A first-hand view of fighting the communist terrorists — Hussaini Abdul Karim August 30, 2011 AUG 30

  1. A first-hand view of fighting the communist terrorists — Hussaini Abdul Karim, August 30, 2011
  2. AUG 30 — A week before we received our Agong‟s commission, which was to be held on April 14, 1972, all Royal Military College (RMC), Sungei Besi, Kuala Lumpur graduating officer cadets of Short Service Commission Intake 20 and Regular Commission Intake 14 were required to make our choices on which corps in the army we wished to serve.Tensions were very high among us even though we were all fully trained and equipped and were fully fit and ready to fight the communist terrorists (CTs) face-to-face in both West and East Malaysia. The training we went through was very tough. We were all very anxious to know where each of us was to be posted to, especially those of us who had made our choices to join the Infantry, Artillery or the Reconnaissance Corps in the army, all commonly known as the “Fighting Units” of the army. We were repeatedly briefed and reminded about the communist atrocities and how ruthless they were and part of our training was to get us all psyched up to defeat them, our national enemy and a threat to our developing nation. We had to stop them from destroying our country and our people to ensure a prosperous and peaceful future for all Malaysians.

Hussaini Abdul Karim

The writer receiving his Agong’s commission as Lt Muda (2nd Lieutenant, Malaysian Artillery Corps) from Sultan Abdul Halim at the RMC Sungei Besi on April 14, 1972.

I still remember very well the nervous smile of Officer Cadet Elias Ramli, a vertically challenged but stout fellow from Kangar, who was to be posted to 1 Ranger Regiment in Sarawak, the hotbed of the CTs at that time, as well as the sour face of Officer Cadet A. Rahman Koya, a tall and dapper fellow from Rantau Panjang, who was joining another Ranger battalion, also based in Sarawak. Officer Cadet Sallehuddin from Penggerang, Johor, who joined the Royal Malay Regiment, was another graduating cadet who I noticed was feeling very nervous. About an equal number of officers from our graduating class were sent to units operating near the borders of Malaysia/Thailand and Malaysia/Kalimantan to join the respective fighting units we were posted to. Two hundred graduating cadets were posted to the fighting units and the remaining number of newly-commissioned officers was posted to the services and administrative units. I was posted to the 3rd Artillery Regiment in Kuching, which was our temporary base and I was there for just over one year. My parents were less than happy when I told them about it. My second stint there, for about 11⁄2 years, was between early 1974 and mid-1975. Our permanent base was in Kamunting, Taiping.

Lt Muda Elias Ramli, Lt Muda A. Rahman Koya and Lt Muda Sallehuddin as well as a few others did not enjoy the privilege of the four-day break we were given between the time after accepting our commission as 2nd lieutenants and joining our respective units. They had to pack up immediately and were flown or sent by train or Land Rover trucks to Kuching and to other destinations like Ipoh, Sungei Petani, and Bentong that afternoon itself upon completing the passing-out parade. They were to join their colleagues to fight in the country‟s jungles due to a shortage of officers, especially in the infantry units, at the front lines in both theatres.

On April 15, the very first day of active service, we received the very sad news of the first casualty, Lt Muda Sallehuddin, then only 18 years old; the youngest to be commissioned, died after drowning in the Rejang River in Sibu during one of the pursuits of terrorists in his unit‟s area of operations. Over the years there were many more casualties, all young men, who were killed, injured, paralysed, maimed or crippled fighting the communist CTs. Some died or were injured from gunshot wounds or

accidents and some from air crashes after the Nuri helicopters they were in were shot at, all fighting for the country to wipe out the communists. A classmate at RMC Cadet Wing, Lt Fuad Chong from the Engineers Corps, had to have one of his legs amputated after badly injuring it upon stepping on a booby trap in an operation to clear booby traps set up by the CTs in the Perak jungle. My very good friends, Trooper Suandy, a soldier from the elite Commando Unit (MSSU) and Lt Muda (U) Wee Kong Beng, a co-pilot of a Nuri helicopter, died in one of the crashes with seven others including the aircraft‟s captain. In one of the major operations which I was involved in, the Bentong airstrip was even busier than Subang Airport with various types of aircraft such as the Caribou, Cessna, Nuri and Alouette regularly landing and taking off every day.

