Category: Military History

Lawrence of Arabia and more genuine Lying Bastards:

Churchill never said this - Work of another Lying Bastard.
Churchill never said this – Work of other Lying Bastards.

Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill famously said, “Truth is often the first casualty of war“. Hard to argue with that. But, rather ironically, he never said any such thing. This post is loosely about the lies that pervade our lives and surround us. It is easy to state that social media has made it worse. Lying in war, and propaganda for military or political purposes, has always been part of human history. For example, Ancient Roman General Julius Caesar, left us substantial war diaries. Fascinating reading, but they contain mostly lies: the political self-seeking propaganda of its day. I discussed Julius in my previous, ‘Destruction, Lust, Philosophers, Fascists, and Arseholes‘, available by following this link.

My story is based on several hours only. The morning of 1st October 1918, in the Syrian village of Damascus. Events that still resound and echo to this day. There are only two main characters in my story. The famous Lawrence of Arabia, and the totally unknown Australian Lighthorse Officer, Major Arthur Charles Niquet Olden.

Thomas Edward Lawrence – Author and Hollywood Action Star.

1 October 1918, Lawrence and his Arab irregular forces fought their way into and liberated Damascus. Thomas described it all in his autobiography, ‘Seven Pillars of Wisdom‘.

Lawrence of Arabia shown mounted on a Camel. He was capable of extreme physical endurance. Erudite and capable of great charm. He was also extremely neurotic and a self-seeking lying bastard.
Lawrence emersed himself in Arab culture.

A Hollywood block buster movie tells the same story. It’s a great ripping yarn. Action, violence, panoramic scenes of glory, history and epic calvary charges complete with Arabic scimitar.

A poster advertising the Lawrence of Arabia Hollywood Blockbuster movie. However, it simply perpetrated the many lies, half-truths, omissions, and fabrications that Lawrence wrote.
The Hollywood Blockbuster. Lawrence and many of his cavalry charges?

Who was Thomas Edward Lawrence?

Lawrence in Army Dress Uniform.

Thomas Edward Lawrence was a British archeologist, army officer, diplomat and author who became renowned for his role in the World War 1 Palestine Campaign, 1915-1918. Lawrence most famously created guerilla forces from largely nomadic Arab desert tribes. With the support, logistics and substantial funding from Britain, his forces contributed to victory.

A difficult relationship with truth.

Thomas’ birth circumstances gave him a complex relationship with the truth. He was actually born a bastard. His father an English/Irish aristocrat, his mother, the live in teaching governess to his Baron father. His father abandoned his first family and lived the remainder of his life with his mother. They had five children together. Seeking anonymity, they adopted ‘Lawrence‘ as a surname. Lawrence was the name of the family, Thomas’ grandmother worked for, when outside of marriage, she gave birth to his mother.

While six-foot, three-inch Peter O’Toole cut a towering figure as the lead in the 1962 blockbuster ‘Lawrence of Arabia’, the real Lawrence was only five feet, five inches tall (165CM). His small stature disguised a driven personality of quite extraordinary physical endurance. Lawrence had an ability to live with, and ride alongside Arabic nomadic bands who were born mobile in the desert.

In 1914, the British military has employed Lawrence on an archaeological expedition of the Sinai Peninsula. A research trip that was actually a cover for a secret military survey of territory possessed by the Ottoman Turks. Once World War I began, Lawrence joined the British military as an intelligence officer in Cairo. He worked a desk job for nearly two years before being sent to Arabia in 1916 where, in spite of his nonexistent military training, he helped to lead battlefield expeditions and dangerous missions behind enemy lines.

On 13 May 1935, Lawrence was fatally injured in a motorcycle accident, he was 46.

Australian Lighthorse Officer, Major Arthur Olden.

Photo of Major Arthur Olden - Australian Lighthorse, Palestine World War 1. A humble man lost to history and not at all a lying bastard.
Major Arthur Olden – Australian Lighthorse.

Major Arthur Charles Niquet Olden, was a registered Australian dentist prior to World War 1. He joined the West Australian Mounted Infantry, Australian Military Forces, as a second lieutenant in January 1913. In 1924 he went to the Reserve Officer List and practiced the dangerous life of a suburban dentist.

Arthur landed at Gallipoli on 20 May 1915. He was subsequently twice wounded. One of these probably saved his life. Whilst recovering from this second wound in August 1915 Gallipoli, 600 Australian Light Horseman conducted a bayonet attack on the Turkish line in the infamous ‘Nek Battle‘. Within five minutes 400 Lighthorseman are dead, others terribly wounded. Arthur suffered what we would callsurvivor’s guilt, which may explain his performance in Palestine – His way of honouring the boys he lost. The ‘Nek Battle’ is one of the greatest tragedies of Australian history, nevertheless it’s a compelling read. A detailed account is available by clicking this link.

In September 1918, when the 10th Lighthorse led the Australian Mounted Division in ‘The Great Ride‘ to encircle the Turkish armies in Sharon and Samaria, Major Olden was in command as temporary lieutenant-colonel. His cavalry work, like his earlier mounted infantry exploits, showed a fine balance of dash and caution. Olden captured the Syrian town of Jenin with a splendid charge by 500 Aussie Troopers and captured 8107 prisoners and five field-guns. Major Olden was awarded the Distinguished Service Order.

Death of a largely unknown Aussie Hero.

He died of hypertensive vascular disease on 5 October 1949, he was 68.

Lawrence of Arabia – What a lying bastard!

On the evening of 30 September 1918, Lawrence was wandering the British lines outside the besieged Damascus. He can’t sleep, he never slept much. The British have promised that Lawrence and his Arabic forces will in the morning take Damascus. Can they, do it? It’s the culmination of the strategy they have worked on for years. The first step in ensuring Arab independence from the Ottoman Empire. As for the British, we will deal with them latter. See the lies are already starting to be exposed.

And what of these Australians? War is just sport to them. Will they take Damascus, just because they no doubt can? What if the Arabs fail and the Lighthorse become the liberators, our strategy in ruins.

Lawrence knows well my Countryman. It was indeed the Australian Lighthorse’s audaciously successful charge and storming of Beersheba, a year previously, that has started the collapse of the Ottomans. Now the Australian’s are everywhere, clowning around as usually. I don’t think this lying bastard thought much of these men from Downunder who had sacrificed so much so far in this War:

These Australians, shouldering me in unceremonious horseplay, put off half our civilization. They were dominant to-night, too sure of themselves to be careful: and yet: as they lazily swaggered those quick bodies, all curves with never a straight line, but with old and disillusioned eyes: and yet: I felt them thin-tempered, hollow, instinctive; always going to do great things; with the disquieting suppleness of blades half-drawn from the scabbard. Disquieting!”

Thomas Edward Lawrence. Seven Pillars of Wisdom.

Every Bastard is Lying.

Thomas Edward Lawrence, better known as ‘Lawrence of Arabia’, well he could bull shit with the best of them. His book is frequently self-seeking camel shit. More irony, given the books title, ‘The Seven Pillars of Wisdom‘. There must have been something in the Middle East water, because everyone was lying. The British Government led Lawrence’s Arab force, to believe they would receive independence in return for helping to destroy the Ottoman Empire.

Lawrence used this concept, and liberal doses of British gold sovereigns, to build his guerilla forces. However, previously in 1916, Britain and France created the ‘Sykes–Picot Agreement‘ to mutually carve up and occupy the former Ottoman Empire, no mention of Arab independence. Lawrence actually knew the factual intent, obviously kept it from his Arab leadership.

So, what actually happened in Damascus on 1 October 1918? The Australian Light Horse happened!

Up rides a Trooper mounted on his…’, well many troopers mounted on mongrel Aussie Walers.

British forces had Damascus more or less surrounded, but German and Turkish forces are escaping via an unblocked road to Aleppo. Major Arthur Charles Niquet Olden was ordered to ride around Damascus and block the retreat. The going is tough, and the horses are exhausted. He adopts the simple expedient of cantering his detachment through the centre of Damascus. Calvary swords and bayonets held high and flashing sharply in the sun. The horses steel shoes striking sparks of the ancient pavements. It’s a gamble, but they punt their audaciousness.

Photo of Australian Lighthorse entering Damascus, 1st October 1918. May bull artists, not so many lying bastards..
Australian Lighthorse enter Damascus, 1st October 1918.

Major Olden knows the German and Turkish forces have been withdrawing, but many are still here. Certainly, senior German and Turkish Officers, have long since skedaddled. They had acted similarly last year at Beersheba, upon realizing that these Aussie Lighthorseman really were going to cavalry charge the cannon and machine guns of that town’s defense. But the Australian’s respect the Turkish soldier, they know even an abandoned rear guard is capable of vicious resistance. I’m thinking about now the good Major was questioning his own audacious plan.

Investigating a large crowd outside the Hall of Government, Major Olden dismounts and with two officers, .45 Revolvers in one hand, cavalry swords in the other they gingerly enter. His troopers remain outside and are so concerned they brew up!

Ok, whilst the Skipper does Officer Stuff – Time for a brew!

What was the Skipper’s Officer Business?

Major Olden and his two officers enter an imposing Town Hall, up a grand two century old staircase. They enter a richly decorated room, pistols cocked, swords raised, they encounter a room full of dignitaries in fabulous uniforms, suits, ties, and traditional head dress.

Damascus’ Dignitaries are surprised when three dusty, dirty, armed Aussies walked in!

Expecting someone else, thinks Major Olden? Indeed, perhaps they were expecting Lawrence and his Arab forces. Regardless the mood changes quickly to welcoming these ‘British’ officers. Perhaps they actually wanted British liberators in preference to Lawrence and Co? Lawrence always exaggerated the extent of Arabic unity. Yes, Arab self-determination and independence provided a promise of unification, but everyone has separate interests and loyalties – Everyone was a lying bastard!

Or perhaps the dignitaries simply looked out the window and observed Major Olden’s support cast. Thirty of the toughest soldiers in the Palestine combat zone. Battle hardened troopers who had been through hell and would keep going – And I’m only speaking of the Lighthorse Walers, the mongrel Aussie warhorse!

Major Olden edits a speech and changes historic paperwork.

The Ottoman appointed Govenor of Damascus, Emir Said, grandson of the Sultan of Algiers, approaches Olden and commences a flowery speech in Arabic, to which the Major responds:

“The British will be here soon; it is to them you should make such speeches. They love that kind of thing. I’m an Australian”

Major Arthur Charles Niquet Olden. 1st October 1918. Damascus.

Having received his first lesson in the laconic culture of these strange lads from Downunder, the Govenor bows and presents a pre-written surrender document. Olden will accept the surrender, but insists the document is changed. History will now and forever record that Damascus actually surrendered to the Australians of the 10th Lighthorse Regiment. Upon seeing this document, Lawrence grinds his teeth in despair. There is never just a humble dentist when you need one! Disruption of Lawrences’ strategy! Disruption is a constant theme in history. You can read my Post on Disruption by following this link.

Olden and his officers, pistols now holstered, swords sheathed, return to their troopers. Showing them the surrender document, he says:

“I’m in the line of Rameses of Egypt, Alexander the Great, and Napoleon of France.”

Major Arthur Charles Niquet Olden. 1st October 1918. Damascus.

Troopers cheer, Walers whinny, but also stamp their hooves. A reminder to the human troopers, enough shenanigans, we have work to do! They simply ride off to complete their actual mission. As an Australian, it’s hard not to love the Aussie War Horse of WW1, the Waler. Iv’e previously written about them. You can follow this link to discover one of the greatest, Bill the Bastard.

Where is Lawrence of Arabia? Perhaps his Rolls Royce broke down?

What were the conditions like as Major Olden commenced his audacious move through Damascus? Well, the streets are deserted, markets closed, Turkish rearguard forces still very much in dominance. At one point the small detachment encounters a Turkish regiment, hunkered down in their barracks. Rifle fire cracks past the heads of Aussie troopers. And the Australian response? As it always was since Beersheba, swords drawn, forward at the gallop, Charge!

Henry Gullet, A Lighthorse trooper present that morning, describes, the Turkish response:

“For a moment the enemy decision was in the balance. But the sight of the great Australian horses at the gallop, flashing swords, and the ring of horseshoes, turned the scale.”

Henry Gullet. 10th Lighthorse Regiment.

As Major Olden trots forward to his date with history, other Australian forces enter Damascus. There is no more shooting, well if you exclude the local Arabs who are now expressing their joy by blazing away at the heavens. Yes, Lawrence does arrive some hours later in a Rolls Royce. By which time Australian forces have secured thousands of prisoners and controlled Damascus. There is little if any fighting, as the brave Turkish rear guard, having watched their officers previously skedaddle, have had more than enough.

Damascus opens like a flower. Markets spring open for business; we know these Australians are a hungry and ‘thirsty’ lot! Australian troopers are sprayed from balconies with champagne, perfumes, flowers and confetti. As Major Olden leads his contingent out of Damascus, the greatest risk is being hit by a rose petal, or perhaps puffing on the strong Turkish cigars that rain down upon them.

Damascus, 1st Oct 1918 - Liberation after 400 years of Ottoman Empire. The lying by many bastards is about to commence.
Damascus, 1st Oct 1918 – Liberation after 400 years of Ottoman Empire.

Lawrence Arrives -The Lying Bastards go to work.

We found Lawrence on the evening of 30 September 1918, outside Damascus, he is being manhandled by dominating, thin-tempered, and disquieting Australian Lighthorse troopers. His mind is on the 4,000 Rualla tribesman he had that night sent into Damascus. Thomas describes their function in ‘Seven Pillars of Wisdom’ – To prepare the political way for Lawrence’s arrival in the morning. This is complete bullshit, more of Lawrence being a lying bastard!

British forces have Palestine blockaded. Unless off course they are using the northern road from Aleppo. In which case they would be moving against the desperate retreat of German and Turkish forces. 4,000 tribesman is a huge number to simply be overlooked. It’s also a very big number of ‘diplomats’ to be sent on what Lawrence himself describes as something like a fifth column political operation. No fighting occurred in Damascus on this evening, though certainly the Ottoman forces were still in command, if ever increasingly reluctantly.

We have a reliable source to disapprove Lawrence’s claim. General Sir Henry George Chauvel, commander of the Australian Lighthorse, was himself present that evening and said:

“If any of Lawrence’s forces entered that night, they were unrecognizable to us. I am personally of the opinion that the first Arab forces followed Lawrence in the next day. By which time Lighthorse elements had taken the surrender off, and an entire Brigade had passed right through Damascus.”

General Sir Henry George Chauvel. Letter to the Director Australian War Memorial 1936.

October 1st, 1918 – Damascus. Lawrence ‘fights’ his way in.

