An interesting Second World War Indian Ocean, Malaya Operation Zipper and subsequent Operation Masterdom French Indo-China and First Vietnam War group awarded to Telegrapher G.T. Millner, Royal Navy. From St. Helens, Lancashire, he was trained in top secret methods of sending and receiving codes, especially the use of Morse Code, and went overseas to Ceylon in December 1944. After a period spent in Aden during early 1945, he then joined Naval Party 2422 from 28 June 1945, this being a Special Operations Assault Group formed for Operation Zipper, the British landing to capture Port Swettenham and Port Dickson in Malaya, as staging areas for the recapture of Singapore. Zipper was delayed until after the Second Atomic Bomb was dropped in August 1945, but then went ahead, with Millner’s unit being deployed aboard the frigate Waveney. Shortly afterwards he proceeded via Singapore to Saigon in French Indo-China as part of Operation Masterdom. Owing to Communist pressure, this force soon found itself engaged against the Viet Minh, in what heralded the start of the First Vietnam War. This force also had the unusual role of finding themselves operating alongside the Japanese, for whom they had originally been sent there to take the surrender of. Millner would recall in his letter of application of November 1998 that ‘we acted as part of the occupying forces. Duties were divided between guard ship duties on an L.S.I (Landing Ship Infantry) at the mouth of the River Saigon and setting up the naval radio station in the former naval HQ of the French in Saigon. During our time there the Amanite population aware that the French would be returning to claim their colony formed guerrilla groups with the backing of Communists in the north of French Indo China. As they became more active difficulties increased, and I recall taking part in a not too unsuccessful operation to ascertain the situation north of the city using river craft.’ From October 1945 he ended up at Singapore where he was employed in reconstructed and manning the naval radio base on the Isle of Blaki Mati.
Group of 5: 1939-1945 Star; Burma Star; Defence Medal; War Medal; Naval General Service Medal 1909-1962, GVI 1st type bust, 1 Clasp: S.E. Asia 1945-46, a later claim from the 1990’s; (JX674399 G T MILLNER TEL RN), mounted swing style for wear.
Condition: the last a late claim, Good Very Fine.
Geoffrey Thomas Millner was born on 22 November 1925 in St. Helens, Lancashire, the having worked as a clerk, with the ongoing Second World War, then joined the Royal Navy for ‘Hostilities Only’ as an Ordinary Telegrapher (Chatham No.JX.6745399) with the training establishment Royal Arthur from 13 December 1943. Millner was posted to signals training centre Cabbala from 29 December 1943, where he was trained in top secret methods of sending and receiving codes, especially the use of Morse Code. Posted to the Southampton base Shrapnel for service with Holloway from 5 February 1944, he then joined the Rosyth base Scotia from 17 June 1944, before being posted to Pembroke from 6 October 1944.
Millner was posted to Lanka, the naval base at Ceylon in the Indian Ocean from 13 December 1944, and then to Mayiaa, the naval establishment near to Colombo in Ceylon from 1 January 1945, before being posted to Shaba, the naval base at Steamer Point in Aden from 7 February 1945, where he was when rated as a Telegrapher on 5 April 1945. Millner returned to Mayina in Ceylon from 2 June 1945, and was destined for service in operations against the Japanese when he joined Naval Party 2422 from 28 June 1945, this being a Special Operations Assault Group formed for Operation Zipper, the British landing to capture Port Swettenham and Port Dickson in Malaya, as staging areas for the recapture of Singapore. This saw Millner embarked aboard the frigate Waveney.
Operation Zipper was delayed until after the dropping of the Second Atomic Bomb, but the force then landed on Morab beach between Port Swettenham and Port Dickson. Millner would later personally recall in a letter written on 23 November 1998 that ‘apart from quicksands in the landing area the landings were quickly accomplished and NP2422 back on board Waveney proceeded via Singapore to Saigon in French Indo China (now Vietnam)’. Millner then found himself involved in what was known as Operation Masterdom, that resulted in his being involved in the opening stages of the First Vietnam War.
Operation Masterdom, the British landing in French Indochina, occurred in what is now the south of what is Vietnam.
In July 1945 at Potsdam, Germany, the Allied leaders made the decision to divide Indochina in half—at the 16th parallel —to allow Chiang Kai-shek to receive the Japanese surrender in the North, while Lord Louis Mountbatten would receive the surrender in the South. The Allies agreed that France was the rightful owner of French Indochina, but because France was critically weakened as a result of the German occupation, a British-Indian force was installed in order to help the French Provisional Government in re-establishing control over their former colonial possession.
