| 
                And, as a convert and later a proselytizer, 
it was no surprise that Mackenzie subsequently repeated the story that Goeben 
and Breslau coaled at Syra, adding that a telegram was sent to Hastings, 
the British consul there, to keep a look-out for them. ‘So,’ Mackenzie 
tendentiously recounted, 
as dear old Hastings himself told me, he used to start away 
every morning in the heat and sit on the arid cliffs of Syra gazing out to sea 
for the German warships through a small telescope, “though,” as he added, “what 
I was expected to do if I saw them I don’t know.” Presently he had the 
melancholy pleasure of telegraphing to the British Legation in Athens that they 
were being coaled in the harbour of Syra itself. 
So it was then that, by this time, the campaign of 
disinformation had become entrenched. A year earlier this very same Mr Hastings 
had maintained – correctly of course – that it was an ‘absolute fable’ that 
Goeben had coaled at Syra and, certainly, no record exists in the Consular 
Archives of the telegram Hastings was alleged by Mackenzie to have sent. In any 
case Hastings was not consul at the time in question: this was the duty of Mr J. 
Saliba, who sent at least two cables to Erskine in Athens on Saturday 8 August 
1914 – the day of the purported coaling – yet neither referred to Goeben, 
a strange omission if the battle cruiser was actually in the harbour. 
                As has been shown, Kerr passed the 
information that Goeben was ‘near Syra’ to Third Secretary Rendel on the 
night of 7 August and Rendel relayed this to Milne via Malta. Subsequently, the 
Russian Admiralty received a cable from Athens that Goeben was coaling at 
Syra while, in London, the intercepted signal from the mysterious Metriticicas 
on the 9th went further, to explain the Goeben had asked to coal at Syra 
but that the demand might not be met due to the Greek Government’s appropriation 
of all coal stocks. This information, together with the retrospective attempt by 
Venizelos to seek British authorization to coal belligerent ships, and the 
curious transformation of the nationality of the collier Bogados from 
German (in the signal from Piraeus to Athens) to Austrian (in the signal from 
Athens to Malta), would, the Prime Minister must have hoped, tend to exculpate 
him with regard to his own responsibility for making possible Souchon’s escape. 
Indeed, it is tantalizing to suggest that ‘Metriticicas’ was an agent of the 
Prime Minister and that the message to ‘Warplume’ in London was meant to 
be intercepted by the British to show that the Greeks had, apparently, refused 
to coal the German ships. Venizelos, above all – if he wished to carry to 
fruition his plan to align Greece with the Entente – had the most pressing 
reason to conceal the fact that he, personally, had provided the lifeline 
Souchon needed if the German ships were to reach the Straits safely. Naturally, 
as a committed Venizelist, Mackenzie had a vested interest in pushing the fable 
of the phantom coaling at Syra; not to do so would have inevitably led to 
questions being asked as to how Souchon actually did obtain coal if he had not 
appropriated the stocks at Syra and this, in turn, would have led to the real 
culprit — Eleutherios Venizelos. 
                Mackenzie also made a further charge against 
King Constantine which is less easy to dismiss than the phantom coaling. ‘So far 
as I am aware’, he claimed, ‘none of the information contained in [Wilhelm’s 
telegram of 4 August concerning the Turco-German alliance and the destination of
Goeben and Breslau] was communicated, and I should certainly have 
heard from Admiral Mark Kerr…if he had been authorized to warn the Admiralty 
about those orders given to the two German warships.’ 
This begs the question that the King did tell Kerr and it was Kerr who, 
for reasons of his own, did not pass the information on; in that case Kerr would 
hardly admit to having acted in a manner that could almost be regarded as 
treasonous. All that Kerr had to do to refute this charge – as far as he was 
concerned personally – was to claim that the King had not divulged the entire 
contents of the telegram to him; yet he never used this defence. On the other 
hand, what proof is there that the Admiral was aware of all the contents of the 
cable? This is Kerr’s own testimony: 
…King Constantine had received a telegram from the Emperor 
practically dictating the course Greece was to pursue in the war. King 
Constantine brought the telegram to my house and read it to me. 
