The 'Battle of Madagascar' was the
Allied campaign to capture
Vichy French-controlled
Madagascar during
World War II. It began on
5 May,
1942. Fighting did not cease until
6 November.
Background
In early
1942, Allied leaders believed that ports on the island might be used by
Japan, an idea shared by the German Navy (''
Kriegsmarine''). Following their conquest of
South East Asia, east of
Burma by the end of February
1942, the Japanese high command was able to contemplate moves westward. Submarines of the
Imperial Japanese Navy were moving freely throughout the
Indian Ocean. In March
1942, Japanese aircraft carriers conducted the
Indian Ocean raid. This raid drove the
British Eastern Fleet out of the north-east Indian Ocean. The British were forced to re-locate to a new base at
Kilindini (at
Mombasa), in
Kenya.
The move laid the fleet open to a new angle of attack: the possibility of Japanese naval forces using forward bases in Madagascar had to be addressed. The potential use of these facilities threatened Allied merchant shipping, the supply route to the
British Eighth Army and also the Eastern Fleet.
Japanese submarines had the longest ranges of any at the time — more than 10,000 miles (16,000 km) in some cases. Had these submarines been able to utilise bases on Madagascar, it would have affected Allied lines of communications in a region stretching from the
Pacific and
Australia, to the
Middle East and
South Atlantic.
Operation Ironclad
Allied commanders decided to launch an amphibious assault on Madagascar. The plan was known as 'Operation Ironclad' and Allied forces, centred initially on the
British Army and the
Royal Navy were commanded by Major-General
Robert Sturges of the
Royal Marines. The Allied naval contingent consisted of over 50 vessels, drawn from
Force H, the
British Home Fleet and the British Eastern Fleet, commanded by Rear Admiral
Edward Neville Syfret. The fleet included
HMS ''Illustrious'', her sister ship
HMS ''Indomitable'' and the ageing
battleship HMS ''Ramillies'' to cover the landings.
The landings
Following many reconnaissance missions by the
South African Air Force, the
British 5th Infantry Division's
17th Infantry Brigade Group and
13th Infantry Brigade, as well as the
British 29th Infantry Brigade, and 5 Commando,
Royal Marines were carried ashore by
landing craft to Courrier Bay and Ambararata Bay, just west of the major port of
Diego Suarez (later known as Antsiranana), at the northern tip of Madagascar. A diversionary attack was staged to the east. Air cover was provided mainly by
Fairey Albacores,
Grumman Martlets and
Fairey Swordfish from the
Fleet Air Arm, which attacked Vichy shipping. A small number of SAAF planes assisted.

September 19, 1942. Allied troops disembarking from ''
LCA-164'' in
Tamatave harbour. (Photographer: Lt D.C. Oulds.)
The Vichy forces, led by
Governor General Armand Léon Annet, included about 8,000 troops, of whom about 6,000 were Madagascan. A large proportion of the others were
Senegalese. Between 1,500 and 3,000 Vichy troops were concentrated around Diego Suarez. However, naval and air defences were relatively light and/or obsolete: eight
coastal batteries, two
armed merchant cruisers, two
sloops, five submarines, 17
Morane-Saulnier 406 fighters and 10
Potez 63 bombers.
Following fierce fighting, Diego Suarez was surrendered on 7 May, although substantial Vichy forces withdrew to the south.
The Japanese submarines
''I-10'',
''I-16'' and
''I-20'' arrived on
May 29. ''I-10's reconnaissance plane spotted the ''Ramillies'' at anchor in Diego Suarez harbour but, the plane was seen and ''Ramillies'' changed her berth. ''I-20'' and ''I-16'' launched two
midget submarines, one of which managed to enter the harbour and fired two torpedoes, while under
depth charge attack from two
corvettes. One torpedo seriously damaged ''Ramillies'', while the second sank an oil tanker (''British Loyalty'', later refloated). ''Ramillies'' was later repaired in Durban and Plymouth.
