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Variables generated for this change
Variable | Value |
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Name of the user account (user_name ) | '175.37.106.112' |
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Page ID (page_id ) | 14065577 |
Page namespace (page_namespace ) | 0 |
Page title without namespace (page_title ) | 'Attacks on Australia during World War II' |
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle ) | 'Attacks on Australia during World War II' |
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Action (action ) | 'edit' |
Edit summary/reason (summary ) | '/* Sources */ ' |
Old content model (old_content_model ) | 'wikitext' |
New content model (new_content_model ) | 'wikitext' |
Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext ) | '{{Tone|date=December 2019}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}}
[[File:Ringed with menace (AWM ARTV09061).jpg|thumb|250px|An Australian World War II propaganda poster produced in 1943 emphasising the threats posed by Japanese forces]]
Attacks on continental Australia during World War II were relatively rare due to [[Australia]]'s geographic position. However, [[Axis Powers|Axis]] surface raiders and submarines periodically attacked shipping in the Australian coastal waters from 1940 to early 1945. Japanese aircraft bombed towns and airfields in [[Northern Australia]] on ninety-seven occasions during 1942 and 1943. [[Papua New Guinea]] was in part of Australia's overseas territories until 1975, and so the large Japanese invasion in 1942 was a significant invasion of territory under Australian control.
==Naval attacks==
{{Main|Axis naval activity in Australian waters}}
Six German surface raiders operated in Australian waters at different times between 1940 and 1943. These ships sank a small number of merchant ships and the Australian light cruiser [[HMAS Sydney (1934)|HMAS ''Sydney'']]. The German submarine [[German submarine U-862|''U-862'']] also carried out attacks in Australian waters in late 1944 and early 1945.
Japanese submarines operated in Australian waters from January 1942 until July 1944. Major submarine offensives were carried out against shipping off the Australian east coast from May to July 1942 and January to July 1943.
On the evening of 31 May/morning of 1 June 1942, Sydney harbour came under [[Attack on Sydney harbour|direct attack]] from Japanese midget submarines. {{HMAS|Kuttabul|ship|6}}, a converted ferry being used as a troop sleeper, was hit and sunk. twenty-one sailors were killed, nineteen Australians and two members of the Royal Navy.
The only Japanese force to land in Australia during World War II was a reconnaissance party that landed in the [[Kimberley (Western Australia)|Kimberley region of Western Australia]] on the 19th of January 1944 to investigate reports that the Allies were building large bases in the region. The party consisted of four Japanese officers on board a small fishing boat. It investigated the York Sound region for a day and a night before returning to Kupang in Timor on January 2th0. Upon returning to Japan in February, the junior officer who commanded the party suggested using 200 Japanese prison inmates to launch a guerrilla campaign in Australia. Nothing came of this and the officer was posted to other duties.{{sfn|Frei|1991|pp=173–174}}
The single greatest loss of life resulting from a submarine attack in Australian waters occurred in the early hours of the 14th of May 1943 when the [[Japanese submarine I-177|Japanese submarine ''I-177'']] torpedoed and sank the Australian hospital ship {{ship|AHS|Centaur}} off Point Lookout, Queensland. After being hit by a single torpedo, ''Centaur'' sank in less than three minutes with the loss of 268 lives. While hospital ships such as ''Centaur'' were legally protected against attack under the terms of the Geneva Conventions, it is unclear whether Commander Hajime Nakagawa of ''I-177'' was aware that ''Centaur'' was a hospital ship. While she was clearly marked with a red cross and was fully illuminated, the light conditions at the time may have resulted in Nakagawa not being aware of ''Centaur''{{'}}s status, making her sinking a tragic accident. However, as Nakagawa had a poor record as a submarine captain and was later convicted of machine gunning the survivors of a British merchant ship in the Indian Ocean, it is probable that the sinking of ''Centaur'' was due to either Nakagawa's incompetence or indifference to the laws of warfare. The attack on ''Centaur'' sparked widespread public outrage in Australia.
==Air attacks==
{{Main|Air raids on Australia, 1942–43}}
The first air raid on Australia occurred on 19 February 1942 when [[Bombing of Darwin|Darwin was attacked]] by 242 Japanese aircraft. At least 235 people were killed in the raid. Occasional attacks on northern Australian towns and airfields continued until November 1943. These included:
* 896 raids on Darwin
* 9 raids on Horn Island
* 4 raids on Broome
* 3 raids on Exmouth Gulf
* 98 raids on Townsville.
==References==
{{Portal|Australia|World War II}}
{{Reflist}}
==Sources==
*{{cite journal|last=Clayton|first=Mark|title=The north Australian air war, 1942–1944| journal=Journal of the Australian War Memorial|publisher=Australian War Memorial|location=Canberra| number=8|date=April 1986|pages =33–45|url = https://www.academia.edu/37991892 |issn=0729-6274}}
* {{cite book|last=Frei|first=Henry P.|year=1991|title=Japan's Southward Advance and Australia. From the Sixteenth Century to World War II|publisher=Melbourne University Press|location=Melbourne|isbn=0-522-84392-1}}
==External links==
* [http://www.awm.gov.au/encyclopedia/air_raids/ Air raids on Australian mainland: Second World War] - Australian War Memorial
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Attacks on Australia During World War Ii}}
[[Category:Military attacks against Australia|*]]' |
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext ) | '{{Tone|date=December 2019}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}}
[[File:Ringed with menace (AWM ARTV09061).jpg|thumb|250px|An Australian World War II propaganda poster produced in 1943 emphasising the threats posed by Japanese forces]]
Attacks on continental Australia during World War II were relatively rare due to [[Australia]]'s geographic position. However, [[Axis Powers|Axis]] surface raiders and submarines periodically attacked shipping in the Australian coastal waters from 1940 to early 1945. Japanese aircraft bombed towns and airfields in [[Northern Australia]] on ninety-seven occasions during 1942 and 1943. [[Papua New Guinea]] was in part of Australia's overseas territories until 1975, and so the large Japanese invasion in 1942 was a significant invasion of territory under Australian control.