He was indignant at the interference in his country’s affairs. However, to stop 
such telegrams coming in daily he determined to send on this occasion a 
sympathetic answer. I may add that at the same time King Constantine was 
supplying me with information from the secret service for our use in the 
war and he continued to do so until struck down by illness in the following 
summer. 
letter to ‘the 
times’ by admiral mark kerr, 9 december 1920. 
King Constantine showed me telegrams that passed between him 
and the German Emperor from time to time, and he was certainly in a very 
difficult position…during the first year…Greece’s entry would have been a 
disaster for the Allies. The enemy were overwhelmingly powerful in this part 
of the world. 
the case for 
constantine by vice-admiral mark kerr, ‘the morning post’, 11 december 1920 
When I went to see King Constantine at Lucerne on November 
19, 1920…I asked him if there was anything secret or otherwise that could be 
brought up against him by the Allies, as I should have to act as counsel on his 
behalf in the case of any disputes as to his past policy. He replied to me that 
his wife’s telegrams to the Emperor were sent when he was ill, without his 
knowledge, but that, after all, they were only a natural outburst of anger to 
her brother on the way that the Allies had behaved towards her husband, after he 
had done all he could to assist them short of plunging his country into war 
without support in sufficient quantity from those self-same Allies. The only 
other point was the opening sentence of the telegram above referred to 
[Constantine’s reply of 7 August to Wilhelm], which contained King Constantine’s 
reply to the Emperor’s telegram of August 4, 1914, sent through the Greek 
Minister at Berlin. This opening sentence stated that ‘the Emperor knows that my 
personal sympathy and my political opinion lead me to his side. I shall never 
forget that to him we owe Kavalla.’ 
                His Majesty commenced to explain that he was 
sugaring the pill which is contained in the rest of the telegram, and I told him 
that it was needless to explain it to me, as I had been with him when he 
received the telegram, and he intimated to me then what his reply would be. 
mark kerr, ‘land, sea and air’, (1927),
pp. 188-9. 
I was in constant touch with King Constantine. He was NOT 
pro-German in any way whatever, and altogether was VERY pro-Ally. He permitted 
me to send the Greek plan for the taking of the Dardanelles to our Admiralty, 
and also all the secret service information which came weekly from the 
Dardanelles to Athens he ordered to be sent to me for transmission to London…The 
King showed me all the telegrams which passed between him and the German 
Emperor and others, and the replies that he received. 
admiral mark kerr, 
letter to ‘the sunday times’, 10 november 1940. 
What was even more remarkable was the Admiral’s reticence 
with regard to Goeben and Breslau. Although keen to draw attention 
to Constantine’s telegram of the 7th, emphasizing the threats and incentives of 
the German Emperor’s telegram three days previously, Kerr consistently ignored 
all mention of the Turco-German alliance and the order to Souchon to proceed to 
Constantinople. Kerr was obviously still more intent on protecting the King’s 
reputation than saving his own but clearly must have hoped that, by not 
mentioning the contents of the 4 August telegram, no-one would make the 
connexion. As the King’s brother later admitted in a fulsome tribute, Kerr 
‘stood by King Constantine through thick and thin, and at a moment when it was 
difficult to do so. He risked his own career for his friend.’ 
In 1925 Kerr wrote the preface for the published edition of some of the King’s 
letters and, therefore, was presumably aware of the contents of the book, 
including the footnote which appeared after mention of the infamous telegram of 
4 August: ‘King Constantine read this telegram to Admiral Mark Kerr, expressing 
to him his indignation at the interference on the part of the Emperor in the 
internal affairs of Greece.’ 
Kerr did not refute this statement. 
                There would seem to be little doubt then that 
Kerr was aware of the telegram and most of its contents; but was he perhaps 
presented with an edited version in the same sense that Venizelos gave Erskine a 
doctored version of the report from Theotokis? Here the evidence is of a more 
negative character. In his continued defence of Constantine over the next 
quarter of a century Kerr took pains to mention that the King had passed him ALL 
the information that was variously available. With the flood of diplomatic 
documents being published in the 1920s Kerr should have been aware of the full 
contents of all the telegrams including that of 4 August from Wilhelm to 
Constantine. Indeed, as early as 1919 (that is, before the date of any of the 
above quotations by Kerr in the King’s defence), the complete text of the 
telegram was published in England by J. S. Willmore in his The Story of King 
Constantine as revealed in the Greek White Book. 