One officer from our batch, Lt Muda Basri, an infantry officer from 4 Ranger Regiment, was awarded the Panglima Gagah Berani (PGB) for bravery after successfully leading his platoon to defeat a group of CTs in 1973. This guy had burning red eyes and he always was full of spirit; though he was among the quieter ones at RMC, from his determination and passion shown when competing in team contests and games during our training sessions, I knew that one day he would be a hero. Another officer who was also a classmate by the name of Basri, also from the Royal Engineers Corps, a very affable fellow, was also awarded the PGB and he has since retired with the rank of Lt-Colonel.

Life in the army then was very tough and in my case, I spent most of my active military service in the country‟s jungles in Sarawak, Sabah, Perak, Kedah and Pahang, sometimes at a stretch for as long as six months. Of course, there were many like me. We young officers were still bachelors and were considered by our superiors that leaving us in the jungle for a long stretch of time didn‟t really matter. The married officers who had families had shorter stints. Sometimes, I did feel angry with myself, with a tinge of regret for joining the army instead of one of the universities like many of my classmates who completed pre-university did, and be able to sleep on very comfortable Dunlopillo latex foam mattresses, enjoy good food, had girlfriends and enjoyed the bright city lights.

We slept on makeshift tents created using our rubber “poncos” from branches of small trees and depending on the duty roster, we either slept during the day or at night. Sometimes, when there was not enough time, we just slept on the ground with the ponco used as a ground sheet. As we were always on the move, the tents had to be dismantled and the area cleared after every short stay of between two and three days. Our food was the dry rations supplied to us and sometimes, when we camped near rivers, we did manage to get fish and fresh vegetables. There were, among the soldiers, some very good cooks who were able to prepare delicious dishes from these fish, vegetables and some other fresh leaves eaten fresh like ulam. It was quite normal for us to camp on high ground near flowing rivers as the clean waters allowed us to bathe and do plenty of cleaning, cooking and washing. During the annual but short Hari Raya Aidilfitri periods, the food spread was quite large and we had lemang, ketupat, rendang and a good variety of kuih raya and that could last up to a week. Sometimes we found photos of young girls of about our age; they were volunteers who helped prepare the food packs who must have cheekily placed them in those packs just to cheer us up and that actually did the trick. However, morale of the soldiers was high and we were always supporting and comforting each other particularly when we received sad and devastating news about casualties and deaths of our friends and colleagues. Every time I heard news like these, I felt very angry, frustrated and most vengeful. I felt like, if I ever happened to encounter them, I would catch them, wring their necks until they could not breathe, hang them by their feet and make them suffer enough before shooting them. I had books and past newspapers delivered to me by my very considerate commanding officer, the late Maj-Gen Datuk Johan Hew, of and on and I read them all from cover to cover over and over again; including all the advertisements and notices, in the case of newspapers, until the next delivery. The news I read were sometimes a week old at best. Other reading materials included the Quran and some kitabs.

In one of the fire fights that I was involved, a supply convoy consisting of 12 vehicles escorted by a reconnaissance troop with Ferret scout cars and V-150 APCs was ambushed by CTs along the road flanked by sloping hills with thick undergrowth not very far from our Maong Gajah base camp in Kedah near Pedu Lake (before the dam was constructed) and very near to the Thai border. Casualties on our side were several and most of them were seriously injured but nobody was killed. The counter attack mounted by the RMR infantry company didn‟t come back with any captured or dead terrorists. My troops fired round after round of high explosive ammunition every night for the next three nights covering a very large area but there was still no captured or dead terrorists. Another

incident was near Kampung Lallang in the Sungei Siput area in Perak where a small group of CTs, three of them actually, was sighted on a small hill and the field commander ordered us to cordon the area with a two-layer, shoulder-to-shoulder, man-to-man ring surrounding the „target‟ with the aim to capture the enemies alive instead of killing them. When we closed in on the target, the enemies were nowhere to be seen and we were all puzzled. We were very sure that the sighting, based on our intelligence report which was categorised as A1, was accurate. That led to many theories and one was that they escaped via a tunnel somewhere in the jungle and the other was that these people had special powers and could hide behind leaves. We searched but did not find any tunnel. Many of us however, believed in the latter theory.

