Madagascar in World War II

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Westland Lysander of the RAF over Madagascar in 1942

Madagascar, then officially known as French Madagascar, was a French colony at the outbreak of the Second World War, having been under French administration since 1885. It played an important role in the war due to the presence of critically important harbors, the contribution of Malagasy troops, and was also the scene of fighting between Allied and Vichy French forces in 1942. After the fall of France in 1940, Madagascar became a crucial flashpoint in contention between the Free French movement and Vichy France. The island was also consequential in the Pacific theater of the war as Imperial Japanese naval forces operated unopposed off the island for some time.

In 1942, the British and several other Allied forces launched an invasion of Madagascar, seeking to protect its position as an important juncture in Allied shipping and deny its use to the Axis. In addition to its role as a key link in the Allied supply lines and major provider of troops, Madagascar was also briefly considered as the solution to the Jewish Question by the government of Nazi Germany who openly floated deporting Europe's Jewish population to the island in 1940. This scheme known as the Madagascar Plan never came to fruition because of the British takeover. The island was officially handed over from the British to Free France in 1943 under whose control it remained for the remainder of the war.

Pre-war

Franco-Hova War poster

British claims to Madagascar were withdrawn in 1885 after the signing of the Treaty of Berlin, placing Madagascar solely within the colonial dominion of France. France invaded the island of Madagascar in 1883, setting off the first engagement of a series of armed conflicts that would come to be known as the Franco-Hova Wars[1] which ultimately ended in 1897 with the deposition of Queen Ranavalona III and the creation of the Malagasy Protectorate. The protectorate would soon become French Madagascar.

Under French rule, Madagascar was settled with plantations to export crops, primarily sugar,[2] and the capital city of Antananarivo was developed further. A coaling station was established in the city Antsiranana (then known as Diego-Suarez),[3] located on Madagascar's northern tip which became a frequent stopover for French vessels heading further east.[4] In World War I, tens of thousands of Malagasy men were drafted into the French army to serve on the Western Front, setting the stage for future conscription of Madagascar's male population to defend mainland France.[5]

Madagascar Plan

Planning for the deportation of Europe's Jews overseas began in 1938. However, Madagascar was not brought up as a possibility until June 1940 when it was proposed by F Rademacher. The intention was to transport Europe's Jews to the island where they would be under strict control by the Schutzstaffel who would manage Madagascar like a police state.

This was to be the "Final Solution" to the supposed Jewish Question, a massive forced exodus of millions to a faraway African island where they would live in effective quarantine and disconnected from the rest of the world. Over a period of four years, one million Jews a year would be sent to the island under the assumption conditions would be too harsh and many would perish.[6]

The plan was never carried out. Germany suffered a defeat in the battle of Britain which meant that a German capture and commandeering of the British merchant fleet to transport millions of Jews became unfeasible. In 1942, Madagascar was invaded and captured by British forces in the battle of Madagascar further complicating matters. The Madagascar Plan was scrapped and instead the Jewish population would have to be removed through the Holocaust.[7]

Early war

The Second World War saw tens of thousands of Malagasy men forced into the ranks of the French army yet again. 34,000 of these Malagasy conscripts were in France when it capitulated in the summer of 1940 with an additional 72,000 still in Madagascar awaiting transport to Europe.[8] Malagasy troops captured by Germany during the invasion were treated harshly as many were subject to massacres and summary executions upon capture. Others were killed when they reached prisoner of war camps.[9] This was in part due to German propaganda that depicted black French troops as savages who fought to the death and took no prisoners.[10]

Against Charles De Gaulle's objections and urgings to join the Free French, the colonial administration under the leadership of Governor-General Armand Annet of French Madagascar pledged their allegiance to Petain and Vichy France. This move exasperated De Gaulle and worried the British command. British commanders worried that French Madagascar's allegiance to the Vichy government would pave the way for the establishment of Axis bases on the island. Japanese, German, and Italian vessels, particularly merchant raiders and submarines, had already been operating in the island's waters, attacking Allied shipping at will and inflicting numerous losses.[11][12] Losing Madagascar to the Axis would mean exposing the coast of east Africa and the Indian Ocean to Axis attack. A plan was devised by Winston Churchill to seize control of Madagascar and to De Gaulle's irritation and surprise, Free French troops were excluded.[13]