It is inconceivable that Kerr was not aware of this. Would he have defended the 
King quite so vehemently if he thought the King had deceived him? In fact Kerr 
was not averse to judicious editing to save the King embarrassment when 
Constantine was on the verge of returning to Greece in 1920. In the Morning 
Post article Kerr quoted Constantine’s reply to Wilhelm of 7 August but 
deliberately withheld the opening sentence, ‘The Emperor knows that my personal 
sympathy as well as my political opinions draw me to his side.’ The Admiral 
waited seven years before explaining why he had censored this sentence: his 
explanation is given above in the quotation from his autobiography Land, Sea 
and Air. 
                The King died in 1923 yet his memory remained 
sacred to Kerr. The Admiral risked disgrace once the text of the Kaiser’s 
telegram was published; if Constantine had deceived Kerr over the contents of 
the telegram, the Admiral’s defence was simple: the King had deliberately kept 
him in the dark. Yet he never used this defence. There remains the other 
alternative that the King divulged the contents of the telegram but swore Kerr 
to secrecy to prevent incurring the wrath of the Kaiser. It has already been 
seen that Constantine was afraid of being ‘rude’ to his brother-in-law and that 
this might result in calamity for Greece; what would Wilhelm have thought if his 
impulsive cable to Constantine had resulted in the destruction of Souchon’s 
squadron? 
							 
  
One theory has recently been advanced that Kerr might have 
been used – ‘controlled’ – by British Intelligence to feed disinformation to the 
Kaiser. 
Kerr had been in close personal touch with the German Emperor since a long 
meeting with him at Corfu in April 1908 (though he had first met Wilhelm as long 
ago as 1889 at Phalerum Bay in Greece for the wedding of the then Crown Prince 
Constantine to Sophie, Wilhelm’s sister). 
Following the meeting at Corfu Wilhelm sent Kerr a copy of the German Navy 
handbook Nauticus which Kerr used as a pretext to write a long, 
apparently indiscreet, letter to the Emperor in which he mentioned that he was 
going to be the first captain of Invincible, the revolutionary new 
British battle cruiser, and that he had just been on board her sister ship 
Indomitable where he discovered: 
                They found no difficulty in getting the 
speed, but of course it was very hard to get the coal to the fires after the 
first two days – Her bunkers stretching so far forward and aft every soul was 
down below trimming coal at the end. [As Captain Kennedy was to discover in 
August 1914.] Still it was a fine performance. One advantage of the turbine 
is – that the strain on the Engineer officers is reduced to a minimum. 
[The underlining belonged to Wilhelm who found this statement of particular 
interest.] There are not hot bearings to be looked for! Yet the steam and the 
ship will gallop! I have talked to two Cabinet Ministers and several Members of 
Parliament about keeping the names of foreign Powers out of their mouths when 
discussing naval and military programmes and I am glad to say that the two 
ministers have both spoken in public since and deprecated the naming of Germany 
as an enemy or rival. I have also talked to some newspaper men about the same 
thing. 
                I find that in the last few years a great 
change has come over the feelings of the upper classes in this country. I have 
had several conversations with men and women in society and whereas a few years 
ago I found most people very prejudiced against the German Empire and the German 
people, now the feeling has changed and the admiration and appreciation of your 
Majesty is almost general, in fact I have only met one man who did not share in 
it. He was of no account by the time I had finished with him he was sorry he had 
spoken. Certainly he had no supporters. Then as regards the feeling towards the 
German people I find a general tendency to admire their patriotism and hard 
work. Indeed I hope that better understandings are arising. 
                I had a long discussion with two Cabinet 
Ministers about the Two Power Standard and they came to agree that it was a pity 
that it had ever been started but thought that it was impossible to 
abandon the expression now. They said ‘If it was dropped we should get no more 
money, to begin with, and we should probably be turned out of power to end 
with.’ However, they promised to cultivate a better way of talking of these 
things in the future. Words mean so much in these days of irresponsible 
newspapers. In any case I shall do my small work of trying to produce the 
better feeling and I have got some others to help, and each night I pray that 
God’s help may be in the good cause – of friendship between the two great 
countries – that I know your Majesty has at heart. 
                                                                Wishing your 
Majesty every possible good wish. 
                                                I have the 
honour to be Your Majesty’s most obedient and devoted servant. 
