bagnold, Ralph Alger (Major), 74, 168, 284, Corps
285 IV Corps, 134, 317, 318
Balkans, operations in, 169-72, 176 V Corps, 136
Baltic Landeswehr, 107, 108 X Corps, 153, 234, 235
Bardia, 191, 192 XII Corps, 152, 237
Barrackpore, 218, 310 XIII Corps, 194, 233, 234
Basra, 132, 305 XV Corps, 292
Battle of Britain, 75 XXX Corps, 154, 215, 238, 239-40
Battle of the Atlantic, 97 XXXIII Corps, 317, 319
Batdeaxe, Operation, 202 Royal Armoured Corps, 248
Baudouin, Paul, 338-9 Royal Tank Corps, see Royal Tank
Beda Fomm, battle of, 195, 201 Regiment
Beirut, 173 Divisions
Belgium 1st Armoured Division, 108, 109, 249
course of fighting in 1944, 162-3, 237 2nd Division, 166
Gamelin's 'Plan D', 40, 42 3rd Division, 151, 231

Benghazi, 194, 195, 209 4th Division, 232, 236


Bennet, Gordon (Major-General), 263, 270 5th Division, 42
Beresford-Peirse, Lt.-General, 80, 202 6th Armoured Division, 236
Bergonzoli, Annibale (General, Italian 7th Armoured Division, 168, 183, 187, 188,
Army), 191, 192, 193, 195 189, 190, 191, 206, 236; see also Desert Rats
Billotte, Gaston (General, French Army), 8th Division, 151, 185
38-9, 42, 43 9th Armoured Division, 233
Bir Gubi, 212 10th Armoured Division, 234
Bir Hacheim, 212 nth Armoured Division, 248, 249
Bizerta, fall of, 115 14th Division, 83, 310-11
Bletchley, code and cypher school, 4 19th Division, 319
Bradley, Omar (General, US Army), 158-9, 44th Home Counties Division, 154, 232
161 46th Division, 236
Brandenburg units in Poland, 283 79th Armoured Division, 250, 252, 254

353
INDEX

British Army, formations of- ami. character, Montgomery's assessment, 10


Divisions - cont. personality, views of friends, 100-1
Guards Armoured Division, 215 Brooke-Fopham. Robert (Air Chief
Brigades Marshal). 2hi. 262
1st Tank Brigade. 245 Burma
4th Armoured Brigade, 189, 190, 196, 206 Chinese armies offered for defence of, 81
5th Infantn Brigade, 230 geograph\ of, 2Sq
6th Infantn Brigade, [66 \\ mgate\ reconnaissaiM
7th Armoured Brigade, 102. [93 Burma campaign
10th Brigade, 304 / Wdhnti Died (Alfred Wagg), 309
17th Brigade, 192 \llied forces deployed fa

Regiments British view of, 332-3


Cameron Highlanders, 190 Churchill's view of. 299,333
Cameronians (Scottish RitK 5 ending of, 510
4th 7th Dragoon Guards, 251, ;:; Japanese retreat, 00
Kings Dragoon Guards, 195 I eese's sen ice under Mountbatten, 217
Durham light Infantn, 176 I ong Range Penetration Groups, 289; set
nth lussars. [86, 104. 195
1 abe Chindits
Prinee of ales W
einster I Regiment. ;;, Sinn- American pressure, effect of, 309
Ro\al 1 lorse \rtillen. [88, 195 special operations, \\ mgate's application of, 295
Ro\al Scots Fusiliers, 1 strategies, conflict between Churchill and
Ro\al lank Regiment. [68, i
s V [QI, 244. Brooke, i)S— i)
I S view ot, ;;--;
Royal arwickshire Regiment, 150
\\ \\ a\ ell's strateg) -

Territorial \rm\. 37, 231, 23a withdrawal to India (1942), 309


British Expeditionary Force Burma ( !orps, 507, 308
France, service in 1014, 334-5 Bush Warfare School, 288
France, service in 1030 40. k.
British Somaliland, 75, 76 ( iabinel Ministers, sir War Cabinet

Broad, Charles. 244 Caen, 151), 100


Brooke, Man, 1st \ iscounl Campbell, Jock (I. t. -Colonel), 195
Alanhrooke (Field-Marshal) ( an a<fan \rmy
appointments and eareer 1 litler .me breakthrough, 216
I

CIGS (1941), 89 Normand) landings, 158


not given Supreme Allied Command, 101 Reichswald. Battle of the, 238-9
rejection of command ofl )esert \rm>, n Carton de \\ iart. Sir Adrian (Lt. -General)
Southern Command (11)40). 29 appointments and career
bibliography, 101-2 Brigadier-( reneral (1917), 326
chronology of life of, 102 China, missions to (1943), 332-3
Churchill, relations with Chiang Kai-shek, Churchill's
functions, respective, with regard to representative to, 332
strategic planning, Q2-4 Chungking, Attlee's representative in 1945,
Norway, Churchill's plan for campaign, 94 344
partnership with Churchill, importance of, decorations, 324, 325
n, 92, 101 Nonvegian Expeditionary Force, command
resentment, Brooke's grounds for, qo-92 of (1940), 329
shared backgrounds, 89-90 Poland, Military Missions, 326, 327, 328
military strategy and expertise Yugoslavia, Military Mission, 332
exceptional grasp of, 10 chronology of life of, 347-8
campaign, view
Italian of, 97-8 Churchill, relations with, 326, 332
Montgomery, support for, 95, 99 Italian armistice negotiations, in, 332
other generals, contacts with liaison officer duties, 332
Alexander, 112 military strategies and experiences
Dill, 65 Burma campaign, view of, 333
Hobart, 248, 249-50 courage, reputation for, 324, 325, 331

personal life FirstWorld War sen ice, 323


birth and education, 89 leadership, style of, 324, 344

354
INDEX

mechanization of German forces, Ironside, 21, 29-30, 26-7


assessment of, 329 Montgomery, 12-13, J 5 2
prisoner of the Italians (1941), 332 Percival, 14
servicebetween wars, 324 Slim, 14, 300
Somali Camel Corps, 325 Spears, 15, 336-7, 341, 343
South African war service, 324 Wavell, 12, 71, 76, 77, 80
strategic naivete, 327 Wilson, 174, 178-9, 180
wounds, 325 Wingate, 13-14, 277, 281
personal life generals, relationship with, collectively
appearance, 324, 326 disputational style, 58, 59
autobiography, 344 First World War experience, effect of, 148
birth and education, 324 House of Commons behaviour, influence
character, 15 of, 56
marriages, 344 Hitler
Poland, in, 326, 327, 328 methods contrasted with, 7
political naivete, 333 opposition to, 2

