Dunsterforce: The Fighting in North-West Persia During 1918
The start of the Russian Revolution in the
Spring of 1917 heralded the decline of Russia as an effective member of
the alliance that was fighting the Central Powers who were led by
Germany and Turkey. By December of that year revolutionaries had seized
power in Russia and had signed a separate peace with the Central Powers
at Brest-Livotsk. This resulted in the demoralisation and disintegration
of the Russian forces that had been confronting Turkey in Anatolia and
Persia. Turkey was now able to reclaim territory previously occupied by
the Russians, punish those people such as the Armenians who had
collaborated with Russia on Turkish soil, and look to expand Turkish
influence both in the Caucasus region and eastwards.
The Caucasian states of Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan created a
Transcaucasian Federation that eventually declared itself to be
independent from Bolshevik Russia in April 1918. Initially the
Federation sought friendly relations with Turkey but agreement could not
be reached on border demarcation and fighting commenced. This situation
was compounded by Germany becoming involved on the side of Georgia,
that state declaring itself independent from the Federation in May.
Turks fighting Georgian troops found themselves fighting Germans who
were assisting Georgia. Both German and Turkish eyes and interests were
focused eastwards on the Azerbaijani oilfields at Baku on the Caspian
Sea.
The Turkish War Minister, Ismail Enver Pasha, had ambitions to unite
the Turkic people of Central Asia with Anatolian Turkey. On hearing of
the fighting in Georgia, Enver quickly went there accompanied by the
German Chief of the Turkish General Staff, General Hans Von Seeckt.
Differences were resolved between German and Turkish policies in the
region, and Enver ordered two weak Turkish armies to prepare to advance
eastwards. The Ninth Army was to advance through Persian Azerbaijan with
Tabriz as its immediate objective, whilst the Third Army advanced upon
Baku to seize the oilfields there. Neither of these Turkish armies
contained German troops; the Germans were busy concentrating a weak
division at Tiflis and they watched Enver's eastern advances with
interest but did not directly support them, preferring to thwart them
where they could. But German training missions were already in Persia
attempting to achieve a change of government that would bring Persia
into the war as an ally of the Central Powers.
The British reaction
During the Autumn of 1917 Britain had observed the decline of Russian
military capability on the Caucasian Front with deep concern. It was
vital that Caspian oil and cotton (used in the manufacture of munitions)
be prevented from getting into German hands. Britain also feared that
the Central Powers would now move through neutral Persia (previously
they had been restrained by an effective Russian military presence in
the north of that country) to de-stabilise the Indian North-West
Frontier and beyond, and bring Afghanistan into the war against Britain.
Stability in India was a vital British requirement as a further
half-million Indian soldiers were being recruited and trained at this
time, with the aim of establishing 67 more infantry battalions, to be
used primarily in overseas theatres.
Some modern historical commentators have derided this British fear.
However during the war Germany promoted strong insurrections in Persia
and infiltrated small groups of men and weapons through the country to
Afghanistan; the Germans and the Turks did not need to move large armies
through Persia, as well-led and financed training missions could
achieve their aims. During the war German support for the Indian Ghadr
revolutionary movement and Turkish calls for a Muslim Holy War caused
serious problems in India and Burma, including mutiny in some military
units. The Afghanistan threat was potent as was shown in 1919 when that
country invaded India, encouraging thousands of border tribesmen to join
in the fight against the British.
During late 1917 the War Cabinet in London wanted to move British
troops into the Caucasus but none was available. An alternative plan was
adopted to send a British Military Mission to the Georgian capital,
Tiflis; this mission would not be a fighting unit but would contain
instructors and staff officers capable of financing, training and
organising indigenous Caucasian units that would fight the Turks. The
only conventional part of the mission was to be a British Armoured Car
Brigade. It was determined that the best possible route to Tiflis was
overland from Baghdad through Persia to the Caspian Sea, then by boat to
Baku, and onwards by train to Tiflis. Unfortunately events in Tiflis
were already making this British plan redundant.
Command of the British Mission was given to Major General Lionel
Charles Dunsterville CB. He was a well-liked and respected Indian Army
officer and a fluent Russian speaker, with operational experience on the
Indian North-West Frontier and in China. As Dunsterville states in his
account of Dunsterforce, the name by which his mission became known: 'My
own knowledge of the Russian language and known sympathy with Russia
had probably a good deal to do with my selection for the task'. His
mission was: 'the maintenance of an effective force on the Caucasus
front so as to protect the occupied portions of Turkish Armenia and to
prevent the realisation of Pan-Turanian designs'. The then British
Military Agent in Tiflis was Lieutenant Colonel G D Pike MC, 9th Gurkha
Rifles, Indian Army, and Dunsterville was to take over the appointment
from him.
Above: General Lionel Dunsterville
Dunsterville's resources were a large treasure chest, the Armoured
Car Brigade, a small group of staff officers, another small group of
Russian officers, and around 200 officers and 200 non-commissioned
officers selected chiefly from Canadian, Australian, New Zealand and
South African units. Many of these men had been decorated for gallantry
in the field. This was a Special Forces unit, tasked with a strategic
Special Forces mission, long before Special Forces were officially
invented, glamorised and awarded cult-hero status.
In the event Dunsterforce did not get to Tiflis, but it was involved
in heavy fighting against the Turkish Third Army around Baku and in
serious fighting against the Turkish Ninth Army and its Persian allies
in northern Persia. This first article describes the important military
actions in Persia, and a second article will describe military
operations around Baku and the Caspian Sea.
Map: Dunsterforce routes
Dunsterville moves into Persia
Lionel Dunsterville's first major problem was that he could not
concentrate his mission before it was deployed; he set off himself first
with a small staff hoping that his men and vehicles would quickly
follow. In the event some parts of the Armoured Car Brigade did not
arrive in Persia until after Dunsterforce had been disbanded. The second
major problem was the attitude of the theatre commander in Mesopotamia,
Lieutenant General W R Marshall KCB, who had succeeded in command after
General F S Maude's death from illness in Baghdad. Marshall strenuously
objected to the concept of Dunsterforce because he had to logistically
support it across Persia, but more personally he vehemently objected to
the fact that Lionel Dunsterville reported directly to London. From this
moment onwards Marshall's somewhat petulant opposition to Dunsterforce
grew and Dunsterville's chances of achieving some kind of success
receded.
