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Operation Musketeer (1956)

Operation Musketeer (French: Opération Mousquetaire) was the Anglo-French plan[1] for the invasion of the Suez canal zone to capture the Suez Canal during the Suez Crisis in 1956. The operation had initially been given the codename Operation Hamilcar, but this name was quickly dropped when it was found that the British were painting an air recognition letter H on their vehicles, while the French, who spelled Hamilcar differently, were painting an A. Musketeer was chosen as a replacement because it started with M in both languages. Israel, which invaded the Sinai peninsula, had the additional objectives of opening the Straits of Tiran and halting fedayeen incursions into Israel. The Anglo-French military operation was originally planned for early September, but the necessity of coordination with Israel delayed it until early November.[2] However, on 10 September British and French politicians and Chiefs of the General Staff agreed to adopt General Charles Keightley's alterations to the military plans with the intention of reducing Egyptian civilian casualties. The new plan, renamed Musketeer Revise, provided the basis of the actual Suez operation.[3]

Operation Musketeer
DateNovember 1956
Location
Result Suez Crisis
Belligerents
 British Army
 French Army
 Egyptian Army
Suez Canal invasion during the 1956 Operation Musketeer

The operation edit

 
Troops of the Parachute Regiment escort a captured Egyptian soldier at Port Said

Headed by British Army General Charles Keightley, it was conducted in November 1956 in close coordination with the Israeli armoured thrust into the Sinai, which was called Operation Kadesh. Egypt's government, led by Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser, was seeking political control over the canal, an effort resisted by the Europeans. The army was originally to land at Alexandria, but the location was later switched to Port Said since a landing at Alexandria would have been opposed by most of the Egyptian army, necessitating the deployment of an armoured division. Furthermore, a preliminary bombardment of a densely populated area would have involved tens of thousands of civilian casualties. The naval bombardment of Port Said was rendered less effective by the decision to only use 4.5-inch guns instead of large caliber guns, in order to minimise the number of civilian casualties.[4]

The final land order of battle involved the Royal Marine Commando Brigade, the 16th Parachute Brigade, and the 3rd Infantry Division. To bring these formations to war establishment, the regular army reserve and selected national service reservists were mobilised. Most of the latter were sent to units in home stations (Britain and Germany) to replace regulars posted to the Musketeer force. Lieutenant General Sir Hugh Stockwell was appointed to command the landing force. A French parachute brigade joined 16th Parachute Brigade as it returned to Cyprus. The Commando Brigade completed refresher training in shore landings from helicopters, in association with the Mediterranean fleet, which was preparing to support the amphibious operation. Over the summer the Royal Air Force selected a range of targets whose loss would cripple Egyptian resistance.

Details of the secret plan for Israeli forces to invade the Sinai desert were revealed to the Chiefs of the Defence staff in October. On 29 October Israeli armour, preceded by parachute drops on two key passes, thrust south into the Sinai, routing local Egyptian forces within five days. Affecting to be alarmed by the threat of fighting along the Suez Canal, the UK and France issued a twelve-hour ultimatum on 30 October to the Israelis and the Egyptians to cease fighting. When, as expected, no response was given, Operation Musketeer was launched.

The air offensive began. The 3rd Division, minus the Guards Brigade, embarked on 1 November. The 45th Commando and 16th Parachute Brigade landed by sea and air on 5 November. Although landing forces quickly established control over major canal facilities, the Egyptians were able to sink obstacles in the canal, rendering it unusable. The Anglo-French air offensive suppressed Egyptian airfields not already attacked by the Israelis, but failed to destroy oil stocks or cripple the Egyptian army.[5] Cairo Radio continued to broadcast. The 3rd Battalion Parachute group captured El Cap airfield by airborne assault. The remaining units, held back initially for deep airborne targets, travelled by sea to Port Said. The Commando Brigade captured all its objectives. The French parachutists took Port Fuad, opposite Port Said. Elements of the 16th Parachute Brigade led by Brigadier M.A.H. Butler and a contingent of the Royal Tank Regiment set off south along the canal bank on 6 November to capture Ismailia.