Casablanca Conference, 113 literary works, 2


Cassino, battles of, 120, 178, 216-17 military career, 1-3
Catania, 116, 117 Minister of Defence, as, 6
Chiang Kai-shek, 308, 332, 333 Nazism, opposition to, 246
China personality
armies offered by Chiang Kai-shek, 81 breadth of vision and romanticism, 92
British and US interests in, 332 Brooke contrasted with Churchill, 91-2
US views on role of, in Far East theatre, Roosevelt, relationship with, 93
286-7 Singapore surrender, depression at, 256
Chindits war strategy
first expedition Boer War experiences, influence of, 5
casualties, 278-9 British Army as principal war-waging
component forces, 289 instrument, 6
course of, 290, 294, 295 Burma campaign, view of, 14, 299-300
name 'Chindit', origin, 289 command, style of, 7
role of, 289 Far East, opposition to Brooke, 98
second expedition Malaya and Singapore, 260, 272
aerial support, 292 Middle East and Singapore, priority
component forces, 292 question, 55-6
planning, 291, 291 papers written in 1941, 93
Slim's view of, 315 plenary authority, requirement of, 15
strength of, in 1943, 315 rationalization of machinery for directing
Chindwin River, 289, 317 war, 6-7
Churchill, Sir Winston Scandinavian strategy, 24-5
American view of, 96 'set Europe ablaze' instruction, 5
Bolshevik regime in Russia, SOE, setting up of, 5
opposition to, 326 tank warfare, influence of Hobart, 246
Chiefs of Staff, relationships with, 10-11, view of war, 4-5
59-60 Churchill tanks, 236, 251
Curragh incident in 1914, 71 Clark, Mark (Lt. -General, US Army)
France's separate peace in 1940, Alexander, relationship with, 123
attitude to, 339 Leese, rivalry with, 217
generals, relationships with individual Salerno, landings at, 118
Alexander, 11, in seizure of Rome as objective, 121, 122, 216
Auchinleck, 130, 130, 135, 137, 139 Cochran, Philip (Colonel, US Army Air
Brooke, 10-11, 60, 89-90, 94, 100 Force), 292
Carton de Wiart, 326, 332 Colville, Sir John (biographer of Gort), 34,
Cunningham, 204 47
Dill, see under Dill Commandos, 283, 284
Gort, 11-12 Committee of Imperial Defence, 6
Hobart, 245, 247, 254 Compass, Operation, 77, 189

355
INDEX

Crete, battle for, 79 \\ ashington. diplomatic posts in, 53, 60-68


Crusader, Operation bibbograprj
objective of, 205 chronology of life of, 68
planning, start of, 174 Churchill, relations with
preparation, 204, 205, 206 communication difficulties, 59
tanks, British strategy involving, 206 criticisms of Dill, 14, 52, 57
withdrawal after, 210 generals. )ill\ support for, 58
I

Cunningham, Sir Alan (General) unsatisfactory nature of relationship, 51-2,


chronology of life of, 222
Churchill, pressure exerted b\, 204 Strategy, differences as to, 57-8
desert warfare, no preparatory experience, 1 larn I lopkins, dealings with, 61
204 1lore-Belisha, relationship with, 55
Ethiopian campaign, 203 Marshall American Chief of Staff),
(

personal qualities, 207 relations with.


14, 03-5

relieved of command in battle. 207 other generals, contacts with


Cyrenaica Auchmlcck. rvS
British Italian offensives and countcr- Brooke. 6l

offensives, 168-9 1 lobart. 24S


Cyrenaica Command, establishment, 202 I lorrocks, 220
Italian forces, components ol (1041). 205 Pcrci\al. :-

O'Connor, strategy of, 103-4 personal life

( Operation C irusader, tee I Operation birth and education, 53


Crusader marriages, 54
recapture, plans tor (Ma\ 1042), 210 \\ ashington, service in, ^,2-t,, 60-68
remo\al of troops from, to Greece, 107 Dinapur, 314, 317
Rommel in (1941), 171 IMxon, )r Norman, 273
I

IDodecanese Islands. 170


I )-I )a\ landings. tee ( hcrlord. ( )peration I)orman-Smith, Eric (Brigadier), 193, 197
Damascus. 173 Dragoon, Operation, see Vnvil Dragoon,
I )eGaulle, Charles (General) ( Operation
ambitions tor Trance. Spears' vie* 01,342 I )unkirk, experiences at
escape to England (1940), 339 Uexander, 109-10
Jerusalem, in, 173 1 lorrocks, 231-2
I e\ant. opposition to British moves in. 340 Montgomery, 152, 231

polio after escape from France. 340 1 )\le I ine, 40, 43, 109, 152
Spears' relationship w ith, 15, 340, 342
Syrian armistice, 342 East African ( lampaign, 78, 285
Vichy French empire, need to control, 340 Eastern Command
Wilson's dealings with, 174 I lorrocks (1941), 232
Dempsey, Sir Miles (General), 159, 160, 102 Ironside (1936), 19
Denmark, German invasion, 134, \2k) Eden, Sir Anthony, 1st Earl of Avon
Desert Rats (7th Armoured Division) Slim, support in Khartoum, 304
North Africa, at final surrender in, 236 Wavell, support for, and visits to, 77, 168,
Operation Crusader, in, 206 169, 184
Support Group, 188, 189, 190, 191 Egypt
Western Desert Force, in (1940), 168, 183, defence against Italian threat from Libya,
187 186, 201
Desert W ar, see \\ estern Desert Campaign political activity in 1939, 167
Diadem, Operation, 120, 122, 216 special operations forces of British Army,
Dickens, Operation, 216 283
Dill, Sir John (Field-Marshal) Turkish invasion threat, 132
Americans' view of, 66, 67-8 Wilson as C-in-C British Troops, 1939, 167
appointments and career Eighth Army
Boer war service, 54-5 Auchinleck as GOC, m
CIGS, 14, 51-2, 56-60 Catania, landings at, 116

war years (1939-40),


early 55 commanders, sequence of, 201
Yice-CIGS, 27,55 component forces, 204

356
INDEX

Crusader offensive, 139; see also Crusader, Japanese forces, compared with, 318
Operation name changed to Fourteenth Army (1943),
El Alamein campaign ribbon, 201 322-3
El Alamein second battle, fame resting on, objective of, in Far East, 314
200 revitalizanon under Slim, 312-13
function in Middle East, 95 SEAC, in, 218
Gott, appointment and death of, 11, 95 Fourth Indian Division
Gustav Line breakthrough, 121 Horrocks, under command of, 236
Italy in 1944, 178 Italian East African campaign, in, 77, 190
Leese command (1943), 158
in Nibeiwa battle, in, 189
Montgomery in command (1942), 141, 149, XIII Corps, in, 204
154 Western Desert Force, in, 168, 183, 188
Operation Vulcan, 115 Fox-Davies, Harry (Lieutenant), 74
origins of, in Western Desert Force, 201, France {see also Vichy French)
204 armistice in 1940, British view of, 339
popular perception of, 200 British clarions with Vichy French and
1

