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Syria–Lebanon campaign

Syria–Lebanon campaign
Part of the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of the Second World War

Australian troops among the ruins of the Sidon Sea Castle, Lebanon, July 1941
Date8 June – 14 July 1941
(1 month and 6 days)
Location
Syria and Lebanon
Result Allied victory
Territorial
changes
Syria and Lebanon taken over by Free France
Belligerents

 United Kingdom

 Australia
 Free France
Czechoslovakia

 Vichy France


 Germany
Commanders and leaders
Archibald Wavell
Henry Wilson
John Lavarack
Paul Legentilhomme
Henri Dentz
Strength
~34,000 troops
  • 18,000
  • 8,400
  • 5,000
  • 2,000
  • 1,600
  • 280+
50+ aircraft
1 landing ship
5 cruisers
8 destroyers
Vichy France:
~35,000 troops
  • 8,000
  • 25,000
90 tanks
289 aircraft
2 destroyers
3 submarines
German Luftwaffe:
At least 10 bomber aircraft[1]
Casualties and losses
c. 4,652
Australian: 1,552
Free French: c. 1,300
Jordanian: c. 250
British and Indian: 1,800, 1,200 POW, 3,150 sick
41 aircraft[2]
Vichy France:
6,352 (Vichy figures)
8,912 (British figures)
179 aircraft
1 submarine sunk
5,668 defectors
Germany:
4 aircraft[1]

The Syria–Lebanon campaign, also known as Operation Exporter, was the invasion of Syria and Lebanon (then controlled by Vichy France) in June and July 1941 by British Empire forces, during the Second World War.

On 1 April 1941, the Iraqi coup d'état had occurred and Iraq had come under the control of Iraqi nationalists led by Rashid Ali, who appealed for Italian and German support. The Anglo-Iraqi War (2–31 May 1941) led to the overthrow of the Ali regime and the installation of a pro-British government. During this conflict, key Vichy figure Admiral François Darlan had allowed German aircraft to use Vichy airfields in Syria for attacks against the British in Iraq.[3] The British invaded Syria and Lebanon in June, to prevent the Axis powers from using the Vichy French-controlled Syrian Republic and French Lebanon as bases for attacks on Egypt, during an invasion scare in the aftermath of the Axis victories in the Battle of Greece (6–30 April 1941) and the Battle of Crete (20 May – 1 June). In the Western Desert Campaign (1940–1943) in North Africa, the British were preparing Operation Battleaxe to relieve the siege of Tobruk and were fighting the East African Campaign (10 June 1940 – 27 November 1941) in Ethiopia and Eritrea.

The French conducted a vigorous defence of Syria but, on 10 July, as the 21st Australian Brigade was on the verge of entering Beirut, the French sought an armistice. At one minute past midnight on 12 July, a ceasefire came into effect and ended the campaign.[4] The Armistice of Saint Jean d'Acre (Convention of Acre) was signed on 14 July at the Sidney Smith Barracks on the outskirts of the city. While the surrender was being held, Time magazine referred to the Syria-Lebanon campaign as a "mixed show", and the campaign to this day remains relatively unknown, even in the countries that participated in it.

Background edit

On 28 May 1941, Admiral François Darlan, on behalf of Vichy France, signed the Paris Protocols, an agreement with the Germans which granted Germany access to military facilities in Vichy-controlled Syria.[5] The protocols remained unratified, but Charles Huntziger, the Vichy Minister of War, sent orders to Henri Dentz, the High Commissioner for the Levant, to allow aircraft of the German Luftwaffe and the Italian Regia Aeronautica to refuel in Syria. Marked as Iraqi aircraft, Axis aircraft under Fliegerführer Irak landed in Syria en route to the Kingdom of Iraq during the Anglo-Iraqi War. Darlan, a confirmed Anglophobe, allowed the German and Italian aircraft to use Syrian airfields partly because of attacks on Vichy French ships by the British. He calculated that, since July 1940, 167 French ships had been seized by British forces.[6][7]

Under the Paris Protocols, an agreement was also made for the French to launch an offensive against the British-held Iraqi oilfields, a proposal put forward by Darlan.[6] As well as the use of Syrian airfields, the Germans also requested permission from the Vichy authorities to use Syrian railways to send armaments to Iraqi nationalists in Mosul. In return for Darlan's enthusiastic pro-Axis gestures, the Germans released 7,000 French prisoners of war, many of whom were professional officers and non-commissioned officers.[6] Despite government prodding, General Archibald Percival Wavell, the Commander-in-Chief of Middle East Command, was reluctant to intervene in Syria, because of the situation in the Western Desert, the imminent German attack on Crete and doubts about the Free French intentions.[8]

Prelude edit

Vichy Syria edit

 
Captured French Martin 167F at Aleppo 1941

Dentz was Commander in Chief of the Armée du Levant (Army of the Levant), which had regular metropolitan colonial troops and troupes spéciales (special troops, indigenous Syrian and Lebanese soldiers).[9] There were seven infantry battalions of regular French troops at his disposal, which included the 6th Foreign Infantry Regiment of the French Foreign Legion, the 24th Colonial Infantry Regiment and eleven infantry battalions of "special troops", including at least 5,000 cavalry in horsed and motorized units, two artillery groups and supporting units.[9] The Army had 35,000 troops with 35,000 regulars including 8,000 French and 25,000 Syrian and Lebanese infantry. The French had 90 tanks (according to British estimates), the Armée de l'air had 90 aircraft (increasing to 289 aircraft after reinforcement) and the Marine nationale (French Navy) had two destroyers, Guépard and Valmy as well as one Sloop, the Élan and three submarines.[10][11]

On 14 May 1941, a Royal Air Force (RAF) Bristol Blenheim bomber crew flying a reconnaissance mission over Palmyra, in central Syria, spotted a Junkers Ju 90 transport taking off, with more German and Italian aircraft seen later that day. An attack on the airfield was authorised later that evening.[12] Attacks against German and Italian aircraft staging through Syria continued, and the British claimed six Axis aircraft destroyed by 8 June. Vichy French forces shot down a Blenheim on 28 May, killing the crew, and forced down another on 2 June.[13] French Morane-Saulnier M.S.406 fighters also escorted German Junkers Ju 52 aircraft into Iraq on 28 May.[13] The RAF shot down a Vichy Martin 167F bomber over the British Mandate of Palestine on 6 June.[14] While German interest in the French mandates of Syria and Lebanon was limited, Adolf Hitler permitted reinforcement of the French troops by allowing French aircraft en route from Algeria to Syria to fly over Axis-controlled territory and refuel at the German-controlled Eleusina air base in Greece.[15] The activity of German aircraft based in Greece and the Dodecanese Italian Islands of the Aegean was interpreted by the British as support for Vichy troops, but although Dentz briefly considered accepting German assistance, he rejected the offer on 13 June.[16] By the end of the Anglo-Iraqi War, all 14 of the original German Messerschmitt Bf 110 aircraft sent to Syria and five Heinkel He 111 and a large number of transport aircraft had been destroyed by the British.[17]

Palestine and Iraq edit

The British-led invasion of Syria and Lebanon aimed at preventing Germany from using the Mandatory Syrian Republic and Greater Lebanon, controlled by Vichy France, for attacks on Egypt as the British fought the Western Desert Campaign (1940–1943) against Axis forces in North Africa. In September 1936, the French had ceded autonomy to Syria but it retained rights to maintain some armed forces and two airfields in the territory. The British were concerned about potential attacks by Nazi Germany from Syria and Lebanon, or that the Germans might gain access to airfields there. An additional concern related to the possibility of German troops on the Eastern Front linking up with Vichy forces if Germany defeated the Soviet Union, by advancing south through the Caucasus. Both contingencies were unlikely, but would have exposed Allied forces in Egypt to a northern front at a time when all available resources were needed to halt Axis advances from the west.[18] On 1 April 1941, after a coup d'état, Iraq, on the eastern border of Syria, came under the control of nationalists led by Rashid Ali, who was willing to appeal for German support. The Anglo-Iraqi War (2–31 May 1941) led to the installation of a pro-British government.[19]