On 24 January 1918 Dunsterville despatched an advance party under
Major Sir Walter Barttelot DSO, Coldstream Guards, who was accompanied
by Captain G M Goldsmith, Intelligence Corps, and an armoured car
commanded by Lieutenant C M Singer, Devonshire Regiment and Motor
Machine Gun Corps. Barttelot's mission was to move to Hamadan in Persia
and ensure petrol supplies for Dunsterville's group when it arrived.
Three days later Dunsterville left Mesopotamia with 41 Ford cars with
Army Service Corps drivers, eleven staff officers and two clerks. The
drivers took rifles and an infantry staff officer took a Lewis Gun.
Critically the convoy carried a large amount of Persian silver and
British gold coins, and the need for adequate protection of this
treasure was soon to constrain Dunsterville's actions.
After struggles through snowdrifts the 41 Ford cars reached
Kermanshah on 3 February. Here Dunsterville made contact with 1,200
Russian Cossacks under the command of Colonel Lazar Bicherakov, a
courageous and charismatic Ossetian who was to be a staunch ally of the
British in northern Persia and the Caucasus. Bicherakov and his
Caucasian Cossacks were fiercely anti-Bolshevik. Lieutenant Colonel C H
Clutterbuck, 125th Napier's Rifles, Indian Army, was the British liaison
officer with the Russians, and he was assisted by New Zealand army
signallers manning a Russian wireless set. Clutterbuck was a Russian
language specialist and popular with the Cossacks; the New Zealanders
were from an Australian and New Zealand wireless squadron.
Above: Dunsterforce men (Australians in slouch hats) in Persia
Dunsterville pushed on the next day, now accompanied by one of
Bicherakov's officers acting as a guide. Due to snowfalls the convoy did
not reach Hamadan until 11 February, although Dunsterville rode ahead
and reached the town four days earlier. Fortunately the road being
followed was an ancient trade route and old serais, designed to shelter
passing camel caravans, were located along the way. At Hamdan the
advance party was waiting as was Brigadier General Offley Shore, CB,
CIE, DSO, Indian Army, who was returning from Tiflis and waiting to
brief Dunsterville on the current situation there.
Above: Dunsterforce camp at Hamadan
Also at Hamadan was the Russian Lieutenant General Nikolai Baratov,
commander of the Russian troops in northern Persia. This force had
performed well as part of the Imperial Russian Army and had pushed a
Turkish advance out of Persia and back into Mesopotamia. But now
Baratov's command had disintegrated and most of his remaining soldiers
refused to accept orders as they tried to get home. Dunsterville
carefully negotiated seperately with Bicherakov and Baratov. He paid
Baratov for items of military equipment purchased and he paid Bicherakov
when he needed the Cossacks to fight.
Above: Dunsterforce car and driver
Whilst the convoy re-organised at Hamadan Captain Goldsmith was sent
ahead again to reconnoitre the route to Enzeli and locate petrol
supplies. In the event George Goldsmith then parted from Dunsterforce,
as he successfully reached Enzeli on the Caspian Sea, took a boat to
Baku and then the train to Tiflis where he joined Colonel Pike. After
Geoffrey Pike was killed during a fight between Bolsheviks and Terek
Cossacks in August 1918, Goldsmith became Acting Commanding Officer of
the Caucasus Military Agency until he was arrested by Bolsheviks two
months later; but long before those events Dunsterforce's mission had
been re-focused away from Tiflis.
The advance to and withdrawal from Enzeli
Dunsterville left Hamadan on 14 February when a pass immediately
ahead was cleared of snow and his convoy, now including Cecil Singer's
armoured car, made good time down an excellent Russian-constructed road
to Kasvin. This was an important town of 50,000 inhabitants and the road
to Tehran, the Persian capital, forked eastwards from there.
Dunsterforce was now approaching territory controlled by a group of
Persians known as the Jangalis because they operated from the heavily
forested or jungle-like land in Gilan Province south of the Caspian Sea.
The Jangali revolutionary leader, Mirza Kuchik Khan, had vowed not to
let the British through his region. Kuchik Khan, like many Persians had
felt humiliated by the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907 that was used to
allow 'Spheres of Influence' to be created in Persia, the Russian
sphere being almost the entire north of the country and the British
sphere being in the south-east, adjacent to the Indian border. So far
the Jangalis had resisted attempts by both the Tehran government and the
local Russian forces to destroy them. A German mission under Colonel
von Passchen was training Kuchik Khan's men who were equipped with
rifles and Turkish machine guns.
The British convoy drove on towards the Caspian on 16 February,
pushing its way through hordes of Russian pro-Bolshevik soldiers who had
demobilised themselves and who just wanted to go home with whatever
booty they could carry. The convoy crossed the bridge at Menjil and
drove on to Resht, not knowing that both locations would shortly have to
be fought over. At Resht Dunsterville met with the British Acting
Vice-Consul Charles Maclaren, who was soon to be captured and
incarcerated by the Jangalis along with Captain E W C Noel CIE, 91st
Punjabis, Indian Army attached to the Political Department. Noel would
be carrying despatches from Tiflis for Dunsterforce at the time of his
capture. The cars then drove to Enzeli on the Caspian Sea where trouble
started to mount.
Above: A repair team works on a British armoured car
At that time Belgians managed the Persian customs for the weak
Persian central government, just as Swedes managed the Persian
Gendarmerie. The Belgians in Enzeli hosted the Dunsterforce convoy but
Russian Bolsheviks controlled the port. After negotiations, which
Dunsterville always preferred before military action because of the
weakness of his force, the realisation came home that the convoy was not
going to be allowed to board a ship and, even if it did, then the
Bolsheviks controlling Baku would arrest Dunsterville and his men on
arrival at that port. To stay in Enzeli was to invite destruction at the
hands of Bolsheviks and Jangalis with the consequent loss of the
treasure chests that were to finance anti-Central Powers military
activity in the Caucasus. Dunsterville maintained good relations with
the Bolsheviks controlling Enzeli, obtaining all the petrol he needed,
and before dawn on 20 February his convoy was back on the road to
Hamdan. Later that day a detachment of Red Guards arrived at Enzeli from
Baku, just too late to accomplish its mission of arresting the British
soldiers.
