Last modified: 2009-08-08 by dov gutterman
Keywords: jamaica | police | fin flash | regiment |
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Defence Forces in imperial usage were small local forces for
colonial defence consisting of part-time colonials and sometimes
natives, and completely separate from full-time "imperial
forces" whose service liability included overseas ventures.
Defence Forces often existed in the absence of Colonial Forces (a
more substantial army of colonists and natives available for both
defence and external service.) Defence Forces reported
to the local colonial government, but Colonial Forces were
sometimes under direct War Office control in London.
"Imperial" forces usually meant British forces when
serving overseas in order to distinguish them from all the others
they served with, but the term eventually came to vaguely embrace
full-time native forces (e.g. King's African Rifles in East
Africa, the regular Indian Army, etc.). Most Brits
today would not recognize "imperial forces" as applying
to them.
As small countries with no regular forces became independent,
they kept their "Defence Force" (including the name)
while elevating at least some liability to full-time regular
service.
The local "regiment" and the DF are often
indistinguishable.
For instance, "The Jamaica Regiment" and the
"Jamaica Defence Force" are essentially one and the
same. At independence, the JDF absorbed one battalion of the West
India Regiment (the other battalion becoming the army of Trinidad
and Tobago) to become The Jamaica Regiment. As the name 'Defence
Forces' implies, these forces are still too small to invade
anybody. Virtually none of them at independence
included naval and air elements. When these were
formed later, they remained under the umbrella of the
predominantly land DF.
Jamaica doesn't have an "air force." It has an
"Air Wing" of the Defence Force (JDF), which is
considered a support arm.
The JDF is too small to have separate services.
In other words, the navy and air are branches of the army.
T.F. Mills, 11 March 2009
image by Eugene Baldwin, 23 September 1998
After [smi75b]. This is now
the military flag, but is derived from the badge of the Colonial
Police Force in Jamaica. The inscription on the badge on the flag
is "DEFENCE FORCE". Ratio 3:5.
David Prothero, 26 September 1998
Armed forces in Jamaica (1997): 3.320 (Army, 90.4%; Cost
Guards, 4.5%; Air Force, 5.1%).
Source: Encyclopaedia Universalis Yearbook (1998).
Ivan Sache, 27 February 2002
The Jamaica Regiment (infantry) is the main component of the
Jamaica Defence Force, and each of the three battalions carries
two colours in the British tradition.
The Queen's Colour is the national flag with a central red circle
inscribed with the name of the regiment and surmounted by a
crown. The battalion number (roman numeral) is in the
middle of the circle.
The Regimental Colour consists of the same circle, regimental
name and crown, but inside the circle is the regimental badge (an
alligator). The whole is surmounted by a wreath of a design
peculiar to Jamaica (in keeping with Commonwealth tradition), but
I can't figure out what the wreaths are. They appear to be
different for each battalion. Also unusual are the
different facing colours for the 1st and 2nd Battalions (blue and
red). Normally all battalions of a regiment have the same
colour. Blue is reserved for "royal" regiments
(which Jamaica is not), and red is normally unknown since a
regiment with red facings would carry a Colour in the form of a
St. George cross.
You can see the Colours at <www.jdfmil.org>.
Only a Queen's Colour is shown for the 3rd Battalion, and it is
possible that is all that was ever presented.
T.F. Mills, 22 September 1999 and eljko Heimer,
23 February 2002