57 pages 1 hour read

Barbara W. Tuchman

The Guns Of August

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1962

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Chapter 10Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Chapter 10 Summary: “Goeben...An Enemy Then Flying”

As the war begins, Germany makes overtures to Turkey. Russia is Turkey’s enemy, and England has written her off as “the sick man of Europe” (161). Germany enters into an alliance with Turkey to cut off Russia’s access to the Mediterranean, and thus cut off her supplies, but at the onset, Turkey does nothing to help Germany. Meanwhile, the French and British fleets attempt to establish dominance in the Mediterranean so the French can transport 80,000 troops from North Africa to France. Rear Admiral Wilhelm Anton Souchon, in charge of the German fleet, which consists of only two ships, and Sir George Milne, in charge of the British fleet, hunt for each other as the war looms closer.

They also move themselves into attack positions, though the war has not yet been declared and orders from their respective governments, in the case of the French at least, are slow in coming. On August 4, running up a Russian flag, Souchon opens fire on Phillipeville in Algeria. The Breslau, a second German ship, opens fire on the Algerian city of Bone. Afterward, Souchon, following orders from Germany, heads to Constantinople. The British ships follow but cannot catch up, though they are unable to fire anyway, as war has not been declared.