British forces to the south of Syria in Mandate Palestine were under the command of General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson and consisted of the 7th Australian Division (minus the 18th Brigade, which was in North Africa, besieged at the siege of Tobruk), Gentforce with two Free French brigades of the 1st Free French Division (including two battalions of the 13th Foreign Legion Demi-Brigade attached to the 1st Free French Brigade) and the 5th Indian Infantry Brigade (4th Indian Infantry Division) with artillery, engineers and other support services attached to form the 5th Indian Brigade Group. In northern and central Syria, Iraq Command (Lieutenant-General Sir Edward Quinan) was used in the campaign to attack from the east, consisting of the 10th Indian Infantry Division, elements of the 17th Indian Infantry Brigade (8th Indian Infantry Division) and Habforce, the 4th Cavalry Brigade and the Arab Legion, under John Glubb (Glubb Pasha).[20] Commando and raiding operations were undertaken by No. 11 (Scottish) Commando from Cyprus,[21] as well as Palmach paramilitary and Mista'arvim squads from Mandatory Palestine.[22]

Air support was provided by squadrons from the RAF and the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). Ground forces on the coast were supported by bombardments from Royal Navy (RN) and Royal Australian Navy (RAN) units of the Mediterranean Fleet. At the beginning, Air Commodore L. O. Brown, the Air officer commanding (AOC) HQ RAF Palestine and Transjordan had the understrength 11 Squadron (Blenheim Mk IV), 80 Squadron, re-equipping with Hawker Hurricanes, 3 Squadron RAAF, converting to Curtiss Tomahawks, 208 (Army Co-operation) Squadron with a flight of Hurricanes and X Flight (Gloster Gladiators). A detachment of Fleet Air Arm (FAA) 815 Naval Air Squadron (Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers) in Cyprus and 84 Squadron (Blenheims) in Iraq were to co-operate.[23]

British forces in reserve included the 6th Infantry Division (with the Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion–East attached to the 23rd Infantry Brigade) and the 17th Australian Brigade.[24] In mid-June, the division with its two infantry brigades came into the line as reinforcements, mainly on the Damascus front, and the southern force was placed under the command of the 1st Australian Corps on 19 June.[25][26][27] At the beginning of Operation Exporter, the British and Commonwealth force consisted of about 34,000 men (18,000 Australians, 9,000 British, 2,000 Indian and 5,000 Free French troops).[28] The RAF and RAAF had about 50 aircraft, and the navy contributed the landing ship HMS Glengyle, five cruisers and eight destroyers.[29]

British plan of attack edit

 
Indian troops outside Damascus

The British plan of attack devised by Wilson called for four lines of invasion, in Damascus and Beirut, in Palestine, in northern Syria and Palmyra, in central Syria, from Iraq, and in Tripoli (in northern Lebanon) also from Iraq.[30][31] The 5th Indian Brigade Group (Brigadier Wilfrid Lewis Lloyd) was ordered to cross the Syrian border from Palestine and take Quneitra and Deraa. This was anticipated to open the way for the 1st Free French Division to advance to Damascus. Four days after the commencement of the operation, the force was brought under unified command and was named Gentforce after its French commander, Major-General Paul Louis Le Gentilhomme.[32] The 7th Australian Division (Major-General John Lavarack, succeeded by Major-General Arthur "Tubby" Allen on 18 June when Lavarack took over Australian I Corps) advanced from Palestine along the coastal road from Haifa towards Beirut.[33] The Australian 21st Brigade was to take Beirut, advancing along the coast from Tyre, over the Litani River towards Sidon.[34] The Australian 25th Brigade was to attack the large Vichy French airbase at Rayak by advancing along a route further inland from the 21st Brigade.[35] The operation was also to include a supporting commando landing from Cyprus at the south of the Litani River.[36]

Once the two southern prongs were well engaged, a third force if formations drawn from Iraq Command, was planned to invade Syria. The bulk of the 10th Indian Infantry Division (Major-General William "Bill" Slim) was to advance north-west, up the Euphrates River from Haditha in Iraq (upstream from Baghdad), toward Deir ez Zor and thence to Raqqa and Aleppo. The manoeuvre was intended to threaten the communication and supply lines of Vichy forces defending Beirut from the Australians advancing from the south, particularly the railway line running northwards through Aleppo to Turkey, which was thought by some British strategists to be sympathetic to Vichy and Germany.[37] A group of two infantry battalions from the 20th Indian Infantry Brigade (10th Indian Division) and two from the 17th Indian Infantry Brigade (8th Indian Infantry Division) would operate independently to capture all the territory in north-eastern Syria. The 20th Indian Infantry Brigade were to make a feint from Mosul, and the 17th Indian Infantry Brigade would advance into the Bec du Canard (Duck's Bill) region, through which a railway from Aleppo ran eastward to Mosul and Baghdad.[38][39] Habforce was in Iraq attached to Iraq Command because it had struck across the desert from the Transjordan border as part of the relief of RAF Habbaniya during the Anglo-Iraqi War.[40] Habforce consisted of the 4th Cavalry Brigade, the 1st Battalion, Essex Regiment and the Arab Legion Mechanized Regiment supported by field, anti-tank and anti-aircraft artillery units, to gather in western Iraq between Rutbah and the Transjordan border.[41] As the thrust up the Euphrates took place, Habforce would meanwhile advance north-westerly to take Palmyra, Syria, and secure the oil pipeline from Haditha to Tripoli.[40]

Campaign edit

War on land edit

 
Main axes of invasion from Iraq

Hostilities commenced on 8 June 1941. The battles of the campaign were:

War in the air edit

 
11 Squadron RAF Bristol Blenheim bombing Beirut, 1941

The initial advantage that the Vichy French Air Force (Armée de l'Air de Vichy) enjoyed did not last long. The Vichy French lost most of their aircraft destroyed on the ground where the flat terrain, the absence of infrastructure and the absence of modern anti-aircraft (AA) artillery made them vulnerable to air attacks.[42] On 26 June, a strafing run by Tomahawks of 3 Squadron RAAF, on Homs airfield, destroyed five Dewoitine D.520s of Fighter Squadron II/3 (Groupe de Chasse II/3) and damaged six more.[43]

On 10 July, five D.520s attacked Bristol Blenheim bombers of 45 Squadron RAF, which were being escorted by seven Tomahawks from 3 Squadron RAAF.[44] The French pilots claimed three Blenheims but at least four D.520s were destroyed by the Australians.[44][45] The following day, a Dewoitine pilot shot down a Tomahawk from 3 Squadron, the only one lost during the campaign.[44] By the end of the campaign, the Vichy forces had lost 179 aircraft from about 289 committed to the Levant, with remaining aircraft with the range to do so evacuating to Rhodes.[46]

War at sea edit

The war at sea was not a major part of Operation Exporter, although some significant actions were fought. During the Battle of the Litani River, rough seas kept commandos from landing along the coast on the first day of battle. On 9 June 1941, the French destroyers Valmy and Guépard fired on the advancing Australians at the Litani River before being driven off by shore-based artillery-fire. The French destroyers then exchanged fire with the British destroyer HMS Janus. The Royal New Zealand Navy light cruiser HMNZS Leander came to the aid of Janus along with six British destroyers and the French retired.[47] The Luftwaffe attempted to come to the aid of the French naval forces on 15 June. Junkers Ju 88s of II./LG 1 (2nd Group, Lehrgeschwader 1), attacked British warships forces off the Syrian coast and hit the destroyers HMS Ilex and Isis. That evening, French aircraft of the 4th Naval Air Group bombed British naval units off the Syrian coast.[47]

 
Hammana, September 1941. With terrain typical of the region in the background, Maj. Gen. A. S. Allen (centre), commander of the Australian 7th Division, inspects some of his men. British Commonwealth units garrisoned Lebanon and Syria for several months, following the end of the campaign. (Photographer: Frank Hurley.)

