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The WW2 Battle that Completely Crossed the Line

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Unable to resist such a tantalizing target, a  massive Allied fleet assembled in the pre-dawn darkness of June 29, 1945. Their objective  was Borneo's oil reserves - the final lifeline sustaining Japan's desperate war machine. Naval artillery thundered across the water, the concussive blasts echoing through  the hulls of nine tank landing ships as they lurched toward shore.
Inside,  Australian soldiers from the 7th Division gripped their weapons, their knuckles white. But, suddenly, still 1,300 yards from the beach, Lieutenant Colonel Phillips raised his binoculars  and froze. The blood drained from his face.
The men around him hesitated, sensing something  terribly wrong. Phillips stared again through the lenses, his hand trembling slightly  as he scanned the unfamiliar coastline. What he saw through those binoculars forced  an immediate, desperate change to their entire battle plan - something no amount of  intelligence or preparation had anticipated.
Prelude to an ending Before World War 2, Borneo was divided between British and Dutch  territories. The British controlled the north, and the Dutch controlled the south as  part of the Netherlands East Indies. By 1941, the island's population was about three  million, mostly living in small villages.
The island's dense jungles, swamps, and lack of  infrastructure made it difficult to defend, despite its strategic importance  due to valuable resources like oil. The Japanese swiftly seized Borneo to control its oil fields and secure sea  routes for further invasions. They landed in Sarawak on December 16, 1941, and  attacked Tarakan on January 11, 1942.
Despite fierce resistance, British and Dutch forces  were overwhelmed. In retaliation, the Japanese executed civilians, especially in Balikpapan. By  1944, Japanese forces were entrenched in Borneo.
The Allies, under General MacArthur’s leadership, planned an attack called Operation Oboe. The  goal was to retake Borneo and deny Japan its resources. It would be the final major Allied  campaign in the Pacific Theater of World War 2.
The plan had six stages, targeting key locations  across Borneo and the Netherlands East Indies. However, in the end, only the  operations against Tarakan, Balikpapan, and British North Borneo – at  Labuan and Brunei Bay – took place. These were key targets for the Allies, and Australian  forces were tasked with leading the assault.
Australian forces hadn’t  fought in over a year, but now, with Japan on the defensive,  it was their turn to strike. The Japanese were preparing their defenses.  The 37th Army, along with naval and air forces, was positioned to repel the Allied landings. 
Intelligence suggested there were about 32,000 Japanese troops in Borneo, but many were  exhausted from long marches across the island. Allied troops were ready for the  first assault on Tarakan. But as they prepared to land, the Japanese forces dug in.
The highways to Tarakan Before dawn on May 1, 1945, the Australian invasion fleet closed  in on Tarakan, guns primed for assault. A naval and air bombardment pounded Japanese  defenses along the southern coast, tearing into bunkers and artillery positions. As smoke and  fire filled the air, landing craft surged forward.
At 8:00am, the 2/23rd Battalion  stormed Green Beach, disembarking from American LVTs into thick, clinging mud. Japanese defenders fought back fiercely with  machine guns and mortars from concealed bunkers. But despite the heavy fire,  the 2/23rd fought through Japanese outposts in the hills around  Lingkas, blasting pillboxes and snipers, then pushed inland, securing the vital  Glenelg Highway toward Tarakan Town.
To the north, the 2/48th Battalion landed at Red  Beach, advancing steadily over firmer ground. They overran Japanese pillboxes with grenades  and small-arms fire, knocking out machine gun positions before securing oil storage tanks,  some already burning from earlier bombardment. By nightfall, they occupied high  ground overlooking Tarakan Town.
The 2/24th Battalion arrived as reinforcements  later in the morning, holding in reserve until ordered northward along Anzac Highway in the  afternoon. They encountered no resistance. But the Japanese were still present.
Snipers  harassed the Australians throughout the night, and the 2/2nd Pioneer Battalion  engaged in close-quarters skirmishes, clearing out isolated enemy positions with  grenades, bayonets, and small-arms fire. However, logistical problems soon emerged. The muddy conditions bogged down vehicles,  and several landing ship tanks, or LSTs, ran aground after misjudged beachings, worsening congestion at the landing sites.
