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Western Australian emergency of March 1942

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Date
  
March 1942

Western Australian emergency of March 1942

Objective
  
Reinforcement of Western Australia in response to a feared Japanese attack

The Western Australian emergency of March 1942 was a series of events that occurred in northern Western Australia that gave Australian military forces serious concerns about the capacity of the Japanese to move down the Western Australian coast. The air raids on Broome and other locations in March 1942 caused the Allies to reinforce the military forces located in Western Australia to defend the state.

The action was taken to defend against the possibility that a force of Japanese warships and planes would attempt to attack the cities of Fremantle and Perth. The speed and extent of Japanese expansion to this time was considered a major threat to the region.

Japanese propaganda was produced at the time to spread the idea of invasion or bombing of southern Australian cities. Authorities were attempting to allay fears a month before the Darwin bombings. The events surrounding the bombings and response by authorities in northern Australia were referred to as "Japanese Scare" tactics.

The work undertaken in Fremantle and Perth to prepare for an imminent invasion or attack was the most extensive in the history of Western Australia. The establishment of the Fremantle submarine base was a part of the defensive actions. The subsequent Western Australian emergency of March 1944 was in effect a repeat of the 1942 emergency, but less damaging in comparison to the bombings on Broome and other locations during the 1942 emergency.

References

Western Australian emergency of March 1942 Wikipedia