Why Japanese Couldn’t Explain How Australian Squads Fought Without Orders D
Japanese intelligence officers were tearing through captured documents and questioning prisoners trying to find one thing. The headquarters coordinating the Australian attacks killing their men across the entire island. They never found it because it didn’t exist. So, how were 200 C75 Australian commandos fighting in perfect coordination without orders, without radios, and without a single commander telling them what to do. It was August 1942.
The place was a steep mountain trail high above the town of Dilly on the island of Teimour. The sun had not come up yet. Mist hung in the trees like wet smoke. A line of 42 Japanese soldiers walked up the path in single file, their boots quiet on the soft dirt. The man in front was their best scout.
He was looking for tracks. He was looking for the men they had been hunting for 6 months and could not find. His foot brushed against a small stone that had been kicked over and left in the middle of the path. He stopped. He looked down. It was a tiny thing, just a rock. But to him, it meant something was wrong.
He started to turn and lift his hand to warn the men behind him. He never finished the move. 3 minutes later, rifle shots cracked open the morning from four different sides at once. Bullets came from above. Bullets came from below. Bullets came from places where there should have been nothing but jungle.
The Japanese soldiers dropped to the ground and fired back, but they hit only leaves and dirt. When it was over, and the few who lived stumbled back down the mountain, 11 of their friends were dead. They had not seen one Australian. Not one face, not one shadow, just guns in the trees.
That same morning, 80 km to the south, another small group of Japanese soldiers was hit the same way. Six of them died and 90 km to the west, it happened a third time. Three attacks, three places, all at the same hour. The Australian squads who pulled them off had no radios talking to each other, no phones, no runners passing notes, no one in charge sending out orders, and yet they had moved together like the fingers of one hand.
This is the story you came here to see. The title told you the Japanese could not explain how Australian squads fought without orders. That is not a guess. That is not made up. Japanese officers spent the next 10 months trying to figure it out. They captured Australian papers. They asked prisoners hard questions.
They sent spy planes over the mountains. They searched every village. And they never ever solved the puzzle. The answer is the reason you clicked on this video and you are going to get it. But first, you need to know what kind of war this was. You need to understand how big and how dark this moment in history really was.
Because what these men did was not just brave. It was the kind of thing the rest of the world had stopped believing was even possible. Just 6 months before that misty morning in the mountains, Japan had started its great push across the Pacific. In a few short weeks, they had taken country after country.
The British city of Singapore fell in only 7 days. 80,000 Allied soldiers walked out with their hands up and laid down their guns. It was the biggest surrender in British history. The Philippines fell next. The Dutch East Indies, a huge stretch of islands, was taken in about 90 days. Japan had grabbed an empire of 150 million people in 12 weeks. 12 weeks.
That is faster than a school year. Even Australia was being hit. On the 19th of February 1942, Japanese planes flew over the city of Darwin in northern Australia and dropped a huge wave of bombs on it. By some accounts, more bombs than had fallen on Pearl Harbor. Ships burned in the harbor. Streets cracked open. Children hid under tables.
People who had thought the war was far away suddenly knew that it was not. It was right on the doorstep. And nothing seemed to be able to stop it. Allied soldiers were tired. Allied leaders were scared. People back home read the newspaper every morning and saw more bad news.
There were mothers in Sydney who could not sleep. There were fathers who could not look their kids in the eye. The world was losing this war and most people knew it. Then something strange happened on a small green island that most Australians could not have pointed to on a map. 275 men did something no one else in the Pacific had done.
They did not surrender. They did not run. They did not get on a boat and sail home. Instead, they did the last thing anyone expected. They turned and they walked into the mountains and they vanished. The Japanese came looking for them with a thousand soldiers, then 5,000, then 10,000, then close to 20,000. big patrols, small patrols, trackers, translators, whole companies of men sweeping the hills.
