Dan Snow's History Hit - Ian Fleming's Commandos
Episode Date: November 25, 2024Amid the chilling tension of the Cold War, Ian Fleming captured readers with his character James Bond, whose missions were based on his experiences with the elite and secretive 30 Assault Unit in W...WII. 30AU was established in 1942 by British Naval Intelligence and was overseen by Fleming. Their role was to capture secret German documents, weapon blueprints, and communication codes from behind enemy lines. They often targeted command centres, labs, and bunkers to recover valuable information and technology before they could be destroyed by retreating Axis forces.Dan is joined on the podcast by historian Dave Roberts to uncover some of the true stories behind the plots of From Russia with Love, Moonraker and The Man With the Golden Gun, and the array of real commandos who inspired Fleming's Bond.Produced by Mariana Des Forges and edited by Dougal Patmore.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.
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1956. The world is split between two mighty power blocks. Nuclear-armed hair triggers.
Rivalry that seeps into every aspect of life. That was the year that a British author published
a novel. A novel that captured some of the excitement and subterfuge of the era.
A tale of deception, seduction, and deadly espionage. That novelist's name was Ian Fleming.
His book was called From Russia With Love. The main character was an MI6 operative called Bond,
James Bond.
Our hero faces a sinister conspiracy orchestrated by SMERSH,
the Soviet Union's ruthless counterintelligence agency.
Determined to eliminate Bond and embarrass British intelligence,
SMERSH offers up an irresistible bait.
The promise of the coveted Soviet cipher machine,
Spectre.
It was dangled in front of Bond, of course,
by an enigmatic, beautiful defector,
Tatyana Romanova.
Taking the bait,
Bond embarks on a perilous mission to Istanbul,
a city of shadows,
an arena for East-West competition.
Fleming writes,
That glitter in M's eyes, thought Bond.
How well he knew those moments when M's cold grey eyes betrayed their excitement and their greed.
She had a last card to play and she knew it was the Ace of Trumps.
If she could come over to us, she would bring her cipher machine with her. It's the brand new spectre machine, the thing we'd give our eyes to have.
God, said Bond softly, his mind boggling at the immensity of the prize. The spectre,
the machine that would allow them to decipher the top secret traffic of all. To have that,
even if its loss was immediately discovered, and the settings
changed, or the machine taken out of service in Russian embassies and spy centres all over
the world, would be a priceless victory.
So, it's a cipher machine that could crack all top-secret Russian traffic. Well, that
all sounds pretty familiar now. It sounds exactly
like the Enigma machine, the one the Nazis used to encrypt all their messages during the Second
World War. And yet the eagle-eyed among you will have realised that 1956 was way before the whole
story of Enigma had been declassified. So how had some novelist got wind of this intensely guarded official secret?
Well, because Fleming was no ordinary novelist. He'd been a senior wartime intelligence officer,
and he seems to have based this storyline on the hunt for the German cipher machine,
the Enigma. Fleming was drawing on his experience with 30 assault units, which was a rather
unconventional group of commandos who were formed to focus on capturing German signals intelligence,
documents, blueprints, communications codes. They operated behind enemy lines, usually targeting
command centres, signals hubs, intelligence bunkers, always looking for top secret material and objects.
So folks, we've all heard the stories of this person or that person inspired Bond.
My in-laws would like to tell you that one member of their family inspired Bond, and maybe they're right.
But what is certainly true is that much of Bond is based on the exploits the men of 30 Assault Unit.
And that's because we know that Fleming was instrumental in forming that unit
and in charge of overseeing their escapades.
So today, let's talk about 30 Assault Unit.
There is no better person to tell us this astonishing story than Dave Roberts.
He's a historian.
He's the leading voice on 30 Assault Unit.
And he tells me how their DNA
is still in many of the special operations units that we still have today. You're listening to
Dan Snow's History Hit. This is the king. No black-white unity till there is first and black unity.
Never to go to war with one another again.
And lift off, and the shuttle has cleared the tower.
Dave, thank you very much for coming on the podcast.
It's a pleasure to be here, and thank you for having me.
Whose idea was this sneaky elite unit?