Reaction edit

Worldwide reaction against Musketeer was massive and negative. The United States unexpectedly led condemnations of the action at the United Nations and in other forums, marking a sharp break in the "special relationship" between the United States and the United Kingdom. Of the countries in the Commonwealth, only Australia, South Africa and New Zealand supported the military operation, with Canada strongly opposing it. Just before midnight Brigadier Mervyn Butler was ordered to stop on the hour, when a ceasefire would come into effect. This raised a difficulty. There were Egyptian forces ahead; the British column was in open desert with no defensible feature to hand. Butler compromised, advancing until 0:15 a.m. to reach El Cap, where he sited the 2nd Battalion of the Parachute Regiment, with supporting detachments.[5]

While the military operation itself had been completely successful, political pressure from the United States obliged the British and French governments to accept the ceasefire terms drawn up by the United Nations. The 3rd Division landed to relieve the parachutists. While accepting a United Nations Emergency Force to replace the Anglo-French presence, Nasser nevertheless ensured the Canal could not be used by sinking or otherwise disabling 49 ships in the channel. Anglo-French forces were withdrawn by 22 December.

End of operation edit

When the United States threatened to devalue the British currency (the Pound Sterling),[6] the British cabinet was divided. Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden called a ceasefire, without Israeli or French officials being notified. This caused France to doubt the reliability of its allies. A few months later, French president René Coty ordered the creation of the brand new military experiments facility C.S.E.M. in the Sahara. It was used by his successor Charles de Gaulle to develop an autonomous nuclear deterrent against potential threats. The French atomic bomb Gerboise Bleue was tested in February 1960. In 1966, de Gaulle further loosened his ties with the Western Allies by leaving NATO's peacetime command structure.

Naval support edit

Britain had a treaty with Jordan, and had a plan (Cordage) to give assistance to Jordan in the event of an attack by Israel. This led to the First Lord of the Admiralty (Hailsham) sending a memo to Eden on 2 October 1956 proposing the use of the light cruiser HMS Royalist for Cordage as well as Musketeer. HMS Royalist had just been modernised as an anti-aircraft radar picket ship, and was regarded as the most suitable ship for protection against the Mystère fighter-bombers supplied by France to Israel. But HMS Royalist had just been transferred to the Royal New Zealand Navy, and New Zealand's Prime Minister Sidney Holland did not in the end allow the Royalist to be used with the British fleet in the Mediterranean for Cordage or Musketeer (where her presence would indicate support by New Zealand). The memo indicates that Hailsham did not know of the negotiations of Eden and Lloyd with France and Israel for concerted moves against Egypt.[7]

Aftermath edit

Operation Musketeer was a failure in strategic terms. By mischance it covered the Soviet Union's military intervention in Hungary on 4 November. On this issue and, more generally, on the principle of premature military action against Egypt, the operation divided public opinion in both the UK and France. It demonstrated the limitations of British as well as French military capacity, and exposed errors in several staff functions, notably intelligence and movement control. It was tactically successful for both countries, both in the sea and airborne assaults and the subsequent brief occupation.

French order of battle edit

French Navy edit

Ground forces edit

Most French units involved came from the 10th Parachute Division (10e DP).

