"When we conduct an
overt dive the beach has already been secured by soldiers ashore before
we start. We go into the beach by boat and clear it during daylight. The
hydrographic team accompany us and survey the approaches to the beach"
explained Commanding Officer of AUSCDT4, Lieutenant Commander Peter Tedman.
"If the beach needs to be cleared prior to the area being secured then
the dive team conducts a clandestine operation by swimming into the beach
under the cover of night. Only after troops are landed ashore can the
hydrographic team then can go in and survey the beach."

Clearance Divers
in Dili Harbour.
Pic: ABPH Damien Pawlenko |
In total the team has
conducted eighteen overt diving operations throughout East Timor. In addition
they have conducted two clandestine operations at night in Aidabeleten
and in the Oecussi enclave located within West Timor.
"Batagarde was also intended to be a clandestine dive, however an Indonesian
Navy ship was too close to the beach so we had to abort the dive. We had
to wait until the Australian soldiers arrived by road the next morning.
We then went in and cleared the beach so the Australian Navy Landing Craft
could land with supplies for the troops ashore."
To conduct a successful overt beach clearance the dive team positions
a number of divers along the beach. Each diver swims out from the beach
along a compass bearing, whilst laying a line along the bottom until they
reach the ten metre mark off the beach. Once the lanes are laid, two divers
then tow a line between them and investigate any snags.
"We normally clear a 120 metre wide beach front out to a depth of 10m.
In East Timor the 10m depth contour is usually about 150m from the beach
so we end up with an area of about 18000 sq m that is clear of dangers.
If we snag something one of the divers will investigate it and if it's
substantial will come to the surface and report it. Otherwise the diver
will take a depth over the obstacle to determine if there is sufficient
water for a Landing Craft to get over it. If there is insufficient water
then the search area has to be re-centered."

Clearance Diving
Team 4 in East Timor. Pic: ABPH Damian Pawlenko |
"Compared to overt beach
surveys were you can take all the time you want, even stay for multiple
days if necessary, clandestine operations can get really pressing. The
clandestine dive at the Oecussi enclave has been the highlight of all
the dives we've done in East Timor".
"We were on a very skinny
time line with the soldiers flying in by Black hawk and the Landing Craft
beaching both occurring the next morning at first light. The problem was
that if the Blackhawks landed without the beach being cleared, the Landing
Craft couldn't deliver their vehicles, equipment, packs and ammunition.
So everything was predicated on us completing the beach clearance in time".
"We only had one period of darkness, from 10pm to 3am, a total of five
hours to complete the beach clearance at the enclave and give the helicopters
enough time to make the flight. The timings were also compounded by the
fact that the Navy didn't sail from Dili until it was after dark."
"Prior to the dive in
the Oecussi enclave INTERFET had received unconfirmed reports of people
being killed in the area. As we approached the beach we could hear shots
being fired in the distance so there was a lot of tension, especially
when a vehicle drove up the beach and stopped only a half a kilometre
short of where we were in the water."
"The other clandestine operation we did was in Aidebeleten. Although we
only had six hours in the water to complete the beach clearance, there
was no landing occurring the next morning so it wasn't as tight. However
in Aidebeleten there was a lot of activity ashore with fires being lit
and vehicle movement, unlike the enclave though it was not really considered
an area of particularly high security risk."
Traditionally clearance divers plan their operations over multiple nights.
In East Timor AUSCDT4 has not had this luxury. Instead the dive team have
had to complete the reconnaissance and survey dives all in one night.
If any problems are found the landing area must be relocated straight
away.