And every time they thought they were close, the Australians would hit them and slip away again like water through your fingers. So, here is the question. The one you really want answered. The one Japanese officers asked themselves every single night for almost a year and never solved. How were 275 Australian men spread across an island the size of a small country with no headquarters and no commander telling them what to do, fighting in perfect time together? To answer that question, we have to go back a little. We have to go back before the bullets, before the mist on the mountain, before the war even reached Teeour. We have to go back to a quiet beach in southern Australia in the year 1941 where a small group of men were learning
a new way to fight. The place was called Wilson’s Promonry. It is a wild windy point of land in the state of Victoria with cold sea on three sides and thick bush behind it. The Australian Army built a training camp there in 1941 and gave it a boring name on purpose. They called it the number seven infantry training center.
The name was meant to be dull. The name was meant to be forgotten. The truth was it was one of the most secret places in the country. A British officer named Mo Hood had come all the way to Australia to help start it. He had a job. He was supposed to teach Australians a brand new kind of soldiering.
Not the kind where thousands of men march in long lines and shoot in big rows. The other kind. The hidden kind. The kind where small groups of soldiers slip into enemy land, blow up bridges, kill quietly, and slip out again before anyone knows they were there. The men who trained at Wilson’s promonry learned to set off explosives.
They learned to fight without making a sound. They learned to send radio signals in secret code. They learned how to walk through the bush at night without a map and still know where they were. They learned how to live for weeks on what they could find, hunt, or take from the enemy.
But the most important thing they learned was something you cannot see or touch. They learned how to think for themselves. Most armies do not work that way. Most armies have one leader who tells the next leader what to do, who tells the next leader what to do, all the way down to the soldier with the gun. Orders flow down like water in a pipe.
The men at the bottom do what they are told. They do not decide things on their own. But the new Australian commando units were different. A small group of about 10 or 12 men was called a section. The man in charge of a section was usually a corporal or a sergeant. He was not a fancy officer.
He was not even very high in rank. But the army told him something amazing. They told him, “We will tell you what we want done. We will not tell you how to do it. That part is up to you.” Now, think about how this looked to an enemy expecting a normal army. to anyone trained to find the boss. This kind of unit had no boss to find.
That was the trap being built. The Japanese did not know it yet, but it was being built for them. This was the seed. This was the beginning of everything. Remember it because it is the answer to the big question. Even though we are not at the answer yet, the unit at the heart of our story was called the 22 Independent Company.
The name sounds strange, but you can just say the 22nd. About 275 men joined it. Their first leader was a major named Alexander Spence. Later, another major named Bernard Kalinan would take over. Remember those names, especially Kalinan. The men in this company were not the kind of soldiers you might picture.
Most of them were not city boys. They were bushmen. They were drovers who had moved cattle across empty country. They were miners who had worked deep underground. They were surveyors who had mapped rivers and hills. They were men who had grown up alone in big country, walking for days with only a horse, a rifle, and a tin cup.
Being on their own was not scary to them. It was normal. There was a doctor named Dunley. There was a young signalman named Max Loveless, but everyone called him Joe. Write his name down in your head. Joe is going to do something amazing in just a little while. Now look at where they ended up. Teeour is an island and it has two halves.
The west half belonged to the Dutch. The east half belonged to a little country called Portugal. Portugal said it was not in the war. It did not want to fight. It just wanted to be left alone. But in December 1941, the Australians and the Dutch went into the Portuguese half of the island anyway. They knew Japan would come for it. They wanted to get there first.
They marched in, set up camp, and waited. They had no plan for what to do if they got cut off. They had no plan for what to do if Australia could not save them. There just was not one. Nobody had thought it through. And here is the part that matters most. The Japanese army at this time worked the old way, the strict way. Orders had to come from the top.
A young officer who acted on his own without being told was looked at with suspicion. Their leaders believed every army worked like this. So when they fought an enemy, they always looked for the boss. Find the headquarters, they said. Find the radio. Find the commander. If you cut off the head, the body falls down. That was their rule.