==Naval attacks==
{{Main|Axis naval activity in Australian waters}}
Six German surface raiders operated in Australian waters at different times between 1940 and 1943. These ships sank a small number of merchant ships and the Australian light cruiser [[HMAS Sydney (1934)|HMAS ''Sydney'']]. The German submarine [[German submarine U-862|''U-862'']] also carried out attacks in Australian waters in late 1944 and early 1945.
Japanese submarines operated in Australian waters from January 1942 until July 1944. Major submarine offensives were carried out against shipping off the Australian east coast from May to July 1942 and January to July 1943.
On the evening of 31 May/morning of 1 June 1942, Sydney harbour came under [[Attack on Sydney harbour|direct attack]] from Japanese midget submarines. {{HMAS|Kuttabul|ship|6}}, a converted ferry being used as a troop sleeper, was hit and sunk. twenty-one sailors were killed, nineteen Australians and two members of the Royal Navy.
The only Japanese force to land in Australia during World War II was a reconnaissance party that landed in the [[Kimberley (Western Australia)|Kimberley region of Western Australia]] on the 19th of January 1944 to investigate reports that the Allies were building large bases in the region. The party consisted of four Japanese officers on board a small fishing boat. It investigated the York Sound region for a day and a night before returning to Kupang in Timor on January 2th0. Upon returning to Japan in February, the junior officer who commanded the party suggested using 200 Japanese prison inmates to launch a guerrilla campaign in Australia. Nothing came of this and the officer was posted to other duties.{{sfn|Frei|1991|pp=173–174}}
The single greatest loss of life resulting from a submarine attack in Australian waters occurred in the early hours of the 14th of May 1943 when the [[Japanese submarine I-177|Japanese submarine ''I-177'']] torpedoed and sank the Australian hospital ship {{ship|AHS|Centaur}} off Point Lookout, Queensland. After being hit by a single torpedo, ''Centaur'' sank in less than three minutes with the loss of 268 lives. While hospital ships such as ''Centaur'' were legally protected against attack under the terms of the Geneva Conventions, it is unclear whether Commander Hajime Nakagawa of ''I-177'' was aware that ''Centaur'' was a hospital ship. While she was clearly marked with a red cross and was fully illuminated, the light conditions at the time may have resulted in Nakagawa not being aware of ''Centaur''{{'}}s status, making her sinking a tragic accident. However, as Nakagawa had a poor record as a submarine captain and was later convicted of machine gunning the survivors of a British merchant ship in the Indian Ocean, it is probable that the sinking of ''Centaur'' was due to either Nakagawa's incompetence or indifference to the laws of warfare. The attack on ''Centaur'' sparked widespread public outrage in Australia.
==Air attacks==
{{Main|Air raids on Australia, 1942–43}}
The first air raid on Australia occurred on 19 February 1942 when [[Bombing of Darwin|Darwin was attacked]] by 242 Japanese aircraft. At least 235 people were killed in the raid. Occasional attacks on northern Australian towns and airfields continued until November 1943. These included:
* 896 raids on Darwin
* 9 raids on Horn Island
* 4 raids on Broome
* 3 raids on Exmouth Gulf
* 98 raids on Townsville.
==References==
{{Portal|Australia|World War II}}
{{Reflist}}
==Sources==
*{{cite journal|last=Clayton|first=Mark|title=The north Australian air war, 1942–1944| journal=Journal of the Australian War Memorial|publisher=Australian War Memorial|location=Canberra| number=8|date=April 1986|pages =33–45|url = https://www.academia.edu/37991892 |issn=0729-6274}}
* {{cite book|last=Frei|first=Henry P.|year=1991|title=Japan's Southward Advance and Australia. From the Sixteenth Century to World War II|publisher=Melbourne University Press|location=Melbourne|isbn=0-522-84392-1}}
Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah, you talk too much
==External links==
* [http://www.awm.gov.au/encyclopedia/air_raids/ Air raids on Australian mainland: Second World War] - Australian War Memorial
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Attacks on Australia During World War Ii}}
[[Category:Military attacks against Australia|*]]' |
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff ) | '@@ -32,4 +32,6 @@
*{{cite journal|last=Clayton|first=Mark|title=The north Australian air war, 1942–1944| journal=Journal of the Australian War Memorial|publisher=Australian War Memorial|location=Canberra| number=8|date=April 1986|pages =33–45|url = https://www.academia.edu/37991892 |issn=0729-6274}}
* {{cite book|last=Frei|first=Henry P.|year=1991|title=Japan's Southward Advance and Australia. From the Sixteenth Century to World War II|publisher=Melbourne University Press|location=Melbourne|isbn=0-522-84392-1}}
+
+Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah, you talk too much
==External links==
' |
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Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node ) | false |
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp ) | '1665734895' |