New Guinea Campaign: Allied Air Operations Lae-Salamaua - Restored 1943

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ZenosWarbirds

ZenosWarbirds

10 жыл бұрын

This action packed film covers a key battle of the oft overlooked 1943 New Guinea campaign in the South Pacific. General Douglas MacArthur and his staff put together a brilliant combined arms strategy that utilized Air Power as a key element to leap frog over rugged jungle terrain and isolate and destroy Japanese strongholds. For a larger strategic over view of the campaign, see "Mission to Rabaul" on this channel bit.ly/1hi2FLj
While tough Australian jungle fighters spearheaded the frontal ground assault, American paratroopers accompanied by Aussie light artillery volunteers, dropped on, seized & secured a Japanese air base behind enemy lines so that an Australian division could be ferried in on C-47s and attack the enemy from the rear. This film effectively uses maps & illustrations to show the strategy and tactics used in this this classic battle. In this almost impassable terrain, that made transport of heavy guns slow and difficult, air power functioned as "flying artillery." You'll see spectacular in cockpit views of B-25 Mitchell medium bombers making strafing runs on Japanese bases at tree top level as well as some of the first ever "on the deck" tail gunner views of delayed action and "para frag" bombs dropping & exploding right behind the hedge hopping Mitchells. Some nice A-20, B-24 & P-38 action footage too! Get this video and more on our "B-25 Mitchells Go to War" DVD bit.ly/142ZMur
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Пікірлер: 434
@craig4867
@craig4867 Жыл бұрын
Videos like this keep the memories of our fathers and grandfathers alive, they are no longer with us, God bless them all!
@karlosvulture7707
@karlosvulture7707 2 жыл бұрын
I can proudly say that my grandad got shot by a sniper over there,he fought in PNG and then went to the Solomon's,he was lucky as the bullet just missed his heart by millimeters..by all accounts he fought hard and like many kiwi soldiers he was willing to pay the ultimate sacrifice for his country and the freedom of the world...RIP Grandad and thanks mate
@gw2058
@gw2058 10 ай бұрын
This is probably one of the best US Army WW2 (1943) news/information documentaries made regarding the Operations at Lae-Salamaua and Huon Peninsular, and the pronunciation of the place names is pretty good too
@laurencetilley9194
@laurencetilley9194 3 жыл бұрын
My Father was a member of the Australian, 7th Divisions, 2/4th field regiment that flew into Nadzab. He said the Young American soldiers were very inexperienced when they arrived in New Guinea, but they went through a baptism of fire, to become bloody good soldiers as the campaign continued. My dad said Yank air force combined with the RAAF did a bloody good job and saved many lives
@allananderson2019
@allananderson2019 2 жыл бұрын
My Grand dad also.
@roberttrout3588
@roberttrout3588 2 жыл бұрын
My Uncle Lee Trout piloted one of those Bostons, thank you for your kind words 🙏
@stevenseagal6548
@stevenseagal6548 2 жыл бұрын
My grand dad was in the 2/8th field regiment. Great grand father was the commander of the 11th infantry and 14th infantry Later good enough island and the milne bay fortress. He was on blameys staff and apparently also thought of blamey as a wanker. Ive got a trove of photos in the albums
@jefesalsero
@jefesalsero 2 жыл бұрын
Ya bloody right, they did!
@karlosvulture7707
@karlosvulture7707 2 жыл бұрын
My grandad also said the same thing about the yanks..he didn't have much respect for the American officers as many young soldiers died because of their inexperience, poor buggers were ordered to their death.....
@jimbo81553
@jimbo81553 Жыл бұрын
The Aussies sacrificed so much from a small population. God bless the Aussies!
@mmcin719
@mmcin719 4 жыл бұрын
My grandfather was an Australian engineer in New Guinea. He would never say a word about it. When I went into the army, his advice was look after your rifle as it will be your best friend. I still have his medals, it was tough up there.
@MrCarlSykes
@MrCarlSykes 2 жыл бұрын
We have the blood of heros in our veins Jeffrey. My grandfather was in the 39th up the Kokoda trail and then at Gona. My grandfather basically never talked about his time in New Guinea either. My grandfather didnt go for the "glory", he went to protect his family and his people. I reckon the same for your grandfather Jeffrey. If he had gone for the glory, and there was plenty of that, he would have crowed about it. He didn't. Freedom in Australia for a person to grow and live and thrive and shine is not a god given right, it is a privilege. It was bought with the suffering, commitment and love of a band of ragged bloody heroes. Our children and their children in turn are living free because of our grandfathers and their mates. We are very blessed Jeffrey. "Lest we forget."
@63bplumb
@63bplumb 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrCarlSykes Bless ALL of them for their service!
@markfryer9880
@markfryer9880 2 жыл бұрын
Lest We Forget!
@peterrobbins2862
@peterrobbins2862 Жыл бұрын
It was absolutely horrific up there my grandfather was at Milne bay and various along the coast and Bouganville tropical illnesses and malaria took a massive toll on the troops
@wdavis6814
@wdavis6814 4 жыл бұрын
My great-grandfather served with the 5th Air Force - 22nd BG in Australia, he was onboard many b26 and b24 flights into New Guinea, New Britain, and other islands there. Luckily he left the Pacific Theatre with all his limbs. Truly a generation of brave giants.
@kathryndrury6495
@kathryndrury6495 4 жыл бұрын
My Dad 5th AF/22nd BG. - B-24 pilot at age 19! George F. Drury
@jeffkeith637
@jeffkeith637 4 жыл бұрын
That is probably the best coverage of any WW2 campaign I've seen. That treetop flying was just awe inspiring. Great work.
@MarsFKA
@MarsFKA 3 жыл бұрын
21:45 "The kunai grass hampered the job of finding and assembling the heavy equipment." No kidding! That stuff has more sharp edges and points than barbed wire. I worked in Lae for a year in 1971/72 and even that long after the War there was still a lot of discarded war materiel lying around - I saw old runway matting used for a variety of purposes. However, the piece of War materiel that really caught my attention was the bit that I dug up in my garden one day - I was living close by the air field, that had, in this movie, been the Japanese air strip - and my shovel went clink on a 3-inch anti-aircraft shell that had been lying there for twenty-eight years. I called the police, who called the Army and we all stood back at a respectful distance while the Army ordnance people took the shell away.
@ballafon7
@ballafon7 3 жыл бұрын
My dad Charles Allen piloted and copiloted B-25's and then B-24's here Oct 14 1943 until July 28th 1944 until scrub typhus hospitalised him. 55 combat missions.
@vicbittertoo
@vicbittertoo 5 күн бұрын
be very proud, tough blokes :)
@CaesarInVa
@CaesarInVa 4 жыл бұрын
One of my best friend's father, Ed Kieloch, fought all the way up the coast of New Guinea all the way to Manila with the 503 PIR. Mr. K was one hell of a man. Built like a refrigerator, he was his platoon's BAR man. Rugged as hell and tough as nails, he was kind, intelligent and compassionate as well. After he got out of the Army, he went to Harvard, then skipped grad school and went straight into a PhD program when he completed his under-graduate studies. In the 1960's he conceived, implemented and led Project Head Start, a Department of Education initiative intended to redress academic inequities of the less-fortunate. He was one hell of a guy and the best kind of American this country ever produced.