United Kingdom order of battle edit

 
A Hawker Sea Hawk of 899 Naval Air Squadron, armed with rockets, about to be launched from the aircraft carrier HMS Eagle for a strike on an Egyptian airfield

Royal Air Force edit

British Army edit

These were supported by units from:

Royal Marines edit

Royal Navy edit

Fleet Air Arm edit

Royal Fleet Auxiliary edit

Civilian auxiliary ships edit

  • Ascania (troopship)
  • Asturias (troopship)
  • Ausdauer (chartered heavy-lifting vessel)
  • M/V Dispenser (salvage lifting vessel)
  • Dilwara (troopship)
  • Dunera (troopship)
  • Empire Fowey (troopship)
  • Empire Gaelic (troopship)
  • Empire Ken (troopship)
  • Empire Parkeston (troopship)
  • Energie (chartered heavy-lifting vessel)
  • SS Kingsbury (troopship)
  • New Australia (troopship)
  • MV Salinas (cargo ship)

Royal New Zealand Navy edit

  • HMNZS Royalist (cruiser), with the carrier group as a radar picket until 2 November, "but was ordered not to take part in any operations".[39]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Suez Crisis: Operation Musketeer
  2. ^ Dupuy, R. Ernest and Dupuy, Trevor N. The Collins Encyclopedia of Military History Fourth Edition (1993) p. 1341
  3. ^ Kyle, Keith (2011). Suez. London: I. B. Taurus. pp. 236–237. ISBN 978-1-84885-533-5.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-06-29. Retrieved 2011-07-02.
  5. ^ a b The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Army (1994) p. 349
  6. ^ . Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on July 11, 2007. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  7. ^ ADM 116/6097, see Ties of Blood and Empire: New Zealand’s Involvement in Middle East Defence and the Suez Crisis 1947-57 by Malcolm Templeton, pages 130-131 (1994, Auckland University Press, Auckland, NZ) ISBN 1-86940-097-6
  8. ^ a b c Falls, Cyril. "Operation Musketeer". Brassey's Annual, the armed forces year-book, 1957. p. 77.
  9. ^ a b c Randier, Jean. La Royale, la torpille et la bombe. p. 155.
  10. ^ a b Carter, Geoffrey. Crises Do Happen, the Royal Navy and Operation Musketeer, Suez 1956. p. 37.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Jefford 1988, p. 151.
  12. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 23.
  13. ^ a b c d e Cull 1996, p. 164.
  14. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 26.
  15. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 27.
  16. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 28.
  17. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 29.
  18. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 30.
  19. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 34.
  20. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 35.
  21. ^ a b c Jefford 1988, p. 37.
  22. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 39.
  23. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 43.
  24. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 44.
  25. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 46.
  26. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 50.
  27. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 53.
  28. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 54.
  29. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 55.
  30. ^ a b Jefford 1988, p. 57.
  31. ^ a b Jefford 1988, p. 60.
  32. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 62.
  33. ^ a b Jefford 1988, p. 69.
  34. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 71.
  35. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 78.
  36. ^ Jefford 1988, p. 95.
  37. ^ "Malta/Suez".
  38. ^ . Airborne Sappers. Archived from the original on 24 July 2016. Retrieved 23 February 2024.
  39. ^ Carter, Geoffrey. Crises Do Happen, the Royal Navy and Operation Musketeer, Suez 1956. pp. 20–21.

Bibliography edit

  • Jefford, C G (1988). RAF Squadrons. A comprehensive record of the movement and equipment of all RAF squadrons and their antecedents since 1912. Shrewsbury: Airlife. ISBN 1-85310-053-6.
  • Carter, Geoffrey [2006] - Crises Do Happen: The Royal Navy And Operation Musketeer, Suez 1956. Maritime Books, Cornwall. ISBN 978-1-904459-24-8
  • Cull, Brian (1996). Wings over Suez: The Only Authoritative Account of Air Operations During the Sinai and Suez Wars of 1956. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-904943-55-6.
  • Nicolle, David (May–June 2004). "Suez: The Other Side: The Egyptian Air Force in 1956 Campaign". Air Enthusiast. No. 111. pp. 56–65. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Osborne, Richard (November 2022). "Naval Air and Amphibious Operations at Suez, 1956". Marine News Supplement: Warships. 76 (11): S561–S575. ISSN 0966-6958.

