In the morning of 8 December 1941 Japanese troops commenced landing in
Northern Malaya. This assault was co-ordinated with the Japanese strike
against the United States Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbour (7 December,
local time). As a consequence of these actions the Royal Australian Navy
found itself facing a new enemy and fighting a new war. A war that was
to last four years and see Australian ships and personnel operate across
the vast expanse of the Pacific and Indian Oceans.
Prior to the outbreak of hostilities six corvettes of the RAN had
already been based at Singapore. Other vessels, including the cruiser
HMAS HOBART, the destroyer HMAS VAMPIRE and the sloop HMAS YARRA, were
ordered back to Australian waters to help meet this new threat. VAMPIRE
formed part of the escort of HM Ships PRINCE OF WALES and REPULSE on
their ill fated sortie to attack Japanese landing forces at Kuantan on
Malaysia's east coast. She rescued 225 survivors after both the capital
ships had been sunk by Japanese naval aircraft.
After this disaster the Australian ships were heavily involved in
escorting the troopships bringing reinforcements to Singapore, often in
the face of severe Japanese air attacks. On one occasion YARRA lifted
over 1300 survivors from the troopship EMPRESS OF ASIA after it had been
dive bombed and sunk. A few days prior to this, on 27 January, VAMPIRE
carried out a spirited but unsuccessful attack on a superior Japanese
landing force at Endau. An accompanying British destroyer, HMS THANET,
was sunk. Other ships carried out patrol and evacuation duties. After
taking part in the evacuation of Singapore the Australian ships formed
part of the force allocated for the naval defence of the Netherlands
East Indies.
To remove a threat from their flank while attacking eastern Java the
Japanese Navy launched a heavy air raid on Darwin, which was being used
by the Allies as a staging point for reinforcements. The bombers hit the
town, airfield and harbour facilities, sinking five merchant ships and
the destroyer USS PEARY. Many other vessels, including the hospital ship
MANUNDA, were damaged. This was the first of many such raids.
In Javanese waters, on 27 February a combined Australian, British,
American and Dutch striking force composed of five cruisers, including
HMAS PERTH, as well as a number of destroyers, engaged Japanese forces
covering the approach of a landing force. In this action, the Battle of
the Java Sea, the Allies lost two Dutch cruisers and three destroyers
with damage to a British cruiser. Subsequently the Allied naval forces
were ordered to withdraw from the Dutch East Indies. However, whilst
attempting to reach Australia through Sunda Straits, PERTH, accompanied
by the cruiser USS HOUSTON, ran into a Japanese force landing troops in
Bantam Bay. In the ensuing action both cruisers were sunk with heavy
loss of life. Many of the survivors were to subsequently die as
prisoners of war.
The Australian built corvettes were able to withdraw successfully to
Australia while the destroyer VAMPIRE had reached Ceylon. Also fortunate
was the destroyer HMAS VENDETTA which had been immobilised and under
repair in dry dock at Singapore at the time of the attack. She
eventually reached Australia after an epic towing operation through
enemy controlled waters. Less fortunate, the sloop YARRA which, whilst
escorting a convoy south of Java, was surprised by a Japanese heavy
cruiser squadron. Despite putting up a gallant fight she was overwhelmed
and sunk on 4 March. Five days later VAMPIRE was also sunk by Japanese
carrier aircraft off Ceylon.
With the occupation of Malaya and the Dutch East Indies the strategic
centre of gravity moved east. The Japanese, having occupied Rabaul and
points on the northern New Guinea coast decided to occupy the Solomon
Islands and Port Moresby. This would enable them to deny the Allies
bases from which to attack Rabaul and also to threaten the trans-Pacific
lines of communication. The Combined Operations Intelligence Centre,
located in Melbourne, linking information from locally based signals
intelligence units, Coastwatchers and aerial reconnaissance, issued an
assessment on 25 April that a Japanese assault on Port Moresby was
imminent.
On 1 May the cruisers HMA Ships AUSTRALIA and HOBART and USS CHICAGO
escorted by three American destroyers sailed from Hervey Bay to
rendezvous with an American force built around the aircraft carriers
YORKTOWN and LEXINGTON. The Australian force, designated Task Force 44,
reinforced with a fourth US destroyer and detached on 7 May to block the
movement of any Japanese ships through the Jomard Passage. The force was
bombed that day by Japanese aircraft incurring only superficial damage.
Although no other enemy were sighted the presence of the Allied ships
was influential in the Japanese decision to withdraw the Moresby
Invasion force. Meanwhile US carrier aircraft had sunk the Japanese
light carrier SHOHO the same day.
In the action between the American and Japanese fleet carriers, SHOKAKU
and ZUIKAKU on the 8th, the LEXINGTON was sunk and the YORKTOWN badly
damaged. Neither of the Japanese carriers were sunk though the SHOKAKU
was badly damaged. Although the Japanese had inflicted greater losses in
ships on the Allies they had not achieved their strategic objectives.
