List of military disasters
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2008) |
This article or section may contain an unpublished synthesis of published material that conveys ideas not attributable to the original sources. Please help Wikipedia by adding sources whose main topic is "List of military disasters". See the talk page for details.(May 2008) |
The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please improve this article or discuss the issue on the talk page. |
A military disaster is when one side in a battle or war is unexpectedly and soundly defeated, and often changes the course of history.
A military disaster can range from a strong army losing a major battle against a clearly inferior force, to an army being surprised and defeated by a clearly superior force, to a seemingly evenly matched conflict with an extremely one sided result. A military disaster could be due to bad planning, bad execution, bad weather, general lack of skill or ability, the failure of a new piece of military technology, a major blunder, a brilliant move on the part of the enemy, or simply the unexpected presence of an overwhelming enemy force.
Contents |
[edit] Ancient era
- The Battle of Salamis in 480 BC where a huge Persian fleet is defeated by a united Greek force.
- The Athenian expedition to Syracuse in 415 BC.
- The Battle of Cannae in 216 BC, where Hannibal destroyed the sixteen Roman and Allied legions, led by Lucius Aemilius Paullus and Gaius Terentius Varro. In all, perhaps more than 80% of the entire Roman army was dead or captured (including Paullus himself).
- The Battle of Teutoburg Forest, where German warriors destroyed three Roman legions
- The Battle of Adrianople, in which the emperor Valens was killed while Gothic heavy cavalry ambushed and decimated his Roman heavy infantry.
- The Battle of Guandu, which the more powerful Yuan Shao army failed to guard its supplies, and was defeated soundly by Cao Cao in 200 AD.
- The Battle of Chi Bi, where Liu Bei's advisor Zhuge Liang and Sun Quan's advisor Zhou Yu utterly destroyed Cao Cao's much-larger army with fire in 208 AD.
[edit] Medieval era
- The Battle of Yarmuk in 636. The Monophysite Ghassanid contingents in the Byzantine army, brutally persecuted by the Orthodox authorities, defected en masse to the Muslim side thus guaranteeing a Muslim victory.
- The Battle of al-Qādisiyyah in 636 - The Arab Muslim army decisively defeated the larger Sassanid Persian army resulting in the Islamic conquest of Persia.
- The Battle of Anchialus in 927. An enormous 110,000 Byzantine army was tactically outwitted by a smaller Bulgarian force causing the death of 90,000 soldiers, 70,000 of whom were Byzantines in one of the bloodiest battles in the Middle Ages. The bones of tens of thousands perished could be seen on the battlefield 75 years later.
- The Battle of Hattin in 1187, where overconfident Crusader forces from Jerusalem became trapped in a waterless desert area, and thus became easy prey for the Saracen forces of Salah-ud-din (Saladin)
- The Battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297. English Earl John de Warenne's well-equipped army were trapped on a narrow bridge by William Wallace's 15,000 unarmored, lightly-armed Scots, bearing long pointed stakes. The bridge had been chosen as the point of engagement by Warenne, even though the river could easily have been forded just a few miles upstream.
- The Battle of Agincourt in 1415 - A large force of French knights could not operate effectively in muddy conditions, and were therefore mown down by English longbowmen.
[edit] 16th century
- The First battle of Panipat - Babur sacked Delhi and defeated Ibrahim Lodhi.
- The Battle of Lepanto in 1571. The Holy League's fleet defeated the Ottoman fleet in the largest naval battle of human history. The Ottomans lost 240 ships (out of about 300), while the League lost 12 of their 210 ships.
- The Spanish Armada in 1588. An English fleet sends fire ships into the Spanish invasion fleet destroying some and scattering the rest effectively ending the invasion threat.
- The Battle of the Yellow Ford in 1598. An English force of 4000 is ambushed by Irish defenders under Hugh O'Neill and defeated.This temporarily put Ireland out of English control, allowing the rebellion to spread throughout Ireland.
[edit] 18th century
- Charles XII of Sweden's disastrous wintertime march on Moscow during the Great Northern War marked the beginning of the end of the Swedish Empire.
- The Battle of Karansebes in 1788. A fight broke out between hussars and infantrymen of the Austrian army campaigning against the Ottomans in Wallachia. An officer shouting "Halt! Halt!" was misheard as "Allah! Allah!" causing a mass panic which ultimately resulted in the death or wounding of over 10,000 Austrian soldiers.
[edit] 19th century
- The Charge of the Light Brigade. A British officer misinterpreted an order and led a suicidal charge against the Russian guns. ("Not tho' the soldier knew, someone had blunder'd" — Tennyson)
- Battle of the Little Bighorn. General George Custer attacks a superior force of armed Native American warriors, gets himself and his entire command killed, the only survivor being a lone horse.
