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June 6, 1915 - Meanwhile,
in the Med ("A Rush to Judgement?")
---- Noon, wardroom of HMS Chatham, 25 knots, course 285
Admiral De Robeck sat silently, staring at the papers laid out before
him on the tiny table. He ignored the vibrations that resonated from every
surface. The words were familiar, as they were to all officers in the
Royal Navy: "you are requested and required." In this case,
to turn over his command immediately and report to the Offices of the
Admiralty at his soonest convenience. He was directed to detach HMS
Chatham, or another suitable vessel, and to proceed with utmost dispatch,
to catch a French train, etc.
The Dardanelles campaign had been bitterly opposed by Admiral Fisher
from the start. In hindsight, De Robeck was almost ready to admit the
First Sea Lord had been right all along. No, not quite, he corrected himself
once again. The opportunity had, really, been there. He remained convinced
of it, even now. But the recall of Queen Elizabeth and the battlecruisers
had hurt badly, as much in the implication that the Admiralty had lost
interest, as in lost firepower. Then, swept waters had suddenly been full
of mines. Turkish soldiers - nearly rabble! - suddenly were resolved to
die simply to delay any advance. It was like the expedition had had to
fight both the Admiralty and Nature, in addition to the Turks.
Then Carden's breakdown in March, and De Robeck had found himself in
charge. This was true opportunity and the attack had gone well, until
the mines. Yet, Constantinople should be in his hands at this very moment,
THIS VERY MOMENT! The landing force had failed to attack when planned.
The force's guns and ammunition had not been shipped in the same hulls
as the soldiers who would have to use them! Whoever had been responsible
would burn in hell! That single delay had cost tens of thousands of British
their lives and had saved the Ottoman Empire. That his own career had
apparently been destroyed was a minor, inconsequential detail. De Robeck
looked again at his orders. They were oddly phrased, but a court martial
seemed to await him. It would not be Ian Hamilton that the mob would blame.
No, General Hamilton was quite correct to stop in Egypt, offload, and
reload properly. But why, he wondered again, had Hamilton not made sure
all was correct before the force had ever been allowed to leave England?
It did not matter. No, not now. De Robeck had never been one to shirk
responsibility and he was not about to start it now. He had, after all,
been in command when the force finally, after that one month delay, had
landed only to find that 50 or even 100,000 Turkish soldiers now opposed
them. They had almost won anyway. If he was going to a court martial and
ruin, well, sobeit.
General Hamilton had been readying for another try at the Ottomans. The
general had expressed confidence that there would be no repeat of the
earlier reverses. De Robeck, however, had found that he no longer shared
the other's optimism. At this point, in the face of the naval force reductions,
and after so many British dead with so little to show for it, the Admiralty
was probably quite right to call the whole thing off. Lord Fisher, as
he had so often in his long career, had been proven right again. The opportunity,
though, it HAD been there. De Robeck remained sure of it. Not that it
mattered now. Maybe nothing in this entire theatre mattered now.
The rumors that the Grand Fleet had suffered another sharp rebuff in
the North Sea were quite unsettling. The Greeks had grown quite cool this
last week, promising to make problems even worse in the months ahead.
The Greeks had proven remarkably accurate weather vanes, De Robeck had
observed. They sure seemed to feel that the winds of war had changed their
course. So, perhaps the rumors that the defeat had been worse than let
on might well be true. Far worse. Certainly, the Dogger Bank debacle had
robbed his expeditionary force of key warships at the critical moment.
This last affair could be even worse in its effects. Damn, he thought,
this all smacks of retrenchment. He did not think "defeat";
he had never admitted defeat, nor even considered it.
But why, he wondered for the thousandth time, if their lordships truly
wanted his head, why were they in such a bloody hurry for it?
jim (Letterstime)
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