Lieutenant Saburo Akieda and Petty Officer Masami Takemoto beached their submarine (''M-20b'') at Nosy Antalikely and moved inland towards their pick-up point near Cape Amber. They were informed upon when they bought food at a village and both were killed in a firefight with
Royal Marines three days later. The second midget submarine was lost at sea and the body of one its crew was washed ashore a day later.
The land campaign
Hostilities continued at a low level for several months. During the summer of
1942, the two brigades of the
British 5th Infantry Division was transferred to
India. On
22 June, the
East African Brigade Group (
King's African Rifles) arrived on Madagascar. The
South African 7th Motorized Brigade and the
Rhodesian 27th Infantry Brigade (including forces from
East Africa) were landed in the weekd following the arrival of the East Africans.

December 1942. Four
Westland Lysander Mark IIIA reconnaissance planes of
No. 1433 Flight RAF, based at
Ivato, over typical Madagascar countryside, following the end of the campaign. (Photographer: Sgt J.D. Morris).
The 29th Brigade and 22nd Brigade Group carried out an amphibious landing on
10 September at
Majunga, in the north-west, to re-launch Allied offensive operations ahead of the
rainy season. Progress was slow for the Allied forces; in addition to occasional small scale clashes with enemy forces, they also encountered scores of obstacles erected on the main roads by Vichy soldiers. The Allies eventually captured the capital,
Tananarive without much opposition, and then the town of
Ambalavao. The last major action was at
Andriamanalina on
18 October. Annet surrendered near Ilhosy, in the south of the island on
8 November.
[4]
The Allies suffered about 500 casualties in the landing at Diego Suarez, and 30 killed and 90 wounded in the operations which followed
10 September.
Naval order of battle
Allied
★ Battleship
HMS ''Ramillies''
★ Aircraft carriers
HMS ''Illustrious'' and
''Indomitable''
★ Cruisers
HMS ''Hermione'' and
''Devonshire''
★ Destroyers
HMS ''Active'',
HMS Anthony,
''Duncan'',
''Inconstant'',
''Javelin'',
HMS Laforey,
''Lightning'',
''Lookout'',
HMAS ''Nizam'',
HMAS ''Norman'',
HMS Pakenham,
HMS Paladin and
HMS Panther.
★ Frigates, corvettes and transports.
Vichy France
★ Two armed merchant cruisers
★ Two sloops
★ Five submarines including ''Beveziers'', ''Le Heros'', ''Monge''
Japan
★ Submarines
''I-10'' (with reconnaissance aircraft),
''I-16'', ''I-18'' (damaged by heavy seas and arrived late),
''I-20''
★ Midget submarines ''M-16b'', ''M-20b''
Aftermath
Free French General
Paul Legentilhomme was appointed High Commissioner for Madagascar. But French control of the island was not to last much longer. Like many colonies, after World War II, Madagascar sought its independence. In
1947, the island experienced the
Malagasy Uprising. This costly revolution was crushed in
1948. On
14 October 1958, about ten years later, the
Malagasy Republic successfully proclaimed its independence from
France.
See also
★
East African Campaign (World War II)
★
West Africa Campaign (World War II)
★
Battle of Dakar
★
Battle of Gabon
★
Syria-Lebanon campaign
★
Invasion of French Indochina
★
Operation Torch
External links
★
Bill Stone, 1998, "Operation Ironclad: Invasion of Madagascar"
★
exordio.com, ?, "Operación Ironclad" (Spanish language)
★
Outline of Japanese involvement
Footnotes
1. Andre Wessels, "South Africa and the War against Japan 1941-1945", in ''Military History Journal'' (South African Military History Society) v.10, no.3 (June 1996). Access date: 9 March , 2007.
2. Wessels, ''Ibid.''
3. Wessels, ''Ibid.''
4. Time Magazine, Madagascar Surrenders
References
E.D.R. Harrison, "British Subversion in French East Africa, 1941-42: SOE's Todd Mission." ''English Historical Review'', April 1999.