The Japanese Invasion of
Dutch West Timor Island
, February 1942
The area of Dutch West Timor was 5,500 square miles, Koepang being the
capital and principal port, 517 miles from Darwin and 670 miles to Java. The
main airfield at Penfui was six miles south east of the town. Nearby were
four seaplane anchorages, the principal base at Tenau. Koepang bay and
adjacent Semua strait provided good shipping shelter. The population was at
least 400,000 West Timorese and about four to five thousand others including
Dutch, Chinese and Arabs. On the eastern half of the island named Timor, and
a small enclave at Ocussi on the northwest coast, was under neutral
Portuguese rule and a population of 500,000 East Timorese, 2,000 Chinese,
about 300 Portuguese and a few Japanese and Arabs. The threat to Australia
from Japanese occupied Timor prompted the Australian cabinet that Portuguese
Timor must be prepared to cooperate to the fullest possible extent to defend
the island. It would be an extremely optimistic view to imagine the Japanese
respecting the territory of a neutral power, or that East Timor's small
force would be capable of defending an invasion. Dili, the capital of the
Portuguese half, is 450 miles from Darwin, had an airfield a mile west of
town and ship and seaplane anchorages. The residence of the Portuguese
Governor, Manuel de Abreu Ferreira de Carvalho, and the principal European
community was situated at Dili with the colony divided into provinces, each
with a administrator, then each province was divided into "postos" under a
junior officer named Chefe de Posto.
An Australian officer described northeast Timor as "one lunatic, contorted,
tangled mass of mountains" in which "the mountains run in all directions and
fold upon one another in crazy fashion" Timorese ponies, an estimated
100,000 of them, were the basic transport on the island, or by walking. The
Dutch territorial commander of Timor and dependencies in December 1941, KNIL
Lieutenant Colonel W.E.C. Detiger, had a force of about 500 troops. There
was a similar force under Portuguese command, having some 150 troops
deployed at Dili and considered insufficient to defeat even a small scale
Japanese assault.
On the 12 December 1941 the AIF 2/40 Battalion and 2/2 Independent Company
arrived at Koepang. The commander Lt-Col Leggatt, aged 47 and a Melbourne
lawyer that had served in France during the Great War plus with the militia
afterwards and had replaced the previous battalion commander just a month
before.
In the transport ships Westralia and Zealandia, included in Sparrow Force,
contained 70 officers and 1,330 men of a coastal artillery battery. The
airforce had an under strength No.2 RAAF squadron flying Hudson bombers. The
main task of his force was to defend the Bay of Koepang and the Penfui
airfield with the Dutch taking up positions to defend the southern area. A
rear HQ was established at Tarus, a supply base at Champlong, plus fixed
defences were concentrated at Klapalima and a battery position on the coast
3.5 miles northeast of Koepang.
Most of the Australians were afflicted by dysentery and malaria. On the 15
December Dutch KNIL Colonel N.L.W. van Straten arrived by air at Koepang
from Java with an additional 100 troops to take command of the Dutch forces
on the island under Leggatt. That evening a conference was held and attended
by the Dutch Resident at Koepang Mr. Niebouer, the Australian Consul at
Dili Mr. Ross, the military commanders mentioned earlier including the
Officer Commanding the Australian airforce squadron Wing Commander Headlam,
Commander of 2/2 Independent Company Major Spence and staff officers of
course plus the captain of the old 16 knot fast Dutch training cruiser
Soerabaja (5,644tons). The newcomer Colonel van Straten said that the
Governor-General of the Netherlands East Indies, Jonkheer Tjarda van
Starkenborgh Stachouwer, was informed that as a result of negotiations
between the United Kingdom, Dutch, Australian and Portuguese governments it
had been agreed that the Governor of Portuguese East Timor would ask for
assistance in case of Japanese aggression against Portuguese territory and
that Netherlands East Indies troops would be sent. Further that if an attack
were imminent the government of Netherlands East Indies would request that
the Portuguese Governor ask for the troops to be sent. The Colonel added
that Japanese ships were now in the vicinity of Portuguese Timor. It was
agreed that Leggatt and Detiger go to Dili next day in the Canopus, a custom
and police steam yacht of 773 tons attached to the navy in time of war, and
convey this information to the Portuguese governor in an interview to be
arranged by Ross who was to fly back to Dili. On 16 December 155 troops of
the Independent Company and 260 KNIL troops embarked on the Soerabaja,
leaving the remainder of 2/2 to follow in the Canopus upon its return to
Koepang. At Dili on the 17 December Leggatt and Detiger wearing civilian
clothes were introduced by Ross to the Portuguese governor and told of his
message received through Dutch Colonel N.L.W van Straten.