Yet, a quarter of a century later, the chapter on the Kaiser 
in Kerr’s autobiography is an anodyne affair that quotes next to none of the 
correspondence, which continued until the outbreak of the war. Kerr does relate, 
however, one of the, allegedly, most successful British secret service 
operations of the pre-war period: 
There is an interesting little history attached to the 
building of the Invincible, the first type of battle-cruiser that was 
ever designed. The Admiralty, not wishing that any hint of her speed and gun 
power should get abroad correctly, had two sets of plans made. One set was drawn 
for the ship to be built by, but the other set was intended for the German 
agents to steal. These busy people did succeed in stealing the plans which were 
intended for them, and consequently the German Admiralty designed and built the
Blücher to be rather faster and more heavily gunned that the 
Invincible. Their dismay must have been surprising when they first saw the 
completed Invincible with her eight 12-inch guns and 25-knots speed, 
which she could easily exceed, [as Kerr had told Wilhelm] as against the 
Blücher’s 11-inch guns and lesser speed. I happened to be the first captain 
of the Invincible, and I sent a picture-postcard of her to the German 
Emperor, to which he replied by sending me one of the Blücher, on which 
he had written, ‘This is Wellington’s old ally.’ 
Was it no more than a coincidence that Kerr, on intimate 
terms with the Kaiser, was made first captain of Invincible after the 
Germans had been supposedly misled as to the firepower and speed of this new 
type of ship — the development of which Fisher, in particular, viewed with such 
great importance; or was he rewarded for services rendered? Fisher used to like 
to boast that, when necessary, he could have information ‘whispered in the 
German Emperor’s ear’ presumably through a network of informal contacts. 
                Kerr was not the sole user of this 
extra-diplomatic channel: Rear-Admiral the Hon. Victor Montagu also conducted a 
fawning correspondence with the Kaiser from 1908 till the outbreak of war. 
According to the authors of the study referred to above, 
It is clear that the letters of Montagu and Kerr…circulated 
in the policy-making circles of the German Empire, and that the information they 
contained on the views of substantial sections of British opinion and on British 
domestic politics and the problems of the British Government, were of interest 
to the All-Highest. The latter…recognised that the correspondence presented an 
alternative view of both the actual state and the potentialities of Anglo-German 
relations to that derived from more conventional sources. There might, however, 
have been rather more to it than this. The coincidence of several of the 
letters… with times of tension provokes the speculation that these two 
correspondents might not have been so entirely under the spell of the Kaiser as 
their modes of address suggest… 
Was Kerr, then, a “sleeper” whose supposed influence with the 
Kaiser made him a perfect conduit for disseminating misinformation and who, at 
the crucial moment, was positioned in Greece to try to ensure that country’s 
adherence to the Entente? If so, did he then, under the influence of 
Constantine, disobey his instructions in an attempt to keep Greece neutral, 
having been convinced by the King that this was the only safe course? This was 
certainly the view taken by the Foreign Office in London. 
In that case, one comes back to Compton Mackenzie’s view of Kerr as a naïve, 
impressionable officer, besotted by Royalty, who ‘genuinely believed a King was 
by the quality of his kingship endowed with superior discernment.’ 
Unquestionably, Kerr’s remarkable letter to Battenberg of December 1913 (quoted 
earlier) in which the Admiral expressed a desire to change his nationality to 
fight with the Greeks provides evidence of a certain instability in Kerr’s 
make-up. 
                In the First Lord’s letter to Battenberg 
immediately prior to Kerr’s appointment in Greece, Churchill had warned against 
Kerr imparting any ‘naval information of a specially secret character’ as it 
‘may be transmitted to Germany, and…we have no corresponding method of obtaining 
information of German developments.’ 
If Kerr were a secret agent it would not seem, therefore, to have been under the 
official aegis of the Admiralty: as Churchill makes clear, the original naval 
mission to Greece had been promised by the Foreign Office without consulting the 
Admiralty who then, out of pique, decreed that only retired officers (the first 
of whom would be Admiral Tufnell) could be sent. When the Greeks complained at 
this treatment – as the Turks had been sent serving officers for their mission – 
a serving officer was sought by Churchill to go to Athens but, it would seem, 
his primary concern was ‘to give them really good men who will do us credit.’ 
