 | Robert Laycock: Encyclopedia II - Robert Laycock - Commandos: early days
Robert Laycock - Commandos: early days
Laycock was appointed by Keyes to the Commandos and was put in charge of one unit. He raised and trained a body of men, often drawing on his wide circle of friends. From the first, the outfit attracted men with initiative and enterprise, often those who could think along unorthodox lines. Mostly, the choices were good, but regular units sometimes used the opportunity to get rid of those who did not fit in. Much of the training was done in Western Scotland.
Numbers 7, 8 and 11 commandos (called Layforce) were sent to the Middle East in February of 1941 under the command of Laycock. A locally raised commando was attached to the unit. An attack on the Italian island of Pantelleria was planned. This would have given Britain airfields to protect convoys passing through the central Mediterranean Sea. However the plan was overtaken by events.
Looking for a role, the Commandos were assigned to raid the Axis held port of Bardia in the Italian Colony of Libya. The raid produced few material results, but taught valuable lessons, especially about the need to move quickly. One indirect result was that the Germans pulled back an armoured brigade from the forward area to guard against future attacks.
The Greek island of Crete was under attack by German airborne troops and the British garrison was in danger of capture. Layforce was the only general reserve available to General Sir Archibald Wavell, the British Commander-in-Chief in the Middle East. It was sent to Crete at a time when the issue was in doubt, but when it arrived its mission was to cover the evacuation of British and Imperial forces.
Layforce arrived at Suda Bay on Crete on the night of April 26/27, 1941. They held a defensive position blocking the main road inland to Sphakia. They attracted heavy air attack. Laycock's personal assistant was the novelist, Evelyn Waugh, a personal friend who showed conspicuous bravery throughout.
Laycock's leadership throughout the Crete campaign was exemplary, on one occasion personally routing a night-time German attack on his headquarters, by jumping in a tank that happened to be nearby and driving over the invaders.
Both Waugh and Laycock were on the last British ship out of Crete, before it fell. The force lost 600 men in the campaign, a casualty rate of 75%.
Laycock also led the 1941 raid to capture General Erwin Rommell which failed with significant casualties, including Roger Keyes' son, Geoffrey Keyes, V.C.. Laycock escaped and made his way with a small group overland to British forces, after two months behind enemy lines.
In 1942, Laycock returned to England as commander of the Special Services Brigade. He led his brigade in the assault on Sicily in 1943 and in the brutal Salerno campaign where his forces held the bridgehead for 11 days and suffered 50% casualties. He received the DSO for this service.
Other related archives1907 births, 1940, 1941, 1943, 1954, 1968 deaths, Admiral of the Fleet, Anthony Head, April 18, Archibald Wavell, Axis, Bardia, Battle of France, British Army soldiers, British Expeditionary Force, Combined Operations, Commander-in-Chief, Commandos, Crete, DSO, Dictionary of National Biography, Dom Mintoff, England, Erwin Rommell, Eton College, Evelyn Waugh, France, General, Geoffrey Keyes, Governor, Italian, Layforce, Libya, London, Lord Lieutenant, Louis Mountbatten, M.P., Malta, Mediterranean Sea, Middle East, Nottinghamshire, Pantelleria, Roger Keyes, Royal Artillery, Royal Horse Guards, Royal Military College, Salerno, Sandhurst, Scotland, Secretary of State for War, Sicily, Sword of Honour, V.C., Winston Churchill, World War One, World War Two, armoured, brigade, commandos, convoys, major general, probated
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