General George Giffard
Posted by Mitch Williamson in Biography on Monday, January 30, 2012
General Sir George Giffard GCB DSO (1886–1964) was a British
military officer, who had a distinguished career in command of African troops
in World War I, rising to command an Army Group in South East Asia in World War
II.
Giffard served in World War II initially as Military Secretary
at the War Office and then, from 1940, as General Officer Commanding Palestine
& Trans-Jordan.
In 1941 he became Commander-in-Chief of West Africa Command.
While the Mediterranean was barred to British shipping by German and Italian
naval and air force units, West Africa was an important link in Allied lines of
communication to the Middle East and Far East. In addition to organising the
logistic infrastructure, Giffard's major achievement was the reorganisation of
the units of the Royal West African Frontier Force into two field infantry
divisions, capable of serving as independent forces in rough terrain.
Initially, this was in response to a potential threat from Vichy French forces
in Senegal and Niger. Later, these two divisions, 81st (West Africa) Division
and 82nd (West Africa) Division served with distinction in the Burma Campaign.
He was made General Officer Commanding Eastern Army, India
in August 1943. This army faced the Japanese army which had occupied Burma.
Several sources, notably Field Marshal William "Bill" Slim, testified
to his contribution to the improvement in morale and effectiveness in Eastern
Army during this period.
In 1943 he was appointed Commander in Chief of 11th Army
Group in Burma. His period of command here was less happy, mainly because of
difficulties with the US General Joseph Stilwell. The two men disliked each
other, and Stilwell held so many appointments that any working arrangement had
to be an awkward compromise. (As commander of the Northern Combat Area Command,
Stilwell was Giffard's subordinate, but as Deputy Supreme Commander of the
South East Asia Command, he was Giffard's superior.) Nevertheless, this period
was marked by the victories in the Arakan, and at Imphal and Kohima, to which
Giffard contributed greatly. Late in 1944, 11th Army Group was replaced by the
Allied HQ, ALFSEA and Giffard was replaced by General Oliver Leese.
He was also Aide-de-Camp General to the King from 1943 to
1946. He retired in 1946.
Several sources,
notably Field Marshal William "Bill" Slim, testified to his
contribution to the improvement in morale and effectiveness in Eastern Army
during this period.
Although General George Giffard would later have many
vociferous critics, and even Slim eventually backtracked on his initially favourable
estimate, at first he seemed like a breath of fresh air after Irwin.
The new Army Commander had a great effect on me. A tall,
good-looking man in the late fifties, who had obviously kept himself physically
and mentally in first-class condition, there was nothing dramatic about him in
either appearance or speech. He abhorred the theatrical, and was one of the
very few generals, indeed men in any position, I have known who really disliked
publicity . . . But there was much more to General Giffard than good taste,
good manners and unselfishness. He understood the fundamentals of war – that
soldiers must be trained before they can fight, fed before they can march, and
relieved before they are worn out. He understood that front-line commanders
should be spared responsibilities in the rear, and that soundness of
organisation and administration is worth more than specious short-cuts to
victory.
The first weeks of December were anxious ones for him. It
did not help that the entire senior personnel of SEAC were in a state of flux,
largely because of Mountbatten’s megalomania. October was a key month for
‘Dickie’, as he saw the back not only of Stilwell (against whom he had
intrigued assiduously) but the three chiefs of staff who had ‘defied’ him. All
the problems basically arose from the fact that the creation of the post of
Supreme Commander, South-East Asia, was a nonsense that had never been properly
thought out and was simply one of Churchill’s ‘bright ideas’. Mountbatten, with
his vaulting ambition, always wanted to be a generalissimo, not a mere
committee chairman, in which case, as the chiefs of staff ruefully concluded,
what was the point of them and what was their role supposed to be? Either they
or the supreme commander were an unnecessary layer in the military hierarchy.
In land warfare the complex system would work only if the supreme commander,
the army commander and the general actually directing the campaign were all of
one mind. Mountbatten and Slim meshed perfectly, and Slim and Giffard collaborated
well because Giffard always gave his subordinate his head. But Mountbatten and
Giffard was an impossible mixture. Temperamentally poles apart, they seemed to
differ at every conceivable level. For Giffard fighting during the monsoon was
dangerously irresponsible, personal visits to buck up the men’s morale were
mere grandstanding, and Mountbatten’s entire style was personally and
aesthetically repugnant. Detesting Stilwell as he did, Giffard thought that
both Slim and the Supreme Commander deferred to him too much. Resenting the
entire system that had made him Mountbatten’s underling, and disliking the man
personally, Giffard habitually sided with the other commanders, Peirse and
Somerville, who both felt exactly as he did. Whatever Mountbatten proposed, the
trio opposed as if by reflex action. Sacked in May, Giffard was still in post
in October because of the difficulty of finding someone to replace him; a
general had to be found who was both competent and could put up with
Mountbatten, and this was never going to be easy. The obvious solution was for
Slim to take over Giffard’s role, but the Supreme Commander opposed this,
ostensibly because Slim was too valuable where he was. This argument might have
worked in March–June 1944 during Kohima-Imphal, and again after December when
Slim was engaged in CAPITAL, but had no validity whatever in the intervening
period. The suspicion arises that, consciously or unconsciously, Mountbatten
was jealous of Slim. Already in the habit of taking credit for the other man’s
achievements, Mountbatten may have felt that this would be impossible if Slim
was at the very nerve centre of power. The suspicion is enhanced by
Mountbatten’s refusal to have Slim in either Giffard’s job or that of Pownall,
as his chief of staff, when Pownall retired in the autumn.
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