The Governor avoiding prejudice to Portugal's neutrality was seeking to
follow the diplomatically correct response but expressed the hope that
there'd be no blood shed especially for the too small Portuguese number of
soldiers. That afternoon at 1pm the Australian and fifty Dutch troops
landed, unopposed on a sandy beach about 2.5 miles west of Dili. Then a
small party of signallers went to town under Lieutenant Rose and experienced
no trouble in taking over the radio station. The Portuguese governor replied
his instructions were to definitely ask for help only after being attacked.
He was told this would be too late. He then asked for it to be put in
writing and to consult the matter with his ministers. At 9.45am he said that
a message had been received from Lisbon and needed an hour to decode it. In
the meantime the Soerabaja arrived off Dili escorted by Australian aircraft.
The Portuguese governor came back at 10.50am announcing the message was that
he definitely must not allow troops to land unless under attack, and
therefore must resist such a landing. The Dutch occupied the town and as
Spence with his a section took up positions near their objective, the
airfield, he met the Governor, the Dutch consul at Dili and Ross. The
occupation was agreed to by the Governor, though with reluctance, even after
Japanese aircraft had strafed Allied movements and known positions damaging
Portuguese property. Spence was unable to sight any Portuguese troops, or
discover their strength. At the request of Dutch Colonel van Straten, the
Governor had sent the Portuguese troops out of Dili. The Portuguese Council
had a meeting on 19 December and subsequent indications were interpreted as
that the Governor was against the occupation. Leggatt reported to Australian
HQ that the pro-British Portuguese in Dili could form a government with the
support of Allied forces, and Ross recommended if the Governor persisted in
his attitude support should be given to such proposals.
On 31 December a message was received by Sparrow Force, owing to a severe
Portuguese backlash with threats of breaking diplomatic relations, British
proposals having been submitted to Lisbon with Australia's approval. These
were that the Dutch withdraw to West Timor and be replaced by more
Australians. The Portuguese were highly suspicious and antagonistic towards
the Dutch, and presented a diplomatic note amounting to a military
ultimatum, this new solution might relieve the situation.
By 22 December the remainder of the Independent Company comprising a third
Platoon with signallers and engineers had reached Dili and the company
transport vehicles, two one-ton utilities and three motorcycles. The
Australians quickly obtained thorough knowledge of the countryside by
extensive mapping and found friendships with the people of Dili enjoying the
hospitality of Christmas Day. By early January the Platoons were deployed to
various tactical positions where malaria cases grew alarmingly that the
Company practically had no fighting strength. By early February the Company
HQ and hospital were at Railaco. Two sections of Captain Baldwin's platoon
were dispersed over a series of heavily wooded spurs nearby. A detached
section was guarding the airfield and Captain Laidlaw's platoon was in
Bazar-Tete area to control the coast road from Dili and overlooking the
airfield.
