The Emergency in Malaya was the longest continuous military commitment in Australia's history. The confrontation in Indonesia was a small undeclared war on Australia's doorstep.
Between 1950 and the early 60s fifty-one Australian servicemen were killed in Malaya, although only 15 of these deaths occurred as a result of operations. Twenty were wounded, most of whom were in the army.
The "secret war" in Indonesia resulted from a belief by Indonesia's President Sukarno that the creation of the Federation of Malaysia represented an attempt by Britain to maintain colonial rule. Twenty-three Australians lost their lives between 1964 and 1966, seven of them on operations, and eight were wounded.
It's called "a secret war" because of the sensitivity of the cross-border operations. Australians did not read about the Indonesian Confrontation in their so called "free" press, a principle many Australian troops ironically were prepared to lay down their lives for.
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