British plans and preparations On the first quarter of the front line which stretched across the Plain of Sharon from the Mediterranean Sea, the
XXI Corps 35,000 infantry,
Desert Mounted Corps' 9,000 cavalry and 383 artillery pieces were preparing for the attack. On the remaining three quarters of the front line stretching to the Dead Sea, 22,000 infantry, 3,000 mounted troops and 157 artillery pieces of the
XX Corps and Chaytor's Force were deployed facing the Seventh and Fourth Ottoman Armies. "Concentration, surprise, and speed were key elements in the
blitzkrieg warfare planned by Allenby." The Battle of Sharon was to begin with an attack on the long front line, between the branch of the
Jaffa-Jerusalem railway running north from
Lydda towards Tulkarm (cut at the front line) and the Mediterranean, where Allenby massed three mounted divisions behind three of the XXI Corps' infantry divisions, supported by 18 densely deployed, heavy and siege batteries. Together, the five infantry divisions of the XXI Corps, commanded by Lieutenant General Edward Bulfin, had a 4.4–to–1 advantage in total troop numbers and three times the defenders' heavy artillery. The objective of the
60th Division, (XXI Corps), which consisted of three
British Indian Army infantry battalions for each British battalion, was to attack in "overwhelming strength at the selected point", supported by the "greatest possible weight of artillery", The infantry divisions were to continue their attack by swinging north–east, pivoting on their right to push the defenders back out of their trenches away from the coast and back into the Judean Hills towards Messudieh. The XXI Corps' 60th Division would advance north-east towards Tulkarm, while on their right the
3rd (Lahore), the
7th (Meerut) and the
75th Divisions, each division consisting of one British infantry and three British Indian Army infantry battalion per
brigade, would
attack the Tabsor defences, while the all British
54th (East Anglian) Division and the
Détachement Français de Palestine et de Syrie (DFPS) defended and
pivoted on the Rafat salient. Further to the right, the XX Corps would begin the Battle of Nablus in the Judean Hills in support of the main attack by the XXI Corps, by advancing to capture the Seventh Army headquarters at
Nablus and blocking the main escape route from the Judean Hills to the Jisr ed Damieh. Together, these attacks would force the enemy to retreat down the main
line of communication along the road and branch line of the Jezreel Valley railway, which ran alongside each other to pass through Jenin, and across the Esdrealon Plain away, and on to Damascus. The plain was also the site of the important communication hubs at Afulah and Beisan and here thousands would be captured by the cavalry of Desert Mounted Corps as they advanced to their objectives of
Afulah (
4th Cavalry Division), the Yildirim Army Group's headquarters at
Nazareth (
5th Cavalry Division) and
Jenin (Australian Mounted Division) on the Esdraelon Plain. The successful exploitation of the infantry attack on the coast by Desert Mounted Corps' cavalry's breakthrough depended on the mounted corps occupying the Esdraelon Plain (also known as the
Jezreel Valley and the ancient Plain of
Armageddon), behind the Ottoman front line. The site of important Ottoman communications hubs at Afulah and Beisan, the Esdraelon Plain links the
Plain of Sharon with the Jordan Valley. Together, these three lowlands form a semicircle round the positions held by the Ottoman Seventh and Eighth Armies in the
Judean Hills. If the Esdraelon Plain could be captured swiftly, the entire Ottoman army west of the Jordan could be captured.
British Empire deployments The 60th Division commanded by Major General J. S. M. Shea, was to fight on the ancient battlefield between Arsuf and
Nahr el Faliq, where in 1191 King Richard
defeated Saladin and avenged
Hattin. Shea's infantry division was to advance to establish a bridgehead across Nahr el Faliq and create a gap in the front line for the cavalry. Then the 60th Division was to advance north-east to capture Tulkarm and cut the railway line east of it.
German and Ottoman forces and preparations ,
Hans-Joachim Buddecke, and
Oswald Boelcke in Turkey, 1916 In August 1918, the
Central Powers'
Yildirim Army Group commanded by
Otto Liman von Sanders consisted of 40,598 frontline infantrymen organised into twelve divisions defending a long front. They were armed with 19,819 rifles, 273 light and 696 heavy machine guns. The high number of machine guns reflects the Ottoman Army's new tables of organization and the high machine gun component of the German
Asia Korps. Another estimate of this fighting strength was 26,000 infantry, 2,000 mounted troops and 372 guns. Yet another estimate is that on a front extending from the Mediterranean coast westwards, the German and Ottoman force may have deployed 8,000 infantry supported by 130 guns, with the remaining of front defended by 24,000 German and Ottoman soldiers and 270 guns. (
16th and
19th Divisions, three German battalion groups of the German "Pasha II" detachment), with the 2nd Caucasian Cavalry Division in reserve. The Asia Corps linked the Eighth Army's XXII Corps on the coast with the Seventh Army's
III Corps further inland, facing units of the British XX Corps. (See the Battle of Nablus for a description of this fighting.) The 7th, 19th and 20th Divisions held the shortest frontage in the entire Yildirim Army Group. The 7th and 20th Divisions, together held a total of of trenches; the 7th Division held nearest the coast while the 20th Division held and the Asia Corps' 19th Division held of trenches further inland, with the 46th Division in reserve from the front line, near the Eighth Army's headquarters at Tulkarm. These divisions were some of the most highly regarded fighting formations in the Ottoman Army; in 1915 the 7th and 19th Divisions had fought as part of Esat Pasa's III Corps at Gallipoli. The 20th Division had also fought towards the end of the
Gallipoli campaign and served for a year in Galicia fighting against Russians on the eastern front. This regular army division, which had been raised and stationed in Palestine, was sometimes referred to as the
Arab Division. The XXII Corps was supported by the majority of the Yildirim Army's heavy artillery for counter battery operations. Here, three of the five Ottoman Army heavy artillery batteries in Palestine (the 72nd, 73rd and 75th Batteries) were deployed. Further, the Ottoman front line regiments had been alerted that a major attack was imminent. On 17 September 1918, Ottoman Army intelligence accurately placed five infantry divisions and a detachment opposite their Eighth Army. As a consequence, the 46th Infantry Division was moved up to the south–west to a new reserve position at Et Tire, directly behind the Ottoman XXII Corps's front line divisions. It is claimed, without taking into account the large number of machine guns, the effective strengths of the nine infantry battalions of the 16th Infantry Division each was equal to a British infantry company of between 100 and 250 men while 150 to 200 men were
assigned to the 19th Infantry Division battalions which had had 500–600 men at Beersheba. It is also claimed that problems with the supply system in February 1918 resulted in the normal daily ration in Palestine being of bread and boiled beans in the morning, at noon, and at night, without oil or any other condiment.
Tabsor defences The Tabsor defences consisted of the only continuous trench and
redoubt system on the front line. Here the Ottomans had dug two or three lines of trenches and redoubts, varying in depth from . These defences, centred on the Tabsor village, stretched from Jaljulye to the coast. Another less developed system of defences was behind, and the beginnings of a third system ran from Tulkarm across the Plain of Sharon to
Nahr Iskanderun. It has been suggested that an inflexible defence relying on a line of trenches had been developed by the Ottoman armies, which required
every inch of ground ... to be fought for, when a more flexible system would have better suited the situation. ==Battle==