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French Somaliland in World War II

French Somaliland (officially the Côte française des Somalis, French Somali Coast), with its capital at Djibouti, was the scene of only minor skirmishing during World War II, principally between June and July 1940. After the fall of France (25 June 1940) the colony was briefly in limbo until a governor loyal to the Vichy government was installed on 25 July. It was the last French possession in Africa to remain loyal to Vichy, surrendering to Free French forces only on 26 December 1942. Pierre Nouailhetas governed the territory through most of the Vichy period. After aerial bombardment by the British, he instituted a reign of terror against Europeans and locals. Nouailhetas was eventually recalled and forced to retire. From September 1940, the colony was under an Allied blockade, and many of its inhabitants fled to neighbouring British Somaliland. After the territory's liberation, there were many governors and recovery from the deprivation of 1940–42 was only beginning when the war ended in 1945.

Map of French Somaliland, modern Djibouti. The British blockade prevented direct sea communications between Djibouti, the capital and Obock

Background

 
Landing of French troops in Djibouti in 1935
 
Italian supply convoy in Djibouti, c. 1936–38

In 1934–35, Italo-Ethiopian tensions were affecting the Horn of Africa while in Europe German re-armament weighed on the French government. Looking for Italian support against Germany in the event of war, France ceded several territories, including a small piece of territory in northern Somaliland to Italian Eritrea, in the Mussolini–Laval Accord of 7 January 1935. This treaty was never ratified by Italy and although preparations were made to transfer the territory, it was not actually transferred prior to the outbreak of war in 1940.[1]

In 1935, Italy invaded Ethiopia and the French government paid increased attention to the defence of French Somaliland. In January 1938 an Italian force moved down onto the plain of Hanlé[a] in French territory and encamped there. Italy claimed that this territory lay on the Ethiopian side of the border, as per the Franco-Ethiopian treaty of 1897.[2] The French colonial minister, Georges Mandel, and the commander-in-chief at Djibouti, Paul Legentilhomme, responded by strengthening the colony's defences to unprecedented levels: 15,000 troops were stationed there and posts were established at Afambo, Moussa Ali and even on the other side of the Italians.[b] The landward fortifications were augmented extensively with concrete.[4]

In October 1938, in the aftermath of the Munich Agreement, Italy demanded concessions from France, among them a free port at Djibouti and control of the Djibouti–Addis Ababa railway. The French refused the demands, believing the true Italian intention was outright acquisition of the colony.[5] On 30 November, after anti-French protests in Rome, the Italian foreign minister, Galeazzo Ciano, demanded the cession of French Somaliland to Italy. Speaking in the Chamber of Deputies on the "natural aspirations of the Italian people", he inspired shouts of "Nice! Corsica! Savoy! Tunisia! Djibouti! Malta!"[6]

On 18 December 1938, there was a counter-demonstration in Djibouti in the course of which a huge crowd gathered in the centre of town waving the French flag and shouting pro-French slogans.[7] Meanwhile, the Italians built a string of small posts (Abba, Dagguirou, Gouma, etc.) inside the western border of French Somaliland, claiming in late 1939 that the territory had always been part of Ethiopia.[8] In April 1940, they claimed that the French had built a post at Afambo in undisputedly Italian territory, although there is no record that there had been a post there before the Italians built one in October 1940.[9]

 
French military build-up in 1938–39
 
Legentilhomme reviewing troops, c. 1939

In January 1940, the Italian viceroy and commander-in-chief in East Africa, Prince Amedeo, Duke of Aosta, submitted a proposal to Rome for a "surprise" invasion of French Somaliland involving sixteen motorised battalions and a force of 6,000 Azebo Galla and 6,000 Danakil tribesmen already near the frontier.[3] The plan was soon leaked and in response General Guglielmo Nasi was replaced as governor of Harar by a civilian, Enrico Cerulli. The "Danakil horde" continued to monitor the frontier.[10]

On the eve of the world war, Fauque de Jonquières, a battalion commander, was in charge of the local intelligence outfit, itself an arm of the Section d'Études Militaires (SEM), the Deuxième Bureau station in Marseille. After the Italian conquest of Ethiopia he gave money, arms, advisors, propaganda and refuge to the Ethiopian resistance.[11] One French reserve officer, P. R. Monnier, was killed on a secret mission in Ethiopia in November 1939.[12] Despite the fact that British Somaliland bordered the French territory and both were surrounded by Italian East Africa, no Anglo-French joint military planning took place prior to a meeting at Aden in June 1939. In 8–13 January January 1940 a second conference was held at Djibouti. There it was resolved to form an "Ethiopian Legion" in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, but not to use it without an Italian declaration of war.[12] The British Commander-in-Chief, Middle East, General Archibald Wavell, also agreed that the French commander-in-chief at Djibouti, Paul Legentilhomme, would command the military forces in both Somalilands should war come with Italy.[13]

War with Italy and armistice

Fighting during 10–25 June

Italy's declaration of war on France and Great Britain came on 10 June 1940, and the next day Legentilhomme was named supreme commander of all Allied forces in the Somaliland theatre.[12] In French Somaliland he had a garrison of seven battalions of Senegalese and Somali infantry, three batteries of field guns, four batteries of anti-aircraft guns, a company of light tanks, four companies of militia and irregulars, two platoons of the camel corps and an assortment of aircraft.[13]

Since the Allies were outnumbered by about 40,000 to 9,000 along the Somaliland frontier,[c] no offensive actions were planned, although Legentilhomme did receive an order on 11 June to resist "to the end" (jusqu'au bout). The intention was to pin down the Italians while stoking an Ethiopian revolt.[12][14] The Italians did undertake some offensive actions beginning on 18 June. From Harrar Governorate, troops under General Guglielmo Nasi attacked the fort of Ali-Sabieh in the south and Dadda'to in the north. There were also skirmishes in the area of Dagguirou and around the lakes Abbe and Ally.[15] Near Ali-Sabieh, there was some skirmishing over the Djibouti–Addis Ababa railway.[12] In the first week of war, the Italian Navy sent the submarines Torricelli and Perla to patrol French territorial waters in the Gulf of Tadjoura in front of the ports of Djibouti, Tadjoura and Obock.[16][d] By the end of June the Italians had also occupied the border fortifications of Magdoul, Daimoli, Balambolta, Birt Eyla, Asmailo, Tewo, Abba, Alailou, Madda and Rahale.[17]

 
Territories of French Somalia occupied by Italian colonial troops (limited by green line)

