The Australian Army's exceptional effectiveness in World War II stemmed not from superior weapons, tactics, or leadership, but from a unique cultural value called 'mateship' - an unwavering commitment to protecting fellow soldiers at all costs. This bond, rooted in Australia's harsh rural environment and shaped by the Gallipoli experience, meant soldiers would never abandon their comrades, creating an army that refused to break under pressure. This philosophy was demonstrated at Tobruk, where 14,000 Australians held out for 240 days against Rommel's forces, and later at Kokoda Track, where young militia soldiers used the same tactics to stop Japanese advances. The Germans, Italians, and Japanese all recognized the Australians as their toughest enemy, with Rommel himself stating he would use Australians to 'take hell' and New Zealanders to 'hold it.'
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
The Secret Reason the Australian Army Was So Hard to Defeat in WW2Added:
April 1941.
The desert near Tobruk in Libya.
A German general lifts his binoculars to his eyes. He stares out at a small port town shaking in the heat. His name is Erwin Rommel. People call him the desert fox. He is the most feared general in the world right now.
Just 12 days ago, his tanks chased the British army 800 km across the desert.
He won every battle. Every single one.
Now, only this one little town stands in his way.
If he takes it, the road to Egypt is open. The road to the oil fields is open. The road to winning the whole war in Africa is open.
Rommel lowers his binoculars. He turns to his aid. He thinks Tobruk will fall in 24 hours, maybe less.
He is wrong. He is about to spend the next 240 days failing.
Inside that town are 14,000 men. They are not famous. They are not fancy palace guards.
Most of them were sheep farmers a year ago or dock workers or shop boys or miners.
They came from a country on the other side of the world. They are Australians.
And in this video, I am going to show you the one secret these men had. The one strange thing that turned simple farm boys into soldiers so tough that the German army, the Italian army, and the Japanese army all said the same thing about them. They said the Australians were the scariest enemy they ever faced.
Stick with me because once you see it, you will never forget it. Some quick numbers first.
In 1939, Australia had fewer than 7 million people. But by the end of the war, almost 1 million Australians wore a uniform.
That means about one out of every seven people in the whole country went off to fight. One out of seven, and they fought everywhere. Greece, Crete, North Africa, New Guinea, Syria, Malaya, Borneo, six different parts of the world all at once. In some battles, more Australians were lost for their size than even the British.
So, here is the puzzle that has been bothering people for over 80 years.
How did such a small country build an army that the toughest generals in the world were afraid of?
It was not better tanks.
The Germans had better tanks.
It was not more men.
The Japanese had way more men.
It was not better generals.
The British and Americans had brilliant generals, too.
So, what was it? What was the secret?
The answer is strange. It is not a weapon. It is not a clever plan.
It is not one famous hero. It is something almost invisible. Something the German soldiers tried to write home about, but they could never quite find the right words for.
And the answer to this whole mystery does not start on a battlefield.
It does not even start with a soldier.
It starts on a sheep farm 12,000 miles away from Tobruk, where a young man is bending over a sheep with a pair of clippers in his hand. And he has no idea, no idea at all, that very soon he is going to terrify the most powerful army on Earth.
To understand the secret, we have to go back.
Way back to 1915.
That year, on a small beach in Turkey called Gallipoli, the very first Australian army went to war.
They were just boys, most of them.
The fight was a disaster. Thousands of them died on that beach. Thousands more died in the hills above it. But something strange happened.
The Australians did not run.
They did not panic. They stuck together.
They made jokes when they were scared.
They carried each other when they were hurt. They argued with their officers when they thought the orders were stupid.
And they earned a new name, Diggers.
By 1939, every Australian boy had grown up hearing the stories of Gallipoli from their dads, from their granddads.
The lesson was simple. A real Australian soldier never breaks.
A real Australian soldier never leaves a mate behind.
A real Australian soldier laughs at fear.
So when the Second World War started, those boys joined up carrying that lesson deep in their bones. But this new army, called the Second AIF, was different from any other army in the world.
