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Siege of Kut

Siege of Kut
Part of the Mesopotamian Campaign of World War I
Townshend, Khalil Pasha after Fall of Kut.jpg
Townshend and Halil Pasha after the fall of Kut
Date 7 December 1915 – 29 April 1916
Location Kut-al-Amara, Mesopotamia (modern Iraq)
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents

United Kingdom British Empire

 Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom Charles Townshend (POW) Ottoman Empire Nureddin Bey
Ottoman Empire Halil Bey
German Empire Colmar von der Goltz (died of typhus on 19 April 1916, in Baghdad)
Strength
31,000 31,000–41,000
Casualties and losses
30,000 dead or wounded
13,000 captured
10,000 dead or wounded

United Kingdom British Empire

The Siege of Kut Al Amara (7 December 1915 – 29 April 1916), also known as the First Battle of Kut, was the besieging of an 8,000 strong British-Indian garrison in the town of Kut, 160 kilometres (100 mi) south of Baghdad, by the Ottoman Army. In 1915 its population was around 6,500. Following the surrender of the garrison on 29 April 1916, the survivors of the siege were marched to imprisonment at Aleppo, during which many died. Historian Christopher Catherwood has called the siege "the worst defeat of the Allies in World War I".

The 6th (Poona) Division of the Indian Army, under Major-General Charles Townshend, had fallen back to the town of Kut after retreating from Ctesiphon. The British Empire forces arrived at Kut around 3 December 1915. They had suffered significant losses and were down to around 11,000 soldiers (plus cavalry). General Townshend chose to stay and hold the position at Kut instead of continuing the march downriver towards Basra. Kut offered a good defensive position because it was contained within a long loop of the river. The problem was how to get supplies, since Kut was a long way from Basra.

The pursuing Ottoman forces arrived on 7 December 1915. Once it became clear the Ottomans had enough forces to lay siege to Kut, Townshend ordered his cavalry to escape south, which it did, led by Lieut. Colonel Gerard Leachman DSO. The Ottoman forces numbered around 11,000 men and were increasing steadily with additional reinforcements arriving constantly. They were commanded by the respected but elderly German general and military historian Baron von der Goltz. Goltz knew the Ottoman army well, as he had spent 12 years working on modernizing it, from 1883 to 1895. After three attacks in December, Goltz directed the building of siege fortifications facing Kut. He prepared for an attack from Basra, using the Tigris River, by building defensive positions further down the river designed to cut off a river-borne relief.


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