On April 25th, the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) Day is celebrated in Australia, New Zealand and a number of other countries. Back in WWI, in 1915, when the corps landed on the Gallipoli Peninsula, it distinguished itself in battle with the Ottoman Empire. The corps failed to advance, and as a result, it was evacuated. But this was the first major operation in which Australia took part: thus the newly created nation underwent a baptism of fire.
On this day the people of Australia and New Zealand remember their fellow citizens who died in wars and military conflicts.
DISCOUNTS
From April 25th to April 28th (13:00 UTC) you will receive 30% discounts on premium squads with Aussie soldiers.
The 2/24th Battalion in the Battle of Tunisia campaign with the Owen Mk. 1, the Australian Army’s primary submachine gun in WWII. In a test contest held in 1942, Owen’s design, despite its unsightly appearance, won and entered service, beating out the STEN and Thompson submachine guns.
The 5th Squadron in the Pacific war campaign with the Boomerang Mk.II, an Australian single-seat fighter that was created in 1942 when the threat of the Japanese invasion of Australia was more than real. It was armed with two 20-mm guns, four 7.7-mm machine guns, and two 250-pound bombs.
Thank you, would be nice if their voices sounded Australian not English though. Keep up these sales and events, please don’t forget our stuka gunners on Moscow and Tunisia
if when the merge come Commowealth is still fused with US the answer is yes you can use them in pacific and tunisia,normandy because they count as US squad
If instead the Commowealth is a full faction at merger release the answer is yes again, australian are part of Commowealth faction and can be deployed in tunisia
Actually during the battle of Tunisa, there was the siege of city of Tobruk. The Axis tried to take the city for 241 days but was repelled many times by an Allied force consisting mostly of the 9th Australian division.