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The Other Enemy?
is the first study of Australia's military police. Glenn Wahlert
relates their history from the origins of the Provost Marshal in
the colony of New South Wales through to the formation of the Anzac
Provost Corps in 1916 and the end of World War II. He discusses
the profound, sometimes violent enmity between the provosts and
the Anzacs during World War I, when the former came to be known
as the 'other enemy'. One veteran summed it up: "There is no
way that you can convince me that those bastards came anywhere near
the Front ... They were a bunch of no-hopers and a complete waste
of rations.'
Historians and military history enthusiasts will be fascinated by
the book's detailed observations of relations between military police
and soldiers, particularly on the sensitive issue of indiscipline
among the 1st AIF. As Glenn Wahlert writes: 'The Anzac Provost Corps
dealt with more than 26,000 Australian soldiers in England for either
absence or desertion between January 1917 and December 1918. Some
had been absent for so long that they had married, fathered children,
and gained acceptance in the community as discharged veterans ...
One had even joined the local constabulary ...'
Matters improved somewhat during World War II, when the role of
the provosts evolved from being primarily concerned with discipline
into a combat-support role that involved hazardous front-line service.
Nevertheless clashes between soldiers and provosts occurred periodically,
including the infamous Battle of Brisbane in late 1942 when a thousand
soldiers clashed with American military police and one soldier was
shot dead.
This detailed narrative history, complemented by many vivid interviews
with veterans, evokes the atmosphere and personalities of this complex
and often bitter aspect of Australia's military history.