At Resht, Dunsterville learned that the reason why his convoy had not
been attacked on the Enzeli-Resht road was because the Jangalis had
been uncertain whether or not the withdrawing Russians would fight
alongside the British. Overdue maintenance on the cars was performed at
Resht under the supervision of M2/130904 Serjeant R W Harris, Army
Service Corps, and then the convoy drove off to arrive back at Hamadan
on the evening of 25 February. Dunsterville chose Hamadan as his firm
base because of its strategic location within Persia and its healthy
climate, and here he spent time explaining his intentions to the local
Persian administrators and attempting to secure their support for his
activities. This was a delicate task as Persia was still a neutral
country and most Persians resented the constant intrusions onto Persian
soil practised by both the Allies and the Central Powers.
Interlude at Hamadan
Dunsterville received orders through the Russian wireless station,
from London via Baghdad, to remain where he was, monitor the situation
inside Persia, and to advance when he could. When the snows melted more
elements of Dunsterforce were marched up from the holding camp at
Baghdad. Many more stores, particularly petrol, oil and lubricants were
brought up. This was much to the exasperation of General Marshall who
had to watch most of his motor transport being deployed into Persia,
although as Commander of the Mesopotamia Theatre he was not being
required to mount significant operational activity at that time.
A severe famine was prevailing in western Persia because of
predations by Turkish and Persian troops during the previous years that
were now compounded by the avarice of local speculative traders, and
people were dying in the streets and barren fields. Cases of cannibalism
in Hamadan were being reported. Dunsterforce embarked on a large
programme of famine-relief work, employing Persians on civil
construction projects, particularly road improvements. The South African
Brigadier General J J Byron DSO was placed in charge of famine-relief
operations, whilst the Canadian Lieutenant Colonel J W Warden DSO was
appointed town Commandant of Hamadan, with Captain F P Cockerell MC,
Intelligence Corps, as Assistant Provost Marshall.
Another activity was the recruiting and training of local levies and
bands of irregulars; theoretically, the levies would be able to guard
vulnerable points anywhere whilst the irregulars would defend their own
villages. Major J J McCarthy DSO MC, Northern Rhodesian Police, and
Captain R S Engledue, 89th Punjabis, Indian Army, were leading figures
in this activity. Concurrently a British intelligence organisation was
created under Captain Macan Saunders DSO, 36th Sikhs, Indian Army, and
tasked with reporting Turkish movements. Meanwhile Turkish military
instructors were busily at work training their own militias in villages
surrounding Hamadan, and Russian troop movements were being attacked
whilst British officers were occasionally sniped at from a distance.
After consultations, the new Chief of the Imperial General Staff in
London, General Sir Henry Wilson, ordered in March that Dunsterforce was
to frustrate enemy penetration through north-west Persia and that
General Marshall was to be responsible for this, using Lionel
Dunsterville as his local commander in Persia. Meanwhile in Baku the
Bolshevik and Armenian defenders were resisting the advance of the
Turkish Third Army and they were being assisted in this by German
refusals to allow Turkish troops onto the Tiflis-Baku railway. In the
southern Caucasus the situation deteriorated by the week as the
Georgians became increasingly accommodating towards the Germans and the
Turks began transiting through Armenia into Azerbaijan, and it was
Dunsterville's opinion that only Allied military units and formations
could influence the situation now - British instructors and gold would
only complicate and exacerbate it.
Bicherakov now decided that as the snow was clearing he would take
his men out of Persia to pursue anti-Bolshevik activities in the
Caucasus, but Dunsterville persuaded him to delay the move, promising to
support the Cossack march to Enzeli with British armoured cars and
aircraft which were now flying into Hamadan. Meanwhile, to counter both
the progress and the propaganda activities of the Turkish Ninth Army and
German training teams in Persia who were proclaiming German success on
the Western Front, Dunsterville sent out two small missions to both show
the Allied flag and to search for tribal leaders who might be prepared
to fight the Turkish advance from Tabriz. The New Zealander Major Fred
Starnes DSO, the Canterbury Regiment, was dispatched to Bijar, 100 miles
north-west of Hamadan whilst Major Lewis Wagstaff CIE, 2nd Queen's Own
Rajput Light Infantry, Indian Army, pushed westwards along the Tabriz
road from Kasvin. Starnes was also tasked with trying to make contact
with a large Jelu community, the name given to a combined group of
Armenians and Assyrian Christians that was isolated but successfully
resisting Turkish advances around Lake Urmiah.
April saw more Dunsterforce personnel arriving in Hamadan, plus three
more armoured cars from the 6th Light Armoured Motor Battery and 'C'
Squadron 14th (The King's) Hussars, a British Regular Army cavalry
regiment.
Above: 14th (King's) Hussars in Mesopotamia
In May Dunsterville visited Tehran to consult with the British
Ambassador, and also that month the fourth and final party of
Dunsterforce arrived in Hamadan accompanied by a group of specially
selected anti-Bolshevik Russian officers.
The Eastern Committee of the War Cabinet in London made an important
policy change on 27 May, telegraphing that Dunsterforce was now not to
attempt to get to Tiflis but was to reach the Caspian Sea and take
control of the shipping fleet there. The military priority was to secure
the Mesopotamia-Enzeli road. This instruction was modified to allow
Dunsterville or one or more of his officers to go to Baku, at General
Marshall's discretion, to reconnoitre the task of demolishing Baku's oil
wells. General Marshall was to find the troops needed by Dunsterforce.
But Lionel Dunsterville was never to get the troops he needed to
complete the tasks that he would undertake and by now many of his men
were dispersed around northern Persia on intelligence, famine-relief and
training duties.
Concurrent with Dunsterforce operations were a British military move
into Russian Transcaspia from Meshed in north-eastern Persia and the
military operations of the British-sponsored South Persia Rifles in the
south of the country.
The road to Resht and the Menjil Bridge
On 1 June Dunsterforce moved to Kasvin, leaving Brigadier John Byron
in charge of the line of communication at Hamadan where Lieutenant
Colonel W Donnan, a re-enlistment from the Indian Army Retired List, was
commanding an efficient militia. Kasvin was an unhealthy location and
the Dunsterforce Senior Medical Officer, Major John H Brunskill DSO,
Royal Army Medical Corps, soon had too many patients. An important
arrival from Baghdad was Lieutenant Colonel J C M Hoskyn DSO, 44th
Merwara Infantry, Indian Army; John Hoskyn became the Dunsterforce
principal staff officer (GSO1) for Military Operations.
At long last a detachment of the Dunsterforce Armoured Car Brigade
(known as DUNCARS) was nearing Kasvin. This brigade had been formed in
England from a Royal Navy Air Service armoured car unit that had been
serving in Russia until 1917. When this detachment arrived it would
patrol the line of communication whilst Bicherakov seized Enzeli.