An artillery troop equipped with 105mm Howitzers in the „position ready‟ position. Firing starts upon orders received from the gun position officer (GPO).

The mode of operations those days required each infantry brigade involved in the search and destruction of CTs in both East Malaysia and the peninsula to have one three-gun 105mm Howitzer- equipped artillery troop to flush out CTs from their hideouts and we were engaged in many harassing fire missions and fired hundreds of rounds of high explosive ammunition, normally at night, at all the areas suspected to be CT hideouts but we never knew if there were any casualties among them. However, all the time, search-and-destroy operations carried out after the guns ceased firing rendered zero findings. Our jungles are very thick with severely undulating grounds and many meandering big and small rivers and it was very difficult and dangerous to carry out search-and-destroy operations. The situation was a lot worse when it rained and we had to face inclement weather quite regularly. The air force also assisted in the operations either by providing airlifting operations using Sikorsky (Nuris) helicopters to fly in the troops, guns and supplies to the designated gun positions in the heart of our jungles in Perak, Kedah, Pahang, Kelantan, Sabah and Sarawak, which were not accessible by road or foot, as well as “Eye Observation Posts” (Eye OPs), an air reconnaissance artillery gun control operations using the smaller Alouette helicopters. Communication was by means of fairly obsolete equipment and the PRK 55 mobile signal units. Most of the times we took turns to crank the batteries by hand continuously to provide power for the signal equipment because communication had to be maintained uninterrupted for 24 hours every day. Despite the shortcomings, we still managed it. Orientation was assisted by accurate topographical maps, compasses, rulers and protractors.

Only the CPM members would know the number of casualties they suffered.

In all of our further and advanced training sessions, courses, briefings and debriefings, we were told and reminded that our enemies were members of the Communist Party of Malaya (CPM) and their two illegal organisations viz the Malayan National Liberation Army (MNLA), a group formed for their armed struggle, and the Malayan National Liberation League (MNLL). Another organisation was the CPM Marxist-Leninist Faction (CPMML) which was responsible for the constitutional struggle and certain aspects of the illegal or “militant” struggle and there was also the Malayan Communist Youth League (MCYL) recruited from youths aged between 15 and 30. In East Malaysia, we were fighting the North Kalimantan Communist Party (which had no direct links with the Malayan Communist Party), an offshoot of the clandestine communist organisation that was waging a guerilla campaign against the government. Names like Chin Peng, the CPM secretary-general, Rashid Mydin, Abdullah CD, Wahi Annuar, Shamsiah Fakih, Siu Cheong alias Ah Soo, P.V. Sharma, Ah Hoi alias Chen Jui, Sun Chek, Lim Chau, Soh Chee Peng alias Shi Meng and Musa Ahmad were regularly mentioned.

They were not fighting to liberate the country, which they claimed, but their aim was to form a communist republic to be known as the Malayan Peoples Republic and anyone who went against them, regardless of race or religion, shall be killed. We lost many soldiers, mostly young Malay soldiers (there were very few Chinese, Indian and people of other races in the army then), and we also received news that some civilians were also killed. I also remember reading a report about the communists in the early „50s, not long after the Japanese surrendered, and the „60s, where killings were also carried out in towns like Muar, Kluang, Ipoh and Sungei Petani, among others. In 1971, the then-IGP Tan Sri Abdul Rahman Hashim was assassinated at the junction of Lorong Weld and Jalan Tun Perak Kuala Lumpur on June 4, 1974; his driver was also killed and about 16 months later another senior police officer, Perak CPO Tan Sri Khoo Chong Kong, was gunned down together with his driver at midday in Ipoh. These assassinations were carried out by members of the 1st Mobile Squad of the CPMML, a squad formed to carry out assassinations. Two other planned assassinations of the then-Chief of Armed Forces Staff, General Tan Sri Ibrahim Ismail (now Tun), and the then Singapore Commissioner of Police, Tan Sri Tan Teik Khim, were thwarted after two CPMML members were arrested and sentenced to death for the murders they committed earlier.

An artillery troop command post with the gun position officer (GPO) giving firing orders using a megaphone.

