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Overview
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![]() Australian action at Buna, Geoffrey Mainwaring 1962.
[Painting 274 x 137cm AWM ART 27547]
![]() Troops of the 21st Brigade, which took over at Gona from the 25th Brigade, attend a church service conducted by Padre James Lynch on 5 December 1942. The men were about to begin yet another attack on Japanese positions. It took four more days of fighting before Gona fell.
[AWM 013739]
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![]() Privates William Walker, Keith Beckmann and Bruce Chadwick, 55th/53rd Battalion, wounded during an attack on Japanese positions on the Sanananda Track on 7 December 1942, make their way back to the main dressing station.
[AWM 013857]
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The Battle of the Beachheads
![]() Map depicting the approach of the Allied forces overland and the
Japanese fortified positions [DVA]
The final battle involving Australian troops in 1942 was the Allied attack on the Japanese beachheads in northern Papua – Buna, Gona and Sanananda. The Allies expected that this battle would be won easily, as it seemed that the Japanese had lost most of their force in Papua in the long battle on the Kokoda Track. In the last pitched battle on the Kokoda Track, at Oivi-Gorari, the Australian 16th and 25th Brigades had overrun the dug-in survivors of the Japanese 144th Regiment and the way seemed clear to the coast. In fact, the senior Allied commanders – Generals Douglas MacArthur, the American supreme commander of Allied forces in the South-West Pacific Area, and Thomas Blamey, the Australian commander of Allied Land Forces in the theatre – grossly underestimated the strength of the Japanese force and overestimated the Allies’ capacity to continue fighting. The Japanese had brought in fresh troops and had up to 9000 men in well-dug defences around the beachheads who were prepared to fight to the death if necessary. Of the troops first detailed to attack, the 16th and 25th Brigades were down to one-third of their normal strength and were worn out after fighting their way across the mountains, while fresh American troops from the 32nd Division were not adequately trained for jungle warfare and had no combat experience.
Generals Thomas Blamey (left) and
Douglas MacArthur (centre) with Australian Prime Minister John Curtin. [AWM 042766]
The battle opened on 19-20 November with simultaneous attacks against Buna by the Americans, Gona by the Australians and Sanananda by both Australians and Americans. The troops encountered a string of well-defended bunkers, expertly camouflaged in the lush tropical vegetation, and enemy troops armed with machine-guns and mortars. American troops suffered heavy casualties, and so did the Australians. The Allied attacks faltered on all fronts. gallery
![]() Bogged down, the Allies built airfields not far from the battlefronts so that supplies and reinforcements could be flown in from Port Moresby. The air war over the beachheads was vital. American fighters patrolled the area to chase away any Japanese aircraft so that Allied aircraft could continue to transport and supply troops. On many days, cloud over the Owen Stanley Range either prevented flying or limited the number of flights that could be flown, and on these days troops in the forward area ran low on food and ammunition. ![]() Near the end of fighting on the Buna front,
Lieutenant Duncan Clarke, 2/12th Battalion, stands before a captured Japanese bunker, warily peering inside. One of the bunker’s occupants during the battle lies dead outside. [AWM 014082]
Allied aircraft and artillery bombed and shelled the Japanese positions, but the Australian and American troops continued to suffer heavy casualties in attacking them. Not only did enemy fire cause the death and wounding of many men, but tropical diseases such as malaria caused many more to be evacuated sick. Allied commanders pondered whether it was the Japanese or the mosquitoes that represented the worst enemy. They reasoned that at least the Japanese were also suffering with the same tropical diseases as their own men. By the end of November, the Australian 21st and 30th Brigades, including many veterans of the Kokoda Track, had been flown in to relieve the exhausted 16th and 25th Brigades. On 9 December, the 21st Brigade captured Gona after suffering heavy casualties in repeated attacks. Meanwhile, the Americans at Buna had also made some ground but, having taken heavy casualties, had to be reinforced by the Australian 18th Brigade, which had earlier fought at Milne Bay. Over the rest of the month, with support from Australian light tanks, this brigade made steady progress in pushing back the enemy at Buna, but suffered hundreds of battle casualties. The battle for the beachheads dragged on into the middle of January 1943, by which time only the enemy pocket around Sanananda remained. The 30th Brigade, which was comprised of inexperienced militiamen reinforced by other inexperienced troops, had suffered over 50 per cent casualties attacking along the Sanananda Track and made little further progress. The 18th Brigade was moved over to the Sanananda front to take over from the 30th, after finishing off the last Japanese resistance at Buna. Swamps in this area prevented the use of tanks and the battle again bogged down.
The turret of a Stuart tank used at Buna and now at
the
Australian War Memorial. [DVA]
It seemed that the Allies could only surround and starve out the Japanese, but suddenly in the middle of January it became clear that the Japanese were evacuating survivors in submarines. By 22 January 1943, Japanese resistance had ended and the campaign in Papua had been won. |
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