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Sir Lionel Bond
BOND.JPG
Born (1884-06-16)16 June 1884
Aldershot, Hampshire, England
Died 4 October 1961(1961-10-04) (aged 77)
Surrey, England
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Years of service 1903–1941
Rank Lieutenant-General
Service number 22542
Unit Royal Engineers
Commands held Malaya Command (1939–41)
Royal School of Military Engineering (1935–39)
Chatham Area (1935–39)
Battles/wars Mohmand Expedition of 1908
First World War
Second World War
Awards Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Companion of the Order of the Bath
Mentioned in Despatches (2)
Relations Major-General Sir Francis George Bond (father)

Lieutenant-General Sir Lionel Vivian Bond, KBE, CB (16 June 1884 – 4 October 1961) was a senior officer in the British Army.

Military career

Bond was the son of Major-General Sir Francis George Bond (1856–1930), and elder brother of Major-General Richard Lawrence Bond (1890–1979). After attending the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Bond was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Royal Engineers in 1903. He first saw action in military operations in the Mohmand Expedition of 1908. He also fought in Mesopotamia during the First World War.

Bond graduated from the first postwar course at the Staff College, Camberley in 1919. In 1922, he published a literary attack on Captain Liddell Hart's new theories on tank warfare, stigmatising them as "flapdoodle of the most misleading kind".

Bond was appointed Chief Engineer at Aldershot Command in 1934, General Officer Commanding Chatham Area in 1935, and Commandant of School of Military Engineering and Inspector of the Royal Engineers in 1938.

Defence of Singapore

Lionel Vivian Bond
Bond Terrace, Fort Canning, Singapore

During the Second World War, Bond took over from Major General Sir William Dobbie as General Officer Commanding Malaya in July 1939. Bond was aware that his predecessor had made an assessment on the war situation in Malaya, and was convinced with his findings that the Japanese would attempt to seize Singapore by attacking Malaya from the north through Siam. With only a small number of British force in his command, he knew he could not undertake the defence of the entire Malayan Peninsula. Bond decided on a strategy of close defence of Southern Johore, and the Singapore island.

Bond completed his term of office in Malaya on 29 April 1941. He retired from active military service soon after, and died in 1961.

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