Eisenhower, Dwight D. (General) Free French, 340


Alexander, relations with, 113 conflicting strategies in 1940, 338
Italian campaign, planning of, 117 Field Force, British (1939)
Montgomery, relations with, 16, 100, 145, 162 aims of, 22
Operation Overlord, command of, 16, 101, C-in-C appointment, confusion, 21,38
158,176-7 communications, shortcomings in, 39
Sicilian campaign, plans for, 156-7, 175 Gort as commander, 21
El Agheila, 77 Ironside's visit to, 24
El Alamein movements in 1940, 26
Eighth Army retreat to, after Gazala, 210 invasion by Allied forces, see Overlord,
El Alamein, first battle Operation
Auchinleck as commander, 200, 208 morale of senior commanders in 1940, 43
course of battle, 139 Normandy on France, 161
battle, effect
El Alamein, second battle Operation Anvil/ Dragoon, see Anvil/
course of, 154-5 Dragoon, Operation
start of, October 1942, 112-13 Scandinavian strategy (1940), 25, 42
victory, 141 Free French forces
Ems, River, crossing of, 239-40 Bir Hacheim, at, 212

Enfidaville, 115, 156 de Gaulle, support in Levant, 341


Enigma radio traffic, 4; see also 'Ultra' French Army
Escaut Line, 22-3 Chasseurs Alpins, 25, 330
Ethiopian campaign morale of, in 1940, 337, 338
British development of desert revolt, 282, French North Africa, see Torch, Operation
284 Freyberg, Sir Bernard (Lt. -General, New
Cunningham against Italians, 203 Zealand Army), 12, 234, 235
Fuller, J. F. C. 'Boney' (Colonel), 18, 244
Falaise, 159, 160, 161
Far Eastern theatre of war Gabes, 235
Allied Command, creation of, 81 Gabr Saleh, 206
Anglo-American divergence on strategy, Galahad Force, 291, 291, 293
286-7 Gallabat, 304, 305
Brooke and Churchill, conflicting strategies Gamelin, Maurice (General, French Army)
of, 98-9 Belgium, proposed advance into, 40
divergence of resources to, on entry of Gort's deference to, 38
Japan, 175 Panzer corridor, action to cut (1940), 44
Field Force, the, see under France Gazala, battle of, 210-14
Finland, invasion, 24, 26 Generals (British Army)
Fourteenth Army (Eastern Army) Churchill's appointments, general
Burma campaign, final stages of, 319 comments, 15
'Forgotten Army', as, 200 Churchill's treatment of, 56, 58, 59, 148
Irwin in command (1942), 310 comparisons of characters, 7,8

357
INDEX

Generals (British Army) - omi. obsession w ith detail, 39-40


education and military training, 8 personality, 47
First World War generals, charactt \\ estern Front campaign

professional lives, similarity, &-o, Allied chain of command in 1940, place in,

Second World War generals, character of, 8

German Army Belgium, actions on invasion of, 42


communication sv stems in Europe in 1943, criticisms of leadership, 39, 42
96-7 French generals, encouragement for, 43, 45
Cyrenaica, forces in (1941). 205 French orders, under. 38-9
Divisions, 90th Lighl Division, 205, 236 Gamelin, relations with, 38, 40, 44
mechanization, 204. 329 German advance, actions to counter, 44
mixed battle groups, practice as to, 204-5 Government decisions, communications
\orwav 1940, movements in, 331 breakdown, 42
Panzer Gruppe \frika. 205 Montgomery critical of,
39
prevention of build-up of, before 1 )-l)a\. return to England from Belgium, 45
96-7, 98 \\ eygand Plan, response to, 44
special forces, use of, : s ; Gothic me. 123. 217
1

surrender in North \frica, 236 Gort, W. H. E. (General 'Strafer'), n, 95, "2,


German invasion of England, threat of 140. 153
defence plans. 28-9, 136 Gra/iam, Rodolfo (Marshal, Italian Army),
tarrocks, service on South coast, :;:
1 183, 1^7. i88, 193, 194
German>. Ulied advance into, 239 ( i recce
( Hdeon Fon British assistance to Greek \rmv in 1941,77
Gifford, Sir George (General)* 312 British guarantee of Greek independence in

( rodwin- \usten. 1 lenrv (1 t. -General) 1939,78, 169


British Somaliland, in, 76 campaign in, effect of, 77, 172—3, 201
Crusader, part in, 20b evacuation of Imperial forces in 1941, 172

Ritchie, conflict with, 200 German declaration of war, 170


XIII Corps, command of, 204 Greek army, plan for withdrawal from
Goodwood. Operation, ibo Macedonia, 170
Gort, lohn. bth \ iscounl Gort (Field- Italian invasion in 1940, 77, 184

Marshal) Gustav I me
appointments .\nd career attack on, nt)
GIGS. 20. 3b construction, 118
earrj arm) career. 35 F.ighth Armv penetration, 121

Field Force, with the. 21, 23 kesselring's Strategy, 21b


Gibraltar,Governor of, 4^
Inspector-General of Training, 45 1 labbaniya, 80, 173
Malta, Governor of, 4b 1 Utile Selassie, 284
Militan Secretary, 19 I lammer, ( )peration, 331
Palestine, High Commissioner, 4b I leath, Lewis, 304
chronology of life of. 49 Hitler, Adolf, 2,7
1 lore-Belisha, relations with. 37, 40 1 litler Fine, 121, 21b
Ironside's view of, as CIGS, 20 Hobart, Percy (Major-General)
militan strategy and views appointments and career
continental commitment of army (1939), 3b Camberley, student at, 244
mechanization, failure to support, 38 capture by Turks in 1918, 244
TerritorialArmy, support for, 3b decorations, 244
Western Front, service on, see Western early military career, 243
Front campaign below Egypt, Commander Mobile Division,
personal background 2 4 b-7, 249
austere lifestyle, ^ nth Armoured Division, 248, 249
birth and education, 34 FirstWorld War service, 244
courage, reputation for, 8, 34 Local Defence Volunteers, 247
enjoyment of war, 38 Quetta, instructor at, 244-5
marriage, }b Royal Tank Regiment, Colonel
nicknames, 35 Commandant, 254

358
INDEX

79th Armoured Division, raising of, 250 XIII Corps commandant, 233
bibliography, 255 War Office, post at (1934), 230
chronology of life of, 255 bibliography, 241
Churchill, relationship with, 243, 245, 247 biography (Warner), 226, 229
military' strategies and expertise chronology of life of, 241-2
conferences in 1944 5, attendance at, 253 military strategies and experience
contact with troops in action, 254 armoured fighting, lessons in, 233
invasion strategy and tactics in 1944, 252-4 Dunkirk, 231-2
mobile warfare, introduction to, in 1916, Normandy and Belgium, in (1944), 237

244 relations with troops, 230, 236


specialized armoured vehicles and devices, summary of early military career, 236
development of, in 1943-4, 250-4 wounded, 236-7
tank warfare, emphasis on, 244-8 other generals, contacts with
other generals, contacts with Dill, 229
Brooke, 248-9, 250-51 Montgomery, 231, 233, 235-6
Dill, 248 Paget, 230-31
Montgomery, 250, 252 Wavell, 230
Wavell, 247 personal life and character

