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Z Special Unit

Z Special Unit (/zɛd/) was a joint Allied special forces unit formed during the Second World War to operate behind Japanese lines in South East Asia. Predominantly Australian, Z Special Unit was a specialist reconnaissance and sabotage unit that included British, Dutch, New Zealand, Timorese and Indonesian members, predominantly operating on Borneo and the islands of the former Dutch East Indies.[1]

Z Special Unit
Crew of the MV Krait during Operation Jaywick, 1943
Active1942–1946
Country
AllegianceAllied
TypeSpecial forces
RoleGuerrilla warfare
Special operations
Special reconnaissance
Part ofSRD, Allied Intelligence Bureau
Engagements

The unit carried out a total of 81 covert operations in the South West Pacific theatre, with parties inserted by parachute or submarine to provide intelligence and conduct guerrilla warfare.[2] The best known of these missions were Operation Jaywick and Operation Rimau, both of which involved raids on Japanese shipping in Singapore Harbour; the latter of which resulted in the deaths of 23 commandos either in action or by execution after capture.[1]

Although the unit was disbanded after the war, many of the training techniques and operational procedures employed were later used during the formation of other Australian Army special forces units and they remain a model for guerrilla operations to this day.[3]

History edit

Formation and training edit

The Inter-Allied Services Department (IASD), was an Allied military intelligence unit, established in March 1942. The unit was created at the suggestion of the commander of Allied land forces in the South West Pacific area, General Thomas Blamey, and was modelled on the British Special Operations Executive (SOE) in London. It was renamed Special Operations Australia (SOA) and in 1943 became known as the Services Reconnaissance Department (SRD).[4]

It contained several British SOE officers who had escaped from Singapore, and they formed the nucleus of the Inter-Allied Services Department (ISD) which was based in Melbourne. In June 1942, an ISD raiding/commando unit was organised—designated Z Special Unit.[4]

Several training schools were established in various locations across Australia, the most notable being Camp Z in Refuge Bay, an offshoot of Broken Bay to the north of Sydney, Z Experimental Station (also known as the "House on the Hill" or ZES) near Cairns, Queensland, Fraser Commando School (or FCS) on Fraser Island, Queensland where a commemorative monument stands on the mainland overlooking the island. As a training exercise, one group led by Samuel Warren Carey paddled folboats between Fraser Island and Cairns. Another training school was the Special Boat Section at Careening Bay Camp, on Garden Island, Western Australia.[5] Another, in Darwin on the site of the Quarantine Station, was named the Lugger Maintenance Section to disguise its true purpose.[6]

Plans for an attack on Singapore edit

In 1943, a 28-year-old British officer, Captain Ivan Lyon of the Allied Intelligence Bureau and Gordon Highlanders, and a 61-year-old Australian civilian, Bill Reynolds, devised a plan to attack Japanese shipping in Singapore Harbour. Z Special Unit would travel to the harbour in a disguised fishing boat. They would then use folding kayaks to attach limpet mines to Japanese ships. General Archibald Wavell approved the plan, and Lyon was sent to Australia to organise the operation.[7]

Bill Reynolds was in possession of a 21.3 m (70 ft) long Japanese coastal fishing boat, the Kofuku Maru, which he had used to evacuate refugees out of Singapore. Lyon ordered that the boat be shipped from India to Australia. Upon its arrival, he renamed the vessel MV Krait, after the small but deadly Asian snake.[7] Lieutenant-Colonel G. Egerton Mott, the chief of the Services Reconnaissance Department, suggested that they should test the effectiveness of the plan by making a mock raid on a tightly guarded Allied port. Townsville, Queensland was chosen for the location of the attack.[8]

Operation Scorpion edit

In January 1943, Lieutenant Samuel Warren Carey, a Z Special Unit officer based at Z Experimental Station, Cairns, Queensland, approached General Thomas Blamey with a proposition for a raid on the Japanese-occupied port at Rabaul, New Guinea. One submarine, with a small group of commandos on board, would be involved. The commandos would be dropped 16 km (9.9 mi) off Rabaul.[9]

They would then use their Hoehn military folboats (collapsible kayaks) to travel into the harbour and attach limpet mines to as many enemy ships as possible. They would then retreat to a volcano section roughly 6 km (3.7 mi) south of Rabaul, where they would hide out until they could safely rendezvous with the submarine. Blamey was sure that the unit would be captured and shot, but he authorised the operation, and issued Carey carte blanche authority to perform whatever actions he deemed necessary during the planning of the proposed operation, which was codenamed Operation Scorpion.[9]

By the end of March 1943, Carey had assembled a team of nine men on their base at Magnetic Island. Lyon and Mott arranged to have Carey's unit perform a mock attack on Townsville, although they were careful not to commit anything to paper. Townsville was a busy harbour full of troop transports, merchantmen and naval escort vessels, and tight security was maintained due to the constant threat of Japanese air and submarine attack.[10]

At midnight on 22 June 1943, the unit left Magnetic Island and paddled by folboat through the heavily mined mouth of Townsville Harbour. Dummy limpet mines were attached to ten ships, including two destroyers. The men rowed into Ross Creek, dismantled and hid their folboats, then travelled into Townsville to find a place to sleep. Around 10:00 am, the limpets were discovered, and panic ensued.[10]

Carey was arrested, and despite producing Blamey's letter and earnest assurances that the mines were dummies, they refused to allow him to leave or to allow the removal of the mines, which the RAN feared were real and might accidentally detonate. Mott was able to arrange Carey's release, but only on the condition that he left Z Special Unit.[10] Operation Scorpion was scrapped due to a lack of submarine transport, but Mott and Lyon had learned many valuable lessons from the raid.[9]

Operation Jaywick edit

Operation Jaywick was an Inter-Allied Services Department operation to infiltrate the Japanese-occupied Singapore Harbour and destroy shipping. On 2 September 1943, the Krait, with a crew of eleven Australian and four British personnel, left Exmouth Gulf, Western Australia. The group, commanded by Ivan Lyon, dyed their skin brown and hair black (the skin dye later caused many skin problems for the members of the team, including irritation and reactions in adverse amounts of sunlight). They also wore sarongs, so that they resembled Indonesian fisherman.[11]