Artillery  from the 2/7th Field Regiment was delayed, and the influx of RAAF ground personnel with  heavy equipment only compounded the issue. The stranded LSTs would remain stuck until May 13. Despite these setbacks, the  Australians advanced inland.
The 26th Brigade Group pushed east into  Tarakan Town and north toward the airstrip, where Japanese resistance stiffened.  The 2/24th Battalion led the assault, advancing under sporadic machine gun fire. As they prepared to seize the  airfield on the night of May 2, a sudden series of massive explosions  tore through the darkness—Japanese forces had rigged the site with demolition  charges.
Fires raged, debris rained down, and the Australians had to fight through fortified  positions before securing the airstrip by May 5. The Japanese, however, still held the island’s  rugged interior. More than 1,700 troops remained entrenched in heavily forested hills, their  positions fortified with mines and booby traps.
To clear them out, Australian forces  relied on artillery and air support to soften enemy defenses before launching  infantry assaults. Tanks provided limited fire support but struggled to maneuver  through the dense jungle and steep slopes. On May 7, the 2/3rd Pioneer Battalion and  a Netherlands East Indies company advanced east of Tarakan Town, pushing forward  through dense scrub.
As they moved, the air was thick with the sounds of  distant firing, but nothing immediate. Then, suddenly, as they crested a small  rise, enemy machine guns opened up from the heavily fortified Helen feature,  a key strongpoint on Tarakan Hill, located south of the airfield. Men dove  for cover as bullets cracked overhead.
The Japanese defenders, numbering around  200, had prepared their positions well. Over the next several days, Australian attacks were repelled with  efficiency, and casualties mounted. On May 12, Corporal John Mackey’s  platoon pushed forward again, determined to break the  deadlock.
As they advanced, Mackey spotted machine-gun positions ahead,  cutting off the Australians’ advance. He surged forward, leading the charge.  Sprinting through the hail of fire, he reached three Japanese machine-gun posts.
Each fell to his attack, but as he reached the  last position, a burst of fire hit him. His courage and sacrifice saved his comrades, and  he was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross. To break Japanese resistance, B-24  Liberator bombers and P-38 Lightnings launched coordinated airstrikes.
The Liberators  carpet-bombed enemy positions, followed by P-38s dropping napalm to flush out surviving  defenders. The tactic proved devastating. By May 14, the Japanese had abandoned  Helen, having lost around 100 men.
The 2/3rd Pioneer Battalion pressed on,  reaching Tarakan’s eastern shore by May 16. Meanwhile, US and Australian naval  forces patrolled the surrounding waters, targeting Japanese supply lines. USN PT boats  intercepted and destroyed at least a dozen enemy craft attempting to reinforce the garrison. 
The Butler-class Destroyer, USS Douglas A. Munro, silenced a Japanese coastal battery at Cape  Djoeata, further isolating enemy forces. By mid-June, the Japanese  were in full retreat.
The last organized resistance collapsed on  June 14, with survivors fleeing north. As fighting raged in the hills, Australian  engineers worked to repair Tarakan’s bombed-out airstrip, cratered and unusable  after the pre-invasion bombardment. Marshy terrain complicated reconstruction,  and it took eight weeks to complete.
The airstrip became operational on June 28, but too late for the Brunei,  Labuan, or Balikpapan landings. With the island secured, Australian  forces turned to mopping-up operations. Japanese holdouts scattered into the jungle,  moving north and east to evade capture.
Many attempted to swim across the strait to Borneo  but were intercepted by Allied naval patrols. Others hid in the hills, launching occasional  raids on Australian positions in search of food. As supplies dwindled, increasing  numbers surrendered.
By early July, only isolated Japanese stragglers remained. Tarakan's oil fields were quickly repaired  after the Allied landing. Engineers restored the first pump by June 27, and by October, the  fields were producing 8,000 barrels per day.
The Battle of Tarakan had cost the  Australians dearly in time and resources, but the island was now firmly in Allied hands. Casualties were significant: Allies suffered  over 251 losses and nearly 700 wounded, while on the Japanese side, 1,540  perished, and 252 were captured. Historians are split on the battle's  significance.