The communists were trained, both physically and mentally, to be brutal, ruthless and unsympathetic they‟d kill just anyone whom they wanted to. Killings to them were a duty and it was like food for them and they did it without feeling even an iota of guilt.

God save us if they were to take over and rule this country.

I was promoted to Captain in 1976 and left the army in 1979 to continue with my studies and to pursue other interests after feeling fully satisfied and my ambition fulfilled and that I have done my duty and contributed in whatever miniscule way to the continued peace and prosperity of our most beloved country. In my relatively short tenure in the army, I served the 1st Brigade, 2nd Brigade, 3rd Brigade, 4th Brigade, 5th Brigade, 6th Brigade, 8th Brigade and Rascom and my last attachment was with the 3rd Field Ambulance in Kinrara, Selangor.

All my former classmates at RMC, Sungei Besi April 1972 graduating class have now retired and many made the army or the air force their career and held very senior ranks and positions and they are my very close friends such as Lt-Gen Tan Sri Wan Abu Bakar, Royal Malay Regiment (former director of military intelligence), Lt-Gen Datuk Seri Bashir, RMAF (former Deputy Chief of the Air Force), Maj-Gen Datuk Mokhtar Parman, Royal Artillery Regiment (former director of training), Maj- Gen Datuk Che Yahya, RMAF (former Chief of Staff, RMAF) and Maj-Gen Datuk Che‟ Hasni, Royal Armoured Corp (former director of army training). The others held ranks of no less than Lt-Colonel.

No, for whatever reasons, we must never allow Chin Peng or any of the still surviving members of the CPM to return to this country. They are all traitors!

We, former members of the security forces, can still feel the hurt and pain, both physically and emotionally, whenever we recall the terrifying years dealing with them.

Even though retired, we will take up weapons again and defend our country against any communist threats either by their members, supporters or sympathisers and I will be the first one to do that!

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication. The Malaysian Insider does not endorse the view unless specified.

YOUR VOICE YOUR SAY

The PM is going direct to the people in the Western Sydney Suburbs next Sunday to Friday to listen to their concerns. If you live in those areas and are concerned with the Government’s military injustices related to breaches of “contracts” by its failures to:

  • Restore veterans disability pensions to the right parity rate (this means for Special Rate/TPI’s a recovery of about $3,300 pa, for the 100% General Rate pensions a recovery of about $1,200 and for other lesser percentage disabilities a pro rata amount).
  • index military superannuation retirement payments to retain their purchasing power, thereby reducing your ability to keep pace with the increasing cost of living is seriously reducing your family’s standard of living, then here is your opportunity to have a say.

Get the facts here

Her itinerary has not yet been released but we believe she will visit the electorates of Chifley, McMahon, Macquarie, Lindsay, Greenway, Watson, Banks, Reid and Grayndler and in each going to the major shopping centres/malls

If you want to join the ADSO Group then email Bob Ihlein [email protected] NOW

If you want to act solo in your own area then we suggest you:

  • keep alert for news of her visit locations through your own contacts and local media and tell Bob so he can pass it on. We will pass on any information we receive through this means
  • wear some item that identifies you as military: medals, caps, polo shirts etc
  • be civil in your engagement/conversation with the PM and her staff. Do not use obscene or abusive language: keep your cool.
  • At the location join with other identified supporters
  • At the end of the event tell Bob of your experience as a lesson learnt.

YOUR VOICE YOUR SAY

The denied 2.7% increase in MTAWE amounts to a loss of approximately $3,300.00 pa to the TPI/Special Rate pension and approximately $1,200.00 pa of 100% of the General Rate pension. All other DVA Disability Pensions are affected pro-rata.by the same 11.4%.

“Australians all let us rejoice for we are young and free …. Advance Australia Fair.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The RAR Corporation wishes all Australians an enjoyable Australia Day with the understanding that this day recognises the contribution that many people have made to making Australia what it is today – a nation of freedom loving people who support the principle of a fair go.

The pride in our nation will be seen not only by our Australian flag flying at official flag stations, mastheads, buildings, homes, on cars and in the hands of children at the many public social outings, but also on the clothing worn with Australian themes and colourful phrases.

