"Korea - 30,800"@en . "Indonesian War (Alternity)"@en . . . "* 190,000\n\nSiam"@en . "Indonesian/Allied victory"@en . . . "* 190,000\n\nMalaysia"@en . . "* 40,000\n\nKorea"@en . . "Manila Pact \n\n22px Philippine Empire\n\n22px West Australia\n\n22px Myanmar"@en . "Alternity"@en . . . "West Australia - 22,000"@en . . . "* 200,000\n\nNew Zealand"@en . "Australia - 11,450"@en . . "* 187,000\n\nAustralia"@en . . . "New Zealand - 4,600"@en . . . "1972-01-10"^^ . "* 1,789,000 \n\nWest Australia"@en . . "1979-06-13"^^ . . "Indonesian War"@en . "* Treaty of Singapore\n* End of Philippine imperial expansion\n* West Australia fortifies Java"@en . "* 346,000\n\nMyanmar"@en . . . "Indonesia - 587,000"@en . . "The first skirmishes of the war were initiated by a chance encounter in the lowland rain forests of Borneo on February 19, 1970 (what is today the Bentuang Kerimun National Park) between a group of some thirty to forty-odd Indonesian Army personnel on a training exercise - mostly recruits - and a small Imperial recon party sent to scout Indonesian positions and assess their troop strength in the region. As the Philippine party (consisting of around fifteen or sixteen of their 'elite' recon personnel) were crossing a small rain forest clearing to access a mountain trail for a better vantage point, some of the Indonesian trainees sighted them, and thinking the Filipinos were a part of the exercise, opened fire, hitting and immobilizing three of the scouting team with stun rounds. The Imperials, however, returned fire with live rounds, killing five of the recruits and sending the rest scrambling for cover in the dense foliage. Over the next three to four hours, the Indonesian and Imperial troops engaged in crude guerrilla warfare, most of the casualties were experienced by the relatively inexperienced Indonesians, while the Imperials used their superior training and equipment to virtually ensure they retained their complement. But by mid-afternoon, three fully armed Indonesian Air Force (INDAF) UH-1 'Huey' helicopters arrived to extract wounded and land a heavily armed platoon to drive the Filipinos out. Seeing no other choice, the Imperial party retreated and thus disappeared into the rain forest."@en . "Philippine Empire"@en . "Second Indochina War"@en . "United Kingdom - 9,500"@en . "* 180,000"@en . "* 1,900,000\n\nUnited States"@en . . . . . . . . "Philippines - 596,980"@en . "Allied Coalition\n\n22px Indonesia\n\n22px United States of America\n\n22px Malaysia\n\n22px United Kingdom\n\n22px Siam\n\n22px Korea\n\n22px Australia\n\n22px New Zealand"@en . "Indonesia"@en . "Siam - 8,900"@en . "Myanmar - 45,000"@en . . "page"@en . . "* 345,000\n\nUnited Kingdom"@en . "* 20,000"@en . "The first skirmishes of the war were initiated by a chance encounter in the lowland rain forests of Borneo on February 19, 1970 (what is today the Bentuang Kerimun National Park) between a group of some thirty to forty-odd Indonesian Army personnel on a training exercise - mostly recruits - and a small Imperial recon party sent to scout Indonesian positions and assess their troop strength in the region. As the Philippine party (consisting of around fifteen or sixteen of their 'elite' recon personnel) were crossing a small rain forest clearing to access a mountain trail for a better vantage point, some of the Indonesian trainees sighted them, and thinking the Filipinos were a part of the exercise, opened fire, hitting and immobilizing three of the scouting team with stun rounds. The Imperia"@en . "United States - 9,000"@en . "Malaysia - 10,700"@en . "Indonesia, New Guinea, Malaysia, Burma, Australia"@en .