East Indies Fleet

(Redirected from Eastern Fleet)

The Eastern Fleet, later called the East Indies Fleet, was a fleet of the Royal Navy which existed between 1941 and 1952.

East Indies Fleet
HMS Renown in 1944 with other Eastern Fleet ships
Active1941–1952
Country United Kingdom
Branch Royal Navy
TypeFleet
Garrison/HQTrincomalee Naval Base, Ceylon
Singapore Naval Base (postwar)
EngagementsLoss of Prince of Wales and Repulse
Indian Ocean raid
Battle of Madagascar
Operation Dukedom
Operation Livery
Commanders
Notable
commanders
James Somerville
Bruce Fraser

In 1904, the British First Sea Lord, Admiral Sir John Fisher, ordered that in the event of war the three main commands in the Far East, the East Indies Squadron, the China Station, and the Australian Squadron, should all come under one command called the Eastern Fleet based in Singapore. The Commander-in-Chief, China would then take command. During the First World War, the squadrons retained their distinct identities and 'Eastern Fleet' was used only as a general term. The three-squadron structure continued until the Second World War and the beginning of hostilities with the Empire of Japan, when the Eastern Fleet was formally constituted on 8 December 1941, amalgamating the East Indies Squadron and the China Squadron.[1]

During the war, it included many ships and personnel from other navies, including those of the Netherlands, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. On 22 November 1944 the Eastern Fleet was re-designated East Indies fleet and continued to be based in Trincomalee. Following its re-designation its remaining ships formed the British Pacific Fleet.[2] In December 1945 the British Pacific Fleet was disbanded and its forces were absorbed into the East Indies fleet. In 1952 the East Indies Fleet was renamed the Far East Fleet.

Background

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Until the Second World War, the Indian Ocean had been a British "lake". It was ringed by significant British and Commonwealth possessions and much of the strategic supplies needed in peace and war had to pass across it: i.e. Persian oil, Malayan rubber, Indian tea, Australian and New Zealand foodstuffs. Britain also used Australian and New Zealand manpower; hence, safe passage for British cargo ships was critical.[3]

At the outbreak of war, Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine used auxiliary cruisers (converted merchant ships) and the "pocket battleship" Admiral Graf Spee to threaten the sea lanes and tie down the Royal Navy. In mid-1940, Italy declared war and their vessels based in Italian East Africa posed a threat to the supply routes through the Red Sea. Worse was to come when the Japanese declared war in December 1941 and, after Pearl Harbor, the sinking by air attack of the battleship Prince of Wales and battlecruiser Repulse, and the occupation of Malaya, Singapore and the Dutch East Indies, there was an aggressive threat from the east.[4]

This threat became a reality during the Indian Ocean raid when an overwhelming Japanese naval force operated in the eastern Indian Ocean, sinking an aircraft carrier and other warships, and disrupting freight traffic along the Indian east coast. At this stage, the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, General Sir Alan Brooke wrote of the situation in 14 April 1942:[5]

We were at the time literally hanging on by our eye-lids! Australia and India were threatened by the Japanese, we had temporarily lost control of the Indian Ocean, the Germans were threatening Iran and our oil, Auchinleck was in precarious straits in the desert, and the submarine sinkings were heavy.

Early war years

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Until 1941, the main threat to British interests in the region was the presence of German commerce raiders (auxiliary cruisers) and submarines. The fleet had trade protection as its first priority and was required to escort convoys and eliminate the raiders. The Germans had converted merchant ships to act as commerce raiders and allocated supply ships to maintain them. The location and destruction of these German raiders consumed much British naval effort until the last raider – Michel – was sunk in October 1943.[6]

On 10 June 1940, the entry of Italy into the war introduced a new threat to the oil supply routes from the Persian Gulf, which passed through the Red Sea to the Mediterranean. The Italians controlled ports in Italian East Africa and Tianjin, China. The Italian Royal Navy (Regia Marina) presence in the Red Sea, Indian Ocean, and the western Pacific Ocean consisted of destroyers, submarines, and a small number of armed merchantmen. The majority of these were based at Massawa in Eritrea as part of the Italian Red Sea Flotilla, including seven destroyers and eight submarines. Damage to British destroyers at this time included Kimberley which was crippled by Italian shore batteries.[7]