Damascus was ‘liberated’ from the seat of an open roofed Rolls Royce.

Lawrence spent much time driving around in this particular Rolls Royce, his own personal vehicle that he had ‘liberated’ in Cairo. In ‘Seven Pillars‘ he is also frequently an occupant of one of several British armoured cars. None of that should hide the fact that he showed great courage and endurance on his many horse and camel mounted exploits behind Ottoman lines, blowing trains and bridges. However, no such reliance on vehicle transport is portrayed in the Hollywood movie that carries his name. Lawrence is more frequently to be shown leading great cavalry charges and wielding a scimitar – Such things never happened. Hang on! Someone did such things – The Australian Lighthorse.

‘Seven Pillars’, describes the reception Thomas experienced as he ‘marched’ into Damascus, hours after Major Olden’s Lighthorse visit, and seemingly unaware of events of that morning:

“When we came in there had been some miles of people greeting us, now there were thousands for every hundred then. Every man, woman and child in this city of a quarter-million souls seemed in the streets, waiting only the spark of our appearance to ignite their spirits. Damascus went mad with joy. The men tossed up their tar-bushes to cheer, the women tore off their veils. Householders threw flowers, hangings, carpets, into the road before us: their wives leaned, screaming with laughter, through the lattices and splashed us with bath-dippers of scent.”

Thomas Edward Lawrence. ‘Seven Pillars of Wisdom’. 1926.

Lawrence clearly presented the reception as a response to the arrival and ‘liberation’ of Damascus by his forces, we now know different. In consequence of the official Australian War Record, it’s reasonable to say that lying bastards really got to work!

Lawrence the Liberator – Well he immediately starts a brawl!

Lawrence eventually arrived at the Town Hall, the scene of Major Olden’s historic actions that morning. However, this time there would be no gracious bows, no attempt at speeches. Lawrence describes what happened immediately upon his arrival:

In the cleared space were Auda abu Tayi and Sultan el Atrash, chief of the Druses, tearing at one another. Their followers bounded forward, while I jumped in to drive them apart; crashing upon Mohammed el Dheilan, filled with the same purpose.

Auda was too blind with rage to be fairly conscious. We got him into the great state-hall of the building; an immense, pompous, gilded room, quiet as the grave, since all doors but ours were locked. We pushed him into a chair and held him, while in his fits he foamed and shouted till his voice cracked, his body twitching and jerking, arms lunging wildly at any weapon within reach, his face swollen with blood, bareheaded, the long hair streaming over his eyes.”

Lawrence of Arabia. 1st October 1918. Damascus.

By comparison the surrender of Damascus to Major Arthur Charles Niquet Olden, and his Australian Lighthorse was a civilized affair. And Lawrence called my Countryman ‘Thin-tempered”!

Conclusion to Lying Bastards:

This is the end of my story, a few hours in world history. However, the lying bastards were just getting started. All along Lawrence had been working with Faisal I bin Al-Hussein bin Ali Al-Hashemi, the son of The Sharif of Mecca. Faisal desired to be King of all we would think of as Palestine, Israel, Lebanon and Syria. Faisal had been double dealing with the British and the Ottomans throughout the Great War. As late as March 1918, when Germany’s Summer Offensive smashed the Allied Front in France, Faisal had accepted an offer from the Ottomans and Germany to rule as their vassal. The Summer Offensive failed! Besides, Germany and the Ottomans were lying to Faisal – Who would have thought!

By 4th October 1918, Faisal and Lawrence have dispensed with the Ottoman appointed Govenor of Damascus, Emir Said. They know well that the Algerian Empire also has been lying as it eyes the Damascus prize. Faisal finally reigns as he desires. With Lawrence’s assistance he commences to consolidate his Kingdom by diplomacy with France and Britain. Diplomacy is obviously a diplomatic description of self-seeking men meeting and pretending they are not all lying bastards.  All goes well until it doesn’t! On 24 July 1920, the French destroy Faisal’s forces in the Battle of Maysalun and Faisal is expelled from Syria.

(Lies and fake news accompanied another Australian military campaign. This time 1942 ‘The Kokoda Track’. A link to this ripping yarn is available by following this Link)

Closing thoughts:

On 23 August 1921, the British Government make Faisal the King of the newly created Iraq. Hard to believe, but the British are swayed by the arguments of no other than Lawrence of Arabia! King Faisal reigns until his death by heart attack on 8 September 1933, he is 48 years old.  

Remember on the evening of 30 September 1918, Lawrence was wandering the British lines outside the besieged Damascus? Complaining of the dominating, cocksure Lighthorseman, and their lazy swaggering quick bodies, and disillusioned eyes. Seems he had time for a rum or three with Australian Lighthorse General Sir Henry George Chauvel. Chauvel asked Lawrence, “How do you and Faisal propose to govern with this mob of Arab Guerillas?

Lawrence simply replies:

“Shoot them for all I care, we don’t need them anymore”!

Thomas Edward Lawrence. 30 September 1918. Damascus.

So, the point of my story?

To end with something Winnie actually said:

Photo of Sir Winston Churchill and the power of Lying Bastards.
Sir Winston Churchill and the power of Lying Bastards.
Erwin Rommel quote on Australian soldiers, applies to General Johon Monash.

Battle of Hamel – Combined Arms and a genuine, clever, Aussie Bastard:

Australian General Sir John Monash watches defeat:

French village of Le Hamel, World War 1. This is a story of defeat, despair, slaughter, setback and one clever Australian Bastard, General John Monash, who changed the course of the War. 21st March 1918, the Western Front France. Germany’s Spring Offensive commences. By close of day 20,000 British troops are dead, and 35,000 wounded. By the end of day two, the British 5th Army is in retreat. German General Erich Ludendorff launched his last role of the dice, committed all remaining resources into pushing Britain back into the sea, leaving France no choice but surrender. The Allies lost nearly 255,000 men (British, British Empire and French).

The intent of this article.

I’m going to discuss the following interrelated subjects: the Battle of Le Hamel, combined arms warfare, and the Australian General Sir John Monash. Yes, I will, where relevant, present the historical context. But this is not a Post about history as such. These are certainly interesting subjects, and I will provide links to articles I found informative. This article about the Battle of Le Hamel is a good start. So, what is my writing intent?

My intent is to explore how General Monash used existing weapons systems, but in creative new ways. How he advanced the theory and practice of combined arms warfare. How his planning and teamwork excelled previous processes. And also, his psychological understanding of his troops, his adored Aussie Diggers of the Australian Imperial Force.

And finally, I am briefly looking to draw historical lessons that may provide some insights into the future of the Ukraine conflict.

Retreat! It’s over, have we have failed?

After four years of slaughter and sacrifice, the Allies were going backward.

The German Spring Offensive artillery bombardment began at 4.40am on March 21. The bombardment hit targets over an area of 150 square miles (390 km2), the biggest barrage of the entire war. Allied troops receive 1,100,000 high explosive and gas shells in five hours. This will not be matched until the Russian attack on Berlin in 1945. So, an Army in retreat is finished? Not necessarily, it depends on issues such as morale, leadership and immediate planning.

The allies may have been in retreat, but they held – Just!

There is an immediate parallel in Ukraine. Ukraine has been fighting for three years. Their summer offensive of 2023, failed to obtain the forward momentum Ukraine and its supporting Nations hoped for. With United States support faltering, despite European ongoing efforts to increase theirs, Ukraine finds themselves much like the Allies in March 1918.

Scotts retreat in good order. The Spring Offensive of WW1 failed.
Scotts retreat in good order. The Spring Offensive failed.

Retreat? – Nuts! It isn’t over till it’s over.

Allied forces will be shocked and shattered on the 21st of March 1918. But then leadership and teamwork kicked in. The retreat had generally been in good order. Small arms and heavy weapons were pulled back, alongside the exhausted but increasingly stiffening and determined troops. Additionally, the United States would soon enter the war, fresh new troops in the hundreds of thousands were arriving.

By comparison German ability to find new troops was close to expended. The Spring Offensive may have gone forward, but at shocking cost in men, and equipment, none of which was easily replaceable. German troop losses were 239,000 men, many of them specialist shock troops who were irreplaceable. Shock troops created by taking the best, strongest, most experienced troops from other units. With such troops destroyed, Germany’s remaining units are largely composed of demoralized and exhausted old men, 18-year-old boys and the previously crippled and lame.

Allied troops also had the advantage of retreating back through country they knew; they had been here before. Back to previously prepared defensive positions. Their supply lines grew shorter and more reliable with abundant United States food, fuel, weapons, and machinery. Putin would do himself a favour and reflect on these typical issues when those you attack retreat.

The Spring Offensive Stalls.

In terms of morale, the initial German jubilation at the successful opening of the offensive soon turned to disappointment, as it became clear that the attack had not achieved decisive results. The German advance was through unfamiliar country. Land devastated by their own artillery. (Sound familiar Mr. Putin?) Supply lines grew longer. And actual food and weapons supplies to bring forward increasingly lacking. It was not only the German soldier who was hungry, their horses were equally worn out. Yes, the German Army of WW1 was not the mechanized instrument we recognize today. If you wanted food and ammunition, old Brandenburger had to haul it to you – Assuming someone didn’t eat him on the way!

German horse drawn artillery – WW1 was not mechanized.

General John Monash strikes back.

4th July 1918, Le Hamel France. German soldiers panic, with approaching British tanks, they leap unarmed from trenches, raise their hands, prepare to have their property ransacked by the rampaging Australian Infantry. Many already have their watches off, prepared to hand these to smirking, smoking, and aggressive Aussie Diggers. As Winston Churchill would later say:

“I love a man who smirks whilst he fights”.

Winston Churchill
Photo showing that Australian Diggers could still smirk during the Battle of Le Hamel.
Australian Diggers could still smirk during the Battle of Le Hamel.

As General Rommel would later say, “Only these bloody Australians steal whilst they fight”. The Australian digger of World War 1 was notoriously vicious in combat but usually friendly and caring to opponents when they surrendered. Well, after they had relieved them of their watches and ‘souvenirs’. Australians were the primary infantry at the Battle of Le Hamel, though for the first time in the War, American forces took part. My Countrymen of WW1, justifiably stand front and centre in the Aussie National Myth. I explore such myths at this link.

Photo of Australian Diggers after the Battle of Le Hamel pose with knicked Souvenirs.
ANZAC Diggers after the Battle of Le Hamel – Posing with knicked Souvenirs.

A tale of two Generals – One lost in past wars, the other just knew how to do stuff.

The German high command is as wild as a hessian bag full of kittens, they have just been informed all the gains of the Spring Offensive are lost. And indeed, Australian forces have runover and recaptured Le Hamel, German General Erich Ludendorff screams, “Der schwarze Tag!” – The Black Day of the German Army.

Photo of German General Erich Ludendorff in charge of the defense at le Hamel. It signaled the total failure of his Spring Offensive.
German General Erich Ludendorff – Not happy at these audacious Aussies.

So, what happened in these 3 months 21st March 1918 to 4th July 1918? Australian General Sir John Monash happened!

The Australian War Memorial has short biography of Sir John, linked here.

Photo of Australian General Sir John Monash, hero of the Le Hamel battle 1918 World War 1.
Australian General Sir John Monash

General John Monash has a Plan.

John Monash had been seeing slaughter since going ashore at Gallipoli in 1915. In August 1915 Gallipoli, 600 Australian Light Horseman conducted a bayonet attack on the Turkish line in the infamous ‘Nek Battle’. They attacked in three waves minutes apart. They only needed to run 20 metres to get at the Turks. But a failed artillery bombardment left them exposed. The first wave will run to their slaughter. So, they sent the second, and the third, they too are mown down. My Grandfathers generation suffered 400 dead in minutes, not one Turk was injured. Turkish troops were heard to yell, ‘Don’t come, stop!”

The Australian Light Horseman were horse mounted infantry, obviously they did not take their horses to Gallipoli. I write extensively about these boys of my Grandfather’s generation – This is one link to these ripping yarns.

1915 ‘The Nek Battle’, Gallipoli – General John Monash said, “Never Again”!

With such motivations, General Monash adopted the principle, “Infantry should not have to fight their way forward on their own”. We would recognise this as a ‘Combined Arms Offensive’.

One clever Aussie Bastard, who swam against the tide of military thinking.

Sir John’s development and refinement of what we would now call ‘Combined Arms’, contributed to the conclusion of WW1. He described his view of his precious Australian Infantry:

“The true role of infantry was not to expend itself upon heroic physical effort, not to wither away under merciless machine-gun fire, not to impale itself on hostile bayonets. On the contrary, it was to advance under the maximum possible protection of an array of mechanical resources: Artillery, machine-guns, tanks, mortars, and aeroplanes. The goal was to advance with as little impediment as possible, relieving them of the obligation to fight their way forward.”

 Australian General Sir John Monash, 1919.

Combined Arms – A concept as old as Alexander the Great.

Combined arms hit the enemy with two or more arms simultaneously in such a manner that the actions he must take to defend himself from one make him more vulnerable to another. In the case of Le Hamel, General Monash’s plan combined aircraft, tanks, artillery, and his beloved Australian Infantry. However, combined arms as a concept existed in the Ancient World, for instance.

Phillip II of Macedon (390BC), Alexander the Greats father, combined the Macedonian phalanx with heavy cavalry and other forces. The phalanx would hold the opposing line in place, until the heavy cavalry could smash and break the enemy line by achieving local superiority.

Alexander the Great – Macedonian Combined Arms. Infantry, Cavalry and Artillery (archers).

Combined Arms Norman Tactics changed British History.

At the Battle of Hastings (1066AD) British infantry fighting from behind a shield wall were defeated by a Norman army consisting of archers, infantry, and cavalry. One of the tactics used by the Normans was to tempt the English to leave the shield wall to attack retreating Norman infantry only to destroy them in the open with cavalry under a creeping barrage put up by Norman Archers.

Painting of the Battle of Hastings - Norman cavalry slaughtered the British Infantry in a combined arms offensive.
Battle of Hastings (1066AD) – Norman cavalry slaughter the British Infantry in the open.

The concept of Combined Arms time travelled down to us. This ability of historical fact and concept, to travel across time and place, is but one reason I find history so fascinating. I explain my views on Time Travel and history at this link.

General John Monash certainly did not invent the Combined Arms concept, so what did he do?

General Sir John Monash’s contribution:

By July 1918 the Australian and New Zealanders (ANZAC) forces were fighting as their own units, under command of their own officers. The much-promoted John Monash was now in control at Le Hamel. This change came in consequence of events such as the Gallipoli Battle of the Nek. Previously ANZAC forces were subjugated to British control. The lads from Downunder didn’t like the results!