That was their belief. It was about to crash hard into the new Australian way. And on the night of the 19th of February 1942, while the 22nd was spread out in small groups across eastern Teeour doing quiet garrison work, the world they thought they knew was about to end. It came in the dark. It came with the rain.
It came with no warning at all. The same night Darwin was being bombed, Japanese ships slid up to the coast of Teeour. The monsoon was beating down hard. Rice fields had turned into thick brown mud. The wind was loud in the palm trees. Australian centuries on the beach near the Dilly airfield were peering out into the black, but they could not see far.
They had no radar. They had no warning planes. They had only their eyes, and the rain was in their eyes. The first thing they saw was tracer fire. bright streaks of light coming up the sand toward them. By the time anyone shouted, Japanese soldiers were already on the beach.
About 1,500 of them came in that first wave. More were on the way. Within a few weeks, there would be more than 4,000 Japanese troops on the island. At the same time on the other half of Teeour, far to the west, an even bigger Japanese force was landing near the town of Copang. That was where the main part of the Australian force was sitting.
The main force was called Sparrow Force. It had about 1,400 men in it. It was supposed to defend the whole island. It would not get the chance. In just 3 days, Sparrow Force was crushed. The Australians fought, but the Japanese came at them in too many places at once. By the 23rd of February, the senior Australian officers were already talking about giving up.
Most of those 1,400 men became prisoners of war. What happened to those prisoners is one of the saddest parts of the whole story. Many of them were sent far away to work as slaves on a railroad through the jungles of Burma and Thailand. Many others were sent to a place in Borneo called Sandacon. The Japanese forced the Sandacon prisoners to march through thick jungle with no food, no water, and no rest.
Out of more than 2,000 Allied men sent to Sandacan, only six lived to see the end of the war. six men out of more than 2,000. Stop and think about that for a second. That is what surrender meant in this war. That is what was waiting for any soldier who put his hands up. But over on the eastern half of Teeour, things went a different way.
The two second independent company was still in one piece. They were spread out in small groups, but they were still ready to fight. Their leader, Major Alexander Spence, called his section commanders together. About 40 men, mostly officers and sergeants, met in an old Portuguese coffee plantation house up in the cool hills above Dilly.
The walls were thick stone. The windows were open to the green hills outside. The mood was very, very serious. Spence put it to them straight. They had a choice. They could come down out of the mountains, walk into a Japanese camp, and surrender like the rest of Sparrow Force. Or they could go the other way.
They could turn their backs on every road and every town. They could disappear into the jungle. They could fight a kind of war that no Australian had ever fought before with no help, no supplies, and no hope of being rescued for a very long time. The story says Spence told them, “We are going to make the Japanese very sorry they came here.
” Whether he said exactly those words, no one is 100% sure. But every man in that room voted the same way. They were not going to surrender. Not now. Not ever. So they got ready. They split up into their small sections. Most sections had 12 men or fewer. Each section was given its own piece of the island to protect, like pieces of a puzzle.
They burned the things they could not carry, so the Japanese could not get them. They put on their packs. They walked into the hills. Life up there was very hard. The mountains of Teeour are made of sharp limestone rock that cuts boots open. The jungle is so thick that a man can stand 30 steps from a Japanese patrol and never be seen.
The men ate corn, sweet potatoes, and bits of water buffalo meat. They never stole from the local people. They traded. The local people on Teeour turned out to be the best friends the Australians could have asked for. Each section had local boys who walked with them. The Portuguese word for these helpers was creat. The boys knew every trail, every spring of clean water, every village where it was safe to sleep and every village where it was not. The men got sick.
Almost every man got malaria within the first two months. Malaria gives you shaking fevers and a sick stomach and makes your bones feel like they are made of glass. Some men got it three or four times. Then came April 1942. Two months had gone by and Australia had not heard a single word from the 22nd.