The Italian naval forces in East Africa were caught in a vice. To put to sea invited heavy British reaction, while to stay in ports threatened by British and Commonwealth forces became impossible. In 1941, during the East African Campaign, these ports were captured by the British.[8]

Singapore

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Before the fall of Singapore, the Eastern Fleet's naval base at Singapore (HM Naval Base) was part of the British Far East Command. British defence planning in the area was based on two assumptions. The first was that the United States would remain as an effective ally in the western Pacific Ocean, with a fleet based at Manila, which would be available as a forward base for British warships.[9] Secondly, the technical capabilities and aggression of the Imperial Japanese Navy were underestimated. In these circumstances, with the Japanese fleet engaged by the United States Navy (USN), the Admiralty planned to send four Revenge-class battleships to Singapore to provide defensive firepower and a British presence. The British assumptions were destroyed on 7 December 1941: the impact of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor denied substantial USN support to the British defence of the "Malay barrier" and made impossible the relief of American garrisons in the Philippines. Furthermore, Japanese capabilities exceeded expectations.[10]

After the fall of France in June 1940, Japanese pressure on the Vichy authorities in French Indochina resulted in the granting of base and transit rights, albeit with significant restrictions. Despite this, in September 1940, the Japanese launched an invasion of that country.[11] The bases thus acquired in Indochina allowed extended Japanese air cover of the invasion forces bound for Malaya and for the Dutch East Indies. In these circumstances, Prince of Wales and Repulse, which were dispatched to intercept the invasion force, were vulnerable to concerted air attacks from the Japanese bases in Indochina and, without their own air cover, they were sunk in December 1941.[12]

After the sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse, Admiral Sir Geoffrey Layton assumed command of the Eastern Fleet. The fleet withdrew first to Java and, following the fall of Singapore, to Trincomalee, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka).

Indian Ocean retreat

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Roskill writes in the War at Sea, Vol. II that:[13]

Admiral Somerville arrived at Colombo on the 26th of [March 1942], and he then took over command of the Eastern Fleet from Admiral Layton. His fleet consisted of the two large carriers Indomitable and Formidable, the small carrier HMS Hermes, the battleships Warspite (recently returned from repairing battle damage received off Crete in America), Resolution, Ramillies, Royal Sovereign and Revenge, two heavy and five light cruisers (including the Dutch Heemskerck), sixteen destroyers and seven submarines.

On 31 March Somerville decided to divide the Fleet into two: Force A and Force B. Force A consisted of the battleship Warspite, the aircraft carriers HMS Indomitable, and HMS Formidable, and three cruisers.[14] Force B was based around the slow Revenge-class battleships of the 3rd Battle Squadron, under Vice-Admiral Algernon Willis. Neither individually nor together could the two Eastern Fleet forces challenge a determined Japanese naval assault.

When Admiral Somerville inspected the base at Trincomalee, its deficiencies were clear to him. He found the port inadequate, vulnerable to a determined attack, and open to spying. An isolated island base with a safe, deep anchorage in a suitably strategic position was required. Addu Atoll, southernmost of the Maldives in the Indian Ocean, 600 miles southwest of Ceylon, met the requirements and it was secretly developed as a fleet anchorage.[15]

Following the Japanese capture of the Andaman Islands, the main elements of the Fleet retreated to Addu Atoll. On 7 April Somerville was given discretion by the Admiralty to send the slow Revenge-class battleships of Force B all the way back to Kilindini in East Africa, relatively safe from Japanese attack. The Indian Ocean raid by Chuichi Nagumo cost the Fleet the carrier Hermes, the cruisers HMS Dorsetshire and HMS Cornwall, the Australian destroyer HMAS Vampire, and two tankers.[16] Beyond the withdrawal of Force B, the Admiralty warned that Colombo could not be used for the present. Somerville kept Force A in Indian waters "to be ready to deal with any attempt by the enemy to command those waters with light forces only."[17]

Later, the fleet in the Indian Ocean was then gradually reduced to little more than a convoy escort force as other commitments called for the more modern, powerful ships. In May 1942, the Eastern Fleet supported the invasion of Madagascar, Operation Ironclad. It was aimed at thwarting any attempt by Japanese vessels to use naval bases on the Vichy French controlled territory. During the invasion, vessels of the Eastern Fleet were confronted by vessels of the French Navy and submarines of the Imperial Japanese Navy.[18]