They arrived off Singapore on 24 September and that night six men left the boat. They paddled 50 km (31 mi) to a small island near the harbour where a forward base was established in a cave. On the night of 26 September, using folboats the party paddled into the harbour and placed limpet mines on several Japanese ships. The mines sank or seriously damaged four Japanese ships, amounting to over 39,000 tons. The raiders waited until the commotion had died down before returning to the Krait. On 19 October the Krait arrived back at Exmouth Gulf having achieved a great success.[11]

Operation Rimau edit

Operation Rimau was a follow-up to the successful Operation Jaywick, which had taken place in 1943, being a further attack on Japanese shipping at Singapore Harbour. Rimau (Malay for "tiger") was again led by Lieutenant Colonel Ivan Lyon, a British officer on secondment from the Gordon Highlanders. Originally named Operation Hornbill, the goal of "Rimau" was to sink Japanese shipping by placing limpet mines on ships. It was intended that motorised semi-submersible canoes, known as Sleeping Beauties, would be used to gain access to the harbour.[12]

Lyon led a Services Reconnaissance Department party of twenty-two men. They left their base in Australia aboard the British submarine HMS Porpoise (N14) on 11 September 1944.[13] When they reached the island of Merapas, which was to be their forward base, it was discovered to be inhabited. To ensure that their stores would remain undiscovered by the natives one of the officers from the Porpoise, Lieutenant Walter Carey, remained on Merapas as a guard. The party then commandeered a Malay junk named Mustika, taking the Malay crew aboard the submarine. The SRD men transferred their equipment to the junk and the Porpoise departed. Lyon decided to drop off four more men with Carey: Corporal Colin Craft, Warrant Officer Alf Warren and Sergeant Colin Cameron.[14]

Meanwhile, the Mustika neared its target. On the day of the planned attack, 10 October 1944, disaster struck. A Japanese patrol boat from the Malay Heiho challenged the Mustika and someone on board opened fire, killing three Malays. Their cover blown, Lyon had no option but to abort the mission. After scuttling the junk and the Sleeping Beauties with explosives, he ordered his men back to Merapas. Unbeknownst to Lyon, two Malays had escaped overboard during the firing and had made their way ashore to report the incident.[15]

The Hoehn Mk III folboats stored in the Mustika were deployed to make the party's way to Merapas.[16] Using these folboats, Lyon led a small force of six other men—Lieutenant Commander Donald Davidson, Lieutenant Bobby Ross, Able Seaman Andrew Huston, Corporal Clair Stewart, Corporal Archie Campbell and Private Douglas Warne—into Singapore Harbour, where they are believed to have sunk three ships.[17] Lyon and twelve others were killed in action soon afterwards, and the remaining ten men were captured and later executed by beheading in July 1945.[18]

Operation Copper edit

 
Four of the crew members of Motor Launch (ML) 1321 and NX73110 Sapper (Spr) Edgar Thomas 'Mick' Dennis, Z Special Unit, the only survivor of the ill-fated raid on Muschu Island (off the coast of New Guinea), at Brisbane dockyard. May 1945

Operation Copper was one of the last Z Special operations in New Guinea. On the night of 11 April 1945, eight operatives were landed near Muschu Island by HDML patrol boat. Their mission was to paddle ashore and reconnoitre the island to determine the status of Japanese defences and validate reports that two 140 mm long-range naval guns were still in position. Intelligence suggested that these weapons were back in service and could prove dangerous during the forthcoming invasion of Wewak, as they had sufficient range to fire into the proposed landing areas and, while they would not stop the Australian invasion, they could cause significant casualties.[19]

Caught by unexpected currents the four folboats were pushed south of their landing area and came ashore amid a surf break. All boats were swamped and some items of equipment lost, but they made it ashore and harboured up until morning.[20] At daybreak they commenced their reconnaissance of the island, soon encountering Japanese who, unbeknownst to them, had found equipment that was washed ashore further along the island. Thus alerted, the island became a hunting ground, with almost 1,000 Japanese searching for the patrol.[21] Attempts to communicate by radio with the HDML patrol boat failed, as their radios had been swamped and the batteries ruined.[22]

Of the eight men, only one survived. Sapper Mick Dennis, an experienced commando who had previously fought the Japanese in New Guinea in several significant engagements, escaped after fighting his way through Japanese patrols.[23] He swam the channel to Wewak while being pursued by the Japanese and made his way through enemy territory to eventually meet up with an Australian patrol on 20 April.[24] The information he returned with proved vital to keeping the guns out of action and in preventing the Japanese from using the island as a launching point for attacks against the Australian forces during the Wewak landings a month later.[25]

In 2010 and 2013, expeditions to Muschu Island were conducted by MIA Australia, leading to the discovery of the remains of four of the Z Special Commandos lost on the Muschu raid.[26][27] In late February 2014 it was announced that the remains of former St George first grade rugby league player, Lance Corporal Spencer Henry Walklate, and Private Ronald Eagleton, would be laid to rest in May 2014 with full military honours at the Lae War Cemetery, where the other five men from Operation Copper are buried.[28]

Borneo edit

During 1943–45, Z Special Unit conducted surveillance, harassing attacks and sabotage behind Japanese lines in Borneo, as well as the training of natives in resistance activities. The first of these operations was Operation Python. Few details of these operations have been officially released, although details have emerged from the personal accounts of some Z Special Unit personnel. On 25 March 1945, Tom Harrisson was parachuted with seven Z Special operatives from a Consolidated Liberator onto a high plateau occupied by the Kelabit. An autobiographical account of this operation (SEMUT I, one of four SEMUT operations in the area) is given in World Within (Cresset Press, 1959); there are also reports—not always flattering—from some of his comrades. His efforts to rescue stranded American airmen shot down over Borneo are a central part of "The Airmen and the Headhunters," an episode of the PBS television series Secrets of the Dead.[29]

Throughout June and July 1945, several operations under the aegis of Operation Platypus were launched in the Balikpapan area of Borneo.[30]

New Zealand recruits edit

During the southern winter of 1944, twenty-two New Zealand soldiers,[31] based at Trentham Military Camp, 30 km (19 mi) north of Wellington, New Zealand were sent to train with Z Special Unit in Melbourne, Australia. They were then sent to Fraser Commando School, on Fraser Island, Queensland, to be trained in using parachutes, unarmed combat, explosives and the Malay language. Four New Zealanders were killed during operations in Borneo.[32][33]

Major Donald Stott and Captain McMillan were both presumed drowned in heavy seas while going ashore in a rubber boat from the submarine USS Perch (SS-313) in Balikpapan Bay on 20 March 1945. Their bodies were never found. Warrant Officer Houghton made it to shore in a second boat but was captured ten days later and languished in Balikpapan Prison where he died of beriberi about 20 April 1945.[32]

