Force 140 (later renamed
Arkforce after its commander, Brigadier
Robert Arkwright) consisted of a parachute brigade from Italy and an armoured brigade (without tanks) from Egypt. They were to land in Greece (
Operation Manna) to 'show the flag' in
Athens, disarm the Greek security battalions established under German occupation, open up ports for relief supplies, and generally to act as arbitrators in local disputes. Operation Manna began on 12 October with parachute landings while Arkforce began landing from
Royal Navy cruisers at
Piraeus on 16 October 66th LAA Regiment loaded its 3-tonners and REME workshop aboard the
Norman Castle and 25 3-ton water trucks on a
Landing Ship Tank (LST), while RHQ and the bulk of the personnel embarked on
HMS Ajax. The follow-up vehicles went aboard the
Fort Frobisher and personnel on HM Transport
Worcestershire. The Royal Signals maintenance detachment left the regiment and was posted to the signals training depot. ''. HMS
Ajax arrived at
Piraeus on 15 October and landed the troops next day; RHQ was established at a flour mill in the town. Next day was spent unloading the vehicles from the
Norman Castle. 66th LAA Regiment brought with it the stores and rations for
2nd Parachute Brigade ('Pompforce'), and the elements of a complete
Bailey bridge. The regiment dismounted the water tanks from the converted 3-tonners, which went up-country to Pompforce's base at
Skiathos for the reoccupation of
Salonika. Meanwhile, the rest of the regiment continued unloading vehicles at Piraeus and established battery HQs in
Faliron, while the second-in-command, Maj C.J. Bateman, took control of the Greek civil transport pool. During November the rest of the men and vehicles arrived from Italy and the Middle East, and the regiment carried out general transport duties for Arkforce around Athens and for relief supplies to the interior. However, in December the former partisans of the
Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) refused to be disarmed and clashes broke out with their rivals of the
National Republican Greek League (EDES), the so-called
Dekemvriana. The movement of relief supplies was stopped by a general strike. On 5 December Arkforce was ordered to clear ELAS out of the Athens–Piraeus area. 66th LAA Regiment was left in the dark, relying on
BBC broadcasts for information, but increased its guards and sentries and prepared platoons of 30 lorries for troop movements, one for duty with 23rd Armd Bde and one taking reinforcements from Piraeus docks into Athens. Next day
139 Infantry Bde HQ arrived and took control of the Piraeus and Faliron area, including 66th LAA Rgt, which was ordered to find foot patrols as well as its transport duties, which included sending lorries to collect British detachments cut off in the city and supplying rations to the Greek Police and National Guard. The REME workshop was brought in from the garage in Athens here it had been based and was now in the heart of ELAS activity. Two drivers were captured by ELAS but persuaded their captors that they were carrying food and were released; two other lorries with their drivers were cut off in Piraeus until the end of the month, and an ambulance driver was wounded in Athens. There were further casualties on the night of 7/8 December, and patrols were stepped up between Faliron and
Kalamaki airfield. ELAS positions overlooked the main road from Faliron to Athens, so convoys could only travel at night under tank escort, and there were patrol skirmishes between 66th LAA Rgt and ELAS. Bitter fighting broke out in the centre of Athens, and on 12/13 December ELAS attacked 23 Armd Bde's HQ, where Capt J.R.G. Holland-Smith of 66th LAA Rgt was killed and a number of gunners were captured. Brig Arkwright later commended the regiment for the 'gallant show' they put on in that fight, and also for 'running the gauntlet' with the supply convoys. 66th LAA Regiment was made responsible for coordinating the ground defences of the base at Faliron. The Supreme Allied Commander designate, Gen
Harold Alexander and the British Minister,
Harold Macmillan, flew into Kalamaki and were taken by armoured car to Athens, where they found the British force 'beleaguered' in the city with only three days' ammunition. However, the arrival of reinforcements by air and sea allowed the force to keep open the lines of communication to the airfield and port, while the reinforcing infantry ('Blockforce') cleared the Piraeus peninsula. Infantry units took over the defence of Faliron under Lt-Col Grandage's command ('Granforce') and on the night of 17/18 December operations began to advance up the road and link up the British positions. Daily convoys to Athens resumed and the regiment's lorries cleared the backlog of supplies that had piled up at the docks and airfield. ELAS began withdrawing from central Athens on 27 December, and on 29 December all the drivers who had brought the lorries from Egypt for 66th LAA Rgt were sent back there guarding some 1500–2000 ELAS
Prisoners of War. The British forces in Athens began an offensive against ELAS on 2 January 1945, during which 66th LAA Regiment suffered minor casualties to men and vehicles from artillery fire. ELAS retreated from Athens on 5 January, and the regiment could reduce its patrols, although fighting went on in other parts of the country. The supply convoys ranged widely in support of these operations and of the
Royal Engineers' bridging activity. ELAS released its prisoners and they returned to the regiment. On 13 February 1945 the regiment was warned that it was to be disbanded and reformed as general transport (GT) companies of the
Royal Army Service Corps (RASC). This was completed on 15 April 1945, when the regiment became 769 and 770 (GT) Companies RASC. ==Footnotes==