Long Range Desert Group

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by W B Kennedy Shaw




  To

  E., M. and V.

  who waited

  Long Range Desert Group

  A Greenhill Book

  Published in 1989 by Greenhill Books, Lionel Leventhal Limited

  www.greenhillbooks.com

  This paperback edition published in 2015 by

  Frontline Books

  an imprint of Pen & Sword Books Ltd,

  47 Church Street, Barnsley, S. Yorkshire, S70 2AS

  For more information on our books, please visit

  www.frontline-books.com, email [email protected]

  or write to us at the above address.

  Copyright © W.B. Kennedy Shaw, 1945

  New Introduction © David L. Lloyd Owen, 1989

  The right of W.B. Kennedy Shaw to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  ISBN: 978-1-84832-858-7

  PDF ISBN: 978-1-84832-861-7

  EPUB ISBN: 978-1-84832-859-4

  PRC ISBN: 978-1-84832-860-0

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

  CIP data records for this title are available from the British Library

  Publishing History

  Long Range Desert Group was first published in 1945 (Collins) and is reproduced here exactly as the original edition, complete and unabridged, with the addition of a new Foreword by Major-General D.L. Lloyd Owen. The text in the original volume is fragile and this creates imperfections when reproduced and which necessarily appear in this facsimile volume.

  Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY

  Contents

  FOREWORD

  PREFACE

  CHAPTER

  1

  ORIGINS

  2

  PREPARATION

  3

  FIRST SORTIES

  4

  MURZUK

  5

  THE TAKING OF KUFRA

  6

  SUMMER AT KUFRA

  7

  “A” SQUADRON AT SIWA

  8

  THE AUTUMN OFFENSIVE, 1941

  9

  RAIDS FROMJALO

  10

  SIWA AGAIN

  11

  SIWA, ALAMEIN, FAIYUM

  12

  ‘TULIP’, ‘DAFFODIL’, ‘SNOWDROP’, ‘HYACINTH’

  13

  THE ROAD WATCH

  14

  ’ALAMEIN TO GABES

  APPENDICES

  1

  GLOSSARY

  2

  ROLL OF HONOUR [From the formation of the unit to March, 1943.]

  3

  HONOURS AND AWARDS [From the formation of the unit to March, 1943.]

  4

  PATROL COMMANDERS [From the formation of the unit to March, 1943.]

  5

  RATION SCALE

  Illustrations

  1. Author, 1927

  2. Sandstone Desert From a drawing by Capt. P. McIntyre

  3. Mushroom Rock From a drawing by Capt. P. McIntyre

  4. Target Practice with the Vickers Official War Office Photograph

  5. In Wireless Touch Official War Office Photograph

  6. ‘Unsticking’: Sand Sea Official War Office Photograph

  7. An Oasis in the Fezzan Royal Italian Air Force

  8. In the Eghei Mountains Royal Italian Air Force

  9. Rough Going in the Harug

  10. Trooper R. J. Moore, D.C.M. From a drawing by Capt. P. McIntyre

  11. Tibesti: the Rocks of Dourso From a drawing by Capt. P. McIntyre

  12. ‘Unsticking’ Official War Office Photograph

  13. Supper Official War Office Photograph

  14. New Zealand Patrol From a drawing by Capt. P. McIntyre

  15. Night Camp Official War Office Photograph

  16. The Waco brings in a Wounded Man Capt. R. P. Lawson

  17. Jake Easonsmith

  18. Leeside of a Crescent Dune Royal Italian Air Force

  19. T and R Patrols Official War Office Photograph

  20. Lunch Official War Office Photograph

  21. T2 Patrol: After the Stukas

  22. Dust Storm Crown Copyright Reserved

  23. Siwa Oasis

  24. Road Watch: On Duty Official War Office Photograph

  25. Road Watch: Off Duty Official War Office Photograph

  26. Moving North to Barce Capt. R. P Lawson

  27. General Montgomery and General Freyberg with R1 Patrol, 1942

  MAPS

  North East Africa

  Egypt and Libya—Eastern Section

  Egypt and Libya—Western Section

  Foreword

  Major-General D. L. Lloyd Owen, C.B., D.S.O., O.B.E., M.C.