Some of the combined arm’s tactics employed at Le Hamel had been practiced before. There was nothing new about tanks or creeping artillery barrages. The Allies and indeed Germany and Turkey were trying all manner of innovations to get this war done. Admitting my Aussie bias, history seems to prove that John Monash’s contribution is indeed:

  1. The extent and quality of coordination, planning and control of combined arms assets;
  2. The training implemented in building teamwork between British tanks and Aussie infantry;
  3. Reserve tanks will carry ammunition and supplies forward, and return with the wounded; and
  4. The dropping of ammunition by aircraft.

Coordination, planning and control of Combined Arms Assets.

Determined to reduce any confusion or doubts, Monash held multiple staff conferences to initiate and discuss proposals and decide on the best course of action. As the plans developed further, and became more complex, more officers were added to provide expertise. The final conference at Bertangles on 30 June included 250 officers, 133 agenda items, and ran for 4 hours and 20 minutes. This is far cry from the earlier tactic such as: “At H Hour I will blow a whistle and you will all run headlong into the interlocked arcs of multiple machine guns“.

Monash’s exemplary planning and logistical skill reflects his civilian life of a civil engineer. He understood both science, mathematics, and the logistical imperative to have things where needed in the correct order. John certainly had an ego, he knew he was the boss, would not hesitate to let you know that fact. But teamwork was his objective, he delegated, he went looking for people who knew what he didn’t.

In his memoir, Lieutenant Rule of the 4th Australian Division describes a pre-Le Hamel Orders Group that would be at home in 2024 in Sandhurst, West Point, or Duntroon.

“We were given our plans and orders, and conference followed conference, until we all had our part down pat; each knew what his brother officer had to do and could take command in case of anyone else getting ‘cracked’ (killed). The men then familiarized themselves with a terrain model of the Hamel area to better understand their unit’s role in the coming days”.

Lt Edgar J. Rule, Jacka’s mob. 1933

British Tanks and Aussie Infantry – Deep seated mistrust.

Allied tanks, the Mark I, were first used in action on the morning of 15 September 1916 during the Somme Offensive. The Battle of Hamel would see the introduction of the Mark V.

A photo of British Mark VI Tank and Aussie Infantry - Brother in Combined Arms. Battle pf Hamel World War 1, July 1918.
British Mark V Tanks and Aussie Infantry – Brothers in Combined Arms.

General John Monash understood the unique personality of his Australian diggers. For instance, he knew well their refusal to salute British officers, after all he’d received plenty of demands for their punishment. A constant military offence that made the British officer’s ‘Sam Brownes’ glow red! Monash, like most Australian and New Zealand officers, simply ignored the issue. They knew well that when it came to fighting, and application of the 2 1/2-foot bayonet, few could rampage like the ANZAC’s. Monash also knew his Australians were cynical of tanks after their experience at Bullecourt in April 1917.

Charles Bean, war correspondent, and author of the definitive ‘Official history of Australia in the war of 1914–1918’ said of the Australians experience with tanks as Bullecourt:

“The tanks were to advance in front of the infantry, crushing wire and clearing enemy resistance. Unfortunately, four of the eight tanks intended to support the Australians, were late, disabled, or broke down; and the Germans had been alerted by the approach of the tanks. The Australians withered under intense machine-gun fire along insufficiently broken entanglements without a single tank ahead of it to clear a passage. The failure of the tanks placed the infantry at unnecessary risk and contributed to over 3,000 casualties. This led to a deep-seated distrust in the tanks. This intense bitterness was grounded in the fact that the whole tanks experiment had been based on a gross overestimate of the tanks capabilities.”

Charles Bean. 1919.

General Monash has some work to do.

The Monash dilemma – How to get cynical and distrustful Aussies to work with something they despise?

The introduction of the Mark V in mid-1918 culminated advancements in tank technology. This tank could move as fast as a running infantryman,
was driven by one man (as opposed to four), had better visibility, and dramatically increased mobility. All useless if the Australian infantry would not work with them, did not trust them. What about these ideas thought Monash:

  1. Each Australian unit will have its own designated tanks. The tanks will carry the Australian units markings;
  2. Furthermore, the British Tank crews will start living with the Australians. Extra rum rations all round. You bloody ripper!
  3. A training location will be established: trenches constructed, strongpoints, and wire entanglements to demonstrate to the Australians the capability of the tanks in overcoming them; and
  4. A bell system will allow Australians to communicate with the tank commander; Thus, the Australian troops will communicate as they advance with the tanks and mark with phosphorous grenades what resistance they wanted eliminated.

Amateurs discuss tactics, professionals discuss logistics.

Since his experience at Gallipoli, Monash had seen his Australian’s storm and cease ground, at tremendous cost and sacrifice. Such ground was then abandoned because of the inability to resupply. Resupply required men to manhandle ammunition, food water, hessian bags and barbed wire across a destroyed battlefield. A broken battlefield exposed to artillery, machine gun and sniper fire – More casualties. Monash’s solution – Some of the sixty provided Mark V tanks, will do nothing but haul critical supplies, on return they can bring back the wounded.

Simple practical solutions, just what you would expect from a civil engineer. Ok, what’s the next problem?

Hey mate, do you think that RE8 Aircraft can drop some tobacco along with the ammo?

General Monash had air support in the form of two squadrons of the Australian Royal Flying Corp (RFC), equipped with the Royal Aircraft Factory R.E.8s. They provided the usual support: Trench strafing, reconnaissance, suppressing counter battery fire, and so on.

General Monash needed more, and with planning, creativity and some practice they used the following solutions during the Hamel Battle:

  1. The RFC will use precisely the same maps in intelligence collection and reconnaissance as Monash’s staff officers;
  2. Thus, upon dropping such completed maps back to HQ, such intel can expeditiously be used in the battles conduct;
  3. The RFC will parachute drop ammunition from their bomb racks as required direct to fighting troops; and
    • (Off course that had never been done before! Another clever bastard worked out how)
  4. Aircraft will fly artillery suppression fire in support of the tanks.
Battle of Hamel. Australian Flying Corp RE8 Fighter Bomber.

93 Minutes! You mean it actually worked! General John Monash never had a doubt.

The Battle of Le Hamel was a small battle, an experiment in the possible. Monash’s experiment in how cynical, hardened, Australian infantry might actually work effectively with British tanks. Reliable resupply from tanks and ammunitions drops from aircraft will sustain offensive advance.

While a coordinated offensive was not a new approach to warfare, Hamel represented the culmination of three years of learning and innovation on the Western Front, testing an all-inclusive approach to mobile warfare. The flawless execution of the operation resulted in Hamel becoming a model for future operations on the Western Front. Monash described his battle plan:

The perfected modern battle plan is like nothing so much as a score for an orchestral composition, where the various arms and units are the instruments, and the tasks they perform are their respective musical phrases.”

General Sir John Monash, ‘The Australian victories in France in 1918’.

The Australian diggers will achieve all Monash’s strategic objectives in 93 Minutes. Three minutes over that allocated by General Sir John Monash!

As for the ultimate objective, stopping this slaughter:

World War 1, the guns fell silent on 11th November 1918.

Lest we forget.

John Monash – Civil Engineer, Combined Arms General, and British Knight: Time Traveller.

I intended to offer more of Sir John’s wisdom, but I have largely summarized all there is. For directly after WW1 Monash simply returned to his normal Job, that of a Civil Engineer. See John was the epitome of the Citizen Soldier, in 1914 he was an Officer in the Army Militia, we might understand it better as Army Reserve, Territorial Army or National Guard. By 1920 he was back in Australia building power systems, roads, and bridges.

John Monash was a hero to my Grandparents, and Parents generation.

He even appears on the Aussie $100 note:

Australian General Sir John Monash - Aussie meet him in their currency.
Sir John Monash – Aussie meet him in their currency.

I would be surprised if my kids had any idea. He has a university named after him, and several academic prizes.

1918, Knighted by King George, to the embarrassment of his loyal, cynical Aussie diggers.
1918, Knighted by King George, to the embarrassment of his loyal, cynical Aussie diggers.

Australia WW1 General Sir John Monash is remembered in Australia.
He even has his own postal stamp.

In times of emergency, Citizens become excellent soldiers, we have seen that with Ukraine’s warriors of both sexes. But warriors require Leadership, and Leadership that will swim against the tide of status quo thinking. Perhaps a Leader, who says, “No thanks, I don’t need a ride, I need ammunition”.

We must not give up on Ukraine, we just need some clever bastard, to empower a unified effective plan, and see it executed.

When I see video of one solitary Ukrainian Bradley Fighting vehicle, taking on three Russian heavy battle tanks – And I consider how Ukrainian’s took existing domestic drone technology, and commenced destroying Putin’s oil capacity, having sunk 30% of his Black Sea Navy, well:

I think Australian General John Monash would smile and say: “It’s not over whilst some Bastard still has a clever Plan”.

Disruption? – Never mind the Bollocks. Rage, hate and genuine art.

Disruption? – Never mind the Bollocks. Rage, hate and genuine art.

(The concept of Stoicism consistently pops up in my writing as a sub theme. It will do it again in this piece. The Stoic Philosophy, and its positive impact on modern life, has gained popularity on social media. If you the reader want to know a little more, I highly recommend Chris Kirk's regular stoic ponderings at 'https://ascendbeyond.beehiiv/com') 

At school in 1977 I heard the Sex Pistols for the first time – absolutely hated them: I was sadly listening to the Eagles and other equally lame California soft rock. I guess the disruption, represented by the Sex Pistols, completely escaped me. The social, economic, and political catalyst for the Pistol’s emergence went completely over my head.

British Punk Band, 'The Pistols', was British Disruption on drugs!
British Punk Band, ‘The Pistols’, was British Disruption on drugs!

Pretty sure I never used the word ‘disruption’ in a sentence. But as I travelled, I came to believe, that the world obviously needed an awful lot of it. The status quo, well not the British Rock Group: The existing state of affairs needed a bloody great shake up.

British Band 'The Sex Pistols', shook up the world. However they lacked endurance and most members died young.
Mindless anarchy and long life – mutually exclusive?

So, what is Disruption, is it not just anarchy?

Sid Vicious, ‘bass guitarist’, member of the Sex Pistols, believed in disruption as chaos, destruction, and complete anarchy. In defense, Sid was only 20. So, I pondered what his views were today: Woops, he died before he reached 22 – Anarchy, anger and worm poo!

Ok, so Disruption requires substance and intent. The Sex Pistols had neither, but they achieved Fame if not fortune. 2004, Rolling Stone magazine listed them No 58 in their ‘100 Greatest Artists of All Time’. Talent is certainly not a precondition of fame, which explains Donald Trump.

So British Punk Rock brought disruption and not much else. Billy Bragg thinks as much, but along came ‘The Clash’ and lead singer Joe Strummer.

“Were it not for the Clash, punk would have been just a sneer, a safety pin and a pair of bondage trousers”.

Billy Bragg. British shit stirrer, political activist and folk singer.
British political activist Billy Bragg describes how social revolution might simply start with a T shirt.
The humble T Shirt has given voice to many social revolutions.

The Clash brought much needed class to the art of disruption.

‘The Clash’ sought disruption, but they had process, talent, substance, and intent.

In 1979, London Calling brought a new level of disruption, one that was thoughtful, and considered. Let’s respect the past, break it yes, but extend it, build on it, positive renewal of the past. The not-so-subtle hint of Strummer’s intent is in hindsight, perfectly clear from the album’s homage to Elvis Presley’s first album.

British Punk Rock Group 'The Clash', they actually were thoughtful creators of disruption. But they respected the past at times. Their first album paid homage to Alvis Presley.
Disruption – Respect the Historical Legacy: Positive Creation not Anarchy.

Sometimes you just need to tell people what you stand for, what your intent is – Strummer did this!

Joe Strummer leader of British Punk Band 'The Clash', brought considerable intelligence to his disruption.
Punk Rock – Proactive Creative Disruption.

Disruption and the Boss – enduring time traveller.

So, it seems disruption can be enduring. Well certainly Strummer’s intent has been enduring:

London Calling by the Boss!

On June 28, 2009, Bruce Springsteen packed out London’s Hyde Park. The name of the tour was ‘London Calling‘, the opening song a homage to ‘The Clash’. Thirty years to the day, the best Punk song ever written, was still disrupting London. Do yourself a favour, find this concert, sit back, embrace the Bosses energy and drive. Time travelling to 2024:

Ok, so I hear you saying, “So what, it’s all just music, makes no real difference”.

Well Bruce Springsteen gives a far better reason for music then I ever could:

US Musician, composer, and singer Bruce Springsteen, has always used disruption to speak for the silent people.
London Calling by the Boss!

Now Bruce is no Sid Vicious. For starters Bruce has a rare and unique talent, people such as that have earned their fame. Bruce and Strummer share the need for disruption, but in a considered, thoughtful way: Certainly not anarchism:

Even Patriots can be Disruptive.

Disruption does not mean anarchy.

So, it seems that disruption does not require destruction of the status quo. Indeed, it often is respectful of the past, but desires fundamental improvements. Disruption can become the status quo or at least a major common aspect of it. That’s precisely what Earnest Hemingway did:

Have you ever read literature from the 19th Century? Like me you started and gave it up as totally incomprehensibly complex. Can’t sleep grab a copy of Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (1899) or Lord Jim (1900). Hemingway thought so as well. Hemingway sought to disrupt what had been acknowledged as fine literature in the past. In so doing he created a unique formula based on comprehensible, uncomplicated language which is simple and straightforward.

Hemingway was so disruptively successful that without us even being aware, most Western writing, is based on Earnest’s Iceberg Theory:

Ernest Hemingway introduced disruption to the history of literature.
Ernest Hemingway introduced disruption to the history of literature.

Disruption and the Art of Warfare.

Tragically warfare has been the cause of much human disruption and suffering. So, understanding a little of disruption requires some warfare time travel. The growth and fall of the Roman Empire remains the most disruptive element of Human History. We still feel its impact today. What is but one element of that disruption that time travelled down 2000 years to us?

My Postcard, ‘Time Travel – Destruction, Lust, Philosophers, Fascists, and Arseholes, found Julius Caesar stalled on the beaches of Ancient Britain. His speech to his reluctant seasick troopers involved a reminder of how they could trust their weapons and their teamwork. Seems rather pragmatic. Not if you consider that Rome’s opponents, Celts and German tribes, had a military tradition of individual combat. Brave and exceptionally violent warriors. But no match for a Roman Legion. Wherein each man took shelter from the shield of the man next to him. And lunged out from behind those shields with a short stabbing sword.

Ancient Rome created military disruption on a grand scale.
Ancient Rome created military disruption on a grand scale.