Let me show you why.
First, every single man was a volunteer.
While Britain and America were forcing men to fight, Australia did not have to.
If you were in that army, it was because you chose to be. You raised your hand.
You said yes. That changes a man.
Second, almost half of these soldiers came from the bush. The bush is what Australians call their wild country.
Huge, empty deserts. Sheep farms the size of small countries. The boys from the bush had spent their whole lives outdoors. They could ride a horse, they could fix a broken truck with a piece of wire.
They could sleep on hard ground. They could walk 30 miles in a day and not even feel tired.
They were already tough before any sergeant ever yelled at them.
Third, the Australian army was strange in a way that shocked the British.
There was no fancy ranking nonsense.
A private would call his colonel by his first name. He might argue with him. He might crack a joke about him. British officers were horrified. They thought it would ruin the army, but the Australians did not care. They believed every man was as good as every other man. They called it the fair go.
And there was one rule that was sacred.
Never leave a mate behind. Wounded? They will carry you out. Surrounded? They will fight their way through to reach you.
Quitting was the one thing you could never do. Not because the army would punish you, but because your mates would never look at you the same way again.
Now, let me show you the men who would lead them.
There was General Thomas Blamey.
Tough. Smart. He fought hard for his Australian boys even against his own British bosses.
And there was Lieutenant General Leslie Morshead. He used to be a school teacher. He looked quiet. He looked gentle.
But his own soldiers gave him a nickname. They called him Ming the merciless. He was strict. He had iron rules and his men loved him for it.
Their best division was called the ninth. The ninth would soon become one of the most famous fighting units in the whole war, but for now, in early 1941, they were just training in the dust of Palestine.
Marching, sweating, eating bad food, joking, singing, waiting.
None of them knew that the Desert Fox himself was about to find them.
Now, we come to it. The desert wind blows hot and thick.
Out of the shining horizon, a long line of black dots starts to grow. Tanks, German tanks, Italian trucks, big guns, soldiers, thousands of them.
Rommel has arrived. His Africa Corps has rolled across North Africa like a hammer.
Town after town has fallen. Army after army has run. But now, on the coast, one small port town stands in his path.
A name on a map nobody much cared about a month ago, Tobruk. If Rommel takes Tobruk, he can land more men, more food, more bullets.
After that, the road to Egypt is wide open. Then, the Suez Canal. Then, the oil fields of the Middle East.
And whoever holds the oil holds the war.
So, Tobruk is not just a town.
Tobruk is the door to everything.
And waiting for him inside that door are 14,000 Australians.
They are dug into a ring of trenches and rocks.
They have a few tanks, but not many.
They have a few big guns, but not enough.
They are completely cut off by land.
The only way they can get food and water is from British ships that sneak in at night.
The British call these little ships the Scrap Iron Flotilla.
Old, rusty, brave. Now, imagine being inside that town with them. The heat is unreal.
50° C, that is 122° F. The metal of your rifle gets so hot it will burn your hand. Sand gets in your eyes, your teeth, your soup, your gun.
You have one canteen of water per day to drink, to wash, everything.
The bombs never stop.
German planes called Stukas come screaming out of the sun.
Tobruk gets more bombs dropped on it, square mile for square mile, than London does during the whole blitz.
You sleep in a hole.
The fleas eat you alive.
Your stomach is sick from the bad water.
Your skin breaks open with sores that will not heal, but you do not leave.
Inside his bunker, General Morshead tells his officers words that will become famous.
There will be no Dunkirk here. If we have to get out, we will fight our way out. There will be no surrender and no retreat. The German radio is laughing at them. A British traitor named Lord Haw-Haw broadcasts every night from Berlin. He calls the Australians rats caught in a trap.
He thinks he is insulting them. The Australians love it. They start using the name with pride. The rats of Tobruk.
Rommel does not understand why these men will not break.
In his diary, he writes about their extraordinary toughness.
He decides he will smash them in one big attack.
Easter Sunday, April 13th, 1941.
