Description
The Malayan Emergency remains the most successful of Australia’s Cold War military commitments — yet its strategic, political, and operational significance is too often overlooked. In Wings Over Malayan Jungle, David Mitchelhill-Green brings this critical yet neglected conflict into focus through the story of No. 1 (B) Squadron RAAF.
From 1951 to 1958, Australian aircrews flew Avro Lincoln bombers in a challenging and often underappreciated role. As a contemporary RAAF review put it, the Emergency was a ‘different war’, one requiring ‘great skill and planning’, one demanding ‘ticklish flying, either day or night.’ The crews, a Singapore masthead reported, flew ‘through mist-swathed valleys and below rugged mountains,’ the war against the Communist insurgents fought as much above the jungle as it was by ground forces below.
By recovering the voices and experiences of those who served, Wings Over Malayan Jungle reclaims an important chapter in Australian military history — one that continues to inform debates about air power, strategy, and Australia’s place in regional security.