Military disruption requires innovation and sound thinking.

Rome conquered and disrupted their known world. That disruption was based on innovation, and adoption of these principles:

  1. Leadership and teamwork;
  2. A professional Non-Commissioned Officer Corp ‘Centurions’, who we would recognize as Sergeants and Warrant Officers;
  3. The empowerment of Centurions to make tactical decisions literally in the front lines, in response to dynamic battle conditions;
  4. Proficiency with personal weapons: The short Roman sword ‘The Gladius’. Not visually dramatic like a battle axe. But delivering lethal thrusts to vital organs from behind the protection of your shield and that of your mates; and
  5. Combined arms warfare: The coordination of artillery, cavalry and infantry.

Testament that today’s disruption becomes tomorrow’s status quo: Rome’s opponents eventually copied such innovation. Significantly,

Rome’s disruptive warfare innovation, and those 5 principles, time travelled 2000 years down to 2024. All professional Western Militaries now fight like this. Putin seems to have misplaced his copy of ‘The Gallic Wars by Julius Caesar’! President Zelenskyy’s success resistance to Russian aggression indicates he actually reads his copy:

President Zelenskyy Learnt Disruption from Julius Caesar.

Disruptive thinkers who time travelled down to us.

Although once disruptive thinking can become the norm, often it is misunderstood. World War One Witnessed Teamwork on an epic scale. With the blow of a whistle large bodies of men, would emerge from the ground in teams. And run diligently into the interlocked arcs of mass machine guns! Teamwork does not always make the Dreamwork, certainly not in the face of misunderstood new technology. Australia World War 1, General Sir John Monash, another disruptive thinker, you can read his story at this link.

Time travelling to North Africa 1942, General Irwin Rommel, has a completely new innovative spin on disruption:

German General Erwin Rommel wrote a treatise on both mastering and using military disruption.
British Military Academy ‘Sandhurst’ should have maintained its German Language classes.

WW1 taught Erwin that military plans would not survive contact with the enemy – Chaos and Disruption were inevitable! Counterintuitively he embraced Disruption. He trained his men to seek out chaos, to create disruption. He trusted his Afrika Korp troopers to respond to such inevitable chaotic disruption, faster and more effectively than his opponent. It worked!

Unlike Putin, Rommel knew his Caesar. He also empowered his Non-Commissioned Officers to make tactical decisions literally in the front lines, in response to those chaotic disruptive conditions.

OODA Loops? Another brilliant disruptive thinker.

1981, another counterintuitive thinker formalized Rommel’s attitude towards embracing the inevitability of disruption. US Airforce Pilot Colonel John Boyd gave us the OODA Loop. (Observe, Orient, Decide, and Act)

OODA – Always Make the other guy react to you.

OODA, a cycle of thinking within a disruptive chaotic environment, designed to make such disruption the other guy’s problem. Another example of how disruptive thinking can become the normal status quo – 40 years later The OODA loop has become an important concept in litigation, business, law enforcement, management education, and military strategy.

Disruptive Innovation – A brilliant man called Magleby.

Time travelling has frequently introduced me to Disruptive Innovation, I thought it was just one of my obsessive quirks, then last week I actually discovered that serious thinkers (obviously excludes me), actually make this a Profession. Take American professor Clayton Magleby Christensen (with a name like that I assumed his Dad thought he would have to fight for a living!) In 1997, old Magleby published his theory of ‘Disruptive Innovation’:

Disruptive Innovation will rip you another arsehole about this big!

Founded in 1843, British establishment and status quo Newspaper ‘The Economist’, has called Magleby,The most influential management thinker of his time”. Do we really need any more evidence that disruptive thinking can become the norm?

I do wonder why disruptive thinking that endures, always seems to require intellectuals – Then I remember Sid Vicious! Why can’t we simply ask the common man what outcome he requires from all this disruption? Let’s see what Henry Ford thought on this question?

“If I had asked people what they wanted, before I built the first mass produced car, they would have said faster horses.”

Henry Ford. 1930.
Henry Ford - Mass produced affordable cars, letting loose disruption on an extreme scale.
Henry Ford – Mass produced affordable cars, disruption extreme.

A Conclusion to Disruption.

What have I learned in this Time Travel episode:

  • The Sid Vicious style, disruptive anarchy is self-seeking and will never endure. It must always be resisted and yes permanently DISRUPTED! I include Putinism and Trumpism in that shameless group of self-seeking miscreants;
  • The status quo frequently deserves DISRUPTION, but the intelligent, patriotic, and considered approach of Joe Strummer and Bruce Springsteen is more effective. If nothing else music gives voice to the unheard;
  • Julius Caesar proves that well founded disruptive principles can endure and remain useful for a very long period of time travel; and
  • Irwin Rommel’s approach to chaos and disruption is healthy for the mind and body. Life is chaotic, disruption is inevitable – Best prepare by aspiring to stoic endurance and resilience.

Oh, and I learnt that some people, like Clayton Magleby Christensen, actually know what they are talking about.


Postscript # 1:

In case the presence of Erwin Rommel offends anyone. Rommel’s actions were disruptive to Hitler’s NAZI government. He was murdered for it in consequence. If only the world had more of Rommel’s disruptive influence.

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Postscript # 2:

All the characters briefly discussed above share one trait – Stoicism. Stoicism, an attitude to life has travelled down to us from the Ancient World. However, it’s so much more than historical interest. Many people today, especially so the younger generation, have discovered the life sustaining benefits of adding some stoicism to your morning cereal.

Chris Kirk, A former British Commando, now genuine good bloke, and advocate of the Stoic Life, well he is well worth having a Captain Cook at.

https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/ascend-beyond-newsletter-7104178761293541376/?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_pulse_read%3Ba7I2kM%2FJRQSZWW%2FHSchW%2FQ%3D%3D

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Propagandist bastards – Dangerous, Deception the Dark Art of Fake News.

Propagandist bastards – Dangerous, Deception the Dark Art of Fake News.

(This Post was originally published in January 2023. With the passing of 12 months, and upon reflection, the warnings contained therein have become even more acute.)

Welcome to 2023! I’m eagerly expecting a year of wonder, interest, frustration, and concerning events. What may come over the horizon? Like taxes, you can count on more political propaganda this year! When did it start? What’s its intent? Who were/are some of the great propagandists of time travel? Does propaganda take many forms? What if any are the defenses against the black arts of propaganda. I’ve been pondering such in between XMAS and New Year festivities. Yes, I know at 60 you would think I had a life!

Defence Against the Dark Arts (DADA) – Chapter 11 PROPAGANDA

Make America great again – Powerful dangerous effective propaganda.

November 17, 2012, was a historical day in US history. Donald Trump ‘created’ a slogan that is perhaps the finest expression of propaganda in the contemporary world. Incidentally he stole the concept, who would expect anything else!

MAGA - Make America Great Again - clever by dangerous propaganda. Contemporary propaganda at its most dangerous.
MAGA – Make America Great Again – clever but dangerous propaganda.

MAGA is brilliant as a propaganda slogan. Its simplicity and statement of nothing precise, provide the receiver multiple imagined reference subjects. All the bad evil things in your life, Trump will fix. Taxes, immigrants, talk of climate change, inflation, the Clintons – Trump can fix it. A defining aspect of both propaganda and Fascism is the promise of easy fixes. If only you were to give enough power to those who brought you the enlightenment in the first place!

Surely, a baseball cap could not possibly warn of the threat of the violence inherent in the propaganda system. Well of course it can’t! That’s the point of propaganda. To convince common people to support, allow, and sustain actions which they would otherwise abhor!

People are diverse and complex, nothing more diverse than opinions on the structure of society. Some of those opinions are ugly! Fascists, and their belief that violence is legitimate political discourse. You’re not likely to see that printed on a baseball cap, it wouldn’t fit.

Behaviour never lies – The Winnie defense.

Winston Churchill knew one defense against these dark arts was to watch people’s behaviour, and not listen to their words.

Winston Churchill defense against propaganda critical element of this Postcard.
Winston’s Primary Defence Against the Dark Arts of Propaganda

But I’m getting ahead of myself. When and where did Propaganda commence its Time Travel?

Origins of Propaganda:

Time travelling back 2538 years to ancient Persia we find King Darius. Darius would bang on with his own version of MAGA – Make Persia Great Again (MPGA), which loses something. I guess the illiterate Trump was lucky America starts with a vowel!

Jumping forward 110 years, we find Pericles in the Acropolis, washing dolmades down with litres of retsina. Prior to the rise of Greece, most people lived under despots. With limited means to represent their political desires as a group. Pericles and his mates were well aware of their group interests. All well informed of the political affairs of their City State. We know Greece as a democracy, but it was a closed shop, excluding women, slaves, non-Greeks and other undesirables. Perhaps Pericles’ propaganda was focused on keeping democracy just the way it benefitted his interest group?

Pericles knew nothing of newspapers, radio, television, LinkedIn and Twitter. But he had public games, theatre, law courts, public oratory, and religious festivals. All of these were used as powerful engines of propaganda to mold attitudes and opinions.

Architecture as Propaganda.

The Greeks were great thinkers, or perhaps it was the retsina. But Pericles realized when the curtain went down on your latest ‘Broadway’ production, well your propaganda went silent. I know, let’s build a huge temple on the highest most expensive land in the city: The Parthenon was born. It’s notable that other great propagandists also chose large architectural monuments to propagandize their message. Christian cathedrals are notable examples as well Hitler’s world capital ‘Germania’.

The Parthenon, built 2450 years before Trump Tower, was intended to show the world the Greeks were strong and brave. In order to serve Pericles’ nationalistic goals, the temple was built on the sacred Acropolis. Seen by anyone approaching the city, permanent glorification of the greatness of Greece. The Parthenon may have survived, but Pericles’s intent for the Greeks did not. The famous Parthenon marbles were knicked by the British in 1812. And the European Union has financially bailed out Greece on more than one occasion. Seems propaganda often does not stand the test of time!

The Parthenon in Greece is a fine example of propaganda in the ancient world.
Bits of the Parthenon – The best bits are in the London Museum

Propaganda and the Ancient World.

My previous Postcard, ‘Lust, Fascists and Arseholes’ discusses the fact that Julius Caesar’s writing was self-seeking propaganda. Roman writing is the primary ancient history which time travelled down to us. Tragically, most of it is Roman self-seeking bull shit, consequently much was lost about other worthy ancient civilizations. Propaganda distorts history, it really is Fake News.

Another Roman Emperor, Marcus Aurelius did not have the same penchant for self-seeking bollocks. Marcus wrote about Defence Against the Dark Arts (DADA), his writings on stoicism justifiably time travelled down to us. Reason is the greatest defense against propaganda, but the dark arts are sneaky!

2000-year-old warnings on defense against propaganda.

Fart jokes and propaganda.

Propaganda was on for young and old with the invention of the printing press in 1450. Several hundred years of mass-produced propaganda followed. As the Protestant Reformers and the Anti Reformation Roman Catholics, slogged it out for righteous dominance. You didn’t think the printing press would have been used to educate the mud eating British peasants, did you?

There does not seem to have been much discipline to 15th Century propaganda. Certainly, a lot of buttock baring, farting jokes, and other schoolboy humour. Seems to be what influenced Donald Trump’s personal propaganda style!

I guess Twitter simply maintains a proud tradition of Propaganda.

The two world wars elevated propaganda to a studied art form. Propaganda counters and bi-passes logic, reason, rational thought, and common sense: It manipulates emotions. My previous Postcard, ‘Bastard Horse and Scared Young Men’, introduced my Uncle Les, who ran off as a 16-year-old, joined the Australian Light Horse and fought through World War 1. I’m guessing that Les’ ‘adventure’ was inspired by manipulative propaganda:

WW2 – Liars, creeps and other bastards

If WW1 made propaganda an art form, WW2 was the master period. NAZI Germany knew the manipulative magic of the Dark Arts, creating a Government Department run by Joseph Goebbels.

“Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it”

Joseph Goebells.
NAZI Creep – Joseph Goebbels. Master of destructive propaganda.

Now this guy was a real creep, couldn’t lie straight in bed! Winston warned us that, “Behaviour never Lies”. True to form, the actual cowardice and brutality of Goebbels was exposed in May 1945. Instead of facing the Russians, he and his darling wife murdered their 5 children and killed themselves.

NAZI propaganda, had at its core a complete disdain for people. But they had thought it through, they knew the psychology upon which it played.

Hitler – An appeal to those of limited intelligence.

The little corporal had no more respect for the people, then Goebbels:

Hitler indulged in propaganda. An effective instrument of NAZI terror and destruction.
The little corporal had no more respect for the people, then Goebbels.

Welcome to the Red Baron’s not so little friend.

Hermann Goering, was no fool, self-seeking, pompous, and arrogant, but clever and calculating. A decorated WW1 Fighter Pilot Ace who flew under command of the Red Baron. When the Baron was shot down by Aussie troops, Fat Boy Goering lead the Baron’s Flying Circus. During the1946 Nuremberg War Crimes Trial, he defended himself effectively against US, Russian and British lawyers. Sentenced to Death by Hanging. True to Churchill’s advice, Hermann also committed suicide.

I imagine Winnie would have chuckled and fired up another Cuban, when he was told of the arrest of Hermann by US military police:

“Hermann was wearing a woman’s silk kimonos, French knickers, long hair, and painted fingernails: He was also completely off his face on morphine.

US MP Arrest Report Fat Boy not so Slim

Notorious propagandists don’t always come dressed like successful seemingly well-meaning politicians.

Hermann had the usual NAZI distain for the views of the German people. He also speaks to the evil power of propaganda:

I seek not to be an apologist for old fat boy Hermann. But as an example, that evil propaganda is not just the tactic of ignorant sociopaths. A fact we may forget after all these years of laughing at Donald Trump.

Speer Defense – I should have known but I didn’t.

Albert Speer, Hitler’s architect – A man of exceptional logistical talent and extraordinary revolting judgement in political friends.

Albert Speer, Hitler's Architect - A propagandist who used architecture and grand physical displays.
Albert Speer, Hitler’s Architect – Built propaganda.

Speer was a propagandist, not words like the slimy Goebbels, but architecture and political rallies on a grand scale. Speer designed ‘Germania’, Hitler’s vision for a European/World capital that eclipsed anything Pericles imagined, with or without a Grecian Urn full of retsina. A capital that would for 2000 years, demonstrate the superiority, power and authority of NAZI Germany:

‘Germania’ – Hitler’s Propaganda on a Massive Scale

Germania was never conceived, Speer’s model disappeared in ashes, in consequence of Allied Bombing. Much like most German cities and all of Hitler’s NAZI evil vision. Contemporary propagandists of the Neo-Nazi, and White Nationalist variety, never seem to mention how Time Travel reveals the ashen consequences of their nonsense.