From October 1943, the Eastern Fleet was the maritime component of South East Asia Command, including responsibilities beyond the SEAC area. The fleet reached full operational strength again by 1944. On 22 November 1944 the Eastern Fleet was split into the British Pacific Fleet, receiving the majority of the ships, and the remnant, which became known as the East Indies Fleet.[19]

Apart from the Eastern Fleet battle forces, it also included a submarine force, to hinder Japan from using sea lanes between Burma and Singapore; and a large supporting escort force, responsible for protecting convoy roues between Suez (Red Sea) and India, and between the Cape of Good Hope and India.[19]

The Eastern Fleet included, from time to time, as well as British warships, a number of warships from the British Dominions of Australia and New Zealand as well as other Allied nations, such as the French battleship Richelieu, other ships from the Free French Naval Forces, the Netherlands, and the United States.

Allied Indian Ocean strikes

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After the departure of the main battle forces during February 1942, the Indian Ocean was left with mostly escort carriers and older battleships as the core of its naval forces. Allied advances in the Mediterranean and northern Europe during 1943 and 1944, however, released naval resources. As a result, more British aircraft carriers entered the area; added to the force were the battlecruiser Renown, the battleships Howe, Queen Elizabeth, Valiant and supporting warships. Preparations were put in hand for a more aggressive stance in the Indian Ocean and for British naval participation in the wide spaces of the Pacific Ocean. Agreement had been reached, after objections from Admiral Ernest King USN, but new procedures would need to be learnt by naval crews and Fleet Air Arm (FAA) aircrew. To this end, Operation Diplomat, a training exercise, took place in late March 1944. The objective was for the fleet to rendezvous with a group of tankers (escorted by the Dutch cruiser HNLMS Tromp) and practice refuelling at sea procedures. The ships then rendezvoused with United States Navy Task Group 58.5, the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga and three destroyers.[20]

Admiral King requested that, during April, the Eastern Fleet should engage Japanese forces in their area and hold them there to reduce the opposition to an American seaborne assault on Hollandia and Aitape on the north coast of Netherlands New Guinea. In response, the Fleet, including Task Group 58.5, carried out Operation Cockpit, an air attack on Sabang, off Sumatra.[21] Surprise was achieved: military and oil installations were heavily damaged by the attacks, aggravating Japanese fuel shortages. The American involvement was extended to capitalise on the success with a second attack, this time on Surabaya, eastern Java, on 17 May (Operation Transom). The distances for this operation necessitated replenishment at sea. Again, the defenders were unprepared and significant damage was inflicted on the port and its military and oil infrastructures.[citation needed] Saratoga and her destroyers returned to the Pacific from 18 May after what Admiral Somerville called "a profitable and very happy association of Task Group 58.5 with the Eastern Fleet".[20]

At the end of August 1944, Admiral Somerville was relieved as Commander-in-Chief Eastern Fleet by Admiral Sir Bruce Fraser, former Commander-in-Chief Home Fleet.[22] The Eastern Fleet was greatly augmented by units intended for the Pacific and on 4 January 1945, the carriers Indomitable and Indefatigable carried out an attack on oil refineries at Pangkalan Brandon in Sumatra (Operation Lentil). The final attacks were flown as Force 63 was en route for Sydney, Australia to become the British Pacific Fleet. Operation Meridian was a series of air attacks upon the oil refineries at Pladjoe, north of Palembang, Java and at Soengei Gerong, Sumatra. Although successful, these were not as smooth as earlier attacks. Three crews (nine men) of Fleet Air Arm were captured by the Japanese during the Palembang raid. They were taken to Singapore where they were tortured and imprisoned; finally in August 1945 they were executed by the Japanese military authorities four days after the Japanese surrender.[23]

On 15–16 May 1945, the British fought the Battle of the Malacca Strait; the 26th Destroyer Flotilla (composed of Saumarez, Venus, Verulam, Vigilant and Virago) sank the Japanese heavy cruiser Haguro in the Malacca Straits using torpedoes.[21]

Eastern Fleet senior officers

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Commanders-in-Chief, Eastern Fleet