However the movements of DUNCARS were restricted by a shortage of
lubricants and spare parts in Mesopotamia and by the Rubberine tyres,
designed for Russian cold-weather use, solidifying in the Persian heat
and breaking back axles.
The attitudes of both London and General Marshall became more
flexible over Baku in early June, both parties agreeing that
Dunsterville could decide what force to send to Baku, but that General
Marshall would retain overall command of Dunsterforce operations. But a
week later the uncertainty over exactly what Dunsterforce was expected
to achieve surfaced again when General Wilson in London expressed doubts
about how long a British force in Baku could survive against a
determined Turkish attack backed by the local Muslim Tartar community
that was strongly pro-Turk and anti-Armenian; in the event this was a
prescient comment but it displayed a difference in opinion between the
Generals in London and the politicians on the Eastern Committee of the
War Cabinet. The British wanted control of the Caspian Sea, but they
shied away from the reality that Baku had to be held by a military force
in order to maintain that control; Lionel Dunsterville was left to make
the new policy work as best he could whilst his military masters
commenced distancing themselves from possible failure.
On 10 June, negotiations with Kuchik Khan to persuade him to become
neutral having failed, Dunsterforce marched out to fight. Bicherakov's
column consisting of two squadrons of Cossack cavalry and a detachment
of infantry, a section of Russian mountain artillery plus 'C' Squadron
14th (The King's) Hussars, advanced towards Resht with the British
squadron leading. In support were two British armoured cars and two
British aeroplanes. At Menjil, half way to the Caspian, was a 200-metre
long, 5-span girder bridge over the Kizil Uzun River that the Jangalis
were defending with an estimated 2,000 men and several machine guns.
However the Jangali defences were poorly sited and vital ground was not
occupied despite the presence of Colonel von Passchen.
To test the determination of the defences the two aircraft flew
overhead without firing and were met by widespread Jangali rifle fire.
Bicherakov then led his men towards the bridge and dispersed a Jangali
picquet by shouting and waving his stick at it. Von Passchen appeared
under a flag of truce demanding a parley in an attempt to separate the
Cossacks from the British troops but Bicherakov verbally dismissed him.
Once von Passchen was out of the way the Russian gunners opened fire,
the Cossack cavalry moved towards the enemy's right whilst the armoured
cars engaged from his left and the infantry advanced. This caused the
Jangalis on the near side of the river to flee from their trenches
towards the bridge where many stragglers were captured. All the Jangalis
now fled from their positions and Bicherakov's column pursued them for
16 kilometres towards Resht. Bicherakov and his Cossacks pushed on to
Enzeli after reorganising, leaving detachments at Resht and two other
points on the road. Captain A V 'Darkie' Pope's 14th Hussars guarded the
Menjil Bridge.
Dunsterville needed to get more men forward from Hamadan before he
could secure his line of communications whilst he advanced. General
Marshall had sent forward a composite battalion, half 1/4th Hampshires
and half 1/2nd Gurkhas, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel C L
Matthews, Durham Light Infantry attached to and commanding 1/4th
Hampshires. This unit was accompanied by Right Section (two guns) of
21st Kohat Mountain Battery (Frontier Force), Indian Army. The battalion
and the gunners were titled 'Matthews' Column'. Some of the Hampshires
now joined Dunsterville but the Jangalis, their morale recovered, gave
them a warm welcome on 18 June by successfully ambushing a party on a
small bridge at Siah Rud. Captain R C Durnford was killed and six men
were wounded.
Three days later another successful Jangali ambush was sprung. For
gallantry displayed on this occasion Lieutenant Geoffrey Watt, Motor
Transport, Army Service Corps, received a Military Cross with the
citation:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty between Menjil and Resht, Persia on 21 June, 1918. He was in
command of a convoy of 66 vans which was heavily attacked by hostile
irregulars. Eight vans were put out of action, but by his entire
disregard of danger and good conduct he managed to salve them. Later, on
three occasions he went out with a small party under fire and salved
four more vans which had been abandoned.
Then the Gurkhas became involved and the fight-back began. On 29 June
Captain Knightley Holler Coxe, Indian Army Reserve of Officers attached
to 1/2nd Gurkhas, won a Military Cross at Imam Zadeh Hachem:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty near Stahmd Bridge, Persia, on 29 June 1918. He organised and
executed a brilliantly successful attack on an enemy position,
inflicting heavy losses on the enemy at very slight cost to his own
force. He displayed marked ability and initiative, coolly meeting every
contingency that arose with marked courage and skill.
The prominent use of Gurkha kukhris during this action gave the
Jangalis something to think about but they were still prepared to attack
as events in Resht during the next month showed. Elsewhere at this time
there were reported to be around 2,000 Turkish troops in Tabriz, and
Wagstaff's mission was ordered to establish itself at Mianeh and to
patrol forward of there.
Above: A British officer from the Dunsterforce watches a Russian instructing a group of Persian police at Resht
Events in Baku
Dunsterville moved his headquarters forward to Enzeli appointing
Major W S W Browne, 44th Merwara Infantry, Indian Army, to command
British troops and levies in that town. The Resht area was commanded by
Lieutenant Colonel Matthews from a British camp sited just outside the
town. London now became critical both of Dunsterville's perceived lack
of action and of his failure to communicate regularly with Marshall.
Dunsterville was expected to seize Enzeli by force from the Bolsheviks,
and he was not to rely so heavily on Bicherakov who might prove to be
untrustworthy. London impressed upon Marshall that now his most
important area of operations was north-western Persia, as control of the
Caspian was vital, and the British were contemplating purchasing the
accumulated stock of cotton held in Krasnovodsk, the port opposite Baku
on the eastern shore of the Caspian Sea. A strategic assessment of
Turkey's current war aims indicated that the Turks now accepted the loss
of their Arabian provinces so they were attempting to compensate by
moving eastwards into Turkic Asia. A further legitimate concern both to
London, the Indian government in Delhi and the British Ambassador in
Persia was that 38,000 Austrian and Hungarian prisoners of war held in
Central Asia were being released and armed by the Bolsheviks.
To gain military control of the Caspian Sea, a Royal Navy party of 5
officers, 86 ratings and 12 guns suitable for mounting on the Caspian
steamers was despatched to Enzeli from Baghdad under the command of
Commodore D T Norris. Also the British 39th Infantry Brigade was now
ordered to move forward from Mesopotamia to Hamadan; this move commenced
but only gradually because of motor transport shortages.