Speer’s Cathedral of Light – All smoke and mirrors.

Speer’s built propaganda works, ‘The Cathedral of Light’, featured in Nazi Party rallies. It consisted of 130 anti-aircraft searchlights, at intervals of 12 meters, aimed skyward to create a series of vertical bars surrounding the audience. Speer described the effect. The feeling was of a vast room, with the beams serving as mighty pillars of infinitely light outer walls”. The British Ambassador to Germany, Sir Neville Henderson, described it as,Both solemn and beautiful… like being in a cathedral of ice. Henderson, quintessentially British establishment, should have known better: Propaganda often appears as seductive entertainment.

Cool as Speer’s ‘Cathedral’ may have been, it was all smoke and literally mirrors, the world should have reacted to the chilling message of hate and domination! Humility seems an excellent DADA principle.

NAZI Cathedral of Light – Illuminating Evil Propaganda

Fascist Achievements? – Talent gone, toadies remain.

In the 1920’s and 1930 Speer was a crap unsuccessful architect. A period when German architecture, design and engineering was world leading. Innovative, focused on solving real problems, and creating healthy affordable environments for the common people. Hitler condemned this, declaring it Marxist, immoral and decadent. Speer’s neo classical exaggerations arrived! German architects, designers and engineers fled to the US in droves – Contributing mightily to US economic success post war. Today’s neo-Nazis and white nationalist propaganda, never seems to mention that driving away critical talent is an inevitable reaction. Talent gone – toadies remain.

In consequence of his logistical genius, Speer became Hitler’s Armaments and Production Minster. The dubious distinction of producing more weapons in the last 12 months under massive, allied air raids, then in the preceding years. Speer also faced the 1946 Nuremberg War Crimes Trial, it seems he never knew of the Holocaust (dubious), but was responsible for the abuse, starvation and death of thousands in his industry. Speer received a 25-year sentence in solitary and served every day. Russia objected hypocritically: “The US, spared Speer from hanging in return for the secrets of his logistics”. No doubt these Russian ‘vodka sours’, were not a sense of thwarted desire for justice, but because US Security captured Speer first! Abundant hypocrisy and propaganda are long standing comrades in solidarity.

Albert Speer was charming, quick witted and urbane: Also, self-seeking and ruthless. Propagandists come in many forms. And Russian President Putin is the contemporary worst! Putin is also the current world’s greatest hypocrite. A subject I discussed in my Postcard, ‘Fools, heroes, and Villains’.

Russian for Dummies.

Putin controls Russian Propaganda, what he says goes and is repeated!

In some ways, Russian propaganda builds on Soviet Cold War–era techniques, with an emphasis on obfuscation and on getting targets to act in the interests of the propagandist without realizing that they have done so. In other ways, it is completely new and driven by the characteristics of the contemporary information environment. Russia has taken advantage of technology and available media in ways that would have been inconceivable during the Cold War. It’s tools and channels now include the internet, social media, and the evolving landscape of professional and amateur journalism and media outlets. It is international, effective, far reaching, a firehose of falsehood – And Putin controls it all, what he says goes and is repeated!

Now we are back in 2023, is there any self-protection against propaganda?

Conclusion: Defence Against the Dark Arts.

I would like to suggest keep yourself informed. But that’s hard, we are all very busy and effective contemporary propaganda, as Putin uses, is much more sophisticated than silly slogan bearing baseball caps. EG: Russian Propaganda Robots (BOTS) are just as likely to slam this Post. Which explains why Siobhan O’Reilly of Kilkenny, is always bagging me online. I thought it was my endless charm and wit!

Winston Churchill’s advice, ignore the words, focus on the actions is dependable. But in the case of your precious vote, the actions come after your vote, the damage may be done.

So, then I remember the old adage: “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is”. Remember propaganda is trying to deceive you into supporting something your rational mind would reject. Propaganda promises quick fixes, adult rational people don’t willingly believe in quick fixes, do they? Tragically if the propaganda is effective, they do. 74,222,958 US Citizens voted for the MAGA baseball cap!

To trace the origins of that old adage requires time travel back to 1580, with Thomas Lupton’s ‘Sivquila’. I would suggest getting a copy of Thomas’ work, but this is the only piece of wisdom it contains. Unless of course your house is infected with fleas, wolves, demons, witches, and sorcery. Thomas has plenty of quick fixes for these common problems. So yes, Thomas was also a propagandist, the adage that travelled down to us was firmly aimed at the Catholic Church and its promise of salvation.

I will leave you with old Winnie’s wisdom to back yourself, but even that seems not as it appears!

Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels – and a genuine, tough, and inspiring old Medicine Man.

Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels – and a genuine, tough, and inspiring old Medicine Man.

A previous Postcard ‘Reluctant Heros – Hate, compassion, and daring’, introduced Raphael Oimbari, a Papuan New Guinean who represents many thousands like himself who cared for, carried, and maintained Australian troops in the vicious fighting on the Kokoda Track, Papua New Guinea in WW2. Raphael was a Fuzzy Wuzzy Angel,(Wiki has an excellent in-depth report) although the Aussie Diggers just called him mate. Men like Raphael were the unsung heroes of this important military campaign. No commendations and little formal recognition found their way to Raphael’s jungle home. Another unsung hero worked alongside Raphael, Dr Geoffrey Hampden, we will meet him soon. This is their story, in a much-abbreviated form.

Nothing is ever as it seems. This statement has inspired my interest in time travel, IE: the study of history. The itching desire to find the truth, what really happened through time. Often our school education perpetuated myths and half-truths, even complete bull shit. Driven by the motives of government, religion or such. We learn things from our parents, siblings, and friends. Often, they speak through bias, or perhaps complete ignorance. Contemporary social media has made bull shit and fake news a constant attack on objective fact. Nothing new in this as Mark Twain, reminds us time travelling from the 1890’s:

“I was educated once – it took me years to get over it.”

Mark Twain 1890.
Mark Twain warns us that people believe things which simply are not true.
Mark Twain – Truth often just isn’t so.

Heroes, Lies, and Half Truths enter my World.

Books and the printed word have a certain legitimacy. We often readily accept their contents, even though its more frequently biased than objectively true. Even Winston Churchill, Britain’s World War 2 Prime Minister and prolific writer knew this to be true:

“History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it myself.”

Winston Churchill.

Winston was a brilliant man, inspiring Leadership skills, remaining studied to this day. However, he was also deeply flawed, and not beyond spinning ripping yarns of self-promotion.

WW2 British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, warns of the value of truth.
Old Winnie could be a notorious BS Artist.

So it was with the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels, I first learned of them at school in 1971. The ‘Queensland School Reader’ read like a travel blog promoting the former glory of the British Empire, Winston Churchill would have been proud. Hero’s and heroine’s exploits lived in vivid detail, and an expectation planted that we would aspire to be like them. Most of them were men involved in war, or other colonization pursuits.

Honour, courage, bravery and loyalty to Queen and Country. Worthy aspirational traits, well if you ignore Australian republican aspirations.

But it inspired me and prompted my lifetime interest in time travel.

The story of the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels first came to my attention through the 'Queensland School Reader'.
Australian School Textbook 1960 – For Queen and Country

Not so much lies as sparing on objective truth.

Such textbooks were anachronistic, something from a previous time, like Australia in 1890. 1970 Australia, involvement in yet another Asia war, this time in Vietnam. Australians, a growing number, believed war was not noble, or honorable, just savage and this time unjustified. Historical documents like the ‘Queensland School Reader’, provide a waypoint in time against which Australia’s progress as a multicultural society can be measured. The problem was that it only reported the good stuff, the history filtered through the ruling white establishment. So yes, the Papuans who assisted Australian troops in WW2 were brave, and loyal. But that’s not anywhere near the complete objective story.

The following summarizes objective facts omitted from the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angel story:

  • Often little more than slaves, driven by Aussie masters;
  • Physically beaten and intimidated;
  • Worked like beasts of burden;
  • Poorly fed and paid, often not at all;
  • And many simply melted away into the jungle;
  • Many wanted nothing to do with this Australian war; though
  • Many were armed and deadly soldiers, as brave as the Aussies.

To understand something of the Papuans, let’s review where they came from, and some brief history:

Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels and European Empire Building.

Papuans arrived some 60,000 years previously having walked from Africa. Their lives did not change all that much until the dreaded European empire builders turned up in the 1880’s. Noting that the Dutch had taken and controlled the west, Dutch New Guinea from 1660 till 1966. The British colony, not yet the independent Australia, grabbed the southern half of east New Guinea, Germany the northeast.  The Europeans had no interest in the welfare of Raphael, other than his cheap labor on cocoa and coffee plantations. Of course, European Christian missionaries followed, their interest being the saving of Raphael’s soul. No one bothered asking Raphael if his soul was in peril, but it certainly was now!

Fuzzy Wuzzy, the native inhabitants of Papua New Guinea, lived on the East Side of their landmass.
1930’s Papua was all under the protection of the Aussies.

With the 1914 outbreak of World War 1, Britain decided the presence of a German colony in the Pacific was unacceptable. The newly formed independent Australian Navy steamed North to forcibly expel the German presence. After a violent but brief encounter, Australia found itself in charge of another large piece of someone else’s Country. It would remain so until 1975 when Papua finally achieved its independence.

There was off course several years, 1941 till 1943, when the Japanese Empire decided that their ‘Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere’, absolutely required invasion of Papua and a march down the Kokoda Track to secure Australia. Japan’s fine words actually meant: ‘Japan will prosper, whilst the rest of Asia simply COoperates‘.

And the positive impact on Papuans of all this frantic European activity? Diddly squat! Raphael and his village effectively gained nothing but hard work for minimum wages. In 2024 Papua remains one of the Planet’s poorest Nations. Raphael’s descendants remain largely in a subsistence existence.

Fuzzy Wuzzy’s and their Aussie Mates.

In retrospect the Papuans had little reason to be loyal to their Australian colonial masters, who often treated them as second-class citizens in their own country. Nonetheless many worked until they dropped. It is said that no living soldier was ever abandoned by the carriers, not even during heavy combat. Their compassion for the wounded and sick earned them the eternal gratitude of the Australian soldiers, who called them ‘Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels’.

One of my attractions to time travel, the study of history, is its ability to inform you of the more objective truth of any subject. Let’s have a quick captain cook at what Raphael actually thought of his Aussie Mates:

Raphael was a Fuzzy Wuzzy Angel of World War 2. Assisted many of Australia's young, wounded troops return down the Kokoda Track.
Reluctant heroes – Raphael and George

Go away, leave us alone!

After the war researchers were astonished to learn that Papuans were united in one opinion:

“We just want the ‘whites’, Japanese and Australians to go away, leave us alone.

Raphael Oimbari

Australia did, but not until 1975.

Such an opinion, if broadly known would have been a shock to the wartime generation, who never gave much thought to what colonial rule meant for and did to indigenous populations. But,

This opinion should take nothing away from the commitment, bravery, sacrifice, and endurance that men like Raphael provided to and for wounded Aussie boys.

Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels. Heroes of the Kokoda Track, New Guinea, World War 2.
Many Aussie boys survived combat due to men like Raphael.

Benevolent masters versus Japanese Prosperity.

Australia treated men like Raphael as at best very low paid workers, if you can call rice and tobacco pay. But one opinion unified the Australian troops with their Papuan load bearers – Disdain of the Japanese! Quite simply the Papuans hated the Japanese – Who stole their food, raped their women, made them slave labourers, and killed indiscriminately. I guess by comparison Aussies were benevolent masters!

My school textbooks failed to mention that the Fuzzy Wuzzy were not just beasts of burden, they were also brave warriors. As much so as the Aussie troops, and they played a completely unrecorded role in stopping the Japanese advance.

The Papuan Infantry Battalion (PIB)

The Papuan Infantry Battalion was raised in 1940 by the Australian Army. Though all Officers and most NCO’s were Australian or New Zealanders, it should take nothing away from the bravery and courage of the Papuan troopers. Most significantly, few Australians even know of the Fuzzy Wuzzy Warriors. History was limited to portraying the loyal black servants of the dominant white Australians – History itself is more frequently biased than objectively true.

What little I knew of the PIB was of a poorly equipped force lead by a ‘Dad’s Army’ of old Australian Papuan resident plantation owners.

Fuzzy Wuzzy Warriors of WW2. Lead by old Aussie plantation owners.
Dad’s Army or Fuzzy Wuzzy Warriors

The objective truth is that such a Dad’s Army knew the rugged unmapped Papuan jungles as their back yard. As coast watches reporting, by air dropped radios, on the movement of Japanese forces, they contributed critical intelligence to the successful defeat of the Japanese. But then there were lethal Fuzzy Wuzzy Warriors.

Green Shadows and Fuzzy Warriors.

Soldiers of the Papuan Infantry Battalion (PIB) were the first to offer resistance to the Japanese invasion of their country. PIB Captain Harold Jesser said that the Battalion was called the ‘green shadows’ because of an entry found in a Japanese diary in Papua.

“The local natives moved silently in the jungle, inflicting casualties on us-and then are gone, like green shadows.

Japanese War Dairy.
Papuan New Guineas were indeed warriors, who fought the Japanese invaders on their own terms.
Fuzzy Warriors – Tool of Trade, automatic weapons and machete!

Sergeant John Ehava, won the Distinguished Conduct Medal, the highest bravery award given to a Papuan during World War two. At the end of the Papuan campaign an element of the Papuan Infantry Battalion under Ehava was ambushing Japanese who were escaping north along the coast towards Salamaua. Ehava’s award citation describes what followed.

On February 8, 1943, at the Kumusi River mouth a patrol under Sergeant Ehava attacked an enemy party attempting to cross the river. During this engagement Sergeant Ehava saw another enemy party approaching on his left. He immediately detached himself from his patrol and, at great personal risk, took up a commanding position and armed with a Bren gun held his fire until the enemy was less than 40 yards distant. He repulsed the attack and personally killed 30 of the enemy.”

Distinguished Conduct Medal (DCM) Citation.

Men like Sergeant Ehava fought as bravely as any of the Aussie Diggers who have been written into my Country’s mythology. Sadly, and dishonestly their stories simply were not passed on. It seems the white fellas were more interested in their own place in history.

Another Reluctant Hero:

Men like Raphael had one white fella in their corner: Doctor Geoffrey Hampden “Doc” Vernon Military Cross (MC).

The Fuzzy Wuzzy had one white fella firmly in their corner. Geoffrey Hampden "Doc" Vernon Military Cross (MC).
Geoffrey Hampden “Doc” Vernon Military Cross (MC).