On 17 June some Italian Meridionali Ro.37bis aircraft undertook a reconnaissance of Djibouti, noting five or six warships in the port and about twenty aircraft at a nearby aerodrome.[18] That same day, the French evacuated the outlying station of Dadda'to and Douméra on the border,[1] although whether it had come under Italian attack is a matter of dispute. The French soon re-occupied it.[9] On 21 June eleven Caproni Ca.133s bombed Djibouti in the largest raid of the colony's brief war. Anti-aircraft fire was intense and two Italian aircraft failed to return, but fires and explosions were seen in Djibouti.[19] Overnight, several waves of Savoia-Marchetti SM.81 bombers attacked the port facilities.[e] On 22 June the Italians suspected the British might try to establish a forward base at Djibouti, and five Ro.37bis, four CR.42 and one CR.32 aircraft based out of Dire Dawa strafed the airfield there.[20] An Italian pilot described this attack in his diary: "The anti-aircraft defence is very poor ... We make another turn to see if any of the French fighters will have the courage to take off. Not one!"[14][f] Some French Potez 25 TOE reconnaissance aircraft bombed Italian installations at Dewele in retaliation.[21][g]

Armistice of Villa Incisa

General Charles de Gaulle's appeal of 18 June for French officers and soldiers to ignore the impending Franco-Italian armistice was itself ignored by most officers in Somaliland, only Legentilhomme himself was in favour of siding with De Gaulle and "Fighting France".[12] On 25 June the Armistice of Villa Incisa came into effect, ending the war between Italy and France. It called for the demilitarisation of Somaliland "for the duration of hostilities between Italy and the British Empire," and granted Italy "full and constant right to use the port of Djibouti with all its equipment, together with the French section of the railway, for all kinds of transport" (article 3). The location for the surrender of "all movable arms and ammunition, together with those to be given up to the troops effecting the evacuation of the territory ... within 15 days" (article 5), the procedures for demobilisation and disarmament of French forces (article 9) and the conditions of wireless communication between France and the colonies (article 19) were left to an Italian Armistice Control Commission.[22] Legentilhomme procrastinated in carrying out the armistice terms, since he had lost contact with the government in France. On 28 June, when the Italians demanded that he fulfill certain clauses, he denied all knowledge of any such clauses.[23]

Fighting after the armistice

 
French fort at Ali-Sabieh, overlooking the railway, c. 1940

Between 1 and 10 July several clashes with the Italians took place on the plain of Hanlé, at Ali-Sabieh and along the railroad.[24] The border area of western French Somaliland was occupied by Italian troops. Under increasing British pressure, they withdrew from Hanlé beginning in October 1940 and from Dagguirou by April 1941, when the French had returned.[9] When the government on 10 July learned that the armistice was not yet put into effect in Somaliland, President Philippe Pétain sent General Gaëtan Germain as his personal representative to correct the situation. Germain arrived at Asmara on 14 July.[25] On 19 July the local conseil d'administration (administrative council) voted unanimously (with the exception of Legentilhomme) to remain loyal to Pétain's collaborationist government at Vichy.[24] Germain then negotiated the resignation of Legentilhomme and convinced the armistice commission then being set up that it was inadvisable and impractical to demilitarise French Somaliland, in which approximately 8,000 soldiers (with tanks and airplanes) remained on guard.[24] French troops in British Somaliland were withdrawn.[25] On 23 July Germain succeeded Legentilhomme as commander-in-chief of French forces. On the same day, Governor Hubert Deschamps (FR) was dismissed for his refusal to expel the British consul, with whom he had reached an agreement to supply the colony with food. Germain succeeded him as well, thus becoming the supreme civil and military authority in the colony.[24] He entered Djibouti on 25 July.[25] According to the Service historique de l'armée de terre, the official archives of the French army, which has a dossier of events in French Somaliland from 17 June through 11 July, the colony "ceased to be a theatre of operations" on 28 July.[9]

 
French fort at Loyada, occupied by the Italians in August 1940

On 2 August Legentilhomme and two officers, Captains Appert and des Essarts,[9] refused the offer of repatriation on an Italian airplane and defected to the British.[24] They arrived in Aden on 5 August.[26] The Italian chief of staff, Pietro Badoglio, had "with casual vindictiveness" ordered him shot if he fell into Italian hands, in accordance with paragraph 14 of the armistice convention which defined those leaving French territory to fight against Italy as "illegal combatants".[25] Negotiations at Dewele on the local implementation of the armistice were only finally completed on 8 August. In a note penned that day, now in the Archives nationales d'Outre-mer, the French colonial official Edouard Chedeville recorded that "the Italians have taken by force our posts at Dadda'to and Balambolta, and occupied certain others after we had evacuated them, notably Dagguirou and Agna in the Hanlé, Hadela to the north of lake Abbe and possibly also Alailou.[9]

During the period of uncertainty in Djibouti, the Duke of Aosta urged an attack on British Somaliland in order to cut off the French colony from British support. Benito Mussolini approved the campaign on 19 July, but the situation in Djibouti changed rapidly in Italy's favour after that.[25] The 17th Colonial Brigade under Colonel Agosti occupied the French fort at Loyada on the border with British Somaliland in early August. When the Italian invasion of British Somaliland began on 3 August, the forces at Loyada moved on Zeila, which they had taken by 5 August.[27] The French territory was completely surrounded on land by Italian possessions. Vichy managed to continue supplying it by submarine from Madagascar, and maintained direct contact by air through flights from France via Greece (usually terminating in Madagascar).[28]

Rule of Nouailhetas

On 18 September 1940, the Royal Navy established a blockade of French Somaliland (and dividing the colony) with ships based out of Aden.[29] Pétain replaced Germain as governor with Pierre Nouailhetas, a naval officer, that same month. On 25 September the British bombed Djibouti from the air, prompting Nouailhetas to institute a brutal reign of terror.[24] Europeans suspected of contact with the enemy were interned at Obock, while 45 others were condemned to death or forced labour, mostly in absentia. In May 1941 six Africans were shot without trial to set an example to potential deserters.[30] The rule of Nouailhetas was too brutal for even the authoritarian leaders at Vichy to stand: in September 1942 he was recalled and forced to retire without a pension.[30]

In the last week of November 1940, De Gaulle and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill met in London to discuss a proposed operation to take French Somaliland. Three Free French battalions, including Foreign Legionnaires, under Legentilhomme would establish themselves near the French Somali border and begin disseminating pro-Gaullist propaganda, seeking to justify the British action at Mers-el-Kébir, the attack on Dakar and the war in Syria. This was labelled Operation Marie. The Royal Navy was to ferry the Free French troops to East Africa.[31][32] The French plan was enthusiastically approved by Churchill, but it was not implemented until the naval assets became available in February 1941.[32] Nonetheless, in November a certain Major Hamilton went to Aden to begin preparing a "Mobile Force" for blowing up the railway from Djibouti to Dire Dawa. In the end, this plan was dropped, since it was not considered politic to upset the Vichyites at that moment.[33]

On 24 March 1941, in an attempt to prevent an Italian withdrawal from occupied British Somaliland, the British bombed a section of the Djibouti–Addis Ababa railway and met with heavy French anti-aircraft fire.[34] By that time, the Allied offensive against the Italians had tightened the blockade of French Somaliland and a famine was setting in. Malnutrition-related diseases took many lives, 70% of them women and children.[29] The locals named the blockade the carmii, a word for a type of sorghum usually reserved for cattle, but used as human food at the height of the famine.[35]

 
Photos showing episodes of the British blockade.

