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The Gallipoli campaign was conceived by Churchill as a brilliant "wheeze" to bypass the stalemate of trench warfare on the Western Front. The ultimate irony is that its failure led to the creation of a new front, where soldiers dug into trenches under even more hellish conditions.
As Australian troops pushed inland at Gallipoli, Ottoman forces began to retreat. Their commander, Mustafa Kemal, personally rallied them with the famous command, "I don't order you to attack. I order you to die." This single act of leadership reversed the retreat and drove the ANZACs back to the beach.
The Gallipoli campaign, a catastrophic failure for the Allies, paradoxically became a cornerstone of national identity for Australia and New Zealand (the ANZAC legend) and for the emerging Republic of Turkey, where Mustafa Kemal Atatürk made his name.
Despite becoming an icon of the war's horror, poison gas was a tactical failure. It was unreliable due to wind and failed to cause mass casualties, killing only 6,000 British and Imperial forces throughout the war. Its primary impact was terror, not breaking the trench deadlock.
Churchill's initial Gallipoli plan relied exclusively on naval bombardment to force Constantinople's surrender, a fundamental strategic error. As even his allies noted, ships cannot occupy cities or hold ground. This flawed premise guaranteed the initial operation's failure and forced a bloody land invasion.
The narrative of incompetent generals is too simplistic. They faced a novel military challenge—defensive technology like machine guns and trenches massively outpaced offensive tactics. Their deadly "experiments" were desperate attempts to solve a problem with no known answer, not just callousness.
The majority of soldiers on the Western Front never killed an enemy in personal combat. Two-thirds of casualties were from artillery, making death an industrialized and distant phenomenon. A soldier could serve and see combat without ever laying eyes on a live opponent.
Churchill viewed the war as a "glorious, delicious" adventure. This personal excitement and desire for a grand "wheeze" led him to champion the ill-conceived Gallipoli plan, overriding cautious advisors and ignoring clear risks, ultimately leading to a catastrophe.
The Allies built their trenches as temporary offensive launch points. In contrast, the Germans, adopting a defensive "what we have, we hold" strategy, built deeper, safer, more comfortable trenches with reinforced concrete, reflecting their long-term strategic outlook.
The entire British Gallipoli strategy was predicated on the racist assumption that Ottoman "Turk" soldiers were inferior and would quickly flee. This belief caused planners to ignore the enemy's battle-hardened status, defensive preparations, and strong motivation, with fatal consequences.
After the initial naval attack at Gallipoli failed disastrously, the British War Council chose to escalate by sending ground troops. The decision was driven not by strategy, but by the need to justify the initial losses of ships and lives, a classic example of the sunk cost fallacy.