GALLIPOLI
1915
Anatolia
has for centuries possessed an enormous strategic importance as
a result of the policies adapted by powers in their attempt to
reach the high seas and warmer climates and other powers who wanted
to establish sovereignty over the Middle East, the Mediterranean
and the Indian Ocean by means of a geo-political belt stretching
from the Baltic throughout the Bosphorus to the Persian Gulf.
The
situation during 1. World War
At the beginning of the 20th century the political climate in
Europe was extremely tense. The great powers of Europe in order
to gain sovereignty in both the geo-political and economic spheres
had split Europe into two blocs; Germano-Latin and Anglo-French.
Thus
the Triple Alliance between Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy
and the Triple Entente between Britain, France and Russia were
founded.
When
the outbreak of the 1st WW seemed imminent, the Ottoman Empire
attempted to ally herself with the Entente under the conditions
that her borders were guaranteed and that the economic capitulations
were abolished. Upon receiving a negative response, the Empire
found herself obliged to join the Triple Alliance and signed the
treaty of 2nd August 1914.
The
Ottoman Empire was not yet prepared for war though it decided
to keep the treaty secret.
The
German warships Goben and Breslau, then in the Mediterranean were
allowed to pass through the Dardanelles on the 10th August. The
Ottoman flag was raised and it was announced that they had been
purchased from Germany. The commander of the ships, Admiral Souchon
was appointed to the Naval Command .
The
Entente declared war on the Empire as a result of the naval operation:
known as the "Black Sea incident" carried out by the
Turkish Navy in the Black Sea.
The
Ottoman Government actively entered the war after this declaration,
on 11 November 1914.
The
Allied fleet chasing the German warships blockaded the Dardanelles
,began bombarding the Turkish batteries at the entrance to the
Straits on 3rd November 1914. This bombardment continued intermittently
until 12th 1915.
Naval
Battle
On 18th March 1915, at the beginning of the Dardanelles campaign,
the commander of the Allied fleet, Admiral de Robeck divided the
fleet into three sections. The first section entered the straits
at 10.30 am. and penetrated as far as the row of mines. The Intepe
batteries started a heavy fire.
The
Intepe, Erenkoy and Tengertepe batteries intensified their fire
and a fierce bombardment continued for three hours. In the afternoon
Admiral de Robeck withdrew his ships in the third section and
threw forward six warships waiting in the rear. During the withdrawal,
one of the ships hit a mine and sunk after a terrible explosion.
The
naval battle continued in all its intensity for seven hours. In
the face of the dogged resistance of the Turkish Straits Defense,
Admiral de Robeck decided that nothing further could be done that
day. During this operation three ships from the Allied Fleet had
been sunk and three badly damaged. It was under these circumstances
that Admiral de Robeck, at 17.30 brought the days' operation to
a close with the order, "All ships, general withdrawal."
Land
Battles
In spite of all the efforts in the Dardenelles from 19th February
to 18th March nothing had been gained by the Allied Forces. Now,
alongside the Naval bombardments and amphibious operation was
under consideration in order to capture the peninsula.
The
Anzac Corps, the 29th British Territorial Infantry Division, the
1st Royal Naval Infantry Division, the 29th Indian Infantry Brigade
and the French 1st Infantry Division were to take part in this
action. These forces were to be split into two groups, the first
group was to seize the Seddulbahir area and open the Straits whilst
the second was to land in the Kabatepe region, seize the Conkbayir
area and obstruct the Turkish Forces moving down from the north.
The
Commander of the Ottoman 5th Army had evaluated the defense of
the Gallipoli peninsula as of secondary importance. Thus out of
six divisions he allocated two divisions and one cavalry brigade
to the defense of the Gulf of Saros, two divisions to the defense
of the area between Anafartalar and Seddulbahir and the remaining
two divisions to the defense of the Asian coast.
Of
the two divisions deployed on the Gallipoli peninsula one was
the 19th division which served as the Chief of Command Reserve
Force in Bigali. The commander of this brigade was Mustafa Kemal.