Marshall described in detail his enormous logistics problems in
supporting Dunsterforce but in a rather scathing tone. This prompted
General Sir Henry Wilson to warn him privately 'that the Eastern
Committee of the War Cabinet thought I was not very zealous in carrying
out their ideas and asked me to keep out of my communiques anything
which might indicate an unwillingness to do so'.
Whilst Marshall was in India on leave Major General Hew D Fanshawe
CB, the acting theatre commander, visited Dunsterforce from Baghdad
after Dunsterville had visited him, and concluded that Dunsterville was
doing the best that he could with the force he had. Fanshawe understood
that there were different categories of Bolshevik and different shades
of Bolshevism and that Dunsterville was correct to negotiate before
using force, particularly as the Jangalis still held Edward Noel
hostage. Lack of regular and detailed contact with Marshall was due to
lack of adequate radio communications, but motor wireless equipment was
being sent forward as were pack mules for off-road deployments. Fanshawe
concluded by stating that so far Dunsterville had done exactly what he
had been tasked to do – he had frustrated enemy penetration through
north-west Persia and secured the land route from Mesopotamia to the
Caspian Sea. Fanshawe also saw good reasons for sending troops to Baku;
London concurred agreeing that two infantry battalions, an artillery
field battery and armoured cars could be sent to Baku under
Dunsterville's command.
Meanwhile Bicherakov had decided that his best tactic was to declare
himself a Bolshevik so that he could gain a footing in Azerbaijan, and
he accepted the post of commander of the Red Army in the Caucasus. He
visited Baku where he found arguments developing between pro and
anti-British Bolsheviks that Dunsterforce could exploit, then he
returned to Enzeli to embark his men. Bicherakov's force sailed on 3
July accompanied by a few attached Dunsterforce staff officers and four
British armoured cars.
Events now moved quickly. A British intelligence officer from the
Military Mission in Meshed, Captain Reginald Teague-Jones, Indian Army
Reserve of Officers, crossed the Caspian to Baku and on his return
reported on the weak state of Baku's defences, and on the fact that the
Germans in Tiflis were obtaining all the oil (through the Baku-Batum
pipeline) and cotton that they could purchase in Baku. Information
supplied by Ranald MacDonell, the knowledgeable British Vice Consul in
Baku whom Teague-Jones had met, stated that many crews on Caspian
steamers were anti-Bolshevik and that a British military presence was
urgently needed in Baku to prevent the town falling to the Turks, but he
advised against using force at Enzeli. When Bicherakov's Cossacks
entered Baku pro-British sentiment was expressed by some important
citizens in Baku, and on 26 July all the Bolshevik government members
resigned to be replaced by a new government proclaiming itself to be
Centro-Caspian and in need of British assistance.
Colonel Clutterbuck, the liaison officer with the Cossacks, informed
Dunsterville of this about-turn by the Baku authorities but he also
advised that Bicherakov was moving northwards towards Derbend. The Turks
were holding ground overlooking Baku and were within 3,000 metres of
the wharves. Bicherakov was not getting the ammunition and supplies that
he needed from Baku and he was concerned about being tricked and
trapped in that town. He suggested that Dunsterforce now land at
Derbend, but that proposal was not acceptable to the British.
Bicherakov, his British liason and staff officers and three DUNCAR
armoured cars under Captain W L Crossing DSC, Machine Gun Corps
(Motors), marched north whilst the Turks inexplicably withdrew. As the
Official History states: 'General Dunsterville offers the opinion that
the movement northwards of Bicherakov's detachment, although apparently
justifiable at the time, was a mistake which contributed mainly to the
ultimate fall of Baku'.
Above: Terek Cossack Artillery
Thus Bicherakov regrettably marched away from Dunsterforce. From
their first meeting in Kermanshah in February Dunsterville had realised
how vitally important Bicherakov and his Cossacks were for the
accomplishment of British strategy in the region, as Dunsterforce was
not structured as a combat formation and initially it lacked artillery
and cavalry. But others in more distant and peaceful offices did not
share Dunsterville's appreciation.
But the future could not be predicted and Dunsterville, having
obtained the agreement of the Enzeli authorities who were now friendly
with the Centro-Caspians at Baku, rapidly organised a group of liaison
and staff officers with an escort from the 1/4th Hampshires to sail to
Baku. This group, under the command of the Dunsterforce principal
intelligence officer, Lieutenant Colonel Claude B Stokes CIE, 3rd
Skinner's Horse, Indian Army, reached Baku on 4 August. In the opposite
direction the Russian linguist Lieutenant Colonel Reginald St Clair
Battine, 21st Cavalry, Indian Army, went with a small group to
Krasnovodsk on 6 August to establish relations with the anti-Bolshevik
authorities there. Later in August a small mission was sent to Lenkoran,
on the western Caspian Sea coastline, halfway between Enzeli and Alyat,
at the request of its Russian community.
The fight for Resht
On 20 July around 2,500 Jangalis supported by a number of Turks and
Germans under von Passchen attacked Resht. Colonel Matthews had with him
300 rifles from his 1/4th Hampshires, 150 Gurkha rifles under Captain G
M McCleverty, 1/2nd Gurkha Rifles, two guns of 21st (Kohat) Mountain
battery transported in Ford vans, and two armoured cars. Most of the
British troops were in their base camp outside the town which was
heavily attacked but detachments were inside Resht guarding buildings.
At the base the enemy were driven back, leaving over 100 dead on the
ground and 50 prisoners, including some Austrian and Hungarian former
prisoners of war now released by the Bolsheviks, in the hands of
Matthews' Column.
For gallantry displayed during this attack Lieutenant Henry Folliott
Scott Stokes, 1/4th Hampshires, was awarded a Military Cross:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Resht, Persia, on 20 July, 1918. He went out constantly to the
front line under heavy fire to report on the situation, sending back
information of the greatest importance. Throughout the operations he
carried on his arduous duties with remarkable zeal and daring. His
services, rendered under trying circumstances, were of great value.
However and more seriously another large group of Jangalis had
entered Resht and attacked the small British posts at the British
Consulate, the telegraph office and the bank, which contained bullion.