Spare a moment of appreciation for our service men and women who are on protective duty at home and away – with the Australian Defence Forces, Police Forces, Fire Services, Ambulance Service and Emergency Services

Enjoy your day Australia.

Veterans Forum – Buderim

 

 

Keep the Promise: Legacy Week 2012

 

 All Australians are encouraged to buy a Legacy Badge this week to support the work of Legacy and assist the families of veterans and ex-service people.

 

Shadow Minister for Veterans’ Affairs, Senator the Hon. Michael Ronaldson, said this year’s Legacy Week would have added significance given the recent losses in Afghanistan.

 

“For nearly 90 years, Legacy has provided a service for the families of our veterans and ex-service people, assisting them with additional financial and moral support when times are tough”, Senator Ronaldson said.

 

“Founded by a group of ex-World War One service personnel, Legacy has grown to become a name synonymous with altruism, kindness, caring and compassion.  It is truly one of Australia’s great institutions.”

 

“Legacy provides help for those in need, particularly widows of veterans and their children.”

 

“Legacy provides care, support and comfort to the recently bereaved and their loved ones.  Their torch burns bright when all else seems lost.”

 

“When we buy a Legacy badge, our donation goes towards helping our veterans, their widows and families in tough times.  It enables Legatees across Australia to continue to ‘Keep the promise’ to those who have given so much for our nation.”

 

Senator Ronaldson said Legacy Week 2012 was our chance to renew our promise never to forget.

 

“When you see a Legatee, or a member of the Australian Defence Force, selling Legacy badges this week, show your support by buying a badge and wearing it with pride.”

Hangout with the PM – Pete Criss Speaks

Many members of the Defence family are angered and dismayed with the PM’s responses to David Jamison’s questions on fair indexation of military superannuation on the recent online forum program, “Hangout with the PM”.

In this video, AVM Peter Criss (Retd) reflects their concerns with his insightful comments on the PM’s remarks.  Misha Schubert the moderator, who has a history of supporting our Military people, and the OurSay team, have subsequently apologised for the confusion during the interview, Misha had her producer and other sound feeds happening at that moment and did not hear David whom she inadvertently cut off.

To join the Fair Go Campaign and keep informed you can click here to register and check out the Stand To website.

 

 

Hanging Out with the PM – DFWA National President NEEDS YOU!

AS YOU KNOW WE ARE FIGHTING THE CASE FOR FAIR INDEXATION FOR DEFENCE SUPER PENSIONS THIS ALSO EFFECTS OUR COLLEAGUES IN THE PUBLIC SERVER WHO ARE ALSO FIGHTING THE CASE. PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO EVERYONE AND ASK THEM TO VOTE EVEN IF THEY AREN’T IN DEFENCE, IT IS FOR PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE DEFENCE PERSONNEL MANY THANKS GREG PS OVER THE YEARS DEFENCE HAVE BE VERY GOOD AT HELPING ACROSS THE AUSTRALIAN COMMUNITIES AND THIS IS THE FIRST TIME I CAN RECALL THEY HAVE ASKED FOR A HAND

Sign up by email or log straight in with your Facebook, Twitter or Google account if you have one…. You have seven votes and can use them ALL on this one question

MEDIA TREATMENT OF ALLEGATIONS OF ABUSE IN THE ADF

In your reporting of the revelations of the DLA Piper Report regarding allegations of abuse within the Australian Defence Force, can you please acknowledge the fact that tens of thousands of young men and women have served and are now serving this nation with exemplary honour, honesty, courage, integrity and loyalty (the latter sorely tested by the neglect by omission on the part of their political leadership and some media reports)?  Their voices if heard would reveal that there is no systemic, endemic or culture of abuse in the ADF and there never has been.

Of course there have been serious offences by individuals over the years and there will be more in the future.  The ADF is after all populated by people inducted from the broader Australian public and can expect that a number of miscreants will slip through the recruiting filters.  The ADF does not train people to behave badly unless forming them into teams to trust each others skill to defeat an enemy is bad behaviour; indeed quite the reverse because it expects its members to perform to those values mentioned above.  Regrettably, occasions will arise when even the best systems are beaten by those with wrongful intent and in my experience of the Navy, when they are detected the system works swiftly to bring them to account.

