Roskill writes in the
War at Sea, Vol. II that: Admiral
Somerville arrived at Colombo on the 26th of [March 1942], and he then took over command of the Eastern Fleet from Admiral Layton. His fleet consisted of the two large carriers
Indomitable and
Formidable, the small carrier , the battleships Warspite (recently returned from repairing battle damage received off Crete in America), Resolution, Ramillies, Royal Sovereign and Revenge, two heavy and five light cruisers (including the Dutch Heemskerck), sixteen destroyers and seven submarines. On 31 March Somerville decided to divide the Fleet into two: Force A and Force B.
Force A consisted of the battleship , the aircraft carriers , and , and three cruisers.
Force B was based around the slow
Revenge-class battleships of the
3rd Battle Squadron, under Vice-Admiral
Algernon Willis. Neither individually nor together could the two Eastern Fleet forces challenge a determined Japanese naval assault. When Admiral Somerville inspected the base at
Trincomalee, its deficiencies were clear to him. He found the port inadequate, vulnerable to a determined attack, and open to spying. An isolated island base with a safe, deep anchorage in a suitably strategic position was required.
Addu Atoll, southernmost of the
Maldives in the Indian Ocean, 600 miles southwest of Ceylon, met the requirements and it was secretly developed as a fleet anchorage. Following the
Japanese capture of the
Andaman Islands, the main elements of the Fleet retreated to Addu Atoll. On 7 April Somerville was given discretion by the Admiralty to send the slow
Revenge-class battleships of
Force B all the way back to
Kilindini in
East Africa, relatively safe from Japanese attack. The
Indian Ocean raid by
Chuichi Nagumo cost the Fleet the carrier
Hermes, the cruisers and , the Australian destroyer , and two tankers. Beyond the withdrawal of Force B, the Admiralty warned that Colombo could not be used for the present. Somerville kept Force A in Indian waters "to be ready to deal with any attempt by the enemy to command those waters with light forces only." Later, the fleet in the Indian Ocean was then gradually reduced to little more than a convoy escort force as other commitments called for the more modern, powerful ships. In May 1942, the Eastern Fleet supported the
invasion of Madagascar,
Operation Ironclad. It was aimed at thwarting any attempt by Japanese vessels to use naval bases on the Vichy French controlled territory. During the invasion, vessels of the Eastern Fleet were confronted by vessels of the
French Navy and submarines of the Imperial Japanese Navy. , Commander-in-Chief Eastern Fleet, in Colombo,
British Ceylon, 17 July 1944 From October 1943, the Eastern Fleet was the maritime component of
South East Asia Command, including responsibilities beyond the SEAC area. The fleet reached full operational strength again by 1944. On 22 November 1944 the Eastern Fleet was split into the
British Pacific Fleet, receiving the majority of the ships, and the remnant, which became known as the East Indies Fleet. Apart from the Eastern Fleet battle forces, it also included a submarine force, to hinder Japan from using sea lanes between Burma and Singapore; and a large supporting escort force, responsible for protecting convoy roues between
Suez (
Red Sea) and
India, and between the
Cape of Good Hope and India. The Eastern Fleet included, from time to time, as well as British warships, a number of warships from the British Dominions of Australia and New Zealand as well as other Allied nations, such as the
French battleship Richelieu, other ships from the
Free French Naval Forces, the Netherlands, and the United States. ==Allied Indian Ocean strikes==