Geoffrey was an Australian doctor and surgeon, resident in Papua growing coffee and providing medical services to remote communities. World War 1 had smashed enough war and slaughter into Geoffrey’s life. From March 1915 to August 1918, he served as a Regimental Medical Officer with the Australian Light Horse at Gallipoli and in the Middle East, where he was awarded the Military Cross for devotion to duty under fire. When the Japanese knocked on the door, Geoffrey lied about his age, enlisted again, pulled on his boots – He was 61!

Geoffrey may have been deaf, in consequence of a near miss with a Turkish artillery shell at Gallipoli, but nothing wrong with his legs – He was one of the few Aussies who could keep pace with Raphael up the brutal Kokoda Track. He also had command of pidgin English, the language of the Papuans – his years of diligent care of the Papuans meant that they had enormous respect for this skinny old man.

Raphael and the Aussie Myth.

Men like Raphael were held in great respect by my Grandparent’s and Parent’s generations, somewhat less by my own, and tragically rarely known to my children’s.

The respect and reverence for men like Raphael is captured in the following verse, written by a soldier of the 39th, which I had to learn in school in the 1970’s:

Many a mother in Australia,
When the busy day is done,
Sends a prayer to the Almighty
For the keeping of her son,
Asking that an Angel guide him
And bring him safely back
Now we see those prayers are answered
On the Owen Stanley track,
For they haven’t any halos,
Only holes slashed in the ears,
And with faces worked by tattoos,
With scratch pins in their hair,
Bringing back the wounded,
Just as steady as a hearse,
Using leaves to keep the rain off
And as gentle as a nurse.

The problem with such myths, is they disguise the truth. They invent a white man’s view on what happened to Papuan’s who really had little if any choice in the matter.

Raphael Oimbari said in 1982:

“We worked hard despite all the danger. We were promised compensation and I ask now for what we were promised. Australian government said you work, you will be like us, but it hasn’t happened. Work for us, we all sit down at the same table, same spoon, same food hasn’t happened. Worked day and night so that things would change, I thought of nothing else. I worked hard for nothing. Australian men went home and got pensions. I’m just rubbish. Old men like me are dying without getting anything … nobody counted how many of us were killed.”

Raphael Oimbari.

And with that quote Raphael disappeared from history, or did he?

Raphael and George – Lest we Forget.

Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels – Often reluctant, yet nonetheless Unsung Heroes.

The truth of Raphael’s words came home to me in researching this article, easy to find precisely how may Aussie (625) and Japanese (10,000) boys died on the Kokoda Track, not even an estimate in regard Papuans!

Alongside the romanticized myth lies a contradictory and unpleasant truth of what life was really like for some Papuan carriers. They were not all volunteers, nor were they all treated kindly with the respect and friendliness that the myth suggests. It has remained in Australia’s public consciousness with varying significance, yet always concealing the negative aspects of this historical narrative. What is most important is to recognise that without the help of the Papuan carriers, reluctant help in many cases: Australia may have had a very different outcome on the Kokoda Track.

Reluctant? Perhaps – Tough and Enduring, definitely!

And what of Dr. Geoffrey Vernon MC?

Geoffrey followed the 39th Battalion up the Track. From the first contact with the Japanese, Dr. Vernon placed himself just behind the front line. He surprised an old Warrant Officer friend from WW1 when walking up the track and out of the mist he simply said in classic Aussie laconic understatement:

“Jack, I heard there was some action here and thought you may need some assistance. Where do I start?”

Dr. Geoffrey Vernon. MC.

Without Geoffrey’s immediate aid, many more boys would have been lost or indeed suffered more than they already had. Dr. Vernon similarly cared for the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels who gave unrelenting care at tremendous loss in evacuating Aussie Troops down that horrible, hated Kokoda Track. Geoffrey survived Kokoda, how he managed to evacuate wounded, and reestablish front line triage, with the constant moving warfare up and down the Track, well that is indeed the work of an unsung hero.

Dr. Vernon simply largely disappeared from Australian History; Geoffrey died in Papua of malaria in 1946.

Fuzzy Wuzzy Warriors – Lest we Forget.

In June 2008, and Australian senator called for Australia’s Parliament to give official recognition to Papua New Guineans’ courage and contributions to the war effort.

I was stunned to learn that Australia has not officially recognized these wonderful Papuan nationals who saved the lives of Australian servicemen. They carried stretchers, stores and sometimes wounded diggers directly on their shoulders over some of the toughest terrain in the world. Without them I think the Kokoda campaign would have been far more difficult than it was.

In 2009, the Australian government began awarding the ‘Fuzzy Wuzzy Commemorative Medallion‘ to living Papua New Guineans who assisted the Australian war effort, usually bringing survivors and their families to Port Moresby for ceremonial presentations.

Lest we Forget, those Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels!

Raphael’s moment in history lives on.
Reluctant heroes – Hate, compassion, daring, Kokoda and Cannibalism

Reluctant heroes – Hate, compassion, daring, Kokoda and Cannibalism

Let me introduce two reluctant heroes, Private George Whittington and Raphael Oimbari. Raphael and George met in 1942, they would have preferred not to. This Postcard tells the story of men such as these. A story in our troubled times I believe it’s worth remembering.

Reluctant heroes - Raphael and George on the Kokoda Track, WW2, New Guinea
Reluctant heroes – Raphael and George on the Kokoda Track, WW2, New Guinea

39th Militia Battalion- very reluctant Aussie heroes.

George was part of the 2/10th Australian Infantry Battalion, professional soldiers, who relieved the decimated reserve 39th Militia Battalion, who had slowed the Japanese advance down the Kokoda Track, Papua New Guinea in 1942. George though shot in the face, survived, but died in 1943 of scrub typhus.

Both George and Raphael were reluctant heroes. George is a representative of all the young Aussie men, whose fight, wounds, and death on the Kokoda Track became legend. Raphael, the thousands of Papuans who carried wounded Aussie boys out of the bloody combat, back to the comparative safety of Port Moresby. What is a reluctant hero?

How do you recognize a reluctant hero?

Don’t take my word for it. I’m a notorious tale spinner and bull shit artist. So, in respect to yourself the reader, as follows a quote from Jessica Morrell who actually knows about such things:

A reluctant hero is a tarnished or ordinary man with several faults or a troubled past, and he is pulled reluctantly into the story, or into heroic acts. During the story, he rises to the occasion, sometimes even vanquishing a mighty foe.”

Jessica Morrell in ‘Bullies, Bastards and Bitches’.

Why my interest in legitimate heroes?

I remain interested and proud of the Aussie reluctant heroes. National heroes create national myths. Such concepts are important to a Countries identity. Maintaining their legacy will require honesty, transparency and integrity. National mythology remains a consistent theme of my pondering Postcards. ‘Bastard Horses and Scared Young Men’, explores this further. Primarily because they typically are ordinary people, people who eventually say: ‘Enough, I don’t like what’s happening, I’m going to stop it”. I’m also very cynical about ‘classic heroes’, that some politicians pretend to be, that pretend they are our salvation, that they by stint of their ‘specialness’, can make things better. Sounds like bull shit to me! But, genuine classic heroes, well we are going to meet one of those, but also a small group of reluctant heroes. Firstly, a little time travel back to 1942 and the Kokoda Track:

Where the hell is the bloody Kokoda Track?

The Kokoda Track runs over the rugged steep inhospitable Owen Stanley Range, Papua New Guinea. Which in 1942 was an Australian protectorate and had been since the opening days of WW1 when Australia destroyed a German garrison in occupation. Papua had been a German colony from 1884 till 1914.

The Japanese Imperial Forces sent a naval force to seize Port Moresby, the capital of Papua, a strategy designed to separate Australia from the United States. However, subsequently Japan received a beating in that Battle of the Coral Sea. Inconsequence their second option prevailed, a force march over the Own Stanley Range.

Map of the Kokoda Track. In 1942 Australian and Papuan New Guineans, fought the Japanese Imperial Forces. It's a story of reluctant heroes.
Kokoda Track – Bastard of a Place.

Kokoda – What a bastard of a place!

The Kokoda Track was 150 kilometres of hell! Even today, with modern light backpacks, structured trails and professional guides – 10 days, and that’s only one half, Ower’s Corner to Kokoda. The rainforest is thick, dark, steep and impenetrable, a soldier wandering off 5 metres to relieve his dysentery, risked not ever finding his mates again.

Compared to the great land battles of WW2: Kursk, Alamein, Guadalcanal – Kokoda was a skirmish. A skirmish that killed 625 Australian, 10,000 Japanese boys, and an unknown number of Papuan New Guineans. Kokoda descended into a clash of cultures. A relatively new Australian society, versus a centuries old Japanese culture of martial pursuits. And the poor bloody local Papuans found themselves smack in the middle.

Kokoda was fought with rifle, pistol, bayonet, machine guns, small mortars, fists, and teeth. There were no tanks, no air support for resupply or evacuation – No Australian artillery to break up Japanese attacks, yet somehow the Japanese had manhandled their own artillery up there! Another aspect of Kokoda, complete underestimation of the professional Japanese Forces: We would more aptly call it racism!

Death, torture and yes, the human taboo – cannibalism!

Kokoda displays all the horrendous, horror of men at war: Death, mutilation, hunger, sickness, disease, murder, rape, torture and yes, cannibalism.

Cannibalism! Though the men of the 39th had no delusions about war, they knew it was not ‘cricket’. But they were totally unprepared for the Japanese culture of war. In the crisis of nearly being overrun, a group of Aussie wounded were left behind to the tender mercy of the Japanese. A counterattack drove the Japanese back, the 39th discovered all their mates had been tortured as bayonet practice, slain and then some eaten. Kokoda was a clash of cultures, much like Ukraine and Russia. Kokoda’s fighting had no limits, no pity or compassion – There were few if any POWs on either side after that episode. 10,000 young Japanese boys marched down the Kokoda Track towards Australia. Only 600 would ever see the Cherry Blossom in Japan ever again.

23rd July 1942, the Australian 39th Battalion first contacted the might of Japan at Awala, small extremely remote village on the Kokoda Track. The American Fleet lay smashed at Pearl Harbour, Singapore had fallen – All seemed lost and dark. Japan was rampaging toward Australia – In their way the 39th – A Bloody Rag Tag Bunch of Reluctant Heroes!

39th Militia Battalion – Boys and old men, reluctant heroes all.

Off to Kokoda then. WTF is Kokoda!

The soldiers of the 39th were part time reserve soldiers, some only just 18, many were well past 60. Australia introduced conscription in 1939, but it only applied to the Militia, the professional Army remained all volunteers. Militia members often joined the permanent Army, many didn’t. Some of the 39th had been passed over by the regular army. Too old, broken down, misfits, hopelessly unfit, lame, crippled, lacking fighting spirit, and reluctant. Fighting in Australia was one thing, but Africa no thanks, see the Militia could not by Law be sent outside Australia. The Lads had seen what WW1 did to their fathers and uncles – War was no longer some grand adventure. Understandable reluctance, yes!

Then some bright politician had an idea. If Papuan New Guinea was an Australian protectorate, well pretty much part of Australia – Off to Papua it is then lads!

So, the lads found themselves crawling and scratching up Kokoda, very little training – a few rounds through a 303, old weapons as befits ‘simple’ reservists. Clad in highly visible khaki uniforms in a sea of dark green – It really was a desperate measure! Australia’s professional army, Australia’s Imperial Force (2AIF) was fighting in Africa, would take time to ship them back. Assuming we could get around Winston Churchill, he did everything he could to block the return of the AIF.

So, there we are, reluctant heroes in place, in hell on earth and all hell is about to let rip.

How did the Australian Government lead such reluctant heroes?

The answer is not very well, well certainly not at supreme command level.

General Douglas Macarthur was the supreme allied commander based Down Under. Had been since the Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbour and Douglas’ abandonment of his own troops in the Philippines. The US decided it needed an unsinkable aircraft carrier – What about a little place called Australia?

Winston Churchill did not help. Winnie, you said Singapore was invincible, now we are about to be overrun by some very brutal effective lads from the Land of the Rising Sun – We like our own land of glorious sunset plains and vision splendid, thanks a lot! And as for knicking our AIF because of some equally effective German Panzer commander in Africa – Might just call Washington.

United State General Macarthur became supreme commander in Australia in World War 2. He was no reluctant hero, you just had to listen to him say how brave he was!
US General Macarthur – All mouthy corn cob, no trousers!

Two Generals with big heads – But NFI about Kokoda.

Macarthur was all corn cob and personal self-seeking puffery – Just perfect for his aspiration to be the next US President!

Macarthur broke the cardinal rule of warfare, know your terrain. Douglas infamously said of Kokoda:

It’s just like Leonidas the Spartan, at the Pass of Thermopylae, two old *iggers with shot guns could hold it.”

General Douglas Macarthur. Description of the Kokoda Track.

I’m sure Australia’s Prime Minister John Curtin, wished the British War Cabinet under Churchill was still in charge. But John has another blow hard to contend with, Australian grown, Field Marshall Sir Thomas Albert Blamey.

Australian Field Marshall Blamey WW2. Also, no reluctant hero, he always told you how brave he was.
Thomas Blamey, another blow hard.

Field Marshall Sir Thomas Albert Blamey, the Australian, supreme Australian commander, under ‘Old Corn Cob’, well he had no more idea of the horrendous conditions our reluctant heroes were facing at Kokoda. Not sure what ‘Field Marshall’ signified as he certainly knew nothing about the ‘Field’ of Kokoda, and little of infantry tactics.

Thomas said of the 39th:

“You ran like rabbits, remember it’s the rabbit who runs who gets shot, not the man with the gun.”

Field Marshall Sir Thomas Albert Blamey

Blamey was describing the 39th’s simply brilliant series of textbook tactical withdrawals, more of that soon. Thomas thought he could run Kokoda from Army HQ, Brisbane. Some 2000 kilometres away, an awful long distance in 1942. Thomas did more brown nosing, than nosing around such that he had appropriate knowledge of the Kokoda logistical obstacles.

Sir, Should I call you President?

Kokoda and Legitimate Leadership.

In Blamey it is hard to imagine a worst leader to be in charge of Aussie troops, However,

At the front the 39th were led by NCO’s and Officers who were simply first class. They really were ‘Dad’s Army’, veterans of WW1, they had reenlisted expecting to pass on their knowledge to their sons in boot camp. Another round of combat carnage was the last thing they expected. They lead from the front, statistics prove that. -Officer and NCO casualties were 15 times higher than in Africa fighting Rommel. If they were reluctant, they did not show it. Men like Colonel Ralph Honner who took command of the 39th, replacing the previously killed CO.

