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16-382 Garand Picture of the Day

Location: Buna, Papua New Guinea
Date taken: 1943
Photographer: George Strock
Soldiers attending prayer service after capturing Buna Village during the fight against Japanese
troops for control of the island.
Breakthrough at Buna Village
On 5 December, Urbana Force pressed an attack on Buna village from the south with four companies. P-40 Kittyhawks supported by attacking the station, to disrupt any attempt to reinforce the village. The attacks by the flank companies faltered while the centre advanced with limited success. However, on the centre right, Staff Sergeant Herman Bottcher, a platoon commander in H Company, 126th Infantry, leading 18 men, was able to drive to the sea. Bottcher and his troops fought off attacks for seven days during which he was wounded twice before he was relieved. Australian
war correspondent George Johnston wrote in Time magazine on 20 September 1943: "By a conservative count ... Bottcher and his twelve men ... killed more than 120 Japs."
Sanananda Front, December 1942.
Bottcher had finally turned the tide of the battle at Buna. His platoon's efforts cut off the Japanese in Buna Village from resupply and reinforcements, being already isolated on the western flank. It provided the impetus for the ultimate capture of the village. Bottcher was awarded a battlefield commission to the rank of captain and the first of two Distinguished Service Cross Medals. A plaque was later placed at the entrance to Buna Village in memory of his actions that day.
On this same day, Bren carriers were to spearhead an unsuccessful attack on the Warren Force front. Subsequent actions on the Urbana front were to consolidate the gain made by Bottcher. For the next week, activity on both flanks at Buna was mainly restricted to infiltration and harassing artillery fire. On 11 December, the III/127th, having arrived at Dobodura two days earlier, took over forward positions occupied by II/126th. In the morning of the 14th, after concentrated mortar fire, the III/127th advanced on the village but the defenders had already fled. The only positions to the west of Entrance Creek that remained were at the Coconut Grove. This was cleared by the II/128th, with attacks on the 16th and 17th
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Last edited by Mark in Rochester; 12-29-2016 at 02:01 PM.
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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12-29-2016 01:58 PM
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It is fascinating how both the Australian
and american accounts down play the importance of the achievements of the other countries forces.
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Originally Posted by
CINDERS
Britain abandoning our forces at Singapore (Read ~ The Great Betrayal By David Day and you will see why I said that) and the 39th Militia had done a sterling effort at halting the Japanesein New Guinea the first time they had been defeated in jungle warfare but it surely was not going to be the last.
I don't think that Britain abandoned it's forces of British
and Commonwealth troops at Singapore but there may have been serious question marks about how well they were deployed/commanded?
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I think that you have to be very careful about who you proportion blame to, in 2016, for the fall of Singapore to Japanese
forces during WW2, Cinders. My personal view is that it is not fair to lay the blame at one group of people or a single person but a significant proportion of the blame probably lies with the senior British
commanders in Singapore at the time. With the amount of personnel and equipment on and around Singapore at the time one would have thought that more of a fight would have been put up than what actually happened.
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Originally Posted by
Paul S.

Australians of the 2/12th Battalion move past a group of Americans on the Sanananda track, who had been in action a little earlier.
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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