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Last post: Aden, 1964-67
The final years of British
forces in Aden and the Radfan
| Author | Julian Paget |
| Publisher | Faber& Faber |
| ISBN # | 0571087205 |
| On-line Merchant | Amazon This title is out of print. |
| This Book was added by | Doug Grant |
Comments
I obtained this book in Beirut
2-4-75 a day before the civil war. It is an excellent coverage of the last
years both from a Military and Political view.
At first sight the price
seems somewhat daunting for what is a very slim volume of little over 100
pages ofA5. But there is an immense amount of information tucked away between
the covers. Every single unit to have been raised in the former Aden Protectorates
from 1839 until independence is listed and described. From the First Yemen
Infantry used to keep the Turks at bay during the first World War to the
Zeylah Field Force used in Somaliland in 1884, they are all here. Sensibly,
most coverage is given to the major units familiar to anyone who served
in South Arabia from the 1950s onwards: the Aden Protectorate Levies (APL—
later the Federal Regular Army and, finally, the South Arabian Army)
the
Government Guards —later
the Federal National Guard (FNG 1), and the Tribal Guard — later to become
FNG 2. Then in the former Eastern Aden Protectorate, the Kathiri Armed
Constabulary, the Mukalla Regular Army, and the better known Hadlirami
Bedouin Legion (inspired by the Jordan Arab!
Legion) and
in Aden colony, the Aden Police and the paramilitary Armed Police. State
police forces are also listed, and some oddities such as the Imad Levy
raised in 1915 to fight in the hinterland which at that time was mostly
dominated by the Turks and their allies. British units, whether stationed
for long periods in Aden, or rotated for shorter terms of duty such as
the 1964/5 Radfan campaign, are also mentioned. Extensive appendices supplement
the main text, describing insignia (cap badges and shoulder flashes), campaign
service medals and other decorations, and ranks (my favourite always being
the ‘Bash Shawoosh’ or Staff Sergeant in the pre-1957 APL!). There are
also good maps and a comprehensive bibliography Almost the best feature
of this well turned out volume are the excellent photographs, many from
the late Jim Ellis’s collection, scattered throughout the book. Jim Ellis
wrote
the Foreword and obviously
gave much assistance to the two authors it is fitting that the book
is dedicated to his memory.
This book is a valuable addition
to any Aden archive. ‘A supplement volume’ is apparently in preparation
and the co-authors are asking for relevant inaterial.There are stirring
tales yet to be recounted about the exploits of some of these tiny forces,
so less well known to the general public than their more illustrious counterparts
elsewhere in the former British Empire. Aden may have been a colonial disaster,
but that does not detract from the work of so many officers and men who
served a distant King and Queen with loyalty and fortitude.
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