Not a radio signal, not a letter, nothing. The Australian army wrote them off. They were thought to be dead or captured. Even General MacArthur’s headquarters gave up on them. And the Japanese the Japanese were sending out patrol after patrol, finding nothing, losing men anyway and starting slowly to feel afraid.
In a small village in the hills called Mate, in a hut with a thatched roof and a dirt floor, a young Australian signalman was hunched over a pile of broken parts. His name was Max Loveless, but his friends called him Joe. He had a problem to solve, and the lives of 275 men, and the future of the whole campaign rested on his shoulders.
Joe and a small team had been collecting bits and pieces of broken radios for weeks. They pulled wires out of crashed trucks. They took parts from old radios that the Portuguese had left behind. They had even taken pieces from a Japanese radio set that had been captured.
They scraped out parts from a flooded telephone exchange in town. They had wires and tubes and dials and metal scraps spread out on a wooden table. None of it matched. None of it was made to go together. But Joe started putting them together anyway. Day after day, by the light of a small lamp, he worked. He twisted wires. He tested tubes.
He soldered joints. The men in his section took turns turning a hand crank to make electricity because there was no power on this hilltop. The crank was hard to turn. After a few minutes, your arm would burn. So they took turns. One man cranking, one man resting, one man cranking, on and on.
Then came the day, the 19th of April, 1942, two months after the rest of Sparrow Force had been crushed. Joe flipped a switch. A small light glowed. He tapped out a message in Morse code into the empty sky. They had given the radio a name. They called it Winnie the War winner. Hundreds of kilometers away in the city of Darwin in northern Australia, a signals operator at his station heard a faint clicking sound coming through his headphones.
He sat up. He listened harder. The signal said it was the 22n independent company. It said they were alive. It said they were still fighting. The Australian command did not believe it. Not at first. They thought it was a Japanese trick. The Japanese were known to use captured radios to lure Allied ships and planes into traps.
So, Australia sent back a hard, careful message. They asked secret questions, personal questions, things only the real Australians would know. The names of wives, the names of pets, streets back home. Joe and his officers passed the questions around their men. The answers came back, the right answers, all of them. It was real.
They were really alive. When the news reached Australia, it was a quiet kind of miracle. Many of the men’s families had already received letters that said their son or their husband or their father was missing and probably dead. Mothers had cried over those letters. Wives had folded them up and put them in drawers.
Now very quietly those families were told something different. He is alive. He is in the mountains. He is fighting. But there was a second turning point happening at the same time. And this one is the answer to the big question we have been asking from the very start. By the middle of 1942, the Japanese were getting more and more men onto the island to hunt the two second.
First a few thousand, then 12,000. At the highest point, some historians think there were close to 20,000 Japanese soldiers on Teeour, all looking for the Australians. And every single one of them was looking for the wrong thing. The Japanese officers were searching for a headquarters. a central place, a big tent or a hidden cave with maps on the walls and a leader inside sending out orders to all his men. That was how their army worked.
That was how they thought every army had to work. So they searched and they searched. They asked prisoners. They read captured papers. They sent spy planes over every valley. But there was no headquarters. There was no big tent. There was no leader sending orders. The 22nd had broken up into small sections of 8 to 12 men each.
Each section had been given a job. Things like stop the Japanese from using this road or hit any Japanese patrol you see in this valley. And then the section commander, often just a corporal or a sergeant, was free. He decided when to attack. He decided where to attack. He decided how to attack.
No one was telling him from above. Now, here is the part that broke the Japanese mind. The sections did not need to talk to each other. They did not need radios. They did not need runners. They did not need a boss telling them what to do today because every single man already knew what to do.
They had all been trained the same way. They all carried the same plan in their heads. They all knew the same priorities, the same triggers, the same answers. The orders were not in a tent. The orders were not on a radio. The orders were inside the men. So, two Australian squads 100 km apart would hit two Japanese patrols in the same hour on the same day without ever speaking to each other.