On 16 June, British torpedo aircraft sank the French destroyer Chevalier Paul, which had been en route from Toulon to Syria, carrying ammunition from Metropolitan France. The following day, British bombers attacked another French destroyer in the port of Beirut which was also carrying ammunition.[47] On the night of 22/23 June, Guépard fought a brief engagement with two British cruisers and six destroyers off the Syrian coast, before the French destroyer retired under the cover of darkness.[48] The French suffered further losses on 25 June, when the British submarine HMS Parthian torpedoed and sank the French submarine Souffleur off the Lebanese coast; shortly afterwards, the French tanker Adour, which was carrying the entire fuel supply for the French forces in the Middle East, was attacked by British torpedo aircraft and badly damaged.[49]

Armistice edit

On 10 July, as the Australian 21st Brigade was on the verge of entering Beirut, Dentz sought an armistice. At one minute past midnight on 12 July, a ceasefire came into effect and ended the campaign. The Armistice of Saint Jean d'Acre (also known as the "Convention of Acre") was signed on 14 July at the Sidney Smith Barracks on the outskirts of the city of Acre.[50]

Aftermath edit

Analysis edit

Wavell had not wanted the Syrian distraction, given that British forces in the Mediterranean were already overstretched. However, political factors, including pressure from Churchill and CIGS in addition to guarantees by the Free French that any operation into Syria and Lebanon would meet with little resistance, forced his hand. In the event, the Vichy government ordered its soldiers to resist the invasion and its troops offered stiff resistance to the advancing British Empire forces. The Vichy government also conducted an effective propaganda campaign within France, encouraging the people to fight the "hereditary enemy" (Britain) and equating the defence of Syria as a matter of national honour.[51] As a result of the unexpected resistance British forces quickly required reinforcements, which could only be provided piecemeal. Many of the British and Commonwealth troops were novices and the hot, dry, mountainous terrain was a severe test, in which Indian Army units excelled. The Australian contingent had to cope with the worst country but conducted the most effective attack, "with a good plan carried through with great determination". The achievement of air superiority was delayed by the lack of aircraft but the urgency of the situation made it impossible for the naval and ground forces to wait. Vichy French airmen concentrated their attacks on ships and ground targets, which were highly effective until they were forced to move north. The scare caused by the German success in Crete had been exaggerated because the German parachute and glider invasions of The Netherlands and Crete had been very costly and there was little chance of the Germans gaining a bridgehead in Syria. The Germans withdrew from Syria to preserve their forces and to deprive the British of a pretext for invasion. The British invaded Syria anyway and gained naval and air bases far north of Suez, thus increasing the security of the oil route from Basra to Baghdad in Iraq to Haifa in Palestine.[52]

Casualties edit

In August, the Vichy authorities announced 6,352 casualties of whom 521 men had been killed, 1,037 were missing, 1,790 wounded and 3,004 men had been taken prisoner. After the war, Dentz stated that 1,092 men had been killed, which would mean 1,790 wounded, 466 missing and 3,004 prisoners against a British claim of 8,912 casualties of all natures.[53] The Vichy Air Force lost 179 aircraft, most destroyed on the ground, the navy lost one submarine and 5,668 men defected to the Free French.[42][54] The armistice agreement led to the repatriation to France of 37,563 military and civilian personnel in eight convoys, consisting of three hospital ships and a "gleaner" ship, from 7 August to 27 September.[55] Prisoners taken by the Vichy French forces were returned but several British prisoners of war had been sent out of Syria, some after the armistice. The delay in obtaining the return of these prisoners led to the detention of Dentz and 29 senior officers in Palestine who were released when the British prisoners were returned to Syria.[56] British and Commonwealth casualties were about 4,652; the Australians suffered 1,552 casualties, (416 men killed and 1,136 wounded.) The Free French incurred about c. 1,300 losses and 1,100 men taken prisoner; British and Indian casualties were 1,800 wounded, 1,200 men captured and 3,150 sick, including 350 malaria cases.[57] The RAF and RAAF lost 27 aircraft.[58]

Subsequent events edit

 
Allied leaders meet in Syria. Left to right: Air Chief Marshal Longmore, General Wavell, General de Gaulle, General Catroux

Operations against the Vichy regime in Syria could only be conducted with troops withdrawn from the Western Desert, a dispersal that contributed to the defeat of Operation Battleaxe and made the Syrian campaign take longer than necessary. Churchill had decided to sack Wavell in early May over his reluctance to divert forces to Iraq. Wavell was relieved on 22 June and relinquished command on 5 July, leaving for India two days afterwards.[59] In late July 1941, De Gaulle flew from Brazzaville to congratulate the victors.[60] Free French General Georges Catroux was placed in control of Syria and Lebanon and on 26 November, shortly after assuming this post, Catroux recognized the independence of Syria and Lebanon in the name of the Free French movement.[61] After elections on 8 November 1943, Lebanon became an independent state on 22 November 1943 and on 27 February 1945, declared war on Germany and the Empire of Japan.[62]

By 1945, however, continued French presence in the Levant saw nationalist demonstrations which the French attempted to quell. With heavy Syrian casualties, notably in Damascus, Churchill opposed French action but after being rebuffed by Charles De Gaulle, he ordered British forces into Syria from Jordan with orders to fire on the French. Known as the Levant Crisis, British armored cars and troops reached Damascus, following which the French were escorted and confined to their barracks. With political pressure added, De Gaulle ordered a ceasefire and France withdrew from Syria the following year.[63]