Colonel Ralph Honner lead Aussie Troops at Kokoda. He was far from a reluctant hero.
Shakesperean Drama on the Kokoda Battlefield.

So how did the 39th Perform:

From the first contact on 23rd July 1942, The 39th could not possibly block the Japanese, so they fought a series of textbook tactical withdrawals back to the Village of Isurava, where on 26 August 1942 the full-time professional soldiers of the AIF started to arrive and fill in their depleted ranks.

Together the 39th and the AIF continued their tactical withdrawal, until on the 05 September 1942 the 39th were relieved – All remaining 185 of them.

39th Battalion – Scruffy, Knocked about – Not Beaten!

The AIF dug in at Imita Ridge on 18 September 1942, the planned last stand, there would be no more withdrawal. But the Japanese were defeated. But there were no words for ‘retreat’ nor ‘tactical withdrawal’ in the Japanese Imperial Field Manual – They were simply instructed to ‘Advance to the Rear’.

No casual withdrawal, as the AIF chased them all the way back to Gona.

So, what was so heroic about the reluctant heroes of the 39th?

There are no recorded grand classic heroic actions by the soldiers of the 39th. But their big brothers of the AIF, at Isurava, they displayed plenty of that. Take Charlie McCallum’s action in covering the withdrawal of 39th and his own mates from the AIF:

“Charlie had already been wounded three times when his platoon was ordered to withdraw just as the Japanese were about to swamp their position on the high ground at Isurava. Charlie held and fired his Bren gun with his right hand and carried a Thompson submachine gun in the other hand. When his magazine ran out on the Bren, he swung up the Tommy gun with his left hand and continued to cut down the surging Japanese as he changed magazines on the Bren. When the Tommy gun was empty, he used the Bren gun again, and continued his one-man assault until all his comrades were clear. When he knew his mates were clear, Charlie fired a final burst and calmly moved off back down the Track.”

Extract from Charlie’s Victoria Cross nomination.

The Teamwork of heroes.

The 39th’s heroics were typically not of the individualistic self-sacrificing type, though there was plenty of that. Theirs was one of teamwork, the ability to learn fast and adapt in life-threatening, soul-destroying conditions. The fact that they mastered one of the most complex of infantry manoeuvres, the successful tactical withdrawal, and kept it over 7 weeks is quite remarkable – Many of these men had not even fired a 303 rifle until the voyage to Papua.

On the evening of the Japanese attack at Isurava, a Platoon size group of 39th seriously wounded had been sent, in the care of Papuans, back along the track to Moresby. On hearing the escalating din of battle from Isurava, the platoon about turned, hopped, crawled and staggered back to rejoin the fight. One had no foot, the other a bullet in the throat, and a third a forearm blown off.

One of the young 39th soldiers said:

“We never did it for King and Country – Fuck that. We did it because the 39th expected it of us.”

Unidentified digger of the 39th.

Lost, crippled, and bloodied – Not so reluctant heroes now.

Four days prior a 39th forward patrol had been driven off the Track by Japanese units surging on Isurava. Surviving the murderous, groping jungle, they emerged back on the Track.

Their Commanding Officer Col Ralph Honner described what happened then:

It was enough to make a man weep, to see those poor skinny bastards hobble in on their bleeding legs. On hearing of the news that the 39th and AIF were fighting for their lives at Isurava. They turned and hurried off back up the track to Isurava, as fast as their crippled feet could carry them”.

Colonel Ralph Honner

Shakespearian elegance in the jungle of death.

How did the 39th perform? Strewth, all bloody rippers!

Col Ralph Honner, with much more Shakespearian elegance, addressed the last parade of the 39th on 05 September 1942:

One hell of a After Action Review.

Lt Col Ralp Honner’s address has understandably become a significant event in Australian nation building. The Australian made 2006 movie ‘Kokoda’ brilliantly and tear jerkingly recreates this address in the short extract.

The End of Reluctance:

May we never forget that common ordinary men can do extraordinary things. They can beat the odds.

Yes, we need classic individual heroes, men like Prime Minister Churchill, and President Zelensky – People who inspire us to keep going. Men and women who would rather stand against evil then hitch a ride away from danger.

But, more than ever we need everyday heroes, people prepared to stand up and resist oppression, evil and all the crap things in our world – Even if they start out somewhat reluctant!

Lest We Forget.

Fools, heroes, and villains – Venture out in the midday sun.

(This Postcard was originally published in January 2023. Like many, I was both enraged and deeply concerned about Putin's illegal and unprovoked attack on Ukraine. When little Vlad suggested that the West needed to stay out of it, well I had to respond.)


Who would venture out in the midday sun? Well according to the 1931 Noël Coward song, only ‘Mad dogs and Englishmen’. Coward would perhaps smile in considering the deconstruction, and reconstruction of his lyrics. As a result, they have morphed to accommodate ideas quite removed from the simple witty satire originally intended. Noel knew social media to be newspapers and the medium he mastered, popular music. Today’s social media brings the glare of the midday sun, onto most people on the Planet. That is to say, Noel’s lyric are a metaphor for public exposure. Most people have some exposure to social media. As a result, most people, know how cruel, how energy sapping, how destructive, such exposure can be. Only a certain type of person enjoys such attention. Consequently, only fools, heroes, and villains venture out in the midday sun!

Does anything more than popular entertainment result from social media dominance? Perhaps it depends on whether those exposed are heroes, fools or villains. Above all whether we can understand the difference. I was pondering such issues when I decided to write to little Vlad.

Putin – fool and villain. Dear Vlad,

Recently I sent a letter via LinkedIn to President Putin as follows:

Oh, Mr. Putin you are a hypocrite. You say, “The Wests’ provision of weapons to Ukraine will prolong the war, it must stop”.

Do you remember the USSR, it was in all the papers, especially its dissolution on Dec 26, 1991. Well,

The USSR was attacked by Germany on June 22, 1941. The USSR was sustained by Allied Convoys delivering weapons and materials. Oh, that sounds remarkably familiar.

And you clearly forget that in excess of 10,000 merchant sailors perished on such convoys.

Convoys like PQ17, 35 ships commenced the journey, only 11 made it to the USSR.

Lest we Forget!

Peter Veal, January 2023

Vlad the Hypocrite.

I attached the following poster. Which depicts Allied Convoys making the extremely dangerous run to Russia. Arguably Russia would have succumbed to German Nazism during World War 2 if not for such sacrifice. Now Putin complains of the same Countries sustaining Ukraine: Hypocrisy!

Describes the Allied Convoys that supplied and sustained the USSR, when it was attacked by Germany in World War 2.

British Merchant Seaman – Uncelebrated Quite Heroes

I’m still awaiting a response from Vlad, perhaps he’s busy? My intent was to define Putin’s hypocrisy in complaining of the West’s support for Ukraine. Whilst ignoring the historical fact that in 1941 the West supported Russia (USSR).

Over 10,000 Merchant Seaman died crewing these convoys. This figure excludes military personnel, sailors and airman: In total 72,000 lives! Britain expended weapons and treasury it really needed for self-defense. British convoys commenced in August 1941, only a few months after the Battle of Britain, had ceased to be an existential threat. Consequently, as much as Britain needed Russia to resist Germany, it desperately needed all its weapons, men and treasury rebuild its defensive and offensive strength.

Extraordinary Heroism and Conspicuous Courage. Death in a freezing cold sea, a long way from home.

  • So, what does it mean to be a hero?
  • What is the importance in Society of Heroes?
  • Should we still value heroic endeavours in the contemporary world?

One person’s Hero, another’s Fool a short time travel trip.

In Ancient Greek tradition, a hero was a human, male or female, of the remote past. Heroes, in consequence of descendance from immortal gods, possessed superhuman abilities. Equally, they had all of the qualities and faults of their fellow humans. But those human characteristics were always on a much larger scale. Counterintuitively for the modern mind, ancient heroes were not paragons of virtue. Whether fool or villain, ancient heroes like their parent gods, were objects of cult worship.

Obviously, some of this tradition time travelled 2500 years down to us: Donald Trump.

A baseball card illustrating Donald Trump as a superhero. Image illustrates how are villainous fool can be portrayed as a hero.

Funny? No: Pathetic and Insulting to Real Heroes, yes!

If you’ve been lucky to escape this absurdity, Trump has recently released a range of digital trading cards which portray himself as a superhero! Quick pause to be sick and then we will continue………………………

Trump certainly fits the classical tradition: No virtue, all the failings of mortal humans but on a much larger scale, and at least in his ‘mind’, descended from a god albeit a self-seeking, sociopathic one, his father Fred Trump!

A sensible definition of a Hero.

Out of respect for legitimate heroes, like the merchant men on Convoy PQ 17, let’s move on. What’s a contemporary more plausible definition of hero?

The Oxford English Language Dictionary defines Hero:

  1. A person who is admired by many people for doing something brave or good;
  2. The main male character in a story, novel, film, etc.;
  3. A person that you admire because of a particular quality or skill that they have; or
  4. In North American English, a long bread roll split open along its length and filled with various types of food.

Ok, Item 4 demonstrates how contemporary language has become ‘monetized’, to the point of meaninglessness. So, this Postcard definition (with the help of people who actually know what they are talking about):

Definition of HEROICS:

  • It’s performed in service to others in need – whether that’s a person, group, or community – or in defense of certain ideals;
  • It’s engaged in voluntarily, even in military contexts, as heroism remains an act that goes beyond the requirements of military duty;
  • A heroic act is one performed with recognition of risks and costs, be they to one’s physical health or personal reputation, in which the actor is willing to accept anticipated sacrifice; and
  • It is performed without external gain anticipated at the time of the act.

Heroism is a concern for other people in need—a concern to defend a moral cause, knowing there is a personal risk, done without expectation of reward. What are the consequences of neither having legitimate heroes, nor honouring them:

Enough chat, lets discuss some real heroes:

Who were the Heroic Men of Convoy PQ17.

The merchant seaman of Convoy PQ17 were just average British men, men of combat age, who just loved being at sea, right? Absolutely wrong! PQ17 included: Indian, Chinese, West Africans, Scandinavians, Dutch, Canada, New Zealanders, and Australians. Notably and in contrast to the times – The British Merchant Navy was similar to a ‘Foreign Legion’, recognized as an open society, free of distinctions of class, race, religion, age or colour.

The men who crewed such convoys, are often portrayed as grizzled, crusty older men. Perhaps stoking boilers or a cook smoking whilst stirring yet another stew of salted beef. Much of this is true, for example the oldest known merchant seamen were in their seventies. Chief Cook Santan Martins of SS Calabria was aged 79 when he was killed in action in her sinking by German Submarine U-103 in December 1940. But, there were also boys.

The youngest merchant seamen were invariably “Boy” ratings, Deck Boys, Galley Boys, Mess Room Boys, Stewards Boys or Cabin Boys typically 14 or 15 years of age. Ken and Ray Lewis, aged 14 and 15 years respectively, were killed sailing together aboard the SS Fiscus when it was sunk by German Submarine U-99. 

Heroes of the British Convoys that supplied the USSR in World War 2.
Heroes of the British Convoys that supplied the USSR in World War 2.

What motivated such Heroes?

So why did they do it?

Well, it certainly wasn’t for the pay and conditions! The basic working week was 64 hours, before overtime kicked in. Food was usually coarse and poor as refrigeration was not available. Salt meat from brine tubs and butter from tins provided much of the staple diet. 

On British vessels attacked and sunk by enemy action, merchant sailors received no pay from the moment that their ship sank, regardless of survival if picked from the sea, it was all recorded as non-working time! Fortunately, this changed in May 1941, so the few survivors of PQ 17 were paid: An amount substantially less than a British Army Privates pay, so not very much!

From the outbreak of war in September 1939, British Merchant Seamen could decide if they wished to sail and risk attack by German forces. The extremely high losses were public knowledge. Such men knew the fear and went anyway.

The men of PQ 17 were not there for the pay or conditions, they weren’t volunteers as such, but it seems they had a choice: They really were unsung heroes! They must have known the risk of death in a cold dark sea.

Lying in the dark, trying to sleep, waiting for the shattering, shaking, and shock inducing impact of a torpedo: They really were heroes, scared and frightened, but nevertheless heroic.

Heroes: Real and Fictious:

Do we need to bring back real heroes? Why if at all do we need heroes?

We need heroes first and foremost because our heroes help define the limits of our aspirations – Courage, humour, and justice: Or indeed the lack of them. Sometimes those heroes are real characters, sometimes fictious. Sometime those heroes are very young and very scared, but they perform heroic acts regardless. The fictious ones are often satirical, funny, pathetic even: They provide a voice that the real unsung heroes may never otherwise have.

Old Tin Legs – Sir Douglas Bader:

Douglas Bader a Heroes, hero.
Watch this Mum – No legs! Nothing beats Determination!

Group Captain Sir Douglas Robert Steuart Bader, or better known to those who respect him as, ‘Old Tin Legs’, or ‘Dogs Body (DB)’.

Those lucky to have been born in my generation or earlier, the Swinging 60’s, know Douglas well. For others, a potted history:

Douglas was a WW2 British Spitfire Ace. Quite remarkable given he lost both legs crashing his plane in 1931. Flew top cover over ‘The Dunkirk Evacuation’, then ‘The Battle of Britain’, until shot down over France in 1941: Multiple escapes from German captivity, the first within days of being shot down. Such a pain in the arse, Germany locked him in ‘Colditz Castle’. Not one to let the weeds grow under his tin feet, Douglas spent his time in Colditz smuggling contraband around inside his tin legs.

Sir Douglas is a legitimate hero in the classic military sense, boundless drive, courage, and resilience But, just as important is the example he sets in overcoming adversity. Imagine losing both legs in 1931? We’ve all seen contemporary amputees working hard to regain mobility, and that’s with extremely sophisticated prosthetics. Imagine having two tin legs manufactured by a craftsman who last week was beating out wing panels for a Morris Minor?

Heroism is not just displayed in military settings. Not all heroes are solely of the ‘daring do’ military type, some heroes, who time travelled down to us, were simply heroic regardless of setting!

Captain Lawrence Oates.

“I am just going outside and may be some time.”

Captain Lawrence Oates.

Last week, 19 January, was the anniversary of British Naval Officer, Captain Scott’s ill-fated race to the South Pole. He lost the race and his life. Also losing his life was a British Army Officer, Captain Lawrence Oates. Lawrence was another classic military hero. Seriously wounded in an 1898 Second Boer War engagement, when called on to surrender Lawrence replied, “I came to fight not surrender”. For that action Lawrence was recommended for the Victoria Cross, the Commonwealth’s highest military medal, since 1856 only ever awarded to 1358 individuals. But another action made him an enduring hero.