Wilson, 244, 246-7 birth and education, 225, 228


personal life and character linguistic ability, 8, 226
argumentative manner, 243, 244 marriage, 229
marriage, 245 sporting activities, 225, 228
Home Guard, 136, 247 Russia, adventures in, 226-8
Hong Kong, 333 summary of later career, 242
Hopkins, Harry, 61-2 Husky, Operation, 115, 116
Hore-Belisha, Leslie, 1st Baron Hore-
Belisha Imperial Force, North Africa (1941), 170
army appointments by, effects of, 19 Imphal
army reform, efforts toward, 36 campaign for Imphal plain, 315-17
Dill, relationship with, 55 early objective in Burma offensive, 293
Gort, relations with, 21, 36, 37, 40 Japanese plans for invasion of India from,
Ironside, attitude to, 18, 19 314
Liddell Hart, reliance on, 19, 37 siege of, 317
'pill-box' incident, 40-42 Slim's defence plans, 316
resignation from War Office, 24, 41 India
Secretary of State for War, appointed, 19 independence, events leading to, 143
Horrocks, Sir Brian (Lt.-General) Japanese plans to attack, 293, 314
appointments and career Second World War, Indian views at
Aldershot in 1923, 228 outbreak of, 134

Eastern Command, Brigadier General Indian Army


Staff, 232 Arakan, advance into, 316
5th Infantry Brigade, Brigade Major, 230 Auchinleck as C-in-C, 130
First World War service, 226 First World War, Divisions fighting in, 132
44th (Home Counties) Division, Major- independence, splitting of army at, 143-4
General, 232 modernization of army under Auchinleck,
4th Division, nth Brigade, temporary 133
command, 231 Western Desert Force, infantry in, 201
4th Indian Division in 1942, 235 Indian Army, formations in
Middlesex Regiment, 2nd Battalion, Corps
command of, 231 III Indian Corps in Malaya, 262

9th Armoured Division, command of, 233 Divisions


9th Middlesex Regiment, adjutant (1927), 3rd Division, 134
229 4th Division, see Fourth Indian Division
Staff College, on staff (1938), 230 5th Division, 304, 316
X Corps, command of, 235 6th Division, 132
3rd Division, 9th Brigade, command of, 7th Division, 316
232 nth Division, 264, 265, 267

359
INDEX

Indian Army, formations in - cunt. personal life and character


Divisions - amt. earl\ life. 17
17th Division, 317 linguistic ability ,
17
Brigades nickname, 17-18
5th Infantn. 173 politicians, attitude to, 18
63rd Infantry, 83 popular reputation, 21

Peshawar Brigade, 133 temperament and character, 18


Regiments Irra\\add\ Ri\er, 289,318-19
62nd Punjabis, 131, 132. 133 Irwin. Noel (Ft. -General), 83,310-12
6th Rajputana Ritles, 190 Israeli \rmy, 280-81
Intelligence {fee also "Ultra") Italian Arms
Burma campaign, in, 307. 315. 316 Benghazi (1041), iqri
Gazala, failure at battle of, 212 \ibeiua battle. 189
Wavell, Italian information available to, 76 Sidi Barrani. 169
Invasion of Western Europe, wH Kerlord. \\ estern I )esert, campaign in, 168, 169, 183,
Operation l»7
Invasion threat (England), 28-9, w Italian \rm\ formations
Iraq 10th Arm\, 1X3, 196
Iraqcampaign in 1941, 341 Corps
Mesopotamia campaign (First \\ orld W ar), \\I Corps, 205
I )i\isions
Rashid Ali rebellion (1941), 137 \nete \rmoured Division, 205, 206
Iraqi Army Savona Division, 205
Basra, attack on (iq.4.1 ), 305 Italian campaign
Germans, collaboration with, 173 \le\andcr\ part in, 117—23, 124—5
Ilabbanna siege, 173 \nglo- \mcrican alliance in, 116-18
Ironside, Kdmund, ist Baron Ironside (Field- I eese's part in, 123, 210-18
Marshal) Montgomery's part in. 157-8
appointments removal of \llied forces for other
Commandant Staff College in iq22. iS
at operations, 217
CIGS (1939-40), 18. 21-S Itah
Gibraltar, Governor of (1938), 20 armistice in 1943, l 7^
Home Forces Commander, 20 armistice negotiations, 332
Inspector-General of Overseas Forces, 20, 21 declaration of war in 1940, 75, 186
Poland, mission in 1939, 21 1 g^pt. diplomatic activity (1939), 167
summary of military career. iS 1 ithiopian campaign, see Ethiopian
unsuitability of appointments, ig campaign
Archangel expedition, 18 Mediterranean campaign, effects of, 97
chronology of life of, 32 Wilson's strategy as to, 177-8
Churchill, relations with, 21, 26-7, 29-30
military strategy and experience Japan
airwarfare strategy, views on, 2} entry into war, events following, 175, 286
defences against German invasion of strategies toward defeat of, 99
England, views on, 28-9 surrender of, 99
Escaut Line, views on proposed advance Japanese Army
to, 22-3 annihilation after battles in Burma, 293-4
France, role in battle of, 27-8 Arakan, 316
German generalship, views on, 27 attacking tactics inBurma, 307-8
Middle East, view of strategic importance India, planned offensive into, 293, 314
of, 20 Malaya, strategy in, 265, 268
Norway, evacuation of, 27 rebuilt armies in 1944, 317
RAF tactics, views on, 23 Singapore, assault on, 269
Scandinavia, strategy involving, 24-6 Japanese generals
South African war experiences, 17 Kimura, 317-18, 319
strategic priorities, view at outset of war, Renya Mutaguchi, 314
22 Shozo Kawabe, 314, 317
War Cabinet, relations with, 21, 27 Johore, 267, 268

360
INDEX

Kasserine Pass, 114 Lumsden, Herbert (Major-General), 153, 154,


Kesselring, Albert (Field-Marshal, German 155,234
Army), 118 Lyttelton, Oliver, 202,342
Kipling,Rudyard
quoted on Alexander, 106, 107 Maaten Baggush, 186
Kirke, Walter, 20 Macedonia, 170, 171
Kohima, 293, 317, 318 Maktila, Egypt, 168, 184, 189
Kos, island of, 176 Malaya
Kra Isthmus, 261, 262 airfields, construction, 260
Kyaukse, Burma, 309 airfields, defence of, 262, 264, 266
civil authorities, restrictions on military by,
Lanrezac, Charles (General, French Army) 261-2
334> 335> 336 communications problems in 1940, 262-3
Latvia, Alexander in, 107 defensive works, 264, 267, 272
Lebanon, Vichy French in, 173, 174 Japanese attacks on, 265, 267
Leese, Sir Oliver (Lt.-General) military forces in, inadequacy of, 258
appointments withdrawal of forces to Singapore, 268
Eighth Army command, 158, 215, 216 Malta convoys, 203, 210
Fourteenth Army, 318 Mandalay
S.E. Asia, under Mountbatten, 217, 218-20 capture (1945), 219, 293, 319
XXX Corps, command of, 154, 215 Chindit operations, 290
chronology of life of, 223 Manstein Plan, 27
military strategy and experience Maori Brigade, 234
Alam Haifa, in battle of, 154, 155, 156 Mareth Line, 156, 163, 235
First World War service, 214 Market Garden, Operation, 100, 162, 238
infantry experience, 215 Marshall, George C. (General, US Army),
Operation Diadem, 216 i4» 6 3~5

