The Far East Command was a British military command which had 2 distinct periods.
| Command | Head Quarters | Rank | Name | Appointed | |
| Far East Command | The Naval Base, Singapore | Commander-in-Chief |
| Air Chief Marshal R. Brooke-Popham |
| Lieutenant-General Sir H. R. Pownall |
| November 18 1940 |
| December 23, 1941 |
| Air Vice Marshal J.T. Babington |
| Air Vice Marshal C.W.H. Pulford |
| Air Vice Marshal P.C. Maltby |
| August 12 1938 |
| May 6 1941 |
| February 11 1942 — (February 14 1942) |
| Major General D.K. McLeod |
| Lieutenant General T.J. Hutton |
| 1939 |
| December 29 1941 |
At the start of World War II the British had two commands with responsibilities for possessions in the Far East. British India Command under General Sir Archibald Wavell the Commander-in-Chief (CinC) of the Army of India and the Far East Command under Air Marshal Robert Brooke-Popham and from December 23, 1941 by Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Royds Pownall.
The CinC Far East Command was responsible directly to the Chiefs of Staff for the operational control and general direction of training of all British land and air forces in Malaya, Burma, and Hong Kong, and for the co-ordination of plans for the defence of those territories. But the CinC exercised no command or control over any naval forces.
It was intended that CinC should deal primarily with matters of major military policy and strategy, but it was not the intention that the CinC should assume any administrative or financial responsibilities or take over any of the day-to-day functions at that time exercised by the General (or Air) Officers Commanding (GOC) of the different areas. The degree of "operational control" of British land and air forces, which the Commander-in-Chief Far East should assume, was defined as meaning "the higher direction and control" as distinct from "detailed operational control". To complicate matters the GOCs correspond with the War Office, Air Ministry, Colonial Office and Local Govenor's Offices on all matters on which they had previously dealt with those departments. But the GOCs had to keep the CinC informed if he wished.
To enable the Commander-in-Chief Far East to carry out his Functions, he was allowed a small staff, initially consisting of seven officers drawn from all three Services with the necessary clerical and cipher staff. For intelligence purposes, he had at his disposal the Far East Combined Intelligence Bureau, though it remained under Admiralty control. Although the establishment of his staff was later increased to fifteen it was never large enough. The Naval Base was a considerable distance across Singapore from the Malaya Army Headquarters which discouraged frequent meetings.
On the December 5 1941 London given permission for CinC Far East Command to decide if Operation Matador should be activated. The chief strategic decision to be decided was whether Siam should be invaded in a pre-emptive move, before any Japanese landings took place. The Malaya Command was responsible for the planning of Operation Matador. On December 6 1941, it had reworked the plan and allocated forces for immediate deployment. This is what GOC Malaya Arthur Percival recommended that evening in a meeting with the Governor Sir Shenton Thomas and CinC Brooke-Popham, who decided it was premature to launch the operation which included the pre-emptive move into Siam.
When the Allied governments appointed General Sir Archibald Wavell as supreme commander of ABDA Command (ABDACOM), British Far East Command became redundant because its functions would in future be carried out by ABDACOM. So when Wavell arrived in Singapore, where the British Far East Command was based, on January 7, 1942. ABDACOM absorbed the British command in its entirety and CinC Far East Command Henry Royds Pownall became Wavell's Chief of Staff. On January 15, Wavell moved his headquarters to Bandung in Java and assumed control of Allied operations.
1963 Far East Command was established, covering the region covered China, Hong Kong, Kobe and Singapore. Major bases included Hong Kong (HMS Tamar) and Singapore. It was organised as an interservice command:
January 11 1971 disbanded at Singapore (succeeded by ANZUK Force).
British Commander-in-Chief, Far East Command:
British General Officer Commander-in-Chief, Far East Land Forces:
Commander, British Far East Land Forces:
British rule in Singapore | History of Malaysia | Military of Singapore under British rule | World War II British forces
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"British Far East Command".
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