A War Against Birds? The Surprising Story of How Emus Defeated Australia

Kazi Nasir | Dec 10, 2025, 15:31 IST
Emu Encounter at Australia | Photo: Wikimedia Commons
The Emu War of 1932 remains one of history’s most unusual military operations an event where Australia, equipped with soldiers and machine guns, attempted to control a booming emu population but ultimately failed. This article explores why the Emu War happened, how it unfolded, and what made it such a bizarre yet significant chapter in environmental and military history.

What if I tell you a modern nation once deployed soldiers with machine guns to fight a battle against giant birds? Yes, it's true. In 1932, this bizarre scenario took place in Australia. As thousands of migrating emus were descending on cultivated farmlands in Western Australia, devastating farmers' crops and livelihoods, it was the time of the great depression. How the government responded that time today is known as the "EMU War." Modern troops and their firing thousands of rounds went to vain and the operation failed. The emus defeated them. It wasn't a victory of emus only; nature won the battle. This is the story of a war humans lost to birds.



How the Emus Took Over Australian Farmland


Emu War Photo | (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

World War I had recently over and it was the beginning of the Great Depression. Farmers were facing economic hardship in Western Australia. A large number of emus naturally migrate toward farmed regions. It was after their breeding season, so they were in need of food and water. Ironically, that year witnessed a large number of emus, which is unusual, estimated at up to 20,000. The migration went wild. Results: crops were destroyed, fences collapsed, the water troughs became emptier so the government faced huge pressure from financial ruin.




Machine guns vs. Feathers



Black and White Ground
Image credit : Freepik

The Royal Australian Artillery deployed soldiers in November 1932. Each soldier with two Lewis machine guns and 10,000 rounds of ammunition, their mission was to protect farms and slaughter the emus.



But the army faced unexpected difficulties as emu sizes are huge up to 1.9 meters and have astonishing speed up to 50 km/h and they do not move in big flocks like cattle do rather they prefer to be scattered in small groups. This makes them difficult to target. The soldiers faced lots of other difficulties as the terrain was so bumpy, it was tough to chase the emus and shoot them and when a machine gun jammed the birds ran away safely.



Despite thousands of fired rounds, only a few hundred or fewer than a thousand emus were confirmed killed and the army admitted defeat soon; they withdrew and the war finally ended in December 1932.



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FAQs

Q1. Which country lost a war against emus?


Ans: Australian



Q2. Who won the Emu War?


Ans: The Emus



Q3. Can emus fly at all?


Ans: No, emus cannot fly


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