The 6th Division, under
Major General Iven Mackay fought in the
Western Desert campaign at
Bardia,
Tobruk and
Benghazi. It experienced many casualties in the
Greek campaign, where 3,000 Australian soldiers were taken prisoner. After refitting in Syria, the 6th Division was recalled to Australia to take part in the
Pacific War in February 1942. Its 16th and 17th Infantry Brigades were temporarily diverted to garrison
Ceylon. The 19th Infantry Brigade was sent to
Darwin, except for its 2/11th Infantry Battalion, which went to Western Australia. When the remainder of the 6th Division returned, it was committed to the fighting in New Guinea. The 16th Infantry Brigade participated in the fighting on the
Kokoda Track and at
Buna. The 17th Infantry Brigade fought in the
Battle of Wau and the
Salamaua campaign. The 7th Division, under
Major General Arthur Allen and other Australian units formed the body of the Allied invasion of
Lebanon and
Syria in 1941. The division's 18th Infantry Brigade fought at Tobruk. Following the outbreak of war in the Pacific, elements of the 7th Division were sent to the
Dutch East Indies, reinforcing a few 8th Division units. The bulk of the 7th Division was deployed in support of Militia battalions engaged in a rearguard action on the
Kokoda Track Campaign in
New Guinea. With elements of the 1st Armoured Division and 6th Divisions, and Militia, it formed a large part of the Allied forces which destroyed the major Japanese beachhead in New Guinea, at the
Battle of Buna-Gona. Most of the 8th Division was sent to
Malaya to strengthen the garrison prior to war with Japan, while the remaining battalions were deployed in the
Dutch East Indies and
New Guinea. Consequently, most of the division was lost at the
Fall of Singapore in February 1942, where the division lost 1,789 killed and 1,306 wounded; another 15,395 were captured. The divisional commander,
Major General Henry Gordon Bennett created an enduring controversy by escaping. A small, lesser-known force known as Mission 204 was drawn from units in Malaya, including forty men of the 8th Division. It served in China, advising the Chinese Army, until it was withdrawn in October 1942. The 23rd Infantry Brigade remained, but without battalions, as these had been lost when
Ambon,
Rabaul and
Timor fell. It was filled up with Militia battalions, and it and other remaining elements of the 8th Division participated in the campaigns in the South West Pacific. The 8th Division was reformed after the war to process prisoners of the Japanese. Australian prisoners of war, like other
Allied prisoners of the Japanese, were often held in inhumane conditions, such as
Changi Prison or in
Japan. Some were subject to forced labour, including the
Burma Railway or forced long distance marches, such as on
Sandakan. AIF
Independent companies continued guerrilla operations in East Timor for many months until being evacuated in January 1943. Independent companies played an important part in the defence of New Guinea, initially occupying several locations to Australia's north to provide an early warning capability in the months prior to the outbreak of the Pacific War, and then, after the fighting had started, fighting several delaying campaigns in
Timor,
New Guinea, and
New Britain. Later in the war, these units were converted into "commando" units, subsequently fighting several campaigns in New Guinea,
Bougainville and
Borneo. The 9th Division fought in the
North African campaign under
Major General Leslie Morshead and distinguished itself first at the
Battle of Tobruk, where it became the first Allied unit to resist German
Blitzkrieg tactics. The
Axis leader in North Africa, Lieutenant General
Erwin Rommel, described the 9th Division at Tobruk as: "immensely big and powerful men, who without question represented an elite formation of the British Empire, a fact that was also evident in battle." The 9th also served with distinction at the
First and
Second Battles of El Alamein. It returned to Australia in early 1943 in a convoy operation designated
Operation Pamphlet. In 1943, the 6th, 7th and 9th Divisions were reunited on the
Atherton Tableland. General
Douglas MacArthur,
Supreme Allied Commander in the
South West Pacific Area depended on the AIF as the spearhead of his land forces in 1942 and 1943. The 7th Division, now under
Major General George Vasey, fought at
Nadzab and in the
Finisterre Range campaign. Meanwhile, the 9th Division, now under
Major General George Wootten fought at
Red Beach and then in the
Huon Peninsula campaign. in July 1945 MacArthur deployed the AIF divisions in secondary assignments during 1944–45, where they often fought what many considered to be pointless battles. A shortage of first operational units and then logistic units caused the 6th Division, now under
Major General Jack Stevens to be committed to the
Aitape-Wewak campaign despite MacArthur's efforts. He employed the 7th and 9th Divisions in the
Borneo Campaign (1945). A planned invasion of the Japanese home island of
Honshū in 1946,
Operation Coronet, would almost certainly have included an "
Australian 10th Division", made up of experienced personnel from the three existing divisions. However, the Japanese surrendered before the invasion took place. ==Disbandment==