After Japan surrendered when Emperor Hirohito announced the capitulation on 16 August, Mountbatten, Supreme Allied Commander of the Southeast Asia Command, was to form an Allied Commission to go to Saigon and a military force consisting of an infantry division that was to be designated as the Allied Land Forces French Indochina (ALFFIC). It was tasked to ensure civil order in the area surrounding Saigon, to enforce the Japanese surrender, and to render humanitarian assistance to Allied prisoners of war and internees.The concern of the Allies' Far Eastern Commission was primarily with winding down the Supreme Headquarters of the Imperial Japanese Army Southeast Asia and rendering humanitarian assistance to prisoners of war. Major-General Douglas Gracey was appointed to head the Commission and the 80th Brigade, commanded by Brigadier D.E. Taunton, of his 20th Indian Division was the ALFFIC which followed him to Vietnam. In late August 1945, British occupying forces were ready to depart for various Southeast Asian destinations, and some were already on their way, when General Douglas MacArthur caused an uproar at the Southeast Asia Command by forbidding reoccupation until he had personally received the Japanese surrender in Tokyo, which was actually set for 28 August, but a typhoon caused the ceremony to be postponed until 2 September.
There was also chaos in Indochina—the Japanese had conducted a coup d’erat against the French in March 1945 and successfully dismantled their control of Indochina. The Japanese then installed and created a new Empire of Vietnam under Bao Dai hoping to forestall a potential invasion by the Allies. MacArthur's order had enormous consequences because the delay in the arrival of Allied troops enabled revolutionary groups to fill the power vacuums that had existed in Southeast Asia since the announcement of the Japanese capitulation on 15 August. In Indochina Japanese garrisons officially handed control to Bảo Đại in the North and the United Party in the South. This, however, allowed nationalist groups to take over public buildings in most of the major cities. The Communists, who exercised complete control over the Viet Minh, the nationalist alliance founded by Ho Chi Minh in 1941, were thus presented with a power vacuum. The August Revolution commenced forcing Bảo Đại to abdicate in favor of Viet Minh. In Hanoi and Saigon, they rushed to seize the seats of government, by killing or intimidating their rivals. The Japanese did not oppose their takeover as they were reluctant to let the French retake control of their colony. Ho Chi Minh proclaimed Vietnam’s independence on 2 September 1945.
The Allies, including the United States, stated that the French had sovereignty over Indochina, with America in favor of the return of Indochina to the French, but there was no official American animosity towards the Communist-led Viet Minh. MacArthur finally had his ceremony on board the battleship USS Missouri on 2 September, and three days later the first Allied medical rescue teams parachuted into the prisoner of war camps. During the following days a small advance party of support personnel and infantry escort from Gracey's force arrived in Saigon to check on conditions and report back; on the 11th a brigade was flown in from Hawk Field in Burma via Bangkok. When these advance Allied units landed in Saigon they found themselves in a bizarre position of being welcomed and guarded by fully armed Japanese and Viet Minh soldiers. The reason these soldiers were armed was because six months earlier (9 March) they disarmed and interned the French, for the Japanese feared an American landing in Indochina after the fall of Manila and did not trust the French.
Upon Gracey's arrival on 13 September to receive the surrender of Japanese forces, he immediately realized the seriousness of the situation in the country. Saigon's administrative services had collapsed, and a loosely controlled Viet Minh-led group had seized power. In addition, since the Japanese were still fully armed, the Allies feared that they would be capable of undermining the Allied position. Furthermore, Gracey had poor communications with his higher headquarters in Burma because his American signal detachment was abruptly withdrawn by the U.S. government for political reasons; it was a loss that could not be rectified for several weeks. Gracey wrote that unless something were done quickly, the state of anarchy would worsen. This situation was worsened by the Viet Minh's lack of strong control over some of their allied groups. Because of this, the French were able to persuade Gracey (in a move which exceeded the authority of his orders from Mountbatten) to rearm local colonial infantry regiments who were being held as prisoners of war.
Gracey allowed about 1,000 former French prisoners of war to be rearmed. They, with the arrival of the newly formed 5th Colonial Infantry Regiment commandos, would then be capable of evicting the Viet Minh from what hold they had on the Saigon administration. Gracey saw this as the quickest way to allow the French to reassert their authority in Indochina while allowing him to proceed in disarming and repatriating the Japanese.
Gracey faced another problem in his relations with Mountbatten. One example of this occurred on Gracey's arrival in September. He drew up a proclamation that declared martial law and stated that he was responsible for law and order throughout Indochina south of the 16th parallel. Mountbatten, in turn, made an issue of this, claiming that Gracey was responsible for public security in key areas only. The proclamation was published on 21 September and, although Mountbatten disagreed with its wording, the Chiefs of Staff and the Foreign Office supported Gracey. During the following days, Gracey gradually eased the Viet Minh grip on Saigon, replacing their guards in vital points with his own troops which were then turned over to French troops. This procedure was adopted because the Viet Minh would not have relinquished their positions directly to the French. By 23 September, most of Saigon was back in French hands, with less than half a dozen vital positions in Viet Minh control. The French subsequently regained total control of Saigon. On that day, former French prisoners of war who had been reinstated into the army together with troops from the 5th RIC ejected the Viet Minh in a coup in which two French soldiers were killed.