In March 1941, with Free French forces facing the Vichyite garrison in Somaliland, the British changed their policy to "rally French Somaliland to the Allied cause without bloodshed". The Free French were to arrange a voluntary "rallying" (ralliement) by means of propaganda while the British were to blockade the colony. Wavell considered that if British pressure was applied, a rally would appear to have been coerced. Wavell preferred to let the propaganda continue and provide a small amount of supplies under strict control.[26] As part of this propaganda war, there were even competing newspapers: the Free French published Djibouti Libre ("Free Djibouti") and smuggled it into the colony, while the Vichy authorities published the official Djibouti Français ("French Djibouti").[31]

In April, after the fall of Addis Ababa, the British tried to negotiate with Nouailhetas for transporting Italian prisoners-of-war along the Djibouti–Addis Ababa railway and evacuating them through Djibouti's port. On 1 May Nouailhetas telegraphed Aden to inform the British that he had received permission from Vichy to negotiate. On 8 May General Alan Cunningham responded with his proposals, but no commitments.[31]

When the policy of stoking a "rally" had no immediate effect, Wavell suggested negotiations with Nouailhetas to obtain use of the port and railway. The suggestion was accepted by the British government but, because of the concessions granted to the Vichy regime in Syria and Lebanon, proposals were made to invade the colony instead.[26] On 8 June, Nouailhetas was given an ultimatum. Wavell promised to lift the blockade and provide one month's worth of provisions if the colony declared for De Gaulle; otherwise the blockade would be tightened. Leaflets were dropped from the air to inform the inhabitants of French Somaliland of Britain's terms. Nouailhetas wrote to Aden on 15 June about the high rate of infant mortality owing to malnutrition in the territory, but he rejected the British terms.[31] The British considered but ultimately rejected an invasion of French Somaliland because they could not spare the troops and did not wish to offend the local French, whom they hoped would join Free France.[31] The 2nd Tanganyika Battalion of the King's African Rifles (KAR), composed of troops from the Tanganyika Territory, were at this time deployed along the Zeila–Loyada and Ayesha–Dewele routes.[36]

After the war, De Gaulle alleged that Britain intended to bring French Somaliland into its sphere of influence, and that this explains Britain's reluctance to use force to liberate a territory that would of necessity been surrendered to their forces at the end of the war.[37] When negotiations resumed with Nouailhetas later in the summer, the British offered to evacuate the garrison and European civilians to another French colony upon surrender. The French governor informed them that he would have to destroy the colony's railroads and port facilities prior to surrendering.[38] As late as November flights from Italy were still landing in Djibouti,[39] and on 11 December a British Mohawk fighter and a French Potez 631 exchanged shots over the British aerodrome at Ayesha.[40]

Following the failure of negotiations and the final defeat of the Italian forces in the field by July 1941—with the exception of General Guglielmo Nasi at Gondar—the French colony was totally surrounded and cut off by hostile British forces. All horses, donkeys and camels were consumed, as well as all fresh fruits and vegetables. Beriberi and scurvy spread and many townsfolk left for the desert, leaving their children to be cared for by the Catholic missions. The head doctor at the hospital committed suicide in despair.[38] Only a few Arab dhows (boutres) managed to run the blockade from Djibouti to Obock; and only two French ships from Madagascar managed to run it. The Japanese declaration of war (7 December 1941) gave the colony some respite, since the British were forced to withdraw all but two ships from the blockade for use in the East.[38][41]

For six months (June 1941–January 1942), Nouailhetas remained willing to grant concessions over the port and railway but would not tolerate Free French interference. In October the blockade was reviewed but no changes were implemented before the beginning of the war with Japan. On 2 January 1942, the Vichy government offered the use of the port and railway, subject to the lifting of the blockade, but Britain refused.[26] At the same time, on account of the increased ease of the dhow trade, even the land blockade of the colony was lifted on 15 January 1942.[28][29] The British ended the blockade unilaterally in March 1942.[26]

Rallying and liberation

A few defections from French Somaliland took place in 1941. Some air force pilots escaped to Aden to join the Escadrille française d'Aden under Jacques Dodelier, and Captain Edmond Magendie began training some non-commissioned officers who would become the backbone of the Bataillon de tirailleurs somalis (FR), which later fought in Europe. Some Free French sloops also took part in the blockade.[38] The Commander-in-Chief, East Africa, William Platt, codenamed the negotiations for the surrender of French Somaliland "Pentagon", because there were five sides: himself, the Vichy governor, the Free French, the British minister at Addis Ababa (Robert Howe), and the United States.[42] The American consul at Aden, Clare H. Timberlake, even bluffed the acting British governor, John Hall, into getting Frederick Hards, AOC Aden, to fly him to Djibouti to interview Nouailhetas before his dismissal. In the end the Americans apologised for this interference.[42]

Only following Operation Streamline Jane—the Allied conquest of Madagascar (September–November 1942)—and Operation Torch—the Allied landing in French Morocco and Algeria in November 1942—did one third of the Somali garrison, the first battalion of Senegalese Tirailleurs under Colonel Sylvain Eugène Raynal, cross the border into British Somaliland and defect. This prompted the new governor, Christian Raimond Dupont, to offer the British an economic agreement without surrender, but it was rejected. He was informed that if the colony surrendered without firing a shot, the French right to it would be respected in the post-war order. On hearing this, Dupont surrendered and Colonel Raynal's troops crossed back into French Somaliland on 26 December 1942, completing its liberation.[37] The official handover took place at 10:00 p.m. on 28 December.[42]

The first governor appointed under the Free French was André Bayardelle (FR), transferred from New Caledonia in December 1942. Under Bayardelle, the Bataillon de tirailleurs somalis was recruited for service in Europe.[37] Late in 1943 he was transferred to become Governor-General of French Equatorial Africa. His replacement, Raphaël Saller (FR), took office on 13 January 1944. Shortly after he took office, a commission was created to examine those civil servants and other collaborators who had remained loyal to Vichy. In general, only their political allegiance during 1940–42 mattered, and Vichyites were dismissed from public service permanently.[37] He too was shuffled along, and began a long career in the colonial service in French West Africa. The next governor, Jean Chalvet, was replaced within a few weeks by Jean Beyries as acting governor. Djibouti began to return to normal in mid-1945 when a sufficient number of natives who had fled to neighbouring countries had returned so that the port could operate again.[43] Provisions were coming in from Ethiopia, Madagascar and French North Africa. The power plant was in poor condition and electricity functioned only intermittently, while the rail infrastructure was in disrepair and awaiting deliveries on orders placed in the United States when the war ended.[43]