Operation Olive, 217 Martel, Sir Gifford (Lt.-General), 248, 249


other generals, contact with Matilda Tanks, 189, 190, 191, 192
Clark, 123, 217 Maurice Force, 329, 330
Montgomery, 215, 218 Mechanization of British Army (see also

Slim, 219, 318 Tanks and tank warfare)


personal character, 215-16, 220 controversy in 1930s, 245
Levant Gort, failure to support, 38
Anglo-French tension (i94i),342 Hobart's tank campaign, 244-8
Free French declaration of independence in Ironside, support of, 18
1941,340 slowness of most generals to adapt to, 204
Spears, policy of, 342-3 Wav ell, experimental work, 73
Lewin, Ronald, 302 Medenine, 156
Libya Mediterranean theatre of war (see also

British forces, strength in 1941, 169 Western Desert campaign)


Italian forces in (1940), 168 Alexander as Supreme Commander, 124
special operations in, 284 Churchill's plans for, 93, 97
Wavell's plans in desert war, 76 Churchill's priority, 260, 266
Libyan forces Operation Torch, 94, 111, 153
prisoners in Western Desert, 196 opposing policies of Churchill and Brooke,
Sidi Barrani, Divisions near, 168, 187 94
Liddell Hart, Basil Henry (Captain), 18, 19, supply convoy (1940), 184
20, 37, 281 Meiktila, Burma, 219, 319
Lloyd, W. L. (Major-General), 310 Merrill's Marauders, 291-3
Local Defence Volunteers, 136, 247 Mersa Matruh, 186, 187, 213
Long Range Desert Group Mesopotamian campaign, 132
Bagnold's plan to form, 284 Metema, Ethiopia, 304, 305
formation in 1940, 74 Middle East (see also Mediterranean theatre
precursors of, 168 of war)
Luftwaffe, 330 Dill's comments on strategic importance, 57

361
INDEX

Middle East - cont. Brooke, 152


Eighth Army, importance of, 95; see also Eisenhow er, 16
Eighth Army Gort, 39
generals, reshuffle of, in 1942, 185 Hobart, 250, 252
preparation of Eighth Army under Horrocks, 231
Auchinleck, 139 Leese, 215
priority attached to, in 1940, 136-7 personal life and character
Wavell as GOC
(1939), 74-5 birth, 149
Wilson as C-in-C (1943), 175 education, 150
Military academies publicity, skill in, 200
British and German systems contrasted, 9 Sandhurst, misdemeanour at, 150
British generals, training of, 8 tacdessness, 157, 163
Camberley Staff College, syndicate system, wound suffered in 1914, 8, 150

229 political talents, 142


Minefields Moungdow -Buthidaung road, 316
Chindit operations, 290 Mountbatten, Lord Louis, 1st Earl
El Alamein, clearance before, 234 Mountbatten of Burma (Admiral)
training in clearance, desert war, 155 Leese's service in Burma under, 217-20
Mohmand, Operation (1935), 133 second offensive into Burma, 293
Monte Cassino, see Cassino, Battles of Stilwell, relations with, 288
Montgomery, Bernard, rst \ iscount views on prospects for Burma campaign, 307
Montgomery of Alamein (Field-Marshal) Myitkyina, Burma, 290, 293,314,315
Americans, relationship with, 100, 161-2
appointments and career Namsos, Norway, 330
decorations, 150 Narvik
Eighth Army, command of, 11. 95, 141, 141) Allied Norwegian campaign, 25-6, 135
Palestine.Major-General in, 151 German seizure, in 1940, 134,329
Royal Warwickshire Regiment, Neame, Philip (Lt. -General), 197-8, 202
commissioned in, 150 New Zealand forces
bibliography, 163 Alam I lalfa, 154, 234
chronology of life of, 163-4 Eighth Army, 204
in,

Churchill, relationship with, 12-13, ]


52 German surrender to, in North Africa, 236
criticisms of, 99, 155-6, 162 ( hreece, in, 172
military strategies and experience Western Desert, in, 154, 156, 201
alternating thrusts strategy, 163 New Zealand formations
anti-invasion (of England) policy, 136 Corps
casualties, attitude to, 160-61 X Armoured Corps, 234, 235
caution and calculation, emphasis on, 149, Divisions
151, 158 1st New Zealand Division, 204
desert warfare plans, 154—5 2nd New Zealand Division, 156, 234, 235
El Alamein victory, 141, 155-6 Brigades
First World War sen ice, 150-52 4th and 6th, 172
image with troops, 157 Maori Brigade, 234
Italian campaign, 157-8 Nibeiwa
morale, emphasis on, 152, 158 Italian forces at, 184, 187
Normandy landmgs strategy, preparation Operation Compass, 189-90
of, 158-60 Nijmegen, 238
Operation Market Garden, 162 Normandy Landings, see Overlord,
Operation Vulcan, 115 Operation
Palestine, peacekeeping force (1939), 185 Norris, Sir Willoughby (Lt. -General), 204,
preparation of 3rd Division in 1939, 152 206
Rommel, strategy against, 233-4 North African campaign (see also Torch,
strict routine, adherence to, 152, 231 Operation; Western Desert Campaign)
training, excellence at, 151, 152, 155 Churchill's plans for, 93, 94
other generals, contacts with course of, 96, 236

