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The Aden Emergency, also known as the 14 October Revolution (Arabic: ثورة 14 أكتوبر, romanized: Thawrat 14 ʾUktūbar, lit. '14th October Revolution') or as the Radfan Uprising, was an armed rebellion by the National Liberation Front (NLF) and the Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen (FLOSY) against the Federation of South Arabia, a British Protectorate of the United Kingdom, which led to the proclamation of the People's Republic of South Yemen.
Aden Emergency | ||||||||
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Part of the Cold War, the Arab Cold War, and the decolonization of Asia | ||||||||
The location of the Aden Protectorate | ||||||||
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Belligerents | ||||||||
NLF |
FLOSY Supported by: United Arab Republic | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | ||||||||
Harold Wilson Michael Le Fanu Michael Beetham Colin Campbell Mitchell |
Qahtan al-Shaabi Jarallah Omar |
Abdullah al-Asnag Gamal Abdel Nasser | ||||||
Units involved | ||||||||
Federal Regular Army Hadhrami Bedouin Legion | Guerrilla fighters | |||||||
Strength | ||||||||
30,000 at peak[1] (3,500 in November 1967)[2] 15,000 federal troops[3] | 26,000 fighters[4] | |||||||
Casualties and losses | ||||||||
British Army: 90–92 killed 510 wounded[5][3] Federal Regular Army: 17 killed 58 wounded |
382 killed 1,714 wounded[3] | |||||||
Total: 2,096 casualties[6] |
Partly inspired by Gamal Abdel Nasser's pan-Arab nationalism, it began on 14 October 1963 with the throwing of a grenade at a gathering of British officials at Aden Airport. A state of emergency was then declared in the British Crown colony of Aden and its hinterland, the Aden Protectorate. The emergency escalated in 1967 and hastened the end of British rule in the territory which had begun in 1839.
Background
editAden was originally of interest to Britain as an anti-piracy station to protect shipping on the routes to British India. With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, it further served as a coaling station. Over the period since the annexation of Aden, the British had signed many protection treaties with the emirs of the inland to secure British rule over the area. Following the independence of India in 1947, Aden became less important to the United Kingdom.
The Emergency was precipitated in large part by a wave of Arab nationalism spreading to the Arabian Peninsula and stemming largely from the socialist and pan-Arabist doctrines of Egyptian leader Gamel Abdel Nasser. The British, French and Israeli forces that had invaded Egypt following Nasser's nationalisation of the Suez Canal in 1956 had been forced to withdraw following intervention from both the United States and the Soviet Union.
Nasser enjoyed only limited success in spreading his pan-Arabist doctrines through the Arab world, with his 1958 attempt to unify Egypt and Syria as the United Arab Republic collapsing in failure three years later. A perceived anti-colonial uprising in Aden in 1963 provided another potential opportunity for his doctrines, though it is not clear to what extent Nasser directly incited the revolt in Aden, as opposed to the Yemeni guerrilla groups drawing inspiration from Nasser's pan-Arabist ideas but acting independently themselves.[citation needed]
Emergency
editThis section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2022) |
There were a number of different nationalist groups fighting the British. Often, they fought each other. The most well known groups are:[7]
1. The South Arabian League (S.A.L.)
2. The Front for the Liberation of South Yemen (F.L.O.S.Y.)
3. The Organization for the Liberation of the Occupied South (O.L.O.S.)
4. The People's Liberation Party (P.L.P.)
5. The National Liberation Front (N.L.F.)
Among the main players, the S.A.L. was backed by Saudi Arabia, the F.L.O.S.Y. by Egypt and the Aden Trade Unions. All the major groups were based in Yemen, and they regularly combined or broke up with other groups. For instance, S.A.L joined with P.S.P. to become O.L.O.S. in 1965, and then broke away in 1966. The N.L.F. joined with O.L.O.S. in January 1966 to form F.L.O.S.Y. then broke away in December 1966. Such movement was quite common all through the war.[7]
Hostilities commence
editHostilities started on 10 December 1963, with an NLF grenade attack against British High Commissioner of Aden Sir Kennedy Trevaskis, which took place as he arrived at Khormaksar Airport to catch a London-bound flight. The grenade killed the High Commissioner's adviser and a woman, and injured fifty other people. On that day, a state of emergency was declared in Aden.
The NLF and FLOSY began a campaign against British forces in Aden, relying largely on grenade attacks. One such attack was carried out against RAF Khormaksar during a children's party, killing a girl and wounding four children.
The guerrilla attacks largely focused on killing off-duty British officers and policemen. Much of the violence was carried out in Crater, the old Arab quarter of Aden. British forces attempted to intercept weapons being smuggled into Crater by the NLF and FLOSY on the Dhala road, but their efforts met with little success. Despite taking a toll on British forces, the death toll among rebels was far higher, largely due to inter-factional fighting among different rebel groups.
In 1964 the British 24th Infantry Brigade arrived to conduct land operations. It remained in Aden and the Aden Protectorate until November 1967.
By 1965, the RAF station RAF Khormaksar was operating nine squadrons, including transport units with helicopters and a number of Hawker Hunter fighter bomber aircraft. These were called in by the army for attacks on rebel positions in which they would use 60-pound high explosive rockets and their 30 mm ADEN cannon.