Signalman Ernie Myers, a trained Z Special Unit operative in Platypus VII, parachuted into enemy-held territory near Semoi on 30 June 1945, but landed with two other operatives inside a Japanese camp area. They resisted strongly, but the Australian in the party was killed and Myers was captured along with the Malay interpreter of the group. Both men were tortured for three days, before being beheaded. Their bodies were recovered soon after the Japanese surrender when Lieutenant Bob Tapper, another New Zealander who was working with the War Graves Commission, discovered their remains. Evidence given to the commission by native witnesses ensured that the Japanese involved paid the penalty for this atrocity.[32]

Vessels allocated to Z Special Unit edit

Snake-class boats edit

 
HMAS Tiger Snake in April 1945

The SRD used a number of vessels for its operations in South East Asia. Over the course of 1944–45 SRD took control of four 20 metres (66 ft) trawlers that were constructed at the naval dockyard in Williamstown, Victoria.[34] These vessels were modified with more powerful engines and alterations were made to their superstructures in order to disguise them and make them look more like the types of vessels that were operating in the waters around South East Asia.[34] They were designated "Snake-class" boats. Later, two more were built but they were not completed in time to see service during the war.[34]

On operations the Snake-class vessels operated in tandem with a mother-ship.[35] SRD operated two such vessels—HMAS Anaconda and HMAS Mother Snake—both of which were 38 metres (125 ft) long wooden motor vessels.[35] There was a third vessel laid down—AV 1358 (Greenogh)—but it did not see service with SRD during the war.[35] With a crew of 14, these vessels were mainly crewed by a mixture of Royal Australian Navy and Australian Army personnel with a naval lieutenant in command and an army captain as chief officer. The boats were officially commissioned ships and were outfitted with two 300–320-horsepower diesel engines and armed with one 20mm Oerlikon as well as a number of assorted smaller machine guns.[35]

Of the Snake-class boats that saw service, at least three were used to deploy Z operatives with Hoehn military folboats in enemy occupied areas for reconnaissance or small scale raids. HMAS River Snake went to Portuguese Timor, to deploy SUNCHARLIE operatives. HMAS Black Snake deployed GIRAFFE and SWIFT operatives in the Celebes and HMAS Tiger Snake sailed out of Sarawak to set down operatives of SEMUT IVB.[36]

After the war, the Anaconda remained in service until November 1946 when she was sold and converted into a fishing boat.[35] The fate of the Mother Snake is unknown, although it is believed that she remained in Borneo after the war.[35] The six Snake-class boats, however, along with the Krait were sold to the British Civil Administration in Borneo.[34] The MV Krait was originally restored in 1964 and used for training and recreation purposes by the Royal Volunteer Coastal Patrol. The vessel is part of the Australian War Memorial's collection, on loan to the Australian National Maritime Museum in Darling Harbour, Sydney.[37]

Other vessels edit

Legacy edit

 
Commemorative plaque to the Z Special Unit at Rockingham, WA

There is now a public memorial to the Z Special Unit on the esplanade in Cairns. It was moved from the naval base HMAS Cairns and rededicated on 26 October 2007. Those present at the ceremony were original unit members George Buckingham, John Mackay and the then commander of Special Operations of the Australian Defence Force, Major General Mike Hindmarsh. The RSL plans to erect a permanent display of military equipments nearby.[41][42]

Z Special Unit is one of the various special forces units commemorated on the New Zealand Special Air Service memorial at Papakura Military Camp in New Zealand.[43]

The Z Special Unit Association (NSW Branch) was disbanded in March 2010 due to a decline in members and the Association's last Sydney ANZAC Day march was held in 2010.[44] Commemorative plaques to Z Special Unit have been placed on each lamp post on the new jetty at Rockingham, Western Australia, and the activities of Z Special Unit have been depicted in several Australian films, TV series, and documentaries including Attack Force Z, The Highest Honor, The Heroes, Heroes II: The Return, and Australia's Secret Heroes.[45]

As of 2022, there is only one surviving member still living, Allan Russell. In July 2023 Ken O'Brien who served with the unit celebrated his 100th birthday in Hobart.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Horner 1989, p. 26
  2. ^ Courtney 1993, p. 14 and Horton 1983, p. 150
  3. ^ Horner 1989, p. 27
  4. ^ a b Dennis et al 2008, p. 508.
  5. ^ Powell 1996, p. 119 and pp. 196–198.
  6. ^ "Lugger Maintenance Section". Northern Territory Library. Department of the Arts and Museums, Northern Territory Government. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  7. ^ a b Courtney 1993, p. 3.
  8. ^ McKie 1960, pp. 45–53.
  9. ^ a b c Powell 1996, pp. 64–65.
  10. ^ a b c Thompson and Macklin 2002, pp. 59–61.
  11. ^ a b Courtney 1993, pp. 3–4.
  12. ^ Powell 1996, p. 124.
  13. ^ Thompson and Macklin 2002, p. 149.
  14. ^ Thompson and Macklin 2002, pp. 154–160.
  15. ^ Thompson and Macklin 2002, pp. 165–167.
  16. ^ Hoehn 2011, p. 70, 72 and pp.99-103
  17. ^ Thompson and Macklin 2002, p. 169.
  18. ^ Thompson and Macklin 2002, p. 210 and 243.
  19. ^ Dennis 2006, p. 58.
  20. ^ Dennis 2006, pp. 61–64.
  21. ^ Dennis 2006, pp. 65–67.
  22. ^ Dennis 2006, p. 70.
  23. ^ Dennis 2006, pp. 179–183.
  24. ^ Dennis 2006, p. 226.
  25. ^ Dennis 2006, pp. 233–234.
  26. ^ "Australian Z Special MIAs fate determined after 65 years". Guns of Musch MIA Project. Guns of Muschu.com. Retrieved 22 September 2013.[dead link]
  27. ^ McPhedran, Ian (18 May 2013). . News.com.au. News Limited Network. Archived from the original on 21 June 2013. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  28. ^ McPhedran, Ian. . Archived from the original on 12 January 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
  29. ^ Director: Mark Radice (11 November 2009). "The Airmen and the Headhunters". Secrets of the Dead. Season 9. Episode 2. PBS. Thirteen/WNET New York.
  30. ^ "The Official History of the Operations and Administration of Special Operations - Australia (SOA), Volume 2: Operations". RecordSearch. National Archives of Australia. p. 213. Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  31. ^ Sgt P. J. Boyle, Sgt W. J. Butt, Maj J. K. L. Brown, Sig A. J. Campbell, Cpl G. R. Edlin, Sig N. G. Flemming, S/Sgt G. R. Greenwood MID, Cpl J. K. Harris, Sgt W. H. Horrocks, WOII R. G. Houghton, Lt F. J. Leckie, Capt L. T. McMillan, Capt R. M. Morton MC, DCM, Sig E. H. Myers, Sgt R. J. Newdick, WOII L. N. Northover MM, Lt A. G. Palmer, Sgt R. B. Shakes, Sgt V. E. Sharp, Maj D. J. Stott DSO & Bar, Lt R. Tapper and Sgt F. A. Wigzell.
  32. ^ a b c Wigzell 2001.
  33. ^ McGibbon 2000, p. 627.
  34. ^ a b c d "Royal Australian Navy Gun Plot: Services Reconnaissance Department". Retrieved 16 June 2009.
  35. ^ a b c d e f "Royal Australian Navy Gun Plot: Z Special Unit – SRD Mother Ships". Retrieved 16 June 2009.
  36. ^ Hoehn 2011, pp. 69–71.
  37. ^ "Encyclopedia: Krait". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 18 June 2010.
  38. ^ a b c Register of Army Small Craft covering the period 1943 to 1946. Held by the Naval Historian at the Navy Office, Canberra.
  39. ^ Dennis 2006, p. 54.
  40. ^ Horton 1983, p. 148.
  41. ^ ABC 2 TV News 1900 AEST 27 October 2007.
  42. ^ Memorial move prompts ceremony for Z Force soldiers – Australian Broadcasting Corporation 23 October 2007, retrieved on 28 August 2008.
  43. ^ Fisher, David. "Inside the NZSAS: creating the elite soldier". www.nzherald.co.nz. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  44. ^ "Sydney Legacy Annual Review, 2010–2011" (PDF). Legacy Australia. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
  45. ^ "Australia's Secret Heroes S1 Ep1". www.sbs.com.au. SBS (Australian TV channel). Retrieved 26 July 2017.