- Battle of Isandlwana. A Zulu impi armed mostly with spears destroys two British battalions armed with rifles in a Pyrrhic victory.
- Napoleon's Invasion of Russia in the summer and winter of 1812 where Napoleon lost almost all of his troops; it was the turning point of the Napoleonic wars.
- William Elphinstone's disastrous retreat in 1842 during the First Anglo-Afghan War led to the loss of almost his entire command.
- Both the Battle of Fredericksburg and the Battle of Cold Harbor become horrible one-sided battles in which Union advances on entrenched Confederate units result in horrendous casualties during the American Civil War.
- Pickett's Charge by the Confederates in the Battle of Gettysburg was easily repulsed and, along with the cost of the previous two days of the battle, permanently crippled the Army of Northern Virginia.
- HMS Victoria collided with HMS Camperdown and was sunk with the loss of 358 lives after the fleet commander George Tryon ordered a sudden turn during maneuvres in 1893.
- The Battle of Adwa fought between the Italians and Ethopians in 1896. The Italians were completely defeated and the battle confirmed the independence of Ethopia.
[edit] 20th century
- The Battle of Tsushima - the Russian Baltic fleet was sent halfway around the world in a suicidal attack on the Japanese in the Tsushima Straits in 1905.
- The Battle of Gallipoli in 1915 and early 1916. A combined British, Commonwealth and French attempt to capture Istanbul fails completely at the Gallipoli peninsula.
- The Maginot line - although from a strictly technical viewpoint the line itself functioned as designed, it was emblematic of a deeply flawed defensive strategy.
- The Battle of France in 1940 - the French Army moved to meet the Germans inside Belgium, believing the Maginot Line would force the Germans to rerun the Schlieffen Plan, but was cutoff by a German advance through the Ardennes, which the French had believed was impassable for tanks.
- The Battle of Taranto in 1940. A small number of British aircraft more or less eliminated the Italian navy by knocking out three battleships with torpedoes as they lay at anchor in the harbor of Taranto.
- The British Operation Compass proved a disaster for the Italian forces in Libya. In the end the British force of 36 000 men captured 130 000 POWs ultimately forcing Germany to dispatch troops of her own to North Africa to save Mussolini from defeat.
- The Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 rendered the US Pacific fleet unable to act for six months during which Japan conquered much of the Pacific.
- The sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse (two battleships) in December 1941 shocked the British and once more showed that aircraft posed a serious threat to even the largest of warships.
- Operation Typhoon, the failed German drive towards Moscow in 1941 was exacerbated by the German decision to not bring along any winter clothing and vehicle antifreeze.
- The fall of Singapore (believed to be an impregnable fortress) in February 1942 to two Japanese division was the largest surrender of British-led troops in history and destroyed the linchpin of the American-British-Dutch-Australian Command.
- The naval Battle of Midway. Admiral Yamamoto of the Imperial Japanese Navy attempted to invade the American navy base at Midway Island. US navy intelligence broke his codes and anticipated the attack. The Imperial Japanese Navy lost four fleet carriers in three days.
- The Allied Dieppe Raid on German-occupied France in 1942 ended with ~60 % of the attacking force being lost in battle without any of the major objectives of the raid achieved.
- The Battle of Stalingrad in the winter of 1942/43 was one of the turning points of World War II. The German troops in Stalingrad surrendered even though Hitler had promised that they would never leave the city.
- The Battle of Dien Bien Phu, which forced the French to withdraw from northern Vietnam in 1954.
- The Bay of Pigs Invasion, a 1961 attempt to overthrow Cuban President Fidel Castro with 1,500 Cuban exiles. Not only were the exiles heavily outnumbered when they reached the bay, but the US-promised air support never came to aid the exiles.
- The Battle of Longewala, a pivotal battle of the Bangladesh Liberation war where a 2000 strong Pakistan Infantry Brigade and Armoured Regiment comprising 60+ tanks failed to take a lone Indian outpost manned by a company of just 120 soldiers before being finally decimated by the Indian Air Force.
- The Battle of Basantar, a single regiment of the Indian Army, led by Lt. Arun Khetarpal, captured the Shakargarh bulge near Sialkot, Pakistan.
- Operation Eagle Claw, a US attempt to rescue hostages in Iran. This operation was marked by a series of mechanical and communication failures that lead to the deaths of 8 American servicemen, and failed to rescue the hostages.
- Argentinian bombing of Royal Navy ships during the Falklands War. The Argentines flew so low that their bombs hit their targets before the fuses had time to activate. As a result, the bombs almost always failed to detonate.
[edit] Further reading
- Military Intelligence Blunders and Cover-Ups, by Colonel Hughes-Wilson John (ISBN 0-7867-1373-9)
- Geoffrey Regan's Book Of Military Blunders, by Geoffrey Regan (ISBN 0-233-99977-9)