@danzervos7606
@danzervos7606 4 жыл бұрын
My mother went to college with my sister and got her teaching certificate. Her first job was with Head Start in 1964. We ended up with a goat the Head Start Program acquired and didn't know what to do with it at the end of summer school and as we had a small farm they gave it to us. We later gave the goat to a guy who boarded race horses. They had a horse that was fidgety and nervous and thought it could use a stable mate. Worked like a charm and the horse had some success in racing. An older man who worked at the stables at Sportsman Park appropriated the goat and it achieved minor celebrity status. We called the goat Pearl. The guy at the stables renamed it Pearly May.
@ThomasWLalor
@ThomasWLalor 2 жыл бұрын
The Aussies performed superbly in that conflict. I am glad the US and Australia are allies. Lucky US
@ClancyQuinn
@ClancyQuinn 4 ай бұрын
My Dad was a bombardier/navigator with the 90th bomb group on a B24. He contracted malaria on the island of New Guinea. Was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and 2 other medals. Major Donald M. Detry. My Dad.
@petermalloy5360
@petermalloy5360 3 жыл бұрын
Bravest and superbly planned Battle well Done Aussie engineers and infantry.Airforce firepower magnificent WELL DONE
@pshehan1
@pshehan1 3 жыл бұрын
I have interviewed veterans of the 2/14 battalion 7th Australian Division who participated in the Markham and Ramu valley campaigns, and have also spoken to the Australian artillerymen who parachuted into the valley as mentioned in the video. Sadly there are now very few of these remarkable men left.
@peteranson4021
@peteranson4021 3 жыл бұрын
My father-in-law, Dick Slattery was in the 2/14th. He joined under an assumed name because he was under-age, was wounded in Syria fighting the Vichy French, went AWL from hospital and stowed away on the ship returning the battalion to Australia (he was discovered in his hiding place because of the gangrenous smell of his wound). He fought on the Kokoda track and Gona. I think he missed the battle depicted here because he was recovering from scrub tyfus in Australia but he rejoined the battalion and fought right through to the end of the war.
@mohammedcohen
@mohammedcohen 3 жыл бұрын
...reading "war at the End of the World" about the New Guinea campaign....hell on earth...God rest the souls of these brave men...
@greasyflight6609
@greasyflight6609 3 жыл бұрын
Burma was no picnic either. Kohima
@kathryndrury6495
@kathryndrury6495 4 жыл бұрын
Our Dad, Col. (P) George F. Drury USAF piloted a B-24 with the 5th AF in 1943 - the Command Pilot at 19 years old! He. Was a Red’s Raider! See the book - Red Raiders Revenge! A great history and a great picture of our 19 year old hero!
@ballafon7
@ballafon7 3 жыл бұрын
My dad too. Charles C. Allen
@BearfootBob
@BearfootBob Жыл бұрын
Sgt. Sheldon Scriven was with the 312 Bomb Group(L) , airborne recon photographer. He flew on one of the A-20Gs through the whole campaign, and promoted in August of '45.
@leomoore3597
@leomoore3597 3 жыл бұрын
My dad was in the Navy "Sea Bees" Construction Battalions, on Manus Island, known as Admiralty Island off the coast of New Guinea during that WWll Naval campaign.
@davidvines6498
@davidvines6498 2 жыл бұрын
My Dad was in the Seabees too, all he would say was he was in the Aleutians and the Philippines. I know his unit was in Guadalcanal, but he was tight lipped about what went on during the War
@peterrobbins2862
@peterrobbins2862 Жыл бұрын
They were very well regarded by the Australian troops
@royfrye333
@royfrye333 4 жыл бұрын
My dad fought in New Guinea. He didn’t speak about it much. I really enjoyed watching this. I don’t understand all the criticism about “incorrect pronunciations” of various places and things. Seems like petty nonsense complaining about how the narrator pronounced things.
@terryrussel3369
@terryrussel3369 3 жыл бұрын
Made my uncle laugh and he actually was 'strawffed'. Air crew. Radioman. 8th USAAF.
@rupert5390
@rupert5390 3 жыл бұрын
god bless your dad
@maryannamerica6934
@maryannamerica6934 5 жыл бұрын
Ok, here’s my story...My dad fought in New Guinea and in the Philippines. He was a Reconnaissance Scout for the 167th Infantry. My dad worked with everyone, especially The Aussies and he said they were the greatest gift that they could have ever gotten!!! He said there was never a division with our allies! The native’s were amazing too and so many of them helped us beyond mention! I am just happy that my dad told me all of his stories (most of these never heard in a movie). I am very thankful that he fought for our freedom and today I am a true free American 🇺🇸 I learned so much about my dad from World War II. I learned he knew jujitsu and that he got to see general MacArthur on the beach in the Philippines. He was my HERO!!!!!! 🇺🇸31st Dixie Division - 167th Infantry - U.S. Army A USAF Veteran Maryann
@docw1819
@docw1819 4 жыл бұрын
Maryann America my uncle is interned in a war cemetery in Port Moresby. The time that the Kokoda track campaign soaked up gave the US and Australian forces the breathing room to consolidate is highly underestimated. 🇦🇺 🇺🇸 Also the Battle of the Coral Sea would not have happened without the stand.
@ogmiossoimgo696
@ogmiossoimgo696 4 жыл бұрын
same goes for me, but my father was first attached to the RAF before Pearl and then reattach to the US Army from Italy till the mad rush into Germany... he loved General Patton and would have followed him into Russia if Patton had been given the go ahead.
@KateLicker
@KateLicker 4 жыл бұрын
Great message, but as for 'division with allies", well, I'm afraid there was some on Australian home-front.. I don't want to ramble through what I know of it, but if interested Google things like 'Battle of Brisbane" (not a battle that had anything to do with the Japanese) ...'brownout strangler (Pvte Eddie Leonski, US army, him I read a book on, buried in US army cemetary in Hawaii,apparently) ,,,there was a mediocre war movie in 1980s which combined the two things, but although having two big-name actors, James Coburn and Brian Dennehy (playing Pvt Leonski), the movie was pretty fictionalised account of true events. My stepfather Keith Harris was an Australian RAAF 'fitter", effectively airplane mechanic, with RAAF Beauforts and P40s in New Guinea, but like a lot of Australian personel on NG, he worked alongside and even sometimes actually on loan to Kenneys 5th USAAF..he had many stories...one day, an American P38 Lightning had either just landed or was taxiing to take off..one of the engines maybe sounded a little off (not unusual for GM Allison engines in p38s to have spark-plug issues, for example) so Keith walked up in front of the plane closer to listen to motors..pilot, American kid looked just 19-20YO, put head down, grinned, and threw throttles forward to full, '38 roared and surged down runway with Keith running like Jessie Owens...young Yank in P38 thought this hilarious...maybe so do I, kind of, LOL.
@KateLicker
@KateLicker 4 жыл бұрын
one wartime US training vid made re the issues I've referred to.. kzbin.info/www/bejne/qZ7CdJ2NibCpf5I
@hodaka1000
@hodaka1000 4 жыл бұрын
@@KateLicker My father was a member of the 2/19th Battalion fortunately he wasn't with the Battalion during their epic battle along the Bakri Parit Sulong road in Malaya. He was wounded in the fighting on Singapore and was one of the six survivors from Sandakan Ranau Death March in North Borneo. He called P38s "spilt-arses" and mentioned times when they were attacked by them.
@stevelacombe9816
@stevelacombe9816 3 жыл бұрын
That was amazing! Those were some bad-ass soldiers and airmen!
