Killing proclaimed fanatical Afghan tribesman at arm’s length from the air did not originate with the Soviets in their misadventure in the ‘80’s or with Bush’s cruise missiles or Obama’s
drones. The Brits in India had been
battling them on the famous North-West
Frontier for decades when they
decided to try to wipe out the last resistance by the raiding tribes in a strictly air campaign that began on
March 9, 1925. It was the first time the
Royal Air Force (RAF) ever conducted operations totally independent of the Army or Navy. It is also thought to be the first offensive war conducted entirely from the air.
It
went down in history or at least a footnote to history as Pink’s War in honor of the RAF officer
who commanded operations, Wing Commander
Richard Pink. Unintentionally the
name also evokes the heady days when
Britain and her far-flung empire were always represented
on maps in the color pink. In 1925 a
hell of a lot of the globe was pink.
The
British had a long and bloody history fighting the Afghans beginning
with the disastrous First Afghan War (1839-42) the ended
with an army of the British East India
Company being completely destroyed
almost to the last man—only 1 officer, a doctor, made it alive back to India. The Second
Afghan War (1878-1880) was fought largely on the North-West frontier and
was marked by more near massacres of British and Indian units. This was the war immortalized in the tales and
poems of Rudyard Kipling. Ultimately,
at great cost the British secured a recognized
border between the Emirate of
Afghanistan and India and control over Afghan foreign relations and defense
which checkmated Russian ambitions in
the so-called Great Game. In exchange the British withdrew most of their troops from Afghanistan
proper and allowed self-rule on
local matters.
A Third Afghan War erupted in 1919 when Afghanistan
decided to invade the North-West
Territories to assert and gain complete independence. Although the regular Afghan Army was ill-trained,
badly organized, under supplied,
armed mostly with a hodge-podge of obsolete weapons, and short on powder and ammunition
they could rely on up to 50,000 tribal
irregulars. These were actually fierce warriors and excellent troops who were well armed
and supplied with guns and ammunitions stolen
from the British and excellent flintlock
rifles of their own manufacture. They were highly skilled in the guerilla tactics of hit, run, and ambush and could melt into
the mountains and civilian
populations.
The
British and the Indian Army were superior in numbers and in
training. But it was recovering from years of service of many of its best units in World War I against the Germans
and Ottomans. Moral
among troops of both armies was low as they hoped to be demobilized after 4 years of service in the Great War.
The
Afghans, particularly the tribal auxiliaries, were able to inflict painful
casualties and take some smaller garrisons. They were supported by civilian insurrections in some of the
North-West Territory’s principle cities. After initial Afghan success, the British
were able to rally and even to counter
attack into Afghanistan. The RAF
provided an edge to the British by providing reconnaissance and intelligence
on enemy movements, bombing and strafing enemy units and supply lines, and even bombing the Palace in Kabul. Despite this the prospect of a lengthy war loomed and the possibility of becoming bogged down in a draining ground war of attrition.
The British had little stomach
for that prospect. Negotiations were opened with Afghan Amir Amanullah. On
August 9, 1919 a peace was
declared. The British claimed a tactical victory for holding its ground
and having the border reaffirmed. The Afghans, however, achieved their main
war aim—complete sovereignty and independence. During the
short conflict the Afghans lost about 1000 dead, but the British also paid a
heavy price—236
killed in action, 615 wounded 566 dead from cholera, and 334 dead from other
diseases and accidents.
After
the war officially ended, resistance by
Afghan tribes in the North-West Frontier continued. The British had to continue a low grade war
against them for the next five years, employing cavalry and infantry on punitive raids when their installations, police stations, civil
government offices, and military
posts were attacked or when troops
and commerce were ambushed. But one by one the tribes were subdued or pushed across the border. By
1925 only the Abdur Rahman Khel and three smaller Mahsud tribes in South Waziristan remained
defiant.
Their
stronghold was in some of the most rugged
and remote mountain terrain in the
Northwest Territory. It shared a porous border with Afghanistan to the
west where fighters could slip away for
refuge or through which volunteers from
other tribes might come in case of a prolonged or escalating conflict. On the south as British India proper and the
possibility that raid could be launched into the Raj itself. A land offensive
in such terrain would be extremely dangerous and costly. The British faced the possibility of taking a
defensive posture and enduring
periodic raiding.
But
recalling the effectiveness of the RAF in the Third Afghan War, the air officer
commanding in India, Sir Edward Ellington
conceived of an all-air operation to punish the rebels. To command he picked a veteran officer with wide experience,
Richard Pink.
Pink,
was born on November 30, 1888 in Winchester,
Hampshire, England. He was educated at the Royal Naval College, at Dartmouth,
Devon. In 1904 at the age of 16 he enlisted in the Royal Navy in 1904. He rose
quickly in the service and by 1911 was a lieutenant
in the submarine service. With the outbreak of war in 1914, Pink transferred
to the new Royal Navy Air Service,
where he trained as a pilot and was
assigned to anti-submarine duty. During the war he served with
distinction, including commanding anti-submarine units based in Midford Haven, Longside, and Pembroke.
When
the Navy Air Service was absorbed into the new RAF, Pink, a promising officer, held
various staff jobs and training commands. He was made Wing Commander—the equivalent
of Lt. Colonel in 1919.
Wing Comander Pink arrives at the forward base at Miriamshah. |
In
1923 he arrived in India to take command of the No. 2 Indian Wing consisting of the Nos. 5, 27, and 60 Squadrons. In 1925 he was tapped by Air Vice-Martial Ellington to plan and lead the all-air operation
against the Waziristan tribesman. No. 6 squadron flying Bristol F2B fighters stationed in Tank a district capital near the Wasiristan border, and 27 and 60
Squadrons stationed at a forward base at
Miramshah on the Afghan
border began operations on March 8 by dropping flyers alerting the local
population of impeding action and warning them about harboring
fighters. The next day strafing and
bombing runs against suspected insurgent formations began. Around-the-clock
night
and day bombing by deHavilland DH9A light
single engine bombers was meant less
to inflict casualties or damage
civilian villages than to completely disrupt daily life and prevent the
villages from becoming safe havens for
the tribal fighters. Inevitably,
however, there were civilian casualties and some villages were heavily
damage. Herd of goats, mainstays of
the agricultural economy were killed
or scattered.
The
campaign was, or seemed, relentless. On May 1 after 53 days tribal leaders gave up and agreed to end hostilities
and accept governance by British
approved local councils answerable to colonial
bureaucrats. None of their leaders
were arrested or prosecuted after the so-called
Honorable Peace.
A Bristol F.2b Fighter like those flown in Pink's War. |
No
one counted tribal casualties. The RAF
lost only two men and one aircraft in the operation. It was such a stunning success that it became the only action officially named
for an RAF officer. Jealous senior official in the War Office at first resisted bestowing honors
for Pink and his men of the upstart RAF,
but eventually the India General Service
Medal with the Waziristan 1925 bar
was awarded to the 46 officers and 214 enlisted men who participated in the
action. The Waziristan bar is the rarest
of all such distinctions which can
be attached to the ribbon. Pink was promoted to Group Captain “in
recognition of his services in the field of Waziristan” and several of the combat pilots received medals including
a Distinguished Service Order, three
Distinguished Service Crosses, and 5
Distinguished Flying Medals for Sergeant Pilots. 14 other men, including the two who were
killed were mentioned in the dispatches.
Pink
seemed destined for great things in
the service. He was mentioned as a possible
future Chief of Air Services. But he contracted cancer and died on March 7, 1932 in England at Princess Mary's RAF Hospital, RAF Halton. He was just 43 years old.
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