On this day in 1915, British
and French battleships launch a massive attack on Turkish positions at Cape
Helles and Kum Kaleh at the entrance to the Dardanelles, the narrow strait
separating Europe from Asia in northwestern Turkey and the only waterway linking
the Mediterranean Sea to the Black Sea.
With Turkey's entrance into World War I in November
1914 on the side of the Central Powers, the Dardanelles were controlled by
Germany and its allies, thus isolating the Russian navy from the Allied naval
forces and preventing cooperation between the two, as well as blocking passage
of Russian wheat and British arms back and forth. An attack on the Dardanelles
was thus a key objective of the Allies from the beginning of the war.
The British, and especially
Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill,
became convinced that it was possible to win control of the strait by a purely
naval attack, avoiding the diversion of soldiers from the battlegrounds on the
Western Front. At the end of January 1915, the British War Office approved a
plan to bombard the Turkish positions at the Dardanelles; the initial
bombardments would make way, they hoped, for British forces to move on
Constantinople, knock Turkey out of the war and open a path to Russia.
Churchill set the date for the
attack as February 19; on that day, a combined British and French fleet
commanded by Admiral Sackville Carden opened fire with long-range guns on the
outer Turkish fortresses, Cape Helles and Kum Kaleh. The bombardments made
little initial impact, however, as the Turks were not caught unawares: they had
long known an attack on the Dardanelles was a strong possibility and had been
well fortified by their German allies.
The largely unsuccessful
Allied efforts to force their way into the Dardanelles continued over the next
two months, including a disastrous attempt on March 18 in which three ships
were sunk and three more badly damaged by Turkish mines before the attack had
even begun. Over Churchill's protests, the naval attack was called off and a
larger land invasion involving 120,000 troops was planned.
On April 25, troops from
Britain, Australia and New Zealand launched a ground invasion of the Gallipoli
Peninsula, which bordered the northern side of the strait. The Turkish defense
soon pushed the Allies back to the shore, inflicting heavy casualties. Trenches
were dug, and the conflict settled into a bloody stalemate for the next eight
months. Some 250,000 Allied soldiers died at Gallipoli; Turkish casualty rates
were roughly the same. In December, the exhausted and frustrated Allied forces
began their retreat. The last Allied soldiers left Gallipoli on January 8,
1916. As a result of the disastrous campaign, Winston Churchill resigned as
first lord of the Admiralty and accepted a commission to command an infantry
battalion in France.
Taken from: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/british-navy-bombards-dardanelles
[19.02.2015]
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