In early May 1941, the Commander-in-Chief directed forces to support the pursuit of
Pinguin, the German raider that eventually sank after the
action of 8 May 1941 against . On 7 December, cruisers on the station included the
heavy cruisers HMS
Cornwall, , and ; the
light cruisers , , , , and (some sources also place the heavy cruiser as being on station on that date, while others report her being under refit and repair in the UK between early November 1941 & May 1942), and six
armed merchant cruisers. Also assigned to the station was
814 Naval Air Squadron at
China Bay, Ceylon, which unit was at that time equipped with
Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers.
Japanese threats, led to the East Indies Station merging with the
China Station in December 1941, to form the
Eastern Fleet. Later the Eastern Fleet became the East Indies Fleet. In 1952, after the Second World War ended, the East Indies Fleet became the
Far East Fleet. A separate Commander-in-Chief for the East Indies was reappointed. During the 1950s, the task for Royal Navy vessels in the East Indies "..was to deliver fighting power in support of British foreign policy, be that in major warfighting (
Korea) or low intensity operations such as counterinsurgency (
Malaya), and to offer a British military presence in support of national policy." But disagreement over
Suez meant that the Ceylonese Government did not wish to let British naval forces use their bases in an emergency, and this policy was reaffirmed by the new government installed after the
1956 Ceylonese parliamentary election. The Navy Yard, and
Admiralty House were handed over on 15 October 1957, the flag was lowered over the shore establishment , and the next day, 16 October 1957, the last flagship, , left Trincomalee. The station was temporarily relocated to
Bahrain. The Senior Naval Officer, Persian Gulf was to become an independent commander with the title
Commodore, Arabian Seas and Persian Gulf. "At nine o'clock on the morning of 7 September 1958, 'the flag of the one-hundredth Commander in Chief of the East Indies Station, Vice Admiral Sir
Hilary Biggs, was hauled down over ,'" the Royal Navy base in Bahrain. ==Subordinate Commands==