Incomplete Victory: General Allenby and Mission Command in Palestine, 1917-1918

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Abstract:

The Palestine Campaign of the First World War exhibited a fighting style that brought with it various challenges in mission command. While General Allenby, commanding the Allied Egyptian Expeditionary Force EEF, gained several victories in the early stages of the campaign, he did not comprehensively defeat the Turkish forces in Palestine. He drove them away from their defensive line, but they escaped, avoided destruction, and retreated north to reestablish a defense and engage the EEF at later date. This thesis argues that General Allenby did not achieve great successes at the battles of Beersheba, Gaza, and Sheria and the pursuit of Turkish forces that ended with Allenbys capture of Jerusalem. Instead, Allenby had to learn how to succeed in Palestine to finally destroy the armies of the Ottoman Empire in Palestine at the battle of Megiddo in September 1918. The research in this study highlights the mission command challenges in Allenbys early campaigns and how he learned to overcome them and adapt his tactics to achieve complete victory at the battle of Megiddo. This thesis will use the tenets of mission command, consisting preparation, combined arms, prioritization of resources, and communication to examine General Allenbys Palestine campaign. Mission command, both a function of war and a philosophy of leadership, constitutes one of the key facets of military thought that leaders must consider to achieve complete victory.

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