Jakarta Globe – AFP, Jan 02, 2015
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| An Indonesian helicopter searches for victims and debris during recovery operations on Jan. 1, 2015 for Indonesia AirAsia flight QZ8501 that crashed in the Java Sea. (AFP Photo/Adek Berry) |
Jakarta.
The Java Sea where a massive search operation is underway for Indonesia AirAsia
Flight QZ8501 is also the graveyard for one of the largest naval engagements of
World War II.
Old wrecks,
whether from battles or peacetime disasters, have occasionally given false
leads to modern searches.
Indonesian
search and rescue agency official S.B. Supriyadi said on Friday the hunt for
the AirAsia plane had detected a metal structure but it proved to be a false
lead, “possibly a ship which sank”.
While it is
unlikely to have been an old warship, the Java Sea was the scene of a
disastrous defeat for the Allied navies by invading Imperial Japanese forces as
they swept through the Dutch East Indies.
In the
Battle of the Java Sea on Feb. 27, 1942, a combined force of Dutch, US, British
and Australian ships was hopelessly outmatched, suffering the loss of five
warships and 2,300 sailors against Japanese losses of one damaged destroyer and
36 dead.
A second
engagement by British and US forces on March 1 resulted in the sinking of three
Allied warships with one Japanese destroyer damaged.
Wrecks from
these World War II battles remain at the bottom of the Java Sea and are popular
with divers.
In August
last year, US Navy archeologists, working with Indonesian navy divers,
identified one as the cruiser USS Houston, which sank during the Battle of the
Sunda Strait in 1942.
The US Navy
said the ship, nicknamed “The Galloping Ghost of the Java Coast,” was the final
resting place of about 650 sailors and Marines.
During the
Battle of the Sunda Strait on March 1, 1942, the Houston and Australian cruiser
HMAS Perth were sunk during an engagement with a vastly superior Japanese
force.
The
Houston’s captain received a posthumous Medal of Honor for extraordinary
heroism.
In November
2013 Indonesian researchers made a surprise discovery of what is believed to be
a German submarine that was torpedoed off Java during World War II.
Researchers
believe the wreck — which contained at least 17 human skeletons — is U-168,
which succeeded in sinking several allied vessels before itself being torpedoed
by a Dutch submarine in 1944.
“This is an
extraordinary find that will certainly provide useful information about what
took place in the Java Sea during World War II,” Bambang Budi Utomo, head of
the research team at the National Archaeology Center that found the vessel,
said at the time.
As well as
the human skeletons, dinner plates bearing swastikas, batteries, binoculars and
a bottle of hair oil were pulled from the wreck.
Japan
occupied Indonesia during World War II, which was then still known by its colonial
name of the Dutch East Indies. Tokyo and Berlin were allies during the war.
Agence
France-Presse

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