On the return from the South Pole, Lawrence performed an extraordinary feat of self-sacrifice. Injured and crippled from frost bite, he knew he was slowing down the team, compromising their chance of a safe return. Lawrence walked out into the night with classic British understatement: “I am just going outside and may be some time”.

Captain Lawrence Oates – ‘A Very Gallant Gentleman’.

Enduring British Heroes of total fiction.

Some fictious heroes, just endure, for their message travels across time – Take Captain James ‘Biggles’ Bigglesworth – then we have a not so humble bank manager, the WW2 British Home Guards, Captain Mainwaring.

Am I entering the Realm of Fantasy here?

Captain George Mainwaring a fictional WW2 British Home Guard Captain of the sitcom ‘Dad’s Army’ fame. First aired on 31 July 1968, ‘Dad’s Army’ still remains a favourite, despite 53 years of time travel! But seriously, what can the bungling George tell us about heroism?

George is pompous, blustering, with an overdeveloped sense of his own importance. But he is also brave, self-sacrificing, loyal to his men without fault, and prepared to make very hard decisions. If not perhaps classically heroic in appearance, Captain Mainwaring is at least out in public demonstrating fundamental Leadership skills. However, even the bumbling, likeable Captain, does at times display heroics beyond that expected of a Home Guard Officer. When the local parishioners are taken hostage by a downed Luftwaffe air crew, George leads a successful rescue mission. Success is only possible when George places his own life in danger as a distraction, allowing the Platoon to flank and overcome armed German airman.

Captain George Mainwaring symbolizes all the ordinary people that have performed extraordinary heroic feats of self-sacrifice in the interests of others.

Lest we forget that fact. Britain has not.

Lest We Forget all the Captain George Mainwarings

The End – of Heroes

The time has come to change our model of heroism. Being a hero is no longer a mythical classification reserved for superheroes in comic books, or a few legendary men and women, or classic military types. Nor should we tolerate narcissistic politicians, who debase the concept of ‘Hero’ for self-seeking purposes.

The meaning and definition of words is important. That the Oxford English Language Dictionary, defines ‘Hero’ as a: ‘Bread roll stuffed with food’, is quite absurd!

Our role models need reprogramming, who do we want to emulate. People we respect because of their ethical values and morals? Or those who have many social media followers?

Social media makes it far too easy to confuse celebrity with excellence.

Recognition and acceptance of the value of Principles is part of the answer: Trustworthiness, Integrity, Courage, Honesty, Authenticity, and Humility – Foundational Leadership aspirations. Oh, and let’s toss in some essential Captain Mainwaring – Loyal to his men without fault and prepared to make very hard decisions.

The war in Ukraine has many lessons – We need more of such Principles.

Who could ever have guessed that the good President was a fan of Corporal Jones?

The Wisdom of Humble Butchers can inspire Presidents!

Putin murderer, liar, hypocrite – Death in a cold dark sea.

(This Postcard, originally published January 2023, is one of my 'Postcard Snippets' range. Intentionally abbreviated, little more than introductions to a complex subject. Often, they first appeared as spontaneous Posts on Facebook or LinkedIn, sometimes on the anniversary of a historical event discussed therein. I provide links and suggestions to the interested reader so they may choose to follow the bouncing ball and discover more about the endlessly fascinating stories History and Time Travel expose.)

Recently I sent a letter to President Putin as follows:

Oh, Mr. Putin you are a hypocrite.

You say:

“The Wests’ provision of weapons to Ukraine will prolong the war, it must stop.”

Vladimir Putin

Do you remember the USSR, it was in all the papers, especially its dissolution on Dec 26, 1991. Well,

The USSR was attacked by Germany on June 22, 1941. The USSR was sustained by Allied Convoys delivering weapons and materials. Oh, that sounds remarkably familiar.

And you clearly forget that in excess of 10,000 merchant sailors perished on such convoys.

Convoys like PQ17, 35 ships commenced the journey, only 11 made it to the USSR.

Lest we Forget!

Peter Veal January 2022

I attached the following poster – Allied Convoys sustained Russia in World War 2, now Putin complains of the same Countries sustaining Ukraine: Hypocrisy!

British Merchant Seaman – Uncelebrated Quiet Heroes

I’m still awaiting a response from Vlad, perhaps he’s busy? My intent was to define Putin’s hypocrisy in complaining of the West’s support for Ukraine, whilst ignoring the historical fact that in 1941 the West supported Russia (USSR) after attack by Hitler.

I was struck by the sacrifice of Merchant Seaman, over 10,000 killed running convoys as depicted above. This figure excludes military personnel, sailors and airman: In total 72,000 lives!

Extraordinary Heroism and Conspicuous Courage. Death in a freezing cold sea, a long way from home.

Mongrel Warriors – Les and Bill the Bastard: Tough Buggers!

Bill the Bastard and Les - Aussie mongrels fighting a War.
Bill the Bastard and Les – Aussie mongrels fighting a War.

Let me introduce Bill the Bastard. You have already met my Uncle Les in my previous Postcard ‘National Myths – Bastard Horses and Scared Heroic Young Men’. Les was a country lad: riding, shooting, and living rough was part of his way of life. Leslie was like all Aussie Lighthorseman of the First World War, rough, tough, adventurous, brave, courageous – And that was the horses I am describing! Bill the Bastard was an Aussie War Horse, a Lighthorse Trooper. Les and Bill spent the War chasing Turkish cavalry around the Palestine Desert. Other Australian Light Horsemen were dispatched to the battlefields of Gallipoli and France. Their stories are accessible for reading through this provided link.

Mongrel Warriors - Aussie Troopers and their Horses of World War 1.
Mongrel Warriors – Aussie Troopers and their Horses of World War 1.

What a contrast. Turkish troopers represented the upper segments of their society, mounted as they were on highly trained thoroughbred horses. Australian’s troopers, Les and Bill, well they were the other end of the social spectrum. They had the characteristics required for success. What Australians will still describe as: “You gotta have some mongrel in you to succeed.”. By example, my previous Post, ‘Lawrence of Arabia and other Lying Bastards’, describes another adventure of the Australian Waler. You can read their story by following this link.

The language we speak is ever evolving, and a brief historical example explains this. At the 1066, English Battle of Hastings, we would not recognize the English, French, or German languages being spoken. The English of 1066 used words, and changed their meanings in a manner we would recognize. A ‘bastard’, who we know as William, was present at the Battle of Hastings.

Another right Bastard called Bill.

William the Conqueror, led the successful Norman Invasion of England in 1066, which changed the course of British history. British King Charles 3 is directly descendent from William, consequently the ruling British Monarchy actually took the British Throne by force of arms. Try doing that in Europe in 2024, without creating an awful fuss. The Pre-Norman English, preferred to call WilliamBill the Bastard.’ Not all was wine and roses in 1067, England.

Jumping forward to 1914, the year Australia entered World War 1.

1914, the Aussie subjects of George 5, King Charles 3’s, Great Grandfather: Well, they had turned the ‘Kings English’ on its head. ‘Bastard’ had become a salute of honour, praise, and respect. Only Australian’s would take another country’s derogatory terminology, spin it, give it a completely opposite meaning. Aussie’s still do this. It’s origins?

Perhaps started with British convicts, those from the ‘back blocks’ of London, those transported to Australia for petty crimes. Such people created a coded language ‘rhyming slang’, intended to be their own, intended to confuse those in authority.

Definitely an Australian motivation for such colloquial language is in large part a ‘thumb your nose’ approach to those who get above their station. Australians still aspire to an egalitarian society where no man is king, and no man’s fine language makes him better than the rest.

Up steps ‘Bill the Bastard’! A horse who really represented this Australian Mythology of the ordinary bloke, being as good as the next, and capable of extraordinary achievements.

Australia’s War Horse – No they weren’t all called Bill.

Bill was an Australian ‘Waler,’ a War Horse. A Waler is an Aussie Iconic image: stout, ugly, tough, loyal, and resilient war horse unique to Australia. Troopers, like my Uncle Les, consider them mates. Bill had his origins in the English Thoroughbreds and Arabs the English Government shipped Down Under, along with an awful lot of Convicts. This was a tough new land; no fine English blood line would cut it. After introducing some ‘mongrel’ blood from South Africa and Timor: Bill appeared. A tough new breed, just the thing for: Beating the toffs at the Local Races, pulling the wife and kids in a buggy to Sunday Mass, riding to the pub: And fighting a war!

Bill fought in and survived the Battle of Romani 1916. He and his rider, raced through Turkish gunfire to collect four wounded Aussie Troopers. Two wounded troopers climbed up in the saddle behind the rider. Bill’s stirrups each supported another. It was fortunate for all, that the Turkish soldiers were consistently poor marksman. Bill galloped 1.6 miles back though soft sand, with Turkish rifle fire cracking around their heads.

This old horse was tough, he was a ‘Ridgee didge ewe beaut Bastard!’

Bill the Bastard rescues five Australian soldiers.
Bill the Bastard rescues five Australian soldiers.

Bill, the now tired old bastard, had earned his rest. Withdrawn from combat, he worked on Gallipoli, retrieving the fallen bodies of Aussie and Turkish boys. He retired on a farm in Gallipoli, and now rests in a marked grave with other fallen heroes. Bill has not been forgotten and recently a large bronze statue has been created in his honour.

How these Australians bastardize the King’s English.

(Another diversion to discuss Australian slang. I did warn in 'Time Travel and Me' of my unapologetic Aussie voice. The Aussie use of the derogatory 'Bastard' is the finest example of what my Countryman have done with the King's English. As follows a famous quote to illustrate)

(During the 1932-33 cricket test between England and Australia , English captain, Douglas Jardine, walked into the Australian dressing room to complain about being called a bastard. The Australian captain asked his team):

“Which one of you bastards called this bastard a bastard?”

Bill Woodfull, Australian Captain 

Bill and Les – Leadership lessons.

What is the point of this Postcard? It’s a ripping good yarn. National Myths, Values and Ethos develop and are sustained by such yarns. Language changes and morphs with time and context. Another reason explaining my interest in Time Travel, or the study of history. And,

It is a Leadership Lesson, about the risk of underestimating the underdog, the rough trade, low breed, back blocks stock, non-establishment types: They are often the heroes!

And, if it is just a good story, you can find ‘Bill the Bastard’ by Roland Perry, on ABE Online Books, for as low as $3.60 AUD, bloody good read about a real tough bastard!

A book about Bill the Bastard, tough Australian War Horse.
War in Australia – Death, hate, violence, innocence – Clash of cultures

War in Australia – Death, hate, violence, innocence – Clash of cultures

(This Postcard is one of my 'Postcard Snippets' range. Intentionally abbreviated, little more than introductions to a complex subject. Often, they first appeared as spontaneous Posts on Facebook or LinkedIn, sometimes on the anniversary of a historical event discussed therein. I provide links and suggestions to the interested reader so they may follow the bouncing ball and discover more about the endlessly fascinating stories History and Time Travel expose.)  

On the 7th of December 1941, Australia was at war with Japan. Both Countries commenced their catastrophic clash of cultures in the Pacific. Australia declared war on Japan, in consequence of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour. That surprise attack awoke the sleeping giant that was the United States. It was however, along with the British Commonwealth, woefully unprepared for war. Japan had the upper hand as a result of preparation, recent combat experience, and shear bloody ruthlessness.

Then things changed as a result of two primary victories. Firstly, men such as though below, halted, reversed, and then drove the Japanese forces out of New Guinea. Secondly, in parallel with the first action, A combined US and Aussie fleet, defeated the Japanese Imperial Navy in the Battle of the Coral Sea.

One of my passions is Time travel, you may recognize it more readily as the study of history. Military history remains at the forefront of historical studies, above all because it contains so many lessons about the nature of humans.

Japan brings war Downunder.

23rd January 1942, Japan landed on New Guinea, approaching Australia via the Kokoda Track. After a year of brutal, ruthless, slaughter, where few POWs on either side were taken; on the 9th of December 1942 Japan began its withdrawal from New Guinea. But such withdrawal came with a problem. Japanese Imperial forces had no military order for retreat, they had never needed too or even drilled a retreat action. The commanding General had a pragmatic solution:

Advance to the rear“.

General Tomitarō Horii

However, it was not that simple. Aussie men, men of my grandfathers and father’s generation, men just like those below, they weren’t having any of this simply walking away routine. Consequently, they chased the Japanese all the way out of New Guinea, well actually most Japanese boys stayed permanently, rotting in the ground.

Yes, typical of Aussie troops, what are scruffy lot! They might have been unkept, but when Australia was at war, well these blokes stepped up.

1941 multicultural Australia at war.

This photograph is historically interesting, because of the two issues it illustrates:

  • An Australian will recognize the multicultural mix we already were by 1941. First Nations, fair skinned Scots, olive skinned Italians and Welsh, light-built Angles and heavy-built Saxons – All Australian; and
  • For a Country caught with its pants down by the outbreak of war, well in barely more than half an Infantry Section, there are by 1942 standards, a predominant number of automatic weapons. 303 Bren Gun, jungle clearing sweeper, usually fired from the hip in advance, and supplying fire support in withdrawal. The .45 Thompson Machine Gun of 1920’s gangster fame, a heavy unreliable weapon, but critical fire power at close quarters in New Guinea’s heavy rainforest. Devastatingly effective when poked through the firing port of a once concealed Japanese bunker.

Scruffy Aussies at War.

I saw an Australian step out of the jungle, naked other than a pair of torn shorts, firing a Thompson with one hand, he threw grenades with the other. I knew we could not defeat men such as these.”

A Japanese Warrant Officer
Scruffy, naked, but effective Aussie Diggers.

Australia at War – Lest we Forget, but please don’t celebrate.

On ANZAC day, Australians and New Zealanders stop and remember the sacrifice of men such as these. War is the worst form of human behaviour. As a result, war must always be the last resort. Of course, sometime wars of self-defense are the inevitable response to aggression. The Rules of War must be maintained, otherwise we many never find our way back to peace. It’s difficult to consider peace with an enemy, who invaded without provocation, and then rapped, pillaged, tortured and cannibalized their way across your Country. The alternative to war by rules is simply terrorism and inhuman brutality.

17,000 Aussie men like these, died in the War against Japan, 8,000 of these as starved, brutalized, tortured, and over worked prisoners of war.

10,000 Japanese boys marched down the Kokoda Track, New Guinea toward Australia – Less than 600 would ever see Japan again.

Fortunately, Australia and Japan are now close friends, as Australia is with Vietnam, after similar brutal combat. No holds barred enemies, don’t have to remain so, things can change, but both sides must make the choice.

Lest we forget out shared humanity in our present troubled times.

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