Gallipoli Campaign Ends with
Occupation of Istanbul
by Jeff Provine
Author
says: what if the Gallipoli Campaign was a bloody triumph? muses Jeff
Provine's on his excellent blog
This Day in
Alternate History. Please note that the opinions expressed in this post
do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).
On January 9th 1916,
Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.after nine grueling months of combat,
ANZAC troops led the charge into the capital of the Ottoman Empire and
brought about its surrender.
It was a campaign that was conceived initially by First Lord of the
Admiralty Winston Churchill and solved many of the Allies' problems after
the opening of the World War had come to stalemate. Trench warfare in
France had come to a standstill, and the Allies needed a new front to
break into the territory of the Central Powers. First Sea Lord John Fisher
suggested an amphibious landing in Germany itself to break the Kaiser's
strength at home, but Churchill suggested taking the Dardanelles, which
would break up the Ottoman Empire while also making use of outdated naval
ships unfit for combat against the German fleet as well as establishing
supply lines to Russia, which was effectively cut off from the rest of the
Allies by the Central fronts, German ships, and ice.
Churchill won the debate, and an Allied fleet made its first attack on
February 19, 1915. Initial bombardment weakened the fortresses along the
Dardanelles, so Admiral Carden cabled Churchill that victory would be
assured by a major push in early March. Fisher and others in the Navy
noted that losses would be severe, and Fisher repeatedly threatened to
resign over the matter. Churchill initially dismissed the notion, saying
that war was war, but he finally conceded and asked Fisher to outline a
battle plan with minimal loss. Instead of the direct attack planned, the
navy would give support while covert agents swept for mines and destroyed
mobile artillery that could attack from anywhere along the shore.
"The only thing I wonder about is how a successful
campaign would have affected the 1917 events in Russia." - reader's
commentRather than the direct attack, the British and French fleets
moved slowly and methodically, eliminating any possible mines while the
Ottomans continued to patrol and strike whenever possible. The latter
struggled constantly with low ammunition, and the Allies gradually made
their way upward to the forts guarding the narrow-most corridor of the
Dardanelles. Under naval artillery support, troops were landed at Cape
Helles, most notably the Australia and New Zealand Army Corps, who had
been training in Egypt for battle in France and suddenly reassigned. Also
among them were elite troops in the British Gurkhas, the Jewish Legion,
and many English and Irish. The Ottomans fought back fiercely, such as the
stand of the 57th Infantry Regiment under the command Lieutenant-Colonel
Mustafa Kemal, who said, "I do not expect you to attack, I order you to
die. In the time which passes until we die, other troops and commanders
can come forward and take our places".
"Well it would be very nice to control the Black
Sea and the Crimea" - reader's commentsOver the course of the next
months, battle after battle would press the Allies forward. Both armies
would suffer from intense heat in the summer, mosquitoes and vermin,
storms, flooding, and frostbite during the winter. That spring, the navy
would break through the strait and gain open water in the Sea of Marmara,
setting up a new stage for the campaign in besieging and assaulting
Istanbul. Joined by the Russian fleet from across the Black Sea, the city
would be cut off from the rest of the empire, which would shatter over the
course of 1916. The Armenians, who had been executed en masse for their
volunteer forces in Russia, rebelled openly and were promised their own
nation-state. The Young Turk movement, which had been suppressed and even
turned to fight against the invasion of the Allies, now declared the
caliphate abolished, establishing a new republic. Other territories of the
Ottomans were broken apart, though diplomats were busy solidifying the
entrances of Romania and Greece into the war and left the divisions to the
Arab Bureau of the Foreign Office, working primarily with archeologist /
Intelligence Officer T.E. Lawrence and General Archibald Murray of the
Egyptian Expeditionary Force. The new national lines followed the division
of people groups, notoriously spawning wars in the Middle East throughout
the twentieth century, though rarely violent internal matters.
The collapse of the Ottoman Empire seemed a great boon for the Allies, but
the fall of Russia later that year would bring the war to another
standstill until won after the entrance of the United States and
devastating Spanish Flu pandemic. The signing of the Treaty of Versailles
would be the first great note of Sir Winston Churchill's career as Prime
Minister.
Author
says in reality the Gallipoli Campaign would be one of the bloodiest
failures of the Allies in World War I, ending with an evacuation of troops
on January 9, 1916. Churchill and Fisher would argue to the point of
Fisher's resignation, though the two retained mutual respect. Churchill
received much of the blame for the failures at Gallipoli and was demoted,
eventually taking a short retirement from politics and commanding an
infantry battalion on the Western Front. The genocide against the Armenians,
which would total over one million deaths, is believed to have been
intensified because of the desperation of war in Gallipoli.To view guest
historian's comments on this post please visit the
Today in Alternate History web site.
Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In
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Imagine what would be, if history had occurred a bit
differently. Who says it didn't, somewhere? These fictional news items
explore that possibility. Possibilities such as America becoming a Marxist
superpower, aliens influencing human history in the 18th century and Teddy
Roosevelt winning his 3rd term as president abound in this interesting
fictional blog.

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