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Thread: Jack Sue RIP

  1. #1
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    Jack Sue RIP

    Hi Guys
    Jack "Wong" Sue passed away today.
    He led the Z force and worked behind the Japanese lines in Borneo.
    He went on to run a Dive bussiness out of Midland WA.
    In recent years he regularly talked on the radio about his experiences,he has books too as far as Im aware.
    Listened to many of his stories on the wireless,great insight into the fight against the Japs.
    Im sure the Military members amongst us could provide alot more info.
    RIP JACK WONG SUE
    Andrew
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  2. #2
    midal Guest
    He was a hell of a man.....he was refused entry into the navy initially I believe (according to radio reports this arvo) so he joined the army and entered into a special commando course. Was behind enemy lines at 19yrs of age! Took part in the celebrated Z Force, destroyed enemy ships in Singapore harbour. Received gongs from Aust plus American Submariner gong.
    A genuine hero and a hell of a man! RIP Jack.

    Cheers
    Mick

  3. #3
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    Rip Jack,
    for as long as i can remember (and probably longer than i have been alive) he's run that dive shop. My grandparents lived in midland and it always cracked me up as a child that he had a girls name.....

    Sad to hear of his passing though, I didn't know the stories behind the man.

  4. #4
    RichardK is offline ChatterBox Silver Subscriber
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    RIP Jack, long may you be remembered

  5. #5
    richard4u2 Guest
    R.I.P. Mr Sue
    We are so greatfull for what you and the men and woman of your era did so we can live our life style we have today . thank you .

  6. #6
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    RIP

    He saw the Sandakan death march but could do nothing. It was reported to Blamey and Macarthur, but they didn't want to know about it as they didn't want to deviate forces.

    He also said some prominent Fremantle identities were Jap spies.

    A great man!

  7. #7
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    Abrief history of the man Jack Wong Sue, R.I.P.

    Baz.


    Mr Sue was a member of Z Special Unit, a special forces reconnaissance unit which operated behind enemy lines in South-East Asia during World War II.

    Z Special Unit was the predecessor to the Special Air Service Regiment.

    Mr Sue spent months behind enemy lines in Borneo and in his memoirs claimed Z Special Unit commandos in Borneo killed 1,700 Japanese and trained 6,000 guerrillas.

    Allied forces later invaded Borneo.

    Mr Sue was awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal and rose to the rank of Sergeant during his army career.

    He was awarded the Order of Australia in 2006.

    His son Barry Sue confirmed he died today.

    In 2006, The West Australians' Rod Moran wrote of Mr Sue's war-time exploits.

    Head-hunting Dyaks, murderous Japanese infantry and the tragedy of the Sandakan Death Marches in the fetid jungle of what was then British North Borneo provided the grim backdrop to teenage warrior Jack Wong Sue's experience of World War II in the South-West Pacific, Moran wrote.

    His award of the Order of Australia Medal was partly for his recording of those experiences in Blood on Borneo, a remarkable memoir of his nine months behind enemy lines in 1944-45. Published in 2001, more than 17,000 copies of the book have been sold in WA alone.

    But Mr Sue's trajectory to war began when he was merely 16 years old. After receiving a white feather in the mail - a symbol of cowardice - he joined the merchant navy, sailing the submarine-infested high seas on a Norwegian oil tanker.

    En route, he rubbed shoulders with nazi sailors on shore leave in pro-German neutral ports, and witnessed the fiery death by torpedo of an Allied merchantman at night.

    On returning to Fremantle he attempted to enlist in the Royal Australian Navy, but was rejected because of his Chinese background. The fact that he was Australian-born and that China was a wartime ally made no difference.

    Ironically, it was precisely his oriental appearance and connections - as well as his fluency in Chinese and Malay - that led to Mr Sue's recruitment into Z Special Unit, an ultra-secret organisation that infiltrated agents behind Japanese lines throughout the South-West Pacific for sabotage, guerilla warfare, and intelligence gathering.

    After extensive training in the ruthless methods and technologies of clandestine warfare, Mr Sue was sent into the field as agent AKR 13. Leaving Fremantle on the USS Tuna, he was inserted into Borneo to conduct operation Agas 1. He had been issued with “L-tablets”, lethal capsules to be ingested if captured. At the time, Borneo was occupied by 37,000 troops of the Japanese Imperial Army.

    The aim was to gather intelligence on Japanese troop movements as a prelude to the Australian invasion of Borneo. It was during this operation that Mr Sue won the Distinguished Conduct Medal for his actions in securing intelligence at Bongawan railway station.

    Mr Sue was also involved in Operation Kingfisher, a plan to rescue the PoWs at the brutal Sandakan prison camp in northern Borneo. With nearly 2000 Japanese troops in the area, Mr Sue had to reconnoitre the camp and its hinterland.

    All but six of the 2400 prisoners at the camp died on the subsequent Sandakan Death Marches, or were murdered at the camp itself. Mr Sue is the last living witness to the third and final march.

    Historian Lynette Silver, author of Sandakan: A Conspiracy of Silence, describes his predicament: “Into their line of vision came a contingent of Japanese guards, followed by four skeletal creatures, so starved and emaciated they looked more like mummified corpses than human beings.” They were Australian PoWs.

    Mr Sue's instincts told him to kill the guards and free the prisoners. But his training told him to stay under cover. The image of his countrymen as the living dead haunted Mr Sue.

    In 1945, at the age of just 19, Mr Sue emerged from the jungle emaciated, psychologically haunted and a decorated war hero. With great fortitude, he began the process of building a new life in civvy street
    Cheers Baz.

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  8. #8
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    Legend in every sense of the word.
    We owe "everything" to gentlemen like this and their comrades.
    Lest We Forget

  9. #9
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    Wow - glad I never had to go through that, and very thankful to him and others like him for doing it for us. One heck of a tough guy.

    I met a guy when I was in primary school - the Z forces bit reminded me, as this guy was Z forces. He had three blue dots tattooed on his wrist or hand in a triangle - apparently it was a tribal thing to show he was made part of a head hunter tribe. Any chance that I met Jack Sue?

    RIP

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