Victoria Cross edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Sutherland & Canwell (2011), pp. 53–67.
  2. ^ Sutherland & Canwell (2011), p. 91.
  3. ^ Sutherland & Canwell (2011), p. 34.
  4. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 221, 335–337.
  5. ^ Keegan p. 676
  6. ^ a b c Sutherland & Canwell (2011), p. 35.
  7. ^ "Today in World War II History—May 28, 1941". 2021-05-28. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  8. ^ Raugh 1993, pp. 216–218.
  9. ^ a b Mollo (1981), p. 144.
  10. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 200, 206.
  11. ^ Long (1953), pp. 333–334, 363.
  12. ^ Richards (1974), p. 338.
  13. ^ a b Sutherland & Canwell (2011), p. 43.
  14. ^ Shores & Ehrengardt (July 1970).
  15. ^ Shores & Ehrengardt (1987), p. 30.
  16. ^ de Wailly (2016), p. 246.
  17. ^ Sutherland & Canwell (2011), p. 44.
  18. ^ James 2017, p. 99.
  19. ^ Raugh 1993, pp. 211–216.
  20. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 204, 206–209, 216.
  21. ^ Smith (2010), p. 191.
  22. ^ Ben-Eliezer, Uri (1998). The Making of Israeli Militarism, pp. 83–84.
  23. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 205–206.
  24. ^ Playfair 2004, p. 209.
  25. ^ Joslen 2003, p. 50.
  26. ^ Playfair 2004, p. 211.
  27. ^ Chappell 1987, p. 19.
  28. ^ Long (1953), p. 526.
  29. ^ Playfair (2004), p. 214.
  30. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 203, 206.
  31. ^ James 2017, p. 119.
  32. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 210–212.
  33. ^ Long (1953), pp. 338, 413
  34. ^ Johnston (2005), pp. 48–55.
  35. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 208, 211, 219.
  36. ^ Long (1953), pp. 360–361.
  37. ^ Raugh 1993, pp. 221–222.
  38. ^ Playfair (2004), p. 217.
  39. ^ Mackenzie (1951), p. 121.
  40. ^ a b Raugh 1993, p. 222.
  41. ^ Playfair (2004), p. 213.
  42. ^ a b Mollo (1981), p. 146.
  43. ^ Shores & Ehrengardt (1987), p. 94.
  44. ^ a b c Herington (1954), p. 94.
  45. ^ Brown (1983), p. 17.
  46. ^ Shores & Ehrengardt (August 1970), pp. 283–284.
  47. ^ a b c Piekałkiewicz (1987), p. 144.
  48. ^ Piekałkiewicz, p. 146
  49. ^ Piekałkiewicz, p. 147
  50. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 221, 335–337.
  51. ^ Barr, James (2011). A Line in the Sand: Britain and France and the Struggle that Shaped the Middle East (1st ed.). London: Simon and Schuster. p. 218.
  52. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 221–222.
  53. ^ Long (1953), p. 526.
  54. ^ Playfair (2004), pp. 214, 221.
  55. ^ Auchinleck (1946), p. 4216.
  56. ^ Auchinleck (1946), p. 4217.
  57. ^ Long (1953), p. 526.
  58. ^ Playfair (2004), p. 222.
  59. ^ Raugh 1993, pp. 222, 238–239.
  60. ^ "Foreign News: Reconquering An Empire". Time. August 4, 1941.
  61. ^ Playfair (2004), p. 221.
  62. ^ Martin (2011), p. 11.
  63. ^ Luce, Henry Robinson (1945). Time, Volume 45. Time Incorporated. pp. 25–26.
  64. ^ Playfair (2004), p. 211.
  65. ^ James 2017, pp. 203–205.
  66. ^ Playfair (2004), p. 220.
  67. ^ James 2017, pp. 225–227.

Sources edit

Books edit

  • Auchinleck, Claud (1946). Despatch on Operations in the Middle East From 5th July, 1941 to 31st October 1941. London: War Office. in "No. 37695". The London Gazette (Supplement). 20 August 1946. pp. 4215–4230.
  • Brune, Peter (2003). A Bastard of a Place: The Australians in Papua. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74114-011-8.
  • Chappell, Mike (1987). British Battle Insignia: 1939–1940. Men-At-Arms. Vol. II. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-0-85045-739-1.
  • de Wailly, H. (2016) [2006]. Invasion Syria, 1941: Churchill and De Gaulle's Forgotten War [Syrie 1941: la guerre occultée: Vichystes contre gaullistes]. trans. W. Land (2nd English trans. ed.). London: I. B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-78453-449-3.
  • Gaunson, A.B. The Anglo–French Clash in Lebanon and Syria, 1940–45 (St. Martin's Press, 1987).
  • Herington, John (1954). Air War Against Germany and Italy. Australia in the War of 1939-1945. Vol. 3. Canberra: Australian War Memorial.
  • James, Richard (2017). Australia's War with France: The Campaign in Syria and Lebanon, 1941. Newport, New South Wales: Big Sky Publishing. ISBN 978-1-925520-92-7.
  • Johnston, Mark (2005). The Silent 7th: An Illustrated History of the 7th Australian Division 1940–46. Crows Nest, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74114-191-7.
  • Joslen, H. F. (2003) [1960]. Orders of Battle: Second World War, 1939–1945. Uckfield, East Sussex: Naval and Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84342-474-1.
  • Keegan, John (2005). Dear, I. C. B.; Foot, M. R. D. (eds.). Oxford Companion to World War II. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280670-3.
  • Long, Gavin (1953). "Chapters 16 to 26". Greece, Crete and Syria. Australia in the War of 1939–1945, Series 1, Army. Vol. II (1st online ed.). Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 3134080.
  • Mackenzie, Compton (1951). Eastern Epic: September 1939 – March 1943, Defence. Vol. I. London: Chatto & Windus. OCLC 1412578.
  • Martin, Chris (2011). World War II The Book of Lists. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-6163-2.
  • Mollo, Andrew (1981). The Armed Forces of World War II. London: Crown. ISBN 978-0-517-54478-5.
  • Owen, James (2012). Commando. Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-349-12362-2.
  • Piekałkiewicz, Janusz (1987). Sea War: 1939–1945. London/New York: Blandford Press. ISBN 978-0-7137-1665-8.
  • Playfair, Major-General I. S. O.; et al. (2004) [1st. pub. HMSO 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 978-1-84574-066-5.
  • Raugh, H. E. (1993). Wavell in the Middle East, 1939–1941: A Study in Generalship (1st ed.). London: Brassey's. ISBN 978-0-08-040983-2.
  • Richards, Denis (1974) [1953]. Royal Air Force 1939–1945: The Fight At Odds. Vol. I (pbk. ed.). London: HMSO. ISBN 978-0-11-771592-9. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Ehrengardt, Christian-Jacques (1987). L' aviation de Vichy au combat 2 La campagne de Syrie, 8 juin – 14 juillet 1941 [Vichy Air Combat: Syria Campaign, 8 June – 14 July 1941] (in French). Vol. 2. Paris: Lavauzelle. ISBN 978-2-7025-0171-9.
  • Smith, C. (2010) [2009]. England's Last War Against France: Fighting Vichy 1940–1942 (Phoenix ed.). London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-7538-2705-5.
  • Sutherland, Jon; Canwell, Diane (2011). Vichy Air Force at War: The French Air Force that Fought the Allies in World War II. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Aviation. pp. 53–67. ISBN 978-1-84884-336-3.
  • Sutton, David. Syria and Lebanon 1941: The Allied Fight Against the Vichy French (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2022).
  • Wavell, Archibald (1946). Despatch on Operations in Iraq, East Syria and Iran from 10th April, 1941 to 12th January, 1942. London: War Office. in "No. 37685". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 August 1946. pp. 4093–4102.

Journals edit

  • Anderson, Betty S., and Götz Nordbruch. "Nazism in Syria and Lebanon: The Ambivalence of the German Option, 1933–1945." International Journal of Middle East Studies 44.1 (2012).
  • Baudru, Remi (October 1993). "Quand l'Armée de l'air partit en Syrie, combattre la RAF: ce que recontent les photos" [When the French Air Force Fought the RAF in Syria: What the Photos Say]. Le Fana de l'Aviation (in French) (287): 16–25. ISSN 0757-4169.
  • Bou-Nacklie, N. E. (1994). "The 1941 Invasion of Syria and Lebanon: The Role of the Local Paramilitary". Middle Eastern Studies. 30 (3): 512–529. doi:10.1080/00263209408701009. ISSN 1743-7881.
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Ehrengardt, Christian-Jacques (July 1970). Part I. "Syrian Campaign, 1941: Forestalling the Germans: Air Battles Over S. Lebanon". Air Pictorial. 32 (7): 242–247. OCLC 29897622.
  • Shores, Christopher F.; Ehrengardt, Christian-Jacques (August 1970). Part II. "Syrian Campaign, 1941: Breaking the Back of Vichy Air Strength Conclusion". Air Pictorial. 32 (8): 280–284. OCLC 29897622.

Further reading edit

  • Gaunson, Alexander Bruce (1981). To End a Mandate: Sir E. L. Spears and the Anglo-French Collision in the Levant, 1941–1945. hydra.hull.ac.uk (PhD). University of Hull. OCLC 53527058. EThOS uk.bl.ethos.348610. Retrieved 7 October 2016.

