Lionel Bond

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Sir Lionel Vivian Bond
18841961
Lieutenant-General Lionel Vivian Bond
Place of death Flag of England
Allegiance British Army
Rank Lieutenant-General
Unit Royal Engineers
Commands held Chief Engineer, Aldershot Command
Commanding Officer, Chatham Area
Commandant, Royal School of Military Engineering
Inspector of Royal Engineers, War Office
General Officer Commanding Malaya
Battles/wars Zakka Khel and Mohmand, India (1908)
Mesopotamia, World War I
World War II
Awards KBE,CB

Lieutenant-General Sir Lionel Vivian Bond, KBE,CB, (1884-1961) began his lifelong career as a Royal Engineers soldier in 1903. He first saw action in military operations in Zakka Khel and Mohmand expeditions, India in 1908. He also fought in Mesopotamia during World War I. Bond became General Officer Commanding Chatham Area, Commandant of School of Military Engineering and Inspector of Royal Engineers between 1935 and 1939. During World War II, He took over Sir William Dobbie as General Officer Commanding Malaya on July 1939, ending his term on 29 April 1941. He retired from active military soon after, and died in 1961.

Contents

[edit] Family

Son of Sir Major-General Francis George Bond (1856 -1930), and brother of Major-General Richard Lawrence Bond (1890-1979)

[edit] Defence of Singapore

Bond was aware that his predecessor, Sir William Dobbie had made an assessment on the war situation in Malaya, and was convinced with his findings that the Japanese would attempt to seize Singapore by attacking Malaya from the north through Siam. With only a small number of British force in his command, he knew he could not undertake the defence of the entire Malayan Peninsula. Thus in early 1939, Bond decided on the strategy of close defence of Southern Johore, and the Singapore island.[1]

[edit] Quotes

"The United States Fleet is the most powerful factor deterring the activity of an enemy of Britain in the Pacific area."[2]

[edit] Military career

1934 - 1935 Chief Engineer, Aldershot Command
1935 - 1938 Commanding Officer, Chatham Area
1938 - 1939 Commandant, Royal School of Military Engineering
1938 - 1939 Inspector of Royal Engineers, War Office
1939 - 1941 General Officer Commanding Malaya

[edit] Controversy

In 1922, Bond published a literary attack on Captain Liddell Hart's new theories on tank warfare, stigmatising them as "flapdoodle of the most misleading kind".[3][4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Kirby, Stanley Woodburn (1971) Singapore: the chain of disaster. London: Cassell.
  2. ^ Matsuoka Home With a Head, Time magazine, 5 May 1941
  3. ^ Lee, Cecil (1994) Sunset of the Raj: fall of Singapore, 1942. Edinburgh: Pentland Press.
  4. ^ 'The tactical theories of Captain Liddell Hart (a criticism)' by Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel L V Bond, in The Royal Engineers Journal, written in reply to article by Liddell Hart, entitled 'A study of the new French infantry regulations' in The Royal Engineers Journal, 1922 May - with papers relating to Liddell Hart's rely to criticisms, including proof copy of reply, published as 'Colonel Bond's criticisms (a reply) by Liddell Hart in The Royal Engineers Journal, November 1922, and of 'Captain Liddell Hart and Lieut-Col Bond, a summary and a judgment' by Col John Frederick Charles Fuler in The Royal Engineers Journal, March 1923.
    Source: Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives (ref. no: LIDDEL: 7/1922/9-20 1922-1924)

[edit] Further reading

  • Out-generalled, Outwitted, and Outfought: Generals Percival and Bennett in Malaya, 1941–42 / Lieutenant General John Coates (Retd), Australian Army Journal, Vol II, No. 1 (Winter 2004). pp. 201-214.