Fleming would love us to believe that it was his original idea, but he basically pinched it from
the Germans. The Germans, Admiral Canaris had created a sort of a special intelligence unit
for their early operations into the Balkans, particularly where this elite unit would race
ahead on motorbikes, seize headquarters,
codes, and so on. They were known as the Abwehr Commando. And Fleming, amongst others in the
British intelligence world, had come across these. But in March 1942, it's Fleming that
writes the proposal that grabs the attention. Well, in that case, let's talk about Ian Fleming.
What has war been like thus far? Was he a pre-war intelligence officer or was he a wartime recruit?
So he was a wartime recruit. He'd been headhunted by John Godfrey, Director of Naval Intelligence,
in early 1939. Prior to that, he'd been a failed stockbroker and a journalist for Reuters. He once famously
described himself as the world's worst stockbroker, despite the fact that that was the family
business. That's where they'd made all their money.
To be fair, the 1930s, the 20s and 30s have been a bit lumpy for the old stock market,
so we've got to have some sympathy with him.
Yeah, probably not the best time to be a stockbroker, but he turned out to be a better journalist and ended up covering a show trial in Moscow in the mid-30s where some British engineers were being put on trial for spying.
And that caught the attention of the Foreign Office, who then sent him back to Moscow to do a bit of fact-finding.
And that then brought into the attention of Naval Intelligence in July 1939, as obviously war is approaching and they're having to gear up for another war.
Just before we launch into the war itself, is there anything about his character or his pre-war experiences that suggested that he'd be particularly good, particularly suited to his role?
And when he was recruited, exactly what would that role be?
And when he was recruited, exactly what would that role be?
So he was recruited as personal assistant to the Director of Naval Intelligence,
which basically meant that anything that landed on the desk of the Director of Naval Intelligence,
we're going to go through Fleming first.
So he was going to be at the very heart of the British intelligence services.
Pre-war, he'd had a very chequered past.
He'd lived a bit of a playboy lifestyle. He'd been a disappointment to his mother. His father had been killed in the First World War. And he
had an elder brother, Peter, who was fairly successful as an author and a diplomat as well.
So he had something to live up to. But I wouldn't say there was anything that really sort of
singled him out as an intelligence specialist. But quite quickly, does he take to the job?
He does. And I think one of the things that he probably does have is he has an imagination.
And he has this idea that anything is worth trying. And some of the schemes, some of the
plans that he comes up with are some of the most audacious of the war.
30 Commando is probably the most successful, but he's involved with Operation Postmaster,
which is subject of ungentlemanly warfare, the Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.
He's part of that. He's involved in Operation Mincemeat.
He's involved in Golden Iron Tracer, which plans in case Gibraltar falls to the Germans if Spain comes into the war.
But probably his most audacious and flamboyant was Operation Ruthless, which is his plan to use a captured German bomber, crash land it in the channel full of commandos.
crash land it in the channel full of commandos and then when the german rescue boat comes out to rescue the downed german crew the commandos leap out jump on the boat capture the boat and
their enigma machines and code books and sail it back to the uk and what happened to that plan
unbelievably that plan made it to the point where they were about to take off but unfortunately it
was stopped by weather.
Yeah, it seems mad that it would even get across that many tables that it needed to, but it did.
Wow, I love that plan.
Okay, let's go back though.
You mentioned a couple of the famous events,
Operation Mincemeat.
People have heard a podcast about that on this feed
a few years ago for the anniversary.
Talk to me about Operation Postmaster
featured in the recent Guy Ritchie film.
Just while we're on the subject,
Fleming appears in that. What's the myth versus reality on that episode?
So as I said earlier, Fleming's at the heart of everything that's going on in the intelligence
world, whether he's working for Naval Intelligence, but he's working hand in hand with SOE, with MI6,
with MI5, all those intelligence organizations, he knows what's going on.
So it's not surprising that he appears in the film with Operation Postmaster, with Mincemeat.
He's always in the background.
He's always enabling these things to happen without perhaps necessarily being the brains behind it.
He's the one that is pushing it along.
So Operation Postmaster, it's going to
the film anyway. They send a group of cutthroat men who they can deny their existence. They're
still operating outside of the British military mainstream. They send them down to West Africa to
sabotage German U-boat support vessels. And Fleming is seen as the man pulling the strings.
