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News from a wargamer with a special interest in the military history of the Balkans. It mainly covers my current reading and wargaming projects. For more detail you can visit the web sites I edit - Balkan Military History and Glasgow & District Wargaming Society. Or follow me on Twitter @Balkan_Dave
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Friday, 20 February 2026

Italy's War for a Desert

 Francis McCullagh was a war correspondent embedded with the Italians during their 1911 invasion of Tripoli. He wrote up his experiences in this book, published in 1913. It has been republished by Forgotten Books, and there is an ebook version as well. He includes the best line I have read about this conflict: "The Italians are besieging the desert. They have sat down before it and called upon it to surrender." 


It would be fair to say the author was not impressed by the Italian army's performance in this campaign. He highlights equipment deficiencies, like the tiny half-litre water bottles (the French version was two litres), and the heavy uniform material, "criminally, out of place here." Officers had no training in local conditions, such as drinking from water fountains when Cholera was raging in the town. The defence lines were too close to the town, allowing Ottoman artillery to attack targets far behind the lines. They failed to disarm the locals and had few reserves.

The book is a narrative of the actions he witnessed, limited to Tripoli, and is a useful primary source, but Charles Stephenson's A Box of Sand does a comprehensive job of this. The value is in his often acerbic commentary. He sums up the Italian policy as "a mixture of excessive foolhardiness and excessive caution." It is hard to disagree. Any illusions that the Italians would be welcomed as liberators disappeared quickly. They wrongly assumed that the town Arabs and others were attacking them from the rear, when in fact they had infiltrated the Italian lines. This led to a series of atrocities, which simply fuelled the insurgency, and led our author to leave Tripoli to avoid the Italian censors.

As Napoleon once said, "Never make war against a desert." An adage the Italians forgot and paid a heavy price.

I have now painted the Arab horse, using Pendraken Miniatures.


This means I have enough troops to get this project onto the tabletop. We used The Men Who Would Be Kings for our midweek game, 36 points. The locally raised Ottoman infantry were holding an oasis, which would be attacked by an Italian column from Tripoli. The Arab horse ominously gathered on the flanks.


The Italian attack became a bit disjointed due to poor initiative dice, which was not helped by the Arab horse launching flank attacks. The whole attack then broke down, and the Italians made a hasty withdrawal back to Tripoli. The rules worked well, and it will be interesting to see how they work when I have painted the Ottomans. Hopefully, after my daughter's wedding this weekend, my painting productivity will improve.




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