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So the bombing of Darwin was not the responsibility of the RN to protect the borders of Australia? Help me out here.
Looks like HMS Repulse's Dec 1941 run to Darwin was as close as Australia got to have any heavy RN units since the February 1924 Sydney visit by HMS Hood and Repulse. It's too bad that the entirety of Force Z wasn't at Darwin when the shooting started, as they would have likely have been more diligently employed, including waiting for a carrier (Hermes or Indomitable) to arrive.
HMS Repulse, British battlecruiser, WW2
5th – REPULSE escorted by the destroyers TENEDOS and HMAS VAMPIRE sailed from Singapore for Darwin for a 'showing the flag' visit to Australia.
6th – At 1330 hours en route to Darwin, REPULSE and her escort were recalled to Singapore.
In Feb 1942, HMS Hermes was ordered to Freemantle where the Allies had a regional command centre, but was recalled to Ceylon to join Sommerville's eastern fleet.
That would have been something, Warspite, probably the luckiest dreadnought ever to serve in the RN (hit 15 times at Jutland, first aircraft to sink a U-boat in the war, scored a 24 km (26,000 yd) hit at Calabria and survived a direct hit, near miss by Fritz X guided bombs and broke away on her way to the breakers), against Nagato or one of the 14" armed IJN ships. If ever there was a big gun ship that deserved to be preserved alongside Nelson's Victory it was Warspite.Ramilles operated in New Zealand and Australian waters in 1939/40, and Warspite was conducting gunnery exercises whilst briefly based at Sydney NSW, in Feb 1942. The IJN was convinced that she was part of ABDA and Coral Sea operations.
So the bombing of Darwin was not the responsibility of the RN to protect the borders of Australia? Help me out here.
Bringing back on topic.... that's why I want the Ceylon trap to be mostly an RAF affair. Sommerville can take the sloppy seconds.Lord no, never send carriers to defend when you have a land base within range.
From the perspective of credibility, it is disastrous. The Empire was like a protection racket as well as a free trade zone. Not being able to protect them means they'll go for independence. Insurrections followed post-war in French Vietnam, Dutch Indonesia and British Malaya. Repercussions followed in British Kenya. Wars that lasted for 30 years. Australia and New Zealand turned to America for protection. That's why Australia always sides with America immediately.The Eastern fleet was there to protect Ceylon and not Australia.
So....Warspite and the R class were slow by standards of 1942 and had no chance of chasing anything in the Kriegsmarine. So putting them in the Indian Ocean is fair enough.
We talk about loss of Singapore as been a disaster. Not really. It never endangered the existence of the UK.
Loss of the Mediterranean or loss in the U boat war would have been far worse. So I would not put my eggs in one less important secondary basket against what could be a superior opponent.
Yes, Atlantic & Arctic Oceans, Mediterranean & Red Seas and the Indo-Pacific theatres. the Brits can't win.Yes.
UK and other allied powers like the Dutch and French were seen as weak and vulnerable and lost all their colonies.
End of the day UK was at war with 3 navies in 3 scenarios in 3 different theatres of war.
The RN had seen Japan as enemy No1 before so had the enemy only been Japan then yeah....send the lot and with the Dutch and French and our dominions then we would have kicked the IJN back to Tokyo. Sorted.
The fall of Gibraltar or Suez would have been far more damaging.
A war of attrition is a better bet than a one off winner takes all rumble.
It's ok if you win but it sucks if you lose.
That's like saying the loss at Yorktown and the entirety of the 13 colonies wasn't a disaster because the existence of the UK wasn't in question.We talk about loss of Singapore as been a disaster. Not really. It never endangered the existence of the UK.
The British Empire is dead, long live the American Empire.?
You build a world empire with multiple commitment and the when it all falls down you don't have the capacity or capabilities to save it.
Sometimes your eyes are bigger than your belly.
As far as Australia being self defending in 1940-41 goes
Population of Tokyo-Yokohama in 1940................12,740,000
Population of Japan in 1940...................................... 73,114,308
Population of Australia in 1940...................................7,077,586
Were the Japanese using all of their strength against Australia ?......No
Could the Australians have had a better defense?..........................Yes
Would it have made much difference?
Population of the UK in 1941....................................48,216,000
Granted Japan was a somewhat poorer nation but the disparity in size of population means Australia would never be able to defend itself against the Japanese without help and the addition of a few destroyers or a light cruiser or a few dozen airplanes was not going to change that.
See this Wiki page for information on the Wirraway. CAC Wirraway - Wikipedia
If the Australians had started earlier what would they have had?
3-4 dozen Hawker Harts or Harts with radial engines?
Perhaps a "factory" that could build 3-6 Harts per month could have been modified to build the N/A-16 or another plane somewhat faster than was done but you still aren't going to get Spitfires by the score in 1941/42.
I am in no way trying to degrade Australia's contribution to the allied efforts in WW II. Australia punched way above her weight. But her weight was limited.
That's like saying the loss at Yorktown and the entirety of the 13 colonies wasn't a disaster because the existence of the UK wasn't in question.
By your book if the inhabitants of the British Isles aren't invaded, there's no disaster. So, no disasters since Hastings in 1066? That's a very good, nearly one thousand year run of not one military disaster.
The Eastern fleet was there to protect Ceylon and not Australia.
So....Warspite and the R class were slow by standards of 1942 and had no chance of chasing anything in the Kriegsmarine. So putting them in the Indian Ocean is fair enough.
We talk about loss of Singapore as been a disaster. Not really. It never endangered the existence of the UK.
Loss of the Mediterranean or loss in the U boat war would have been far worse. So I would not put my eggs in one less important secondary basket against what could be a superior opponent.
You refer to Galipoli as a disaster, but not the loss of Malaya and Singapore. Your criteria for disaster labeling makes no sense. I had a longer rebuttal drafted but there's no point, and we'd be threadjacking the thread off topic. Back to Ceylon I go.....Look at Gallipoli....total disaster of the first order.