Is there any truth to that or is it a great film? I love the film and I love the truth version of it.
And it's not quite the film.
The film I describe is, you know, the old Commando comic stories.
That's what the film is.
The truth is probably a little less flamboyant.
And the truth on that occasion is, did they launch that raid and disable German capabilities to operate in the Atlantic?
As far as I know, yes, that did happen and they were reasonably successful and
it did lead on to other things. And it's one of the very first operations like that. It's one of
the very first times that Britain takes this fight to the Germans, having been thoroughly
humiliated by Dunkirk. It's one of those first chances we get to really kick back.
Let's talk about, so Fleming, he's helping send out raids, special forces units down to the coast of Africa, all over the shop. He's tried to crash a load of commandos into the ocean on aircraft, which strikes me as extraordinary. Tell me about this 30 assault unit. What was his idea here?
Early 1942, it's probably one of the darkest periods of the war for Britain at that time.
America hadn't really geared up its war effort yet.
It was in the war, but it wasn't fully engaged.
Britain had suffered some humiliations with the loss of Singapore and the loss of Benghazi.
And the war in the Atlantic still wasn't going in Britain's favor,
although Blexley Park were managing to crack codes and so on.
Numbers of shipping and tons of shipping that was being sunk in the early 1942 is going up and up. And in February 1942, the Germans are introducing a new Enigma machine, a four-rotor machine,
which means that Bletchley Park will then go blind effectively on naval messages,
which could be disastrous for the battle in the Atlantic. So priority for all the intelligence agencies is this new Enigma machine, this special intelligence
as the Royal Navy called it.
So Fleming comes up with this idea, and I strongly believe that his main and sole aim
for this was to grab signals intelligence, SIGINT, Enigma codes, Enigma machines, Enigma ciphers, anything
to enable Plexiglas Park to keep reading these messages so that U-boats didn't get the upper
hand.
So March 42, he writes this proposal.
The director of Enable Intelligence, John Godfrey, agrees, pushes it forward to Joint
Intelligence Committee, which is the most senior intelligence organisation in Britain.
And at that meeting in August,
it is approved that an intelligence assault unit
will be formed with a variety of tasks,
but the main one being signals intelligence.
That just shows how important that was.
Fleming had obviously learned a lot about the war by this stage.
What did he decide to do differently, or what does he build on in terms of when he puts together this new unit?
I think one of the things he decides when this new unit comes out
is that up until this point, any signals intelligence,
any enigma things that have been captured
have almost been captured by luck
rather than by any sort of planned organisation.
And it's been done very hit and miss.
So some had been captured, obviously, from U-110 in May 40.
There'd been some raids up in Norway that had come away with some.
But he felt really strongly that one organization,
one unit specifically trained and targeted with this would be beneficial.
And Chief of Combined Operations,
Louis Manbatten, agrees with this,
as does MI6.
And via MI6, Blakesley Park see that this,
having one specially trained organisation under the command of Combined Operations,
controlled by naval intelligence,
will be the way to go forward.
And what kind of men is he looking for?
So as I said earlier, with any of these units, you tend to find that the eccentrics,
the oddballs. And interestingly, every naval officer that was recruited into 30 Commando
were reservists. They were Royal Navy volunteer reserve officers. So they were part-timers. They
weren't career naval officers. And it's a bit of a feeling
that no career navy officer wanted to go anywhere near something this odd that this was seen as
career ending possibly for a professional naval officer when it's formed in august 42 though
they choose robert rider as the initials commanding officer And he'd been the CO for the raid at St. Nazaire
and won his VC there.
So he was someone who was experienced,
had a name, could carry some clout.
And he recruits similar type men.
So he recruits another polar explorer, Quentin Riley.
And he also recruits Dunstan Curtis,
who was an MGB commander at St. Nazaire
and won a DSC at St. Nazaire.
So he starts to pull in like-minded,
slightly oddball, slightly unique characters
because this was going to be a unique,
slightly off-the-wall private army, if you like.
I'll pick you up on that.