External links edit

    operation, musketeer, 1956, other, uses, operation, musketeer, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, opera. For other uses see Operation Musketeer This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Operation Musketeer 1956 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Operation Musketeer French Operation Mousquetaire was the Anglo French plan 1 for the invasion of the Suez canal zone to capture the Suez Canal during the Suez Crisis in 1956 The operation had initially been given the codename Operation Hamilcar but this name was quickly dropped when it was found that the British were painting an air recognition letter H on their vehicles while the French who spelled Hamilcar differently were painting an A Musketeer was chosen as a replacement because it started with M in both languages Israel which invaded the Sinai peninsula had the additional objectives of opening the Straits of Tiran and halting fedayeen incursions into Israel The Anglo French military operation was originally planned for early September but the necessity of coordination with Israel delayed it until early November 2 However on 10 September British and French politicians and Chiefs of the General Staff agreed to adopt General Charles Keightley s alterations to the military plans with the intention of reducing Egyptian civilian casualties The new plan renamed Musketeer Revise provided the basis of the actual Suez operation 3 Operation MusketeerDateNovember 1956LocationEgypt and Sinai PeninsulaResultSuez CrisisBelligerents British Army French Army Egyptian Army Suez Canal invasion during the 1956 Operation Musketeer Contents 1 The operation 2 Reaction 3 End of operation 4 Naval support 5 Aftermath 6 French order of battle 6 1 French Navy 6 2 Ground forces 7 United Kingdom order of battle 7 1 Royal Air Force 7 2 British Army 7 3 Royal Marines 7 4 Royal Navy 7 5 Fleet Air Arm 7 6 Royal Fleet Auxiliary 7 7 Civilian auxiliary ships 7 8 Royal New Zealand Navy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksThe operation edit nbsp Troops of the Parachute Regiment escort a captured Egyptian soldier at Port Said Headed by British Army General Charles Keightley it was conducted in November 1956 in close coordination with the Israeli armoured thrust into the Sinai which was called Operation Kadesh Egypt s government led by Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser was seeking political control over the canal an effort resisted by the Europeans The army was originally to land at Alexandria but the location was later switched to Port Said since a landing at Alexandria would have been opposed by most of the Egyptian army necessitating the deployment of an armoured division Furthermore a preliminary bombardment of a densely populated area would have involved tens of thousands of civilian casualties The naval bombardment of Port Said was rendered less effective by the decision to only use 4 5 inch guns instead of large caliber guns in order to minimise the number of civilian casualties 4 The final land order of battle involved the Royal Marine Commando Brigade the 16th Parachute Brigade and the 3rd Infantry Division To bring these formations to war establishment the regular army reserve and selected national service reservists were mobilised Most of the latter were sent to units in home stations Britain and Germany to replace regulars posted to the Musketeer force Lieutenant General Sir Hugh Stockwell was appointed to command the landing force A French parachute brigade joined 16th Parachute Brigade as it returned to Cyprus The Commando Brigade completed refresher training in shore landings from helicopters in association with the Mediterranean fleet which was preparing to support the amphibious operation Over the summer the Royal Air Force selected a range of targets whose loss would cripple Egyptian resistance Details of the secret plan for Israeli forces to invade