External links edit

  • "Despatch on Operations in Iraq, East Syria, and Iran From 10th April, 1941 to 12th January 1942" (PDF). Supplement to the London Gazette, Number 37685. August 13, 1946. Retrieved September 26, 2009.
  • "Claude Auchinleck's Despatch on Operations in the Middle East From 5th July, 1941 to 31st October 1941". Supplement to the London Gazette, Number 37695. August 20, 1946. Retrieved November 6, 2009.
  • Australian War Memorial, 2005, "Syrian Campaign"
  • "World War: MIDDLE EASTERN THEATER: The Syrian Show Begins". Time. June 16, 1941.
  • Time magazine article, July 28, 1941
  • The Palmach

syria, lebanon, campaign, part, mediterranean, middle, east, theatre, second, world, waraustralian, troops, among, ruins, sidon, castle, lebanon, july, 1941date8, june, july, 1941, month, days, locationsyria, lebanonresultallied, victoryterritorialchangessyria. Syria Lebanon campaignPart of the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of the Second World WarAustralian troops among the ruins of the Sidon Sea Castle Lebanon July 1941Date8 June 14 July 1941 1 month and 6 days LocationSyria and LebanonResultAllied victoryTerritorialchangesSyria and Lebanon taken over by Free FranceBelligerents United Kingdom India Assyrian Levies Mandatory Palestine Palmach Transjordan Australia Free France Czechoslovakia Vichy France Syria Lebanon GermanyCommanders and leadersArchibald Wavell Henry Wilson John Lavarack Paul LegentilhommeHenri DentzStrength 34 000 troops 18 0008 4005 0002 0001 600280 50 aircraft1 landing ship5 cruisers8 destroyersVichy France 35 000 troops 8 00025 000 90 tanks289 aircraft2 destroyers3 submarines German Luftwaffe At least 10 bomber aircraft 1 Casualties and lossesc 4 652 Australian 1 552 Free French c 1 300 Jordanian c 250 British and Indian 1 800 1 200 POW 3 150 sick41 aircraft 2 Vichy France 6 352 Vichy figures 8 912 British figures 179 aircraft1 submarine sunk5 668 defectors Germany 4 aircraft 1 The Syria Lebanon campaign also known as Operation Exporter was the invasion of Syria and Lebanon then controlled by Vichy France in June and July 1941 by British Empire forces during the Second World War On 1 April 1941 the Iraqi coup d etat had occurred and Iraq had come under the control of Iraqi nationalists led by Rashid Ali who appealed for Italian and German support The Anglo Iraqi War 2 31 May 1941 led to the overthrow of the Ali regime and the installation of a pro British government During this conflict key Vichy figure Admiral Francois Darlan had allowed German aircraft to use Vichy airfields in Syria for attacks against the British in Iraq 3 The British invaded Syria and Lebanon in June to prevent the Axis powers from using the Vichy French controlled Syrian Republic and French Lebanon as bases for attacks on Egypt during an invasion scare in the aftermath of the Axis victories in the Battle of Greece 6 30 April 1941 and the Battle of Crete 20 May 1 June In the Western Desert Campaign 1940 1943 in North Africa the British were preparing Operation Battleaxe to relieve the siege of Tobruk and were fighting the East African Campaign 10 June 1940 27 November 1941 in Ethiopia and Eritrea The French conducted a vigorous defence of Syria but on 10 July as the 21st Australian Brigade was on the verge of entering Beirut the French sought an armistice At one minute past midnight on 12 July a ceasefire came into effect and ended the campaign 4 The Armistice of Saint Jean d Acre Convention of Acre was signed on 14 July at the Sidney Smith Barracks on the outskirts of the city While the surrender was being held Time magazine referred to the Syria Lebanon campaign as a mixed show and the campaign to this day remains relatively unknown even in the countries that participated in it Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 2 1 Vichy Syria 2 2 Palestine and Iraq 2 3 British plan of attack 3 Campaign 3 1 War on land 3 2 War in the air 3 3 War at sea 3 4 Armistice 4 Aftermath 4 1 Analysis 4 2 Casualties 4 3 Subsequent events 4 4 Victoria Cross 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 7 1 Books 7 1 1 Journals 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editOn 28 May 1941 Admiral Francois Darlan on behalf of Vichy France signed the Paris Protocols an agreement with the Germans which granted Germany access to military facilities in Vichy controlled Syria 5 The protocols remained unratified but Charles Huntziger the Vichy Minister of War sent orders to Henri Dentz the High Commissioner for the Levant to allow aircraft of the German Luftwaffe and the Italian Regia Aeronautica to refuel in Syria Marked as Iraqi aircraft Axis aircraft under Fliegerfuhrer Irak landed in Syria en route to the Kingdom of Iraq during the Anglo Iraqi War Darlan a confirmed Anglophobe allowed the German and Italian aircraft to use Syrian airfields partly because of attacks on Vichy French ships by the British He calculated that since July 1940 167 French ships had been seized by British forces 6 7 Under the Paris Protocols an agreement was also made for the French to launch an offensive against the British held Iraqi oilfields a proposal put forward by Darlan 6 As well as the use of Syrian airfields the Germans also requested permission from the Vichy authorities to use Syrian railways to send armaments to Iraqi nationalists in Mosul In return for Darlan s enthusiastic pro Axis gestures the Germans released 7 000 French prisoners of war many of whom were professional officers and non commissioned officers 6 Despite government prodding General Archibald Percival Wavell the Commander in Chief of Middle East Command was reluctant to intervene in Syria because of the situation in the Western Desert the imminent German attack on Crete and doubts about the Free French intentions 8 Prelude editVichy Syria edit See also French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon nbsp Captured French Martin 167F at Aleppo 1941Dentz was Commander in Chief of the Armee du Levant Army of the Levant which had regular metropolitan colonial troops and troupes speciales special troops indigenous Syrian and Lebanese soldiers 9 There were seven infantry battalions of regular French troops at his disposal which included the 6th Foreign Infantry Regiment of the French Foreign Legion the 24th Colonial Infantry Regiment and eleven infantry battalions of special troops including at least 5 000 cavalry in horsed and motorized units two artillery groups and supporting units 9 The Army had 35 000 troops with 35 000 regulars including 8 000 French and 25 000 Syrian and Lebanese infantry The French had 90 tanks according to British estimates the Armee de l air had 90 aircraft increasing to 289 aircraft after reinforcement and the Marine nationale French Navy had two destroyers Guepard and Valmy as well as one Sloop the Elan and three submarines 10 11 On 14 May 1941 a Royal Air Force RAF Bristol Blenheim bomber crew flying a reconnaissance mission over Palmyra in central Syria spotted a Junkers Ju 90 transport taking off with more German and Italian aircraft seen later that day An attack on the airfield was authorised later that evening 12 Attacks against German and Italian aircraft staging through Syria continued and the British claimed six Axis aircraft destroyed by 8 June Vichy French forces shot down a Blenheim on 28 May killing the crew and forced down another on 2 June 13 French Morane Saulnier M S 406 fighters also escorted German Junkers Ju 52 aircraft into Iraq on 28 May 13 The RAF shot down a Vichy Martin 167F bomber over the British Mandate of Palestine on 6 June 14 While German interest in the French mandates of Syria and Lebanon was limited Adolf Hitler permitted reinforcement of the French troops by allowing French aircraft en route from Algeria to Syria to fly over Axis controlled territory and refuel at the German controlled Eleusina air base in Greece 15 The activity of German aircraft based in Greece and the Dodecanese Italian Islands of the Aegean was interpreted by the British as support for Vichy troops but although Dentz briefly considered accepting German assistance he rejected the offer on 13 June 16 By the