At
the beginning of the 1st WW, Staff Lieutenant Colonel Mustafa
Kemal was Military Attaché in Sofia. Preferring to participate
personally in the struggle of his county against invading super
powers of the time, rather than watching from the sidelines, he
requested active military duty from the Chief of Staff. Upon his
insistence, he was appointed to the 19th Divisional Command founded
in Tekirdag on 1st February 1915.
In
less than one month, Mustafa Kemal had the division prepared for
war. On 25th February, his division was at Eceabat and ready for
combat.
The
Seddulbahir Battles
At dawn on the 25th April, the Seddulbahir coast was seen to be
surrounded by several ships and landing crafts.
At
5.30 am. a hellish fire was opened from the allied warships.
Bombardment
from the sea held the tip of the peninsula under fire from three
sides. The 29th British Infantry Division attempted to move into
the land.
The
defending forces broke the first wave of the invading forces with
success. Then, with the reinforcements which were later brought
in, the operation was extended on the land without much success.
The
1st., 2nd., and 3rd Battles of Kirte and Kerevizdere continued
from 25th April until the end of May when it turned into chronic
local clashes.
In
June 1915 the battle again intensified and after the bloody Zigindere
Battles which began on the 28th June continued for eight days.
Ariburnu
Battles
The area chosen by the Anzac Corps as a landing area was the coast
to the north of Kabatepe. However, the Anzacs had landed in the
steep, inaccessible area of Ariburnu due to their boats having
been carried by the strong current. First landing group consisted
of 1500 men with the same number again in a following wave. The
first target to be captured after the landing was the "Karacimen
Bloc."
One
of the battalions of the 27th regiment of the 9th Turkish Division
in Ariburnu was guarding the coasts of the area. One company of
the battalion had spread from the Ariburnu hills to Agildere.
This company consisted squads; one on the Ariburnu hilltops, one
in Balikcidamlari and one other in reserve on Haintepe.
The
Anzac attack began at 4.30 on 25th April. They landed at Ariburnu
in the form of a surprise attack. The defending squad opened fire
on the invading forces, but the Anzacs advanced. The Turkish company
defending the coast immediately reported the situation to 27 regimental
Command to the west of Eceabat.
While
the Regimental Commander was giving his report to the 9th Division,
at the same time he informed the 19th Division. The 8th Company
Commander brought up reinforcements to counter the first wave
of attacks, however, the heavy losses caused by the intense cannon
fire from the ships and the lack of ammunition led him to retreat.
Although
Staff Lieutenant-Colonel Mustafa Kemal had sent reports to the
army and the Corps Command at Gallipoli, he received no reply.
Using his initiative he attacked the Anzacs. Reinforcing the 57th
Regiment with a hill-top cannon battery, he advanced towards Ariburnu
via KocaCimen. In a critical moment Mustafa Kemal gave the order
for a company to rapidly reach the area and for the forward battalion
to immediately enter the fray. With their arrival, the Turkish
forces attained the initiative. The 57th Regiment completed their
battle preparations by noon and moved southwards from Conkbayiri
to the Anzac forces. This strike could not advance any further
than Duztepe because of the effective cannon fire from the ships.
He arrived at Korucakoy and reported the situation to the Army
Headquarters. He met the commander of the 3rd corps at Maltepe
from whom he received permission to deploy the entire 19th Division
after explaining to him the situation. He moved those forces forward.
Mustafa Kemal's decision, on the night of 25-26th April was to
take the command of the 27th Regiment and to attack the Anzacs
with two regiments from the south and two regiments from the north
and to drive them that night at whatever cost into the sea. Same
night the attack was deployed. Since the majority of the 27th
Regiment which arrived from Aleppo was composed of aged soldiers,
the action on the southern flank did not develop as hoped. The
57th and 72nd Regiments forced the Anzacs to retreat further south
from the Cesarettepe hill-top. The Anzacs were in great difficulty
to defend their positions with this latest assault. The allied
commander decided to evacuate his forces into Hamilton.