the Sinai desert were revealed to the Chiefs of the Defence staff in October On 29 October Israeli armour preceded by parachute drops on two key passes thrust south into the Sinai routing local Egyptian forces within five days Affecting to be alarmed by the threat of fighting along the Suez Canal the UK and France issued a twelve hour ultimatum on 30 October to the Israelis and the Egyptians to cease fighting When as expected no response was given Operation Musketeer was launched The air offensive began The 3rd Division minus the Guards Brigade embarked on 1 November The 45th Commando and 16th Parachute Brigade landed by sea and air on 5 November Although landing forces quickly established control over major canal facilities the Egyptians were able to sink obstacles in the canal rendering it unusable The Anglo French air offensive suppressed Egyptian airfields not already attacked by the Israelis but failed to destroy oil stocks or cripple the Egyptian army 5 Cairo Radio continued to broadcast The 3rd Battalion Parachute group captured El Cap airfield by airborne assault The remaining units held back initially for deep airborne targets travelled by sea to Port Said The Commando Brigade captured all its objectives The French parachutists took Port Fuad opposite Port Said Elements of the 16th Parachute Brigade led by Brigadier M A H Butler and a contingent of the Royal Tank Regiment set off south along the canal bank on 6 November to capture Ismailia Reaction editWorldwide reaction against Musketeer was massive and negative The United States unexpectedly led condemnations of the action at the United Nations and in other forums marking a sharp break in the special relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom Of the countries in the Commonwealth only Australia South Africa and New Zealand supported the military operation with Canada strongly opposing it Just before midnight Brigadier Mervyn Butler was ordered to stop on the hour when a ceasefire would come into effect This raised a difficulty There were Egyptian forces ahead the British column was in open desert with no defensible feature to hand Butler compromised advancing until 0 15 a m to reach El Cap where he sited the 2nd Battalion of the Parachute Regiment with supporting detachments 5 While the military operation itself had been completely successful political pressure from the United States obliged the British and French governments to accept the ceasefire terms drawn up by the United Nations The 3rd Division landed to relieve the parachutists While accepting a United Nations Emergency Force to replace the Anglo French presence Nasser nevertheless ensured the Canal could not be used by sinking or otherwise disabling 49 ships in the channel Anglo French forces were withdrawn by 22 December End of operation editWhen the United States threatened to devalue the British currency the Pound Sterling 6 the British cabinet was divided Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden called a ceasefire without Israeli or French officials being notified This caused France to doubt the reliability of its allies A few months later French president Rene Coty ordered the creation of the brand new military experiments facility C S E M in the Sahara It was used by his successor Charles de Gaulle to develop an autonomous nuclear deterrent against potential threats The French atomic bomb Gerboise Bleue was tested in February 1960 In 1966 de Gaulle further loosened his ties with the Western Allies by leaving NATO s peacetime command structure Naval support editBritain had a treaty with Jordan and had a plan Cordage to give assistance to Jordan in the event of an attack by Israel This led to the First Lord of the Admiralty Hailsham sending a memo to Eden on 2 October 1956 proposing the use of the light cruiser HMS Royalist for Cordage as well as Musketeer HMS Royalist had just been modernised as an anti aircraft radar picket ship