References edit

  • Courtney, G.B. (1993). Silent Feet: The History of 'Z' Special Operations 1942–1945. Melbourne: R. J. and S. P. Austin. ISBN 978-0-64612-903-7.
  • Dennis, Don (2006). The Guns of Muschu. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74114-878-7.
  • Dennis, Peter; et al. (2008). The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History (Second ed.). Melbourne: Oxford University Press Australia & New Zealand. ISBN 9780195517842.
  • Hoehn, John (2011). Commando Kayak: The Role of the Folboat in the Pacific War. Hirsch Publishing. ISBN 978-3-0330-1717-7.
  • Horton, Dick (1983). Ring of Fire: Australian Guerilla Operations Against the Japanese in World War II. London: Leo Cooper/Secker and Warburg; Melbourne. ISBN 978-0-43620-157-8.
  • Horner, David (1989). SAS: Phantoms of the Jungle-A History of the Australian Special Air Service. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 0-04520-006-8.
  • McGibbon, Ian (2000). The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Military History. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-195-58376-0.
  • McKie, Ronald (1960). The Heroes: They Were Men of Z Force. Their Target–Singapore. Angus & Robertson. ISBN 0-207-12133-8.
  • Powell, Alan (1996). War by Stealth: Australians and the Allied Intelligence Bureau 1942–1945. Carlton South, Victoria: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84691-2.
  • Sue, Jack Wong (2001). Blood on Borneo. L. Smith (WA). ISBN 978-0-64641-656-4.
  • Thompson, Peter; Macklin, Robert (2002). Kill the Tiger: The Truth about Operation Rimau. Hodder. ISBN 978-0-73361-448-4.
  • Wigzell, Francis (2001). New Zealand Army Involvement: Special Operations Australia–South-West Pacific World War II. Pentland Press. ISBN 978-1-85821-815-1.

Further reading edit

  • Brown, C.A. (2011). The Official History of Special Operations – Australia. Volume 1: Organization. Lexington, KY: SOA Books. ISBN 978-1-4611-4092-4.
  • Brown, C.A. (2011). The Official History of Special Operations – Australia. Volume 2: Operations. Lexington, KY: SOA Books. ISBN 978-1-4611-9651-8.
  • Brown, C.A. (2012). The Official History of Special Operations – Australia. Volume 3: Communications. Lexington, KY: SOA Books. ISBN 978-1-4636-7351-2.
  • Brown, C.A. (2012). The S.R.D. Technical Handbook: Weapons and Equipment of Z Special Unit. Lexington, KY: SOA Books. ISBN 978-1-4781-7574-2.
  • Campbell, Lloyd (2006). Z-Special: Desert–Jungle–Sabotage. Australian Military History Publications. ISBN 978-1-8764-3963-7.
  • Connell, Brian (1971). Return of the Tiger. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-3300-2763-2.
  • Feuer, A.B (1996). Commando! The M/Z Unit's Secret War Against Japan. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-2759-5408-6.
  • Feuer, A.B (2006). Australian Commandos: Their Secret War Against the Japanese in World War II. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-3294-9.
  • Griffiths-Marsh, Roland (1990). Sixpenny Soldier. Australia: Collins-Angus & Robertson. (Republished as: Griffiths-Marsh, Roland (1995). I Was Only Sixteen. Potts Point, New South Wales: ETT Imprint. ISBN 1-8758-9209-5.
  • Harrisson, Tom (1959). World Within. A Borneo Story. London: Cresset Press. OCLC 736758.
  • Ind, Allison (1958). Allied Intelligence Bureau: Our Secret Weapon in the War Against Japan. New York: David Mckay Company Inc. OCLC 906064065.
  • Long, Bob (1999). 'Z' Special Unit's Secret War: Operation Semut 1. Soldiering with the Head-hunters in Borneo. Hornsby, New South Wales: Transpereon Press. ISBN 0-9080-2115-1.
  • McDonald, Gabrielle (1991). New Zealand's Secret Heroes: Don Stott And The 'Z' Special Unit. Reed. ISBN 978-0-7900-0216-3.
  • McKie, Ronald (1994). The Heroes: Daring Raiders of the Pacific War. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. ISBN 0-2071-8438-0.
  • Silver, Lynette Ramsay (1991). The Heroes of Rimau. S.A. Majeed. ISBN 978-9-8389-9156-8.
  • Thomas, Richard (2002). Never Ever Volunteer. Regal Publications. ISBN 1-876261-18-8.
  • Waddy, Rowan (1995). On Operations with Z Special Unit – WWII. Collaroy, New South Wales: Rowan E. Waddy. OCLC 222234110.