Just before midnight, the German guns open up. Shells rain down on the Australian trenches like a hot black storm.
Then the Panzers move forward.
Big metal monsters rolling through the wire, crushing everything in their path.
The Australians have no good weapon to stop a tank. So, they are about to do something nobody in this whole war has ever tried before.
Just past midnight, April 14th, 1941, Easter Sunday is over.
Easter Monday has begun.
The Panzers come through the wire.
The Australians can hear them in the dark. Big diesel engines roaring, steel tracks crunching over rocks. A young Australian private is curled up at the bottom of his hole.
He is 19 years old. He has a rifle. He has two grenades. He does not have anything that can stop a German Panzer.
His sergeant whispers a strange order down the line.
Let them through. Stay down. Let them roll right over you.
What? The young man does not understand.
Letting tanks through is suicide. Tanks behind you means you are surrounded.
Tanks behind you means you are dead.
But the Australians had thought of something nobody had tried before.
Here is the secret of how a German Blitzkrieg works. The tanks go first.
They smash a hole in the line.
Then the German foot soldiers run in right behind.
The tanks protect the men. The men protect the tanks. Together they roll forward like one big hammer.
But what if you broke that hammer in half?
So, the Australians stayed flat in their holes.
They did not shoot at the Panzers. They let them pass. They let them roll right over the trenches.
The big tanks rumbled by, never knowing there were men hiding under their tracks.
And the moment the German foot soldiers came running up behind, the Australians popped up, rifles cracked, machine guns roared, grenades flew. The German infantry, out in the open with no cover, were cut down in seconds.
Hundreds fell into the hot dust.
Hundreds more turned around and ran.
Now, the Panzers were alone, deep inside the Australian lines, with no foot soldiers to protect them. And up ahead, hidden behind a low ridge, the British gunners were waiting with their 25-pounder guns.
The 25-pounders fired straight at the tanks over open ground. There was no missing.
The first Panzer brewed up in a ball of orange flame. Then the second, then the third. Black smoke poured into the desert sky.
When the sun came up that Easter Monday morning, the German attack was finished.
Rommel had lost dozens of tanks. He had lost hundreds of men, and he had not gained one single inch of Tobruk.
It was the very first time in this whole war that Rommel's blitzkrieg had failed.
Just 1 year before, that same kind of attack had crushed France in 6 weeks.
Now, a bunch of sheep farmers in a dusty hole had stopped it cold. But the Australians did not stop there.
Most armies, when they are surrounded, hide.
They wait. They hope somebody will save them.
The Australians did the opposite.
Every single night, all summer long, Australian patrols crawled out into no man's land. They moved silent as cats.
They went deep into the German lines, sometimes for miles. They cut throats.
They blew up machine gun nests. They grabbed prisoners and dragged them back.
Then they slipped home before the sun came up.
Within a few weeks, the German soldiers in front of Tobruk became scared of the dark.
Captured German diaries used the same words over and over. They called the Australians phantoms. They called them cutthroats.
Every shadow looked like an Aussie with a knife.
A young Australian corporal, his shoulder wrapped in bandages from a German bayonet, told a war reporter something the world would never forget.
"They reckon we can't get out," he said with a grin. "We're not trying to get out. They're the ones who've got to get in."
By August of 1941, Rommel sat down and wrote a letter home.
In it, he made a quiet, painful confession.
Tobruk could not be taken by storm, not by him, not by anybody. The myth of the unbeatable German army had cracked, and it had cracked against a country most Germans could not even find on a map.
240 days.
That is how long the siege lasted.
From April 1941 all the way through to November.
Eight months of dust and bombs and bad water and no real sleep. And at the end of it, when the British Eighth Army finally smashed through to save them, the rats of Tobruk walked out alive. But you would not have known they were alive just to look at them.
Their faces were burned dark brown.
Their eyes were sunk deep. They had grown so thin you could see their bones through their shirts.
Their uniforms were rags. Many of them could not stop their hands from shaking.
Half of the men who walked into Tobruk eight months before, were not walking out.