To the Japanese, it looked like magic. It looked like the Australians had perfect secret communication. It looked like a hidden master was pulling all the strings. But there was no master. There were just men who trusted each other to do the right thing on their own. The new commander, Major Bernard Kalinan, said it best after the war.
He wrote that he often went weeks without knowing where half of his sections even were. And that he said was the whole point. I commanded by trust, not by signal. The ambushes themselves were short and brutal. Most lasted 90 seconds. Open fire, hit the front of the patrol, disappear before the rest can shoot back.
Over the course of the campaign, the numbers were almost too strange to believe. About 1,500 Japanese soldiers killed, about 40 Australians lost. That is a ratio of nearly 40 to1. The Japanese never did figure it out. Once Winnie the Warwinner started talking to Australia, everything began to change.
Slowly at first, then quickly. The first thing Australia did was send help. Planes flew low over the mountains of Teeour and dropped supplies by parachute. Boots, bullets, medicine for malaria, bandages, tinned food. The men in the hills would watch the parachutes drift down through the trees and run to grab them before the Japanese could get there first.
Submarines slipped close to the shore at night. They carried in fresh radios, more guns, and even mail from home. Some of those letters were the first words from family that the men had seen in almost a year. Grown men cried over them in the dark. It was not all good news. In September 1942, an Australian destroyer named the HM Voyager came in close to the coast of Teeour to drop off more men and supplies.
Something went wrong and the ship ran ground. It got stuck on the beach. Japanese planes saw the next day. They bombed it again and again. The crew had to leave the ship and run inland. And here is the strange and wonderful part. The men they had come to save, the two second, came out of the hills and rescued the rescuers.
The very men they had been sent to help helped them. Back in Australia, the newspapers could not say a word about any of this. The whole campaign was a secret. If word got out, the Japanese would learn how the Australians were doing it. So families and the public had no idea. But behind closed doors in the offices of the most senior Australian leaders, Te-our was being talked about with quiet wonder. It was proof.
Proof that Japan could be hurt. Proof that the long string of Allied losses could be broken. In September 1942, a fresh Australian unit called the 24th Independent Company was dropped into Teeour to help. Now there were twice as many commandos in the hills. Now let us look at the other side. Let us look at what was happening inside the Japanese camps.
The Japanese officers were past angry. They were past confused. They were starting to break down. Their reports back to Tokyo started to sound desperate. After the war, when Allied translators read those captured reports, they found a story of growing fear. Field commanders begged for more troops. Senior officers blamed the field commanders for being weak.
Nobody could explain why the bodies kept piling up, but no enemy could be found. One Japanese officer wrote in his diary a line that has stayed in history books ever since. He wrote, “We chase ghosts. The ghosts kill us.” But the Japanese did something terrible to try to fix the problem.
When they could not find the Australians, they took their anger out on the people who they thought were helping the Australians. They turned on the local Timarice. This is the hardest part of the whole story, so slow down for a moment and listen carefully. Japanese soldiers walked into Tim’s villages and demanded to know where the Australians were.
When the villagers would not say or could not say, the Japanese burned the houses. They took hostages. They killed children in front of their parents. They executed entire families to send a message. They cut off the food supply to whole valleys. They poisoned wells. By the time the war was over, the number of Timurice civilians who died because of the Japanese during and after this campaign was somewhere between 40,000 and 70,000 people.
40 to 70,000 on a small island. Many of them were the families of the creados, the local boys who had walked beside the Australians, who had shown them the trails, who had carried their packs and shared their food. The Australian men in the hills knew it was happening. They could see the smoke rising from villages in the distance.
They could smell it on the wind. They knew that every Japanese soldier they killed brought more anger down on the people they had come to love. It was a weight none of them ever fully put down. After the war, many of the two second men spoke of this with tears, even as old men. The Australians were paying their own price, too.
Not as steep, but real. Malaria was hitting the men harder than Japanese bullets ever did. By late 1942, most of the 2C had lost between 15 and 25 kg of body weight. That is the same as the weight of a small child. Some men were so thin that their belts no longer had a hole tight enough. Their cheeks had hollowed in.