end of the Anglo Iraqi War all 14 of the original German Messerschmitt Bf 110 aircraft sent to Syria and five Heinkel He 111 and a large number of transport aircraft had been destroyed by the British 17 Palestine and Iraq edit See also Mandatory Palestine and Kingdom of Iraq The British led invasion of Syria and Lebanon aimed at preventing Germany from using the Mandatory Syrian Republic and Greater Lebanon controlled by Vichy France for attacks on Egypt as the British fought the Western Desert Campaign 1940 1943 against Axis forces in North Africa In September 1936 the French had ceded autonomy to Syria but it retained rights to maintain some armed forces and two airfields in the territory The British were concerned about potential attacks by Nazi Germany from Syria and Lebanon or that the Germans might gain access to airfields there An additional concern related to the possibility of German troops on the Eastern Front linking up with Vichy forces if Germany defeated the Soviet Union by advancing south through the Caucasus Both contingencies were unlikely but would have exposed Allied forces in Egypt to a northern front at a time when all available resources were needed to halt Axis advances from the west 18 On 1 April 1941 after a coup d etat Iraq on the eastern border of Syria came under the control of nationalists led by Rashid Ali who was willing to appeal for German support The Anglo Iraqi War 2 31 May 1941 led to the installation of a pro British government 19 British forces to the south of Syria in Mandate Palestine were under the command of General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson and consisted of the 7th Australian Division minus the 18th Brigade which was in North Africa besieged at the siege of Tobruk Gentforce with two Free French brigades of the 1st Free French Division including two battalions of the 13th Foreign Legion Demi Brigade attached to the 1st Free French Brigade and the 5th Indian Infantry Brigade 4th Indian Infantry Division with artillery engineers and other support services attached to form the 5th Indian Brigade Group In northern and central Syria Iraq Command Lieutenant General Sir Edward Quinan was used in the campaign to attack from the east consisting of the 10th Indian Infantry Division elements of the 17th Indian Infantry Brigade 8th Indian Infantry Division and Habforce the 4th Cavalry Brigade and the Arab Legion under John Glubb Glubb Pasha 20 Commando and raiding operations were undertaken by No 11 Scottish Commando from Cyprus 21 as well as Palmach paramilitary and Mista arvim squads from Mandatory Palestine 22 Air support was provided by squadrons from the RAF and the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF Ground forces on the coast were supported by bombardments from Royal Navy RN and Royal Australian Navy RAN units of the Mediterranean Fleet At the beginning Air Commodore L O Brown the Air officer commanding AOC HQ RAF Palestine and Transjordan had the understrength 11 Squadron Blenheim Mk IV 80 Squadron re equipping with Hawker Hurricanes 3 Squadron RAAF converting to Curtiss Tomahawks 208 Army Co operation Squadron with a flight of Hurricanes and X Flight Gloster Gladiators A detachment of Fleet Air Arm FAA 815 Naval Air Squadron Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers in Cyprus and 84 Squadron Blenheims in Iraq were to co operate 23 British forces in reserve included the 6th Infantry Division with the Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion East attached to the 23rd Infantry Brigade and the 17th Australian Brigade 24 In mid June the division with its two infantry brigades came into the line as reinforcements mainly on the Damascus front and the southern force was placed under the command of the 1st Australian Corps on 19 June 25 26 27 At the beginning of Operation Exporter the British and Commonwealth force consisted of about 34 000 men 18 000 Australians 9 000 British 2 000 Indian and 5 000 Free French troops 28 The RAF and RAAF had about 50 aircraft and the navy contributed the landing ship HMS Glengyle five cruisers and eight destroyers 29 British plan of attack edit nbsp Indian troops outside DamascusThe British plan of attack devised by Wilson called for four lines of invasion in Damascus and Beirut in Palestine in northern Syria and Palmyra in central Syria from Iraq and in Tripoli in northern Lebanon also from Iraq 30 31 The 5th Indian Brigade Group Brigadier Wilfrid Lewis Lloyd was ordered to cross the Syrian border from Palestine and take Quneitra and Deraa This was anticipated to open the way for the 1st Free French Division to advance to Damascus Four days after the commencement of the operation the force was brought under unified command and was named Gentforce after its French commander Major General Paul Louis Le Gentilhomme 32 The 7th Australian Division Major General John Lavarack succeeded by Major General Arthur Tubby Allen on 18 June when Lavarack took over Australian I Corps advanced from Palestine along the coastal road from Haifa towards Beirut 33 The Australian 21st Brigade was to take Beirut advancing along the coast from Tyre over the Litani River towards Sidon 34 The Australian 25th Brigade was to attack the large Vichy French airbase at Rayak by advancing along a route further inland from the 21st Brigade 35 The operation was also to include a supporting commando landing from Cyprus at the south of the Litani River 36 Once the two southern prongs were well engaged a third force if formations drawn from Iraq Command was planned to invade Syria The bulk of the 10th Indian Infantry Division Major General William Bill Slim was to advance north west up the Euphrates River from Haditha in Iraq upstream from Baghdad toward Deir ez Zor and thence to Raqqa and Aleppo The manoeuvre was intended to threaten the communication and supply lines of Vichy forces defending Beirut from the Australians advancing from the south particularly the railway line running northwards through Aleppo to Turkey which was thought by some British strategists to be sympathetic to Vichy and Germany 37 A group of two infantry battalions from the 20th Indian Infantry Brigade 10th Indian Division and two from the 17th Indian Infantry Brigade 8th Indian Infantry Division would operate independently to capture all the territory in north eastern Syria The 20th Indian Infantry Brigade were to make a feint from Mosul and the 17th Indian Infantry Brigade would advance into the Bec du Canard Duck s Bill region through which a railway from Aleppo ran eastward to Mosul and Baghdad 38 39 Habforce was in Iraq attached to Iraq Command because it had struck across the desert from the Transjordan border as part of the relief of RAF Habbaniya during the Anglo Iraqi War 40 Habforce consisted of the 4th Cavalry Brigade the 1st Battalion Essex Regiment and the Arab Legion Mechanized Regiment supported by field anti tank and anti aircraft artillery units to gather in western Iraq between Rutbah and the Transjordan border 41 As the thrust up the Euphrates took place Habforce would meanwhile advance north westerly to take Palmyra Syria and secure the oil pipeline from Haditha to Tripoli 40 Campaign editWar on land edit nbsp Main axes of invasion from IraqHostilities commenced on 8 June 1941 The battles of the campaign were Battle of the Litani River 9 June part of the advance on Beirut from Palestine Battle of Jezzine 13 June part of the advance on Beirut from Palestine Battle of Sidon 13 15 June part of the advance on Beirut from Palestine Battle of Kissoue 15 17 June part of the advance on Damascus from Palestine Battle of Damascus 18 21 June part of the advance on Damascus from Palestine Battle of Merdjayoun 19 24 June part of the advance on Beirut and Damascus from Palestine Battle of Palmyra 1 July part of the advance on Palmyra and Tripoli from Iraq Battle of Deir ez Zor 3 July part of the advance on central and northern Syria from Iraq Battle of Damour 5 9 July part of the advance on Beirut from Palestine Battle of Beirut 12 July part of the advance on Beirut from PalestineWar in the air edit nbsp 11 Squadron RAF Bristol Blenheim bombing Beirut 