Read Voices from the Air Online
Authors: Tony Hill
Wilmot, Silk and Parer wanted to stay at the front and leave with the troops but were refused and an AIF colonel told Wilmot, âYou can help the AIF best by getting out now and trying to write the truth about what has happened over here.'
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They were told to get to Piraeus to join a ship that was evacuating Athens Headquarters and British Embassy staff.
We had a most hectic drive to Athens, the road was packed with retreating troops, most of them Greeks in the most tumbledown lorries you ever saw . . . All the other trucks stopped when they saw a plane and while they were stopped we raced past them . . . For the last 60 miles we didn't stop except once when 42 bombers, on their way back from Piraeus, flew over us and then bombed Thebes about five miles behind us.
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Wilmot raced across Athens to pick up his things from the house and to try to find his batman â the batman could not be found and would end up as a prisoner of war. At the rendezvous
point at their camp, Wilmot and the other correspondents finished off the last of their beer and whisky and then boarded the ship at Piraeus.
. . . by the light of shaded hurricane lamps, men were toiling to coal the ship â a little 150-ton tub built around 1900: we picked our way through bomb craters on the cobbled quay to the ship â feeling our way on board over a plank that bounced as you stepped on it and then into the bowels of the ship, already hot and fetid with the smell of crowded humanity â it was the strangest human smell I've ever smelt . . . an indescribable feverish smell â as though human beings when in fear gave off some peculiar odour.
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The ship was crowded âwith hundreds of civilians: Greeks, Jews, Americans, British, all sorts of people and their dogs, their cats, their pet birds, their bedding, their suitcases and all sorts of odds and ends. A seething humid mass, all battling for the best positions'.
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They sailed after midnight just before an air raid that sank any remaining ships in the harbour. There were 300 soldiers, 250 refugees, 130 German prisoners and a dozen war correspondents on board. The ship survived several bombing raids on the short journey to Crete, the last one just as the passengers were being taken off to go ashore.
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Wilmot had been under fire numerous times and had been scared many times during the six months or so that he had been in the field, but he wrote to his family:
I do know this â that the prospect of being shelled or bombed is far more alarming than the actual thing. The unknown and unexperienced is worse than the reality.
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One of the war correspondents evacuated with Wilmot was Henry Stokes, a Reuters correspondent who had covered the Spanish Civil War and the conflict in the Balkans. Wilmot later wrote a reference for Stokes and on his return to Australia, Stokes would become a war correspondent for the ABC in Malaya in the last months before the fall of Singapore.
The earlier ship carrying Cecil, MacFarlane and the ABC truck had fourteen alarms on the journey to Alexandria and was bombed and machine gunned; two passengers were killed and six others were injured. Cecil was slightly wounded by a piece of shrapnel from machine-gun fire.
I was out in the open when the ship was machine-gunned. A burst hit the deck directly in front of me, where there was a case of bully beef, and scattered fragments in all directions. I felt a sudden sting in the wrist and realised it was bleeding. Whether this was caused by a splinter of explosive bullet, or an undignified scrap of bully beef tin I am unable to say, but the machine-gunning was the cause.
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Wilmot's main focus on his return to Egypt was scripting his reports on Greece and analysing the failure of the Greek campaign. âThe lesson of the campaign I think is this. Not even the best troops can hold a numerically superior enemy without adequate air support â and at no time did the Anzac and British troops in Greece have this.'
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He urged more air support for the troops in the Middle East and returned to a similar theme in a broadcast on the subsequent defeat in Crete. âThe main thing that the Greek and Cretan campaigns teach us is that troops on the ground cannot hold positions in the face of continuous strafing from the air.' He criticised âthe strange lack of foresight' by the Allied command and stressed the need for
hard work and âclear original thinking'.
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Some of his stronger comments were censored, and an even more critical script on Crete that drew clear conclusions about the lack of planning and preparation was completely barred.
