- Small Scale Raiding Force
A Small Scale Raiding Force (SSRF) was initiated by Lord Louis Mountbatten, Chief of Combined Operations, in February/March
1942 to be a permanent "amphibious sabotage force" of fifty men directly under his command. The force was actually a reclassification of theMaid Honor Force already formed by theSpecial Operations Executive (SOE). The title coming from theBrixham trawler named "Maid Honor " which the SOE requisitioned and substantially armed and converted.Mountbatten negotiated control of the SSRF which remained within SOE based on Station 62
Anderson Manor nearBlandford . [p.168, Foot] while being under operational control ofCombined Operations Headquarters and with the cover name of "No.62 Commando" which was formed in 1941. [p.92, Moreman] MajorGus March-Phillipps [reassigned from Royal Artillery, p.167, Foot] continued to lead the force and be its main inspiration [p.14, Ladd] , as MajorGeoffrey Appleyard remained its second in command. Both men formed the original "Maid Honor Force" when specially chosen for that duty byBrigadier Colin Gubbins the military head of SOE, from B Troop of No.7 Commando.The SSRF used HM MTB 344 ,a
Motor Torpedo Boat colloquially nicknamed "The Little Pisser" from its outstanding turn of speed, and conducted a number of raids by sea from Britain including "Operation Aquatint " on 12/13 September 1942 onSainte-Honorine on the Normandy coast [ later part ofOmaha Beach ] , where most of the 11 men on the raid were killed (including March-Phillipps) or captured. [p.48, Chappell] The force was made up to strength with men from No.12 Commando with Appleyard now Operational Commander, and SSRF renamed 1. SSRF. [p.33, Howarth] Appleyard conducted "Operation Basalt " on theChannel Island ofSark on 3/4 October 1942 with Lt. (later Maj.)Anders Lassen (who was to be awarded the VC whilst commanding a Squadron of theSpecial Boat Service in Italy in 1945) amongst his force. An incident involving prisoners having their hands tied behind them, their mouths stuffed with grass and their subsequent killing whilst attempting to escape led directly toHitler 's decision to issue his "Kommandobefehl " ("Commando Order") on18 October 1942 . [This was attested by Colonel GeneralAlfred Jodl , who drafted the order, in his testimony at theInternational Military Tribunal atNuremberg in 1946.] Accounts vary as to whether the captives were knifed by Lassen himself or shot by him or another. Officially sanctioned German military accounts of the time assert unequivocably that the dead German soldiers were found with their hands bound and later German military publications make many references to captured Commando instructions ordering the tying of captives hands behind them and the use of a particularly painful method of knotting around the thumbs to enable efficient, coercive, single-handed control of the captive.Fact|date=May 2008Despite No.62 Commando being made a larger force thereafter, the SSRF was absorbed into the Special Boat Squadron after "
Operation Pussyfoot " on 3/4 April 1943 [p.11, Shortt] , though prior to this the force had started to break up after a January decision of theChiefs of Staff curtailed their raiding operations following "clashes of interests" objections from the SOE and theSecret Intelligence Service ("MI6"). Both Appleyard and Lassen went to theMediterranean , where Appleyard helped to shape the new 2Special Air Service which evolved from a Detachment of No. 62 Commando under the command ofBill Stirling , [p.33, Howarth; Appleyard was to go on to command what would later become the 2 Special Air Service Regiment] elder brother ofDavid Stirling , and where Lassen raised theSpecial Boat Service from the Special Boat Squadron of 1 SAS. Neither survived the war.References
ources
* Mike Chappell, "Army Commandos 1940-45", Osprey Publishing, 1996 ISBN 1855325799
* Tim Moreman, "British Commandos 1940-46", Osprey Publishing, 2006 ISBN 184176986X
* James D. Ladd, "Inside the Commandos: A Pictorial History from World War Two to the Present", Naval Institute Press, 1984 ISBN 0870219030
* Michael Richard Daniell Foot, "SOE in France: An Account of the Work of the British Special Operations", Routledge, 2004 ISBN 0714655287
* Patrick Howarth, "Undercover: The Men and Women of the Special Operations Executive", Routledge, 1980 ISBN 0710005733
* James Shortt, Angus McBride, "The Special Air Service: And Royal Marines Special Boat Squadron", Osprey Publishing, 1981 ISBN 0850453968ee also
*
Operation Chestnut
*Military history of the United Kingdom during World War II
*Special Air Service
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