The First Battles
Trapped on narrow beaches below cliffs that commanded the entire landing area and unable to move inland, the Allied force held on desperately throughout the entire summer. The fierce Turks were able to bring batteries of guns and machine guns to bear on the invaders below, who fought with their backs to the sea, burrowing as best they could into the rocks and sand. The Gallipoli Peninsula Campaign ended, its objects unattained, with the evacuation of the Anzacs in December 1915 and the British in January 1916.
The French and British also landed at Salonika, Greece, to support Serbia and counter Bulgaria. Despite much bitter fighting, very little strategic gain was made by opening this new front and it tied up over half a million troops (they were nicknamed the 'Gardeners of Salonika' by Clemenceau) who might have been better employed elsewhere.
There was perhaps more understandable logic in military operations aimed at defeating Turkey in Mesopotamia (now Iraq) and in Palestine (now Israel). While Colonel T. E. Lawrence ('Lawrence of Arabia') united and led the desert Arabs in a guerrilla war against the Turks, a conventional British and Australian army pushed north from the Suez Canal eventually to free Palestine.
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