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Rank Flag Name Term
Commander-in-Chief, Eastern Fleet[22][24]
1 Admiral   Sir Tom S.V. Phillips October – 10 December 1941
2 Vice-Admiral   Sir Geoffrey Layton 10 December 1941 – 12 February 1942
3 Vice-Admiral   Sir James Somerville 12 February 1942 – 6 April 1942 (promoted to Adm.
4 Admiral   Sir James Somerville 6 April 1942 – 22 August 1944
5 Admiral   Sir Bruce A. Fraser 22 August 1944 -December 1944 – becomes C-in-C British Pacific Fleet

Vice-Admiral Commanding, 3rd Battle Squadron & Second-in-Command, Eastern Fleet

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Rank Flag Name Term
Vice-Admiral, Commanding 3rd Battle Squadron & Second-in-command, Eastern Fleet[25][19]
1 Vice Admiral   Algernon Willis 26 February 1942 – February 1943
2 Rear-Admiral   William G. Tennant February–October 1943
3 Vice-Admiral   Sir Arthur Power January 1944 – November 1944
4 Vice-Admiral   Sir Harold Walker November 1944 – 1946

Chief of Staff, Eastern Fleet

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Rank Flag Name Term
Chief of Staff, Eastern Fleet[26]
1 Rear-Admiral   Arthur F. E. Palliser December 1941 – January 1942
2 Commodore   Ralph A. B. Edwards March 1942 – August 1944

Rear-Admiral, Eastern Fleet Aircraft Carriers

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This officer supervised the Fleet's aircraft carriers and naval air stations.[19] Air stations included RNAS China Bay (Trincomalee), RNAS Colombo Racecourse (HMS Bherunda), Coimbatore, and RNAS Katukurunda.

Rank Flag Name Term
Rear-Admiral, Eastern Fleet Aircraft Carriers
1 Rear-Admiral   Denis Boyd 18 February 1941 – December 1942[27]
2 Rear-Admiral   Clement Moody 1 December 1943 – August 1944

Flag Officer Commanding, Red Sea and Canal Area, 1943–44

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Rank Flag Name Term
Flag Officer Commanding, Red Sea and Canal Area
1 Rear-Admiral   Ronald H. C. Hallifax 18 May 1942 – 6 November 1943[28] (died in office)
2 Rear-Admiral   John Waller 6 November – 28 December 1943[28]
3 Commodore   Douglas Young-Jamieson 28 December 1943 – 31 October 1944[29]

Flag Officer, East Africa and Admiral Superintendent, H.M. Dockyard, Kilindini

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Responsible to the Commander-in-Chief, Eastern Fleet, from April 1942 to September 1943 then transferred back under the East Indies Fleet.

Rank Flag Name Term Notes/Ref
Flag Officer, East Africa
1 Rear-Admiral   Peter Reid April 1942 – October 1942
2 Commodore   Charles G. Stuart October 1942 – September, 1943

With the Flag Officer, East Africa, was the Commodore, Naval Air Stations, East Africa, which was within the Eastern Fleet command from April 1942 to September 1943 then was transferred back to the East Indies Fleet.

Senior Naval Officer, Persian Gulf

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The Senior Naval Officer, Persian Gulf was responsible for administering Royal Navy ships and establishments in the Persian Gulf. He was initially located at Basra, in Mandatory Iraq, then later at HMS Juffair in Bahrain from 1901 to 1972. His command was part of the East Indies Station, then the Eastern Fleet, then the East Indies Fleet.[19]

There were also Naval Officers-in-Charge at Basra and for the Hormuz.

Flag Officer, Malaya

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The Flag Officer, Malaya commanded naval forces and establishments in Malaya including HMNB Singapore.