832 Australians had been killed. 2,177 had been wounded. 941 had been taken prisoner.
Companies that once held 120 men now had 30 left, sometimes only 20. But every man who walked out walked out unbeaten.
Tobruk had not fallen. Rommel had not won.
Back in Germany, Rommel's own chief of staff, a general named Fritz Bayerlein, would later call Tobruk the foundation stone of the German defeat in Africa.
The whole German loss in Africa, he was saying, started right here, started against the Australians. Hitler was furious. He demanded to know how a tiny group of soldiers from a far-away country had stopped his mighty desert army.
In London, Winston Churchill went on the radio.
"The Australians at Tobruk," he said, "have written their name in letters of fire."
The whole free world cheered.
The Australians had given them the first real piece of good news in a long, dark year.
And the Australians themselves, they did not understand the fuss. They had been told to hold the town.
They held the town.
What was the big deal?
That was always the digger way.
A shrug.
A grin.
Yeah, mate, it was a bit warm out there.
Got any tea?
But here is something that does not always show up in the history books.
Inside all that hate and fear, there were small moments of pure humanity.
Australian soldiers gave their last drops of water to thirsty German prisoners.
An Italian officer was captured and shown the Australian food.
A little bread, a spoonful of meat from a tin.
The Italian officer started to cry. He had been told the Australians lived like kings while his own men starved.
Now he saw the truth. The Australians were starving, too, and still they handed him a share.
Out in no man's land, sometimes the guns went quiet without any orders.
Australians and Germans walked out of their holes together. They picked up their dead. They covered them with blankets. They nodded at each other.
Then they went back and started shooting again.
But the war was far from over. The Rats of Tobruk were about to be put on a ship.
And their secret was about to be tested all over again.
On battlefields they had never even imagined.
The story of Tobruk did not stop at Tobruk.
After the siege ended, the British 8th Army studied how the Australians had fought.
The night patrols, the quiet ambushes, the way they let tanks roll past, then killed the soldiers behind them.
The British said, "We need to learn this." So, Australian fighting tricks spread to the whole desert army. And 1 year later, in October 1942, the same Australian men were back in the desert.
This time at El Alamein.
El Alamein was the biggest desert battle of the whole war.
The British General, Bernard Montgomery, had a plan.
He needed somebody to fool Rommel.
Somebody to attack hard in the north, so Rommel would send all his best tanks up that way.
Then, Montgomery would punch through the south.
Who did Montgomery pick to do the dangerous job in the north?
The Australians.
For 12 days and nights, the Aussies fought through German lines.
They drew the Panzers right to them, just like Montgomery wanted. And they paid a terrible price.
5,800 Australians fell at El Alamein.
The hardest fighting of the whole battle was on the Australian end of the line.
But, the plan worked. The Germans broke.
Rommel ran.
After El Alamein, the Axis would never win another battle in Africa.
But, the desert was not the only war Australia was fighting. Far away, on the other side of the world, something terrible had already begun nearly a year before.
December 1941, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.
The American fleet went up in flames.
The whole Pacific was now at war.
February 1942, the British fortress of Singapore fell to the Japanese. 15,000 Australian soldiers were taken prisoner in one day.
It was the worst military disaster in Australian history. And then came the news that froze every Australian's blood.
The Japanese were coming. They were already in New Guinea, the big island just north of Australia.
Their soldiers were marching south through the jungle, less than 200 km from the coast of Australia itself.
From people's homes, from their kids, from their mothers, the Japanese plan, take a tiny mountain trail called the Kokoda Track, cross the Owen Stanley Mountains, capture Port Moresby, then leap across the sea to Australia.
Who was there to stop them?
A few hundred young Australian boys.
Most were teenagers. Most had never fired a gun in real combat.
They were called the 39th Battalion.
They were militia, which is a fancy word for weekend soldiers.
Against them came the elite of the Japanese army. Veterans, killers, men who had never lost a single battle.
The Japanese expected the kids to run away in 5 minutes. The kids did not run.
