Australian Active Service Medal 1945–1975 Explained

Australian Active Service Medal 1945–1975
Presenter:Australia
Type:Campaign medal
Awarded For:service in designated campaigns
Clasps:Malaya
Korea
Malaysia
Thailand
Thai-Malay
Vietnam
Established:11 December 1997
Lastawarded:23 January 2014
Total Awarded:74,000[1]
Access-Date:12 December 2022-->
Precedence Label:Order of Wear
Higher:Vietnam Logistic and Support Medal
Lower:Australian Active Service Medal
Related:Australia Service Medal 1939–45

The Australian Active Service Medal 1945–1975 recognises the service of Australian Defence Force and certain other persons in prescribed warlike operations in the period after World War II, and prior to February 1975. The medal was established in December 1997. The Australian Active Service Medal recognises warlike service after February 1975 until 2012 when the Australian Operational Service Medal was instituted.

Description

Related medals

Recipients of this medal are also entitled to the issue of the Returned from Active Service Badge.

Recipients of the AASM 1945–75 may be authorised to wear up to three further medals for the same period of service; a UK campaign medal, a medal from an international organisation and a medal from a host nation.

During this period campaign and service medals under the UK system were originally issued. The Australian system of honours was introduced in 1975 following which Australian service and campaign medals were issued to Australian Military Force personnel, and the issue of UK medals discontinued.

The AASM 1945–75 was issued retrospectively to provide an Australian recognition of the service. The AASM 1945–75 was issued in addition to the existing UK medals. The UK medals remained recognised in the Australian Order of Precedence. UK medals applicable to a clasp are referenced with the clasp details.

Personnel who receive this medal may also be entitled to receive a service or campaign medal from an international organisation or the host country, if they meet the eligibility criteria for those medals. These are treated as foreign medals in the Australian system, and if approved for wear on service uniforms, are worn after Australian medals in the order they are received.

Some of the international and host nation medals have been granted a blanket authority for all recipients to wear. Others are approved on an individual basis. Any foreign medals with blanket approval to be worn are referenced with the clasp. In addition all UN medals are authorised for wear.

Clasps

The medal has the following clasps:

MALAYA

1 days service during the Malayan Emergency from 16 June 1948 – 31 July 1960

See also General Service Medal (1918) with clasp Malaya

May also be eligible for the Malaysian Pingat Jasa Malaysia

KOREA

1 days service during the Korean War from 1 July 1950 – 27 July 1953

see also Korea Medal

see also the United Nations Korea Medal

MALAYSIA

1 days service in:

See also General Service Medal (1962) with clasps Malay Peninsula and Borneo

May also be eligible for the Malaysian Pingat Jasa Malaysia

THAILAND

1 days service:

THAI-MALAY

1 days service in:

Initially, this service was recognised with a similarly named clasp to the Australian Service Medal 1945–1975, but it was upgraded to the AASM 1945–1975 in February 2002.[2]

VIETNAM

For recipients of:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Medal Yearbook 2023 . 2022 . . Honiton, Devon . 978-1-908828-63-7 . 467 .
  2. Web site: Eligibility Criteria for the Australian Active Service Medal 1945–75 . Department of Defence . 20 March 2022.