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Included:[28]

East Indies Fleet senior officers

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Commander-in-Chief, East Indies Fleet

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Rank Flag Name Term
Commander-in-Chief, East Indies Fleet[22][30]
1 Admiral   Sir Arthur J. Power November 1944 – December 1945[31]
2 Vice-Admiral   Sir Clement Moody 15 December 1945 – 8 March 1946[32]
2 Vice-Admiral   Sir Denis Boyd March 1946 – January 1948
3 Admiral   Sir Denis Boyd January 1948 – January 1949[33]
4 Vice-Admiral   Sir Patrick Brind January 1949 – February 1951
5 Vice-Admiral   Sir Guy Russell February 1951 – January 1952

Rear-Admiral, Commanding, 5th Cruiser Squadron and Second-in-Command, East Indies Fleet/Far East Fleet

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Rank Flag Name Term
Rear-Admiral, Commanding, 5th Cruiser Squadron and Second-in-Command, East Indies Fleet/Far East Fleet
1 Rear-Admiral   Alexander Madden 1948 – 1950[34][full citation needed]
2 Rear-Admiral   William Andrewes 17 December 1950 – October 1951[35]
3 Rear-Admiral   Eric Clifford CB circa 1953 [citation needed]
4 Rear-Admiral   Gerald Gladstone 1953 – 1955[36][full citation needed]

Chief of Staff, East Indies Fleet

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Rank Flag Name Term
Chief of Staff, East Indies Fleet[37]
1 Commodore   Edward M. Evans-Lombe August 1944 – October 1944
2 Rear-Admiral   Edward M. Evans-Lombe October 1944 – March 1946
3 Commodore   Stephen H. Carlill March 1946 – August 1948
4 Commodore   Geoffrey F. Burghard August 1948 – September 1950
5 Captain Ralph L. Fisher September 1950 – January 1952

Flag Officer, (Air), East Indies Fleet

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This officer commanded the aircraft carriers and the naval air stations.

Rank Flag Name Term
Flag Officer, (Air), East Indies Fleet[19]
1 Rear-Admiral   Clement Moody August 1944 – November 1944
2 Rear-Admiral   Reginald H. Portal November 1944 – March 1946
3 Rear-Admiral   Charles H.L. Woodhouse March – July 1946
4 Rear-Admiral   Robin Bridge July 1946 – February 1947
5 Vice-Admiral   George Creasy February 1947 – 1948

Commodore (D), Commanding, Destroyer Flotillas, Eastern Fleet (and later East Indies Fleet)

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Rank Flag Name Term
Commodore (D), Commanding, Eastern Fleet Destroyer Flotillas
1 Commodore   S. H. T. Harliss 9 June 1942 – December 1942[28]
2 Commodore   Albert. L. Poland April 1944 – October 1944[38]
3 Commodore   Stephen H. Carlill March 1946 – August 1948
4 Commodore   Geoffrey F. Burghard August 1948 – September 1950

Flag Officer, Ceylon, 1942–46

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Rank Flag Name Term
1 Rear-Admiral   Arthur Read 14 May 1942 – August 1943
2 Rear-Admiral   Victor Danckwerts August 1943 – March 1944, (died in office)
3 Rear-Admiral   Gresham Nicholson March 1944 – 1945
4 Rear-Admiral   John Mansfield 1945 -10 April 1946

Flag Officer Commanding, Royal Indian Navy

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The Royal Indian Navy came under the command of the Commander-in-Chief, East Indies, on the outbreak of the Second World War and reverted to a separate command after the Japanese surrender.

Rank Flag Name Term
Flag Officer Commanding, Royal Indian Navy
1 Vice-Admiral   Sir Herbert Fitzherbert December 1941 -22 March 1943
2 Vice-Admiral   John Henry Godfrey 22 March 1943 – 15 March 1946

In addition to the Vice-Admiral commanding, Rear-Admiral Oliver Bevir served as Senior Officer, Royal Naval Establishments, India, from June 1944 to July 1945.[38]

Flag Officer, Malaya and Forward Areas

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Subordinate naval formations

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Units that served in the two fleets included:[40][41]