Alexander, 112-13, 116-17 reshuffle of generals in 1942, 175


Auchinleck, 152, 153 Wavell, strategy of, 75

362
INDEX

Norway appointments and career


Carton de Wiart in expedition to, 15, 329-31 decorations, 8
German invasion, 134, 329 First World War service, 257
Norwegian campaign France, service in 1939, 258
Anglo-French operations, 26 Greenwich Royal Naval College, 257
armaments ship, loss of, 135 Ireland, service in 1920, 257
Auchinleck, appointment of, 134 Malaya, GOC, 258, 260, 261
Chamberlain's conduct of, 3 Russia, service in, 257
Churchill's plan for, 94 chronology of life of, 275-6
effects elsewhere of operations in, 42 Churchill's attitude to, 14
evacuation, 27, 135, 331 criticisms of, 270-71, 273
Dill, relations with, 257-8
O'Connor, Sir Richard (General) Malaya, service in
appointments communications problems, 265
Cameronians, commissioned into, 185 defensive works, attitude to, 267
decorations, 8, 185 Japanese landings, view of likelihood, 264
India, C-in-C Eastern Command, 198 officers, difficulties with, 263
knighthood, 198 review of forces required for defence, 264
command of 7th Division in,
Palestine, 185 Singapore surrender, 14, 269
Peshawar Brigade, command of, 185 strategy, failures in, 266
chronology of life of, 198-9 withdrawal, no advance plans for, 268
military strategy and experience personal life and character
capture and escape, 197, 202, 332 appearance, 269
Cyrenaican strategy, 193-4 personality, 257, 258, 269-72
First World War service, 185 psychological explanation of character, 273
Libya, with Wavell in, 79 Russian speaker, 8
Normandy, action in, 198 Petain, Henri Philippe (Marshal, French
Sidi Barrani victory, 77, 189 Army), 339
Western Desert campaign, 187-97 Phillips, Brigadier, 330, 331
personal life and character Pile, Frederick (General), 247
birth and education, 185 'Pill-box incident', 41-2
character, 186 Poland
Wilson, contrasted with, 186 Brandenburg units in, 283
Olive, Operation, 123, 217 British government stance in 1920, 326-7
Overlord, Operation Carton de Wiart as head of British Military
conditions deemed necessary for success, 96-7 Mission, 1919-24: 326-7; 1939: 327-9
course 99-100
of, Churchill's policy against Lenin, 326
Eisenhower as commander, 177 German forces, strength of, in 1939, 328
German generals, conflicting policies of, 136 Ironside's visits to, 21
priority for, Roosevelt's insistence, 176-7 Polish war strategy in 1939, 327
strategy and planning, 158-60 Soviet invasion in 1939, 329
tanks, role of, 252-4 Pownall, Sir Henry (Lt.-General)
Director of Military Operations and
Paget, Sir Bernard (General) Intelligence at War Office, 21, 36
chief of staff to Ironside, 29 Gort, chief of general staff to, 38
Horrocks, relations with, 230-31 Ironside, opinion of, 18, 21, 26
Sickleforce, commander of, 330-31 Malaya and Singapore, comments on, 272
Palestine 'pill-box incident', involvement in, 39-41
peace-keeping force in (1939), 151, 185 Scandinavian policy, views on, 24, 42
Panzerwaffe (German Tank Arm), 245 Singapore, service in, 261
Patton, George (General, US Army) Prince of Wales, sinking of, 256, 260, 265
campaign in Sicily, 117, 157 Prince of Wales' Leinster Regiment, 53
desert war strategy, 114 Prisoners of war
Normandy landings, part in, 159, 161 Italians in Western Desert, 190, 191, 192, 193,
Pearl Harbor, 52, 81 196
Pegu Yoma intelligence service, 307 Reichswald, Battle of the, 239
Percival, Arthur E. (Lt.-General) Sidi Barrani action, captured in, 201

363
INDEX

Quadrant Conference, Quebec, 84, 277, 291 Singapore, inter-service relations in (1940),
262
Rangoon Tobruk, supplies to, 193
abandonment (1942), 82, 83 Salerno landings, 236 118,
advance on, and capture (1945), 219, 293 Sandbostel camp, discover) of, 240
Alexander at, 111, 308 Scandinavia
Rashid Ali, 173 Churchill's strategy in 1940, 24, 42
Regia Aeronautica, 187, 188 German invasions, 134, 329
Reichswald, Battle of the, 238-9 Shewbo, Burma, 318
Repulse, sinking of, 256, 260, 265 Shingle, Operation, 119, 120-21
Reynaud, Paul campaign
Sicilian
criticism of Gort, 34 Middle East command, launched from,
Spears as Churchill's representative to in 175
1940, 337 Operation I lusky, 115, 116
army in 1940, 338
strategy for French plans for campaign, 156-7, 235
Tours conference with Churchill, 338 Sickleforce, 330
Rhine, River, crossing of, 239 Sidi Barrani
Rhodes, plan to capture, 176 Allied troops, composition of, 201
Rifle Brigade, 166, 196 British capture of, 77, 201
Ritchie, Sir Neil (General) Italian advance to, 76, 184
chronology of life of, 222-3 Italian forces in area, strength of, 168, 187
Cyrenaica, planned offensive to recapture, O'Connor's campaign, 189, 201
210 Sidi Re/egh, 206-7
Eighth Army commander, 208 Simson, Brigadier, 264
Gazala, loss of command after, 210-11 Singapore
Joint Services Mission to USA (1951), 214 army strength, multi-national forces in,
Normandy, service in, 214 262
personal qualities, 214 Churchill's policy toward, 260
Rome, Allied entry, 121-2, 178, 216 defences, 268
Rommel, Erwin (Field-Marshal, German Dill's view of strategic importance, 56
Army) fall of, 65, 256, 269, 286
Afrika Korps, use of, 153 inter-service relations in 1940, 262
desert offensive in 1942, 95 Japanese assault on, 268-9
El Alamein, withdrawal from, 155—6 military forces, inadequacy, 258
Kasserine Pass action, 114 naval base, defence of, 259
Libya, advance in 1941, 79, 202 War Council in, 262
offensive toward El Alamein, 139 withdrawal from Malaya to, 268
tanks available to,
234 Sinzweya, Burma, 316
\\ avell's book, reader of, 74 Sixsmith, E. K. G. (Major-General), 273
Roosevelt, Franklin D. Slim, William, 1st Viscount Slim of Burma
Churchill's meetings with in 1941, 93 (Field-Marshal)
Operation Overlord, insistence on priority appointments and career
for, 176-7 between-wars career, 303
Stalin, attitude to, 96, 98 Burma Corps Commander, 307
Royal Air Force XV Corps, command of, 310
air warfare strategy, Ironside's views, 23 First World War service, 301
Greece, in (1941), 170 Fourteenth Army, command of, 312

Habbaniya siege, 173 Indian Army, transfer to, 303


Malaya, withdrawal from, 265 Mesopotamia, service in, 301
Malayan 260
airfields, construction, SEAC, C-in-C Allied Land Forces, 320
Singapore, withdrawal from Malaya to, 262 10th Brigade, command of, 304
Western Desert (1940), 187, 188, 189 10th Indian Division, command of, 305
Royal Navy West India Regiment (1916), 302
Maktila, attack on, 189 bibliography, 320
Norway, evacuation of force from, 331 biographers, 299, 302, 303
Operation Overlord, landing techniques, Burma Victory (film), 299
252 chronology of life of, 322-3

364
INDEX

Churchill, relations with, 14, 300 diplomatic shortcomings, 346


Defeat into Victory, author of, 298, 308, 310 FirstWorld War service, 334-6
military strategy and experience France, changing attitudes to, 338-42
Arakan campaign, 310-11 French armies, service with in 1914, 334
assessment of generalship, 319-20 French army morale in 1940, view of, 337,
Burma campaign, command of, 307, 308
early military career, 301, 302 liaison duties, 334-5, 336
Eastern Army, revitalization of, 312-13, 319 linguistic ability, 334
Far Eastern campaign, 14 literary works, 334
Japanese tactics, methods to counter, 307-8 military strategies and experience
management of men, 303, 304, 307, 310, 314 modern weapons, interest in, 334
medical supplies in Burma, securing of, 313 Mons, intervention in battle of, 334-6
morale, emphasis on, 313 training of liaison officers, 337
recognition after Burma battles, 318 personal life and character