Battle of Madagascar

Captured French troops marching away from their HQ after the British had captured Diego Suarez on 7 May

An Allied naval force consisting of over 50 ships under the command of Rear Admiral Edward Neville Syfret arrived off the coast of Madagascar in May 1942. The fleet had two aircraft carriers, HMS Illustrious and HMS Indomitable as well as the battleship HMS Ramillies.[14] After reconnaissance overflights by the South African Air Force and naval shelling, the first amphibious assaults were undertaken by British troops of the 29th Independent Infantry Brigade Group and No. 5 Commando who came ashore in landing crafts in northern Madagascar, just west of Diego Suarez. The 17th Infantry Brigade landed shortly after.[15]

Facing little resistance, the British troops seized Vichy positions around Diego Suarez, taking one hundred prisoners. Heavy fighting broke out the following day on May 6 when British troops met the dug-in Vichy troops guarding Antisarane. The British eventually overcame the resistance by moving through surrounding swamps and marshes and capturing the city later that night.[16]

Governor-General Annet had 8,000 troops at his disposal, all but 2,000 of whom were Malagasy. They were positioned to defend the island's strategic sites such as harbors and possible amphibious landing sites. However, they were outnumbered by the British and their Allies who had close to twice the number of troops. Regardless, a cable from Vichy leader Pierre Laval ordered Annet to defend Madagascar "as long as possible, by all possible means, and with no other considerations."[17]

Japanese submarines also participated in the battle, with the submarines I-10, I-16, and I-20 attacking British ships. The submarines launched midget submarines that attacked HMS Ramillies, damaging her,[18] and sank the British motor tanker, British Loyalty.[19] Both midget submarines were eventually lost; one at sea, and one when the crew was ambushed onshore and killed by British troops.

After the capture of Diego Suarez and Antisarane fighting on the island continued at a low intensity. The British made landings on Madagascar's west coast with the intention of moving inland from there. In September, the colonial capital of 'Tana' or Antananarivo was captured by the British. Nonetheless, resistance continued and Vichy Governor-General Annet remained at large. Several other Malagasy towns and cities fell to the British before Annet surrendered in November after signing an armistice.[20]

Later war and aftermath

Paul Legentilhomme inspecting a garrison in Djibouti, three years before arriving in Madagascar

Madagascar remained firmly in Allied hands for the remainder of the war, becoming an important link in the nexus of Allied shipping lines as a link between Western Europe, the East Indies, Africa, and the Middle East. Madagascar's deepwater port of Diego Suarez remained heavily defended, and created a base from which Allied ships could combat Japanese submarines.[21] In 1943, British forces left Madagascar and full control was given to Free France and Paul Legentilhomme was appointed to serve as Commissioner of Madagascar.[22] U-boats of the Kriegsmarine continued to operate in the seas around Madagascar until at least the end of 1944. In August 1944, a trio of U-boats sank eight merchant ships in the Mozambique Channel.[23] On 5 September 1944, U-861 sank a Greek freighter off the coast of Madagascar.[24]

At the Brazzaville Conference in 1944, Charles De Gaulle gave all of France's colonies, including Madagascar, representation in the French National Assembly as a way of securing their loyalty in the face of rising anti-colonial sentiments worldwide.[25]