I am a veteran of 35 years active service in the Navy and after retiring in 1998 I have continued to serve the interests of Navy veterans.   Summing all of my experience starting as an 18 year old in an old destroyer used as the Training Ship, as a junior and senior officer in surface warships and submarines; in senior management positions including those with responsibility for behavioural programs and the assimilation of women into combat ships and submarines; I have never seen or heard of the types of serious abuse that has been alleged and gone unreported.  Yes, some summary and very tough discipline by the civilian standards of the day.

The DLA Piper Review seems to cover some 50 years or more!  Is it not a false premise to examine practices of past generations through the prism of contemporary values and then condemn those practices as if they were today’s?  All reasonable persons will of course readily agree that if abuse did happen then certainly it should be dealt with firmly.  But was it all abuse?  Conditions on ships during the fifties, sixties and early seventies were tough and the men who taught us to handle those conditions were tough ex-World War Two and Korean War Veterans who were unyielding in passing on their standards learned the hard way, in combat.  These are also the men who saw the conditions under which they served and strived tirelessly over many years to improve them to what sailors enjoy today.  Many young men and women under them failed and discharged some blaming the system rather than praising the men who may have simply done them a favour, indeed maybe even saved their lives by weeding them out.  Those men and women of all ranks who fought long and hard to improve conditions of service would quite rightly feel betrayed if they could witness the politicisation of their Service’s management for the sake of a very, very few untested allegations.

And what is the numbers context?  When I was last involved in ADF people numbers in the mid-90s, the average annual turnover of personnel was about 10% and I suspect that it is little different today.  If current strength of the ADF of 60,000 (excluding Active Reserves) is the average over the last 50 years of the DLA Piper investigation, the number of people separating each year for all reasons would be 6000 or 300,000 total.  If all of those 700 with an allegation of abuse separated from the ADF because of it then 0.23% or less that one person in every 400 might have done so because of what are now plausible but untested allegations.  If any alleged victims continued to serve then this is much lower.  Are we to spend scarce taxpayer funds on a witch hunt based on these figures or, even worse, sit in judgement over the whole ADF based on the untested allegations of so few?

Whenever the subject of the alleged “culture of abuse” comes up my email Inbox lights up with messages from men who served as sailors and officers in careers from four to forty years in old steam ships, modern frigates or submarines; who were Cadets at the Naval College; Junior Recruits at HMAS Leeuwin; Apprentices at HMAS Nirimba; General Entry at HMAS Cerberus and all of whom have absolutely no recollection of any of the abuse being witnessed nor had any even heard of it on the very powerful sailors grapevine.  Yes, sometimes sailors were tough on each other within their peer groups, as young men and women can be in many varieties of institutional living not exclusive to the ADF.  Yes, in a previous era there were peer group rites, initiation ceremonies and admonishments that were themselves relics of an even earlier era across many sections of the community but now quite rightly purged from the psyche (I recall getting the boot black treatment as a new Boy Scout in the fifties!).  But, the management skill of the Naval Divisional System which has survived the test of a century of success was there to report and detect unhealthy actions and mostly did so.

Please speak up for the sailors, soldiers and airmen and women who have served and are serving exemplarily and who daily disprove the proposition that there is a culture of abuse in the ADF?

Yours faithfully

 

Commodore Bob Trotter OAM RAN (Ret’d) FIEAust
Past Director, Finding Sydney Foundation (2001-11)

Past National & WA President, Naval Association of Australia
1/9 Cornwall St, Swanbourne, WA, 6010

Research on RCB Commanders Diary Notes

Its a marvelous invention the internet, it allows us to research and to communicate effectively.I have done a little research and have documents titled Commanders Diary Notes – 6RAR for the period 1971 – 1973.

During this period 6RAR were stationed in Singapore as part of the tri nation 28 ANZUK Brigade.
There are two documents which are of relwevance to our cause, the first is a document titled CT Mine and Booby Trap Markings and Indicators.the second sets out the objectives for D.Coy deployment to Butterworth in Jan 73 direct from Singapore,

The argument that I am trying to put across is that whther it was ANZUK Brigade service or RCB service there was an inherant danger which the government knew about, yet it did at the time sell the service as normal training activity.These documents clearly expose the fact that we were placed in harms way with an expectation of casualties.As follows:

Document a

Instruction of 5 pages
Annex N to 6RAR – R841/1/61
Dated October 1972
CT Mine And Booby Trap Markings and Indicators

The first paragraph sets out the purpose of the instruction, which no doubt was issued by intelligence to 6RAR Comand.