Their eyes had sunk back. They looked more like shadows than soldiers. But they were still fighting. And yet, even as the men got thinner, even as the tear suffered, something bigger was starting to happen. Something none of them could see from inside the jungle. In the big offices in Australia and the United States, planners were looking at maps.
They were drawing lines. They were comparing numbers. And they were beginning to realize that what these 275 men had done on this one small island was changing the shape of the entire war in the Pacific. To understand how we have to go up, up out of the jungle, up out of the hills, up to where the whole wall can be seen at once.
Picture a big map of the Pacific Ocean. Picture all the islands. Picture all the places where the war was being fought in 1942. Now look at the small green shape of Teeour in the middle of it all. Up to 20,000 Japanese soldiers were stuck on that one island. 20,000 hunting 275 Australians and a few hundred more from the 24th.
Now think about what those 20,000 soldiers were not doing. They were not in New Guinea. They were not on the COD track where Australian soldiers were fighting one of the hardest battles of the whole war just to keep the Japanese from reaching the city of Port Moresby. They were not at a place called Mil Bay where Australian troops in August and September of 1942 fought off the very first Japanese land defeat of the war.
They were not on the island of Guadal Canal where American Marines were fighting in the mud and the rain to hold a strip of airfield against wave after wave of Japanese attacks. Every Japanese soldier on Teeour was a soldier who could not be sent to those other places. Every bullet shipped to Teeour was a bullet that did not reach New Guinea.
Every supply truck, every plane, every ship sent to hunt. The two second was one less truck or plane or ship for the bigger fight. Allied generals saw this. They wrote about it after the war. They said the men of the two had pulled Japanese strength away from the most important battles of the Pacific at the most important time.
They said the Australian commandos had bought weeks of time. Weeks that helped save Port Moresby. Weeks that helped win Mil Bay. Weeks that gave the Marines on Guadal Canal a fighting chance. 275 men doing all of that from a few hilltops on a tiny island. The story of what they did also changed the way Allied armies thought about war.
Their reports became required reading for every special unit being trained from that point on. American special forces called the OSS studied them. British special forces called the S OE studied them. Years later, when other special units were created, they all looked back at the 2C and learned the same lesson.
Train your men well, trust them, then let them go. The Australian Special Air Service Regiment, known as the SAS, was created in 1957. The Australian Commando Regiment came later. Both of these units, still active today, look back at the 2C as their grandfathers. The same rule that Major Kalinan used in the hills of Timour is still taught now.
The man on the ground, the section commander, has the say in his patch. He is trusted. He is free. The army gives him the goal, not the steps. But here is the strangest part. The Japanese army never learned from Teeour. They were the ones who had been beaten by it. They were the ones who had been confused by it.
They were the ones who had lost almost 40 soldiers for every Australian. And yet when the war moved on, they kept fighting the same way. They kept waiting for orders from the top. They kept assuming every enemy must have a headquarters they could find and break. In 1944 and 1945 on islands like the Philippines and Okinawa, the Allies tricked them again and again using the same kind of small, fast, hidden units the 2 had been.
The Japanese army as a whole never figured it out. They never adapted. And that was one more reason they lost the war. Now let us look at the contrast one more time because it is the heart of the whole story. In Singapore, 80,000 Allied soldiers had surrendered to a Japanese force less than half their size.
They surrendered in 7 days. They had more men. They had more guns. They had more food. They had more bullets. and they still gave up. In Teeour, 275 Australians fought against more than 12,000 Japanese for nearly a year. Some say closer to 20,000 at the peak. They had less of everything. They had no easy supply line. They were surrounded.
They were sick. and they killed about 1,500 enemy soldiers while losing only about 40 of their own. Why? Why was there such a huge difference? It was not because the Australians had better guns. They did not. It was not because they had more men. They had fewer. It was not because they were smarter or stronger or braver.