Naval Units Based at Date Notes
Force A Trincomalee March 1942 to June 1942
Force B Trincomalee/Kilidini March 1942 to June 1942
21st Aircraft Carrier Squadron Trincomalee March 1945 – December 1945
1st Battle Squadron Trincomalee March 1942 to 1942
3rd Battle Squadron Trincomalee January 1942 to December 1945
4th Cruiser Squadron Trincomalee then Singapore Naval Base December 1947 to July 1954
5th Cruiser Squadron Trincomalee then Singapore Naval Base January 1942 – May 1960
2nd Destroyer Flotilla Trincomalee February 1942 to June 1943
4th Destroyer Flotilla Trincomalee April 1943 to November 1944
6th Destroyer Flotilla Trincomalee June 1945 –
7th Destroyer Flotilla Trincomalee January 1942 to April 1945
8th Destroyer Flotilla Singapore 1947 to July 1951 re-designated 8th DSQ
11th Destroyer Flotilla Trincomalee February 1943 – 1945 transferred from Med Fleet
24th Destroyer Flotilla Trincomalee January to May 1945
26th Destroyer Flotilla Trincomalee January 1945
1st Destroyer Squadron Singapore 1950 to April 1960
8th Destroyer Squadron Singapore July 1951 – May 1963 renamed 24th ESQ
1st Escort Flotilla Singapore 1946 to 1954
4th Frigate Squadron Singapore January 1949 to August 1954
6th Minesweeper Flotilla Trincomalee January 1945 to July 1947 transferred to Singapore
6th Minesweeper Flotilla Singapore August 1947 to 1951 placed in reserve
6th Minesweeper Squadron Singapore 1951 to June 1954 new formation
7th Minesweeper Flotilla Trincomalee February 1945
2nd Submarine Flotilla Trincomalee January 1945
4th Submarine Division Sydney May to October 1949
4th Submarine Flotilla Trincomalee January 1942 to October 1947
4th Submarine Flotilla Singapore October 1947 to December 1948
6th Submarine Flotilla Trincomalee February to August 1944
2nd Submarine Flotilla Trincomalee January 1945
4th Submarine Flotilla Trincomalee then Singapore January 1942 to October 1947
6th Submarine Flotilla Trincomalee February to August 1944
Persian Gulf Division Juffair Naval Base January 1942 to January 1954
Red Sea Division Aden Naval Base February 1942 to January 1954
60th Escort Group Trincomalee January to May 1945 11 ships
Aden-Bombay-Colombo Groups Aden/Bombay/Colombo 4 February 1944 to January 1945 ABC 30 escorts
Aden Escort Forces Aden 4 February 1944 to January 1945 15 escorts
Ceylon Escort Forces Colombo 9 January 1943 to 4 February 1944 10 escorts
Kilidini Escort Forces Kilidini 4 February 1944 to January 1945 8 escorts
Kilidini Escort Forces Kilidini January to May 1945 14 ships
Royal Indian Navy Escort Forces Bombay 4 February 1944 to January 1945 8 escorts