Who's private army? I mean,
who's tasking these people? Is it Fleming? It is. So there was obviously some argument as to
who would be in ultimate control. And it's put under the control of combined operations, but
Fleming and Naval Intelligence make it very clear that they are the ones that are
choosing the targets. They are the one that are issuing the orders. And the only thing that will come from combined operations is things like
supplies and recruits and so on. But all the targets, all the planning, all that is coming
through naval intelligence and all of that is coming through Fleming himself at this moment in
time. So, okay, how does he choose to wield this private army? What are its first few missions?
So the very first time it appears is in Operation Torch, the invasion of North Africa in November
42. A small party had been detailed to assault Dieppe as part of the Dieppe parade to grab some
of this full rotor Enigma technology and code
books. As we know, D.E.P. was a disaster. The men that survived that formed the nucleus of this new
unit. But the first time they go into action is in Algiers on the 8th of November, 1942.
They are tasked with assaulting the port of Algiers, capturing the French admiralty buildings
in Algiers and finding whatever signals admiralty buildings in Algiers,
and finding whatever signals intelligence they can grab from that.
This is Lieutenant Curtis and six marines.
They are due to assault Algiers harbour on two old British destroyers,
very typical of the Saint-Nazaire-Diet type raid.
They're going to sail these two destroyers in, pull them up alongside in the port.
These US infantry are going to leap over the side,
take the port, and Curtis and his Marines
are going to go off and seize the Admiralty.
And all of this is going to happen
because the French are just going to go,
oh, it's the Americans, we'll let them in, it's fine, don't worry.
Doesn't go to plan.
The French decide that they are going to open fire
on these two destroyers.
One of the destroyers carries on into the harbour. The Americans unload, disembark,
and are very quickly rounded up. Curtis decides we're not doing this. His destroyer pulls away,
and Curtis and his marines land about six miles to the west of Algiers and decide to,
in true marine style, yomp it into Algiers themselves on foot.
You're listening to Dan Snow's History.
This is the story of 30 Assault Unit, the story behind Bond.
More coming up.
I'm Matt Lewis.
And I'm Dr. Alan Orjanaga.
And in Gone Medieval, we get into the greatest mysteries.
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Do they get a good haul of intelligence materials?
So one of the things is that Curtis refers to the excellent planning that
he was surprised at how good the planning was because they arrive in Algiers, they're directed
to Italian commissions or directed to certain targets and they do come up with a decent haul.
They walk away with a previously unknown Enigma machine used by the German Abwehr which is very
quickly got to Bletchley Park and allows them to break some traffic.
So the first operation, although it started disastrously, does create a decent enough haul for them to be, okay, this is something we need.
And it begins to get them noticed in the eyes of the planners and they start to be included
in bigger and better plans.
The next operation is that they head back to Algiers and they head back to Tunisia
as the Americans and the British
are starting to close in on Rommel's Africa Corps.
And again, it's courteous.
It's about 15 Marines this time
in a couple of Jeeps and a motorcycle.
And part of their operation,
they basically SAS style
and drive across from the American First Army
in the West, cross the German front line,
and join up with the British Eighth Army in the east, having traveled about roughly about 500
miles across desert and salt lakes. 30s commandos' role was to seize enemy intel as quickly as
possible. So that meant that they had to be on the front line or
ahead of the front line troops. So often they found themselves arriving alongside first allied
troops into a city, sometimes over the first allied troops into towns and cities, particularly
when they get to France and Germany, they're liberating villages and towns in France before
any Americans or British other troops get there. But in the desert, they didn't like keeping a low profile.
So the stories of them hurtling past British infantry
who were very gingerly digging for mines and so on.
And suddenly these two Jeeps go whizzing past,
one of them flying a huge white Ensign,
as these sailors and Jeeps described by somebody in combined operations
as authorized and armed expert looters that's how
they were described officially so yeah so they they caused a bit of a scene they then are part
of operation husky the invasion of sicily and then they're also involved in operation the operation
landing in salerno in italy so they're in the planning for every amphibious landing
that now goes on from this point onwards,
culminating in the D-Day landings where they take part.
And that role, very simply put,
that role is just to go as near to the first wave as you can,
but just with a very specific job of targeting enemy signals,
communications, equipment,
and try and get it back to Bletchley Park as soon as they can.
Yeah, and the list of targets,
the list of things they were tasked with obtaining grew and grew.
So what you find is that they basically are given a shopping list
from all the different departments.