On 22 January fifty-five reinforcements arrived and were put with Captain
Bryland's platoon on a position called "Three Spurs" between Railaco and
Dili. The Dutch were still in town, showing little interest to the
activities of the Australians and all-round disapproving of their friendly
going attitude with the local population on the whole island. Of the 371
Dutch troops under command of Sparrow Force in Dutch Timor, 188 men were in
Koepang area mainly responsible for the stretch of beach from Koepang to
Tenau. The Australian 2/40 Battalion, 'A Company Captain Johnston and 'B
Company Captain Roff were assigned the beach defence between Koepang and
Usapa-Beser, 'C Company captain Burr at Penfui and 'D Company Captain
Trevalla was mobile reserve. One platoon of HQ Company would act as covering
force at Kapalima with an ad hoc company protecting the headquarters. The
Combined Defence Headquarters was located at Penfui in the RAAF control
room, advanced HQ also at Penfui, a supply base at Champalong 29 miles from
Koepang and overlooking the bay on the road through the centre of Dutch
Timor into Portuguese Timor.
In anticipation to the Australian Governments decision Brigadier Veale
arrived on Timor 12 February, to await the extra battalion and take command.
Also destined for Timor were the 49th American Artillery Battalion allotted
to Sparrow Force, the 79th Light Anti-Aircraft Battery, less one troop that
arrived at Koepang from Surabaya on 16 February. Wavell decided that after
the Japanese attack on the convoy bringing these reinforcements for Timor
was attacked an enemy invasion of the island was imminent and ordered the
ships back to Darwin. Australian and American pilots that had crashed in
Dutch Timor area were flown out of Penfui airfield on 19 February.
Sparrow Force was informed that Penfui would become a refuelling port only,
afterwards the news that Den Pasar airfield at Bali, another staging point
for aircraft flying further onto Java, had been heavily bombed and
continually under aerial raids.
A strong Portuguese garrison force (about 800 men) was on its way from East
Africa to take over the defence of east Timor. With the Dutch troops at Dili
withdrawing the re-deployment of the Independent Company was also
considered. The Portuguese force was due at Dili, when on the night 19-20
February, Private Hasson at Dili airfield, reported noises of a landing.
Following Callinan's communication with Colonel van Straten eight rounds of
shell fire hit the Dutch HQ, but left the next door Japanese consulate
building untouched. Dutch returned fire at a supposed submarine.
McKenzie sent a patrol, and a Bren gun team, to cover the entrance to the
airfield from Dili. The patrol returned with a negative report, so he rang
Callinan and the conversation was cut short by a burst of Bren gun fire.
Another group of Japanese also came into machine-gun fire at the back of a
hanger. McKenzie tried to ring HQ again but the line was cut.
At dawn the situation revealed that the section at the airfield held out to
overwhelming odds, the expected reinforcements sent to the airfield had not
arrived, the Japanese were being strengthened and McKenzie without orders
from higher command arranged for a counterattack to cover a withdraw which
was carried out with determination and vigour.
Meanwhile Callinan having accompanied the Dutch force some distance from
Dili, and as Colonel van Straten intended to leave Portuguese Timor, he and
Doyle pushed onto Aileu.
The Australian rearguard force had kept up gunfire until dusk, the withdraw
along the road to Atambua taken by KNIL Colonel van Straten and 150 Dutch
troops leading the retreat. On the morning of 20 February Laidlaw in the
Bazar Tete area gave reports from the observation posts to Company HQ of a
warship shelling the town and Japanese troops still landing.
In one incident four Australian prisoners had been forced to march some
distance with their hands tied behind their backs, pushed into a drainage
ditch beside the road the fired on them killing three. The survivors upon
moving were bayoneted by the Japanese and Private Hayes was wounded again in
the neck, regaining consciousness his hands free and wristwatch gone, he
crawled away then was found by local natives and returned to Laidlaw's
position on a pony. The Independent Company continued to move further back
into the hills in anticipation to a Japanese push and by the end of February
the Company HQ was at Villa Maria, a house twenty miles from Dili. Laidlaw
continued to patrol the Bazar Tete area and had their first encounter with
the enemy by ambushing a transport convoy. The Australians began laying
mines, although this was delayed by brewing tea, the Japanese trucks
returned and no vehicle struck the explosives, they kept rolling past the
twelve ambushers when Lieutenant Nisbet stepped out aimed his Tommy-gun at
the lead driver and it jammed ! The enemy convoy pressed on through rifle
fire and grenade bursts and only one truck was wrecked, the rest dashed off.