List of governors during the war

 
Vichy France stamp issued in 1941, with an image of Pétain
  • Hubert Jules Deschamps (2 May 1939 – 25 July 1940), previously acting governor
  • Gaëtan Louis Élie Germain (25 July–7 August 1940)
  • Pierre Marie Élie Louis Nouailhetas (7 August 1940 – 21 October 1942)
  • Auguste Charles Jules Truffert (21 October–4 December 1942)
  • Christian Raimond Dupont (4–26 December 1942)
  • Ange Marie Charles André Bayardelle (30 December 1942 – 22 June 1943)
  • Michel Raphaël Antoine Saller (13 January–1 May 1944), previously acting governor
  • Jean Victor Louis Joseph Chalvet (1 May 1944 – 30 April 1946)
    • Jean Beyries (14 May 1944–December 1945), acting governor

Notes

  1. ^ Hanlé is a wadi (French oued) in the south of the Danakil Desert, in northern Djibouti
  2. ^ Mockler puts the number at 5,000.[3]
  3. ^ Mockler puts the garrison of French Somaliland at about 10,000 men. He says that Legentilhomme planned to invade Ethiopia along the railway.
  4. ^ For further information, see Red Sea Flotilla.
  5. ^ Mockler reports that four crashed.[14]
  6. ^ This pilot's diary was captured and translated by the British. His identity is unknown.
  7. ^ Upon his return to Dire Dawa, the Italian diarist noted that at noon "three French planes attack us by surprise—one of our planes is destroyed on the ground."

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Imbert-Vier 2008, pp. 226–29.
  2. ^ Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 14.
  3. ^ a b Mockler 1984, p. 194.
  4. ^ Ebsworth 1953, p. 564.
  5. ^ Burgwyn 1997, pp. 182–83.
  6. ^ Clark 2005, p. 243.
  7. ^ Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 15: Djibouti, terre française, droit rester française! ("Djibouti, French land, must remain French!")..
  8. ^ Imbert-Vier 2008, p. 171: map titled "Postes français et italiens fin 1939".
  9. ^ a b c d e f Imbert-Vier 2008, p. 172.
  10. ^ Mockler 1984, p. 198.
  11. ^ Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 15.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 16.
  13. ^ a b Raugh 1993, pp. 75–76.
  14. ^ a b c Mockler 1984, pp. 223–24.
  15. ^ Rovighi 1995, p. 107.
  16. ^ Rovighi 1995, p. 105.
  17. ^ Rovighi 1995, p. 109.
  18. ^ Shores 1996, p. 23.
  19. ^ Shores 1996, p. 26.
  20. ^ Shores 1996, p. 27.
  21. ^ Ferry 2005, p. 148.
  22. ^ Franco-Italian Armistice & 25 June 1940.
  23. ^ Shores 1996, p. 30.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 17.
  25. ^ a b c d e Knox 1982, p. 152.
  26. ^ a b c d e Playfair et al. 2004, pp. 322–24.
  27. ^ Picone Chiodo 1990, p. 86.
  28. ^ a b Ebsworth 1953, p. 565.
  29. ^ a b c Alwan & Mibrathu 2000, p. 24.
  30. ^ a b Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 18.
  31. ^ a b c d e Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 19.
  32. ^ a b Mockler 1984, pp. 302–03.
  33. ^ Mockler 1984, p. 310.
  34. ^ Shores 1996, p. 131.
  35. ^ Alwan & Mibrathu 2000, p. 26.
  36. ^ Moyse-Bartlett 2012, pp. 452 and 569.
  37. ^ a b c d Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 21.
  38. ^ a b c d Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 20.
  39. ^ Shores 1996, pp. 158, 161.
  40. ^ Shores 1996, p. 162.
  41. ^ Alwan & Mibrathu 2000, p. 25.
  42. ^ a b c Ebsworth 1953, p. 568.
  43. ^ a b Thompson & Adloff 1968, p. 22.

Bibliography

  • "The Franco-Italian Armistice". Bulletin of International News. 17 (14): 852–854. 13 July 1940.
  • Alwan, Daoud Aboubaker; Mibrathu, Yohanis (2000). Historical Dictionary of Djibouti. Scarecrow Press. OCLC 45899363.
  • Burgwyn, James H. (1997). Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, 1918–1940. Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-94877-1.
  • Clark, Martin (2005). Mussolini (1st ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-582-06595-6.
  • Ebsworth, W. A. (1953). "Jibouti and Madagascar in the 1939–45 War". Journal of the Royal United Service Institution. 98 (592): 564–68. doi:10.1080/03071845309422199.
  • Ferry, Vital (2005). Croix de Lorraine et Croix du Sud, 1940–1942: aviateurs belges et de la France Libre en Afrique. Éditions du Gerfaut. ISBN 2-914622-92-9.
  • Imbert-Vier, Simon (2008). Frontières et limites à Djibouti durant la période coloniale (1884–1977) (PhD thesis). Université de Provence–Aix-Marseille I.
  • Knox, MacGregor (1982). Mussolini Unleashed, 1939–1941: Politics and Strategy in Fascist Italy's Last War. Cambridge University Press.
  • Mockler, Anthony (1984). Haile Selassie's War: The Italian−Ethiopian Campaign, 1935–1941. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-394-54222-3.
  • Moyse-Bartlett, H. (2012). The King's African Rifles, Volume 2. Andrews UK Limited. ISBN 978-1781506639. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  • Picone Chiodo, Marco (1990). In nome della resa: l'Italia nella guerra 1940–1945. Mursia.
  • Playfair, I. S. O.; Flynn, F. C.; Molony, C. J. C.; Toomer, S. E. (2004) [1956]. Butler, J. R. M. (ed.). The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Germans Come to the Help of their Ally (1941). History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. Vol. II. Naval & Military Press. ISBN 1-84574-066-1.
  • Raugh, H. E. (1993). Wavell in the Middle East, 1939–1941: A Study in Generalship. London: Brassey's. ISBN 0-08-040983-0.
  • Rovighi (1995). Le operazioni in Africa orientale (giugno 1940 – novembre 1941). Volume II: Documenti. Rome: Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito.
  • Shores, Christopher (1996). Dust Clouds in the Middle East: Air War for East Africa, Iraq, Syria, Iran and Madagascar, 1940–42. London: Grub Street.
  • Thompson, Virginia McLean; Adloff, Richard (1968). Djibouti and the Horn of Africa. Stanford University Press.

