The Long Road to Changi
By (Author) Peter Ewer
ABC Books
ABC Books
1st August 2013
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Modern warfare
Battles and campaigns
940.5425957
Paperback
346
Width 157mm, Height 235mm, Spine 20mm
568g
How flawed planning, dysfunctional personalities and empirical arrogance took Australia down the long road to Changi. In the 1930s while war raged in Europe, Australians were assured by politicians that the country was safe as long as the Union Jack fluttered over 'Fortress Singapore'. the reality was so different: Britain, over-stretched and under threat, skimped on the forces it needed to hold the base. When Japanese forces began flexing their muscles in the Pacific, a hasty defence plan was put in place. Australian troops, aircrews and sailors were dispatched to Singapore as much for purposes of propaganda as anything else. the understanding was that bronzed Aussies would soon put the Japs in their place. But it was so much wishful thinking. While most books centre on the horrors of the death camps, historian Peter Ewer asks how we came to be in this mess in the first place. Why was an untested Australian military contingent expected to play a leading role in halting the cream of the Japanese army Why did British commanders and politicians send them there - then blame them for the inevitable defeat Could this disaster have been averted Drawing on fresh archival research, Ewer uncovers a story of incompetent planning, powerful but flawed characters and national trauma which resonates to this day. Writing from the perspectives of foot soldiers and generals, politicians and socialites, he constructs a riveting picture of a war which was lost before it began.
Dr Peter Ewer is a historian and author of three books: FORGOTTEN ANZACS, WOUNDED EAGLE: THE BOMBING OF DARWIN AND AUSTRALIA'S AIR DEFENCE SCANDAL, and STORM OVER KOKODA: AUSTRALIA'S EPIC BATTLE FOR THE SKIES OVER NEW GUINEA.