Hi George:
You wrote:
Quote:
Chris - I finally obtained an article on an Australian veteran who went back to Morotai in '89, 40 years after he was stationed there. After several detailed (but friendly) interviews with the police, he was allowed to visit his old Australian airfield, Wama, but the old American strip was off-limits. He wanted to visit his old campsite, but the road was closed. Wama was reverting to jungle, but he was still able to walk its entire length. Pieto is closed to visitors, except on civil flights. I found it interesting that along the east coast, he was shown some large American dumps in ravines covered by jungle. Other dumps had already been removed by scrappers. What was heartbreaking was that the natives had a "factory" (as they called it) where they were converting(dismantling) old aircraft remains into decorative products.
And to prove how rough this area is, 3 Japanese warships in the water off of Ternate, where he caught an old boat to Morotai, are being accosted and overtaken by the jungle! It was starting to cover the anti-aircraft guns and approaching the bridge on one in '89.
A few questions I have are: Which airstrip is the American strip you refer to? Isn't that the main base in the south coast that is well known?
Where is Wama? I thought, maybe wrongly, that the Australians and Americans all shared the same base?
My guess is that there were 7 runways parallel, and that they were actually two parallel bases. One American and one Australian. Is this correct? That would explain why (Pieto?) 2 runways are still in use by the TNI-AU, and as a result off limits.
Is there anyway I could contact this Australian fellow, and clarify some questions all of us have?
I'd also like to get specifics on the locations of Wama, Pieto, the other base if there is one, and the scrapyards in ravines--which I didn't see in the AWMphotos.