One historian called it: [QUOTE] “A very well conducted amphibious operation  which attained its objectives with minimum loss,” While another argued: [QUOTE] “The results achieved did not justify the cost. ” The Pocket of North Borneo On June 10, the Australians launched the next  two major amphibious landings in North Borneo. After intensive rehearsals at Morotai  Island in May, an 85-ship assault force, led mainly by the US Navy, departed in early  June.
Minesweepers and survey vessels moved ahead, clearing the way for the main naval attack group. The first landing targeted Labuan Island. Two battalions of the 24th Brigade—2/28th  and 2/43rd—stormed ashore, backed by Matilda tanks from the 2/9th Armoured  Regiment.
A third battalion, the 2/32nd, remained in divisional reserve. Cruisers and rocket ships unleashed  a devastating bombardment, while eight squadrons of Liberator bombers rained  anti-personnel bombs onto Japanese positions. The enemy had already pulled back from  the beaches, leaving the Australians to land unopposed.
They pushed inland  toward Victoria and the airfield, overcoming scattered resistance before  securing both objectives by nightfall. The 2/11th Commando Squadron  secured the western flank. The Japanese, not yet defeated, withdrew into a  fortified redoubt—the Pocket—deep in the jungle, where swamps and ridges offered natural defenses.
The 24th Brigade Group pushed  relentlessly toward the Pocket, facing fierce resistance from entrenched forces.  Tanks were damaged, and casualties mounted. By June 19, artillery and air support intensified.
Two days later, C and D Companies,  supported by flamethrower tanks, launched the final assault, overrunning the  Pocket and terminating 60 Japanese soldiers. Meanwhile, the Australians unleashed  a three-day naval and air bombardment, attempting to break Japanese resistance. Yet the enemy struck first, with  100 troops launching a desperate counterattack on the Australian maintenance  area and airfield.
The Australians held firm. A few days later, the 2/28th Battalion attacked  again. This time, tanks and flamethrowers spearheaded the assault.
The defenders,  overwhelmed, fell one by one. By the time the battle of Labuan ended, 389 Japanese lay lifeless.  The Australians had lost 34 men, with 93 wounded.
Simultaneously, the 20th Brigade struck  Muara Island and the Brunei Peninsula. The 2/15th and 2/17th Battalions led the assault,  supported by another squadron of Matilda tanks. The Australians swiftly advanced: the  2/17th captured Brunei on June 13, the 2/15th secured Muara Island and reached  Limbang by June 18, and the 2/13th landed at Lutong two days later, supported by air  cover.
They then pressed on to Miri and Seria. Upon arrival, they realized that retreating  Japanese had set 37 oil wells ablaze. Engineers began the grueling task of extinguishing the  fires, which would take over three months.
By June 24, the Australians  had reached Kuala Belait. With their objectives secured, the  20th Brigade turned to patrolling. Using landing craft, they moved  swiftly along rivers and streams, chasing Japanese remnants.
Resistance was  scattered but grew fiercer beyond Miri. Meanwhile, RAAF Mosquitos and Beaufighters  pounded Japanese positions, sinking an 800-ton vessel near the Tabuan River  and destroying aircraft on the ground. Reinforcements arrived from Labuan, including  two companies of the 2/28th Battalion for rear security.
Intelligence estimated that  800 to 1,000 Japanese held Beaufort, determined to secure their escape routes. On June 27, the 2/43rd Battalion led the charge  toward Beaufort, the rain pouring down in sheets, turning the battlefield into a treacherous swamp.  The 2/32nd Battalion provided flank protection, and the Australians fought through the  muck, determined to push forward.
One company pressed directly into Beaufort, while  another cut off the Japanese retreat route. The Japanese fought back fiercely,  launching six brutal counter-attacks throughout the night. The battle  devolved into vicious hand-to-hand combat.
One Australian company became  isolated, surrounded by enemy forces. By morning, the pressure was mounting. A second company fought through multiple Japanese  positions, carving a path to relieve the trapped men.