So they've obviously got signals intelligence,
but then they need to find technology for torpedoes, radar.
They need to find technology for mines. Later radar. They need to find technology for mines.
Later on, they're tasked with hunting down the V1 sites,
rocket technology, midget submarines,
new propulsion systems, rocket scientists.
So that what happens is they get this shopping list,
which is produced in the Admiralty,
and then these teams are sent out to go and find it.
And the issue you have is not only you've got to get there
before the enemy can destroy it,
you've got to get there before the enemy can destroy it
and before your own troops can go in
and start to just basically loot, if you like.
We'll come on to another couple of case studies in a second.
But in general, were they discharging their weapons?
Are they doing a bit of fighting as well?
Or are they slipping in and slipping out and keeping their heads down?
They would try and avoid any confrontation if they could, because they were very lightly armed.
So they were riding around in Jeeps. Later on, they had some armored cars, but they were lightly
armed. Generally, they had American weapons because they often operated in the American
areas, so it was easier. But really, if they did get into any trouble, they would sort of back out
quite quickly and they became quite adept at that. But they weren't shy of getting involved
and getting stuck in. And there are certainly lots of occasions where they get involved in
the fighting. In fact, at one point, they get told off for getting involved in the fighting
when they shouldn't have been.
Well, let's come on to D-Day, the ultimate amphibious landing.
What were they doing that day?
So at the end of 1943, 30 Commandos were basically recalled to the UK in preparation for D-Day.
So it was clear then that they were going to be involved right at the heart of the planning.
And they're reorganized, they're expanded.
Prior to December 43, there'd been a maximum of sort of 50 men in the unit.
As they approach D-Day, they're expanded to nearly 200.
And the plan is that they'll land in three teams.
So one team, Pike Force, will land on Juno Beach on D-Day,-hour plus 30, so 30 minutes after the first troops land.
They land alongside the Canadians on Juno Beach.
Kurt Force will arrive on Gold Beach later that day.
And then Wall Force, the main body of the unit, will arrive on Utah Beach two days later.
So that's the plan.
And each of those units is tasked with certain targets.
So what we know as the black books were prepared with target lists
of what they were looking for, where they might find it.
And did they succeed?
So, yeah, and unbelievably,
Kurt Force and Pike Force land with no casualties at all.
That's particularly surprising, I suppose, for Pike Force,
who land alongside the Canadians.
They landed alongside the North Shore Regiment,
which was heavily hit with casualties.
But Pike Force, this small group, managed to get onto Juneau.
They get up off the beach through Saint-Aubin
and end up the day at the Chateau at Talville,
not having reached their first day target,
which was the radar station at Duve,
but certainly having made an impact through there.
One of the Marines remembers seeing one of the naval officers
landing on Juno Beach, carrying a walking stick
and being more interested in the butterflies he could find in the hedge
than actually the shells and the bullets that were whizzing past him at the time,
which gives you some idea of the caliber of men that were involved.
Eccentric, brave, inquisitive.
Yeah, yes.
Yeah, and that was one of the things he was describing.
He just seemed to be very curious all the time, apparently, this officer.
After D-Day, did they get useful intel?
They did.
So what they then do is they fan out and their targets become
Cherbourg as the main German naval base in the area.
But very quickly, once the V-1 rockets start launching on the 13th of June,
the RAF, who hadn't really been interested in this unit at all and didn't
want anything to do with it, suddenly put out a request for 30AU to start finding some of these
V1 launch sites and any relevant technology. So on the 17th of June, they find the first V1 site.
And in fact, the Air Ministry write directly to the Director of Naval Intelligence,
thanking him for 30 AU's efforts and the captures that they've managed to find in that.
So they could turn their hand to whatever was needed, really.
Speaking of which, submarine facilities. There's a famous raid that you've talked about in Brittany, isn't there?
Tell me about that.
Obviously, the ports were the main targets.
Cherbourg fell around July time, 44, and they're
then expanding out into Brittany, operating alongside American troops. They're the only
British unit really that's operating in that area. They're literally driving around trying to find
anything, picking up intel on the spot, arriving in towns and villages as the Germans are exiting
the other end, being welcomed by these French
civilians because they're the first allied troops that are in there. But there's one instance where
they get a bit of intelligence that there's a German radar station up on the north coast at
a place called Saint-Pabu. And Lieutenant Hugel is driving around with a small party of Marines,
there's about half a dozen Marines, And he comes across a funeral procession.