LCDR Peter Tedman,
CO of Clearance Diving Team 4 doing reconnaissance of a beach in East
Timor. Pic: ABPH Damian Pawlenko |
"When we landed in Aidebeleten
there was a big rocky outcrop in the centre of the search area so we had
to move 800m to the east until we found clear water. We were lucky to
find clear water that night because if we hadn't we wouldn't have been
able to complete the beach survey in the hours of darkness available.
This also occurred during the dive in Suai where the metal frame of a
large railway carriage was submerged in the water. Because of the potential
for the metal to spear one of the Landing Craft the entire search area
had to be relocated to the west."
Fortunately for the
clearance diving team the large beach frontages along the East Timor coast
and the fact that no particular beaches have been specified for each landings,
has enable the divers to simply recentre the search rather than lay charges
to remove the obstacles within it.
"One of our biggest problems was that we couldn't deploy to East Timor
with all our Mine Counter Measure equipment because with a total weight
of 11,000 kgs it takes up nearly a whole Hercules aircraft. As a result
we had to deploy with a reduced capability. To counteract that we selected
members from all three functional elements of the diving team including
experts in underwater battle damage repair; mine counter measures and
maritime tactical operations. This has proved invaluable because we have
a team with a range of skills instead of just one focused group. It's
also been beneficial because we've encountered just about everything here
except mines".
One of the tasks which
AUSCDT4 were required to complete that used their underwater battle damage
repair skills involved one of the large merchant vessels that was coming
alongside Dili wharf. During the approach the MV Calatagan picked up a
mooring cable which wrapped around its propeller and shaft 8 to 10 times
until the ship was well and truly fixed to the harbour bottom. With the
aid of 'broco' cutters the divers were able to cut the cable between the
propeller and the mooring cable, freeing the merchant ship so it could
be pushed alongside the wharf. The operation took eight hours and the
following morning the divers had to recover the mooring buoy and replace
the 20 metres of cable they'd cut off.

Team 4 Clearance
Divers on a beach in Betano, East Timor. Pic: ABPH Damian Pawlenko |
"The operation in East
Timor has been great experience for the guys. There isn't anyone in this
group of twelve divers who have been operational before. Everything we
are doing is new and we've had to come up with different operational procedures
to the way we normally do things. A lot of the tasks have been fly-away
operations where a helicopter takes our equipment and us to the task.
This means we have to modify our operation because you can only take what
you can carry. In the end though it's worked out really well."
The operation has provided
AUSCDT4 with numerous lessons about the nature of the sea currents in
the waters surrounding East Timor. "There are some pretty mad currents
around here. Aidebeleten was probably the worst where we put divers in
the water for a reconnaissance dive and before they reentered for a full
survey dive, the current turned 180 degrees in only one and a half hours.
On another occasion the divers were swept in one direction by the sub-surface
current and the dive boat another by the surface current until they ended
up 2 km apart."
"We've also learnt a lot about the amount of noise that carries here.
When you are doing a clandestine dive everything seems really bright and
noisy whether it's the backlight from your night vision goggles, the brightness
of someone's compass board or the noise of the boat's motor. You get really
paranoid. But what we discovered was that as soon as you get into the
water and swim a short distance away from the boat you can't hear or see
a thing. So noise and light isn't as big a problem a we thought."
"As we were conducting our clandestine dive in the Oecussi enclave we
were thinking that everyone must be able to hear us and that a reception
party would be waiting for us on the beach. But in reality it was just
our own senses being heightened to anything that would give us away."

CPOCD Bruce Day
of Team 4 plunges into the water in East Timor. Pic: ABPH Damian Pawlenko
|
RAN clearance diving
teams have always worked on the premise that they would survey the beach
up to the waterline and that someone else would survey the back of the
beach, however this has not been the case in East Timor so they have had
to do it. "While we can find a really good beach there may be a swamp
or a cliff at the back of the beach that we can't see which makes landing
there useless. To make sure that the landing site is suitable for over
the beach operations we have had to get out of the water to check the
back of beach and beach exit. Fortunately we haven't had to go too far
up the beach. If we can confirm all of that from the water then we won't
even get out." AUSCDT4 from Perth will remain in East Timor until the
first week of December when they will be replaced by CDT1 from Sydney.
However by the time CDT1 arrives, AUSCDT4 will have cleared the major
ports and landing sites in East Timor.
"I think once CDT1 arrives it will be more of a maintenance task because
the wet season will have a big effect on the beach surveys we've already
done. Once the rivers in East Timor start to flow, especially the ones
that are close to our landing sites, the outfall will change the lay of
the land quite markedly. CDT1 will probably have to re-survey all the
sites, depending on how much silting occurs," said Lieutenant Commander
Peter Tedman.
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