Purpose:
1he purpose of this instruction is to provide a means of identifying CT mine and booby trap marker indicators.

2 The markings and indicators described in this instruction have been found throughout South Vietnam and SE asia, a knowledge of which may prevent friendly casualties.

The instruction goes through a wide range of situations regarding types of markers and indicators however the following highlites the possibiity of danger.

(n) Vehicle Track Markers. The CT have capitalised on our habit of following old vehicle tracks by placing mines into these tracks.The mines may be under the marker or up to 400m away.
(p) an M1A1 anti tank mine with approximately 25lb TNT was discoverd under this marker.The mine had been marked with sticks at each corner and two sticks forming an X over the mine.
5 Placement Procedures. ——————————The best preventive measure so far is to develop in conjunction with local populace an effective inteligence system to discover enemy plans for mining.This will enable friendly forces to conduct ambushes and destroy or capture CT attempting to lay mines.

Conclusion —————Friendly forces are constantly being menanced by CT mine placementsImproved or unimporoved roads,road shoulders,trails,and any probable avenue of approach are subect to mining.The only doctrine that has appeared concerning the placements of mines requires the CT units to know the location of mines within theiir operating area.Mine indicator are only those which have been reported to date. Many more are suspected and if any new mine indicators or mine markings are found they should be reported as knowledge of these markers by friendly forces will aid in the reduction of mine and booby trap casualties.

It is very clear from reading this document that anybody whether or not it be with ANZUK brigade or with RCB were placed at risk when operating in training mode in Malaysia.Malaysia was at war internally and we were placed into a country riddled with mine and booby trap placements, the government was aware of this,yet coninued to exploit the situation.It was very poor risk management to say the least.How would they have explained a casualty to the Australian public, it would possibly never have been revealed to the public.

The second document reinforces the intent of the government to maintain an Australian Army presence in Malaysia knowing full well that Malaysia was at war and that an inherant danger existed not through direct contact with the CT but indirectly through mine and booby trap placements.Have no doubt we were all placed at risk.

AWM 95
Item No 7/6/68
Item 6 Battalion Royal Australian Regiment
1 – 31 December 1972

Deployment of D Coy Group to Butterworth – General Instructions.
Ref:8/841/4/2

Objectives:
The objectives of the deployment is to
1 Provide an Australian Army presence in Malaysia
2 Supplement normal protective security of Air base Butterworth and RAAF families when aproved by 29 ANZUK Brigade.

Discipline:
OC D coy has power of detachmeny command for duration of deployment.
10 The company is the only representative Australian Army organisation in Malaysia and also on RAAF base.
11. The company group is subject to the following standing orders.
a Formation standing Orders
b Base squadron standing orders
c 28 ANZUK brigade standing orders
d 6 RAR company Group staning orders
e 6 RAR staning orders

12 The Coy group is also to be fully conversant with the Base Defence Plan.

Annexure:
Annex B to DCoy
R 841/4/2
Dated December 1972

Program

Prepare for and move to Butterworth using Excercise name of Mountain Stream
Introduction to Butterworth Air Nase
Introduction to RAAF
Introduction to Butterworth / Penang
The Threat
Base Defence Orientation
Mirage Introduction/ familiarisation
Iroquis
Orentation Butterworth / Penang

Once again it is clearly obvious that a threat existed , we were lectured on the threat by 65 Liason Group.

I think it would be important for us to fully exploit the issues that arise from these documents, simply because they are factual and recorded which leave the people like Feeny nowhere to go but other than to listen.

 

#Research conducted by a former RCB soldier.

William’s Letter

 

 

 

 

This is the letter young 9yo William wrote to Defence Minister Stephen Smith when he was not able to join his “papa” who also wrote and hand delivered his own letter to the minister.  See his grandfathers letter by clicking here.