They struck the Japanese rear by nightfall,  wiping out 100 defenders in a brutal strike. By the end of June, the Japanese were in full  retreat, abandoning Beaufort in disarray, their last stronghold crumbling  under the Australian assault. The Australians pressed forward, mopping  up resistance.
The battle for North Borneo was drawing to a close, but the campaign was far  from over. The Australians would continue hunting enemy stragglers well into August. The obscured shores of Balikpapan The Allied fleet, comprising  over 100 US and Australian ships, assembled near Morotai Island on June 17, and  after rehearsing landings, set sail on June 26, crossing the Makassar Strait.
With a force of  33,000 personnel, they faced Japanese defenders numbering between 8,400 and 10,000, of  which 3,100 to 3,900 were combatants. On June 29, the faster bombardment  ships peeled off as demolition teams, under fire, cleared obstacles  off the coast. Several support vessels were damaged, and the central  landing beaches remained obstructed.
A few days later, the convoy reached its  assembly point 8 miles southeast of Klandasan. A brutal bombardment followed—63 Liberators,  five cruisers, and 14 destroyers firing over 17,000 shells. Nine tank landing ships moved  in, offloading troops to smaller craft such as Alligator tracked landing vehicles, crewed by  US personnel from Amphibian Tractor Battalions.
By 9:00am, the landing craft hit the beaches. Right away, confusion erupted as two  battalions landed far off-course, their intended positions obscured by smoke  and the remnants of coastal obstacles. The soldiers scrambled, disoriented,  trying to reorient themselves.
Despite the initial chaos, the  Japanese defenders, caught off guard, offered little resistance. A few scattered shots  were fired, but they were easily suppressed. Within 20 minutes, the soldiers had regrouped, forming a solid line and securing the beachhead. 
By the time the final landing craft unloaded, no casualties had been reported, and the beach was  in Australian hands, ready for the push inland. After securing the beach, the 18th Brigade pushed  forward to capture high ground north of Klandasan, key for the advance into Balikpapan.  The 21st Brigade moved along the coast road toward Sepinggang and Manggar  airfields, pressing toward their targets.
But the 2/10th Battalion ran headlong  into a brutal defense at Parramatta Ridge. Pillboxes, tunnels, and  landmines littered the area, and enemy fire raked the assault. A last-minute  diversion left the Australians without their planned fire support, and mechanical  breakdowns halted tank reinforcements.
Still, the order was given to attack. The initial assault stalled  immediately under withering enemy fire. Soldiers were pinned,  their progress slow and costly.
Finally, by noon, two supporting tanks  from the 1st Armored Regiment arrived, pushing forward and suppressing  the Japanese positions. This allowed the infantry to press  on, seizing the ridge by 12:40PM. By nightfall, the Australians had  expanded their beachhead by 1.
2 miles. Fighting raged around Klandasan  on July 2, as the Japanese, determined to hold their ground, were well  entrenched and prepared for a fierce defense. As the Australians pressed forward, engineers  moved in under fire to tackle the Japanese defenses.
Explosions ripped through the air  as they set charges, destroying tunnels that crisscrossed the area, used by the Japanese  to ambush and harass the advancing troops. But the real danger lay beneath their feet. The ground was littered with landmines and  booby traps.
Every step was a calculated risk, with engineers working furiously to clear safe  paths while under constant threat of attack. Each explosion of a mine echoed like a warning,  but the Australians pressed on, clearing the way for their infantry to push forward and  tighten the noose around the defenders. By nightfall on July 3, the 21st  Brigade had secured five miles of Beachhead and prepared to  take the Manggar airfield.
But Japanese defenders, perched on high  ground overlooking the field, unleashed a relentless barrage of artillery and mortar fire,  hammering the Australians as they moved in. The airfield was captured on July 4, but the  Australians were far from safe. For days, the enemy continued to rain down fire, slowing  progress as two Australian tanks were knocked out.
With the enemy dug in and artillery positions  causing havoc, the Australians called for naval and air support. Then, naval bombardments  neutralized key Japanese positions. Finally, the remaining defenders were  taken out, and the airfield was secured.
