Famous Ulster Generals
General Claude Auchinleck 1884-1981
Few
A cautious but courageous man, he paid the price of standing up to Sir Winston Churchill rather than sacrificing his forces in
Sacked for refusing to attack until his army was ready, he spent almost a year in the military wilderness while his successor did exactly what he had planned to do. . wait while the ground was prepared for an assault.
Many years later Churchill acknowledged his poor judgement in standing down a man who historians have credited with effectively stopping German commander Rommel from sweeping across north Africa and into
The Auk, as he was affectionately known, merely shrugged and accepted the apology with typical good grace.
The Auchinleck family had crossed to
Claude was born in 1884 while his father, an officer with the Royal Horse Artillery, was stationed at
He attended
An honest and straight-talking man - qualities which sometimes got him noticed by his superiors for the wrong reasons - he was to see action against the Turks in the
For a time, during the Mesopotamian campaign, he even commanded his regiment although only a captain, such was the casualty rate.
Back in
In May, 1940, he was dispatched to Norway with a force made up of British, French and Polish troops but was forced to withdraw again the following month in the face of German reinforcements.
After a brief return to
He discovered that the British equipment he was being supplied was inferior to that of the Germans facing him, particularly regarding anti-tank guns which were incapable of penetrating the panzer armour.
One tool the Auk did employ proved particular effective against the Germans, however - the Special Air Service, which operated behind enemy lines.
Among its number was the
Resisting pressure from Churchill to order an attack, Auchinleck finally launched an offensive in November, 1941, which met with initial success before having to retreat as Rommel's Afrika Korps, reinforced and better led on the ground, inflicted a series of defeats on the British.
In June, 1942, the Auk sacked the commander of the Eighth Army and took control himself. He rapidly stabilised the line and reinforced it at
With Rommel only 70 miles from
The Prime Minister flew to
Without a posting for the best part of a year, the Auk was finally assigned to
Promoted to a field marshal at the end of the war - but later refusing a peerage - he was given the difficult task of creating the new Indian and
Lord Mountbatten, however, called for his resignation in 1947 amid claims by Indians that he was favouring the Pakistanis.
Auchinleck finally retired from public service in 1968 and passed away in 1981.