@acadman4322
@acadman4322 4 жыл бұрын
I see things like this and am overwhelmed with pride for the men slugging it out with such a tough enemy as the Japanese in that Hell of New Guinea. My war was Vietnam, 1967-1968 with the 101st Airborne Div up north around Hue. We slaughtered the enemy in every engagement and yet, still, because of political cowardice and blunders, had to lose our war. These videos of real men with determination crushing a tough enemy inspire me. God bless all soldiers, sailors, and airmen. It does not matter which side, those guys all deserve a "well done". They did their very best for their country.
@jefflanham1080
@jefflanham1080 4 жыл бұрын
ACADMan thank you for your service! It is now June 17, 2020 and look what’s going on right here at home...sad and pathetic. Our kids have been brainwashed by communist/fascist America haters right in our own schools for the last 25 plus years and the politicians are even worse if you can imagine that!
@paulbrown6338
@paulbrown6338 3 жыл бұрын
I was there in 68-69 with 5th Special Forces and you are correct about how easy they were to kill. The hardest part was getting them to fight. We just had too much firepower for them to deal with. Politics determined the outcome and I think we learned from that.
@andreww9252
@andreww9252 Жыл бұрын
Bravo Zulu ACADMAN ... its a Navy congratulations
@oakvue45
@oakvue45 4 жыл бұрын
Dad was a crew chief on C-47's in the 317th Troop Transport Group. He got a Bronze Star delivering Aussie's and ammo up to Wau Airfield on top the Owen Stanley Mountains. The Japanese were trying to cross the mountains north of the Kokoda Trail but the Aussies held the air field at Wau and drove the Japanese back. Dad flew with the 317th all thru the war. They got a hole in a wing dropping paratroops onto Corregidor during our invasion...They even got into Japan for while before being sent home.
@rupert5390
@rupert5390 3 жыл бұрын
god bless you dad
@billgreen7844
@billgreen7844 3 жыл бұрын
My dad piloted a B-25 in the 345th/500th. This is where he flew 50 missions.
@paulmcwilliams1709
@paulmcwilliams1709 3 жыл бұрын
God Bless the Aussies!
@brodybehr
@brodybehr 4 жыл бұрын
My Great uncle was in the fifth air force squadron flying escort, he was a p38 lightning pilot and flew 15 fighter missions! I have his old ring, his wings , air medal , and a book that he’s featured in! very happy to have these items!
@kathryndrury6495
@kathryndrury6495 4 жыл бұрын
My Dad was a command pilot for the 5th Air Force in Papua New Guinea in 1943 - he was 19 years old! Perhaps your great uncle flew escort! His name Col.(P) George F. Drury, USAF. GREAT MEN!
@AtomicDawg713
@AtomicDawg713 4 жыл бұрын
@@kathryndrury6495 My Great Uncle flew with the 19th Bomb Group 93rd Bomb Squad, 5th AF in 1942. In 1944 he was KIA over Italy. Heroes all.
@ballafon7
@ballafon7 3 жыл бұрын
My dad, piloting B-25's and B-24's often spoke of the exhilarated sense of relief when P-38's showed up for escort. Respect.
@robburghoff1355
@robburghoff1355 4 жыл бұрын
My dad was a B24 pilot with the 43rd Bomber group, 63rd bomber squadron "Seahawks" stationed in Dobodura and then Nadzab between Oct '43 to July '44 primarily targetting shipping from Rabaul to the New Guinea coast and Solomons. There's a recently published book covering the B24 era in SWPA titled Ken's Men Against the Empire: Vol II, The B24 Era that details a lot of the campaigns after this one. I haven't read Vol I which does cover this campaign. Really interesting material.
@arabianrebel61
@arabianrebel61 3 жыл бұрын
Your dad most likely knew my grandfather. Raymond Gates of West Monroe Louisiana. Same bomb group and bomber squadron. They had radar in his B-24. I have that book too
@arabianrebel61
@arabianrebel61 3 жыл бұрын
I have a picture of the Seahawks. My grandfather and your dad are probably in it together
@bdcguru01
@bdcguru01 3 жыл бұрын
Rob, Thanks so much for the book info! Looking for information on the role of the B0-24 in the SWP campaign. My father was a young bomber pilot stationed there.
@bobkoomans3490
@bobkoomans3490 4 жыл бұрын
I was at Boram in 1967, as a, Australian Government worker, It was still littered with odd bits of war relics, the main airfield of Wewak still had much of the AA Gun batteries in place, and a number of old enemy planes alongside the airstrip. In 1969, I joined the PNGVR an Australian Army Regiment in TP&NG.
@georgestack4764
@georgestack4764 4 жыл бұрын
Vale, Australian 6th Div., stopped the German nazi Army in the desert sands as the “Rats of Tobruk”, then moved to stop the Japanese imperial army in the tropical jungle conditions of the Kokoda Trail heroes. These heroes delivered the first Allied defeats to the German Nazi war machine and to the Imperial Japanese army in the history of WWII. Among others: Uncle George Remilton, and Father-in-Law, Bill Dundas. Their name liveth forevermore. Always lovingly remembered. Aussies. Vale among others men of The “Grey” 8th Battalion, RAR South Vietnam 1970-71.
@geoffheard5768
@geoffheard5768 4 жыл бұрын
Amazing how the efforts of the 39th Militia Battalion always get overlooked.
@moss8448
@moss8448 4 жыл бұрын
you are correct sir
@terrygalvin6066
@terrygalvin6066 4 жыл бұрын
That's not correct. The 6th Division took Tobruk from the Italians but were sent to Greece and Crete and then onto Syria before being sent to Australia and then New Guinea. They never defended Tobruk. They served on 4 continents.
@MarkGoding
@MarkGoding 3 жыл бұрын
The chocos also did an amazing job.
@laurencetilley9194
@laurencetilley9194 Жыл бұрын
The 18th Brigade of the 6th division was reorganised and joined the Australian 2AIF, 'Silent' 7th Division. These guys were battle hardened. The reorganisation of the 6th division saw them broken up into brigades and dispersed across other divisions etc.They received the name 'silent' because of the 7th divisions secret invasion of Syria. As a formation, the 6th Division fought in the campaigns in Libya, Greece, and the Aitape-Wewak region of New Guinea. Its individual brigades also fought on Crete, in Lebanon, along the Kokoda Trail and at the Japanese beachheads in Papua, and in the Wau-Salamaua region of New Guinea.
@garydargan6
@garydargan6 5 жыл бұрын
My father was originally in 13 Squadron RAAF in Darwin. They flew Lockheed Hudsons, a twin-engined medium bomber version of the Lockheed Ventura airliner. They lost so many planes and crew in operations against the Japanese that by the time they were withdrawn they had only 2 serviceable planes. After a time spent in Victoria doing check and delivery flights of more Hudsons he was posted to a joint Australian-American Bombardment Group flying Liberators. He did his Liberator training at Nadzab. Even after it was repaired flying from this was a bit of an adventure particularly in a heavy bomber like the Liberator. There was a dip part way down the runway which became a small creek when it rained as it often does in New Guinea. For his time in 13 Squadron the Americans nominated his squadron to receive a Presidential Unit Citation. However since it was a foreign decoration they were not allowed to receive it. This rule was changed decades later and after some agitation by my father the surviving members of the squadron were flown to Hughes airfield in Darwin where they had a ceremonial parade and were presented with the citation. My father didn't march very often on Anzac day but when he did visiting American soldiers he encountered treated him like royalty when they saw the blue bar on his jacket.