They held that mountain track for weeks, foot by foot, tree by tree, in rain you could not see through, in mud up to your knees, with leeches sucking their blood.
They were sick with malaria. They were starving.
But they used the same tricks the rats of Tobruk had used. The same patrols, the same ambushes, the same refusal to break.
The secret had crossed the world with them.
Then the Aussie veterans of North Africa, the 7th Division, came running.
Together they stopped the Japanese cold.
Then they pushed them back. Then they crushed them in the jungle. It was one of the first times the mighty Japanese army had ever been thrown back on land in the whole war.
The American Marines started studying Australian jungle fighting manuals.
A Japanese general named Horii wrote shocked notes home.
"The Australians," he said, "kept attacking him even when they were surrounded. It made no sense. It was not how soldiers were supposed to behave."
By now, all three of the great Axis armies had a name for the Australians.
The Germans called them die Australia in a voice they only used for their toughest enemies. The Italians called them the Red Devils because of the desert dust caked on their uniforms.
And the Japanese, they had only one word written over and over in their captured diaries.
Kowai.
It means scary.
Now, let me bring this story back down, down from the big maps and the famous generals, down to the men themselves.
Because in the end, that is what war is.
It is not flags.
It is not numbers.
It is people. His name was Bruce Kingsbury. Before the war, he sold houses in Melbourne. He was 24 years old. He had a kind face and a quiet voice. He was not a hero in any movie way. He was just a regular guy.
But on August 29th, 1942, on the Kokoda Track, the Japanese broke through the Australian line.
Bullets flew, men fell, the whole position was about to collapse.
If the line broke here, Port Moresby would fall.
And Australia itself would be in real danger.
Bruce Kingsbury picked up a Bren gun. A Bren gun is heavy, made for two men to use. He carried it alone. He stood up out of his hole. And he walked right at the Japanese.
He did not run. He walked. He fired the gun from his hip. He kept walking forward. Bullets cracked all around him.
He killed one Japanese soldier, then another, then another. He charged straight into their machine gun nest.
Witnesses say he killed almost 30 enemy soldiers all by himself.
30.
Then a sniper put bullet through him. He fell. He died. But his crazy charge had bought time.
The Australian line did not break.
Port Moresby was saved.
Bruce Kingsbury got the Victoria Cross.
The highest honor in the British world.
It was the first one ever given for fighting on Australian soil.
A Melbourne real estate clerk.
Who could have just stayed home.
Then there was a man named Tom Derrick.
People called him Diver.
Before the war, he was a poor laborer.
He worked digging ditches and picking grapes. He could barely read.
But the war changed Diver.
At Tobruk, he won a medal for bravery.
Later, in the jungle of New Guinea, at a steep hill called Sattelberg, he won the Victoria Cross.
He climbed that ridge alone, knocking out one machine gun nest after another, until the whole hill was Australian.
They made him an officer. The poor laborer who could barely read became a lieutenant.
He kept fighting. New Guinea, Borneo, always at the front.
In May 1945, just weeks before the war ended, a Japanese bullet found him. He died in the arms of his men. He never made it home.
And there was another digger. We do not even know his name.
A British officer met him on a road one day.
The officer was angry because the Australian had not saluted him. He demanded a salute.
The Australian looked at him.
Then he said something that would echo through the whole army.
Mate, I'll salute you when you've done something worth saluting.
Then he walked on.
Now let me show you the other side.
Because the enemy was made of people, too.
A Japanese officer named Lieutenant Hirano was captured in New Guinea.
The Australians fed him. They cleaned his wounds.
He wrote down his thoughts later in private.
We were told the Australians were a soft, lazy people. We were not told the truth.
And finally, I want to tell you about some men who never wore a uniform.
But who fought the war just the same.
They were the people of Papua. The Australians called them the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels because of their soft, curly hair, hurly. When the Aussies were hurt on the Kokoda Track, the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels carried them out. They built stretchers from bamboo and rope. They carried wounded boys for days through the jungle. Up mountains, through swamps, in the pouring rain. They never dropped a man. They sang softly to keep them calm. They covered them at night to keep them warm. They saved hundreds of Australian lives.