Further reading

  • Cornil-Frerrot, Sylvain (2012). "Le ralliement de la Côte française des Somalis à la France combattante" (PDF). Revue de la Fondation de la France libre. 46: 6–7.
  • Costagliola, Jacques (2005). La guerre anglo-française, 3 juillet 1940 – 11 novembre 1942: un conflit parallèle et tangent à la Seconde guerre mondiale. Coulommiers: Dualpha.
  • Koburger, Charles W. (1992). Naval Strategy East of Suez: The Role of Djibouti. New York: Praeger.
  • Pankhurst, Richard (1971). "Italian Fascist Claims to the Port of Jibuti, 1935–1941: An Historical Note". Ethiopia Observer. 14 (1): 26–30.
  • Prijac, Lukian (2015). Le blocus de Djibouti: Chronique d'une guerre décalée (1935–1943). L'Hamattan.

french, somaliland, world, french, somaliland, officially, côte, française, somalis, french, somali, coast, with, capital, djibouti, scene, only, minor, skirmishing, during, world, principally, between, june, july, 1940, after, fall, france, june, 1940, colony. French Somaliland officially the Cote francaise des Somalis French Somali Coast with its capital at Djibouti was the scene of only minor skirmishing during World War II principally between June and July 1940 After the fall of France 25 June 1940 the colony was briefly in limbo until a governor loyal to the Vichy government was installed on 25 July It was the last French possession in Africa to remain loyal to Vichy surrendering to Free French forces only on 26 December 1942 Pierre Nouailhetas governed the territory through most of the Vichy period After aerial bombardment by the British he instituted a reign of terror against Europeans and locals Nouailhetas was eventually recalled and forced to retire From September 1940 the colony was under an Allied blockade and many of its inhabitants fled to neighbouring British Somaliland After the territory s liberation there were many governors and recovery from the deprivation of 1940 42 was only beginning when the war ended in 1945 Map of French Somaliland modern Djibouti The British blockade prevented direct sea communications between Djibouti the capital and Obock Contents 1 Background 2 War with Italy and armistice 2 1 Fighting during 10 25 June 2 2 Armistice of Villa Incisa 2 3 Fighting after the armistice 3 Rule of Nouailhetas 4 Rallying and liberation 5 List of governors during the war 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 8 Bibliography 9 Further readingBackground Edit Landing of French troops in Djibouti in 1935 Italian supply convoy in Djibouti c 1936 38In 1934 35 Italo Ethiopian tensions were affecting the Horn of Africa while in Europe German re armament weighed on the French government Looking for Italian support against Germany in the event of war France ceded several territories including a small piece of territory in northern Somaliland to Italian Eritrea in the Mussolini Laval Accord of 7 January 1935 This treaty was never ratified by Italy and although preparations were made to transfer the territory it was not actually transferred prior to the outbreak of war in 1940 1 In 1935 Italy invaded Ethiopia and the French government paid increased attention to the defence of French Somaliland In January 1938 an Italian force moved down onto the plain of Hanle a in French territory and encamped there Italy claimed that this territory lay on the Ethiopian side of the border as per the Franco Ethiopian treaty of 1897 2 The French colonial minister Georges Mandel and the commander in chief at Djibouti Paul Legentilhomme responded by strengthening the colony s defences to unprecedented levels 15 000 troops were stationed there and posts were established at Afambo Moussa Ali and even on the other side of the Italians b The landward fortifications were augmented extensively with concrete 4 In October 1938 in the aftermath of the Munich Agreement Italy demanded concessions from France among them a free port at Djibouti and control of the Djibouti Addis Ababa railway The French refused the demands believing the true Italian intention was outright acquisition of the colony 5 On 30 November after anti French protests in Rome the Italian foreign minister Galeazzo Ciano demanded the cession of French Somaliland to Italy Speaking in the Chamber of Deputies on the natural aspirations of the Italian people he inspired shouts of Nice Corsica Savoy Tunisia Djibouti Malta 6 On 18 December 1938 there was a counter demonstration in Djibouti in the course of which a huge crowd gathered in the centre of town waving the French flag and shouting pro French slogans 7 Meanwhile the Italians built a string of small posts Abba Dagguirou Gouma etc inside the western border of French Somaliland claiming in late 1939 that the territory had always been part of Ethiopia 8 In April 1940 they claimed that the French had built a post at Afambo in undisputedly Italian territory although there is no record that there had been a post there before the Italians built one in October 1940 9 French military build up in 1938 39 Legentilhomme reviewing troops c 1939In January 1940 the Italian viceroy and commander in chief in East Africa Prince Amedeo Duke of Aosta submitted a proposal to Rome for a surprise invasion of French Somaliland involving sixteen motorised battalions and a force of 6 000 Azebo Galla and 6 000 Danakil tribesmen already near the frontier 3 The plan was soon leaked and in response General Guglielmo Nasi was replaced as governor of Harar by a civilian Enrico Cerulli The Danakil horde continued to monitor the frontier 10 On the eve of the world war Fauque de Jonquieres a battalion commander was in charge of the local intelligence outfit itself an arm of the Section d Etudes Militaires SEM the Deuxieme Bureau station in Marseille After the Italian conquest of Ethiopia he gave money arms advisors propaganda and refuge to the Ethiopian resistance 11 One French reserve officer P R Monnier was killed on a secret mission in Ethiopia in November 1939 12 Despite the fact that British Somaliland bordered the French territory and both were surrounded by Italian East Africa no Anglo French joint military planning took place prior to a meeting at Aden in June 1939 In 8 13 January January 1940 a second conference was held at Djibouti There it was resolved to form an Ethiopian Legion in the Anglo Egyptian Sudan but not to use it without an Italian declaration of war 12 The British Commander in Chief Middle East General Archibald Wavell also agreed that the French commander in chief at Djibouti Paul Legentilhomme would command the military forces in both Somalilands should war come with Italy 13 War with Italy and armistice EditFighting during 10 25 June Edit Italy s declaration of war on France and Great Britain came on 10 June 1940 and the next day Legentilhomme was named supreme commander of all Allied forces in the Somaliland theatre 12 In French Somaliland he had a garrison of seven battalions of Senegalese and Somali infantry three batteries of field guns four batteries of anti aircraft guns a company of light tanks four companies of militia and irregulars two platoons of the camel corps and an assortment of aircraft 13 Since the Allies were outnumbered by about 40 000 to 9 000 along the Somaliland frontier c no offensive actions were planned although Legentilhomme did receive an order on 11 June to resist to the end jusqu au bout The intention was to pin down the Italians while stoking an Ethiopian revolt 12 14 The Italians did undertake some offensive actions beginning on 18 June From Harrar Governorate troops under General Guglielmo