@normm7764
@normm7764 4 жыл бұрын
Gary Dargan hi Gary, I saw your comment. You might be interested in this, if you live in Melbourne, come in for a look. Regards Norm. www.b24australia.org.au/home
@dm2781632
@dm2781632 4 жыл бұрын
The Presidential unit citation has been awarded to three Australian units, The NGVR (New guinea Volunteer rifles ) WW2, 3 RAR Kapyong Korea and D Coy 6 RAR Vietnam. Australia units can receive this award but a nomination is not receiving. Your fathers unit did not receive the award because they were Australian, unfortunately the nomination just did not get accepted .
@grozenbaum
@grozenbaum 4 жыл бұрын
Dr
@rupert5390
@rupert5390 3 жыл бұрын
god bless your dad
@mpetersen6
@mpetersen6 5 жыл бұрын
The 5th Air Force was still flying operations against Rabual in August of 1945. A gentleman I worked with had his co-pilot killed between Hiroshima and Nagasaki in a pointless raid on Rabual. Rabual had been bypassed and left to rot on the vine. Yet air operations continued until the end of the war. The Allies could taken Rabual but it was most likely considered not worth the cost in men, material and time. The same thing happened with Truk and other islands and positions along the north coast of New Guinea. As an aside the US 32nd Infantry (Red Arrow) which served on New Guinea and the Philippines had a number of firsts First US combat division moved overseas in one sea lift (to Australia) First complete unit unit moved by air to an area of operations (128th rgmt) It was one of the first US Army divisions to engage in offensive combat operations and the the last US unit still engaged against Japanese forces in August 1945. On August 15th, 1945 elements of the 32nd defeated two last ditch banzai attacks. In all the Division was I combat operations for 654 days. More than any other US Division. One would think that after that they would be amongst the first units to return home. Yet on October 14th they landed at Sasebo to begin occupation duty in Japan.
@mpetersen6
@mpetersen6 4 жыл бұрын
@@jacktattis143 When the 32nd was put into action on New Guinea they were poorly trained and overburdened with too much personal equipment. One reason they were ill trained is from the time the left for Fort Devins outside of Boston (they were originally being sent to the UK) until the first units were flown into Port Morseby they were either getting ready to move, in transit or getting set-up at their arrival point. Harding protested that they were not trained up but was over ruled by MacArthur. The 41st division wasn't in any better state of readiness. I really don't think any unit in the US Army thrown into that situation in 1942 would have done much better given what the tactical situation was and the terrain. Japanese bunkers were so well concealed that troops could literally walk right up to them and not know it. Add in the lack of artillery (Harding requested artillery be brought up and all he got initially was some aged 3 inch pieces. When he asked for artillery support Kenny (sp) made a comment "in this theater the artillery flys") getting Japanese troops out of their bunkers proved difficult to say the least. Eventually when they received some M-4 light tanks it was possible to drive the tanks right up to the bunker and shoot HE rounds through the gun slits. Overall the whole Southwest Pacific Theater was pretty much run on a shoestring in terms of the commitment of resources up until when the invasion of the Philippines took place.
@jacksnyder7318
@jacksnyder7318 2 жыл бұрын
mpetersen6: My Dad was in the 43rd div 172 inf and I belive you are right on target, Dad didn't say much but said most of his training was on the ship going over (SS Coolidge) he came back on a hospital ship badly wounded. Passed in 2002 with shrapnel still in his skull. I asked him once as a boy if brought anything back and he said "I brought nothing back" he was wrong, he brought back nightmares.
@sonyascott6114
@sonyascott6114 Жыл бұрын
@@mpetersen6 💯 percent correct,brother!You are walking point man with that statement.Shoestring is correct.
@donscheid97
@donscheid97 4 жыл бұрын
The Aussies were and still are great allies. Few recall they were with us in Korea and Nam also.
@kevtop351
@kevtop351 3 жыл бұрын
And so were the New Zealanders.
@maddyg3208
@maddyg3208 3 жыл бұрын
Unlike (in the case of Vietnam), the UK, Canada, Israel etc.
@presidentxijinpingspoxdoct9756
@presidentxijinpingspoxdoct9756 3 жыл бұрын
@dan conrad New Xiland
@chiefseadawg5164
@chiefseadawg5164 4 жыл бұрын
General MacArthur's brilliant Papua-New Guinea campaign remains one of the most under-reported and greatly unknown campaigns of WW II. And what tremendous allies the Americans and Australians were! The Australians were indeed the best jungle fighters in the world. Thank God they were on our side! On a personal note, I was very fortunate to have visited Australia during my career in the U.S. Navy.
@KateLicker
@KateLicker 4 жыл бұрын
there are good books on the PNG north-coast campaign such as Peter Brune's books like "Gona's Gone"
@ninline2000
@ninline2000 4 жыл бұрын
I was fortunate that Vietnam was over before I turned 18. All the people I talked to that were there remarked on how awesome the Aussies were. Lots of people didn't know they were our allies in Vietnam too.
@mickthefisherman1562
@mickthefisherman1562 4 жыл бұрын
@@daviddou1408 Thankyou for mentioning this, my grandfather was in the 2/25th battalion on the track and fought all the way to Gona. He held a great resentment towards MacArthur because of the way he constantly criticised them, while he stayed as far away from danger as he could. When they finally pulled them out of the line they were incapable of offensive action.
@MarkGoding
@MarkGoding 3 жыл бұрын
@@daviddou1408 Gona and Buna were brutal. The Japanese had entrenched themselves in a swampy area with a series of blockhouses with overlapping fields of fire. Even the Australian veterans of the Kokoda trail found that hard going.. No where in NG was easy to fight in. That one was particularly brutal.
@jayfrank1913
@jayfrank1913 3 жыл бұрын
It's hard to get an Aussie in a small roll.
@pamwalker7823
@pamwalker7823 3 жыл бұрын
Never forget these brave souls 🙏🏻
@scottwins2
@scottwins2 4 жыл бұрын
My dad was in New Guinea during the war airfield # 7 I think. B-17's McAurther flew out on my dad's plane. If fact he had to waite since my dad was working on an engine. He was the engineer and also flew top turret twice
@paulbaker9277
@paulbaker9277 3 жыл бұрын
It was nice to hear a little mention of Aussies in there small roll.
@samuelgoodman2825
@samuelgoodman2825 3 жыл бұрын
Aussies Kick Ass
@incubus1160
@incubus1160 3 жыл бұрын
Small role??? are you serious, we played a huge part in defeating the japanese in new guinea.
@the_real_bin_chicken
@the_real_bin_chicken 3 жыл бұрын
Calm down gents..... it’s just a bit of humour.
@XxBloggs
@XxBloggs 3 жыл бұрын
The US ground forces in New Guinea completely failed and were replaced in the line with Australian forces. It was Australian troops who took Buna, Lae, Gona abs Salumala
@justaname1862
@justaname1862 3 жыл бұрын
Small Role? The Aussies cleared everything out...only after they did, did the Yanks turn up...but in typical Yank fashion they tried to take all the glory...Yank arrogance has no limits....They use to say this about the Yanks in Australia...They're Overpaid, Oversexed....and Over "Here"
@kristov29
@kristov29 4 жыл бұрын
Whether it was in the Second Boer War, WWI, WWII, Korea or Vietnam, it seems as though the Australians were always handed the most difficult assignments.