The bond between those Aussie boys and those Papuan men is one of the most beautiful stories of the whole war.
So, now we come to the end.
And we come to the answer. What was the secret of the Australian Army? What made them so hard to beat?
It was not a weapon. They had the same rifles as everybody else.
It was not a clever plan. Their plans were often simple. It was not just bravery. Plenty of soldiers in plenty of armies were brave. The secret was something deeper, something almost invisible. The secret was mateship. Not as a slogan, not as a song, as a way of fighting. Australian soldiers did not really fight for the king.
They did not really fight for Australia.
They fought for the man on their left and the man on their right.
They fought because if they ran, those men would die.
They fought because their friends were watching. They fought because they would rather die themselves than be the one who let their mates down.
Now, think about what that means in a battle. A German tank rolls toward you.
You should run, but you do not run because if you run, your mate Bluey, who is hiding in the next hole, will die.
So, you stay.
And because Bluey will not run either, you live.
The whole army works that way.
Every man holds because every other man holds.
That is the secret. That is what every German general, every Italian officer, every Japanese commander could feel but never quite understand.
And it came from a long time before the war, from growing up in a wild country, from working together in mines and on sheep farms where you trusted the man next to you with your life.
Mateship was not made for the war.
The war just showed everyone what was already there.
In the city of Canberra, the capital of Australia, there is a building called the Australian War Memorial.
Inside, there is a wall.
On that wall are the names of every single Australian who has ever died in a war.
Every name.
And every day, at the end of the day, a soldier reads a few of those names out loud so that no man is ever forgotten.
Every year, on April 25th, the whole country stops.
It is called Anzac Day.
People wake up before dawn. They listen to a bugle. They remember.
Old men come to those services in wheelchairs.
Some are the last living rats of Tobruk.
Some walked the Kokoda Track when they were teenagers.
Now their grandkids stand beside them.
And every year kids walk the Kokoda Track themselves just to feel what their grandfathers felt. The American Marines kept reading those Australian jungle fighting manuals. The lessons of Tobruk and Kokoda saved American lives in Vietnam 20 years later.
But maybe the best words ever said about these men were said by their old enemy himself. By Rommel. The Desert Fox. The man who tried for 240 days to break them and could not.
When asked what kind of soldier he would pick if he had to take on the very gates of hell, Rommel did not hesitate.
"If I had to take hell, I would use the Australians to take it and the New Zealanders to hold it."
80 years later, the wind still blows over the broken stones of Tobruk.
The little rock shelters are still there.
Crumbling now. Half buried in the sand.
But if you walk up to them at sunset, when the desert turns red and gold, you can almost hear it.
The whisper of men who never broke.
The clink of a tin cup.
A laugh in the dark. A sergeant whispering down the line. "Stay down, mate. Let them come to us."
Related Videos
They Said Flight Was Impossible—Then Two Bicycle Mechanics Changed Everything#wrightbrothers
umars997
526 views•2026-05-30
#SeamansAct1915 #MaritimeHistory #LifeAtSea #BoatShitCrazyX #SaferWorkEnvironment
BoatShitCrazyX
859 views•2026-06-01
The British Crown Was a Death Sentence
BritanniaAftermath
699 views•2026-05-31
The Aztecs Paid Taxes With CHOCOLATE 🍫👑
historical_club
899 views•2026-05-30
Black Women Were Banned From White Suffrage Groups
Peoplediduknow
782 views•2026-05-31
A Volcano Created Frankenstein — And Killed Summer for a Year
TheDarkSideOfSmth
389 views•2026-05-29
Born into slavery in Beaufort
RoadsanRoots
613 views•2026-05-31
50.32 Judah And Israel Split / Jeroboam's False Religion - 2 Chronicles ch. 10-11
smyrnachristianchurchkokomo
107 views•2026-05-29











