ON SHAGGY RIDGE
Phillip Bradley
Oxford University Press, 2004
It is possible to argue that this book need not have
been written, for the events covered have been fully described in the official
history. However, one must admit
that Second World War official histories do not adorn many bookcases these
days, and it seems probable that the copies in libraries spend very little time
in the hands of borrowers.
This book, then, joins others in the Army History
series (and some published under other aegis, such as Peter Stanley’s book on
Tarakan, and Peter Brune’s works on the Papuan Campaign) that provide an
important service by bringing Australia’s military history to the general
reader. Such books also serve as
at least a partial antidote to the limited academic study of military history
in current day Australia.
To some degree, the book is in the C.E.W. Bean
tradition, focussing on the men in the front line, with the activities of
senior commanders and staff, and matters of logistics, being little more than
that charming theatrical expression ‘noises off’. This is a strength that helps it to complement rather than
duplicate the narrative in the official history. However, while the focus on the men in the sections and
platoons gives a good understanding of the physical difficulties of the Shaggy
Ridge battles, perhaps a little more depth might have given a better context to
the story.
The focus on the front line, however, does give the
author the opportunity to introduce some personalities who are not well known
in Australia. Prominent among
these is the American pilot Tommy Roberts, who decided to spend some leave in
the front lines while awaiting conversion training in Port Moresby. His performance with the 2/16th
Battalion (surely well above and beyond the call of duty for an airman) earned
him a Silver Star. Ironically,
after returning from Shaggy Ridge he died in an air crash just two days after
his first conversion flight.
A number of references are make through the book to
the difficulties experienced by ‘out of state’ reinforcements in integrating
into battalions with their own proud (but sometimes parochial) histories. The strength that came from the
territorial recruitment of combat units has been highlighted often, including
recently by Ian Kuring in his history of Australian infantry. One has to wonder, therefore, why this
strength appears to have been ignored by the posting authorities in the latter
part of World War II. Surely the
unnecessary tension that this policy caused should have been avoided in time of
war?
It is not as if the numbers were minor. As an example, Bradley notes that some
600 men came from the disbanded 16th Motor Regiment to the 2/16th
Battalion. This effectively
converted it from a West Australian unit to a New South Wales one. Also, while Queenslanders from the 5th
Motor Regiment went to the Queensland 2/9th Battalion, other Queenslanders from
the 11th Motor Regiment went to the South Australian 2/10th Battalion, which
also had a platoon mostly comprising men from Bungendore in New South Wales!
Still, the Adjutant-General’s Branch was responsible
for worse errors during the Second World War, such as the despatch of untrained
reinforcements to Singapore and the botched formation of the 39th, 49th and
53rd Battalions. The question
remains, however, as to whether these various actions were the result of
indifference, indolence, ignorance or incompetence.
The ruthlessness with which the war against Japan
was fought is clear from this book.
The reluctance to take prisoners and the casual treatment of dead
Japanese soldiers would cause agitation in some quarters if repeated
today! However, in the context of
the times, and given the propensity of wounded Japanese soldiers to try to take
someone with them if at all possible, the actions are fully
understandable. Different times,
different mores.
Bradley suggests that the extensive use of air power
to both deploy and support ground troops in the Markham/Ramu Valley campaign
heralded the future of warfare.
Perhaps so, certainly it had its reprise in Slim’s campaign in Burma,
and later with the development of air mobility in Vietnam. However, the recent campaigns in the
Middle East could be taken as a reminder that circumstances dictate the
relevant tactics, and flexibility must remain as a military virtue.
Some tighter editing might have been
appropriate. As a very simple
example, the Studebaker trucks in which men of the 2/33rd Battalion sat on page
one had become Chevrolets by page two!
Such minor issues do not, however, detract seriously from the quality of
the book.
The Army History program has so far produced books
covering the activities if the 7th Division (this volume, as well as indirectly
in the biography of Lavarack), the 8th Division (Against the Sun), and the 9th Division (Alamein, Bravery Above
Blunder, and indirectly in the biography of Morshead). Perhaps it is time for something on the
6th Division?
JOHN DONOVAN
No comments:
Post a Comment