Due
to the lack of necessary vehicles, the evacuation move was suspended.
Dig-in and defend order was given instead.
As
time passed both sides were gradually reinforced. The 16th Division
was rushed from Thrace and the 2nd Division from Istanbul. Fierce
Anzac assaults on Ariburnu continued steadily and the fighting
went on until the end of May. Finally, from the end of May onwards
it turned into a French warfare.
The
clashes of Seddulbahir and Ariburnu in June and July of 1915 were
typical of stationary warfare. The opposing forces were extremely
close to each other, indeed as close as eight meters on certain
locations.
The
Anafartalar Battles
General Hamilton, unable to achieve any success on the Seddulbahir
and Ariburnu fronts in the past five months decided to open a
third front in Anafartalar bay in order to encircle and destroy
the Turkish Army from the rear. He assigned this task to the 9th
British Corps.
The
aim was to immediately seize the Conkbayiri and KocaCimen blocs,
advance from there and take control of the Straits. During this
landing limited action was to be taken in order to keep the Turkish
forces in the Seddulbahir and Ariburnu regions pinned down.
British
Army Corps began landing on the night of 6-7 August, to start
the final attack against the Turkish troops aproximately on the
9th of August. They landed to the south of the Buyukkemikli and
Kucukkemikli headlands. Due to the hot weather and exhaustion
of the British soldiers, 9th corps spend a day on the beach front
instead of moving to the target hills immediately. During this
time two Ottoman divisions were transferred to the front with
Mustafa Kemal as commander. One of these divisions pushed the
9th corps into the sea while the other one prevented the Anzacs
to reach to the battle front.
ldiers
The 12th Division attacked the 9th Corps front lines. The most
critical point was over for the Turks. The 9th Corps, under the
fire of the Turkish Forces, fell in great numbers on the beaches
and were left totally ineffective. Eventhough the 9th Corps, that
was later reinforced, attempted more flank attacks from Ismailoglu
Hill to Anafartalar and from Mt. Karakol to Ece Harbour and Tekke
Hill, they could not succeed.
The
pinning-down and encircling action against the Northern Group
was halted but some sections did come within 25 meters of the
crest-line. The 9th Turkish Division, which had counter-attacked
for two days in order to alleviate this dangerous situation was
not able to achieve a success. Then, Liman Von Sanders, Commander
of the 5th Ottoman Army reinforced the 8th Division with two regiments
and put it under Mustafa Kemal's orders.
Colonel
Mustafa Kemal arrived at the headquarters of the 8th Division,
the night of 9-10th August and ordered his soldiers to attack
using only bayonets at down on the 10th of August. The attack
succeeded and even the British Brigade Commander was among the
dead. Upon the seizure of the land that would guarantee the security
of the defense line, the order to dig-in and defend was given.
The British operation that had been carried out with strong attack
groups in high hopes on Ariburnu and the landings at Anafartalar
were paralyzed and as in the other regions were brought to a standstill.
Thus
the allied forces clearly saw that no possibility remained either
of breaking the Turkish defense in the Dardanelles or of achieving
any result in the Gallipoli Campaign, above all of achieving their
ambition of taking Istanbul. On 20th December 1915 they ordered
the evacuation of Ariburnu-Anafartalar and on the 9th January
1916 Seddulbahir.
Over
33000 allied and 86000 Turkish troops died in the eight-month
Gallipoli campaign which achieved none of its objectives. A British
royal commission later concluded that the operation had been ill-conceived.
Gallipoli cost 8700 Australian dead and 19000 wounded. Large numbers
of the dead have no known grave. The story of Anzac has had an
enduring effect on the way Australians see themselves. Though
the campaign was a failure, Anzac has come to stand, in the words
of the official historian, C.E.W. Bean, "for reckless valour
in a good cause, for enterprise, recourcefulness, fidelity, comradeship
and endurance".
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