The Japanese were shown that the Australians weren't waiting for them to
seek out the enemy so they pushed forces into the Bazar Tete area in the
characteristic encircling movement. Laidlaw's platoon after gruelling
experiences steep jungle country, arduous actions up and down hills and
ridges against the Japanese and leaving heavy enemy casualties in their
rearguard ambushes had reached Hatu Lia by 7 March. The Independent Company
was together for the first time since the Japanese invasion and from
Portuguese reports some 4,000 Japanese had landed, and 200 were killed in
the actions around the airfield. Messages from the Japanese urged surrender,
yet morale was high for the Australians coming through the first shock of an
assault, undaunted and stills a compact fighting force.
However there were anxious thoughts of the fate to Darwin, last news heard
was the port was attacked and also what of the main body of Sparrow Force in
Dutch West Timor. Early morning on 20 February reports arrived at Penfui HQ
of a Japanese landing at the mouth of the Paha River. This enemy landing was
a serious threat to the rear of the forces at Koepang. The order was given
to blow prepared demolitions on the Penfui airfield as authorised by
Brigadier Veale, the reserve company, Captain Trevena, was sent to prepared
positions at Upura astride the road to Koepang and being machine-gunned from
enemy aircraft while doing so. Veale and his HQ moved to Champalong as
arranged, where the limited reserve supplies were based and if the
Independent Company arrived from Portuguese Timor it could be used as a
reserve where required.
Veale decided that Champalong could not be held long, whereas Su would be a
better battalion defence position, he ordered all stores and his staff to go
there. Leggatt the 2/40 Battalion commander had been instructed to withdraw
his force to Su when he could no longer hold the airfield. The Japanese
acted swiftly, bombers attacked fort Klapalima, the combined airforce report
centre transferred to Champalong from Penfui and had received a call that at
9.30am hundreds of Japanese paratroops were coming down five miles
north-east of Babau. The only troops in this area were cooks and 'B Echelon
personnel, headquarters company, a few patients and medical orderlies in a
small dressing station. Trevena's company was ordered to Babau to deal with
this cut in the only road into the centre of the island and cutting the
battalion from its ammunition and supply dumps. An advanced party of
paratroopers entered Babau at 10.50am forcing the improvised Australian
force, armed with rifles, after stiff resistance withdrew to Tarus.

Japanese paratroopers are landing near the town of Usua,
Dutch West Timor, February 1942.
Trevena's company counterattacked at 4.30pm, the left platoon forced its way
into the eastern part of the village, the other platoons under mortar and
machine gun fire advanced to the market place. Many enemy paratroopers were
killed and useful automatic weapons captured but Japanese machine-guns in
concealed positions amongst a maize field made occupation of the village
untenable. So that night, as it seemed hundreds of Japanese were
infiltrating into the village, Trevena withdrew to a good defence position
at Ubelo. That same night Leggatt decided to use his force, withdrawing from
the airfield, to clear his line of communications at Babau, and supposedly
enemy held Champalong, collect and distribute the supplies and wage a
guerilla war against the Imperial Japanese occupation forces. He withdrew
over the Manikin River, sappers of 2/11 Field Company blew the bridge.
Trevena's Company were, again, given the task to attack Babau at 5.30am, 21
February, from the Ubelo start line accompanied with a section of carriers,
an armoured car and mortar detachment in support, but the advance was slow
and laborious having been strafed and dive bombed all morning. The 79th
Light Anti-Aircraft Battery gunners, veteran unit from the Battle of
Britain, shot down and damaged several aircraft. It was reported later that
morning that a further 300 or more Japanese paratroopers had landed in the
area the previous day.
In the assault on Babau the Japanese were cleared from the maize field and
after the enemy headquarter and commander eliminated in a building only
isolated pockets of resistance remained around the village. Leggatt moved
his troops in and by 5.30am on 22 February the Australians were deployed in
the surrounding region forming a perimeter around the vehicles. At Babau the
savagery of the Japanese military mentality again reared its ugly head when
it was found that several wounded Australians, including a medical orderly,
had their throats cut while tied to trees and another man was forced to
carry a wireless set only to be bayoneted upon collapsing with exhaustion.