Wilmot showed his report on Crete to senior commanders and to other correspondents. âMy piece on Crete is still under fire, but everyone who was in Crete to whom I show it says that it is right.'
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He then met General Wavell, the commander-inchief: âhe is much shorter than I thought â had thin grey hair brushed straight back â a square rugged jaw and a swarthy jowl. An accident has put his left eye out of action and it lurks deep in its socket with an eye-lid drooping over it . . . but he makes up for this with the steely glint he gives you with the other eye . . . I'm afraid that all told he rather mopped me up.'
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While Wilmot was disappointed in Wavell and his own failure to more strongly argue his case with the C-in-C, he was also disarmed by Wavell's frank acceptance of responsibility for Greece.
[Wavell said:] âI agree with most of what you say, the facts are true, the criticism is mostly fair, though I don't think you've quite appreciated my difficulties . . . you are giving away information of propaganda value to the enemy, if not military value. I agree with what you say in general. I realise I should have foreseen the things you mention â but I didn't and those I did foresee I couldn't do anything about because I didn't have the equipment.'
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Wilmot had a jaundiced view of the actions in Greece of the Australian commander, General Blamey, though this was not explicitly expressed in his reports,
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and he was critical of the âHeadquarters' lifestyle of some of the Allied command in Cairo, including Blamey. An ABC Commissioner, SJ McGibbon who
was visiting Cairo was also disturbed by what he saw of the âold men' of Cairo and their social life and afternoon siestas. In Chester's view Cairo was a distraction from the real business of the war and he preferred the challenges of the frontline, despite the very real discomforts. He wrote to Edith at the end of May, about a month after his return from Greece:
I'm afraid that Cairo depresses me â the heavy humid air of the Delta hangs a pall of sloth and inertia over everyone â it saps your mental energy and slows down your physical responses and it takes more will power to keep yourself working here than it does even out in the desert. When there are cool easy ways of being leisured it's very easy to be tempted and to fall. Out in the desert it's not hard to keep going through the heat of the day â there are no cool rooms â no beds with cool white sheets where you can have a siesta â no hotel lounges where you can sit in the late afternoon and have tea â there are no swimming pools at the Gezira Club to tempt you to while away the afternoon . . . and when night comes . . . you turn in early most times . . . you perhaps have to cook your dinner in the dark â hiding the primus in a kero tin in the front of the car â but after you've eaten and washed up it's usually about 10 or 10.30, so you go off to bed and get up at dawn and write your story.
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The inability of the field unit to despatch reports directly and immediately to Australia was frustrating for Wilmot â and to a lesser extent Cecil. The field unit, being observers, did not have the right to use the faster priority cables used by the press for their news despatches. Daily news was not in the field unit's brief but Wilmot's reporting was focused on the immediate turn of events in the war, and he was chafing against the lack of a direct
radiotelephone link back to Australia, and against some of the features that the field unit was expected to provide: âa newsman must be his own boss. I can't be expected to cover the news front and do serious commentary if I have to go off and do interviews and features and odds and ends like that.'
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By contrast, the BBC had a more news-focused role, and its reporting aimed at expanding on the daily news through programs such as Radio Newsreel, to which Wilmot also contributed. Wilmot noted the difference between himself and Cecil, who adhered to the field unit's accreditation as observers (features) rather than war correspondents (news â mostly the preserve of the Press).
. . . if there is one thing he won't own up to being it's a war correspondent . . . somehow to him it just ain't nice. I fully agree with him that it is highly desirable to dissociate yourself from the press, but I still find it desirable to get news out to Australia before it's dead.
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Regardless of their different approach, Cecil supported Wilmot's representation to the ABC about the problems in filing stories, but there was no easy solution. Without a direct radiotelephone link to Australia, the field unit airmailed its recorded discs or relied on the BBC using the items in its own programs broadcast for reception in Australia. Cecil estimated that about four out of five items sent in this way were actually used in BBC programs and could therefore be picked up by the ABC.
