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Operation Python (1943–1944)

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Operation Python
(I, II, III and IV)
Part of World War II
Date1943–1944
LocationNorth Borneo
Belligerents
Z Special Unit
North Borneo Natives
Imperial Japanese Army
Imperial Japanese Navy

Operation Python was carried out by the Allied commando unit Z Special Unit, during World War II. The objective of the mission was to set up a wireless station near Labian Point in North Borneo and undertake covert operations reporting on the sea lane of the Imperial Japanese Navy in the Sibutu Passage and the Balabac Strait of the Sulu Sea. The operation was split into Python I and Python II.

Their first task was to plant three of their fellow operators with their radio transmitter at a safe distance, so that coded intelligence could be sent back to Australia. In their information forays and reconnaissance, they traveled many hundreds of miles at great risk using Hoehn military folboats along the coast and accessible inland waters.

Operation Python I

Led by Major F. G. L. Chester, the Z Special Unit operatives landed along Labian Point in early October 1943. They also supported and provided equipment and stores for Filipino guerrillas under the command of an American officer, Captain J. A. Hamner.

Operation Python II

In January 1944, Bill Jinkins led Z Special Unit operatives with the objective of organising the native population for guerrilla warfare. These early efforts did not bear any significant results.

References

  • Feuer, A. B. (2006). Australian Commandos: Their Secret War against the Japanese in WWII, Stackpole Books, ISBN 978-0-8117-3294-9.
  • Hoehn, John. (2011). Commando Kayak: The use of Australian folboats during the Pacific Campaign. hirschbooks.net & ozatwar.com/hoehn . ISBN 978-3-033-01717-7

External links

Australian special operations of the Second World War
Timor,
Sundas
and Java
New Guinea
  • Salamaua Raid (1942)
  • Heath's Farm Raid (1942)
  • Mubo Raid (1942)
  • Operation Cockroach (1942, abandoned)
  • Operation Beetle (1942)
  • Operation Ladybird (1942)
  • Operation Spider (1942, abandoned)
  • Operation Wasp (1942, abandoned)
  • Operation Tick (1942)
  • Operation Bug (1942)
  • Operation Locust (1943)
  • Operation Oaktree (1942–44)
  • Operation Whiting (1943)
  • Operation Scorpion (1943)
  • Operation Mosstroops (1943)
  • Operation Menzies (1944)
  • Operation Perch (1944)
  • Operation Reaper (1944)
  • Operation Silver (1944)
  • Operation Gold (1944)
  • Operation Copper (1944)
  • Operation Vokeo (1944)
  • Operation Crayfish (1944)
  • Operation Falcon (1944)
  • Operation Phoenix (1944)
  • Operation Rose
  • Operation Dodo
  • Operation Moa
  • Operation Lennon
  • Operation Socrates
  • Operation Flathead
Borneo
Celebes and
Moluccas
  • Operation Giraffe
  • Operation Crane
  • Operation Shril
  • Operation Magpie
  • Operation Raven
  • Operation Garnish
  • Operation Opossum (1945)
  • Operation Swallow
  • Operation Swift
  • Operation Finch (1945)
Malaya and
China Seas
  • Operation Jaywick (1943)
  • Operation Rimau (1944–45)
  • Operation Politician-Optican
  • Operation Gunard
  • Operation Crocodile
  • Operation Carpenter
  • Operation Period
  • Operation Oblivion
Other
  • Operation Sabre (1945)
  • Operation Apple (1945)
  • Operation Turnip
  • Operation Potato
  • Operation Goldfish
  • Operation Pine Needle
  • Operation Trout
  • Operation Shark
  • Operation Carrot
  • Operation Radish
  • Operation Asparagus
  • Operation Bream
  • Operation Robin
  • Operation Stallion
  • Mission 204 (or 'Tulip Force') (1942–43)
  • Operation Source (1943)
  • Operation Guidance (1944)
Proposed
Other Netherlands
East Indies
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