With some 300 to 500 Japanese paratroopers causing trouble between Babau and
Champalong, and a Japanese force coming up from Koepang, Leggatt decided to
move through to his supply base beginning at 8am, 22 February, with Roff's
company leading, followed by Johnston's then Trevena's and Burr's protecting
the rear plus the carriers and mortars were under forward units and
anti-tank and anti-aircraft guns were distributed along the column. About a
mile along the road from Babau a roadblock at the bridge over the Amaabi
River with Japanese digging in and a mountain gun were encountered. After
two failed attacks over open ground by midday and an unassailable flank on
the enemy position, the Australians fell back to prepare for an all out
three company assault set for 5.00pm. But twenty five minutes before the
final attack heavy firing was heard from the rear units still near Babau.
A 400 strong Japanese force moving up the road were dispersed but fighting
continued into the evening. Meanwhile the Australian assault began, the
engineers cleared the roadblock and the three companies each cleared the
high ground dominating the objective. On one hill strewn with Japanese dead
the surviving enemy were killed to the last man being captured. This
prisoner jumped into a trench and opened up with a machine-gun and again
another charge was needed to take out this annoyance. And after an all day
battle at 6.50pm the column began moving towards Usau. In the rear strong
enemy forces had knocked out trucks, including two armoured vehicles and
towed anti-tank guns.
Leggatt stopped the column a mile beyond Usua that night, picquets were
posted and patrols sent out and a reconnaissance of the road ahead pushed
on. The troops were becoming exhausted, Leggatt ordered the withdraw to
continue the next morning as the main Japanese force was now behind him. At
7.50am an enemy force of light tanks towing field guns moved up to the tail
of the column, the Japanese commander called upon the Australians to
surrender. He added that he had a total force of 23,000, behind him and on
both flanks of the Australians with a brigade in the rear then the ultimatum
to capitulate by 10am or the convoy will be bombed continuously and fighting
will resume. Leggatt called the officers together to obtain the feelings of
the troops.
The considered it unanimous that further resistance was useless and all the
men indicated they would continue to fight if so ordered but this might mean
annihilation. The decision to surrender was made at 9am 23 February with
arrangements made for the wounded. At 10am a wave of Japanese bombers
appeared hitting both the Australians and Japanese convoys killing and
causing casualties against both adversaries and destroying four tanks. The
Japanese aircraft again came over at 10.10am and done similar but when a
third wave approached overhead the Japanese soldiers had placed many rising
sun flags visibly around the area negating further aerial bombing attacks.
The Australian battalion had fought and moved for four days having 84
officers and men killed. The Japanese stated there were only seventy-eight
survivors from the paradrops and that the Japanese company which moved
overland from the south coast, joining the paratroopers, had been destroyed.
The Japanese paratroopers were armed with .258 carbines, a high number of
.258 light machine-guns, mortars perhaps 2inch and hand grenades, and each
paratrooper carried cooked rice wrapped in oil skin plus a tube filter which
water could be siphoned like a drinking-straw into the mouth.
On 23 February Veale learnt Leggatt had surrendered, he also had no news of
Portuguese Timor. He had some 250 Australians available, mostly Ordnance,
Army Service and Army Medical Corps, armed with rifles and a few
sub-machineguns and about 40 Dutch and Timorese soldiers. Dutch women and
kinder were in a camp 10 miles north of Su and another Dutch force of about
100 soldiers were at Atambua. Veale decided to move his force there taking
the Dutch residence's wireless set with him and sent a party to try and
contact the Independent Company in Portuguese Timor.
An enemy convoy approached the bridge over the Mina River and was fired upon
but withdrew, the bridge was blown and the Australians began retreating to
Atambua. Also an outpost was put on the Benain River crossing and destroyed
that bridge when an enemy force approached on 25 February. Two days later a
fatigued Colonel van Straten arrived from Dili with his tired troops and the
Japanese in the meantime crossed the Benain River mounted on ponies
advancing on Kefannanu. Veale decided to split the remnants of Sparrow Force
into small parties, some going north into Portuguese territory, others
heading for the coast and hopefully Australia.