  WHEN Bill Kennedy Shaw’s masterly account of the Long Range Desert Group’s work in Libya between 1940 and 1943 was first published in 1945 he gave me a copy of it. I have treasured it ever since because the kind words he inscribed in it came from a friend of such sterling quality and whose knowledge of deserts was possibly as great as that of any man then living. And I have valued it over all the years because his classic book has been out of print for far too long.

  As the former Intelligence Officer of the LRDG Bill Kennedy Shaw was in a unique position to record the definitive story of that remarkable unit in which I was privileged to play a part. He wrote it at a time when the censor’s blue pencil was still very active, and no details of ULTRA had been revealed. Readers today, and particularly students of military history, will find no reference in the text, for example, to Vladimir Peniakoff (or Popski as we knew him). He is disguised under the pseudonym of Penman. Equally fictitious are the codewords, given in Chapter Twelve, for the great raids of September 1942 and which are so well described in this book.

  I mention these small points simply because Bill Kennedy Shaw was such an honest, humble and painstaking man that he would never mislead or exaggerate in anything that he wrote. He was far too sincere throughout his life.

  When Ralph Bagnold first raised the LRDG in June 1940, he was well aware of Bill’s reputation and worth from expeditions that they had carried out together in the vast Libyan desert in the decade before the outbreak of the second world war. In 1927 Bill, together with Douglas Newbold also on leave from the Sudan Government service, had made a quite astonishing journey of a thousand miles on a camel across southern Egypt. A splendid photograph of his small caravan of camels is reproduced in the book (illustration no. 2).

  The knowledge that he gained in those pre-war years together with his shrewd, incisive mind gave the author of this book the ideal qualifications for his appointment as unit Intelligence Officer. He excelled at it.

  The success of every patrol sent out on operations was due in no small measure to the sound briefing, which he always gave to its leader before that Patrol went out. And his disarmingly mild manner helped to extract every scrap of information from Patrol leaders on their return. This often was the source of much invaluable intelligence for the staff at Eighth Army headquarters, which was always hungry for up-to-date and accurate news.

  Bill Kennedy Shaw was a genius at his work; and this is reflected in his factual and exciting chronicle of LRDG activities. His profound respect for the uncompromising harshness, and the beauty, of the desert show up so well in his brilliant description of it. For those reasons alone th
is book is as readable today as it was when it first appeared.

  After the defeat of the Axis powers in North Africa, Bill left the LRDG to make further use of his unrivalled understanding of the people. He served with the British Military Administration in Tripolitania as their adviser on Arab affairs until he returned to England in 1944.

  After the war he became Agent to Lord Bledisloe at Lydney Park in Gloucestershire until ill-health, brought on by some virus that had infected him in the Middle East, forced him to give up an active life. Ultimately his eyesight failed him before he died in Lichfield in April 1979.

  Bill Kennedy Shaw will ever be remembered as one of that distinguished band of enthusiasts, who explored the largely unknown and uncharted waters of the desert west of the Nile between the two World Wars, and who were led by Ralph Bagnold.

  Today, is his 94th year, Brigadier Bagnold is the President of the LRDG Association of which I have been proud to be the Chairman since it was formed in 1945. We keep alive the memories and experiences of those war years through the annual Newsletter of our Association. But the real story will live forever in Bill Kennedy Shaw’s evocative and stirring narrative of the Long Range Desert Group in the desert. It is extraordinarily well told.

  DAVID LLOYD OWEN

  SWAINSTHORPE, NORWICH,

  1989

  ‘Then we do nothing?’ said Hugh.

  ‘We wait,’ said De Aquila. ‘I am old, but still

  I find that the most grievous work I know.’