Kerr’s immediate patron at the Admiralty was Battenberg, who was Director of 
Naval Intelligence from 1903 to 1905, while Fisher, who also had a keen interest 
in Kerr’s career, was a born intriguer and remained a powerful influence behind 
the scenes from the period after the end of his first tenure as First Sea Lord 
until his re-employment in the same position following Battenberg’s enforced 
resignation late in 1914. Given the amateurish, at times chaotic, state of the 
pre-war intelligence services 
is it possible that Kerr was a member of an informal ‘network’ operating in and 
connected by the myriad strands of European royalty? 
  
There is, it should be pointed out, some doubt as to whether 
the Kaiser was completely taken in by his garrulous English informants; 
certainly he attempted, in turn, to feed disinformation back through the same 
channels. The laying down of Dreadnought in 1905 had caught the German 
Admiralty off-guard and a perturbed Wilhelm made an ‘amateurish’ attempt that 
year to sway British policy by sending the same Admiral Montagu details of 
‘elderly German battleships’ in the hope Montagu would pass these on. 
By 1907 Tirpitz was desperately engineering an amendment to the 1900 Navy Law 
which would reduce the life of a capital ship from 25 to 20 years. To replace 
existing older ships therefore, the building tempo would have to be increased to 
four ships a year from 1908-9 to 1911-12, dropping to two thereafter until the 
programme expired in 1917-18. Although the amendment was eventually passed by 
the Reichstag in March 1908, to disarm the British, Wilhelm took the 
extraordinary step in February of that year of writing direct to the First Lord, 
Tweedmouth, 
in an attempt to refute the implication that the increased rate of building was 
meant as a challenge to British naval supremacy. Tweedmouth was delighted – not 
at the putative refutation – but to have received, personally, a nine page 
hand-written letter from the All-Highest. 
The flattered, dying Tweedmouth was indiscreet and Repington, military 
correspondent of The Times, heard of the letter. The British Estimates 
for 1908-9 would shortly be debated: capital ship construction had decreased 
from four ships in 1905 to three in 1906 and 1907 and now only two were 
proposed. Meanwhile, under Tirpitz, German building had increased conversely 
from two in 1905 to three and now four. To Repington the Kaiser’s letter was ‘an 
insidious attempt to influence, in German interests, a British First Lord, and 
at a most critical moment, namely, just before the Estimates were coming on in 
Parliament.’ 
When The Times went public on 6 March; however, rather than initiating a 
scare, it focused attention on the unfortunate First Lord, who was soon after 
removed. What would Repington’s reaction had been if he had known that 
Tweedmouth – with Grey’s approval – had sent a copy of the new estimates to 
Wilhelm before they were submitted to Parliament? Having thus, 
indirectly, contributed to the downfall of Tweedmouth, the Kaiser decamped to 
Corfu where the Captain of one of the British battleships sent to greet him (Formidable 
and Implacable) was none other than Mark Kerr. 
                Kerr admitted that there ‘had lately been a 
little trouble over one of the Emperor’s impulsive telegrams [sic] which 
the British public had resented, though why they made such a fuss about it in 
the Press I have never yet been able to understand.’ 
At a luncheon on Implacable Wilhelm came complete with a ‘sketch plan of 
what the German Fleet would be in 1920, if nothing happened between this and 
then.’ 
The Kaiser’s diagram done, according to Kerr, ‘with his usual clearness and 
neatness’ showed an active fleet of 17 ships of the line and 16 cruisers, and a 
reserve fleet comprising the same numbers though with a proportion of the ships 
not actually commissioned and others with nucleus crews. Kerr was so taken with 
the diagram that it was reproduced, in colour, in his memoirs. Here was the 
proposed German fleet strength: ‘I am going to have that exactly, neither more 
nor less’, the Kaiser had told Kerr, helpfully adding afterwards, ‘By the way, 
Kerr, you can send that paper…to Sir John Fisher.’ 
                Kerr states that, without this licence from 
Wilhelm, he would not have forwarded the paper to Fisher (!) ‘considering 
it to be a private matter told me in confidence’. Was this a crude attempt to 
feed information back through Kerr to bolster Wilhelm’s contention that not only 
was the German fleet NOT directed against Britain but, in any event, its size – 
even by 1920 – would not be threatening? In fact, following the 1908 
Supplementary Bill Tirpitz was aiming for a fleet in 1920 of 58 capital ships 
and 38 light cruisers, far in excess of the comforting figures so generously 
given to Kerr. 