Further, the SHOKAKU and ZUIKAKU had suffered such heavy losses in
aircraft and personnel that they were not available for the Midway
Operation in early June.
The combined effects of the battle of the Coral Sea, Midway and latter
the Solomons Campaign turned the tide of the Pacific War. Although no
Australian vessels were present at the Battle of Midway, Australian
naval signals intelligence played an important part in helping to
monitor Japanese movements and intentions and passing this information
onto the Americans at Pearl Harbour.
Just prior to the Midway Operation the Japanese again brought the war to
Australia' shores with an attack on Sydney Harbour by midget submarines.
The accommodation ship HMAS KUTTABUL was sunk alongside Garden Island
but all three Japanese submarines were lost. This was not the first
incursion by Japanese submarines into Australian waters. In January four
mine laying boats had operated in northern Australian waters, laying
mines off Darwin and in Torres Strait. One, the I-124, had been sunk by
the corvette HMAS DELORAINE, assisted by other RAN and US vessels. In
February and March the submarine I-25 had launched its reconnaissance
seaplane on flights over Sydney, Melbourne and Hobart before moving on
to New Zealand and Fiji. Simultaneously, submarine operations off the
west coast resulted in the sinking of two merchant vessels and attacks
on three others.
The midget attack presaged a submarine campaign against shipping on
Australia's eastern coast which lasted from early June until August.
Fourteen ships were attacked of which six were sunk. Convoys were
introduced on the Australian east coast on 6 June. The Japanese
submarines also shelled Sydney and Newcastle with little resultant
damage. Further operations carried out in the first half of 1943
resulted in the loss of a another eleven ships including the hospital
ship CENTAUR.
While the first submarine campaign was being waged, plans were in hand
to eject the Japanese from the Solomon Islands. On 7 August an Allied
force landed on Guadalcanal. Naval support was provided by an
Australian/American force of cruisers and destroyers, including HMAS
AUSTRALIA, CANBERRA and HOBART. Shortly after midnight on 9 August a
Japanese cruiser squadron attacked the allied force sinking CANBERRA and
three American cruisers. Although operations in the Solomons were to
continue, further RAN involvement was limited, although valuable support
was provided by Coastwatchers.
Later in August the Japanese landed at Milne Bay. Units of the RAN had
convoyed troopships to the area and latter supported the defence of the
area from the sea. On 29 September the new destroyer HMAS ARUNTA sank
the Japanese submarine RO33 off Port Moresby, thereby removing a major
threat to the logistic support for Australian troops. With the
successful conclusion of the Milne Bay battle the RAN provided naval
support for forces operating in northern New Guinea and commenced
development of the string of bases that would be opened up along that
coast to support the Allied advance. Operations included conducting
hydrographic surveys, shore bombardments, transporting troops and
providing logistic support.
December 1942 saw the commencement of Operation LILLIPUT, which over a
six month period saw the transportation of 60,000 tons of supplies and
3,802 troops from Milne Bay to Oro Bay, escorted by Australian
corvettes. In March 1943 the Japanese suffered a major defeat when a
reinforcement convoy heading for Lae was destroyed by Allied air attack
in the Battle of the Bismarck Sea. Intelligence on this convoy was
provided by the joint RAN/USN code breaking organisation in Melbourne.
This same period saw a lesser but significant level of RAN activity in
the area north and west of Darwin. While supporting commando operations
in Timor the destroyer HMAS VOYAGER was lost in September 1942 as was
the corvette HMAS ARMIDALE in December. With the withdrawal of the
commandos the RAN continued to support covert operations in the area by
the Services Reconnaissance Department (SRD) which were maintained until
the end of the War. In September 1943 SRD operatives in small boats
carried out Operation JAYWICK, successfully attacking Japanese shipping
in Singapore Harbour. They had been transported there in a small
captured fishing vessel, the KRAIT. In late 1944 another covert attack
on Singapore Harbour was mounted by the SRD but was to end in disaster.
Throughout the war the RAN units based on Darwin were also to provide
support for settlements, missions, airfields and other military
installations in the area. On 22 January 1943, while undertaking one of
these voyages, the stores carrier HMAS PATRICIA CAM was bombed and sunk.
As 1943 and 1944 progressed Australian ships were involved in the
campaigns to oust the Japanese from West New Guinea and adjacent
islands. In the succession of landings carried out the cruisers and
destroyers carried out bombardments and provided seaward cover. The
corvettes escorted merchant ships through the area. The armed merchant
cruisers HMAS MANOORA, KANIMBLA and WESTRALIA were converted to Landing
ships Infantry (LSI). As such they were to take part in many of the
amphibious operations such as those at Hollandia, Biak, Aitape and
Morotai which brought the Allies closer to the Philippines.
In July 1943 the cruisers were detached from the 7th Fleet for
operations in the Solomons area. En route to Espiritu Santo in the New
Hebrides HOBART was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine and put out of
action for nearly two years. In the previous month the heavy cruiser
SHROPSHIRE had been transferred from the Royal Navy as a replacement for
CANBERRA.