and was regarded as the most suitable ship for protection against the Mystere fighter bombers supplied by France to Israel But HMS Royalist had just been transferred to the Royal New Zealand Navy and New Zealand s Prime Minister Sidney Holland did not in the end allow the Royalist to be used with the British fleet in the Mediterranean for Cordage or Musketeer where her presence would indicate support by New Zealand The memo indicates that Hailsham did not know of the negotiations of Eden and Lloyd with France and Israel for concerted moves against Egypt 7 Aftermath editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Operation Musketeer was a failure in strategic terms By mischance it covered the Soviet Union s military intervention in Hungary on 4 November On this issue and more generally on the principle of premature military action against Egypt the operation divided public opinion in both the UK and France It demonstrated the limitations of British as well as French military capacity and exposed errors in several staff functions notably intelligence and movement control It was tactically successful for both countries both in the sea and airborne assaults and the subsequent brief occupation French order of battle editFrench Navy edit French battleship Jean Bart 1940 8 French aircraft carrier La Fayette 9 French aircraft carrier Arromanches 9 Between them 36 Vought F4U Corsairs 9 French light cruiser Georges Leygues 8 a number of escorteurs and destroyers 8 Submarine search and rescue Creole 10 Ground forces edit Most French units involved came from the 10th Parachute Division 10e DP 2nd Colonial Infantry Parachute Regiment 2e RPC 11th Shock Parachute Regiment 11e Choc 1st Foreign Parachute Regiment 1er REP 4 Commandos Marine Commando Jaubert Commando de Montfort Commando de Penfentenyo Commando Hubert Two squadrons of the 2nd Foreign Cavalry Regiment 2e REC comprising AMX 13 tanks Two squadrons of M47 Patton tanks One sapper company United Kingdom order of battle edit nbsp A Hawker Sea Hawk of 899 Naval Air Squadron armed with rockets about to be launched from the aircraft carrier HMS Eagle for a strike on an Egyptian airfield Royal Air Force edit No 1 Squadron RAF 11 with Hawker Hunter F 5 s 12 No 6 Squadron RAF with de Havilland Venom FB 4 s 13 No 8 Squadron RAF with Venom FB 4 s 13 No 9 Squadron RAF 11 with English Electric Canberra B 6 s 14 No 10 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 2 s 15 No 12 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 6 s 16 No 13 Squadron RAF with Canberra PR 7 s 13 No 15 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 2 s 17 No 18 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 2 s 18 No 27 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 2 s 19 No 30 Squadron RAF 11 with Vickers Valetta C 1 s 20 No 34 Squadron RAF 11 with Hunter F 5 s 21 No 35 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 2 s 21 No 37 Squadron RAF 11 with Shackleton MR 2 s 21 No 39 Squadron RAF 13 with Gloster Meteor NF 13 s 13 No 44 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 2 s 22 No 53 Squadron RAF with Handley Page Hastings No 58 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra PR 7 s 23 No 61 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 2 s 24 No 70 Squadron RAF 11 with Hastings C 1 and C 2 s 25 No 84 Squadron RAF 11 Valetta C 1 s 26 No 99 Squadron RAF 11 with Handley Page Hastings C 1 amp C 2 s 27 No 101 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 6 s 28 No 109 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 6 s 29 No 114 Squadron RAF 11 with Valetta C 1 s 30 No 115 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 2 s 30 No 138 Squadron RAF 11 with Vickers Valiant B 1 s B PR 1 s B PR K 1 s and B K 1 s 31 No 139 Squadron RAF 11 with Canberra B 6 s 31 No 148 Squadron RAF 11 with Valiant B 1 s B PR 1 s B PR K 1 s and B K 1 s 32 No 207 Squadron RAF 11 with Valiant B 1 s B PR 1 s and B K 