On the night 5 March Veale's small reconnaissance party moving southwest
Portuguese Timor met Lieutenant Laffy of the 2/2 making a reconnaissance
patrol south of Cailaco and was in touch with the Australian Independent
Company HQ at Bobobaro and also Senhor de Sousa Santos, the Portuguese
administrator of Fronteria Province. Major Spence met Brigadier Veale at
Lolotoio on 8 March.
Order of battle for Dutch, Australian and Japanese Army
Koninklijk Nederlands Indisch Leger (KNIL Army)
- Territorial Command "Timor Island and Dependencies", commander was KNIL
Lieutenant Colonel W.E.C. Detiger, replaced later by KNIL Colonel N.L.W. van
Straten, with a headquarter in Koepang.
The Dutch KNIL garrison numbered approximately 600 KNIL soldiers and
officers.
Timor and Dependencies KNIL Garrison Battalion with several armored cars
(number?)
3rd Company/ VIII. KNIL Infantry Battalion
RK Infantry Company (strength unknown)
Machine-Gun Platoon/ XIII. KNIL Infantry Battalion
Artillery Battery (4 x 75mm guns)
Engineer Platoon
Engineer Platoon
Mobile Auxiliary First Aid Platoon
Imperial Australian Army
Australian forces numbered approximately 1,400 men. The Australian Commander
on the island was Lieutenant Colonel Leggatt.
Sparrow Force (arrived on 12 December 1941)
2/40 AIF Battalion
79th (British) Light AA Battery
2/2 Australian Independent Company
section of 2/11 Field Company (Engineers)
2/1 Heavy Artillery Battery
2/1 Fortress Company (Engineers)
section of 2/12 Medical Detachment
'B Troop 18th Anti-Tank Battery
No.2 RAAF Squadron with 12 light bombers Lockheed Hudson II
Militaire Luchtvaart, KNIL (Air Force) and RAAF
There are no reports about Dutch planes on Timor Island. At Koepang (Penfui)
airfield was stationed just Australian No.2 RAAF Squadron with several light
bombers Lockheed Hudson II.
Zeemacht Nederlands-Indiλ (Royal Dutch Navy)
In Koepang harbor was anchored old Dutch coastal training cruiser Soerabaja
(Cdr. J.C. Cornelis). Except this ship there were no other navy vessels on
Timor Island.
Imperial Japanese Army (Nippon Riku Kaigen) & Imperial Japanese Special
Naval Landing Force
Japanese 228th Infantry Regiment of the Japanese 38th Infantry Division
Yokosuka 3rd Special Naval Landing Force, a naval parachute unit,
commanded by Lt.Cdr. Koichi Fukumi
Imperial Japanese Navy (Teikoku Kaigun)
Convoy for Timor Island numbered 9 transport ships carrying the Japanese
228th Infantry Regiment. Unknown number of transport planes did carry the
Yokosuka 3rd Special Naval Landing Force. Convoy escort was under command of
Rear-Admiral Raizo Tanaka in the light cruiser Jintsu (flagship) and the
invasion convoy was escorted by
2nd Destroyer Flotilla
7th Destroyer Division
destroyers- Ushio, Sazanami
15th Destroyer Division
destroyers- Natsushio, Kuroshio, Oyashio, Hayashio
16th Destroyer Division
destroyers- Hatsukaze, Yukikaze, Amatsukaze, Tokitsukaze
21th Minesweeper Division
minesweepers- W ?, W ?, W ?
Air Group
seaplane tender Mizuho
patrol boat ?
Covering Force was under command of Rear-Admiral Takeo Takagi.
5th Cruiser Squadron
heavy cruisers- Nachi, Haguro
destroyers- Kawakaze, Yamakaze, Inazuma, Akebono
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