  Puck of Pook’s Hill

  Preface

  THERE are no two ways about deserts—either you dislike intensely being in them or you find their attractions hard to resist. I belong to the latter class and since 1927 the Libyan Desert, its history, exploration and archaeology, its politics and everything that concerns it, has been one of my chief interests in life. In it at various times I have spent about three and a half years and have travelled by camel, car and aircraft at least forty-five thousand miles.

  As Intelligence Officer of the Long Range Desert Group from July, 1940, until February, 1943, I took part in some of the operations of the first year and later, as a less active spectator at Group Headquarters, saw most of the game.

  So if I have not written an accurate account, even if not a readable one, of the work of the L.R.D.G. in Libya, I have only myself to blame.

  But even so I shall have made mistakes. To some I shall have given too much honour: to some too little. Of both I ask forgiveness.

  My thanks are due to many friends who have described to me their adventures, and also to those who have written parts of this book and to whom acknowledgement is made in the appropriate place.

  W. B. K. S.

  TRIPOLI—HEBRON—MA’ADI,

  1943

  My guides, sniffing the air like dogs, led me from crumbling room to room, saying, ‘This is jessamine, this violet, this rose.’

  But at last Dahoum drew me: ‘Come and smell the very sweetest smell of all,’ and we went into the main lodging, to the gaping window sockets of its eastern face, and there drank with open mouths of the effortless, empty, eddyless wind of the desert, throbbing past…

  ‘This,’ they told me, ‘is the best: it has no taste.’

  Seven Pillars of Wisdom

  Acknowledgements

  MY THANKS are due to the New Zealand Government for permission to reproduce some of Capt. Peter McIntyre’s drawings; to the New Zealand Public Relations Service who allowed me to consult their archives; to Mr. G. W. Murray and to Mr. H. Rowntree for help in preparing the maps and to ’Abd el Hamid Eff. Mukhtar who drew them; to the Army Film and Photographic Unit for leave to use their photographs, and to other friends who have given me illustrations for this book but of whose names I have not, I regret, a complete record.

  W. B. K. S.

  NORTH EAST AFRICA

  EGYPT AND LIBYA—EASTERN SECTION

  EGYPT AND LIBYA—WESTERN SECTION

  CHAPTER ONE

  ORIGINS

  IT IS a drab, faded, little book, bound in one of those unattractive colours which seem to be reserved for the publications of His Majesty’s Stationery Office. On the outside cover is a stern warning about keeping it in safe custody and disclosing the contents only to authorised persons. It has no date but “internal evidence,” as the critics would say, shows that it was published in 1919.

  Its title is hardly more exciting than its appearance—“Report on the Military Geography of the North Western Desert of Egypt,” by Captain Claud H. Williams, M.C., 1/1st Pembroke Yeomanry, attached No. 5 Light Car Patrol.

  The first sentence of the Preface is commendably to the point : “The object of this report is to place on record any information in my possession, gathered in the course of desert patrolling during the past three years, that may be of military value in the future.”

  You will ask why I quote all this. I do so because on the experiences described in this book many of the achievements of the Long Range Desert Group were founded.

  Few people now remember the Light Car Patrols. The men who made them are forgotten though some of their names are still on the maps : “Williams’ Pass”; “Ball and Moore (1917),” written alongside a desert route; “Owston’s Dump”; “Davidson’s Pass.” The others have vanished before the proper conservatism of the official cartographers who have found Arabic equivalents for the old names. “James’ Peak” is now “Qur Hadid”; “Williams’ Dunes” have become “Ghard Misa’ada”; and “Partridge’s Gap” is “Fassulet Rammak.” But though their names may be forgotten they have a place in L.R.D.G. history.