External links edit

    special, unit, other, uses, force, joint, allied, special, forces, unit, formed, during, second, world, operate, behind, japanese, lines, south, east, asia, predominantly, australian, specialist, reconnaissance, sabotage, unit, that, included, british, dutch, . For other uses see Z Force Z Special Unit z ɛ d was a joint Allied special forces unit formed during the Second World War to operate behind Japanese lines in South East Asia Predominantly Australian Z Special Unit was a specialist reconnaissance and sabotage unit that included British Dutch New Zealand Timorese and Indonesian members predominantly operating on Borneo and the islands of the former Dutch East Indies 1 Z Special UnitCrew of the MV Krait during Operation Jaywick 1943Active1942 1946Country Australia Netherlands New Zealand United KingdomAllegianceAlliedTypeSpecial forcesRoleGuerrilla warfareSpecial operationsSpecial reconnaissancePart ofSRD Allied Intelligence BureauEngagementsWorld War II Operation ScorpionOperation JaywickOperation RimauOperation BinatangBorneo campaign Operation SemutOperation AgasOperation PythonOperation CopperOperation OpossumOperation Platypus The unit carried out a total of 81 covert operations in the South West Pacific theatre with parties inserted by parachute or submarine to provide intelligence and conduct guerrilla warfare 2 The best known of these missions were Operation Jaywick and Operation Rimau both of which involved raids on Japanese shipping in Singapore Harbour the latter of which resulted in the deaths of 23 commandos either in action or by execution after capture 1 Although the unit was disbanded after the war many of the training techniques and operational procedures employed were later used during the formation of other Australian Army special forces units and they remain a model for guerrilla operations to this day 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation and training 1 2 Plans for an attack on Singapore 1 3 Operation Scorpion 1 4 Operation Jaywick 1 5 Operation Rimau 1 6 Operation Copper 1 7 Borneo 2 New Zealand recruits 3 Vessels allocated to Z Special Unit 3 1 Snake class boats 3 2 Other vessels 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editFormation and training edit The Inter Allied Services Department IASD was an Allied military intelligence unit established in March 1942 The unit was created at the suggestion of the commander of Allied land forces in the South West Pacific area General Thomas Blamey and was modelled on the British Special Operations Executive SOE in London It was renamed Special Operations Australia SOA and in 1943 became known as the Services Reconnaissance Department SRD 4 It contained several British SOE officers who had escaped from Singapore and they formed the nucleus of the Inter Allied Services Department ISD which was based in Melbourne In June 1942 an ISD raiding commando unit was organised designated Z Special Unit 4 Several training schools were established in various locations across Australia the most notable being Camp Z in Refuge Bay an offshoot of Broken Bay to the north of Sydney Z Experimental Station also known as the House on the Hill or ZES near Cairns Queensland Fraser Commando School or FCS on Fraser Island Queensland where a commemorative monument stands on the mainland overlooking the island As a training exercise one group led by Samuel Warren Carey paddled folboats between Fraser Island and Cairns Another training school was the Special Boat Section at Careening Bay Camp on Garden Island Western Australia 5 Another in Darwin on the site of the Quarantine Station was named the Lugger Maintenance Section to disguise its true purpose 6 Plans for an attack on Singapore edit In 1943 a 28 year old British officer Captain Ivan Lyon of the Allied Intelligence Bureau and Gordon Highlanders and a 61 year old Australian civilian Bill Reynolds devised a plan to attack Japanese shipping in Singapore Harbour Z Special Unit would travel to the harbour in a disguised fishing boat They would then use folding kayaks to attach limpet mines to Japanese ships General Archibald Wavell approved the plan and Lyon was sent to Australia to organise the operation 7 Bill Reynolds was in possession of a 21 3 m 70 ft long Japanese coastal fishing boat the Kofuku Maru which he had used to evacuate refugees out of Singapore Lyon ordered that the boat be shipped from India to Australia Upon its arrival he renamed the vessel MV Krait after the small but deadly Asian snake 7 Lieutenant Colonel G Egerton Mott the chief of the Services Reconnaissance Department suggested that they should test the effectiveness of the plan by making a mock raid on a tightly guarded Allied port Townsville Queensland was chosen for the location of the attack 8 Operation Scorpion edit Main article Operation Scorpion World War Two In January 1943 Lieutenant Samuel Warren Carey a Z Special Unit officer based at Z Experimental Station Cairns Queensland approached General Thomas Blamey with a proposition for a raid on the Japanese occupied port at Rabaul New Guinea One submarine with a small group of commandos on board would be involved The commandos would be dropped 16 km 9 9 mi off Rabaul 9 They would then use their Hoehn military folboats collapsible kayaks to travel into the harbour and attach limpet mines to as many enemy ships as possible They would then retreat to a volcano section roughly 6 km 3 7 mi south of Rabaul where they would hide out until they could safely rendezvous with the submarine Blamey was sure that the unit would be captured and shot but he authorised the operation and issued Carey carte blanche authority to perform whatever actions he deemed necessary during the planning of the proposed operation which was codenamed Operation Scorpion 9 By the end of March 1943 Carey had assembled a team of nine men on their base at Magnetic Island Lyon and Mott arranged to have Carey s unit perform a mock attack on Townsville although they were careful not to commit anything to paper Townsville was a busy harbour full of troop transports merchantmen and naval escort vessels and tight security was maintained due to the constant threat of Japanese air and submarine attack 10 At midnight on 22 June 1943 the unit left Magnetic Island and paddled by folboat through the heavily mined mouth of Townsville Harbour Dummy limpet mines were attached to ten ships including two destroyers The men rowed into Ross Creek dismantled and hid their folboats then travelled into Townsville to find a place to sleep Around 10 00 am the limpets were discovered and panic ensued 10 Carey was arrested and despite producing Blamey s letter and earnest assurances that the mines were dummies they refused to allow him to leave or to allow the removal of the mines