Colonel Matthews dispatched Captain McCleverty with 100 rifles and the
armoured cars to withdraw the guards at the Consulate and reinforce the
other posts within the town. This was easier said than done in the maze
of alleys within the town and bitter street-fighting started that was to
last for several days.
Two Military Crosses were awarded to officers of the Motor Machine Gun Corps.
Captain Geoffrey Noel Gawler:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Rasht, Persia, on 20 July, 1918. When his two cars were held up
by a barricade across a road he exposed himself fearlessly in order to
direct the demolition of the obstacle. Though severely wounded, he
remained with his cars, eventually bringing them back safely. He only
allowed his wounds to be attended to when he had made all arrangements
for the despatch of his cars on another expedition.
and to Lt Cecil Mortimer Singer, Devon Regiment and 6th Light Armoured Motor Battery:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Resht, Persia, on 20 July, 1918. During an advance through a
town he kept his car well in front of the column, and bore the brunt of
the fighting in the narrow streets. In spite of heavy fire from rifles
and bombs he pushed steadily on, and by his pluck-and determination
performed exceptionally fine work. On a previous occasion, when his car
was put out of action, he speedily repaired it, under most difficult
conditions, and brought it into action again at a critical moment.
Another Military Cross was awarded to Subadar Major Tulsiram Gharti, 1/2nd Gurkhas:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Resht on 20 July 1918. During the attack by an enemy on a town
he led his men with exceptional ability and dash, and by the rapidity of
his advance inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy, taking a number of
prisoners. Later he displayed marked initiative and daring in the
relief of a besieged garrison. His conduct throughout the operation was
splendid.
Distinguished Conduct Medals were awarded to 1200248 Corporal (Company Quarter Master Sergeant) D Kemp, 1/4th Hampshires:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Resht, on 20th July, 1918. During an enemy counter-attack the
small party he was with became separated, and got engaged with a party
of the enemy holding a house; after his officer (Lieutenant John Graham
Wilkinson, 1/4th Hampshires) had been killed, and the majority of the
men wounded, this N.C.O. assumed command, collected a few
reinforcements, and skilfully withdrew his party.
and to 201830 Private (Acting Serjeant) F Mells, 1/4th Hampshires:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Resht, on 20th July, 1918, in command of a building heavily
attacked by the enemy. His party held out for eight hours, inflicting
appreciable losses on the enemy until a relief reached them. Serjeant
Mells displayed fine qualities of initiative and leadership under trying
circumstances.
Two men of the 1/2nd Gurkhas received Indian Orders of Merit. 3695 Havildar Kule Thapa:
He was in command of a small guard that
was in a house surrounded by the enemy. Although heavily attacked and
hard-pressed for nine hours, he beat off all attacks until relief
arrived. He behaved throughout with the greatest coolness and resource,
inspiring his men by his magnificent example. This non-commissioned
officer has previously done good work in carrying out daring patrols and
bringing back valuable information.
and 3966 Lance Naik Kuman Singh Gurung:
It was largely due to the skill and
initiative with which this non-commissioned officer used his Lewis Gun
that his platoon was able to advance as rapidly as it did. On one
occasion when heavy enfilade fire from a house was delaying the advance,
he left two men with a Lewis gun to give covering fire and with the
remainder of his section rushed the house, killing a number of the
enemy, including an officer, and taking several prisoners.
For the operations in Resht and at Imam Zadeh Hachem a month
previously awards of the Indian Distinguished Service Medal were made to
nine officers and men of 1/2nd Gurkhas: Subadar Aiman Rana; Jemadar
Nandbir Thapa; 3489 Havildar Tilakchand Gurung; 199 Lance Naik Kalu
Gharti; 3222 Lance Naik Maniraj Gurung; 1833 Lance Naik Balbir Rai; 1234
Rifleman Singbir Thapa; 455 Rifleman Kahar Sing Rana and 4535 Rifleman
Jagia Khattrie.
Two men of 21st (Kohat) Mountain Battery also won Indian
Distinguished Service Medals for gallant and resourceful actions at
Resht: 403 Havildar Jaggat Singh and 152 Gunner Kishen Singh.
A Distinguished Service Order was awarded to Captain Guy Massy McCleverty MC, 1/2nd Gurkhas:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Resht, Persia, on 20 July, 1918. He was in command of a relief
party sent to extricate a force besieged in a building. He displayed
great courage and initiative, and it was mainly due to his resource and
daring leadership that the relief was successfully accomplished. His
work throughout the operations was of a very high order.
Lieutenant Colonel Claud Leonard Matthews, Durham Light Infantry
attached to Hampshire Regiment, had himself been prominent during the
fighting and he later received a Distinguished Service Order but without
a published citation.
Matthews' Column had taken over 50 casualties but by the end of July
Resht was cleared of all enemy troops and Kuchik Khan negotiated for
peace; hostilities with the Jangalis ceased on 12 August. Attacks by the
Martinsyde aircraft of 'B' Flight, No 72 Squadron, Royal Air Force,
operating from Khasvin had been instrumental in demonstrating to the
Jangalis that they could not compete with Dunsterforce. The British
hostage Edward Noel was released, Vice-Consul Charles McClaren having
escaped earlier, and Kuchik Khan became the largest contractor supplying
rice for the British forces in Gilan Province.
The rescue of the Assyrian and Armenian Christians
Whilst Dunsterville was occupied with reinforcing Baku his men
elsewhere in northern Persia were fighting Turks and their local allies.
Fred Starnes had found a Turkish force at Sauj Bulaq that prevented him
from contacting the Jelus at Lake Urmia. A temporary refuelling
airfield was constructed at Mianeh that allowed Lieutenant K M
Pennington to fly from Kasvin to Urmia where, on 8 July, he bravely
landed unsure of who exactly was on the ground firing rifles into the
air. The Assyrian ladies treated him with adoration as their saviour,
and he arranged with the Jelu spiritual and military leader, Aga Petros,
that a consignment of money, arms and ammunition would be available for
collection from Dunsterforce at Sain Kaleh on 23 July. Kenneth Misson
Pennington was to be awarded the Air Force Cross.
A Dunsterforce party under Captain S G Savige MC, 24th Battalion
Australian Infantry, was waiting at Sain Kaleh on the due date; they had
with them for Aga Petros a train of pack mules carrying £45,000
sterling in Persian silver coins, 12 Lewis light machine guns and
100,000 rounds of ammunition. But the Assyrians were late and the
escort, two squadrons of 14th Hussars, who had been carrying quantities
of the large silver Krans coins in their saddlebags, and a section from
15th Machine Gun Squadron, Machine Gun Corps (Cavalry), began to run
short of grain for their horses. Despite Savige's objections Lieutenant
Colonel E J Bridges MC, 14th Hussars, the escort commander, insisted on a
withdrawal to Bijar but at the half-way point he permitted Savige and
his party to remain at Takan Tepe and raise a levy from the local Afshah
tribe.
