Hot Gates and Narrow Seas β Lessons Written in Geography β Intro
Hot Gates and Narrow Seas Some places on Earth shape history again and again. Narrow straits, mountain passes, shallow beaches, and tight corridors concentrate power. Geography can amplify courage, but it can also magnifβ¦
Hot Gates and Narrow Seas
Some places on Earth shape history again and again. Narrow straits, mountain passes, shallow beaches, and tight corridors concentrate power. Geography can amplify courage, but it can also magnify poor decisions. From the cliffs of Thermopylae to the waters of Gallipoli, from Balaclava to the Strait of Hormuz, commanders have repeatedly sent young people into places where terrain decides outcomes long before the first shot is fired. ππ§
This journey follows a modern naval group departing San Diego and sailing across the Pacific toward the Persian Gulf. Along the way, the story looks backward in time to other moments when leaders underestimated geography or overestimated advantage. At Thermopylae, a small Greek force delayed a vast Persian army at a narrow pass called the Hot Gates. At Balaclava during the Crimean War, cavalry rode into artillery fire in what became immortalized as the Charge of the Light Brigade. At Gallipoli in World War I, commanders believed ships and men could force a heavily defended peninsula. Again and again, narrow places became proving grounds for ambition and cautionary tales for future generations. β
The story is not about condemning those who serve, but about understanding how leaders must respect both geography and human life. History shows clearly that wars often become unjust not only because of cause, but because of careless decisions that ignore predictable consequences. The young rarely choose the battlefield. The powerful often choose it for them. ποΈ