which the RAN feared were real and might accidentally detonate Mott was able to arrange Carey s release but only on the condition that he left Z Special Unit 10 Operation Scorpion was scrapped due to a lack of submarine transport but Mott and Lyon had learned many valuable lessons from the raid 9 Operation Jaywick edit Main article Operation Jaywick Operation Jaywick was an Inter Allied Services Department operation to infiltrate the Japanese occupied Singapore Harbour and destroy shipping On 2 September 1943 the Krait with a crew of eleven Australian and four British personnel left Exmouth Gulf Western Australia The group commanded by Ivan Lyon dyed their skin brown and hair black the skin dye later caused many skin problems for the members of the team including irritation and reactions in adverse amounts of sunlight They also wore sarongs so that they resembled Indonesian fisherman 11 They arrived off Singapore on 24 September and that night six men left the boat They paddled 50 km 31 mi to a small island near the harbour where a forward base was established in a cave On the night of 26 September using folboats the party paddled into the harbour and placed limpet mines on several Japanese ships The mines sank or seriously damaged four Japanese ships amounting to over 39 000 tons The raiders waited until the commotion had died down before returning to the Krait On 19 October the Krait arrived back at Exmouth Gulf having achieved a great success 11 Operation Rimau edit Main article Operation Rimau Operation Rimau was a follow up to the successful Operation Jaywick which had taken place in 1943 being a further attack on Japanese shipping at Singapore Harbour Rimau Malay for tiger was again led by Lieutenant Colonel Ivan Lyon a British officer on secondment from the Gordon Highlanders Originally named Operation Hornbill the goal of Rimau was to sink Japanese shipping by placing limpet mines on ships It was intended that motorised semi submersible canoes known as Sleeping Beauties would be used to gain access to the harbour 12 Lyon led a Services Reconnaissance Department party of twenty two men They left their base in Australia aboard the British submarine HMS Porpoise N14 on 11 September 1944 13 When they reached the island of Merapas which was to be their forward base it was discovered to be inhabited To ensure that their stores would remain undiscovered by the natives one of the officers from the Porpoise Lieutenant Walter Carey remained on Merapas as a guard The party then commandeered a Malay junk named Mustika taking the Malay crew aboard the submarine The SRD men transferred their equipment to the junk and the Porpoise departed Lyon decided to drop off four more men with Carey Corporal Colin Craft Warrant Officer Alf Warren and Sergeant Colin Cameron 14 Meanwhile the Mustika neared its target On the day of the planned attack 10 October 1944 disaster struck A Japanese patrol boat from the Malay Heiho challenged the Mustika and someone on board opened fire killing three Malays Their cover blown Lyon had no option but to abort the mission After scuttling the junk and the Sleeping Beauties with explosives he ordered his men back to Merapas Unbeknownst to Lyon two Malays had escaped overboard during the firing and had made their way ashore to report the incident 15 The Hoehn Mk III folboats stored in the Mustika were deployed to make the party s way to Merapas 16 Using these folboats Lyon led a small force of six other men Lieutenant Commander Donald Davidson Lieutenant Bobby Ross Able Seaman Andrew Huston Corporal Clair Stewart Corporal Archie Campbell and Private Douglas Warne into Singapore Harbour where they are believed to have sunk three ships 17 Lyon and twelve others were killed in action soon afterwards and the remaining ten men were captured and later executed by beheading in July 1945 18 Operation Copper edit Main article Operation Copper nbsp Four of the crew members of Motor Launch ML 1321 and NX73110 Sapper Spr Edgar Thomas Mick Dennis Z Special Unit the only survivor of the ill fated raid on Muschu Island off the coast of New Guinea at Brisbane dockyard May 1945 Operation Copper was one of the last Z Special operations in New Guinea On the night of 11 April 1945 eight operatives were landed near Muschu Island by HDML patrol boat Their mission was to paddle ashore and reconnoitre the island to determine the status of Japanese defences and validate reports that two 140 mm long range naval guns were still in position Intelligence suggested that these weapons were back in service and could prove dangerous during the forthcoming invasion of Wewak as they had sufficient range to fire into the proposed landing areas and while they would not stop the Australian invasion they could cause significant casualties 19 Caught by unexpected currents the four folboats were pushed south of their landing area and came ashore amid a surf break All boats were swamped and some items of equipment lost but they made it ashore and harboured up until morning 20 At daybreak they commenced their reconnaissance of the island soon encountering Japanese who unbeknownst to them had found equipment that was washed ashore further along the island Thus alerted the island became a hunting ground with almost 1 000 Japanese searching for the patrol 21 Attempts to communicate by radio with the HDML patrol boat failed as their radios had been swamped and the batteries ruined 22 Of the eight men only one survived Sapper Mick Dennis an experienced commando who had previously fought the Japanese in New Guinea in several significant engagements escaped after fighting his way through Japanese patrols 23 He swam the channel to Wewak while being pursued by the Japanese and made his way through enemy territory to eventually meet up with an Australian patrol on 20 April 24 The information he returned with proved vital to keeping the guns out of action and in preventing the Japanese from using the island as a launching point for attacks against the Australian forces during the Wewak landings a month later 25 In 2010 and 2013 expeditions to Muschu Island were conducted by MIA Australia leading to the discovery of the remains of four of the Z Special Commandos lost on the Muschu raid 26 27 In late February 2014 it was announced that the remains of former St George first grade rugby league player Lance Corporal Spencer Henry Walklate and Private Ronald Eagleton would be laid to rest in May 2014 with full military honours at the Lae War Cemetery where the other five men from Operation Copper are buried 28 Borneo edit Main articles Operation Python 1943 44 Operation Agas Operation Semut Operation Opossum and Operation Platypus During 1943 45 Z Special Unit conducted surveillance harassing attacks and sabotage behind Japanese lines in