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Operation Royal Amethyst

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1973 military operation in the Portuguese Colonial War in Guinea-Bissau
Operation Royal Amethyst
Part ofPortuguese Colonial War
Date19 May 1973
Location
ResultPortuguese victory
Belligerents
PortugalGuinea-BissauPAIGC
Commanders and leaders
Portugal Maj.Almeida Bruno
Portugal Cap.António Ramos
Portugal Cap.Matos Gomes
Portugal Cap.Raúl Folques
Guinea-Bissau Unknown
Units involved

PortugalForças Armadas

Unknown
Strength
450 soldiers
1 LDG
2 LFDs
Unknown
Casualties and losses
10 killed
22 wounded
3 missing
67 guerrillas killed (2 Cubans and 4 Mauritanians)

Operation Royal Amethyst was a military operation carried out by the Portuguese Guinean Battalion of Commandos, which was held on 8 May 1973 in the course of the Colonial War in Guinea-Bissau, which had the purpose of "annihilating or at least dismantling the organisation of the guerrillas in the region of Guidaje-Bigene".

Background

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The operation divided the battalion into three groups:

  • "Romeu Grouping"-1st Company of Commandos-Captain António Ramos
  • "Bombox Grouping"-2nd Company of Commandos-Captain Matos Gomes
  • "Centauro Grouping"-3rd Company of Commandos-Captain Raul Folques

After embarkation of the Battalion of Commandos onto a LargeLanding Craft (LDG), which was then escorted by two LFDs the unit landed inGanturé and attended a briefing inBigene.

The Operation

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The operation began at 11:50 pm north. The first contact with the forces of thePAIGC was triggered by the Bombox Group after initial aerial bombardment byFiat G.91 aircraft.

At 5:30 am on 19 May, the column's head reached the route that supported the Cumbamori base, the main objective of the operation. The Bombox Group passed north of the road, the Centauro Group occupied positions to the south and the Grouping Romeu was installed in the rear, in a small town.

At 8:00 am and 8:00 pm, air strikes were conducted byFiat G.91 fighter-bombers, which destroyed the base's bunkers, and the guerrillas munitions were on fire for a period of time.

At 9:05 am the Bombox Group performed the initial assault, causing the first contact with the PAIGC forces. This fighting took place from the 14th and 10th, when the commander of the operation ordered the Centauro Group to support a rupture of contact between its forces and those of thePAIGC. It was an operation of great difficulty, because the fighters on both sides were very close to each other. The Centaur Group commander was wounded.

At 14:30, the Commando Battalion began to move to the collection base, and at 6:20 pm its first elements arrived in Guidaje. On 20 May the battalion leftGuidaje forSinta, on foot, leaving there their wounded and the military who were not in conditions to continue the march. In Sinta, the battalion embarked on an LDG to return toBissau.

Aftermath

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During the operation, the Battalion suffered ten troops killed, twenty-two troops seriously wounded, and three troops missing, estimated to have caused sixty-seven deaths, among which, according to information later obtained in Senegal, a Cuban physician and surgeon and four Mauritanians.

References

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External links

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Portuguese Colonial War
Background
Belligerents
Insurgents/aligned
Portugal/aligned
Political leaders
Military commanders
Order of battle
Military operations
Angola
(4 February 1961 – 25 April 1974)
Guinea
(January 23, 1963 – September 10, 1974)
Mozambique
(25 September 1964 – 8 September 1974)
Diplomatic front
Aftermath
Popular culture
Other
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