HMAS Yarra and Operation MARMALADE

by
Petty Officer Peter Cannon

During 1941 a number of Australian ships were serving overseas under British Admiralty control, including the escort sloop HMAS Yarra under Commander Wilfred Hastings Harrington RAN. In August 1941, Britain and the Soviet Union undertook a joint invasion and occupation of Iran, to amongst other things, secure existing British oil interests vital to the Empire’s capacity to remain in the war.

The Persian Gulf Division of the Royal Navy was required to land Indian Army troops in three separate operations at dawn on 25 August 1941, with the primary object being to secure the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company refinery on Abadan Island in the Shatt-el Arab River; the waterway forming part of the frontier between Iran and Iraq. The Iranian naval base upstream at Khorramshahr could pose a serious threat to both the landings and the safety of the refinery, so it needed to be captured before the Iranians could respond to the British assault on Abadan. This would be the responsibility of Commander Ughtred James RN in the sloop HMS Falmouth with HMAS Yarra under his command in an operation code-named MARMALADE. The third landing would occur at the Persian Gulf port of Bandar Shahpur where the Australian manned armed merchant cruiser HMS Kanimbla would spearhead the capture of the port and sheltering Axis shipping.

Yarra sailed from Karachi for service in the Persian Gulf on 12 April 1941 with a ship’s company of nine officers and 129 ratings. Yarra was an efficient and well drilled ship but after nearly four months serving through the Iraqi summer and with a poor diet, the crew was exhausted and had suffered high rates of sickness including malaria. Yarra had been transiting the Strait of Hormuz on passage to Bombay in India for rest and refit when recalled for the Iranian operation.

The town of Khorramshahr lies on the western bank of the Karun River as it enters the Shatt-el Arab through the tributary of the Haffar Channel and is 45 miles from the Persian Gulf. The naval depot was on the opposite side of the channel and the primary base of the small Iranian navy. Expected to be present alongside at Khorramshahr were the 950 ton sloop Babr, two 331 ton gunboats, depot ship Ivy, tug Neyrou, as well as around 1000 naval personnel. Yarra would embark a platoon of Indian soldiers while Falmouth would carry two platoons from C Company of the 3rd Battalion, 10th Baluch Regiment. The requisitioned tug Souriya was also attached to the force carrying a Royal Indian Navy (RIN) boarding party and crewed by sailors from Yarra. All vessels would sail from the Iraqi river port of Basra down the Shat-el Arab while two separate Indian army formations approached the town from the north to engage an estimated 3000 defending soldiers.

Yarra sailed from Basra at 00:56 to lead Falmouth and Souriya down river but Falmouth immediately went aground with a falling tide and could not be immediately floated off. Harrington continued while Falmouth languished on their mud bank for the next 2¼ hours.

Shatt-el Arab Chart. (Peter Cannon)
Shatt-el Arab Chart. (Peter Cannon)

Yarra arrived off Khorramshahr 04:08 and lay off the entrance to the Haffar Channel, the waterway running off the Shatt al-Arab in north easterly direction. The naval base covered a 600 yard frontage of the channel on the eastern bank where five ‘T’ jetties provided berthing for Iranian vessels. The first ship alongside leading up the channel was the sloop Babr with the tug Neyrou ahead of her then the depot ship Ivy followed by the two gunboats Charogh and Simorgh lying alongside one another.

Yarra was to board and capture the two gunboats while Falmouth secured Babr, if at all possible; capturing ships intact and minimising casualties being the aim. But as Harrington was now unsupported, he decided to destroy Babr during his approach into Khorramshahr before she had a chance to react to the assault. Harrington had stopped behind a British cargo ship, the Barala, anchored midstream in order to conceal his ship from the base while waiting for the Abadan assault to go in; preserving the element of surprise at the oil refinery being of more concern than the execution of his own assault.

The first troops went ashore at Abadan at 04:10. The British sloop HMS Shoreham opened fire three minutes later on Babr’s sister ship Palang lying alongside the refinery and immediately set her on fire. The gunfire, only about 8 miles distant, could clearly be seen and heard from Yarra’s bridge and at this point Harrington ordered the ship underway. As Babr came into view off Yarra’s port bow it became apparent that there need not have been any concern at achieving surprise as the barracks were deserted. A similar state of preparedness prevailed aboard the Iranian warships as most of their crews were ashore on overnight leave.

Yarra picked up speed, cleared Barala, and approached Babr. The range was so short that when the Rangefinder-Director crew attempted to open fire they found that the fire control system’s safety depression cut off would not allow the electrical firing circuits to close. Yarra’s crew switched into local control and individual gun captains directed their weapons over open sights. No. 2 gun under Leading Seaman Ronald Taylor was the first to engage. In keeping with his plan of making a stunning example of Babr, Harrington fired ten salvos into the Iranian ship before he ordered the forward guns to cease fire.

Babr was burning from her forward superstructure all the way aft and the fires soon touched off her after magazine; the force of the explosion blowing a hole eight feet in diameter in the bottom of the ship and she immediately sank at her moorings. Harrington now brought his ship slowly around to port to enter the Haffar Channel at 04:25 and proceed alongside the two gunboats to take them by boarding.