Borneo as well as the training of natives in resistance activities The first of these operations was Operation Python Few details of these operations have been officially released although details have emerged from the personal accounts of some Z Special Unit personnel On 25 March 1945 Tom Harrisson was parachuted with seven Z Special operatives from a Consolidated Liberator onto a high plateau occupied by the Kelabit An autobiographical account of this operation SEMUT I one of four SEMUT operations in the area is given in World Within Cresset Press 1959 there are also reports not always flattering from some of his comrades His efforts to rescue stranded American airmen shot down over Borneo are a central part of The Airmen and the Headhunters an episode of the PBS television series Secrets of the Dead 29 Throughout June and July 1945 several operations under the aegis of Operation Platypus were launched in the Balikpapan area of Borneo 30 New Zealand recruits editDuring the southern winter of 1944 twenty two New Zealand soldiers 31 based at Trentham Military Camp 30 km 19 mi north of Wellington New Zealand were sent to train with Z Special Unit in Melbourne Australia They were then sent to Fraser Commando School on Fraser Island Queensland to be trained in using parachutes unarmed combat explosives and the Malay language Four New Zealanders were killed during operations in Borneo 32 33 Major Donald Stott and Captain McMillan were both presumed drowned in heavy seas while going ashore in a rubber boat from the submarine USS Perch SS 313 in Balikpapan Bay on 20 March 1945 Their bodies were never found Warrant Officer Houghton made it to shore in a second boat but was captured ten days later and languished in Balikpapan Prison where he died of beriberi about 20 April 1945 32 Signalman Ernie Myers a trained Z Special Unit operative in Platypus VII parachuted into enemy held territory near Semoi on 30 June 1945 but landed with two other operatives inside a Japanese camp area They resisted strongly but the Australian in the party was killed and Myers was captured along with the Malay interpreter of the group Both men were tortured for three days before being beheaded Their bodies were recovered soon after the Japanese surrender when Lieutenant Bob Tapper another New Zealander who was working with the War Graves Commission discovered their remains Evidence given to the commission by native witnesses ensured that the Japanese involved paid the penalty for this atrocity 32 Vessels allocated to Z Special Unit editSnake class boats edit Further information Snake class junk nbsp HMAS Tiger Snake in April 1945 The SRD used a number of vessels for its operations in South East Asia Over the course of 1944 45 SRD took control of four 20 metres 66 ft trawlers that were constructed at the naval dockyard in Williamstown Victoria 34 These vessels were modified with more powerful engines and alterations were made to their superstructures in order to disguise them and make them look more like the types of vessels that were operating in the waters around South East Asia 34 They were designated Snake class boats Later two more were built but they were not completed in time to see service during the war 34 On operations the Snake class vessels operated in tandem with a mother ship 35 SRD operated two such vessels HMAS Anaconda and HMAS Mother Snake both of which were 38 metres 125 ft long wooden motor vessels 35 There was a third vessel laid down AV 1358 Greenogh but it did not see service with SRD during the war 35 With a crew of 14 these vessels were mainly crewed by a mixture of Royal Australian Navy and Australian Army personnel with a naval lieutenant in command and an army captain as chief officer The boats were officially commissioned ships and were outfitted with two 300 320 horsepower diesel engines and armed with one 20mm Oerlikon as well as a number of assorted smaller machine guns 35 Of the Snake class boats that saw service at least three were used to deploy Z operatives with Hoehn military folboats in enemy occupied areas for reconnaissance or small scale raids HMAS River Snake went to Portuguese Timor to deploy SUNCHARLIE operatives HMAS Black Snake deployed GIRAFFE and SWIFT operatives in the Celebes and HMAS Tiger Snake sailed out of Sarawak to set down operatives of SEMUT IVB 36 After the war the Anaconda remained in service until November 1946 when she was sold and converted into a fishing boat 35 The fate of the Mother Snake is unknown although it is believed that she remained in Borneo after the war 35 The six Snake class boats however along with the Krait were sold to the British Civil Administration in Borneo 34 The MV Krait was originally restored in 1964 and used for training and recreation purposes by the Royal Volunteer Coastal Patrol The vessel is part of the Australian War Memorial s collection on loan to the Australian National Maritime Museum in Darling Harbour Sydney 37 Other vessels edit AL254 Charm a 14 m 47 ft lugger 38 AM355 an 5 5 m 18 ft launch 38 AB1184 3064 and AB1185 3065 Both ALC15 landing craft 38 HDML 1321 39 HDML 1324 40 Legacy edit nbsp Commemorative plaque to the Z Special Unit at Rockingham WA There is now a public memorial to the Z Special Unit on the esplanade in Cairns It was moved from the naval base HMAS Cairns and rededicated on 26 October 2007 Those present at the ceremony were original unit members George Buckingham John Mackay and the then commander of Special Operations of the Australian Defence Force Major General Mike Hindmarsh The RSL plans to erect a permanent display of military equipments nearby 41 42 Z Special Unit is one of the various special forces units commemorated on the New Zealand Special Air Service memorial at Papakura Military Camp in New Zealand 43 The Z Special Unit Association NSW Branch was disbanded in March 2010 due to a decline in members and the Association s last Sydney ANZAC Day march was held in 2010 44 Commemorative plaques to Z Special Unit have been placed on each lamp post on the new jetty at Rockingham Western Australia and the activities of Z Special Unit have been depicted in several Australian films TV series and documentaries including Attack Force Z The Highest Honor The Heroes Heroes II The Return and Australia s Secret Heroes 45 As of 2022 there is only one surviving member still living Allan Russell In July 2023 Ken O Brien who served with the unit celebrated his 100th birthday in Hobart See also edit nbsp Australia portal Allied Intelligence Bureau Far Eastern Liaison Office Secret Intelligence Australia Netherlands East Indies Forces Intelligence ServiceNotes edit a b Horner 1989 p 26 Courtney 1993 p 14 and Horton 1983 p 150 Horner 1989 p 27 a b Dennis et al 2008 p 508 Powell 1996 p 119 and pp 196 198 Lugger Maintenance