British and French naval forces fail to force Dardanelles, lose three capital ships
Updated
Updated · The Independent · Apr 25
British and French naval forces fail to force Dardanelles, lose three capital ships
9 articles · Updated · The Independent · Apr 25
On 18 March 1915, fourteen Allied capital ships attempted to clear the Dardanelles but lost FS Bouvet, HMS Irresistible, and HMS Ocean to mines, while HMS Inflexible was severely damaged.
Vice-Admiral John de Robeck ordered a withdrawal after realizing the waters were not safe, ending the naval-only attempt to reopen the strait.
This defeat shifted Allied strategy to a land campaign, which also failed, highlighting the effectiveness of mines and asymmetric defense against superior naval forces.
How does a century-old naval disaster reveal the US Navy's greatest weakness against Iran today?
Why has the US Navy neglected mine-clearing, leaving global trade vulnerable to attack?
Why are America's allies refusing to help reopen the world's most critical oil chokepoint?
Is comparing the 1915 Dardanelles to today's Hormuz crisis a fatal strategic miscalculation?
Beyond warships, how could Iran's blockade permanently reroute global energy flows?
Could Houthi rebels open a second front, creating a global maritime trade catastrophe?