Aden street riots
editOn 19–20 January 1967, the NLF provoked street riots in Aden. After the Aden police lost control, British High Commissioner Sir Richard Turnbull deployed British troops to crush the riots. As soon as the NLF riots were crushed, pro-FLOSY rioters took to the streets. Fighting between British forces and pro-guerrilla rioters lasted into February. British forces had opened fire 40 times, and during that period there were 60 grenade and shooting attacks against British forces, including the destruction of an Aden Airways Douglas DC-3, which was bombed in mid-air, killing all the people on board.
At one point toward the end of the rebellion in early 1967 the NLF killed at least 35 members of FLOSY in 32 days. The FLOSY guerrillas first asked the British for protection, and then 80 actually flew to the UK using the British passports they had as citizens of a British Colony.[7]
Arab police mutiny
editThe emergency was further exacerbated by the Six-Day War in June 1967. Nasser claimed that the British had helped Israel in the war, and this led to a mutiny by hundreds of soldiers in the South Arabian Federation Army on June 20, which also spread to the Aden Armed Police. The mutineers killed 22 British soldiers and shot down a helicopter (The pilot had to abandon take off from a ledge near Crater, Aden after being hit in the knee by a bullet. The Sioux crashed and burnt out but all three occupants escaped), and as a result, Crater was occupied by rebel forces.
Concerns were heightened regarding the ability to give sufficient security to British families in the midst of the increased violence, resulting in evacuation plans for families being sped up considerably.
Battle of Crater
editFollowing the mutiny, all British forces were withdrawn from Crater, while Royal Marines of 45 Commando took up sniping positions on the high ground and killed 10 armed Arab fighters. However, Crater remained occupied by an estimated 400 Arab fighters. NLF and FLOSY fighters then took to the streets and engaged in gun battles, while arson, looting, and murder was also common. British forces blocked off the two main entrances to Crater. They came under sniper fire from an Ottoman fort on Sira island, but the snipers were silenced by a shell from an armoured car. Order was restored in July 1967, when the 1st Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders entered Crater under the command of Lt. Col. Colin Campbell Mitchell and managed to occupy the entire district overnight with no casualties.
British withdrawal from Yemen
editNevertheless, repeated guerrilla attacks by the NLF soon resumed against British forces, causing the British to leave Aden by the end of November 1967, earlier than had been planned by British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and without an agreement on the succeeding governance, effectively abandoning the South Arabian government.
On November 30, 1967 the Federation of South Arabia ceased to exist when the People's Republic of Southern Yemen was proclaimed. In 1967 Israel defeated Egypt in the Six-Day War thus obliging Egypt to evacuate its troops from Yemen. FLOSY, now without any military support from its Egyptian ally, continued fighting the NLF. However FLOSY's fate was sealed when the NLF managed to persuade the Yemen's Federal army to join the fight against FLOSY. On November 7, 1967 FLOSY tried to attack a federal army base but the army defeated FLOSY with the NLF's help, inflicting heavy losses on FLOSY. After the defeat FLOSY´s fighting force disbanded although some cadres and leaders remained outside the country.[8] Most of the opposing leaders reconciled by 1968, in the aftermath of a final royalist siege of San'a'.
Aftermath
editBritish military casualties in the period 1963 to 1967 were 90 to 92 killed[9] and 510 wounded. British civilian deaths were 17. Local government forces lost 17 killed and 58 wounded. Casualties among the rebel forces stood at 382 killed and 1,714 wounded.[5][3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Wars and Global Conflict: Confrontations and Hostilities". Modern-Day Commando. Archived from the original on 26 June 2014.
- ^ "Aden Emergency". nam.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 28 July 2013.
- ^ a b c d "Aden Emergency PSYOP 1963–1967". PsyWar.Org. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2012.
- ^ Molyneux, Maxine; Yafai, Aida; Mohsen, Aisha; Ba'abad, Noor (1979). "Women and Revolution in the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen". Feminist Review (1): 5–20. doi:10.2307/1394747. JSTOR 1394747.
- ^ a b Roll of Honor
- ^ Peterson, J. E. (August 2009). "British Counter-Insurgency Campaigns and Iraq" (PDF). Arabian Peninsula Background Notes: 12.
- ^ a b c Friedman, Herbert A. (30 January 2007). "Psyop of the Aden Emergency 1963-1967". Psywar.org. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 23 September 2024.
- ^ Kostiner, Joseph (1984). The struggle for South Yemen. London: Croom Helm. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-7099-1504-1.
- ^ "Roll of Honour" (PDF). Aden Veterans Association. March 2022.
Bibliography
edit- Laffin, John (1986). Brassey's battles: 3.500 years of conflict, campaigns and wars from A-Z. London: Brassey's. ISBN 978-0-08-031185-2.
- Naumkin, Vitalij Vjačeslavovič (2004). Red wolves of Yemen: the struggle for independence. Arabia past and present. Cambridge: The Oleander Press. ISBN 978-0-906672-70-9.
- Walker, Jonathan (2005). Aden insurgency: the savage war in South Arabia 1962-1967. Staplehurst, Kent: Spellmount. ISBN 978-1-86227-225-5. OCLC 56645030.
External links
edit- Infantry Assistance From Outside Aden [1] Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- www.britains-smallwars.com – "The Barren Rocks of Aden".
- Argylls in Aden http://www.argylls1945to1971.co.uk/A_and_SH_Aden1967.htm
- Foreign Office documents concerning Aden, Yemen and the Aden emergency of 1963–1967 [2][permanent dead link]