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The police requested the local authories to bring them in because of looting etc. Churchill found out and initially stopped them an they billetted at [Swindon ?]. The local authorities and police asked they carry on to Tonypandy, which they did, but they never came into face-to-face confrontation with the miners. There's a lot of stuff written about it but if you want a balanced, detailed account there's a whole chapter in Jeremy Paxman's Black Gold - it probably available in you local library.
I've read Paxmans book, decent read but certainly subjective, I agree it's quite balanced.
Decent view on the Aberfan disaster too.
Thought my view was 'balanced' mind. I don't subscribe to the view Churchill enthusiastically allowed troops to the Rhondda but he certainly agreed to it.
Another who showed restraint remarkably was the army commander MaCready. The same bloke who went into Ireland with the Black n Tan's.
Just the usual we hate Tory trait.
With no consideration of the issues and behaviour of all at the time ..
Churchill was an extraordinary man , as were his views on winning a war, whilst allowing the rules of war to be ignored in North Africa to win atvall costs , let's not forget it was in tandem with Nazis gassing women and children , and the Japanese cruelly torturing POW's
Guess Nazis ,Japs were not as evil as a all Tories.
The troops went in as support as the police chief and the local police could not cope , or the pther forces called in , he felt folks lives were at stake so he begged Churchill, who initially turned the request down .
I don't think the army or Churchill were the violent components its was more miners and police charging and fighting each other .. even police from Cardiff were there , they just lost control .
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonypandy_riots