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GALLIPOLI WAR - Gelibolu Canakkale city.
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The Gallipoli campaign
took place between April and December 1915 in an effort to take the
Dardanelles from the Turkish Ottoman Empire (an ally of Germany and
Austria) and thus force it out of the war. Some 60,000 Australians
and 18,000 New Zealanders were part of a larger British force. Some
26,000 Australians and 7,571 New Zealanders were wounded; and 7,594
Australians and 2,431 NZs were killed. In numerical terms Gallipoli
was a minor campaign but it took on considerable national and
personal importance to the Australians and New Zealanders who fought
there.
The Gallipoli Campaign was New Zealand's introduction to the Great
War. New Zealanders fought on the Peninsula from the day of the
landings (April 25 1915) until the evacuation of 20 December 1915.
The 25th April is the New Zealand equivalent of Armistice Day. It is
marked throughout the country with Dawn Parades and other services.
Shops are closed in the morning. It is a very important day to New
Zealanders for a variety of reasons that have changed and transmuted
over the years.
World War I
Turkey (Ottoman Empire than) came into the war by the end of October
1914, which had not yet recovered from its wars of 1911 to 1913.
Turkey's treasury was empty. Its leader, a thirty-three year-old
military officer and national hero, Enver Pasha, saw the war in
Europe as an opportunity for Turkey to take back lands that had been
absorbed by the Russian Empire. Enver dreamed of reinvigorating
Turkey's empire. And Enver feared that if Britain, France and Russia
won against Germany and Austria-Hungary, they might deprive Turkey
of more of its empire. So he decided to take Turkey into the war on
the side of Germany.
Ottoman Government ordered two battleships to England just before
the war broke out and paid for them. But close relationship between
Turkey and Germany scared the Allies and thus Britain decided to not
to deliver those battleships which have already been paid. This
caused an uproar among the Turks against Britain and their friends.
This would be a great opportunity for Enver Pasha to use it against
the Allies. Turkey cooperated with two German warships in the
bombardment of two Russian seaports: Odessa and Nikolayev. Russia
responded three days later, on November 2, by declaring war on
Turkey. France declared against Turkey on November 5, and so too did
Britain. And Britain found this an opportune time to annex Cyprus
and Egypt, lands that had been nominally a part of Turkey's empire
while under British authority.
Turkey closed the straits (Bosphorus and Dardanelles) between the
Mediterranean and Black Seas, preventing Russia from exporting her
wheat or receiving shipments of materials from her allies. To
protect its oil wells in the Middle East, Britain moved a military
force up the Persian Gulf to Iraq, where it began engaging Turkish
forces. And in December, Turkey began an assault into Russia's
Caucasus Mountains.
Frustration came with Turkey's failed offensive against the Russians
in the Caucasus Mountains. In a five-day battle ending January 3,
the Russians smashed Turkey's offensive, and of the 95,000 men that
Turkey sent on the offensive only 18,000 returned, about 50,000 of
them having frozen to death. The shocked Turkish people wondered who
to blame for this disaster.
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Gallipoli Campaign
Meanwhile Winston Churchill, responsible of the navy at that time,
planned an offensive against Gallipoli to capture Dardanelles, open
a secure passage for the navy on their way to Istanbul, capital of
the Ottoman Government. Allies gathered their battleships in front
of Dardanelles Straight under the command of Admiral De Robeck. 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 March 1915.
Naval Battle
On 17th March they sent some boats into the straight and the
military intelligence reports said that there were no sea-mines
creating a risk for their attack. But the same night a small Turkish
mine-layer Nusrat laid many sea-mines into the Dardanelles.
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.". The Allied
assault stalled, and the British withdrew to Egypt to prepare for
another, bigger assault.
On 18th March eighteen battleships entered the straits. The fleet
included Queen Elizabeth, Lord Nelson, Agamemnon, Inflexible, Ocean,
Irresistible, Prince George and Majestic from Britain and the
Gaulois, Bouvet and Suffren from France. At first they made good
progress until the Bouvet struck a mine, heeled over, capsized and
disappeared in a cloud of smoke. Soon afterwards two more ships,
Irresistible and Ocean hit mines. Most of the men in these two ships
were rescued but by the time the Allied fleet retreated, over 700
men had been killed. Overall, three ships had been sunk and three
more had been severely damaged.
Land Battles
In spite of all the efforts in the Dardanelles 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 (across
Çanakkale) 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 (later it was called as Anzac
Cove) 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 (Halep) 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 (25
feet) 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 approximately 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.
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. Even though the 9th Corps, that was later
reinforced, attempted more flank attacks from Ismailoglu Hill to
Anafartalar and from Mt. Karakol to Ece Harbor 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 dawn 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.
Mustafa Kemal was stationed at Edirne and
Diyarbakir after the Çanakkale wars and was promoted to the rank of
lieutenant general on 1 April 1916.
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.
Turkish nation who lost about 253.000 men at battle, had managed to
emerge in honor against the Allied forces. Actually the fate at
trenches changed when
Mustafa Kemal addressed his soldiers with the
words "I am not giving you an order to attack, I am ordering you to
die!".
This was the biggest failure of Churchill and of the Allies of
course, they underestimated the military skills of
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and his brave soldiers. Both sides suffered heavy loss of
lives.
Today Gallipoli (Gelibolu) peninsula is a national park nearby
Canakkale and there are many war memorials and cemeteries belonging
to Turks, Australians, New Zealanders, British and French. Every
25th April war veterans (few left today) from both sides and their
children meet here to commemorate the Gallipoli Campaign. It is also
possible to dive at the shipwrecks along the shores. Many tours also
passes from this area.