And they're informed that the four young men who were being buried
had just been murdered by the Germans up at Saint-Pabou.
So, Hugel, in true British style, goes,
okay, let's go and have a look.
Let's go and see what's going on.
They get close to the radar station and are told that there's roughly about
between 300 and 500 Germans in this radar station.
There's Hugel, another lieutenant, and six Marines. And again, Hugel in truberty style goes, okay, let's try something. Let's pretend that we are the lead element of a
very large force, and let's go and see if we can get these Germans to surrender. So under the cover
of a white flag, him and two Marines walk up to the main gate of
this radar station, asked to see the commandant who turns up with his officers. There's a bit of
a standoff. Some of the German officers, particularly a veteran of the Africa Corps,
don't really want to surrender, but Hugo's quite adamant. You know, if you don't surrender,
we've got a hundred and odd tanks over the there that will just come and blast you out.
So basically, they do give up,
and these six Marines take the surrender
of over 280 Germans,
simply by pretending to be part of a much larger force
and bluffing these Germans into believing that.
It almost doesn't quite go to plan
because as the Marines are sort of taking the surrender,
one of the Germans, as he walks past,
one of the Marines hands him a camera
and he's very friendly and says,
oh, you know, here's a present for you and so on.
Sandy Powell, who's the Marine,
takes the camera, looks at it
and sees a very odd looking wire
coming out of the top of it.
And this German had basically booby trapped the camera and Powell decided,
no,
I'll put that aside.
He does say that,
um,
if he'd ever seen that German again,
he wouldn't have been held responsible for what he would have done to him.
But Hugo earns a DSC and the two Marines and DSMs for that distinguished
service cross and distinguished service medals.
So things that they weren't supposed to be doing, you know, they would quite happily
do.
And again, it's just part of this mad story that is 30 Commander.
And I'm sure they made a good haul of intelligence material there as well in that radar station.
Yeah.
And a rather large wine cellar as well, apparently.
You're listening to Dan Snow's History.
This is the story of 30 Assault Unit.
The story behind Bond.
More coming up.
I'm Matt Lewis.
And I'm Dr. Eleanor Yonaga.
And in Gone Medieval,
we get into the greatest mysteries.
The gobsmacking details
and latest groundbreaking research
from the greatest millennium
in human history.
We're talking Vikings, Normans, Kings and Popes, who were rarely the best of friends,
murder, rebellions and crusades. Find out who we really were by subscribing
to Gone Medieval from History Hit, wherever you get your podcasts. tell me about tambach castle so the officer i mentioned before who was very interested in the
butterflies trevig glanville who is an interesting character he is is leading a team in Germany,
sort of spring 1945, Germany's collapsing.
And he grabs a bit of intelligence
from a letter that they find
that there are some German naval documents
in a castle called Schloss Tambach
somewhere in the area.
So he heads off.
They arrive at this castle. They go up to the front door, knock on the area. So he heads off, they arrive at this castle, they go up to the front
door, knock on the door, sentry answers and Glamour says, right, I'd like to see the admiral
in, please. And the sentry turns around and goes, which one? There are three of them.
And what they'd stumbled across was the entire German naval archives from 1870,
entire German naval archives from 1870, which had been transferred out of sort of Berlin or wherever on the orders of Admiral Dönitz to, in a sense, try and prove that the Kriegsmarine had not been
complicit with the Nazi regime. It was meant to try and prove that the Kriegsmarine had been
honorable and professional rather than in any way but the thing is glanville turns
up with his team there are three german admirals there there is the original countess who owns the
castle and is still living in the castle and refuses to allow the germans to fly a swastika
outside the castle but there are also a group of very fanatical Nazi female German naval women who spend the next day trying to burn all of these archives so that they can't get into the hands of the British.
So Glanville ends up having to arm some of the German sailors that are there so that him and his Marines can guard the German naval archives from these fanatical women who are trying
to burn and destroy them. It's such a significant haul of information that Fleming himself flies out
from London to have a look at it and take charge and try and take a little bit of the glory for it
as well. How is Fleming using this intelligence in the bureaucrats' battle in Whitehall? I mean,
is he growing in stature and importance as this unit comes up with more and more of the goods?