Nasi attacked the fort of Ali Sabieh in the south and Dadda to in the north There were also skirmishes in the area of Dagguirou and around the lakes Abbe and Ally 15 Near Ali Sabieh there was some skirmishing over the Djibouti Addis Ababa railway 12 In the first week of war the Italian Navy sent the submarines Torricelli and Perla to patrol French territorial waters in the Gulf of Tadjoura in front of the ports of Djibouti Tadjoura and Obock 16 d By the end of June the Italians had also occupied the border fortifications of Magdoul Daimoli Balambolta Birt Eyla Asmailo Tewo Abba Alailou Madda and Rahale 17 Territories of French Somalia occupied by Italian colonial troops limited by green line On 17 June some Italian Meridionali Ro 37bis aircraft undertook a reconnaissance of Djibouti noting five or six warships in the port and about twenty aircraft at a nearby aerodrome 18 That same day the French evacuated the outlying station of Dadda to and Doumera on the border 1 although whether it had come under Italian attack is a matter of dispute The French soon re occupied it 9 On 21 June eleven Caproni Ca 133s bombed Djibouti in the largest raid of the colony s brief war Anti aircraft fire was intense and two Italian aircraft failed to return but fires and explosions were seen in Djibouti 19 Overnight several waves of Savoia Marchetti SM 81 bombers attacked the port facilities e On 22 June the Italians suspected the British might try to establish a forward base at Djibouti and five Ro 37bis four CR 42 and one CR 32 aircraft based out of Dire Dawa strafed the airfield there 20 An Italian pilot described this attack in his diary The anti aircraft defence is very poor We make another turn to see if any of the French fighters will have the courage to take off Not one 14 f Some French Potez 25 TOE reconnaissance aircraft bombed Italian installations at Dewele in retaliation 21 g Armistice of Villa Incisa Edit General Charles de Gaulle s appeal of 18 June for French officers and soldiers to ignore the impending Franco Italian armistice was itself ignored by most officers in Somaliland only Legentilhomme himself was in favour of siding with De Gaulle and Fighting France 12 On 25 June the Armistice of Villa Incisa came into effect ending the war between Italy and France It called for the demilitarisation of Somaliland for the duration of hostilities between Italy and the British Empire and granted Italy full and constant right to use the port of Djibouti with all its equipment together with the French section of the railway for all kinds of transport article 3 The location for the surrender of all movable arms and ammunition together with those to be given up to the troops effecting the evacuation of the territory within 15 days article 5 the procedures for demobilisation and disarmament of French forces article 9 and the conditions of wireless communication between France and the colonies article 19 were left to an Italian Armistice Control Commission 22 Legentilhomme procrastinated in carrying out the armistice terms since he had lost contact with the government in France On 28 June when the Italians demanded that he fulfill certain clauses he denied all knowledge of any such clauses 23 Fighting after the armistice Edit French fort at Ali Sabieh overlooking the railway c 1940Between 1 and 10 July several clashes with the Italians took place on the plain of Hanle at Ali Sabieh and along the railroad 24 The border area of western French Somaliland was occupied by Italian troops Under increasing British pressure they withdrew from Hanle beginning in October 1940 and from Dagguirou by April 1941 when the French had returned 9 When the government on 10 July learned that the armistice was not yet put into effect in Somaliland President Philippe Petain sent General Gaetan Germain as his personal representative to correct the situation Germain arrived at Asmara on 14 July 25 On 19 July the local conseil d administration administrative council voted unanimously with the exception of Legentilhomme to remain loyal to Petain s collaborationist government at Vichy 24 Germain then negotiated the resignation of Legentilhomme and convinced the armistice commission then being set up that it was inadvisable and impractical to demilitarise French Somaliland in which approximately 8 000 soldiers with tanks and airplanes remained on guard 24 French troops in British Somaliland were withdrawn 25 On 23 July Germain succeeded Legentilhomme as commander in chief of French forces On the same day Governor Hubert Deschamps FR was dismissed for his refusal to expel the British consul with whom he had reached an agreement to supply the colony with food Germain succeeded him as well thus becoming the supreme civil and military authority in the colony 24 He entered Djibouti on 25 July 25 According to the Service historique de l armee de terre the official archives of the French army which has a dossier of events in French Somaliland from 17 June through 11 July the colony ceased to be a theatre of operations on 28 July 9 French fort at Loyada occupied by the Italians in August 1940On 2 August Legentilhomme and two officers Captains Appert and des Essarts 9 refused the offer of repatriation on an Italian airplane and defected to the British 24 They arrived in Aden on 5 August 26 The Italian chief of staff Pietro Badoglio had with casual vindictiveness ordered him shot if he fell into Italian hands in accordance with paragraph 14 of the armistice convention which defined those leaving French territory to fight against Italy as illegal combatants 25 Negotiations at Dewele on the local implementation of the armistice were only finally completed on 8 August In a note penned that day now in the Archives nationales d Outre mer the French colonial official Edouard Chedeville recorded that the Italians have taken by force our posts at Dadda to and Balambolta and occupied certain others after we had evacuated them notably Dagguirou and Agna in the Hanle Hadela to the north of lake Abbe and possibly also Alailou 9 During the period of uncertainty in Djibouti the Duke of Aosta urged an attack on British Somaliland in order to cut off the French colony from British support Benito Mussolini approved the campaign on 19 July but the situation in Djibouti changed rapidly in Italy s favour after that 25 The 17th Colonial Brigade under Colonel Agosti occupied the French fort at Loyada on the border with British Somaliland in early August When the Italian invasion of British Somaliland began on 3 August the forces at Loyada moved on Zeila which they had taken by 5 August 27 The French territory was completely surrounded on land by Italian possessions Vichy managed to continue supplying it by submarine from Madagascar and maintained direct contact by air through flights from France via Greece usually terminating in Madagascar 28 Rule of Nouailhetas EditOn 18 September 1940 the Royal Navy established a blockade of French Somaliland and dividing the colony with ships based out of Aden 29 Petain replaced Germain as governor with Pierre Nouailhetas a naval officer that same month On 25 September the British bombed Djibouti from the air prompting Nouailhetas to institute a brutal reign of terror 24 Europeans suspected of contact with the enemy were interned at Obock while 45 others were condemned to death or forced labour mostly in absentia In May 1941 six Africans were shot without trial to set an example to potential deserters 30 The rule of Nouailhetas was too brutal for even the authoritarian