Section Northern Territory Library Department of the Arts and Museums Northern Territory Government Retrieved 13 November 2016 a b Courtney 1993 p 3 McKie 1960 pp 45 53 a b c Powell 1996 pp 64 65 a b c Thompson and Macklin 2002 pp 59 61 a b Courtney 1993 pp 3 4 Powell 1996 p 124 Thompson and Macklin 2002 p 149 Thompson and Macklin 2002 pp 154 160 Thompson and Macklin 2002 pp 165 167 Hoehn 2011 p 70 72 and pp 99 103 Thompson and Macklin 2002 p 169 Thompson and Macklin 2002 p 210 and 243 Dennis 2006 p 58 Dennis 2006 pp 61 64 Dennis 2006 pp 65 67 Dennis 2006 p 70 Dennis 2006 pp 179 183 Dennis 2006 p 226 Dennis 2006 pp 233 234 Australian Z Special MIAs fate determined after 65 years Guns of Musch MIA Project Guns of Muschu com Retrieved 22 September 2013 dead link McPhedran Ian 18 May 2013 Remains found in PNG thought to be those of lost Australian soldiers News com au News Limited Network Archived from the original on 21 June 2013 Retrieved 22 September 2013 McPhedran Ian WWII soldiers Spencer Henry Walklate and Ronald Eagleton to be buried Archived from the original on 12 January 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2014 Director Mark Radice 11 November 2009 The Airmen and the Headhunters Secrets of the Dead Season 9 Episode 2 PBS Thirteen WNET New York The Official History of the Operations and Administration of Special Operations Australia SOA Volume 2 Operations RecordSearch National Archives of Australia p 213 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Sgt P J Boyle Sgt W J Butt Maj J K L Brown Sig A J Campbell Cpl G R Edlin Sig N G Flemming S Sgt G R Greenwood MID Cpl J K Harris Sgt W H Horrocks WOII R G Houghton Lt F J Leckie Capt L T McMillan Capt R M Morton MC DCM Sig E H Myers Sgt R J Newdick WOII L N Northover MM Lt A G Palmer Sgt R B Shakes Sgt V E Sharp Maj D J Stott DSO amp Bar Lt R Tapper and Sgt F A Wigzell a b c Wigzell 2001 McGibbon 2000 p 627 a b c d Royal Australian Navy Gun Plot Services Reconnaissance Department Retrieved 16 June 2009 a b c d e f Royal Australian Navy Gun Plot Z Special Unit SRD Mother Ships Retrieved 16 June 2009 Hoehn 2011 pp 69 71 Encyclopedia Krait Australian War Memorial Retrieved 18 June 2010 a b c Register of Army Small Craft covering the period 1943 to 1946 Held by the Naval Historian at the Navy Office Canberra Dennis 2006 p 54 Horton 1983 p 148 ABC 2 TV News 1900 AEST 27 October 2007 Memorial move prompts ceremony for Z Force soldiers Australian Broadcasting Corporation 23 October 2007 retrieved on 28 August 2008 Fisher David Inside the NZSAS creating the elite soldier www nzherald co nz Retrieved 12 January 2022 Sydney Legacy Annual Review 2010 2011 PDF Legacy Australia Retrieved 22 September 2013 Australia s Secret Heroes S1 Ep1 www sbs com au SBS Australian TV channel Retrieved 26 July 2017 References editCourtney G B 1993 Silent Feet The History of Z Special Operations 1942 1945 Melbourne R J and S P Austin ISBN 978 0 64612 903 7 Dennis Don 2006 The Guns of Muschu Sydney Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 74114 878 7 Dennis Peter et al 2008 The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History Second ed Melbourne Oxford University Press Australia amp New Zealand ISBN 9780195517842 Hoehn John 2011 Commando Kayak The Role of the Folboat in the Pacific War Hirsch Publishing ISBN 978 3 0330 1717 7 Horton Dick 1983 Ring of Fire Australian Guerilla Operations Against the Japanese in World War II London Leo Cooper Secker and Warburg Melbourne ISBN 978 0 43620 157 8 Horner David 1989 SAS Phantoms of the Jungle A History of the Australian Special Air Service Sydney Allen amp Unwin ISBN 0 04520 006 8 McGibbon Ian 2000 The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Military History South Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 0 195 58376 0 McKie Ronald 1960 The Heroes They Were Men of Z Force Their Target Singapore Angus amp Robertson ISBN 0 207 12133 8 Powell Alan 1996 War by Stealth Australians and the Allied Intelligence Bureau 1942 1945 Carlton South Victoria Melbourne University Press ISBN 0 522 84691 2 Sue Jack Wong 2001 Blood on Borneo L Smith WA ISBN 978 0 64641 656 4 Thompson Peter Macklin Robert 2002 Kill the Tiger The Truth about Operation Rimau Hodder ISBN 978 0 73361 448 4 Wigzell Francis 2001 New Zealand Army Involvement Special Operations Australia South West Pacific World War II Pentland Press ISBN 978 1 85821 815 1 Further reading editBrown C A 2011 The Official History of Special Operations Australia Volume 1 Organization Lexington KY SOA Books ISBN 978 1 4611 4092 4 Brown C A 2011 The Official History of Special Operations Australia Volume 2 Operations Lexington KY SOA Books ISBN 978 1 4611 9651 8 Brown C A 2012 The Official History of Special Operations Australia Volume 3 Communications Lexington KY SOA Books ISBN 978 1 4636 7351 2 Brown C A 2012 The S R D Technical Handbook Weapons and Equipment of Z Special Unit Lexington KY SOA Books ISBN 978 1 4781 7574 2 Campbell Lloyd 2006 Z Special Desert Jungle Sabotage Australian Military History Publications ISBN 978 1 8764 3963 7 Connell Brian 1971 Return of the Tiger Macmillan ISBN 978 0 3300 2763 2 Feuer A B 1996 Commando The M Z Unit s Secret War Against Japan Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 2759 5408 6 Feuer A B 2006 Australian Commandos Their Secret War Against the Japanese in World War II Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 3294 9 Griffiths Marsh Roland 1990 Sixpenny Soldier Australia Collins Angus amp Robertson Republished as Griffiths Marsh Roland 1995 I Was Only Sixteen Potts Point New South Wales ETT Imprint ISBN 1 8758 9209 5 Harrisson Tom 1959 World Within A Borneo Story London Cresset Press OCLC 736758 Ind Allison 1958 Allied Intelligence Bureau Our Secret Weapon in the War Against Japan New York David Mckay Company Inc OCLC 906064065 Long Bob 1999 Z Special Unit s Secret War Operation Semut 1 Soldiering with the Head hunters in Borneo Hornsby New South Wales Transpereon Press ISBN 0 9080 2115 1 McDonald Gabrielle 1991 New Zealand s Secret Heroes Don Stott And The Z Special Unit Reed ISBN 978 0 7900 0216 3 McKie Ronald 1994 The Heroes Daring Raiders of the Pacific War Sydney Angus amp Robertson ISBN 0 2071 8438 0 Silver Lynette Ramsay 1991 The Heroes of Rimau S A Majeed ISBN 978 9 8389 9156 8 Thomas Richard 2002 Never Ever Volunteer Regal Publications ISBN 1 876261 18 8 Waddy Rowan 1995 On Operations with Z Special Unit WWII Collaroy New South Wales Rowan E Waddy OCLC 222234110 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Z Special Unit Special Operations Australia website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Z Special Unit amp oldid 1207244335, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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