Notes

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  1. ^ Jackson, p. 289
  2. ^ Hobbs, David. "THE BRITISH PACIFIC FLEET IN 1945 A Commonwealth effort and a remarkable achievement" (PDF). navy.gov.au. Royal Australian Navy. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
  3. ^ Chew, Emrys (25 October 2007). "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: The Indian Ocean and the Maritime Balance of Power in Historical Perspective" (PDF). S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University. Retrieved 2 September 2012.
  4. ^ "Pearl Harbor Attack CINCPAC (Admiral Chester Nimitz) to CINCUS (Admiral Ernest J. King) DAMAGES SUSTAINED BY SHIPS AS A RESULT OF THE JAPANESE RAID, DECEMBER 7, 1941". 23 April 2000. Retrieved 2 September 2012 – via Hyperwar Foundation.
  5. ^ Lord Alanbrooke (2015). Danchev, Alex (ed.). Alanbrooke War Diaries 1939-1945. Orion. ISBN 9781780227542.
  6. ^ Muggenthaler, p. 282–287
  7. ^ O'Hara, p.103
  8. ^ Hammerton, John, ed. (25 April 1941). "South Africans Won the Race to Addis Ababa". The War Illustrated. Vol. 4, no. 86. London: William Berry. p. 424.
  9. ^ Jackson, p.290
  10. ^ "The Intelligence Failure at Pearl Harbor". Retrieved 2 September 2012.
  11. ^ "L'Indochine française pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale". Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 2 September 2012.
  12. ^ Shores, et al., pp. 120–21
  13. ^ Stephen Roskill, War at Sea, Vol. II, p.22
  14. ^ Roskill, Vol. II, 25; Royal Navy in Pacific and Indian Oceans area
  15. ^ Stephen Roskill, War at Sea, Vol. II, p.25
  16. ^ Roskill, Vol. II, pp.27-28.
  17. ^ Roskill, Vol. II, p.29.
  18. ^ "Battle of Madagascar". Retrieved 2 September 2012.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Watson, Graham. "Royal Navy Organisation in World War 2, 1939–1945: EASTERN FLEET 1.1942-EAST INDIES FLEET 11.44-". naval-history.net. Gordon Smith, 19 September 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
  20. ^ a b Waters, S. D. (1956), "Chapter 23 – The New Zealand Cruisers", The Royal New Zealand Navy, The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–1945, Wellington: Historical Publications Branch, Royal New Zealand Navy, pp. 357, 359, retrieved 2 September 2012
  21. ^ a b Jackson, p. 303
  22. ^ a b c Whitaker's Almanacks 1941 – 1971
  23. ^ Waters, S. D. (1956), "Appendix V – Execution By Japanese of Fleet Air Arm Officers", The Royal New Zealand Navy, The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–1945, Wellington: Historical Publications Branch, Royal New Zealand Navy, pp. 537–538, retrieved 2 September 2012
  24. ^ Mackie p151–152
  25. ^ Mackie p 152
  26. ^ Mackie, p153
  27. ^ The Navy List. London, England: H. M. Stationery Office. December 1942. p. 1339.
  28. ^ a b c d The Navy List. London, England: H. M. Stationery Office. December 1942. p. 1340.
  29. ^ The Navy List. London, England: H. M. Stationery Office. November 1944. p. 2264.
  30. ^ Mackie p 151–152
  31. ^ Heathcote, T. A. (2002). British Admirals of the Fleet: 1734–1995. Barnsley, England: Pen and Sword. p. 187. ISBN 9780850528350.
  32. ^ Houterman, J.N. "Royal Navy (RN) Officers 1939–1945 – M". unithistories.com. Houterman and Kloppes. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
  33. ^ Houterman, J.N. "Royal Navy (RN) Officers 1939–1945 – B". unithistories.com. Houterman and Kloppes. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
  34. ^ Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives
  35. ^ HMAS Sydney Record of Proceedings November 1953
  36. ^ Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives
  37. ^ Mackie p153
  38. ^ a b The Navy List. London, England: H. M. Stationery Office. October 1944. p. 2263.
  39. ^ Watson, Graham (19 September 2015). "Royal Navy Organisation in World War 2, 1939–1945: EASTERN FLEET 1.1942-EAST INDIES FLEET 11.44-". naval-history.net. Gordon Smith. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
  40. ^ Watson, Graham (19 September 2015). "Royal Navy Organisation in World War 2, 1939–1945: 3.3 Indian and Pacific Oceans". naval-history.net. Gordon Smith. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
  41. ^ Watson, Graham (12 July 2015). "Royal Navy Organisation and Ship Deployment 1947–2013:1. ROYAL NAVY ORGANISATION AND DEPLOYMENT FROM 1947". naval-history.net. Gordon Smith. Retrieved 10 July 2018.

References

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  • Grove, Eric (1987). Vanguard to Trident: British Naval Policy Since World War II. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0870215520.
  • Heathcote, Tony (2002). The British Admirals of the Fleet 1734 – 1995. Pen & Sword Ltd. ISBN 0-85052-835-6.
  • Hill, Richard (2000). Lewin of Greenwich. Weidenfeld Military. ISBN 978-0-304-35329-3.
  • Jackson, Ashley (2006). The British Empire and the Second World War. London: Hambledon Continuum. ISBN 1-85285-417-0.
  • Mackie, Colin. "Royal Navy Senior Appointments from 1865" (PDF). Colin Mackie's website. Colin Mackie. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
  • Muggenthaler, August Karl (1980). German Raiders of World War II. London Pan. ISBN 0-330-26204-1.
  • O'Hara, Vincent (2009). Struggle for the Middle Sea: the great navies at war in the Mediterranean theater, 1940–1945. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1591146483.
  • Shores, Christopher; Cull, Brian; Izawa, Yasuho (1992). Bloody Shambles: The Drift to War to the Fall of Singapore. Vol. I. London: Grub Street. ISBN 0-948817-50-X.
  • Watson, Dr Graham (2015). "Royal Navy Organisation and Ship Deployment 1947-2013". www.naval-history.net. Gordon Smith.