After a brief legal career of a few months, the outbreak of the Second World War led Wilmot to join the Australian Broadcasting Commission. He was sent to the
Middle East in September 1940 and reported from
North Africa,
Greece and
Syria, pioneering broadcast interviews; he was in
Tobruk during the
siege of 1941. When
Japan entered the war, Wilmot returned to Australia, then went out to cover the
war in the Pacific. He reported from
Papua during the Japanese invasion in 1942, including the
Kokoda Track campaign, where he walked up to the forward area, around Abuari and Isurava, with fellow war correspondent
Osmar White and cinematographer
Damien Parer. Wilmot regarded General Sir
Thomas Blamey as incompetent and protested at his sacking of Lieutenant General
Sydney Rowell. Blamey cancelled Wilmot's accreditation as a
war correspondent in October 1942 for spreading a false rumour that Blamey was taking payments from the laundry contractor at
Puckapunyal. Wilmot was reinstated, but on 1 November 1942, Blamey again terminated Wilmot's accreditation, this time for good. ==BBC work==