Plenty of brave men had been at Singapore. The difference was something simple. The difference was a way of thinking. The Australians had been taught to trust each other. They had been taught that a small group of men given a job and left alone to do it could be more dangerous than a huge army that needed to be told every move.
They had been taught that an idea shared and understood by all was stronger than any chain of command. The Japanese had been taught the opposite and they paid for it. And through all of it, the Japanese on Teeour were still asking the same question. Where is the headquarters? Where is the radio? Where is the man giving the orders? They never stopped asking.
They never got an answer because there was no answer to give. But behind the maps and the numbers and the strategy, there were still the men themselves. Still in the hills, still hungry, still sick, still walking. And it is time we looked at their faces one more time before this story ends. Let us start with the man who held it all together. Major Bernard Kalinan.
Before the war, Kalinan was not a soldier at all. He was a young engineer in Melbourne. He built things, bridges, roads, quiet, careful work. He was 30 years old when he took command of the 22nd in the middle of 1942. He stood on a hilltop in Teeour and looked down at his small, sick, hungry men. And he led them.
He never raised his voice. He trusted his sections. He let them work. After the war, he sat down and wrote a book about what they had done. He called it Independent Company. He published it in 1953. It is still one of the most important books ever written about Australian commando history. He went back to engineering after the war.
He kept working. He kept thinking. He was kned by the queen in 1977. He died in 1995. An old man with quiet eyes. For the rest of his life, he tried to make sure the Timories who had helped them were not forgotten. He spoke up for them when no one else would. Now let us go back to Joe Loveless, the young signalman, the one who built Winnie the Warwinner from junk and wire and old tubes in a thatched hut.
Joe lived. He came home. He did not become famous. He did not give big speeches. He went back to a normal life, the kind of life young Australians lived after the war with a wife and a job and a quiet street. He never made a big deal out of what he had done. But the radio he built, the one called Winnie, the little machine that saved 275 lives by reaching across the sea, that radio still exists.
You can go and see it today. It sits in a glass case at the Australian War Memorial in the city of Canberra. People walk by it every day and have no idea what it really did. But now you do. Now, let us talk about the creos. It is hard to know all of their names. Many of them were boys. Some were as young as 12 or 13.
They walked beside the Australians for months. They carried packs that were almost as big as they were. They led the men through trails so narrow that a goat would have trouble. They shared their family’s food when there was almost no food to share. They watched their villages burn for it. They were killed for it by the tens of thousands.
There is one story that the Australians told over and over again for the rest of their lives. A boy of about 13 in one section led a group of Australians through three Japanese roadblocks in a single night. He did it without a sound. He did it without a map. He did it because he knew his land better than the enemy could ever learn it.
The Australians wanted to give him something. Money, a knife, anything. He said no to all of it. He just smiled and walked back home. A month later, his village was burned. He was killed. The men in that section never forgot him. Some of them 50 years later still cried when they tried to say his name out loud.
There were thousands of stories like his. Thousands. And there were the Japanese soldiers, too. Most of them were just young men far from home. Years after the war, when historians went and asked some of the old Japanese veterans of Teeour what it had been like, the answers were always strange and sad. One of them said something that has stuck in the history books ever since.
He said fighting the Australians on Teeour was like fighting a fog that shot back. A fog that shot back. Think about that. They never saw who killed them. They just saw the trees move and then their friends would be on the ground. Now let us see how the two second got out. By December 1942, Australia decided it was time.
The men were too sick. They had been in the hills too long. The Japanese were getting better at hunting them. Australian destroyers slipped in close to the coast at night. The two second walked down to the beach in single file in the dark after almost a year in the mountains. Many of them weighed less than 55 kg.
Some had to be carried. Some could not stand up on their own. They climbed onto small boats and were rode out to the warships waiting in deep water. The 24th was pulled out a month later in January of 1943. When they reached Australia, they were given hot food. They were given clean beds. They were given days to rest.