Some Words about the War
Kemal Ataturk; (Inscription on Gallipoli Memorial put up by Turkey
in 1934, also on Ataturk Memorial at Tarakina Bay, Wellington.)
"Those heroes who shed their blood and lost their lives, you are now
lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace.
There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us
where they lie side by side in this country of ours. You, the
mothers who sent their sons from far away countries wipe away your
tears, your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After
having lost their lives on this land they become our sons as well."
Russell Weir; (Tolerton, In the shadow of war p. 202)
"We landed, I suppose, somewhere about nine or half past nine in the
morning. On the Sunday morning, Sunday the 25th of April. And
through a mistake made by the navy, we played into the Turk's hands
beautifully. Because you can imagine a narrow strip of beach,
nothing but stones, no sand, and from that narrow stretch of beach
straight up were high cliffs composed of clay and rock. And the
Turks had the machine guns and the rifle fire and the full view of
the beach, and the only protection we could get when we advanced was
to get in close to the cliff and hug it."
Alexander Aitken; (Aitken, Gallipoli to the Somme p. 33-34)
"... I slid the rifle-sight to '450', aimed and fired.[...] The Turk
plunged into the trench in a swirl of dust ... This, of course, was
what I was there for, but it seemed no light matter, and kept me
awake for some time. I would come to no conclusion except that
individual guilt in an act of this kind is not absolved by
collective duty nor lessened when pooled in collective
responsibility. I further found that I bore the Turk no trace of
enmity - nor for that matter did any of us; he was to us "Johnny
Turk" or "Joe Burke", almost a fellow sufferer. We were not
indoctrinated against him, as we had been against the Germans by
propaganda, the cartoons of Louis Raemakers, and tales of atrocity.
But I saw, still further, that this Turk, at the moment of shooting,
had not even been a person; he might have been big game. It was a
single step to the thought that certain 'colonial' campaigns, not
infrequent in our annals, might have been conducted in almost this
game-hunting spirit. Here I balked; to become analytical might lead
to doubt of the cause for which we were fighting; for this had been
called, in those early years, the 'war to end war'. I was far from
such doubt then, and would have repudiated pacifism."
Major General Godley; (in a letter to the NZ Minster of Interior,
Ronald Graham, July 1915, Boyack p. 59)
"I hear that Winston [Churchill] has arrived, and suppose we shall
see him within the next few days. He certainly is a plucky fellow,
and I think he ought to be given a V.C. and then taken out and shot.
I wonder what sort of reception he will get if he comes among the
troops, whether they will cheer, or shoot him. I think the former."
Dardanelles
Dardanelles is a 61km (28 mile) long and from 3/4 to 4 miles (1.2 to
6.4 kilometers) wide strait between Europe and Asiatic Turkey
(Thrace and Anatolia). This strategically important strait is the
Dardanelles. It leads from the Aegean Sea to the Sea of Marmara and
then through the Bosphorus strait to the Black Sea. Thus the
Dardanelles is the outer gateway to a great productive area. The
world's ships must pass through here to reach the grain ports of
Ukraine and the oil ports of Romania and the Caucasus region. The
western side of the strait is formed by the Gallipoli peninsula.
Major ports along its shores are Gallipoli, Eceabat, and Canakkale;
and many famous castles like Kilitbahir built in 1452 by the Ottoman
sultan Mehmet II, stand along its banks. Also famous Turkish sailor
and the first Turkish marine cartographer Piri Reis was born in
Gelibolu.
The strait is rich with history and legend. In ancient times it was
called the Hellespont, meaning "Helle's sea," in memory of Helle, a
mythical Boetian princess. She was drowned in its swift waters after
falling from the back of the legendary ram with the golden fleece.
Across the Hellespont from the eastern side, Leander swam nightly to
visit Hera, a priestess of Aphrodite. In 480 BC Persia's king Xerxes
sent his army across the strait on a bridge of boats to invade
Greece. In 334 BC Alexander the Great similarly crossed from Greece
to invade Persia. The strait takes its name from the old town of
Dardanus.
Ottomans first put their feet into Gelibolu in 1354 under the reign
of Orhan Bey. But as its center and region, Canakkale passed
completely into Turks in 1362 under the reign of Murat I. In later
years Turkish control was supported by British diplomacy, which
sought to bar Russia from the Mediterranean. But in World War I
Turkey was allied with Germany. The British, wanting to get aid to
Russia through the Black Sea, tried to capture the Gallipoli
peninsula in 1915-16. They were thrown back and the Dardanelles
remained unconquered.
After Turkey's defeat in 1917, the Dardanelles became part of a
neutral zone of straits, which was under control of the League of
Nations. In 1923 the Treaty of Lausanne returned the region to
Turkey. At first Turkey was denied the right to fortify the straits,
but in 1936 another treaty restored this right and also permitted
Turkey to close the straits to belligerent ships in wartime.
Since Turkey was neutral until the closing days of World War II, the
Dardanelles route to the Soviet Union was closed to Great Britain
and the United States. With this sea route barred, the Allies were
forced to build roads through Iran to get supplies to the Soviets.
The Soviet Union became determined to gain partial control of the
Dardanelles after the war. Turkey refused formal demands for a share
in the control in 1946 and again in 1947. As the threat of Soviet
aggression increased during the Cold War, the United States and
Britain encouraged Turkey to stand firm on sole control.
Today Dardanelles is full of shipwrecks from Gallipoli Campaign
which makes divers to have a special interest on this waters. There
are also several tours visiting this interesting area. |
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