Battle of Tanga, the opening battle in German East Africa (Tanzania) on November 2–5, 1914, during World War I in which an amphibious landing at Tanga ended in total fiasco for the British. Failure to secure the harbor as a base for future operations ended hopes that the German colony would be occupied quickly.
Military commanders in London originally intended for a British expeditionary force to sail through the Suez Canal and land at Tanga, denying Germany an essential port. When the Ottoman allies of Germany mounted a fierce campaign in the Middle East, requiring British troops to reinforce Egypt, the decision was made both to entrust the attack on German East Africa to colonial troops and to expand the mission from taking the port to conquering the whole of Germany’s East African possessions. The plan, originally scheduled to be effected in September 1914, was thus overly ambitious from the start.
With few troops available in East Africa, Major General Arthur Aitken sailed from Bombay with Indian Expeditionary Force B, comprising an infantry brigade, two artillery batteries, and a machine-gun company from the Indian Army, numbering about 8,000 soldiers altogether. Unfortunately, this command included many poorly trained men. Little intelligence existed regarding local German forces, which numbered only some 1,000 African soldiers and their German officers, and Aitken chose to ignore advice from men with local knowledge. In addition, the element of surprise was sacrificed when a local truce led to the farce of a British naval officer informing the Germans of the coming attack. This allowed the German commander, Lieutenant Colonel Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck, to reinforce his small, predominantly African Schutztruppe force at Tanga.
Aitken’s landing on October 2 was checked by German machine gun fire just east of the town. On October 4, he attempted a large-scale assault. Indian troops ran into massed rifle and machine gun fire, and casualties were heavy; the battle was further complicated by the fury of agitated bees, which at times even spurred a cessation of shooting while both sides fled the stinging prey. (The engagement is sometimes referred to as the Battle of the Bees for this reason.) Lettow-Vorbeck then launched a counterattack. African porters accompanying Indian units fled. Mistaking these men for Schutztruppe, panic spread through a number of regiments, and the Indian attack collapsed. At no time was artillery or naval gunfire called upon to support the assault. With his force totally disorganized, Aitken embarked his men the next day. Even then, chaos ensued when troops abandoned equipment as they ran for the boats. The remaining troops were moved to British East Africa, where they awaited a German counterattack.
After the battle, in which almost all the Indian elements save for two Kashmiri battalions were adjudged to be unreliable, Aitken was relieved of his command, and Lettow-Vorbeck went on to wage one of the most successful guerrilla campaigns in history. Although a minor battle in the overall context of World War I, the engagement at Tanga pointed to severe weaknesses in British planning and operations that would reemerge at Gallipoli the following year.
Losses: British-Indian, some 1,000 of 8,000; German and Askaris (local allied soldiers), some 150 of 1,000.