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The Aden Veterans Association, our parent body, is a tri-service organisation founded on the 20th March 2000. The aims are firstly to maintain the memory of all those who gave their lives for the cause of peace in Aden and the Protectorate. The second is to promote, and maintain comradeship amongst the members, the Aden Vets.
Welcome to West Dorset Branch of the Aden Veterans Association website. If this is your first visit to the site, please browse through to find out what we do, and how you can contact us. If you are already a member you will find the latest information about events in our area as well as further afield.
In 1839 Britain established a territory in Aden (now part of Yemen), a small area in the south of the Arabian Peninsula, to provide a base for ships heading to India. In 1931 Aden was made a Crown Colony in defiance of neighbouring warlords who sought to reclaim old territories. By the 1960s, Britain sought to create a federation between Aden colony and the surrounding protectorates in order to stabilise the region, which had been dogged by years of unrest. In 1962 the British government announced that Aden would be maintained as a permanent British garrison East of Suez. Yet, by 1967, the British were forced to withdraw from the colony. By 1963 the new Federation of South Arabia faced twin threats – internally from the National Liberation Front (NLF) and tribes in the Radfan area of the country, and externally from Egyptian-backed Yemen.
Between late 1964 and the British withdrawal in 1967, the NLF and its sister organisation Federation for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen conducted a violent terrorist campaign in Aden. This seriously affected morale amongst the Federal Regular Army and later South Arabian Army personnel. In June 1967 South Arabian police officers mutinied and attacked British troops, and in the resulting action the British temporarily withdrew from the Crater area of Aden Colony. Though British troops re-entered Crater two weeks later with some force, the insurgents were emboldened and fighting intensified. Britain realised that its presence in Aden was to end sooner rather than later, and the last British troops left Aden in November 1967 after months of fierce street fighting.
Aden Veterans Association (West Dorset Branch)
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