Australian involvement in South-East Asian Conflicts

The Malayan Emergency (1948-1960) and the Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation (Konfrontasi) (1962-1966)

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The Indonesian Confrontation (Konfrontasi) (1963-1966): Operations

The SAS in Borneo

Members of 1SAS Squadron, Lance-Corporal Leo Walsh, Private Charlie Adamson, Sergeant Chris Pope, Lance-Corporal Ron McHugh and Captain Ian Gollings, before embarking on a patrol in Borneo. During 1965, before the SAS began participating in Claret operations, its members were involved in patrolling the Malaysian side of the border with Indonesia on what were called ‘hearts and minds’ operations whereby they would live in the vicinity of local villages providing medical and other assistance. In return they hoped to gain the villagers’ confidence and encourage them to pass on information they may have received about the Indonesians across the border. It is likely that the men in this image were about to leave on such a patrol. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]

Members of 1SAS Squadron, Lance-Corporal Leo Walsh, Private Charlie Adamson, Sergeant Chris Pope, Lance-Corporal Ron McHugh and Captain Ian Gollings, before embarking on a patrol in Borneo. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]

The Australian Special Air Service (SAS) gained its first experience of active service overseas in Borneo during the Confrontation. The first SAS soldiers reached Brunei in February 1965. While cross-border operations into Indonesia’s Kalimantan had been taking place before the Australians arrived in Borneo, participation was limited to experienced troops. The Australian SAS’s first patrols took place on the Malaysian side of the border and were mainly intended to obtain topographical information on tracks, rivers and villages as well as conducting surveillance of known border crossing points and shadowing Indonesian infiltrators. Patrols were ordered to avoid contact, but if an incident took place a ‘shoot and scoot’ policy was employed, offensive action was to be avoided unless specifically ordered. Most patrols were instead engaged in ‘hearts and minds’ operations. A film showing an encounter between an SAS patrol and some villagers is on this site.

SAS troops began patrolling in Borneo on 28 March 1965. For many who participated in these patrols the experience was one of moving through jungle that was home to abundant and exotic wildlife. There was, however, a price to be paid for patrolling through such beguiling scenery – mosquitoes, sand flies, leeches, fire ants and numerous other creatures could inflict painful bites which often became infected. Heat and humidity caused problems and as one ill-fated patrol learnt, even wild elephants could inflict mortal wounds on men who had no experience of dealing with such creatures. The first member of the SAS to die on active service was killed not by the enemy, but by a rogue elephant. Sadly, Lance Corporal Paul Denehey died an agonising death in the jungle, suffering unimaginable pain for several days from the terrible wound inflicted by the elephant’s tusk.

  • Lieutenant Ken 'Rock' Hudson commanded 2 Squadron SAS's E Troop in Borneo. Aged 30, he was a Portsea graduate and had served with the Army in Malaya. On 3 March 1966 while leading a four man patrol he decided to avoid crossing a flooded river although his men urged him to proceed.  Eighteen days later, on another patrol, he went ahead with a similarly dangerous pre-dawn crossing with tragic results. As a heavy rain fell he and Private Bob Moncrieff were swept away by the strong current. The remaining two patrol members were fortunate to survive. When dawn broke they saw before them a swollen waterway, flowing swiftly and carrying trees and bushes downstream. Of their comrade's fate there was little doubt. Hudson and Moncrieff are listed on the Australian War Memorial's Roll of Honour as having drowned.  Their bodies washed ashore downriver and were found and buried by civilians. With the help of local people members of the Australian and Indonesian militaries located the SAS men's graves in March 2010. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]
  • Private Bob Moncrieff was one of a four-man-strong patrol led by Lieutenant Ken Hudson when he drowned during a night-time river crossing. The patrol was seeking to approach a suspected enemy base on the far side of a rapidly flowing river during March 1966. Their bodies washed ashore downriver and were found and buried by civilians. With the help of local people members of the Australian and Indonesian militaries located the SAS men's graves in March 2010. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]
  • Private Frank Ayling was a member of Ken Hudson's ill-fated patrol. Swept into a fast flowing river along with three other Australians, he managed to jettison his gear and cling on to a log. While fighting for his own life Ayling grabbed Private Bruce Gabriel's shoulder and pulled him to safety. Together they made their way up an embankment where, soaked and shivering, they smoked cigarettes and waited until daylight revealed just how dangerous was the river that they had tried to cross. For rescuing Gabriel, Ayling was mentioned in dispatches. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]
  • According to his troop commander this was the last photograph taken of Lance-Corporal Paul Denehey. Denehey was on a Claret patrol when he and his fellow patrol members encountered a rogue elephant. The other three Australians managed to avoid the rampaging animal but Denehey was gored under the ribcage. The agonising wound killed the stricken Denehey, but it was slow, painful death of a type that no soldier on active service could have anticipated. Enemy action is something that such men prepare for in their training and in their own minds, but the manner of Denehey’s death deeply affected the other members of his patrol. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]
  • The men who appear in the image at the top of this page pose for a photograph during a ‘hearts and minds’ patrol. From left to right they are Captain Ian Gollings, Lance-Corporal Ron McHugh, Sergeant Chris Pope, Private Charlie Adamson and, seated in front, Lance-Corporal Leo Walsh. The contrast between their appearance in the earlier photo, before they set out on patrol, and this one is marked. Each of the men appears weary and unshaven, their uniforms have probably been unchanged for days and their boots carry the mud of the jungle. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]
  • Lance-Corporal Ron McHugh operating a radio set during a 1965 ‘hearts and minds’ patrol in Borneo. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]
  • Shirtless against the tropical heat, members of several SAS patrols sort out the rations that they will need to take with them before they set out. [Image courtesy of the Special Air Service Historical Foundation (SASHF)]

Many of the patrols encountered villagers and on more than one occasion the hospitality offered in return for medical care and other types of aid detained the Australians for longer than had been anticipated.

In May 1965 the Australian SAS began their first cross-border patrols, known by the codename Claret. Like any Commonwealth troops involved in cross-border patrols, the SAS operated under a set of rules, primary among which was that offensive operations could not be carried out without the sanction of the Director of Borneo Operations. Unlike 3RAR, the SAS were eventually permitted to operate up to 20,000 yards on the Indonesian side of the border, beyond the limit set for infantry patrols.

During their four months in Borneo the Australian SAS conducted more than 40 patrols on both sides of the border, almost half of which were solely for reconnaissance. Patrols were usually inserted into the patrol area by helicopter which landed at an established landing zone. If it was not possible to land, soldiers would either abseil to the ground or be winched. Patrols were conducted entirely by foot and without resupply so everyone involved had to carry everything they needed on their backs. Those men from the regiment who went on to serve in Vietnam remembered operations in Borneo as having been far more physically demanding due mainly to the nature of the terrain, the length of the patrols (one of which lasted 89 days) and the need to live off short rations. Borneo did, however, prove to be a valuable proving ground for the SAS ahead of their deployment to Vietnam.


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2SAS Borneo patrol, this film shows members of an SAS patrol making their way through jungle and across streams. [AWM F03767]