Aboriginals and Torres Strait Islanders were used in WWII as a recon and surveilance force. They wouldn't have to engage the commandos, simply track them down and radio their position. I don't care how elite the Germans were, in the Australian bush they would easily be tracked down by the aborigines. I highly doubt anyone could successfully cover all their tracks, especially if they're hauling around heavy weapons or driving through the bush in trucks.
The heavy equipment wouldn't be hauled into the bush, it would either be dug down or hidden somewhere.
As for the Aboriginals tracking the Commandos down easily, that's hardly so. Like I said the commandos would be split up in small teams, some on foot others by car/truck.
Their camo uniforms might be great for Europe but would stand out like dog balls in the Australian bush.
You don't know allot of German uniforms do you ?
You don't seriously believe they would go to Australia with European style camo uniforms do you ? Did they do that in Africa ?
The German army had camo uniforms for every season at every inviroment on earth. Infact I'd imagine the uniform to be used in Australia would be the double sided desert/vegetation camo uniform used in Africa.
Their concealment skills aren't going to help either, as their "tracks" will lead the aboriginals straight to them.
Well the tracks are only helpful in telling you which way what you're trying catch went, it doesn't tell you where it is, which is the dangerous part.
Say the Aboriginals tracks down one of the two man teams, they follow the tracks. The Commandos however make usual stops to make sure their not being followed. At one point the Commandos will spot the ones who are trying to track them down, and when they do they'll know exactly what to do. The tactic is simple, lead your enemies into the open, and once they're there you pick them off one by one from long range.
Agreed, however if the aboriginals were to be used to engage the enemy, it would be in guerrilla type warfare, not stand in the open and throw a boomerang at them. They would simply appear out of the bush, kill one or two at a time with spears and then melt back into the landscape. If they can do this to animals, what chance has a human got?
That's a suicide mission against men wielding fully automatic rifles which can shoot through meter thick trees.
Also how are you to sneak up on them? First of all you have to track them to even get any idea of where they're going. Next you gotta be careful you've not been spotted whilst trying to find tracks, as an ambush might then very well be waiting right around the corner. And trust me, you don't wanna be ambushed by experts with machineguns.