@JRandallS
@JRandallS 3 жыл бұрын
Well in this case, they were defending against an invasion of their homeland by Japan. They were happy to have some Allied assistance in the matter, but I'm sure would have fought on, with or without us.
@matthewcullen1298
@matthewcullen1298 3 жыл бұрын
@@JRandallS hey John . I'm certainly glad our US Friends stepped in on our side.im not sure why some of my fellow Australians get so precious. My uncle fought in PNG. He got buried alive by Japanese artillery but was lucky his mates dug him out. The Aussies stopped the Japanese first at Kokoda buying us some precious time and we should by very proud of our Aussie soldiers but by no means had we beaten the Japanese empire nor did we process the ability too. As a realistic but very proud Australian I'm very greatful for the American people and the sacrifice made by many of their very brave service men and their families. I have nothing but respect for all involved by ALL THE ALLIES
@ramroddrone5449
@ramroddrone5449 4 жыл бұрын
the greatest generation. Yes thanks very much for this video. Dave Australia. The son of an Australian digger who only just survived Milne Bay 1942.
@ramroddrone5449
@ramroddrone5449 3 жыл бұрын
Sorry Milne Bay New Guinea.. Edited
@chrismaggio7879
@chrismaggio7879 4 жыл бұрын
Grampa Chet Long was a bombardier on B-24s (Moby Dick) out of PNG. Thank you to him and so many like him.
@ZenosWarbirds
@ZenosWarbirds 4 жыл бұрын
👍
@tbjr1150
@tbjr1150 4 жыл бұрын
My friend Lou, (deceased) was a paratrooper. Made low level drops in NG . He fractured his leg in Luzon . How you ask, the Japanese shot his chute up. He said as he dropped he passed his buddies down, "in a hurry" . Ended up in Australian hospital. Lou was a great man, RIP Lou.
@frankcomando8440
@frankcomando8440 2 ай бұрын
I cannot thank all service men here enough for your service. may God Bless...All who come in peace...
@phillipoconnor2097
@phillipoconnor2097 8 жыл бұрын
My DAD WAS WITH THE 390th BOMBARDment SQUADRON 13th Air Force 42nd BOMB WING. in New Guinea he was the Intelligence Officer for the Group S-2 It was Called (THE JUNGLE AIR FORCE). The one plane was THE HEAVENLY BODY) which still flies today
@munsif55
@munsif55 8 жыл бұрын
hi gentleman, glade to read about you sir
@johnbeatty9317
@johnbeatty9317 5 жыл бұрын
My father-in-law sgt.J T Vines radio operator and top turret gunner on the B24 ,with Capt. Kelly made the the first raid. He said to me that they didn’t believe they would make it back,but they did and he was for ever thankful for the crew who made the flight. I might add that J T said that they never lost a crew member, while stationed in Australia, and other bases.
@clayz1
@clayz1 2 жыл бұрын
My dad was a US Army medic and could have been in any of those shots of grunts. They worked with Australian troops. Dad had nothing but good to say about the Aussies. God bless them all.
@kilcar
@kilcar 8 ай бұрын
My nextdoor neighbor did the parachute jump on New Guinea. Later, he jumped on Corregidor in the Phollipines and helped liberate it.
@davidmusick1673
@davidmusick1673 4 жыл бұрын
My Uncle Jack Musick was an Enlisted pilot for the Army Air Corps during WWII. My dad (who was in the Navy at the time), said Uncle Jack flew transport planes over the Burma Hump. When I was in the Navy I remember seeing old Chief Petty Officers that were enlisted pilots these were rare birds at the time as they were nearing retirement. Nowadays there are no enlisted pilots. Anyone ever heard of enlisted pilots?
@sonyascott6114
@sonyascott6114 Жыл бұрын
No David,I never have heard of that.What a story,brother.
@johnscanlon3362
@johnscanlon3362 5 жыл бұрын
My father was a navigator on B17s and B25s in New Guinea at the time of this video
@scottwins2
@scottwins2 4 жыл бұрын
Mine was too in 17's
@ninline2000
@ninline2000 4 жыл бұрын
Aussie troops kicked ass!
@scottyfox6376
@scottyfox6376 4 жыл бұрын
My late uncle served in the Australian Medical Corp as a chiropractor in New Guinea. Much respect to the brave men & women who fought & died to stop the Japanese. 🇦🇺🇺🇸💯🙏
@alexbaum2204
@alexbaum2204 2 жыл бұрын
The Huon Peninsula remains a very remote area even today. Really extreme terrain. One of the highest levels of biodiversity on the planet. I watch the bombing runs and can’t help but think of the endemic wildlife getting incinerated. I wonder if any of the conflicts like this put species at risk back then.
@dmr122003
@dmr122003 4 жыл бұрын
this was the bravest generation ever, thank you so much, i am proud to all men , women , and children that did their part for my freedom, the punks of today have NO clue and have NO respect ,
@richardc7721
@richardc7721 4 жыл бұрын
The youth of today are the victims of brainwashing. They are taught that America never did any good only evil. This is being done by other brainwashed people, teachers who were brainwashed by people who never worked or built anything but spent their lives as students all their lives, who after several years in college go on to teach the next generation to hate America. Those are the university professors who indoctrinate students who become the teachers, teaching to hate America and capitalism, to embrace communist. The cycle must be broken starting now at the school board level, they are the ones that okay the school books and subject matter taught. Next the college and university governing bodies, for the same reason, then go after all the American hating professors. Then and only then will we gain back our country. Otherwise, those that hate freedom and embrace communism will outnumber us and vote to enslave us.
@nickviner1225
@nickviner1225 3 жыл бұрын
@@richardc7721 Oh , so true. I have the same thoughts as you do.
@kaptainkaos1202
@kaptainkaos1202 3 жыл бұрын
Well I’d like to see if you are brave enough to tell the Sailors and Marines I work with they’re a bunch of punks. Or maybe either of my nephews who combined have done 11 deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. Or my father who was a USN SAR crewman or maybe even me who has over 3000 flight hours protecting our country in the USN. What have YOU done to contribute? Whine?
@dmr122003
@dmr122003 3 жыл бұрын
@@kaptainkaos1202 first i apologize...our service men and women of today are also some of the best people i’ve met... i was referring to the ones who disrespects the flag , kneel for our anthem. disrespectful of the men in uniform..thank god for those who sever, again i apologize
@richardc7721
@richardc7721 3 жыл бұрын
@@dmr122003 I hold the youth of America that joins the military or P.D. or F.D. in other words those who put others 1st in a special group. They are carrying on the legacy of those who gave more than they got. Those I hold in high esteem. I served my country for many years
@joestephan1111
@joestephan1111 3 жыл бұрын
The Aussies (correctly pronounced "ozzie's") played a major part in world war two, Europe & Africa as well as the Pacific. That includes secret civilian radio operators in the island "hot zone". Many were caught & executed. Because there's so much focus on long range B-29 bombing of Japan, most don't know that B-17s & B-24s played a big part in the South Pacific.
@greasyflight6609
@greasyflight6609 3 жыл бұрын
Aussies are the best friends you will ever have
@joestephan1111
@joestephan1111 3 жыл бұрын
@@greasyflight6609 I spent 25 years writing for Aussie car & motorcycle newspapers & magazines, which included a year living there. I could write a book on my experiences with Aussies both there and here in the U.S. They really are special people.
