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Operation Tombola

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Operation Tombola
Part of Western Front

Albinean Hills
DateMarch - April 1945
Location
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
 United Kingdom
Italian partisans
Nazi Germany Nazi Germany
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom Roy Farran Nazi Germany Friedrich-Wilhelm Hauck
Strength
50 men 2nd Special Air Service
~50 Italian & Russian partisans
LI Gebirgs Corps (elements)
Casualties and losses
3 killed & 7 Wounded 50-60 killed

During the Second World War, Operation Tombola was a major raid conducted by the 2 Special Air Service, under the command of SAS Major Roy Farran, and Special Operations Executive's Captain Michael Lees. The operation was launched prematurely against orders from the Allied 15th Army Group.

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Transcription

Planning

Fifty men parachuted to the Monte Cusna area (Reggio Emilia) between 4 and 24 March 1945, under command of Major Roy Farran to link up with the SOE mission "Envelope"[clarification needed] under the command of Michael Lees. The force liaised Italian Partisans, whose force also included 70 escaped Soviet POWs.

Captain Michael Lees

On 19 March, two German defectors brought Envelope mission information regarding the location of a German Headquarters (they believed 14th Army, but it may have been LI Gebirgs (Mountain) Corps). The German HQ was located in two villas in Botteghe d'Albinea in the hills above Reggio Emilia. Lees' signaled SOE that he and Farran planned to launch an attack.

Later that day, Lees' message was passed to Allied 15th Army Group HQ, who approved the attack, with two caveats. First, Lees and Farran had to reconnoitre and submit a plan of attack, and second, the attack was not to be launched immediately. Instead, it was to be coordinated with Operation Grapeshot, 15th Army's planned Spring offensive that would end with the capitulation of Axis forces in Italy.[1]

Though these orders were received by Lees and Farran, the pair did not incorporate them into their plans. They reconnoitred the enemy HQ and submitted their plan of attack, earmarking 28 March for the operation. This caused alarm at 15th Army Group, with a reply sent "you only have to wait one week after target date...Your scheme will then be correctly time for maximum effort."[2]

This appeal did not succeed, and despite confirming Les and Farran had received their orders, 15th Army Group tried in vain to reign in Lees and Farran. The only signal received from the two was on 23 March, that ignored 15th Army Group's orders. It read "Confirm we attack 26 March...Plans irrevocable now...."[3]

Operation

Captain Roy Farran holding a German sub-machine gun in Italy

Farran and Lees began the attack on the night of 27 March, beginning with the sound of a Scottish piper, David Kirkpatrick. Kirkpatrick had volunteered to be dropped into the area, to identify the operation as British – so that reprisals would not be carried out against the local population.[citation needed] [4]

The attack itself was a success, the Germans sustained 50–60 casualties (including an unknown number killed). Three SAS personnel were killed in action at Villa Rossi, and about seven SAS and partisans were wounded (four British, two Italians and a Russian). Among the wounded was Michael Lees, who was evacuted to France, and then England.

Though the attack was a success, it did not cause the disruption it would have, had it coincided with the beginning of Operation Grapeshot. The offensive would not begin for another week.

Aftermath

The Partisans, SOE, and SAS continued operations until 23 April, including raids against roads as Axis installations. Just as important as the 300 or so Germans killed and 200 captured,[citation needed] was the number of Axis defenders moved from other duties to secure the area. A number of Allied airmen, who were being hidden by civilians in the area, were also returned to friendly lines.

Shortly after the war, Farran recommended Lees be gazetted with the Military Cross, for his bravery during the raid. Reviewing the operation, Farran's recommendation was denied, on the grounds that "the value of this operation depended on its timing and Captain Lees with the SAS detachment carried it out prematurely and recklessly, in spite of the express orders from 15th Army Group transmitted by this HQ. But for the gallantry displayed and the fact that Captain Lees was wounded in the action, it is probable that disciplinary action would have been considered."[5]

Post-War Accounts

The commander of the operation, Roy Farran, published his account in the book Operation Tombola (Special Forces Library, Arms and Armour Press, 1986). The BBC series Secret War narrated by Alisdair Simpson (Acorn Media) in 2011 focuses on the exploits of Roy Farran and Michael Lees in the episode "SAS Italian Job". The operation is narrated also in the TV mini-series "Great SAS missions" (2004).

A book written in Italian Il bracciale di sterline by Matteo Incerti & Valentina Ruozi (Aliberti April 2011) details for the first time the operations with the use of British, Italian, and German documents. A second book Il paradiso dei folli (Imprimatur-Aliberti 2014) by Matteo Incerti to, focused on the war and post war experience of several participants of this secret mission. "Il suonatore matto" (Imprimatur 2017) also written by Matteo Incerti focused about the life of David 'mad piper' Kirkpatrick. Incerti found documents and memory who prove that the sound of Kirkpatrick's bagpipe and the sacrifice of the three SAS soldiers killed in action (Riccomini, Bolden, Guscott) in Villa Rossi,[citation needed] made the Germans believe that Tombola was a conventional military attack, rather than a "partisan" action. As a result the Nazis didn't inflict reprisals on the civilian population of Albinea.[citation needed]

During the second part of Operation Tombola, on 21 April 1945 action in Torre Maina (Modena) also the 2 SAS paratrooper Justo Balerdi-Robert Bruce was killed in action. He was a Basque antifascist, republican, and a former member of the French Foreign Legion. Bruce was the only Basque to fight with the British SAS in World War II.[citation needed] The story of Justo Balerdi-Robert Bruce appears in the books "Il bracciale di sterline" and "Il suonatore matto".

References

  1. ^ Signal No. 132 TAC HQ to Envelope, March 19, 1945 in HS 9/906/6 SOE Personnel file Michael Lees.
  2. ^ Signal No. 141 TAC HQ to Envelope, March 21, 1945 in HS 9/906/6 SOE Personnel file Michael Lees.
  3. ^ Signal No. 230817 from TOMBOLA to SAS HQ, March 23, 1945 in HS 9/906/6 SOE Personnel file Michael Lees.
  4. ^ "The Incredible Story of Scots piper who played through SAS raid". The Scotsman. 2018-11-01. Retrieved 2018-12-23 – via PressReader.
  5. ^ John Grosvenor Beevor, July 25, 1945 in HS 9/906/6 SOE Personnel file Michael Lees.

Further reading

See also

This page was last edited on 15 March 2024, at 11:58
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