And another anniversary from the First World War: one
hundred years ago today Allied forces landed on the Gallipoli Peninsula in an
attempt to secure the Dardanelles from the Turks and open up a supply line to
the Russians.
Gallipoli was the brainchild of Winston Churchill, who
maintained the belief that the Mediterranean was the “soft underbelly” throughout
both world wars. His “second front” was going to change everything, in 1915 and
1942.
Churchill, you understand, was an imperialist to his
spinal fluid. In the First War, he had his eye on gaining territory from the
tottering Ottoman Empire (and ensuring the sea lanes to India). In the Second,
he was intent on maintaining the integrity of those territories the Brits had acquired
in the First.
In fairness, Gallipoli was also an attempt to make a
breakthrough anywhere, because
nothing was happening on the Western Front except a daily mortality rate that
no nation could sustain for long. Especially one that still had a volunteer
military.
So they cobbled together land and sea forces and headed
for the Straits. Their first attempt, a naval attack, foundered on Turkish
mines. But it did alert the Ottomans that something was on the way. So they
resorted to landing troops on beaches of Suvla Bay that faced German-trained
Turks holding the high ground. The Allies—including large forces from Australia
and New Zealand—effectively never got off the beaches. Not in nine months of
fighting.
Conditions were appalling; casualties ditto. The troops
were never properly supplied (arguments back in London about which front should
be fully supported), except with bad commanders. When they evacuated on 7
December, they left behind 46,000 dead, with total casualties more than half of
the force of 450,000 who served.
So 25 April is commemorated in the Antipodes as ANZAC
day, with a mixture of pride and bitterness, at being imperial catspaws. The song “And the Band Played
Waltzing Matilda”, written by Scottish folk songwriter Eric Bogle in 1971,
captures this, so I’ll leave you with the cover by The Pogues, which is as raw as a trench.
With your excellent blog posts I realize how much danger my father, my grandparents, and my aunt were in being Americans living in Constantinople 100 years ago.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your blogs.
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