leaders at Vichy to stand in September 1942 he was recalled and forced to retire without a pension 30 In the last week of November 1940 De Gaulle and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill met in London to discuss a proposed operation to take French Somaliland Three Free French battalions including Foreign Legionnaires under Legentilhomme would establish themselves near the French Somali border and begin disseminating pro Gaullist propaganda seeking to justify the British action at Mers el Kebir the attack on Dakar and the war in Syria This was labelled Operation Marie The Royal Navy was to ferry the Free French troops to East Africa 31 32 The French plan was enthusiastically approved by Churchill but it was not implemented until the naval assets became available in February 1941 32 Nonetheless in November a certain Major Hamilton went to Aden to begin preparing a Mobile Force for blowing up the railway from Djibouti to Dire Dawa In the end this plan was dropped since it was not considered politic to upset the Vichyites at that moment 33 On 24 March 1941 in an attempt to prevent an Italian withdrawal from occupied British Somaliland the British bombed a section of the Djibouti Addis Ababa railway and met with heavy French anti aircraft fire 34 By that time the Allied offensive against the Italians had tightened the blockade of French Somaliland and a famine was setting in Malnutrition related diseases took many lives 70 of them women and children 29 The locals named the blockade the carmii a word for a type of sorghum usually reserved for cattle but used as human food at the height of the famine 35 Photos showing episodes of the British blockade In March 1941 with Free French forces facing the Vichyite garrison in Somaliland the British changed their policy to rally French Somaliland to the Allied cause without bloodshed The Free French were to arrange a voluntary rallying ralliement by means of propaganda while the British were to blockade the colony Wavell considered that if British pressure was applied a rally would appear to have been coerced Wavell preferred to let the propaganda continue and provide a small amount of supplies under strict control 26 As part of this propaganda war there were even competing newspapers the Free French published Djibouti Libre Free Djibouti and smuggled it into the colony while the Vichy authorities published the official Djibouti Francais French Djibouti 31 In April after the fall of Addis Ababa the British tried to negotiate with Nouailhetas for transporting Italian prisoners of war along the Djibouti Addis Ababa railway and evacuating them through Djibouti s port On 1 May Nouailhetas telegraphed Aden to inform the British that he had received permission from Vichy to negotiate On 8 May General Alan Cunningham responded with his proposals but no commitments 31 When the policy of stoking a rally had no immediate effect Wavell suggested negotiations with Nouailhetas to obtain use of the port and railway The suggestion was accepted by the British government but because of the concessions granted to the Vichy regime in Syria and Lebanon proposals were made to invade the colony instead 26 On 8 June Nouailhetas was given an ultimatum Wavell promised to lift the blockade and provide one month s worth of provisions if the colony declared for De Gaulle otherwise the blockade would be tightened Leaflets were dropped from the air to inform the inhabitants of French Somaliland of Britain s terms Nouailhetas wrote to Aden on 15 June about the high rate of infant mortality owing to malnutrition in the territory but he rejected the British terms 31 The British considered but ultimately rejected an invasion of French Somaliland because they could not spare the troops and did not wish to offend the local French whom they hoped would join Free France 31 The 2nd Tanganyika Battalion of the King s African Rifles KAR composed of troops from the Tanganyika Territory were at this time deployed along the Zeila Loyada and Ayesha Dewele routes 36 After the war De Gaulle alleged that Britain intended to bring French Somaliland into its sphere of influence and that this explains Britain s reluctance to use force to liberate a territory that would of necessity been surrendered to their forces at the end of the war 37 When negotiations resumed with Nouailhetas later in the summer the British offered to evacuate the garrison and European civilians to another French colony upon surrender The French governor informed them that he would have to destroy the colony s railroads and port facilities prior to surrendering 38 As late as November flights from Italy were still landing in Djibouti 39 and on 11 December a British Mohawk fighter and a French Potez 631 exchanged shots over the British aerodrome at Ayesha 40 Following the failure of negotiations and the final defeat of the Italian forces in the field by July 1941 with the exception of General Guglielmo Nasi at Gondar the French colony was totally surrounded and cut off by hostile British forces All horses donkeys and camels were consumed as well as all fresh fruits and vegetables Beriberi and scurvy spread and many townsfolk left for the desert leaving their children to be cared for by the Catholic missions The head doctor at the hospital committed suicide in despair 38 Only a few Arab dhows boutres managed to run the blockade from Djibouti to Obock and only two French ships from Madagascar managed to run it The Japanese declaration of war 7 December 1941 gave the colony some respite since the British were forced to withdraw all but two ships from the blockade for use in the East 38 41 For six months June 1941 January 1942 Nouailhetas remained willing to grant concessions over the port and railway but would not tolerate Free French interference In October the blockade was reviewed but no changes were implemented before the beginning of the war with Japan On 2 January 1942 the Vichy government offered the use of the port and railway subject to the lifting of the blockade but Britain refused 26 At the same time on account of the increased ease of the dhow trade even the land blockade of the colony was lifted on 15 January 1942 28 29 The British ended the blockade unilaterally in March 1942 26 Rallying and liberation EditA few defections from French Somaliland took place in 1941 Some air force pilots escaped to Aden to join the Escadrille francaise d Aden under Jacques Dodelier and Captain Edmond Magendie began training some non commissioned officers who would become the backbone of the Bataillon de tirailleurs somalis FR which later fought in Europe Some Free French sloops also took part in the blockade 38 The Commander in Chief East Africa William Platt codenamed the negotiations for the surrender of French Somaliland Pentagon because there were five sides himself the Vichy governor the Free French the British minister at Addis Ababa Robert Howe and the United States 42 The American consul at Aden Clare H Timberlake even bluffed the acting British governor John Hall into getting Frederick Hards AOC Aden to fly him to Djibouti to interview Nouailhetas before his dismissal In the end the Americans apologised for this interference 42 Only following Operation Streamline Jane the Allied conquest of Madagascar September November 1942 and Operation Torch the Allied landing in French Morocco and Algeria in November 1942 did one third of the Somali garrison the first battalion of Senegalese Tirailleurs under Colonel Sylvain Eugene Raynal cross the border into