On July 5, the 2/9th and 2/1st Pioneer Battalions,  backed by the 2/7th Cavalry Commando Regiment, artillery, and tanks, landed at Panadjam using  LVTs and LCMs to eliminate Japanese artillery and reopen the port. Resistance was minimal,  and Panadjam was secured within two days. However, along the Milford Highway, a  Japanese battalion fiercely contested the Australian advance toward  Batuchampar.
The dense jungle offered cover, allowing the Japanese to  set ambushes and slow the forward push. But the Australians responded decisively.  Flamethrower-equipped tanks charged through the thick underbrush, incinerating hidden enemy  positions.
Simultaneously, artillery pounded the area with over 8,000 rounds, creating a deafening  roar as explosions tore through the jungle. By nightfall, the Japanese  resistance had crumbled, and the path toward Batuchampar was cleared. Indigenous vengeance The British North Borneo campaign included a parallel guerrilla war led by Special Operations  Australia, or the SOA.
This effort, codenamed Operations Agas and Semut, followed Operation  Python, which had been considered a failure. Between March and July 1945, five SOA teams  were inserted into North Borneo. Agas 1 and 2 built intelligence networks and guerrilla cells  in the northwest.
Agas 3 scouted the Ranau area for I Corps. Agas 4 and 5, deployed  on the east coast, achieved little. Because the locals were so eager to  fight against the Japanese occupiers, the Agas teams were able to gain local control  with relative ease.
They disrupted Japanese operations but provided inconsistent intelligence  and took out fewer than 100 enemy troops. Operation Semut launched in March 1945,  deploying over 100 Allied personnel, mostly Australians, into the dense, unforgiving  jungles of Sarawak. Their mission was clear: infiltrate behind enemy lines, gather  intelligence, and stir up a guerrilla force capable of striking at the  heart of the Japanese occupation.
The Dayaks, indigenous to the region  and hostile to the Japanese invaders, eagerly joined the fight. With their unparalleled knowledge  of the terrain, they formed small, highly mobile units that could strike swiftly  and vanish into the jungle, leaving no trace. While the 9th Division moved to secure coastal  areas, oilfields, plantations, and ports, the guerrillas took to the rugged interior. 
Operating from hidden bases in Balai, Ridan, and Marudi, they launched harassing attacks  along the Pandaruan and Limbang Rivers and targeted the Beaufort-Tenom railway. These  strikes disrupted Japanese troop movements, forcing enemy units into  retreat under constant fire. The guerrillas fought with ferocity, often  outnumbered and outgunned, relying on stealth, surprise, and relentless pressure.
The  RAAF provided air support when possible, but there were numerous instances when  the guerrillas had to evade Japanese counterattacks with only their wits and  the cover of the jungle to protect them. By the end of the campaign, the guerrillas had  inflicted severe damage on Japanese forces in the region. An estimated 1,800 enemy  troops had been rendered ineffective, forcing a significant shift in  Japanese control over North Borneo.
The operation, though carried out in the shadows, proved to be a decisive factor in the  Allies' success, with the guerrilla force serving as a constant thorn in  the side of the Japanese occupiers. A Debated Victory After the Borneo campaign, Australian forces remained until late 1945  to restore civilian administration, oversee reconstruction, and supervise the surrender of  Japanese troops. They also liberated Allied POWs.
There were claims that the Australians  encouraged the massacre of surrendered Japanese troops in revenge for  the Sandakan Marches that ended the lives of nearly 6,000 men. Yet  those claims remain unsubstantiated. The amphibious operations of Operation Oboe  were hailed as the largest and most complex undertaken by Australians in the war, requiring  extensive naval and air support.
Despite success, critics argued the campaign wasted lives,  with some questioning its necessity. Peter Dennis described the operations as: [QUOTE] “Doubtful value strategically. .
. [but]. .
. they  were skillfully conducted. ” With Max Hastings adding: [QUOTE] “Any rational strategic judgment would have  left [the Japanese] to their own devices.
” Despite controversy, the campaign  achieved its objectives through intense fighting and coordinated amphibious  operations. It cut off Japanese forces, secured vital oil supplies, and liberated  Allied POWs facing worsening conditions.
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