1941The initial advantage that the Vichy French Air Force Armee de l Air de Vichy enjoyed did not last long The Vichy French lost most of their aircraft destroyed on the ground where the flat terrain the absence of infrastructure and the absence of modern anti aircraft AA artillery made them vulnerable to air attacks 42 On 26 June a strafing run by Tomahawks of 3 Squadron RAAF on Homs airfield destroyed five Dewoitine D 520s of Fighter Squadron II 3 Groupe de Chasse II 3 and damaged six more 43 On 10 July five D 520s attacked Bristol Blenheim bombers of 45 Squadron RAF which were being escorted by seven Tomahawks from 3 Squadron RAAF 44 The French pilots claimed three Blenheims but at least four D 520s were destroyed by the Australians 44 45 The following day a Dewoitine pilot shot down a Tomahawk from 3 Squadron the only one lost during the campaign 44 By the end of the campaign the Vichy forces had lost 179 aircraft from about 289 committed to the Levant with remaining aircraft with the range to do so evacuating to Rhodes 46 War at sea edit The war at sea was not a major part of Operation Exporter although some significant actions were fought During the Battle of the Litani River rough seas kept commandos from landing along the coast on the first day of battle On 9 June 1941 the French destroyers Valmy and Guepard fired on the advancing Australians at the Litani River before being driven off by shore based artillery fire The French destroyers then exchanged fire with the British destroyer HMS Janus The Royal New Zealand Navy light cruiser HMNZS Leander came to the aid of Janus along with six British destroyers and the French retired 47 The Luftwaffe attempted to come to the aid of the French naval forces on 15 June Junkers Ju 88s of II LG 1 2nd Group Lehrgeschwader 1 attacked British warships forces off the Syrian coast and hit the destroyers HMS Ilex and Isis That evening French aircraft of the 4th Naval Air Group bombed British naval units off the Syrian coast 47 nbsp Hammana September 1941 With terrain typical of the region in the background Maj Gen A S Allen centre commander of the Australian 7th Division inspects some of his men British Commonwealth units garrisoned Lebanon and Syria for several months following the end of the campaign Photographer Frank Hurley On 16 June British torpedo aircraft sank the French destroyer Chevalier Paul which had been en route from Toulon to Syria carrying ammunition from Metropolitan France The following day British bombers attacked another French destroyer in the port of Beirut which was also carrying ammunition 47 On the night of 22 23 June Guepard fought a brief engagement with two British cruisers and six destroyers off the Syrian coast before the French destroyer retired under the cover of darkness 48 The French suffered further losses on 25 June when the British submarine HMS Parthian torpedoed and sank the French submarine Souffleur off the Lebanese coast shortly afterwards the French tanker Adour which was carrying the entire fuel supply for the French forces in the Middle East was attacked by British torpedo aircraft and badly damaged 49 Armistice edit On 10 July as the Australian 21st Brigade was on the verge of entering Beirut Dentz sought an armistice At one minute past midnight on 12 July a ceasefire came into effect and ended the campaign The Armistice of Saint Jean d Acre also known as the Convention of Acre was signed on 14 July at the Sidney Smith Barracks on the outskirts of the city of Acre 50 Aftermath editAnalysis edit Wavell had not wanted the Syrian distraction given that British forces in the Mediterranean were already overstretched However political factors including pressure from Churchill and CIGS in addition to guarantees by the Free French that any operation into Syria and Lebanon would meet with little resistance forced his hand In the event the Vichy government ordered its soldiers to resist the invasion and its troops offered stiff resistance to the advancing British Empire forces The Vichy government also conducted an effective propaganda campaign within France encouraging the people to fight the hereditary enemy Britain and equating the defence of Syria as a matter of national honour 51 As a result of the unexpected resistance British forces quickly required reinforcements which could only be provided piecemeal Many of the British and Commonwealth troops were novices and the hot dry mountainous terrain was a severe test in which Indian Army units excelled The Australian contingent had to cope with the worst country but conducted the most effective attack with a good plan carried through with great determination The achievement of air superiority was delayed by the lack of aircraft but the urgency of the situation made it impossible for the naval and ground forces to wait Vichy French airmen concentrated their attacks on ships and ground targets which were highly effective until they were forced to move north The scare caused by the German success in Crete had been exaggerated because the German parachute and glider invasions of The Netherlands and Crete had been very costly and there was little chance of the Germans gaining a bridgehead in Syria The Germans withdrew from Syria to preserve their forces and to deprive the British of a pretext for invasion The British invaded Syria anyway and gained naval and air bases far north of Suez thus increasing the security of the oil route from Basra to Baghdad in Iraq to Haifa in Palestine 52 Casualties edit In August the Vichy authorities announced 6 352 casualties of whom 521 men had been killed 1 037 were missing 1 790 wounded and 3 004 men had been taken prisoner After the war Dentz stated that 1 092 men had been killed which would mean 1 790 wounded 466 missing and 3 004 prisoners against a British claim of 8 912 casualties of all natures 53 The Vichy Air Force lost 179 aircraft most destroyed on the ground the navy lost one submarine and 5 668 men defected to the Free French 42 54 The armistice agreement led to the repatriation to France of 37 563 military and civilian personnel in eight convoys consisting of three hospital ships and a gleaner ship from 7 August to 27 September 55 Prisoners taken by the Vichy French forces were returned but several British prisoners of war had been sent out of Syria some after the armistice The delay in obtaining the return of these prisoners led to the detention of Dentz and 29 senior officers in Palestine who were released when the British prisoners were returned to Syria 56 British and Commonwealth casualties were about 4 652 the Australians suffered 1 552 casualties 416 men killed and 1 136 wounded The Free French incurred about c 1 300 losses and 1 100 men taken prisoner British and Indian casualties were 1 800 wounded 1 200 men captured and 3 150 sick including 350 malaria cases 57 The RAF and RAAF lost 27 aircraft 58 Subsequent events edit nbsp Allied leaders meet in Syria Left to right Air Chief Marshal Longmore General Wavell General de Gaulle General CatrouxOperations against the Vichy regime in Syria could only be conducted with troops withdrawn from the Western Desert a dispersal that contributed to the defeat of Operation Battleaxe and made the Syrian campaign take longer than necessary Churchill had decided to sack Wavell in early May over his reluctance to divert forces to Iraq Wavell was relieved on 22 June and relinquished command on 5 July leaving for India two days afterwards 59 In late July 1941 De Gaulle flew from Brazzaville to congratulate the victors 60 Free French General Georges Catroux was placed in control of Syria and Lebanon and on 26 November shortly after assuming this post Catroux recognized the independence of Syria and Lebanon in the name of the Free French movement 61 After elections on 8 November 1943 Lebanon became an independent state on 22 November 1943 and on 27 February 1945 declared war on Germany and the Empire of Japan 62 By 1945 however continued French presence in the Levant saw nationalist demonstrations which the French attempted to quell With heavy Syrian casualties notably in Damascus Churchill opposed French action but after