special forces, postwar view of, 294 birth and education, 334
Syria, operation against Vichy French, 305 character, 15, 344
training programme for jungle warfare, 313 marriage, 344
other generals, contacts with wounds, 337
Alexander, 308 Wavell, relations with, 341
Irwin, 310-12 Special Air Service, 139, 279, 284
Leese, 219, 318 Special forces {see also Chindits)
Wingate, 315-16 British Army experience of, 281-2
personal and character
life Churchill's belief in, 5
background, 300-1 controversy surrounding value of, 282-3,
journalistic activities, 8 294-5
languages, command of, 8 German Army, use by, 283
nickname, 314 Libya, in, 284
wounds, 301, 302, 305 'Special Force', 292-3
public reputation and low profile, 299, 300 Wingate's theories, 279, 281
Unofficial History, author of, 302 Special Operations Executive, 5, 284, 333
South African forces Spiers, see Spears
2nd South African division at Gazala, 213 Staff colleges, see Military academies
South East Asia Command Stalin, Joseph
creation of, 287-8 Churchill's wish to impress, 141
Southern Command expectations as to Allied actions in 1943, 177
Alexander as successor to Auchinleck, 137 Stalingrad, 175
Auchinleck, formation under, 136 Stilwell, Joseph (General, US Army)
Montgomery as subordinate to Auchinleck, Alexander, relations with, 308
152 attitude to British, 111, 145, 287
Wavell as GOC in 1938, 74 Burma withdrawal, assessment of, 309-10
Spears, Sir Louis (Major-General) Galahad Force, command of, 292-3
appointments and career India/China land communications plan, 83
British Military Mission to Paris, Mountbatten, relations with, 288
(1918-20), 336 Myitkyina, drive for, 315

de Gaulle, head of British Mission to, 340 Wavell, relationship with, 82, 287
Army, 334
entry into British Stirling, David, 279, 284
Hussars, gazetted into, 334 Strike, Operation, 115
Member of Parliament, 337, 344 Sweden
Reynaud, Churchill's representative to, iron ore fields as objective in 1940, 24-6
337~9 Syria
Syria and Lebanon, Minister to, 343 defence of Middle East, Wilson's activities,
Arab cause, espousal of in 1941, 342-3 174-5
chronology of life of, 348-9 Syrian armistice, 341-2
Churchill, relations with, 336-7, 341, 343
15, Vichy French in, 173, 174

de Gaulle, relations with, 339-40, 340-41,


342 Tanks and tank warfare
departure from Army in 1920, 337 Allied armies' resources in 1944, 251

365
INDEX

Tanks and tank warfare - cont. Tunisian campaign


British Army's attitude to tank warfare in Anglo-American differences as to strategy,
1944, 205 96, 97
Crabs, 251 end of, 115

DDs, 251, 254 Operation Vulcan, 115


Eighth Army, tanks in, at formation of, 204 planned breakthrough in 1942, 235
El Alamein, at battle of, 141 problems of Tunisia,
tactical 113
Ethiopian campaign, 304 Tunis and Bizerta, fall of, 115
'Funnies', 252, 253, 254 Turkey
Gazala, opposing strengths at battle of, 211 Allied aid to in 1943, 175
German anti-tank guns at Gazala, 211-12 Egypt, potential invasion of, in 1915, 132
German Panzerwaffe, 245 Ironside's assessment of strategic
German tanks in Western Desert, 205, 234 importance in 1939, 22
Grant tank, 234
'Ultra'
Hobart's enthusiasm for, 244-50
Bulgaria, information on German
Japanese tanks in Malaya, 265, 267
movements into, 169
Macedonia, in, 171
Churchill, daily quota of, 4
Malaya and Singapore, Allied shortages in
desert campaign, information in, 76, 80, 138
(1941), 261, 262
Greece, threat to, 78, 79
Martel as CRAG, 248
Middle East Command, information
Matildas in Western Desert, 189, 190, 191,
available to, 76
192
Montgomery, action on information in
Middle East tanks, priority for in 1940, 136-7
desert war, 156
O'Connor's tactics in 1940, 187
United States of America {see also Anglo-
Operation Crusader, strategy in, 206
American alliance)
Rommel, captured tank of, studied, 138
Far Eastern campaign, 99
technical equipment in 1944, 254
war strategy, conflicting views, 94, 97-8,
types of tanks in 1930s, 246
286-7
types of tanks in 1944 invasion of Europe,
US Army, formations of
251-2, 253-4
12th Army Group, 158
WavelTs reinforcements, Middle East, 75
Armies
Western Desert Force, in, 194, 195, 196
Army, 159
First
Wilson's recognition of tanks' importance,
Second Army, 162
168, 174
Third Army, 159
Thermopylae Line, 171
Fifth Army, 158
Thomas, Sir Shenton (Governor of
Seventh Army, 178
Singapore), 262, 270
Ninth Army, 239
Tobruk
Corps
actions leading to Allied capture, 192-3
II Corps, 114
Battle of Gazala, 210, 213
VI Corps, 120
Italian forces in, 187
Valmontone, 121, 122
Operation Crusader, 205, 206
Veritable, Operation, 238-9
relief by Eighth Army, 139
Vichy French
Rommel, taken by, 95
Anglo-Vichy relations, 339
siege of (1941), 202
armistice at Acre in 1941, 341
Torch, Operation
attacked by Slim in Syria, 306
Alexander as task force commander, m Habbaniya, support for German attack on,
Anglo-American views on plan, 94
80, 173
Montgomery, role of, 153
Lebanon, resistance to Allied troops in, 173
Tripolitania
Levant, neutrality in, 341
Allied failure to advance into (1941), 197,
surrender in Syria and Lebanon, 174
201-2
Syria, support to Germans in, 173
British advance into (1942), 209
'Vienna alternative', Alexander's, 98
Operation Crusader, see Crusader,
Vulcan, Operation, 115
Operation
Trondheim, 329, 330, 331 Wadi Akarit, 156, 235
Tummar, battles for camps, 187, 190 W ar Cabinet
r

366
INDEX

formation under Churchill, 3 accident in Singapore visit, 82


Ironside's relations with, 22, 23, 27 aerial mishaps, 75
pre-war unpreparedness, 19 interests outside army, 70
Washington, D.C. literary works, 8, 70-71, 74
Churchill and Dill, diplomatic activity of, nickname, 72
60-68 political views, 85
Wavell, Archibald, 1st Earl Wavell (Field- self-assessment, 70
Marshal) taciturnity, 20, 71
appointments and career temperament, 12
Black Watch, commissioned into, 72 Weichs, Maximilian von (General, German
Boer War service, 72 Army), 171
dismissal from desert campaign, 80 Western Desert campaign
Field-Marshal, 85 air cover, 188, 189

First World War service, 72-3 Alexander and Montgomery, relationship


India, ordered to, in 1941, 80-81 between, 112-13
intelligence section at War Office in 1914, Anglo-American relations, 113— 114
72 army preparation under Wilson, 167-8
Lees Knowles lectures, 71, 72, 74 'boxes' system, 213
Middle East GOC, 74-80 Brooke's rejection of command, 11

Palestine, GOC, 73-4 casualties, 196


Russia, service in, 72 Italian prisoners, provision for, 190
Southern Command, GOC, 74 logistical problems, 210
Staff College successes, 72 London emphasis on, in 1941, 203
Supreme Allied Commander, South West long-range patrols under Wilson, 168
Pacific, 81 offensives urged by Churchill, 94
Viceroyalty of India, 84 Operation Crusader, see Crusader,
bibliography, 86 Operation
chronology of life of, 86 planning of campaign, 169
Churchill, relationship with, 12, 58, 71-2, 76, tanks, disposition of, 187-8