That same day, the local French population, jubilant at the restoration of the city, lost restraint, descending into rioting against the native population. This led to the events of 24-25 September, when a Vietnamese mob (alleged to be the Bin Xuyen, but later found to be Trotskyists), entered the Cité Hérault district of Saigon, lynching 150 French civilians while abducting a similar number - who later also perished. At the same time, the Viet Minh set up road blocks around Saigon, shooting Frenchmen who attempted to leave and accidentally killing OSS agent A. Peter Dewey, the first American to die in Vietnam. Elsewhere on the 25th, the Viet Minh attacked and set fire to the city's central market area, while another group attacked Tan Son Nhut Airfield. The airfield attack was repelled by the Gurkhas, where one British soldier was killed along with half a dozen Viet Minh. The British now had a war on their hands, something which Mountbatten had sought to avoid. For the next few days, parties of armed Viet Minh clashed with British patrols, the Viet Minh suffering mounting losses with each encounter. The British soldiers were experienced troops who had just recently finished battling the Japanese; many officers and soldiers had also experienced internal security and guerrilla warfare in India and the North West Frontier. In contrast the Viet Minh were still learning how to fight a war.
In early October, Gracey held talks with the Viet Minh and a truce was agreed upon. On the 5th, General Philippe Leclerc, the senior French commander, arrived in Saigon where he and his troops were placed under Gracey's command. However, on 10 October, a state of semi-peace with the Viet Minh was broken by an unprovoked attack on a small British engineering party which was inspecting the water lines near Tan Son Nhut Airfield. Most of the engineering party were killed or wounded. Gracey accepted the fact that the level of insurrection was such that he would first have to pacify key areas before he could repatriate the Japanese. It was at this time that his small force had been strengthened by the arrival of his second infantry brigade, the 32nd, under Brigadier E.C.V. Woodford. Gracey deployed the 32nd Brigade into Saigon's northern suburbs. Once in this area the Viet Minh fell back before this force, which included armored car support from the Indian 16th Light Cavalry.
Aerial reconnaissance by Spitfires revealed that the roads approaching Saigon were blocked: the Viet Minh were attempting to strangle the city. On 13 October, Tan Son Nhut Airfield came under attack again by the Viet Minh; their commandos and sappers were able this time to come within 275m of the control tower. They were also at the doors of the radio station before the attack was blunted by Indian and Japanese soldiers. As the Viet Minh fell back from the airfield, the Japanese were ordered to pursue them until nightfall, when contact was broken. By mid-October, 307 Viet Minh had been killed by British/Indian troops and 225 were killed by Japanese troops, including the new body count of 80 more Viet Minh at Da Lat. On one occasion, the Japanese repulsed an attack on their headquarters at Pau Lam, killing 100 Viet Minh. British, French, and Japanese casualties were small by comparison. On the 17th, the third brigade, the 100th, commanded by Brigadier C.H.B. Rodham, arrived in Indochina.
For his part, Millner would recall on 23 November 1998 of Operation Mogodon (aka Andy McGarry) that ‘we acted as part of the occupying forces. Duties were divided between guard ship duties on an L.S.I (Landing Ship Infantry) at the mouth of the River Saigon and setting up the naval radio station in the former naval HQ of the French in Saigon. During our time there the Amanite population aware that the French would be returning to claim their colony formed guerrilla groups with the backing of Communists in the north of French Indo China. As they became more active difficulties increased, and I recall taking part in a not too unsuccessful operation to ascertain the situation north of the city using river craft. In August or September the first of the French troops arrived and Waveney sailed for Borneo with part of NP2422. The remainder - of which I was one - were left in Saigon to prepare for subsequent evacuation. Equipment including radio trucks loaded onto an L.C.T (Landing Craft Tank) and we sailed for Singapore.’
Millner was with Sultan I at Singapore from 3 October 1945, and was then with Sultan II at Kranji from 16 January 1946. He would recalled that ‘in Singapore on the Isle of Blaki Mati with the task of reinstating the naval radio base which had lain abandoned since Japanese occupation. Having rebuilt it we then manned it.’ Millner was with Terror at Singapore from 15 May 1946, and was then due for posting home. ‘Those due for release including myself took passage on a freighter which was in the process of converting back to Marchant Navy use.’ Millner was with Pembroke from 17 July 1946, and was eventually released from service on 15 November 1946.
The group is supplied with colour photocopies of both his service records and the same of his autobiographical letter of 23 November 1998, this being written in order to claim his Naval General Service Medal with the South East Asia 1945-46 clasp.