Abstract

On February 19, 2017, the seventy-fifth anniversary of the bombing of Darwin was commemorated with a service attended by the Australian prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, and Governor General Peter Cosgrove at the memorial cenotaph on the city's esplanade. piercing screech of an air-raid siren was sounded at 9:58 a.m., the exact time of the first Japanese raid in 1942, and military aircraft flew across the sky. Veteran survivor Mervyn Lloyd Ey, age ninety-five years, was among those who gathered to remember and reflect on the enemy attack. He vividly recalled the suddenness of the raid and the ensuing chaos: The first we saw was a whole heap of bombers coming over, and it wasn't long before [there were] dive bombers and fighters, and there were planes . . . and explosions everywhere. bombing of Darwin was the first and most devastating attack by an overseas power on the Australian mainland, killing 250 people and wounding hundreds more. strike, which launched the Japanese air offensive against northern Australia, has grown in prominence within the national memory of role in World War II and has been increasingly referred to as Australia's Pearl Harbor. When the attack on Darwin occurred, Australia had been at war since September 3, 1939, following Great Britain into conflict with Germany. Its army, navy, and air force served with distinction in the European theater: in the defense of Tobruk in North Africa, during the Allied withdrawal from Greece during 1941, and in the Allied victory at the Second Battle of El Alamein in 1942. However, the Japanese raid of Pearl Harbor on December 8, 1941, brought war into the Asia Pacific and to doorstep, with the military and civilian fronts brought into close proximity.2 Australian troops were recalled home from Europe, and with the extension of government controls the civilian population was geared up for total war. For Australia, unlike its allies Britain and the United States, the key theater during World War II was in the Pacific rather than Europe. This chapter provides an overview of war after Pearl Harbor, with a focus on Japanese attacks on Darwin and the Australian mainland, experiences on the home front, and the impact of the war in modernizing society and economy and reshaping its security alliances with the United States and the Asia-Pacific region.

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