And then most of them were sent back to war. They were trained back to health. They were sent to fight in New Guinea, in New Britain, in Borneo. Some of them, after surviving everything Teemo had thrown at them, after a year of hiding and fighting and starving, after dodging 20,000 enemies on one island, were killed in those later battles.
They had survived the impossible. And then the war found them again. But the story does not end with them. The story does not even end with their graves. It keeps going. It is still going and to see how it kept going we have to follow them home. When the men of the two second came home most of them did not talk much about Teeour.
Not at first they went back to their farms and their shops and their offices. They got married. They had children. They mowed lawns on Sundays. But the bond they had made on that island never broke. It could not break. Not after what they had been through together. In the years after the war, they formed a group.
They called it the two second commando association. They held meetings. They wrote letters. They looked after the families of the men who had died. And they did one more thing that not many old soldier groups do. They kept thinking about the Timurice. They could not stop thinking about the creos, about the villages that had burned for them, about the boys who had died for them. So they sent help.
They raised money. They paid for schools to be built in Teeour. They paid for books and pencils for Tim’s children. They sent food and medicine year after year for the rest of their lives. They were old men now with gray hair and slow steps. But they had not forgotten. They would never forget. Up in the hills above the town of Delhi in a place called Dare, the local people built a memorial. It is a simple thing.
A stone and a plaque and a quiet bit of ground. The names of the Australian dead are on it. But here is the part that matters. Beside those Australian names, there are also the names of the timber race who walked with them. The creados, the villagers, the mothers and fathers who had given the Australians a place to sleep when sleeping next to an Australian could get your whole family killed.
They are remembered together, as they should be, as they fought. The wind blows through the eucalyptus trees up at Dare. The trees came from Australia. They were planted there. They are tall now. They make a soft sound, a kind of gentle whisper when the wind moves through them. After the war, Te-our itself had a long, hard road.
The Japanese left, but more pain came. In 1975, a country called Indonesia took over the island. The fighting and suffering went on in different forms for almost 25 more years. Tens of thousands more Timaries died. Australia did not always do the right thing during those years and many people including the old men of the two second were ashamed of that.
They wrote letters. They made speeches. They begged their government to remember the debt Australia owed to Teeour. In the year 2002, after a long fight, the eastern half of Teeour became its own country at last. It is called Teeour, which means East Teeour. And when it became free, the surviving members of the two second were invited back as honored guests.
Old men in their 80s and 90s, some leaning on canes, some in wheelchairs, flew back to the island they had not seen in 60 years. They walked as best they could up into the hills they had lived in as young men. They met the children and grandchildren of the creados who had saved their lives. Some of them wept openly in front of everyone.
They could not help it. Some of them found after all those years the family of a boy they had known. They told the family what that boy had done. They told them that the boy had not been forgotten. Not for one single day. The way the two second fought lives on two inside the Australian army today there is the special air service regiment the SAS there is the commando regiment they are some of the best soldiers in the world and the rule that Major Kalinan used in the hills the rule about trusting the man on the ground the rule about giving him the goal and not the steps that rule is still taught It is still used. The two second died but the way they fought did not. So now after all of this come back to the
question. The question we started with, the question Japanese officers asked themselves every night for almost a year. The question they could never answer. How are 275 Australian men scattered across an island with no headquarters and no central commander fighting in perfect time together. Now you know they were not magic.
They were not lucky. They were just trained well and trusted and left alone to do the job. The Japanese spent a year looking for a headquarters that did not exist. They were searching for a thing they could find and break. What they were really fighting was something they had no word for.
They were fighting an idea. An idea shared by every man in every section all over the island. And you cannot find an idea on a map. You cannot break an idea with a bullet. The Japanese could not explain how the Australians fought without orders because the Australians were not fighting without orders. They were just carrying their orders inside themselves.
Every one of them, all of them the same. You cannot find a center that is not there. And that in the end is why 275 hungry men in the mountains of Teeour changed the course of the Pacific War.
