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WAR EFFORT IN INDIA

Expansion Of Activity MANUFACTURE OF SUPPLIES <British Ollieia] Wireless.) (Received February 21, 7.5 p.m.) RUGBY, February 20. As “Father of the Indian Army,” Field-Marshal Lord Birdwood sent greetings to old comrades who have “ever fought so gallantly for the Umpire and with whom I have been intimately associated during 46 years of active Indian service." These greetings are contained in a foreword to a booklet by Sir George Dunbar on the Indian war effort, which is a valuable record of every kind of-activity.

Recalling the Eastern Group Conference at Delhi of Ministers from various Dominions and colonies with the object of making the whole eastern half of the Empire mutually self-supporting as regards war supplies, tiie booklet expresses the opinion that India is the focal point of the British Commonwealth of Nations east of Suez. "Modern developments in aircraft performance have revolutionized ground strategy, and this conquest of time and space has advanced India’s strategic frontiers eastward to Singapore and west to the Suez Canal.”

Regarding the Army, the India Government is now engaged in providing as a first step and in a comparatively short time nearly 5,000,000 men of all arms trained and equipped and mechanized in accordance with modern requirements. The large number of officers required is being obtained by widespread recruiting. The process of “Indianization” is being speeded up and Indian officers will be posted to all Indian Army units instead of to specified formations only. Indian shipyards are building wellarmed minesweepers and anti-submar-ine patrol boats. Australian shipyards are helping with larger seagoing craft and modern sloops built in Britain for the Royal Indian Navy will shortly be in commission.

Schemes for the expansion of the air force were put into force at the start of the war and various service schools were immediately established. The Air Force technical school has been expanded to train 350 Indian airmen. Today India is estimated to be turning out 90 per cent, of her own war requirements, and when the expansion schemes are complete she should even lie able to send surplus munitions overseas. India makes rifles, machine-guns, small arms ammunition, artillery up to six-inch guns and howitzers, propellants of all kinds, saddlery, blankets, ami uniforms. She lias recently been able to meet overseas orders which include 10,000,660 rounds of small arms ammunition, large quantities of explosives and millions of items of military equipment and clothing. Army boots are living sent to Great Britain at the rate of 1500 pairs a month on an order cf £750.000. Aircraft construction is tnidet consideration. The manufacture of armoured vehicles has already begun and one railway workshop is being adopted for the production of tanks and armoured cars.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19410222.2.103

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 34, Issue 127, 22 February 1941, Page 12

Word Count
449

WAR EFFORT IN INDIA Dominion, Volume 34, Issue 127, 22 February 1941, Page 12

WAR EFFORT IN INDIA Dominion, Volume 34, Issue 127, 22 February 1941, Page 12