Above: Gurkhas in Mesopotamia demonstrate new personal equipment
On 3 August Aga Petros and 2,000 of his men met up with Savige, but
news of a disaster at Urmia quickly followed. Without Aga Petros'
unifying presence many of the Armenians had suddenly deserted their
positions facing the Turks and had fled with their families to
British-occupied Mesopotamia. The 80,000 Assyrians had become
demoralized by rumours of Aga Petros' defeat and death, and they fled
towards Sain Kaleh. This allowed the Turks and their local irregular
Kurdish allies to pounce on the fleeing Christians, killing thousands
and seizing livestock, loot and young females for sale into slavery. The
Assyrian rearguard was being led and inspired by two American
Presbyterian Missionaries, Doctor William A Shedd and his wife Mary.
Above: Gurkha Vickers MG Team
When Savige and Petros met up with the fleeing hordes most of the
Assyrian soldiers dispersed to look after their own families and
interests, leaving the Dunsterforce team to organise the fighting
withdrawal against the Turks and Kurds, along with the few Assyrians
prepared to soldier alongside them. Captain Stanley George Savige MC was
to receive a Distinguished Service Order:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty during the retirement of refugees from Sain Kaleh to Takan Tepeh,
also at Chalkaman, 5 to 6 August. In command of a small party sent to
protect the rear of the column of refugees, he by his resource and able
dispositions kept off the enemy, who were in greatly superior numbers.
He hung on to position after position until nearly surrounded, and on
each occasion extricated his command most skilfully. His cool
determination and fine example inspired his men, and put heart into the
frightened refugees.
Captain Eric George Scott-Olsen, 56th Battalion Australian Infantry, received a Military Cross:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Sain Kaleh, Persia, on 6 August 1918, while assisting in
covering the retreat of a party of refugees when the rearguard was
heavily attacked. He held on to position after position, checking the
enemy's advance. Heavy fighting lasted for six hours, during which he
withdrew his party 15 miles while inflicting severe losses on the enemy.
It was largely due to his courage and determination that the
defenceless party were brought through safely.
A Bar to the Distinguished Conduct Medal was awarded to 1764 Serjeant B F Murphy DCM, 28th Battalion Australian Infantry:
For marked gallantry and leadership at
Sain Kaleh. He was one of a small party covering a retirement, and by
his courage and initiative in using his Lewis gun beat back determined
enemy attacks. When his party were practically surrounded be gave his
horse to a wounded officer and got away successfully with his gun on
another. He showed splendid courage throughout.
The Distinguished Conduct Medal was awarded to the New Zealander 34906 Serjeant A Nimmo, 3rd Battalion the Otago Regiment:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty at Sain Kaleh on 6 August, 1918. He was with a small party
detailed to cover the retirement of a column, and was left behind to
bring the transport out of a village. He and another N.C.O. beat off a
determined enemy attempt to capture the mules. Throughout the fight for
fifteen miles he worked Lewis gun and rifle continuously.
Savige's team lost one man killed in action at Sain Kaleh, Captain
Robert Kenneth Nicol MC, 2nd Battalion The Wellington Regiment, New
Zealand Expeditionary Force. Robert Nicol exposed himself to enemy fire
whilst gallantly attempting to save the mules which enemy snipers were
picking off. His body could not be retrieved from the battlefield.
Above: Dunsterforce convoy near Birkandi
When the Dunsterforce team was being hard pressed at Sain Kaleh,
Savige sent a messenger back to Bijar requesting support. The messenger
was met by a patrol of 14th Hussars who immediately rode to assist. The
patrol commander, H/47485 Serjeant A Hallard, 14th Hussars, received a
Distinguished Conduct Medal:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty north of Sain Kaleh on 6 August 1918. While in command of a patrol
he intercepted an urgent message from another party hard pressed by the
enemy. After dispersing the enemy threatening his flank he led his
patrol to this now exhausted party and relieved them. He displayed great
promptitude and determination under trying circumstances.
The firepower of Albert Hallard's patrol pushed the Turks and Kurds
back, allowing the refugee column to limp into Bijar on 17 August, but
30,000 Assyrians had been killed, captured or abandoned since they fled
from Urmia. Also lost on the journey was the fighting American Doctor
William A Shedd, who died of cholera whilst treating the many sick
refugees. During the march to safety the Assyrians looted and destroyed
every Persian village that they passed through, leading to the
Dunsterforce team having to apply violent disciplinary measures to
reduce these incidents.
At Hamadan the Urmia Brigade was established and able-bodied male
Jelu volunteers were enlisted into its four battalions, under the
supervision of Dunsterforce instructors; two battalions were Assyrian
and the other two were Armenian. The remainder of the refugees marched
down to a camp at Baqubah, Baghdad, the privations of this journey
killing even more of them.
Turkish movement forward from Tabriz
On the 20 August Lewis Wagstaffe reported from Mianeh that Turks were
advancing from Tabriz, where the Turkish 11th Caucasian Division was
believed to have recently concentrated. This was unwelcome news as the
enemy's intentions could have been to disrupt the British line of
communication between Mesopotamia and the Caspian Sea. Wagstaffe had a
platoon of 1/4th Hampshires and 650 levies with Dunsterforce instructors
forward of the Kuflan Kuh ridgeline; in the rear at Zenjan there was
the by now weak squadron of 14th Hussars and 50 rifles of 1/2nd Gurkhas.
Reinforcements for Wagstaffe were sent from Kasvin on 21 and 22
August. The artillery component consisted of a section each from the
44th and C/69th Field Batteries that had come up from Mesopotamia, and a
section of 21st (Kohat) Mountain Battery. The infantry troops
despatched were 100 more rifles from the Hampshires and 50 more from the
Gurkhas. British air reconnaissance verified an enemy advance to
Yusufabad, whilst a British intelligence report indicated that the Turks
also proposed advancing from Sauj Bulag on the two roads through Saqqiz
and Sain Kaleh. This intelligence assessment led to guns and infantry
from 39th Brigade being held back at Hamadan and Kasvin, and this fact
was to lead to a refusal of immediate reinforcements for Baku at the end
of the month.