being rebuffed by Charles De Gaulle he ordered British forces into Syria from Jordan with orders to fire on the French Known as the Levant Crisis British armored cars and troops reached Damascus following which the French were escorted and confined to their barracks With political pressure added De Gaulle ordered a ceasefire and France withdrew from Syria the following year 63 Victoria Cross edit Lieutenant Arthur Roden Cutler 64 65 Private Jim Gordon 66 67 See also editSyria Lebanon Campaign order of battle Asmahan Attack on Mers el Kebir 1936 1939 Arab revolt in Palestine Franco Syrian Treaty of Independence 1936 Italian bombings on Palestine in World War II French Colonial Empire List of French possessions and colonies Moshe Dayan Eye patchReferences edit a b Sutherland amp Canwell 2011 pp 53 67 Sutherland amp Canwell 2011 p 91 Sutherland amp Canwell 2011 p 34 Playfair 2004 pp 221 335 337 Keegan p 676 a b c Sutherland amp Canwell 2011 p 35 Today in World War II History May 28 1941 2021 05 28 Retrieved 2023 07 30 Raugh 1993 pp 216 218 a b Mollo 1981 p 144 Playfair 2004 pp 200 206 Long 1953 pp 333 334 363 Richards 1974 p 338 a b Sutherland amp Canwell 2011 p 43 Shores amp Ehrengardt July 1970 Shores amp Ehrengardt 1987 p 30 de Wailly 2016 p 246 Sutherland amp Canwell 2011 p 44 James 2017 p 99 Raugh 1993 pp 211 216 Playfair 2004 pp 204 206 209 216 Smith 2010 p 191 Ben Eliezer Uri 1998 The Making of Israeli Militarism pp 83 84 Playfair 2004 pp 205 206 Playfair 2004 p 209 Joslen 2003 p 50 Playfair 2004 p 211 Chappell 1987 p 19 Long 1953 p 526 Playfair 2004 p 214 Playfair 2004 pp 203 206 James 2017 p 119 Playfair 2004 pp 210 212 Long 1953 pp 338 413 Johnston 2005 pp 48 55 Playfair 2004 pp 208 211 219 Long 1953 pp 360 361 Raugh 1993 pp 221 222 Playfair 2004 p 217 Mackenzie 1951 p 121 a b Raugh 1993 p 222 Playfair 2004 p 213 a b Mollo 1981 p 146 Shores amp Ehrengardt 1987 p 94 a b c Herington 1954 p 94 Brown 1983 p 17 Shores amp Ehrengardt August 1970 pp 283 284 a b c Piekalkiewicz 1987 p 144 Piekalkiewicz p 146 Piekalkiewicz p 147 Playfair 2004 pp 221 335 337 Barr James 2011 A Line in the Sand Britain and France and the Struggle that Shaped the Middle East 1st ed London Simon and Schuster p 218 Playfair 2004 pp 221 222 Long 1953 p 526 Playfair 2004 pp 214 221 Auchinleck 1946 p 4216 Auchinleck 1946 p 4217 Long 1953 p 526 Playfair 2004 p 222 Raugh 1993 pp 222 238 239 Foreign News Reconquering An Empire Time August 4 1941 Playfair 2004 p 221 Martin 2011 p 11 Luce Henry Robinson 1945 Time Volume 45 Time Incorporated pp 25 26 Playfair 2004 p 211 James 2017 pp 203 205 Playfair 2004 p 220 James 2017 pp 225 227 Sources editBooks edit Auchinleck Claud 1946 Despatch on Operations in the Middle East From 5th July 1941 to 31st October 1941 London War Office in No 37695 The London Gazette Supplement 20 August 1946 pp 4215 4230 Brune Peter 2003 A Bastard of a Place The Australians in Papua Crows Nest NSW Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 74114 011 8 Chappell Mike 1987 British Battle Insignia 1939 1940 Men At Arms Vol II Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 0 85045 739 1 de Wailly H 2016 2006 Invasion Syria 1941 Churchill and De Gaulle s Forgotten War Syrie 1941 la guerre occultee Vichystes contre gaullistes trans W Land 2nd English trans ed London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78453 449 3 Gaunson A B The Anglo French Clash in Lebanon and Syria 1940 45 St Martin s Press 1987 Herington John 1954 Air War Against Germany and Italy Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Vol 3 Canberra Australian War Memorial James Richard 2017 Australia s War with France The Campaign in Syria and Lebanon 1941 Newport New South Wales Big Sky Publishing ISBN 978 1 925520 92 7 Johnston Mark 2005 The Silent 7th An Illustrated History of the 7th Australian Division 1940 46 Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 74114 191 7 Joslen H F 2003 1960 Orders of Battle Second World War 1939 1945 Uckfield East Sussex Naval and Military Press ISBN 978 1 84342 474 1 Keegan John 2005 Dear I C B Foot M R D eds Oxford Companion to World War II New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280670 3 Long Gavin 1953 Chapters 16 to 26 Greece Crete and Syria Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 1 Army Vol II 1st online ed Canberra Australian War Memorial OCLC 3134080 Mackenzie Compton 1951 Eastern Epic September 1939 March 1943 Defence Vol I London Chatto amp Windus OCLC 1412578 Martin Chris 2011 World War II The Book of Lists Stroud The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 6163 2 Mollo Andrew 1981 The Armed Forces of World War II London Crown ISBN 978 0 517 54478 5 Owen James 2012 Commando Little Brown ISBN 978 0 349 12362 2 Piekalkiewicz Janusz 1987 Sea War 1939 1945 London New York Blandford Press ISBN 978 0 7137 1665 8 Playfair Major General I S O et al 2004 1st pub HMSO 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 978 1 84574 066 5 Raugh H E 1993 Wavell in the Middle East 1939 1941 A Study in Generalship 1st ed London Brassey s ISBN 978 0 08 040983 2 Richards Denis 1974 1953 Royal Air Force 1939 1945 The Fight At Odds Vol I pbk ed London HMSO ISBN 978 0 11 771592 9 Retrieved 3 February 2017 Shores Christopher F Ehrengardt Christian Jacques 1987 L aviation de Vichy au combat 2 La campagne de Syrie 8 juin 14 juillet 1941 Vichy Air Combat Syria Campaign 8 June 14 July 1941 in French Vol 2 Paris Lavauzelle ISBN 978 2 7025 0171 9 Smith C 2010 2009 England s Last War Against France Fighting Vichy 1940 1942 Phoenix ed London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 7538 2705 5 Sutherland Jon Canwell Diane 2011 Vichy Air Force at War The French Air Force that Fought the Allies in World War II Barnsley Pen amp Sword Aviation pp 53 67 ISBN 978 1 84884 336 3 Sutton David Syria and Lebanon 1941 The Allied Fight Against the Vichy French Bloomsbury Publishing 2022 Wavell Archibald 1946 Despatch on Operations in Iraq East Syria and Iran from 10th April 1941 to 12th January 1942 London War Office in No 37685 The London Gazette Supplement 13 August 1946 pp 4093 4102 Journals edit Anderson Betty S and Gotz Nordbruch Nazism in Syria and Lebanon The Ambivalence of the German Option 1933 1945 International Journal of Middle East Studies 44 1 2012 Baudru Remi October 1993 Quand l Armee de l air partit en Syrie combattre la RAF ce que recontent les photos When the French Air Force Fought the RAF in Syria What the Photos Say Le Fana de l Aviation in French 287 16 25 ISSN 0757 4169 Bou Nacklie N E 1994 The 1941 Invasion of Syria and Lebanon The Role of the Local Paramilitary Middle Eastern Studies 30 3 512 529 doi 10 1080 00263209408701009 ISSN 1743 7881 Shores Christopher F Ehrengardt Christian Jacques July 1970 Part I Syrian Campaign 1941 Forestalling the Germans Air Battles Over S Lebanon Air Pictorial 32 7 242 247 OCLC 29897622 Shores Christopher F Ehrengardt Christian Jacques August 1970 Part II Syrian Campaign 1941 Breaking the Back of Vichy Air Strength Conclusion Air Pictorial 32 8 280 284 OCLC 29897622 Further reading editGaunson Alexander Bruce 1981 To End a Mandate Sir E L Spears and the Anglo French Collision in the Levant 1941 1945 hydra hull ac uk PhD University of Hull OCLC 53527058 EThOS uk bl ethos 348610 Retrieved 7 October 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Syria Lebanon Campaign 1941 Despatch on Operations in Iraq East Syria and Iran From 10th April 1941 to 12th January 1942 PDF Supplement to the London Gazette Number 37685 August 13 1946 Retrieved September 26 2009 Claude Auchinleck s Despatch on Operations in the Middle East From 5th July 1941 to 31st October 1941 Supplement to the London Gazette Number 37695 August 20 1946 Retrieved November 6 2009 Australian War Memorial 2005 Syrian Campaign World War MIDDLE EASTERN THEATER The Syrian Show Begins Time June 16 1941 Exit With A Flourish Time magazine article July 28 1941 The Palmach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syria Lebanon campaign amp oldid 1207254543, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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