@greasyflight6609
@greasyflight6609 3 жыл бұрын
@@joestephan1111 It takes one to know one
@joestephan1111
@joestephan1111 3 жыл бұрын
@@greasyflight6609 Sadly, over time and my retirement, I have lost track of the last ones I knew. Two key ones have passed away. But they can't take my memories for a million dollars.
@goodshipkaraboudjan
@goodshipkaraboudjan 5 жыл бұрын
"We held at PM and took Kokoda" must be American for - "The Australians held PM and took Kokoda before we even arrived".
@moss8448
@moss8448 4 жыл бұрын
by we ..he meant the Allies
@moss8448
@moss8448 4 жыл бұрын
@Jack Tangles No Sir...as a Yank can't agree with that...the overall perception by the unwashed masses may think that; buffs don't...met some diggers in 'Nam damn good soldiers.
@moss8448
@moss8448 4 жыл бұрын
you guys did all the heavy lifting on that deal...we did or were able to...get off our feet and make a stab at using air power.
@moss8448
@moss8448 4 жыл бұрын
@Jack Tangles yep we got our butts kicked at Kasserine..it was a learning experience for sure..they brought Patton in to take over and you know the rest of the story
@jrt818
@jrt818 3 жыл бұрын
Unclear antecedents, hence lawyers.
@nickviner1225
@nickviner1225 3 жыл бұрын
My late father in law was there and came down the kokoda trail . My Son in Law did the same trail about ten years ago and told me 'it was the toughest thing he had ever done in his life." In his case he (son in law was NOT being shot at.
@jamesmilton8308
@jamesmilton8308 3 жыл бұрын
Had a grandfather in the 7th as a B24 gunner returned stateside in 44 and was an instructor in Pensacola
@wayne.thomson-qe1pf
@wayne.thomson-qe1pf 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this documentary of World war 2 in the Pacific the reason why I'm saying the Pacific is that two of my grandfathers were serving in Australian military one of my grandfathers was a chief gunnery officer on HMAS Canberra and then HMAS Shropshire, HMAS Canberra was at the battle of the Coral sea and also the Boom bombard meant of islands for American troops to land, and then serves on HMAS shropshire at the battle of leyte gulf in the Philippines right up to the end of the war in Tokyo Harbour. My other grandfather served with the Australian army he was a sergeant at the time of this battle in Papua New Guinea he also made it to the end of the war. Myself as a young boy my dad was in the navy The royal Australian Navy and he was posted overseas to Papua New Guinea to a city could ( LAE ), in 1973 and 1974 there was a Japanese soldier still alive thinking the war was still on so they coached him out of the jungle and he got to go home, But it still hurts me today when my grandfather and myself ( grandfather who served on HMAS Canberra ) when to the Australian cemetery to pay our respects to the men and women for the service to our country and the freedoms that we have today unknowing my grandfather and myself we're about to walk up the stairs to the cemetery , Two Japanese men appeared out of nowhere, I saw my grandfather protecting his men that are still asleep he yelled out and then he yelled some more as he still was protecting them I saw my grandfather still fighting the war, protecting and defending me and those men and women who were in the cemetery looking back he didn't want these men from Japan walking or touching Holy ground dishonouring them it would be very disobedient. Lest we forget.
@maryannamerica6934
@maryannamerica6934 4 жыл бұрын
wayne. thomson .....What an amazing story!!!! I was very touched! What awesome grandfathers you had! A USAF Veteran 🇺🇸
@Cbabilon675
@Cbabilon675 2 жыл бұрын
You know I don't think it can be stated in enough how much the native population really helped to win this battle.
@Blinkybills
@Blinkybills 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. Truly inspirational.
@Newtire
@Newtire 2 жыл бұрын
W
@brucestorey3400
@brucestorey3400 4 жыл бұрын
The start of a great and enduring friendship. Australia and USA stand together against tyranny. Now we seem to have another threat emerging.........
@danielmocsny5066
@danielmocsny5066 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, that threat would be the lie-fueled mob of loser Trump supporters storming the very seat of US democracy, the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.
@BigboiiTone
@BigboiiTone 3 жыл бұрын
@@danielmocsny5066 Correct
@donsch6766
@donsch6766 2 жыл бұрын
@@danielmocsny5066 Well we at least know your opinion, although it is not necessarily accurate nor is it shared by half the country.
@raydematio7585
@raydematio7585 2 жыл бұрын
TRUMP makes these people crazy, he's doing a good job. They are so desperate they have to mention him on an old documentary. Good man.
@magnacarta9364
@magnacarta9364 2 жыл бұрын
@@raydematio7585 Lol, living rent free in their heads.
@roymccomb8749
@roymccomb8749 4 жыл бұрын
My grandmothers brother was a B 25 pilot in New Guinea. He was shot down over Wide Bay and survived with 2 other crew members. All 3 men were found by local natives and told that they would be brought back to the allies but were turned over the the Japanese stationed in Rabaul. He spent 8 months in a POW camp but was later taken into the jungle, along with all the other officers in the camp, and beheaded. My grandmother found out what had happened from an Australian Catholic priest that survived the war as a POW and wrote my great grandmother a letter. The Japanese were heartless, soulless individuals whose only purpose was to enslave any non Japanese. Until the day she died my grandmother would refer to them as “Jap bastards”
@AXESMI
@AXESMI 8 жыл бұрын
My dad flew 8 of his 48 missions on Wewak. He was with the 320th Squadron of the Jolly Rogers.
@munsif55
@munsif55 8 жыл бұрын
hi gentleman, glade to read about you sir
@johnscanlon3362
@johnscanlon3362 5 жыл бұрын
did he fly bombers or fighters? My father was there from 1942 until the end of the war. He never said much about it.
@crestonraines9915
@crestonraines9915 5 жыл бұрын
My uncle was Sqd, Com. of the 319th. Maj. Milton Porter. Shot down over Formosa and was killed in the crash of his bomber. 9 crew members killed with him. His Squadron was "Asterperious" "Superior attitude in an inferior environment." Their motto.
@terencegalvin5344
@terencegalvin5344 4 жыл бұрын
My grandad served in Weewak after your Dad made it relatively safe. He was also in Nth Africa, Greece, Crete and Syria. Died aged 100 years 2 months.
@thomasjr8360
@thomasjr8360 4 жыл бұрын
Are wewack and ewack sister islands?
@amartinjoe
@amartinjoe 9 жыл бұрын
..love those B-25's...what a sight to see....
@JohnDoe-ff2fc
@JohnDoe-ff2fc 5 жыл бұрын
such a versatile planes. how many other bombers were used for strafing and tree top bombing? I suppose that you could include the Mosquito
@pshehan1
@pshehan1 4 жыл бұрын
I came to know veterans of the Australian 7th Division through interviewing them in an oral history project for the 2/14 Battalion Association and La Trobe University in Melbourne. At a couple of functions I talked to artillery men who parachuted into the Markham valley as mentioned in the video.
@pshehan1
@pshehan1 4 жыл бұрын
@@daviddou1408 Thanks David. So your father was Ivan Dougherty. I don't really have a specific link on this, and just received word that ANZAC Day functions are cancelled this year due to the virus. So can't ask the old gunner I talked to last year. Is it just info about the artillery men you wan't? I could ask one of the office holders of the battalion association about it if you like.
