
Confrontation with
Indonesia
1962-1966
Supplementary
information and anecdotes
Peter
Schuman on leading his four man SAS patrol in Borneo
It
was absolutely horrendous. ... The maps were absolutely atrocious. Sometimes
half the maps you had were just white with ‘No reliable data because of
cloud cover all year round’. ... I travelled through moss forests, saw
packs of orang-outangs in the wild and wild deer. It was just hard slogging
- day after day of patrolling. That was what I called the ‘loneliness
time’. That was the first time that I was a million miles away from home,
all by myself, in command - it was bloody lonely, it really was.
Winning
hearts and minds
Initially we did ‘hearts and minds’ where we were located in small
areas that included one or two kampongs (villages) and our medics looked
after their health. We tried to get information out of them, learnt their
language, and learnt their customs. We lived away from them but each day we
would go in. We gave them kerosene, and caught food with them using
explosives. We played cricket ... and footy with them. We learnt more about
living in the jungle ourselves, learnt more about them and gained a lot of
information on the areas.
(Peter
Schuman in Gary McKay, Sleeping with your ears open. On patrol with the
Australian SAS. Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 1999, p53,55)
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Ian
Conaghan remembers his service
Leeches
were horrendous, unbelievable. I remember getting one in the groin, because
with leeches you don't know you've had them and the stinging only starts at
the very end before they drop off. ... My daks were not only soaking wet
with water, but were soaking wet with blood ... My patrol commander ... was
bitten on the arm by a scorpion, and honestly within a few hours you would
swear that someone had slipped a football under his skin. It was huge!
There
were lots and lots of snakes, orang-outangs, lots of monkeys. Once I came
across tiger spoor and you could actually smell the tiger, but we never
actually saw one. ... The animals were a problem but not because of any
physical threat to us, but because if we encroached on their territory they
would make a lot of noise and it was just like having a jungle warning
system. Anybody in the area would know that something had disturbed these
guys.
(Ian Conaghan
in Gary McKay, Sleeping with your ears open. On patrol with the
Australian SAS. Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 1999, p71-2)
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Max
Cannon remembers his service
I
was a rifleman with 3RAR 1965 in Borneo.
Our
main role on patrols was ambushing, and keeping the enemy on the move. Most
ambushes didn't catch anyone. It was a very long and tedious process. We
knew that we were going into Indonesian territory, but had to keep it hush
hush.
Conditions
were very hilly, very hot and humid. Conditions differed. If we went through
a recovering rice paddy, there would be thick growth underfoot, that you
would have to hack through foot by foot, under a boiling sun. At other times
you would be going through this clear area or even moss ground, while above
would be this unbroken jungle canopy. When it rained, you would hear the
rain hitting the canopy, but it took a long time to come dripping through.
In other areas it might be swampy, up to your chest in water, and slipping
on the slimy bottom.
We
carried 5 days rations and ammo, easy 75-85 pound loads.
We
had dehydrated ration packs - but it was often hard to get the water to add
to them to cook. Clothes didn't last long - canvas boots with rubber soles
were quiet, but would wear out very quickly.
Few
combat situations, and few combat casualties. The most damage was done by
diseases - some got malaria, but that was pretty much under control. The
worst was scrub typhus, passed on by a bite from a mite. It brought you out
in a terrible, delirious fever, that burned you up, caused terrible cramps
and such. It took several weeks to get over it. The other great problem was
water - it was usually contaminated, and you would get leptospirosis. To
kill the germs you had to add chlorine tablets - well that did wonders for
the taste. We'd try to find fast running water and drink that, and take the
risk.
Some
of the enemy were regulars, and they were well-trained troops. Some were
irregulars, and were not well equipped and not great soldiers.
We
also did a lot of observing over the border by large telescope, and a lot of
‘hearts and minds’ stuff. The locals were always friendly. You would
provide them with escorts, medical help, building a school house, playing
with the kids - that sort of thing.
We
got a few weeks off occasionally, and that was good. But most of the time it
was out on patrol, no contacts or anything, back to camp for a few days,
then out on patrol again, over and over.
We
were a very professional lot - good, experienced men. You felt safe and at
home with them.
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