Morotai was taken in September 1944 and from there the landings in Leyte
were mounted. The LSIs landed American troops at Panaon while the
covering forces included AUSTRALIA, SHROPSHIRE, ARUNTA and her sister
ship HMAS WARRAMUNGA. Survey work was carried out by the frigate HMAS
GASCOYNE. On 20 October a Japanese aircraft crashed into AUSTRALIA
causing heavy damage and casualties and forcing her withdrawal with
WARRAMUNGA as escort.
In the Battle of Surigao Strait on 25 October SHROPSHIRE and ARUNTA
formed part of the large American force formed around six battleships
which overwhelmed a much smaller Japanese battle squadron attempting to
attack the amphibious forces. SHROPSHIRE engaged the battleship
YAMASHIRO with gunfire while ARUNTA carried out a torpedo attack.
Surigao Strait was the last action fought using the traditional battle
line. The Battle of Leyte Gulf, of which it was part, remains the
largest naval battle in history and saw the end of the Imperial Japanese
Navy as a fighting force.
In January 1945 the Allies commenced the invasion of Lingayen.
AUSTRALIA, now repaired, SHROPSHIRE, ARUNTA and WARRAMUNGA carried out
bombardment duties while MANOORA, KANIMBLA and WESTRALIA landed troops.
The sloop HMAS WARREGO and the frigate HMAS GASCOYNE performed escort
duties and carried out survey tasks in Lingayen Gulf. The Allied ships
came under frequent air attack, especially from KAMIKAZE aircraft.
GASCOYNE and WESTRALIA were near missed and ARUNTA damaged. AUSTRALIA,
however, was grievously damaged when, between 5 and 9 January, she was
hit five times. She continued to carry out her bombardment duties until
ordered to retire with ARUNTA on 9 January. The other vessels continued
operations in the area until March, by which time the repaired cruiser
HOBART had rejoined.
At this time the British Pacific Fleet commenced operations in the
Pacific. The RAN was initially represented by the destroyers HMA Ships
QUICKMATCH and QUIBERON as well as a number of corvettes. Later the
destroyers HMA Ships NAPIER, NORMAN, NIZAM and NEPAL joined. All of
these vessels had previously served in the Indian Ocean with the British
Eastern Fleet. The destroyers had taken part in attacks on Japanese oil
installations in Sumatra and the N Class vessels had supported the Army
in Burma. The corvette HMAS LAUNCESTON had sunk the submarine RO 110 off
Vizagapatam. The destroyers saw service in support of the Okinawa
operations in April while the corvettes formed two minesweeping
flotillas.
The RAN's last operations in the Pacific were those in support of
Australian troops in the landings at Tarakan, Brunei and Balikpapan in
May, June and July respectively. As before the cruisers and destroyers
provided gunfire support, troops were landed from the three LSIs and the
sloops, frigates and corvettes carried out patrol, escort and surveying
duties. RAN vessels, especially the smaller motor launches, were also
active in the final operations in New Guinea waters.
Upon the conclusion of the war the RAN played a significant part in the
arrangements for the surrender of various Japanese forces in South East
Asia and the South West Pacific. Minesweeping continued for a number of
years after the surrender and Australian service personnel and prisoners
of war from around the region were repatriated.
The Pacific War saw an expansion of the infrastructure necessary to
support wide ranging naval operations. Defensive minefields were laid in
Australian, New Zealand and New Guinea waters. Harbour defence systems
were established around Australia and forward operating bases provided
logistic support to ships close to the combat areas. The manufacture of
mines, torpedoes, guns and ammunition was undertaken as was the
development and construction of sophisticated electrical equipment.
Shipbuilding, repair and maintenance facilities were greatly expanded,
including the construction of the Captain Cook Graving Dock at Garden
Island. Three destroyers, twelve frigates and sixty corvettes as well as
numerous smaller vessels were built. A large number of merchant ships
were converted for naval purposes and many others were defensively armed
and given mine countermeasures. Most of this work was carried out by the
men and women of the unarmed forces who worked in the factories and
dockyard around Australia.
Women were enlisted into the Navy for the first time and help provide
many of the support functions so desperately needed by a navy at war.
Some of these women played an invaluable, and largely unrecognised, role
in supporting the large intelligence organisation that had been
established. One, Ruby Boye, also served as a Coastwatcher at Vanikoro
from February 1942 to October 1944. Before the end of the war the peak
strength of the RAN had reached 39,650 with approximately 337 vessels
ranging from cruisers to motor launches in service.
In proportion to its size the RAN made a significant contribution to the
Allied effort in the war against Japan. This was more noticeable in the
earlier days of the war when operations were taking place in Australia's
proximity and before the United States was able to fully deploy its
manpower and industrial strength. The amphibious operations, survey,
minesweeping, convoy and patrol tasks from late 1942 to 1945 tend to be
overlooked yet they were all essential components in the exercise of sea
power and ultimately the war in the Pacific was a maritime campaign. |