@pshehan1
@pshehan1 4 жыл бұрын
@@daviddou1408 OK David. I was actually a scientist by trade but did some 'whistle blowing' at Sydney University which was not a good career move and at one stage decided I might become a science maths teacher so was at La trobe doing a Dip Ed when they were looking for someone to do a project in conjunction with the 2/14 Battalion association. They were probably looking more for humanities grads but they were not exactly rushed with volunteers Anyway I have an interest in history and had done some online research into my own families service in both world wars so stuck my hand up. I decided on an oral history project interviewing some of the 'originals' of the battalion. Fantastic blokes who i am pleased to say came to regard me as a friend. Sadly all gone now. This was in 2008. Became a member of the 2/14 Battalion Association which is now run by the sons and daughters of the veterans. So I did become familiar with the battalion history in general so remember the controversy surrounding Potts removal.
@frankcomando8440
@frankcomando8440 2 ай бұрын
My uncle Lt.General Whitehead surmised that, if his forces were to be effective in the im¬plementation of Allied strategy, he would need more airfields so that there would be more room for the concentration of all the available Allied air strength in SWPA. Forward airfields on New Guinea were necessary because pilots from Australia, staging through Port Moresby for targets in Japanese-held territory, flew missions which took them from thirty-six to forty-eight hours away from their home base, so that crews had to fly as much as eighteen hours to drop a load of bombs. Adding to the problem, the Japanese usually met them over the target with swarms of fighters. Under the above-described adverse conditions, the efficiency of both planes and crew suffered. Such circumstances pointed to the necessity of obtaining air bases, not merely staging areas, on the north coast of Papau. Many of the same unfavorable conditions impelled the Japanese to seek an air base on the northeast coast of Papua. Thus when the Japanese landed at Buna on July 21, 1942, they proceeded immediately to build airstrips there.25 Whitehead devoted much of his time during his first months in Now Guinea to obtaining a substantial increase in engineer troops and equip¬ment for construction of the additional airdromes, operations. facilities, and housing. He pushed engineering construction rolls with unlimited energy, and he personally selected sites and visited them on a daily basis.26
@peterread705
@peterread705 3 жыл бұрын
My dad was in the 9th division. He fought at Tobruk (the Easter battle was the first German defeat in WW2) El Alamein then took part in the beach landing at Red beach near Lae. My workmate ( we worked together during the early eighties) flew on the Liberator bombers with the yanks
@longez360
@longez360 2 ай бұрын
My Grandfather too. 9th div 2/23rd battalion. Was wounded in action 4th September 1943. Great men.
@icewaterslim7260
@icewaterslim7260 3 жыл бұрын
That's a ground support A20 at 13:13 . A20s comprised 2 of the first 3 parafrag bomb squadrons, B25s the other. My dad was a gunner on A20s and A26s and was in on this one.
@Vsshooter
@Vsshooter 10 жыл бұрын
My father was at Milne Bay, Buna, Nadzab, Dobodura, Hollandia, Wewak, Biak Island, then to Leyte, Tacloaban, Linguan Gulf, Ie Shima and finally Kimpo Field, Korea. 475th Fighter Group. Check out their museum at the Planes of Fame Museum, Chino, CA. They also have a website 475th Fighter Group.
@rael5469
@rael5469 2 жыл бұрын
The A-10 has almost the bomb load of the B-17. The A-10 has shorter range but of course....with air to air refueling it can exceed the B-17 range. But the A-10 is more or less dependent on fighter escort in a real shooting war.
@lostinpa-dadenduro7555
@lostinpa-dadenduro7555 4 жыл бұрын
The B-25s with all the guns in the nose are awesome.
@desweller6614
@desweller6614 3 жыл бұрын
In
@terryrussel3369
@terryrussel3369 3 жыл бұрын
Strawffing ? That made my uncle laugh. Radioman with the 8th USAAF, European theater. Forgot which group !
@AllanGildea
@AllanGildea 10 жыл бұрын
fascinating, thank you.
@MarsFKA
@MarsFKA 8 жыл бұрын
A lot of war material is still lying around in that part of the world, some of it still lethal. I lived in Lae for a year in 1971-72 and heard on the News of some villagers on one of the New Britain islands, who found a bomb and decided to cut it open to get the explosive out for fishing. Four of them died when it exploded. In Lae, my gardener was digging around one day and found a 3-inch anti-aircraft shell. I still have the photo of me holding it, before remembering that it was the last thing I should be doing, lest it become the last thing I ever did. So I carefully put it down and called the Police, who called the Army, who carefully took it away.
@danzervos7606
@danzervos7606 4 жыл бұрын
Working at a car dealership, a used car came in with a 75 mm shell in the trunk (it weighed about 15 lbs), It had been fired as indicated by the grooves on brass rings on it but had very little damage. It had what looked like a fuse on the base, but no detonator on the nose. I was thinking that if I flushed out the fuse and whatever it led to, it would make a great table decoration. However I knew that sometimes these things used phosphate which probably reacts with water - so I let it be and eventually left the company. Don't know what ever happened to it.
@frankcomando8440
@frankcomando8440 2 ай бұрын
these quotes are from "We Shall Return" MacArthur's Commanders, Lt. General Whitehead Aerial Tactician designed the air attacks. In any large war such as World War II, there are always a few brilliant and dedicated commanders who through dislike of publicity or oversight- deliberate or unintended-on the part of superiors fail to receive the plaudits of the public or the recognition merited by their performance. The Southwest Pacific theater seemed to have more than its share of such individuals, and foremost among them was Lieutenant General Ennis Clement Whitehead, U.S. Air Force serial number nine. Few air com¬manders accomplished as much with as little as did Whitehead. Yet his successes remain obscure and his name largely forgotten. He deserves a better fate.
@icarusairways6139
@icarusairways6139 4 жыл бұрын
5th AF 380 BG B-24 Gunner - 27 missions - my father.
@hazchemel
@hazchemel 3 жыл бұрын
Amazing. Brilliant. Thank you.
@kimoandrews5802
@kimoandrews5802 4 жыл бұрын
Uncle Keith was a Headhunter (80th Fighter Squadron) stationed at Port Moresby... but not for long, they were on to the Philippines and eventually, Honshu.
@derrobbster
@derrobbster Жыл бұрын
There's an excellent book on this campaign called Race of Aces by John R Bruning if anyone is interested.
@ericgrace9995
@ericgrace9995 3 жыл бұрын
Good work. Thanks .
@81squadronraf
@81squadronraf 10 жыл бұрын
Danke! Spasibo! Благодарю!
@jamesbridge6408
@jamesbridge6408 5 жыл бұрын
Great video, showing a retreat from the MacArthur media machine, to a celebrate the men video take.
@JoeInCT418
@JoeInCT418 6 жыл бұрын
Bless those C-47s (2:25). And "The Diggers." "Parafrags"; the original cluster bomb. A bunch of 23-pound hand grenades.
@icewaterslim7260
@icewaterslim7260 4 жыл бұрын
My dad was a gunner on A20s in the 89th Squadron, 3rd Attack Group, 5th Army Air Force . . . One of the first parafrag bomb groups attacking Japanese airfields & ammo dumps.
@charobaigorri2457
@charobaigorri2457 4 жыл бұрын
Lamento no saber inglés y que no haya traducción y, así, poder subscribirme. Enhorabuena por la filmación y la calidad de las imágenes. Saludos
@randelldarky3920
@randelldarky3920 5 жыл бұрын
Kids these days have no idea how great We have it
@manueljudin2501
@manueljudin2501 4 жыл бұрын
@@KateLicker gb
@manueljudin2501
@manueljudin2501 4 жыл бұрын
@@KateLicker ''
@manueljudin2501
@manueljudin2501 4 жыл бұрын
I
@rodkeays8171
@rodkeays8171 4 жыл бұрын
You did what you did so young people would not have to know!