British Somaliland and defect This prompted the new governor Christian Raimond Dupont to offer the British an economic agreement without surrender but it was rejected He was informed that if the colony surrendered without firing a shot the French right to it would be respected in the post war order On hearing this Dupont surrendered and Colonel Raynal s troops crossed back into French Somaliland on 26 December 1942 completing its liberation 37 The official handover took place at 10 00 p m on 28 December 42 The first governor appointed under the Free French was Andre Bayardelle FR transferred from New Caledonia in December 1942 Under Bayardelle the Bataillon de tirailleurs somalis was recruited for service in Europe 37 Late in 1943 he was transferred to become Governor General of French Equatorial Africa His replacement Raphael Saller FR took office on 13 January 1944 Shortly after he took office a commission was created to examine those civil servants and other collaborators who had remained loyal to Vichy In general only their political allegiance during 1940 42 mattered and Vichyites were dismissed from public service permanently 37 He too was shuffled along and began a long career in the colonial service in French West Africa The next governor Jean Chalvet was replaced within a few weeks by Jean Beyries as acting governor Djibouti began to return to normal in mid 1945 when a sufficient number of natives who had fled to neighbouring countries had returned so that the port could operate again 43 Provisions were coming in from Ethiopia Madagascar and French North Africa The power plant was in poor condition and electricity functioned only intermittently while the rail infrastructure was in disrepair and awaiting deliveries on orders placed in the United States when the war ended 43 List of governors during the war Edit Vichy France stamp issued in 1941 with an image of PetainMain article List of governors of French Somaliland Hubert Jules Deschamps 2 May 1939 25 July 1940 previously acting governor Gaetan Louis Elie Germain 25 July 7 August 1940 Pierre Marie Elie Louis Nouailhetas 7 August 1940 21 October 1942 Auguste Charles Jules Truffert 21 October 4 December 1942 Christian Raimond Dupont 4 26 December 1942 Ange Marie Charles Andre Bayardelle 30 December 1942 22 June 1943 Michel Raphael Antoine Saller 13 January 1 May 1944 previously acting governor Jean Victor Louis Joseph Chalvet 1 May 1944 30 April 1946 Jean Beyries 14 May 1944 December 1945 acting governorNotes Edit Hanle is a wadi French oued in the south of the Danakil Desert in northern Djibouti Mockler puts the number at 5 000 3 Mockler puts the garrison of French Somaliland at about 10 000 men He says that Legentilhomme planned to invade Ethiopia along the railway For further information see Red Sea Flotilla Mockler reports that four crashed 14 This pilot s diary was captured and translated by the British His identity is unknown Upon his return to Dire Dawa the Italian diarist noted that at noon three French planes attack us by surprise one of our planes is destroyed on the ground Footnotes Edit a b Imbert Vier 2008 pp 226 29 Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 14 a b Mockler 1984 p 194 Ebsworth 1953 p 564 Burgwyn 1997 pp 182 83 Clark 2005 p 243 Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 15 Djibouti terre francaise droit rester francaise Djibouti French land must remain French Imbert Vier 2008 p 171 map titled Postes francais et italiens fin 1939 a b c d e f Imbert Vier 2008 p 172 Mockler 1984 p 198 Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 15 a b c d e f Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 16 a b Raugh 1993 pp 75 76 a b c Mockler 1984 pp 223 24 Rovighi 1995 p 107 Rovighi 1995 p 105 Rovighi 1995 p 109 Shores 1996 p 23 Shores 1996 p 26 Shores 1996 p 27 Ferry 2005 p 148 Franco Italian Armistice amp 25 June 1940 Shores 1996 p 30 a b c d e f Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 17 a b c d e Knox 1982 p 152 a b c d e Playfair et al 2004 pp 322 24 Picone Chiodo 1990 p 86 a b Ebsworth 1953 p 565 a b c Alwan amp Mibrathu 2000 p 24 a b Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 18 a b c d e Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 19 a b Mockler 1984 pp 302 03 Mockler 1984 p 310 Shores 1996 p 131 Alwan amp Mibrathu 2000 p 26 Moyse Bartlett 2012 pp 452 and 569 a b c d Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 21 a b c d Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 20 Shores 1996 pp 158 161 Shores 1996 p 162 Alwan amp Mibrathu 2000 p 25 a b c Ebsworth 1953 p 568 a b Thompson amp Adloff 1968 p 22 Bibliography Edit The Franco Italian Armistice Bulletin of International News 17 14 852 854 13 July 1940 Alwan Daoud Aboubaker Mibrathu Yohanis 2000 Historical Dictionary of Djibouti Scarecrow Press OCLC 45899363 Burgwyn James H 1997 Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1940 Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 275 94877 1 Clark Martin 2005 Mussolini 1st ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 582 06595 6 Ebsworth W A 1953 Jibouti and Madagascar in the 1939 45 War Journal of the Royal United Service Institution 98 592 564 68 doi 10 1080 03071845309422199 Ferry Vital 2005 Croix de Lorraine et Croix du Sud 1940 1942 aviateurs belges et de la France Libre en Afrique Editions du Gerfaut ISBN 2 914622 92 9 Imbert Vier Simon 2008 Frontieres et limites a Djibouti durant la periode coloniale 1884 1977 PhD thesis Universite de Provence Aix Marseille I Knox MacGregor 1982 Mussolini Unleashed 1939 1941 Politics and Strategy in Fascist Italy s Last War Cambridge University Press Mockler Anthony 1984 Haile Selassie s War The Italian Ethiopian Campaign 1935 1941 New York Random House ISBN 0 394 54222 3 Moyse Bartlett H 2012 The King s African Rifles Volume 2 Andrews UK Limited ISBN 978 1781506639 Retrieved 21 November 2014 Picone Chiodo Marco 1990 In nome della resa l Italia nella guerra 1940 1945 Mursia Playfair I S O Flynn F C Molony C J C Toomer S E 2004 1956 Butler J R M ed The Mediterranean and Middle East The Germans Come to the Help of their Ally 1941 History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Vol II Naval amp Military Press ISBN 1 84574 066 1 Raugh H E 1993 Wavell in the Middle East 1939 1941 A Study in Generalship London Brassey s ISBN 0 08 040983 0 Rovighi 1995 Le operazioni in Africa orientale giugno 1940 novembre 1941 Volume II Documenti Rome Stato Maggiore dell Esercito Shores Christopher 1996 Dust Clouds in the Middle East Air War for East Africa Iraq Syria Iran and Madagascar 1940 42 London Grub Street Thompson Virginia McLean Adloff Richard 1968 Djibouti and the Horn of Africa Stanford University Press Further reading EditCornil Frerrot Sylvain 2012 Le ralliement de la Cote francaise des Somalis a la France combattante PDF Revue de la Fondation de la France libre 46 6 7 Costagliola Jacques 2005 La guerre anglo francaise 3 juillet 1940 11 novembre 1942 un conflit parallele et tangent a la Seconde guerre mondiale Coulommiers Dualpha Koburger Charles W 1992 Naval Strategy East of Suez The Role of Djibouti New York Praeger Pankhurst Richard 1971 Italian Fascist Claims to the Port of Jibuti 1935 1941 An Historical Note Ethiopia Observer 14 1 26 30 Prijac Lukian 2015 Le blocus de Djibouti Chronique d une guerre decalee 1935 1943 L Hamattan Wikimedia Commons has media related to French Somaliland in World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French 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