1 s 33 No 208 Squadron RAF 11 with Meteor FR 9 s 33 No 214 Squadron RAF 11 with Valiant B 1 s B PR 1 s B PR K 1 s and B K 1 s 34 No 249 Squadron RAF 11 with Venom FB 4 s 35 No 511 Squadron RAF 11 with Hastings C 1 amp C 2 s 36 No 48 Field Squadron RAF Regiment to defend El Gamil airfield from Egyptian ground attack British Army edit Gordon Highlanders Cheshire Regiment The Parachute Regiment 1st 2nd and 3rd Battalions Guards Independent Parachute Company 6th Royal Tank Regiment 1st Royal Dragoons 1st Battalion Royal West Kent Regiment 1st Battalion the Royal Scots 1st Battalion The Royal Fusiliers City of London Regt Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry Highland Light Infantry Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders York and Lancaster Regiment Royal Warwickshire Regiment 1st Battalion West Yorkshire Regiment Royal Berkshire Regiment anti tank platoon only 37 3rd Battalion Grenadier Guards one machine gun platoon only Royal Artillery units from 20th Field Regiment 23rd Field Regiment 32nd Medium Regiment 33rd Airborne 33rd Parachute Regiment 97 Battery Lawson s Company Royal Artillery 34th Light Anti Aircraft Regiment 41st Field Regiment 80th Light Anti Aircraft Regiment 9 Independent Parachute Field Squadron RE 38 from the Royal Engineers These were supported by units from Royal Engineers Royal Military Police Royal Electrical Mechanical Engineers Royal Signals Royal Army Ordnance Corps Royal Pioneer Corps Royal Army Service Corps Royal Army Medical Corps Intelligence Corps Royal Marines edit 3rd Commando Brigade Royal Marines Royal Navy edit 1st Destroyer Squadron HMS Chieftain HMS Chevron HMS Chaplet 2nd Destroyer Squadron HMS Daring 3rd Destroyer Squadron HMS Armada HMS Barfleur HMS Gravelines HMS St Kitts 4th Destroyer Squadron HMS Alamein HMS Corunna HMS Barrosa HMS Agincourt 6th Destroyer Squadron HMS Cavendish 5th Frigate Squadron HMS Wakeful HMS Whirlwind HMS Wizard 6th Frigate Squadron HMS Undine HMS Urania HMS Ulysses HMS Ursa Aircraft carriers HMS Albion HMS Bulwark HMS Eagle HMS Ocean HMS Theseus Tank landing ships HMS Anzio HMS Bastion HMS Buttress HMS Citadel HMS Counterguard HMS Evan Gibb HMS Empire Cymric HMS Empire Cedric HMS Empire Celtic HMS Empire Doric HMS Lofoten HMS Loftus HMS Empire Baltic HMS Portcullis HMS Parapet HMS Puncher HMS Rampart HMS Ravager HMS Redoubt HMS Striker HMS Reggio HMS Sallyport HMS Salerno HMS Sulva Minesweepers HMS Appleton HMS Darlaston HMS Letterson HMS Leverton HMS Penstone Net layers HMS Barnstone HMS Barhill Cruisers HMS Bermuda HMS Ceylon HMS Jamaica HMS Newfoundland HMS Childers destroyer HMS Comet destroyer HMS Contest destroyer HMS Decoy destroyer HMS Defender destroyer HMS Delight destroyer HMS Diana destroyer HMS Diamond destroyer HMS Duchess destroyer HMS Crane sloop HMS Modeste sloop HMS Meon frigate HMS Dalrymple survey vessel Submarine depot ships HMS Forth HMS Rampura HMS Manxman Minelayer HMS Tyne Headquarters ship HMS Woodbridge Haven Depot ship HMMRC1097 Landing craft repair ship Submarines HMS Sea Devil HMS Sentinel HMS Totem HMS Trenchant Believed to be in area at the time Submarine search and rescue HMS Tudor 10 Fleet Air Arm edit 800 Naval Air Squadron with Hawker Sea Hawks 802 Naval Air Squadron with Hawker Sea Hawks 804 Naval Air Squadron with Hawker Sea Hawks 809 Naval Air Squadron with de Havilland Sea Venoms 810 Naval Air Squadron with Hawker Sea Hawks 830 Naval Air Squadron with Westland Wyverns 831 Naval Air Squadron with Westland Wyverns 845 Naval Air Squadron with Westland Whirlwinds A Flight of 849 Naval Air Squadron with Douglas Skyraiders B Flight of 849 Naval Air Squadron with Douglas Skyraiders 891 Naval Air Squadron with de Havilland Sea Venoms 893 Naval Air Squadron with de Havilland Sea Venoms 894 Naval Air Squadron with de Havilland Sea Venoms 895 Naval Air Squadron with de Havilland Sea Venoms 897 Naval Air Squadron with Hawker Sea Hawks 899 Naval Air Squadron with