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the Battle of Gaza.
After
occupying El Arish in Sinai in December 1916, the ANZAC mounted division
led British forces up to the Palestine
border. With his forces needed elsewhere, General Archibald
Murray, Commander in Chief of the British Forces in the Middle East,
postponed making further advances.
General Friedrich Kressenstein, commander of the Turkish Expeditionary
Force, occupied the coastal fortress of Gaza, blocking the main route
into Palestine. General Murray was determined
to take Gaza and sent General Dobell, commander of the Eastern Forces,
in March 1917. Kressenstein had 18,000 men but was outnumbered 2 to
1 by Dobell's forces.
General Dobell massed the main bulk of his men 8km from Gaza. Undetected
in a dense sea fog, Dobell's cavalry was able to cut off the town's
rear on the 26th March. The main infantry attack that followed was less
successful. A Turkish counterattack and water shortages forced Dobell
to order his men to retreat. General Dobell lost 4,000 men against about
2,400 Turkish and German casualties. Dobell estimated that the Turks
lost three times that number and at the time the battle was reported
as a British victory.
In June 1917, General Edmund Allenby was
transferred from the command of the Third Army in France to become commander
of the British Forces in Palestine. Lieutenant-General
Harry Chauvel was given command of the Desert Mounted Troops and the
infantry divisions were allotted to Lieutenant-General Philip Chetwode
(XX Corps) and Major General Edward Bulfin (XXI Corps).
The British plan was for a preliminary operation against Beersheba to
enable them to take the higher ground. Once established at Beersheba
the forces would be deployed to roll-up the Turkish flank. Chetwode
and XX Corps and the Desert Mounted Corps formed the main striking force,
whereas Bulfin and XXI Corps would make the attack on Gaza itself.
On the night of 30th October, over 40,000 Australian and British troops
moved into position for the attack on Beersheba. It was hoped that the
diversionary attack would encourage the Turks to reinforce their right
at expense of their left and make it easier for the XX Corps. Gaza was
also bombarded by French and British ships offshore.
The first phase of the assault on Beersheba began early on 31st October.
By late afternoon the Allied forces had driven the Turks back into Gaza.
At 4.30 pm Brigadier Grant led two cavalry regiments against the eastern
defences of the town. Although faced with Turkish machine-guns,
the cavalry managed to gallop into Beersheba. The Turks were captured
before their plans to destroy the wells and evacuate the town could
take place.
The main attack against the Turkish left took place on 6th November.
Although the Turkish trenches ran for eight miles all Allied objectives
were taken by mid-afternoon. That evening the Turks began to retreat.
When XXI arrived on the morning of 7th November, Gaza had been abandoned.
General Allenby's victory at Gaza had unlocked the defences of the Turks.
In the weeks that followed, the Turks retreated 75 miles and on 9th
December the allied forces took Jerusalem. Although a clear victory,
between October and
December, 1917, the British and Empire forces lost 19,702 men during
the campaign in the Middle East
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The Battle of Gaza
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