I think Fleming finds himself in a difficult position because as the unit grows and grows
and expands and becomes more professional and becomes more of a, if you like, a normal,
in inverted commas, unit, he loses some of his control.
It's no longer his own little private army.
And he does clash heads with some of the officers
because, particularly in 1945,
he's trying to give operational orders to them.
And the Royal Marine Colonel, who's now in charge, is going,
no, I'm not taking operational orders from a naval officer
who sits behind a desk in the Admiralty. So, yeah, not taking operational orders from a naval officer who sits behind a desk
in the Admiralty. So yeah, he does begin to lose a bit of it. And although he was quite popular
with the Marines, he was really not liked by the naval officers in the unit at all.
Tell me how you think that this unit, of all the people that he met during his work in intelligence,
why did this unit do you think inspire Fleming's famous James Bond stories?
Yeah, because one of the things you often see is such a body was the real James Bond. You know,
my grandfather was the inspiration of James Bond and all of this. And the clear fact is that James
Bond is an amalgamation of so many characters that Fleming came across during his time in intelligence.
And some of those, yep, did indeed work in 30 AU.
There's one who was touted as one of the strongest candidates for James Bond, and that's a naval lieutenant commander called Patrick D.L. Job.
He was Scottish.
He was an expert skier.
He married a Norwegian wife. He was a sailor. And he was,
again, a bit of an eccentric. He played the bagpipes regularly in camp at night in France
and Germany. When they were operating in France, he had a captured German machine gun welded to
the front of his Jeep and would lead his small trooper vehicles by standing up in his Jeep
and waving a fencing sword in the direction he wanted to go.
So, yeah, he's seen as sort of one of them.
But 30 AU and its exploits and the people involved
start to sort of filter into the Bond novels.
So you can begin to see connections
where Fleming has been involved in things
and he's just sort of stored it away to use later on.
So for instance, from Russia with Love,
the whole basis of that story
is obviously the hunt for the Spectre machine,
which is clearly an enigma machine.
Some of the characters,
so Tony Hugill, he appears in The Man with the Golden Gun.
So he's a character in there. In Moonraker, Hugo Drax was involved with the V2 rocket technology.
And obviously, 30 AU were hunting those scientists and capturing those scientists
at the end of the war. So there's definitely a lot of inspiration there for Bond.
What happened to the unit after the war. So there's definitely a lot of inspiration there for Bond.
What happened to the unit after the war and is its legacy continued?
So at the end of the war, the unit is disbanded, but you can see inspiration. You can see the legacy of it in modern special forces today. So the idea of exploiting enemy intelligence and targets is used and has been used by special forces since then in 2010 the Royal Navy renamed its UK landing force
support group command they renamed that 30 commando intelligence exploitation
group in honor of their wartime predecessors and that unit today is
operating slightly in the you know in that murkier
intelligence surveillance electronic warfare aspect of modern warfare so 30 commando lives
on today its legacy can be seen in special forces operations and its legacy in terms of its men that
served during the war sadly there's only one survivor that we know of at the moment.
That's Tom Bonerman.
He lives over in Canada, very healthily, 101 years old.
What a legend.
We Brits love to tell each other these stories about
sort of slightly eccentric, daring, very, very brave,
people who didn't think in straight lines, as Churchill said.
Didn't there be something unusual about the Brits or would the French, the Americans,
the Germans, the Russians all have stories like this about units and ways of going about
things?
It's just that we're blind to those because of our patriotism.
I genuinely think there is something in the British psyche, or there certainly was in
1939, 1994.
There was definitely something in the British psyche
that that meant that we ended up with these types of men and these types of units because if you
look at everything that's come after that in terms of special forces it all feeds back to what the
British were doing back then you know you can see the origins of it back then so I think it must have
been whether it was circumstances or whether it was something in the psyche, but there was definitely something British about it.
Something very odd going in those big public schools, that's all I can say,
turning out some very strange people. But turns out it was that they were good for the time.
It worked. It worked. Thank you so much for coming on the podcast.
Huge pleasure, Dan. you