North Persia Force
As Dunsterville was now in Baku with a small tactical headquarters,
General Marshall appointed Brigadier General A C Lewin CB CMG DSO to
command all troops south of the Caspian Sea. Lewin took over the
Dunsterforce main headquarters at Kasvin and commanded all operations in
north-western Persia, reporting directly to Marshall.
By a subtle stroke Dunsterforce had been emasculated and the fall of
Baku to the Turks had been ordained. But the real punch below the belt
was that Marshall did not send staff officers from Mesopotamia for the
new headquarters; thus when Dunsterforce was fighting for survival in
Baku and Dunsterville was desperate for more staff assistance, he could
not move his main headquarters forward to Baku as planned, as the men he
needed were no longer under his command. That decision was now Lewin's
and Lewin answered to Marshall. On 31 August Lewin, his task achieved,
handed over his new command, titled North Persia Force, to the commander
of 39th Infantry Brigade, Temporary Brigadier General H F
Bateman-Champain CMG, 9th Gurkha Rifles, Indian Army.
The fighting along the Tabriz-Kasvin Road
On 5 September up to 2,000 Turks advanced from Yusufabad and engaged
the British observation screen at Tikmedash. The British screen was
commanded by Wagstaffe's second-in-command, a Dunsterforce officer named
Captain H E Osborne, 2nd King Edward's Horse, and for his actions over
the next three days Herbert Edward Osborne was awarded a Military Cross:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty during a retirement from Tikmedash to Mianeh on 5-7 September,
1918. He conducted the withdrawal of his small command in face of strong
enemy forces over a distance of 55 miles in a most skilful and cool
manner. He caused the enemy many casualties, and eventually brought his
force through to safety with comparatively few losses.
Osborne, who had previously reconnoitred up to the outskirts of
Tabriz, had under his command locally recruited levies, stiffened by 'C'
Squadron 14th Hussars (60 sabres) and small detachments of Gurkhas and
Hampshires. When the Turks used artillery against Tikmedash the levies
soon became demoralised and fled, as did the local mule train drivers
who cut the loads loose and rode off on the mules. The Medical Officer
Captain Jordan Constantin John, Indian Medical Service, attempted but
failed to stop this flight although he did manage to evacuate the
wounded, and he was later appointed Officer of the Order of The British
Empire (OBE).
During the withdrawal from Tikmedash 1032 Lance Naik Sherbahadur
Ghale, 1/2nd Gurkha Rifles, displayed gallantry that earned him an
Indian Distinguished Service Medal. Osborne's next fight was at
Turkmanchai a day later and here he was supported by the two mountain
guns that had come forward; the mounted enemy unsuspectingly rode within
range and suffered from accurately fired shrapnel shells. Here 4848
Lance Naik Bahadurman Rai, 1/2nd Gurkhas, also won an Indian
Distinguished Service Medal.
Osborne's troops, now joined by Guy McCleverty who had reinforced him
with 100 Gurkha rifles, reached Mianeh on 9 September. Here Claud
Matthews had come forward to take command from Lewis Wagstaffe. A
further withdrawal was made to a defensive position at the pass over the
Kuflan Kuh ridgeline. Throughout the withdrawal from Tikmedash,
'Darkie' Pope's 'C' Squadron 14th Hussars had fought continuously as the
rearguard, and it was due to the Hussars' professionalism that the
Turks were held back, allowing the infantry to make clean breaks from
the fiercely-fought actions.
The defensive position on the Kuflan Kuh was strong in artillery as
the 18-pounders and the howitzers were in support along with a platoon
of the 9th Battalion the Worcestershire Regiment, but with only about 60
sabres and 300 rifles there was insufficient infantry for Matthews to
defend the feature satisfactorily. After repulsing a very determined
enemy attack, during which his levies again fled whilst the Worcesters
saved the day with a bayonet charge forward from their reserve position,
Matthews ordered a withdrawal back to Zinjan.
Here the situation stabilised as the Turks had by now appreciated the
firepower of the British artillery and of the armoured cars that had
engaged them on the Zinjan road. Commonwealth War Graves Commission
records suggest that two Serjeants of the Hampshires and two Gurkha
riflemen were killed as the British pulled back from Tikmedash to
Zinjan; all the British wounded were evacuated.
Captain R Goldberg, Machine Gun Corps Motors, had been prominent in
operations against the Tabriz Turks. Reuben Goldberg was awarded a
Military Cross:
For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
duty. Owing to his skill and ingenuity, a howitzer was brought from a
distance of twenty-four miles into action against the enemy. On another
occasion he carried out a reconnaissance over difficult country under
fire, and brought back valuable information.
Reuben had previously fought in armoured cars in German South West
Africa (now Namibia), and German East Africa (now Tanzania) and he was
soon to be also awarded a Distinguished Service Order.
Conclusion
Hopefully what has been written so far sets the scene for the second
part of the narrative that will describe events in Baku and around the
Caspian Sea. Only the major actions resulting in gallantry awards have
been described in this first part, but there were many more incidents
when Dunsterforce levy commanders and Hussar patrols engaged both
Turkish-inspired hostile tribesmen and gangs of bandits attempting to
seize loot and females. Probably the full story of all these actions
will never be told.
But the important fact, which was conveniently forgotten by the
detractors who chose at the time to judge Dunsterforce operations as
having failed, is that in northern Persia Dunsterville and his
excptional team achieved a remarkable success. Once the plan to reach
Tiflis was abandoned Dunsterforce, utilising extremely limited
resources, achieved the new mission of denying enemy movement through
north-western Persia whilst securing the road from Mesopotamia to the
Caspian Sea. General Hew Fanshawe, an honourable man who was never
afraid of standing up to military authority on behalf of a deserving
subordinate, was the only senior officer who appears to have appreciated
the intricacies and complications of operating in neutral Persia; he
commented objectively and accurately on Dunsterforce's success in
northern Persia and on what was needed at Baku.
Endnote:
This account has concentrated on military actions at the expense of
the concurrent international political activities, but anyone wishing to
learn more of the intriguing political situation in the Caucasus and
Transcaspia in 1918 will find a very readable and entertaining account
in Peter Hopkirk's Like Hidden Fire. The Plot to bring down the British
Empire.
Article contributed by Harry Fecitt
Images contributed by Harry Fecitt and IWM
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