@willthorson4543
@willthorson4543 4 жыл бұрын
@@KateLicker those millennials have been fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq and all over the world since 2003. So slow it down. People know.
@user-qz7nu3mm9r
@user-qz7nu3mm9r 4 жыл бұрын
nice video &job!
@thomgarza
@thomgarza 4 жыл бұрын
Uncle Al- Aeronautical Engineer, 318th Fighter Group, 19th Squadron. P-47 Thunderbolts. IE Shima, Ryukyu Islands near New Guinea. Bomber Escorts for sorties to the Japanese mainland.
@allgood6760
@allgood6760 3 жыл бұрын
These old vids are interesting... thanks from NZ 👍🇳🇿
@djsi38t
@djsi38t 11 ай бұрын
Really an interesting operation that I dont know much about.I am very interested in the pacific campaign and know quite a bit but this was new to me and it seems they really did a great job figuring this one out.Those parabombs look pretty scary,Imagine seeing those falling all around you.
@ZenosWarbirds
@ZenosWarbirds 11 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@kimharris2599
@kimharris2599 4 жыл бұрын
These air raids saved a significant part in preventing Auustralia being invade. To all the men and woman and Tradtional owners Thank you .
@frankcomando8440
@frankcomando8440 2 ай бұрын
Shortly thereafter, Whitehead was sent to Port Moresby. General MacArthur had shaken up his command in an effort to stem the tide of the Japanese advance, assigning Major General George C. Kenney to lead the Allied air forces in the SWPA. Kenney had inherited a command of broken and incomplete elements that had been formed under great pressure dur¬ing the first eight months of the war. Its mission had never been defined, and the responsibilities of each component were not clear. Kenney had reorganized the American fighter and bomber units into the Fifth Air Force and broke up the Australian and other Allied components into sepa¬rate but equal units. Under the new reorganization, the Royal Australian Air Force was assigned the mission of the defense of Australia, while the U.S. Fifth Air Force was given the offensive mission of regaining New Guinea. Kenney therefore wore two hats: he was both commander of Al¬lied Air Forces SWPA and commander of the Fifth Air Force.23 Whitehead had been at Port Moresby for only two days when he was designated commander of Allied Air Forces in New Guinea. Two months later, after General Kenney created the Fifth Air Force, Whitehead be¬came deputy commander of the Fifth Air Force and commanding general of the advanced echelon of the Fifth Air Force.24
@black-hw7zg
@black-hw7zg 5 жыл бұрын
thanx for video didnt know A-20 havocs and B17s were involved in that campaign..
@steves8236
@steves8236 10 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Zeno. So much of the New Guinea campaign's depictions are so vague... a landing here, a landing there... this was good stuff. You haven't happened to run across anything highlighting Charles Lindburgh's work during this campaign have you?
@GKASEY1424
@GKASEY1424 4 жыл бұрын
There is a long video on the P38 in the middle of has a great segment on Lindberghs pioneering work on engine leaning almost doubling the P38 range having significant positive impact.
@twinstu50
@twinstu50 9 жыл бұрын
At 28:37, note the Australian C.A.C. Wirraway in the background, it's the single engine acft with a white tail and white centre to the roundel marking. I think the squadron code on the side is 'QF', not sure though.
@ianjamie7319
@ianjamie7319 5 жыл бұрын
Probably "QE" - 4 Squadron RAAF. "In May 1943, No. 4 Squadron was re-equipped with CAC Boomerang fighter aircraft,[29] to be operated in a tactical reconnaissance role. Operating with these new aircraft and also some Wirraways it had retained, the squadron supported the Australian 7th and 9th Divisions during the Huon Peninsula campaign." - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No._4_Squadron_RAAF#World_War_II
@kennewman4272
@kennewman4272 5 жыл бұрын
@@ianjamie7319 My Dad was with 4 Sqd. as an LAC. I don't know role he played, but he often referred to the Lae area.
@luckyja1
@luckyja1 Жыл бұрын
So so proud of my pa he was a sergent in the 2/7th infantry battle for wau then on to salamaua, he says his greatest achievement was when he escorted general adachi in to allied hands
@markhorrell9213
@markhorrell9213 Жыл бұрын
My old man was there too. He got scrub typhus in Lae n got shipped to Cairns to recover n went back to finish the job
@markhorrell9213
@markhorrell9213 Жыл бұрын
I heard gen Adachi drowned trying to escape Lae.. according to Dad n some of his mates?
@mikemac7133
@mikemac7133 3 жыл бұрын
The "10 days of training" for Australian artillerymen who jumped into the Markham valley with their 25 pounders apparenty consisted about a week of general fitness training before they arrived at the lines of the US 503rd parachute infantry. At this point it was realised that no one had told the men that they would be jumping out of planes. This news came from the commander of the 503rd. All of them turned down the opportunity to withdraw from the mission and most then had only one training jump before their combat drop from 1200 feet 24 hours later. One lieutenant who made the combat jump was a volunteer who had never jumped before and was replacing an officer who had been injured in the sole practice jump on the previous day. Only one gunner was injured in the combat drop when he landed in a tree. They then had to locate and assemble the two 25 pounders before going into action. The 31 paragunners received their US Combat Jump Wings ..... in 1990 at an anniversary celebration.
@waterboy.6001
@waterboy.6001 3 жыл бұрын
I've been there in 2002 , we can still see the remain of WW2 air craft
@rastusdarklord4325
@rastusdarklord4325 3 жыл бұрын
Bloody excellent
@arabianrebel61
@arabianrebel61 3 жыл бұрын
I’ve got my grandfather’s memoirs and reading his accounts of the dates mentioned in this video. Raymond Gates Radar Equipped B-24 top turret gunner/ engineer 43rd bomb group 63rd squadron Seahawks.
@waltershumate5777
@waltershumate5777 5 жыл бұрын
Wewak... boy.... them old Fly boys sure Liberated the living Crap out of that place!! Some of you newer guys in the air arms know what I mean..? Them Aussies in Lae... you dont suppose Eeking a tough living in a HARD land made for some Resilliant, self sufficient, and just "Tougher than boot sole" fighters, do ya'? Far more ready for enviorns that often proved deadly to Northern Hemispheric troops. Great job mates! Wish I could afford to buy you all a pint or two!
@the_real_bin_chicken
@the_real_bin_chicken 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah that deffenttly makes a difference, but good practical training goes a long way too. It currently takes about 18 months to train an Australian rifleman to the standards that have been set by our reputation. The Australian solider has the rep of being almost the modern equilivent to a spartan hoplite. That’s why we always get the though assignments and make some of the best soldiers in the world. Fun fact: In the Vietnam war, the VC and other northern troops actively avoided engaging the Australians after their first battles with them. I mean you can hardly blame the northern commanders... especially after a single Australian rifle company (with New Zealand arty support) decimated both 275 Regiment (VC) and D445 battalion (PAVN) in one night at long tan. I might add that the Aussies where actually ambushed by the Vietnamese units.
@jlandon6028
@jlandon6028 5 жыл бұрын
We did this whole in thing in 4 years. Enough Said!
@AlbertIngirin-eg2vj
@AlbertIngirin-eg2vj 6 ай бұрын
It was really long time ago. Now am leaving at that place am watching
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