Yarra approached the two gunboats, Charogh, and Simorgh, and prepared to board them but the Iranian sailors managed to man their weapons. Their two 3-inch guns were mounted side by side on the forecastle; the port weapons now being trained in the direction of the oncoming Australians in addition to their two single 37mm automatic anti-aircraft guns aft. The Iranians were yet to open fire, with the exception of a few rifles, when Harrington took any such opportunity away. His gunners swept the decks of both gunboats with a hail of heavy machine gun and small arms fire. Meanwhile the Australian boarding and Baluch landing parties, augmented by members of the 4-inch gun crews, poured .303 Bren, Lewis and rifle fire at the remainder of the gunboat’s upper decks. Predictably, all incoming fire ceased. As Harrington manoeuvred Yarra alongside the outboard gunboat, the decks of both vessels were completely clear of personnel although some stray bullets from ashore were still flying over the forecastle.

Yarra’s starboard bow nudged alongside the outboard gunboat at 04:50, No.1 gun’s crew grappling and making fast before sailors ran out the brows that had been pre-positioned on the forecastle for boarding the enemy ships. Lieutenant Francis Smith RANR led the boarding party, comprised of cooks, officer’s stewards and stokers along with No.1 gun’s crew, over the side to board the first gunboat before continuing on to take the inboard vessel.

The Australian sailors immediately secured the upper deck doors and hatches on both gunboats. Luckily for all concerned, whatever fight the enemy had possessed now evaporated as barked orders aided by a few rifle shots fired into the darkness below was enough to secure their surrender. While the boarding was underway, a bus load of Iranians rounded a corner on the waterfront heading towards the action. Instead of being reinforcements, they turned out to be a group of sailors returning from leave but were encouraged to promptly swing around another corner and retire by Australian automatic weapon fire. Soon about 60 Iranian sailors were secured on Yarra’s quarterdeck under armed guard.

At 04:59, only nine minutes after Yarra had secured to the outboard gunboat, silence temporarily fell across the Khorramshahr naval base and Harrington considered his next move. Falmouth had been refloated at 03:15 and was at that moment making her way at speed towards Khorramshahr, no doubt her captain and crew a little embarrassed by their experience and keen to get into the action. Harrington received a signal that Falmouth was on her way and decided not to land his Baluch No.13 Platoon to assault the barracks until she arrived with the remainder of C Company. It was thought that the sight of a solitary platoon of soldiers landing ashore may be enough to encourage the numerous defenders to fight back. Falmouth finally turned into the channel at 05:20 and secured alongside the deserted Ivy before landing Nos.14 and 15 Platoons, soon joined by the troops from Yarra.

Having had to await Falmouth’s arrival and follow her alongside, Souriya, under the command of Lieutenant Noel Anderson RANVR, was manoeuvring alongside a barge tied up outboard of Neyrou when the Iranian tug’s crew opened fire with rifles. The Australian and Indian sailors returned fire with small arms but Souriya overshot the tug on her first attempt at grappling after Anderson was hit in the right forearm. Only Sub Lieutenant Nilakanta Krishnan RIN, of HMIS Investigator, had managed to get aboard the barge and was exposed under heavy fire as Anderson recovered to get back alongside and support him. By the time Souriya was secured and the remainder of the RIN boarding party had gone over the side, Krishnan had already fought his way onto the tug and wounded two Iranians in the process. Krishnan and his sailors then exchanged gunfire with the Iranian crew above and below decks at point blank range before isolating and flushing them out to secure the tug. It appears that one Indian and four Iranian sailors were wounded aboard Neyrou while the tug’s skipper died of his wounds after a shootout with the intrepid sub-lieutenant. Another 20 prisoners were taken aboard Souriya and later transferred to Yarra. The army went on to secure both the town of Khorramshahr and the naval base with minimal resistance and Yarra sailed that afternoon for the Strait of Hormuz to capture an Italian merchant vessel in the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas, rounding out her involvement in Operation COUNTENANCE. She was finally able to return to India and to be taken in hand for a well deserved refit in Bombay on 17 September while her crew was billeted ashore to a rest camp.

Bibliography

  • AWM (Australian War Memorial) 78, Item 374/1, ‘HMAS Yarra: Reports of Proceedings (War Diary), May, June, July, August and September 1941’.
  • AWM78, Item 374/1, ‘HMAS Yarra: Reports of Proceedings (War Diary), Operations at Khorramshahr - 25 August 1941 and Report on Yarra’s Movements in Operation MARMALADE’.
  • AWM Private Record, MSS1581 Taylor, Ron (Leading Seaman, b: 1918 d: 1942), Swinden, Greg, Lieutenant RAN, Their Finest Hour, The Story of Leading Seaman Ron Taylor and the loss of HMAS Yarra.
  • NAA (National Archives of Australia): B6121, Item 55E, ‘Persian Gulf Operations (Operation COUNTENANCE) - Report of Senior Naval Officer’.
  • TNA (The National Archives UK): PRO ADM 199/410, ‘Persian Gulf and Aden Squadrons: War Diaries, Persian Gulf Division War Diary August 1941’.
  • Interview: Frank Glover (ex-HMAS Yarra (II)), North Manly, 2 July 2008.
  • Collins, DJE, Official History of the Indian Armed Forces in the Second World War, The Royal Indian Navy, Combined Inter-Services Historical Section (India-Pakistan), 1964.
  • Pal, Dharm, Official History of the Indian Armed Forces in the Second World War, Campaign in Western Asia, Combined Inter-Services Historical Section (India-Pakistan), 1957.
  • Parry, AF, HMAS Yarra 1936-1942: The Story of a Gallant Sloop, The Naval Historical Society of Australia, Sydney, 1980.

Sea Power Centre - Australia

Sea Power Centre - Australia
Department of Defence
Canberra ACT 2600
seapower.centre@defence.gov.au