John Earle - SOE Yugoslavia

Discussion in 'SOE & OSS' started by Jedburgh22, Oct 1, 2013.

  1. Jedburgh22

    Jedburgh22 Very Senior Member

    OBITUARY: JOHN EARLE
    MONDAY 30 SEPTEMBER 2013

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    John Earle, pictured, who has died at the age of 92, was a distinguished former correspondent whose career with Reuters followed special forces military service in the Balkans during World War II.

    He died in hospital in Trieste on 19 September of pneumonia, having been weakened by a fall in May. He had lived in Trieste for 25 years.

    As a battalion signals officer with the British Army’s Rifle Brigade in North Africa, Earle was wounded at El Alamein in October 1942, later returning to his brigade until the fall of Tunis, followed by service in Syria and Lebanon.

    Late in 1943 he moved to the Yugoslav section of the Special Operations Executive in Cairo with whom he was parachuted in 1944 to the Partisans in Serbia as British Liaison Officer with a radio operator. The operation, Mission Demagogue, was designed to sabotage the Danube but failed.

    In a privately printed account for family and friends in 1999, he recounted how he was briefed to move north to near Belgrade and provide a base to which a British naval intelligence officer could be dropped for anti-Danube activities. Instead, soon after arrival with a Partisan unit, they were attacked by Germans, Bulgarians and Četniks, and forced south to the borders of Kosovo. The situation was complicated by the presence of American missions with the Četniks. After inconclusive to-ing and fro-ing he caught malaria and was evacuated by a Soviet aircraft to southern Italy.

    Later, at a party for local girls in Trieste, Earle met his future wife Anna Maria Tiziani. They had one son and one daughter, and she died in 2000.

    Earle joined Reuters in June 1948 in London. He was successively assistant correspondent in Bonn; correspondent, Belgrade; chief diplomatic correspondent based in London; and chief correspondent, Rome. He then wrote for The Times from Rome before moving to Trieste in 1986.

    As a journalist Earle met many leaders of the era including Josip Broz Tito, Archbishop Makarios, Harold Macmillan and John Kennedy.

    He was president of the Associazione della Stampa Estera in Italia (Italian Foreign Press Association) in 1978 and 1980.

    Recently he had been working on the last of his projects, Trieste Tapestry, in which he wove together a series of stories about local events and notable people in the city’s recent and not so recent past. The book is as yet unpublished.
     
  2. Jedburgh22

    Jedburgh22 Very Senior Member

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    REVIEW

    Tough life with the Partisans before Reuters

    [​IMG] MICHAEL NELSON

    From Nile to Danube: A Wartime Memoir
    JOHN EARLE
    2010 Mladika

    John Earle first served with the British army in North Africa during the second world war, but this fascinating book is mainly concerned with the Yugoslav part of his war service.

    He was parachuted into Yugoslavia as a liaison officer with the Partisans with the objective of getting to the Danube. He never achieved that aim during the war, but got there after the war as Reuters correspondent in Belgrade.

    We take for granted the presence of British officers with the Partisans, but forget the immense suffering they underwent. The greatest burden was hunger followed by fatigue and illness – in John’s case malaria.

    Light relief comes only towards the end of the book when he was joined in recently liberated Dubrovnik by the novelist Evelyn Waugh. Waugh had been stationed with a unit at Partisan HQ for Croatia led by Randolph Churchill, the Prime Minister’s son, and including Lord Birkenhead, who had had Randolph as his fag at Eton. Waugh talked about Randolph to John at length. “Randolph farts, he’s impossible,” Waugh frequently complained to John. Birkenhead had complained to Waugh of Randolph’s habit of eructation.

    Later, at a party for local girls in Trieste, John met his future wife. John retired to Trieste after a distinguished career as a Reuter correspondent, culminating in the post of Chief Correspondent in Rome. ■
     

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