  In 1915, as in 1940, Egypt was in danger of attack from the west. Sayed Ahmed esh Sherif, the Senussi leader, had joined the Turks against the hated Italians, and at the end of 1915, with enemy money and equipment and directed by Turkish and German officers, the Senussi forces advanced as far as Matruh. For more than a year they threatened Egypt with invasion. The simplest way to deal with the threat might well have been to pay each Arab £5 a month more than he was being paid by the Germans, but Britain adopted more conventional methods of warfare and thousands of troops, badly needed in Palestine and elsewhere, were tied up in the Western Desert.

  The greater part of these troops were horsed Yeomanry, unable to operate far away from ample supplies of water and fodder, so along the Mediterranean coast the Yeomanry engaged the Senussi while in the waterless desert of the interior the Light Car Patrols, specially organised and equipped for this sort of job, guarded the desert frontier and the oases. They were our pioneers. They invented the sun-compass and made the first condensers for their boiling radiators. With simple methods of survey they ran their traverses far into the desert, going out beyond the range of the old camel-explorers. The cars they used were Fords, the original Model T, certainly the best then available but hardly one which would be chosen to-day. Williams in his book praises the “oversize three and a half-inch tyres,” a pathetic comparison with the ten-inch sand tyres which the L.R.D.G. always used. But in spite of all these difficulties the Light Car Patrols did their job, showing for the first time what cars could achieve in desert travel. It is a pity no one wrote their story.

  But if men forget the desert remembers. Often during our journeys around the Qattara Depression or Bahariya or south-westwards towards ’Ain Dalla we would find the trace of their narrow wheel-tracks across the gravel or the black, rusted food-tins at their old camps.

  In 1917 the Senussi were driven out of Egypt and the next year the Light Car Patrols were disbanded. The desert lay undisturbed.

  A quarter of a century later history was being repeated. From the west the Italians menaced Egypt. Though more mobile than the horse and camel-borne units who had fought each other in the Western Desert in the Great War, neither the Italians nor the British who opposed them could move their forces any great distance inland, for it was by sea and along the coastal roads and railways that they received their supplies.

  But this time the inner desert was mor
e important than in 1915. For the British in Egypt, in addition to a possible attack from the west, had to face the Italian armies on the east, in Eritrea and in Abyssinia. The Italian forces in the Middle East greatly outnumbered ours; there were only 2500 British and 4500 Sudanese troops in the Sudan in 1940 with no tanks, seven aircraft and hardly any guns, whereas there were about 500,000 Italians in Abyssinia and it was only General Wavell’s stupendous bluffing and, his ability to move his small reserves between Egypt and the Sudan rapidly and at the right moment that saved the Middle East.

  Communications between Egypt and the Sudan lay through the Red Sea, or along the Nile Valley—by train to Aswan, by river steamer from Aswan to Wadi Haifa, and thence southwards by train. At any moment the Red Sea might have been made unusable by the enemy navies and the Nile Valley route was open to attack from the west.

  Seven hundred miles west of the Nile is the oasis of Kufra. There, secure from attack behind the twin barriers of Sand Sea and Gilf Kebir Plateau, with plentiful water and good, communications to the coast and to Hon, the enemy could build up a considerable force. Beyond Kufra is ’Uweinat with its good though limited water and its landing grounds. From ’Uweinat to Wadi Haifa is a three days’ run over excellent going. In the summer of 1940 a force of a hundred or two determined men could have attacked and taken Wadi Haifa, wrecked the dockyard and the railway workshops, sunk any river steamers or barges and made a mess of the Egypt-Sudan line of communications at that point

  From Kufra, too, is the line of approach to the Chad Province of French Equatorial Africa through Sarra and Faya. And through the Chad Province ran the West Africa-Middle East air route, the chain of airfields between Takoradi and Cairo along which so many hundreds of aircraft were flown when the Mediterranean was closed. An Italian force moving down from Kufra and, farther west, from Murzuk in June, 1940, winning over the hesitant French and capturing Fort Lamy, would have been very hard to dislodge at a time when we needed every man and truck for the defence of Egypt and the Sudan.

 

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