At the conclusion of the war, thousands of Malagasy troops returned home to Madagascar contributing to the already growing nationalist and pro-independence sentiment on the island. Many Malagasy were angered at France's treatment of its colonial subjects as second-class citizens and the forced conscription of its men into the armed services. In 1946, Madagascar's representatives in the National Assembly submitted a bill to grant Madagascar its independence from France. It was rejected.[26] All of these events eventually culminated in the Malagasy Uprising of 1947 which saw tens of thousands of people on the island killed when French forces violently crushed the rebellion. Madagascar did not achieve independence until 1960.[27]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Van Den Boogaerde (2008), p. 7
  2. ^ Shillington (2005), p. 878
  3. ^ Randier (2006), p. 400
  4. ^ "History of Madagascar". History World. Archived from the original on 23 October 2010. Retrieved 30 October 2013.
  5. ^ Margaret Peil; Olatunji Y. Oyeneye (1998). Consensus, Conflict, and Change: A Sociological Introduction to African Societies. East African Publishers. pp. 108–. ISBN 9789966467478.
  6. ^ Browning, Christopher R. (2004). The Origins of the Final Solution : The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939 – March 1942. Comprehensive History of the Holocaust. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-1327-1.
  7. ^ Longerich, Peter (2010). Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192804365.
  8. ^ John Grehan (19 September 2013). Churchill's Secret Invasion: Britain's First Large Scale Combined Offensive 1942. Pen and Sword. pp. 14–. ISBN 9781781593820.
  9. ^ Raffael Scheck (3 April 2006). Hitler's African Victims: The German Army Massacres of Black French Soldiers in 1940. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521857994.
  10. ^ Richard E. Osborne (2001). World War II in Colonial Africa: The Death Knell of Colonialism. Riebel-Roque Pub. p. 74. ISBN 9780962832451.
  11. ^ Ian M. Malcolm (1 July 2013). Shipping Company Losses of the Second World War. History Press. pp. 25–. ISBN 9780750953719.
  12. ^ Donald A Bertke; Gordon Smith; Don Kindell (15 May 2012). World War II Sea War, Volume 3: The Royal Navy is Bloodied in the Mediterranean. Lulu.com. pp. 302–. ISBN 9781937470012.
  13. ^ Andrew Shennan (14 January 2014). De Gaulle. Routledge. pp. 20–. ISBN 9781317901976.
  14. ^ Ian Trenowden (6 January 1995). Stealthily by Night - COPP (Combined Operations Pilotage Parties): Clandestine Beach Reconnaissance And Operations In World War II. BookBaby. pp. 26–. ISBN 9781624882685.
  15. ^ karsten friedrich. The Cruel Slaughter of Adolf Hitler. Lulu.com. pp. 89–. ISBN 9781446795705.
  16. ^ Simon Rigge (1980). War in the outposts. Time-Life Books. p. 104. ISBN 9780809433797.
  17. ^ Alison Jolly (2004). Lords and Lemurs: Mad Scientists, Kings with Spears, and the Survival of Diversity in Madagascar. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 107–. ISBN 0-618-36751-9.
  18. ^ Kenneth Macksey (20 July 2013). Commando: Special Forces in World War II. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 122–. ISBN 9781782004028.
  19. ^ British Loyalty British Motor tanker https://uboat.net/allies/merchants/ships/3215.html
  20. ^ Kenneth Cecil Gandar Dower (1943). Into Madagascar. Penguin books. p. 106.
  21. ^ Rigge pp 110
  22. ^ "Biography of General Paul-Louis-Victor-Marie Legentilhomme (1884 – 1975), France". Generals of World War II. 2007-08-22. Retrieved 2018-01-11.
  23. ^ Bob Carruthers (18 March 2013). The U-Boat War in the Atlantic: Volume III: 1944-1945. Pen and Sword. pp. 190–. ISBN 9781473846647.
  24. ^ Clay Blair (1998). Hitler's U-boat War: The hunted, 1942-1945. Random House. p. 541. ISBN 9780679457428.
  25. ^ Eric T. Jennings (8 July 2015). Free French Africa in World War II: The African Resistance. Cambridge University Press. pp. 251–. ISBN 978-1-316-44519-8.
  26. ^ Antoine Masson; Kevin O'Connor (2007). Representations of Justice. Peter Lang. pp. 64–. ISBN 9789052013497.
  27. ^ E. Keller (18 November 2005). The Road to Clarity: Seventh-Day Adventism in Madagascar. Palgrave Macmillan US. pp. 19–. ISBN 9781403977007.