With Bill MacFarlane back on base in Gaza, at the beginning of June 1941 Wilmot, Cecil and the other technician, Leo
Gallwey, boarded the Australian light cruiser HMAS
Perth
at Alexandria. Cecil recorded messages for the â
Voices from Overseas
sessions with about 150 sailors, who queued eagerly for the chance to speak on the radio to their families back home. An air raid struck that night as the ship lay in harbour at Alexandria with dozens of other warships â and the ABC was there to record the attack.
. . . the guns on the ships in the harbour opened up and hell was let loose. There were hundreds of guns firing on land and sea and the air quivered with their thunder . . . and when our own four-inch guns joined in the barrage the whole ship shuddered and the air seemed to rush past you. You felt dwarfed by the immensity of the forces that were let loose all round you.
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The ships in the harbour escaped unscathed from the bombs dropped during the four-hour raid â but Wilmot watched the destruction rain down on the shore: âMost of them fell among the helpless people in the city and casualties were heavy. They started some fires and before long a heavy dull red pall of smoke hung over part of the city â it was also a pall of death.' Hundreds of people were believed killed in the attack on the city, which was the first large-scale raid on Alexandria. Both Wilmot and Cecil recorded descriptions of the raid, passing a microphone back and forth between them as they watched from the bridge, and Leo Gallwey operated the disc recorder from a small room below â but whenever the
Perth
's guns fired the ship shook and the recording needle leapt off the record, and broke. Chester commented on the difficulties of recording in a later article for the
ABC Weekly
.
We've now made recordings in tents and dug-outs in the Western Desert during sandstorms â in a cave in Sollum â in a wadi outside Tobruk in between our guns and the Italians' â in an abandoned Italian fort outside Derna with birds chirping on the roof. Dogs barking and sheep and goats careering and threatening to overturn the mike anytime. We've made recordings in rooms of the Hotel d'Italia in Benghazi, the famous Shepherds in Cairo and on the roof of the Australian Comforts Fund Hotel in Alexandria. All these have caused their special problems, but nothing has ever caused so much concern as trying to record on a warship in action.
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The cruiser was undergoing repairs even before the raid, having been damaged by German aircraft as it was evacuating troops from Crete.
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Cecil and Wilmot recorded interviews with the officers and crew about their time in the Mediterranean since arriving in December. They almost certainly wrote a script for the crew, based on the sailors own words, as the field unit often did for the more structured features. The voices of the crew ranged across deck, engine room, crow's nest, wireless office and gun crews.
With the Allied invasion of Syria and Lebanon on 7 June 1941, the field unit finally gave up its advanced base at Ikingi Maryut on the edge of the Nile Delta from where it had covered the fighting in the Western Desert. Cecil moved the unit's equipment back to Palestine, to the permanent base in the house at Gaza. A few days after the campaign began, Wilmot and MacFarlane followed the Australian troops of the 21st
Brigade, who were pushing north along the Lebanese coast towards Beirut. From an observation post overlooking Sidon on Friday 13 June, Wilmot watched Vichy French air raids on Allied naval ships and on the Australian forward positions, which suffered heavy casualties.
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Again, Wilmot's reporting was detailed and accurate but did not suggest the scale of the losses by the Australians. Censorship, and pre-emptive self-censorship, meant that Australian casualties might be generally acknowledged but were often not detailed in reporting.
Cecil had joined Wilmot by the time Sidon was captured and, while the Navy was still shelling some French rearguard positions on the far side of Sidon, they entered the town with the leading handful of troops to an enthusiastic welcome and an embarrassing case of mistaken identity.
To the crowd, Lawrence with his silver hair curling up round his cap was at least a Brigadier . . . and I presume I was taken for his ADC . . . we held our heads high, waved back and did our best to uphold the honour of the AIF. But we kept getting out of step. Lawrence was an officer in the King's Royal Rifle Corps last war and it's famous for its extra-short snappy step. I learnt a swinging 30 inch step with the Melbourne University Rifles and somehow we never can keep in step.
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