77 termination of campaign, 197


Connell as biographer, 71 Wavell, strategy of, 75

Dill, mediates between W. and Churchill, Western Desert Force {see also Eighth Army)
58 components of, 168, 183
military strategy and experience Eighth Army, origins of, 201
Arakan offensive, 83, 84 objectives in 1940, 187
Burma campaign, 83 renamed XIII Corps, 79, 194, 202
campaigns, list of, 85 Western Front
Chindits, support for, 84 communications problems in 1940, 39, 42-3
Chinese, relations with, 81 German advance in 1940, 44
Compass operation, 77 Scandinavian operations, neglect during, 42
desert war strategy, 75, 185 Weygand Plan, 44, 45, 337
East Africa in 1941, 78 Wilson, Henry Maidand, 1st Baron
Field Service Regulations, contributor to, 71 Wilson (Field-Marshal)
Greek campaign, 78 appointments
infantry, support for, 73 Aldershot, command of 2nd Division, 166
Libyan offensive, plans for, 76 Athens, freedom of city, 178
officers supported and promoted by, 74 Cairo, C-in-C British Troops in Egypt
planning, belief in, 79 (1939), 167
Sidi Barrani victory, 77 Greece, command of British Imperial
Singapore withdrawal, plans for, 82 Force in, 169-71
Tobruk, holding of, 79 knighthood, 175-6
other generals, contacts with Middle East C-in-C (1943), 175
Horrocks, 230 Palestine and Transjordan, command in
Spears, 341 (1941), 173
Wingate, 74, 278, 281, 282, 285 Sixth Infantrv Brigade, command of (1934),
personal life and character 166
academic career, 70-71 South African War service, 166

367
INDEX

Wilson, Henry Maitland, ist Baron Wilson appointments and career


(Field-Marshal) - cont. Bush Warfare School, Burma, 286, 288
appointments - cont. Palestine, general staff appointment in
Staff College senior instructor, 1930, 166 1936, 280-81
Washington, head of British Mission 1945, Sudan Defence Force in 1928, 280
179 Churchill, relations with, 13-14, 277, 291
chronology of life of, 180 Cochran (US Army Air Force), relations
Churchill, relations with with, 292
closeness of relationship, 178-9, 180 chronology of life of, 296-7
Eighth Army appointment, Churchill's I.awrence of Arabia comparison, 277, 281
support for, 174, 179 military strategy and experience
first meeting, 175 controversial views of other officers, 278, 279
Greece, cooling of relations over, 172 Ethiopian campaign lectures, 286
de Gaulle, dealings with, 174 generalship, assessment of, 294-5, 2 9°
Hobart, relations with, 244, 246-7 long-range penetration scheme, 278,
military strategies and experience 288-9; see *&<> Chindits
Greek campaign, view of, 172 unorthodox), 278
Italy, strategy regarding, 178 Zionist cause in Palestine, 280
Ninth Army, command of, 175 other generals, contacts with
Operation Overlord, part in, 177 \uchinleck, 142-3
surprise, insistence on, in desert, 168 Slim, 315
Syria's involvement in defence of Middle \\ avell/74. 278, 281

East, 174 personal life and character


training, emphasis on, 167, 168 appearance, 278
t
VP force, 170, 171, 172 tabic speaker, 280
\\ estern Desert campaign, planning of, 169 background, 13, 279
personal life and character birth and education, 279
appearance, 107 death, 277, 294,316
birth and education, 166 suicide attempt, 285, 286
character, assessment of, 179 special operations involvement, 280—82
diplomacy, talent for, 167, 174, 175, 170, 179 Wingate, Sir Reginald (General), 279
O'Connor, contrast with, 186
personality, 167 Yugoslavia
\ ichv French, signing of Syrian armistice campaign in, effect of, 172

with, 341-2 German declaration of war against, 170


Wingate, Orde (Major-General) guerrilla warfare, 176

368
(continued from front flap)

that in Slim he had found a great general.


Irregular warfare and specialized oper-
ations fired Churchill's imagination. He
hoped Wingate in Burma might be a sec-
ond Lawrence of Arabia; and he brought
Hobart, the temperamental tank pioneer,
out of enforced retirement to develop the
range of specialized armor that was to play
a vital role in the Normandy landings.
Behind all these generals, to a greater
or lesser degree, loomed Churchill himself
—the most implacable and successful of
all Hitler s foes.

JOHN KEEGAN was for many years senior


lecturer at the Royal Military Academy,
Sandhurst, and is now defense editor of
The Daily Telegraph. His books include
The Face of Battle, Six Armies in
Normandy, The Mask of Command, The
Price of Admiralty, and The Second
World War.

Jacket design by Paul Gamarello

Jacket photographs (clockwise from upper right):


Archibald Wavell: AP/ Wide World Photos;
Claude Auchinleck: AP/ Wide World Photos;
William Slim: FPG International;
Harold Alexander: UPI/Bettmann Newsphotos;
Neil Ritchie: AP/Wide World Photos;
Henry Maitland Wilson: AP/Wide World Photos;
Bernard Montgomery: UPI/Bettmann Newsphotos;
John Dill: AP/Wide World Photos;
Alan Cunningham: AP/Wide World Photos;
Alanbrooke: AP/Wide World Photos;
John Gort: AP/Wide World Photos;
Germany
Churchill crossing a bailey bridge in
in March 1945 with Alanbrooke and Montgomery
(background): Imperial War Museum.

GROVE WEIDENFELD

10/91 Printed in USA © 1991 Grove Press, Inc.


"The principal instrument of Churchill's waging of war on land was to
be the British Army and its principal agents its senior officers."
— John Keegan, from the Introduction

Field-Marshal Lord Ironside General Sir Richard O'Connor


by Brian Bond by Barrie Pitt

Field-Marshal Lord Gort General Sir Alan Cunningham,


by Brian Bond General Sir Neil Ritchie and
Lieutenant-General Sir Oliver Leese
Field-Marshal Sir John Dill
by Michael Craster
by Alex Danchev
Lieutenant-General Sir Brian Horrocks
Field-Marshal Earl Wavell
by Alan Shepperd
by Ian Beckett
Major-General Sir Percy Hobart
Field-Marshal Viscount Alanbrooke
by Kenneth Macksey
by David Fraser
Lieutenant-General Arthur Percival
Field-Marshal Earl Alexander
by Keith Simpson
by Brian Holden Reid
Major-General Orde Wingate
Field-Marshal Sir Claude Auchinleck
by Philip Warner
by JohnW Gordon

Field-Marshal Lord Slim


Field-Marshal Viscount Montgomery
by Duncan Anderson
by Michael Carver
Lieutenant-General Sir Adrian Carton de
Field-Marshal Lord Wilson
Wiart and Major-General Sir Louis Spears
by Michael Dewar
by CD. Sheffield

9 "780802"1 13092

ISBN D-fiD21-13DT-S

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