Hawker Sea Hawks Joint Experimental Helicopter Unit with Westland Whirlwinds and Bristol Sycamores Royal Fleet Auxiliary edit RFA Blue Ranger tanker RFA Brown Ranger tanker RFA Fort Sandusky stores ship RFA Kinbrace A281 coastal salvage vessel RFA Spapool water carrier RFA Tideflow tanker RFA Tidereach tanker RFA Tiderace tanker RFA Wave Knight tanker RFA Wave Master tanker RFA Wave Sovereign tanker RFA Swin salvage vessel RFA Uplifter salvage vessel RFA Retainer A329 ammunition and stores Civilian auxiliary ships edit Ascania troopship Asturias troopship Ausdauer chartered heavy lifting vessel M V Dispenser salvage lifting vessel Dilwara troopship Dunera troopship Empire Fowey troopship Empire Gaelic troopship Empire Ken troopship Empire Parkeston troopship Energie chartered heavy lifting vessel SS Kingsbury troopship New Australia troopship MV Salinas cargo ship Royal New Zealand Navy edit HMNZS Royalist cruiser with the carrier group as a radar picket until 2 November but was ordered not to take part in any operations 39 See also editProtocol of Sevres Suez Crisis Closure of the Suez Canal 1956 1957 References editCitations edit Suez Crisis Operation Musketeer Dupuy R Ernest and Dupuy Trevor N The Collins Encyclopedia of Military History Fourth Edition 1993 p 1341 Kyle Keith 2011 Suez London I B Taurus pp 236 237 ISBN 978 1 84885 533 5 H M S Jamaica Archived from the original on 2011 06 29 Retrieved 2011 07 02 a b The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Army 1994 p 349 The Art of Strategic Counterintelligence Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on July 11 2007 Retrieved 4 December 2015 ADM 116 6097 see Ties of Blood and Empire New Zealand s Involvement in Middle East Defence and the Suez Crisis 1947 57 by Malcolm Templeton pages 130 131 1994 Auckland University Press Auckland NZ ISBN 1 86940 097 6 a b c Falls Cyril Operation Musketeer Brassey s Annual the armed forces year book 1957 p 77 a b c Randier Jean La Royale la torpille et la bombe p 155 a b Carter Geoffrey Crises Do Happen the Royal Navy and Operation Musketeer Suez 1956 p 37 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Jefford 1988 p 151 Jefford 1988 p 23 a b c d e Cull 1996 p 164 Jefford 1988 p 26 Jefford 1988 p 27 Jefford 1988 p 28 Jefford 1988 p 29 Jefford 1988 p 30 Jefford 1988 p 34 Jefford 1988 p 35 a b c Jefford 1988 p 37 Jefford 1988 p 39 Jefford 1988 p 43 Jefford 1988 p 44 Jefford 1988 p 46 Jefford 1988 p 50 Jefford 1988 p 53 Jefford 1988 p 54 Jefford 1988 p 55 a b Jefford 1988 p 57 a b Jefford 1988 p 60 Jefford 1988 p 62 a b Jefford 1988 p 69 Jefford 1988 p 71 Jefford 1988 p 78 Jefford 1988 p 95 Malta Suez 9 Independent Parachute Squadron Royal Engineers Airborne Sappers Archived from the original on 24 July 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2024 Carter Geoffrey Crises Do Happen the Royal Navy and Operation Musketeer Suez 1956 pp 20 21 Bibliography edit Jefford C G 1988 RAF Squadrons A comprehensive record of the movement and equipment of all RAF squadrons and their antecedents since 1912 Shrewsbury Airlife ISBN 1 85310 053 6 Carter Geoffrey 2006 Crises Do Happen The Royal Navy And Operation Musketeer Suez 1956 Maritime Books Cornwall ISBN 978 1 904459 24 8 Cull Brian 1996 Wings over Suez The Only Authoritative Account of Air Operations During the Sinai and Suez Wars of 1956 London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 904943 55 6 Nicolle David May June 2004 Suez The Other Side The Egyptian Air Force in 1956 Campaign Air Enthusiast No 111 pp 56 65 ISSN 0143 5450 Osborne Richard November 2022 Naval Air and Amphibious Operations at Suez 1956 Marine News Supplement Warships 76 11 S561 S575 ISSN 0966 6958 External links editBritain s Small Wars Suez Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Operation Musketeer 1956 amp oldid 1210427378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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