Within a year British apprehensions regarding the acceleration of the German 
building programme and faulty intelligence combined to produce the great 1909 
Naval Scare, based on the assumption that Germany would have at least 17 capital 
ships in commission by 1912 and possibly 21. 
As all of Wilhelm’s previous direct approaches to influence British policy had 
come disastrously unstuck did he believe that his attempt to play down the 
threat posed by Germany would carry more weight by being received confidentially 
in London through the medium of Mark Kerr? 
                If it is accepted that Kerr knew, some time 
between the 4th and 7th of August 1914, of Souchon’s destination but that the 
German Admiral still made good his escape it would seem that there are only 
three possibilities: Kerr deliberately withheld the information; or he relayed 
it in doctored form; or else he passed it on verbatim and it was ignored. Kerr’s 
most obvious motive for failing to disclose the destination of Souchon’s 
squadron was a desire to protect his source, King Constantine, just as, in 1908, 
he would allegedly not have divulged the privileged information given him by the 
Kaiser without a licence to do so. 
He had been convinced by the King that, in the interests of self-preservation, 
neutrality was the only course Greece could sensibly adopt; but could this be 
squared with a calculated decision to let two enemy ships escape? Was there 
another way? The Kaiser’s impetuous telegram provided Kerr with the knowledge of 
Souchon’s eventual destination, yet, if he simply stated to Milne that Goeben 
was near Syra, was steering a north-easterly course, and was known to be heading 
for Constantinople, he stood the risk of compromising the King, with, perhaps, 
dire consequences for Greece. Fortunately, or so it must have seemed at the 
time, Kerr had other means at his disposal for ascertaining the whereabouts of 
Souchon, principally the (admittedly) nascent field of wireless telegraphy, of 
which Kerr himself was a great proponent. The intelligence Milne received after 
sailing from Malta, which originated with Kerr, stated that ‘from strength of 
signals Goeben thought to be near Syra’ so, apparently, Kerr WAS trying 
to lead Milne in the right direction, while at the same time disguising the 
source. What he might not have counted on was the fact that Milne would ignore 
this new source of intelligence. 
                As already related, the first information 
from St Petersburg — which the Russians had obtained from Kerr and which did 
state that the German ships were steering north-east — arrived in London soon 
after midnight on the night of 8/9 August. Unaware as to the identity of the 
Russians’ informant, this information was passed on, without comment, to Mr 
Erskine in Athens, from whence the information had originated. Erskine received 
the telegram at 9 o’clock that Sunday morning and, by 11.45 a.m., he had drafted 
his reply, shown below exactly as it appears in the archives: 
Dft Mr Erskine to Sir E Grey              Tel. No. 140 
Secret              sent 11.45 a.m. 
Petersburg Tel. No. 247 
Your tel No. 112 
Information is correct. 
I am in constant communication with Intelligence Officer 
Malta respecting movements of German ships of war referred to & am being 
helped bysecretly helped 
by Admiral Kerrbywireless telegraphy of GreekMinistry of MarineAdmiralty.Latest news ofGoeben
believed to beoffnear Syranigevening of Aug 7. Greek Govt think sheismay 
contemplate going into Black Sea. &Theyhave warned Greek fleettonot to expose themselves to possible danger. 
  
  
   
  
	
		| 
		  | 
		AS 
		ORIGINALLY DRAFTED | 
		  | 
		AS 
		AMENDED AND SENT |  
		| 
		  | 
		
		Petersburg Tel. No. 247 | 
		  | 
		
		Petersburg Tel. No. 247 |  
		| 
		  | 
		Your tel 
		No. 112 | 
		  | 
		
		Information is correct |  
		| 
		  | 
		I am in 
		constant communication with Intelligence Officer Malta respecting 
		movements of German ships referred to & am being helped by Admiral Kerr 
		with wireless telegraphy of Greek Ministry of Marine. Latest news of 
		Goeben was off Syra night of Aug 7. Greek Govt think she is going into 
		Black Sea. They have warned Greek fleet not to expose themselves to 
		possible danger. | 
		  | 
		I am in 
		constant communication with Intelligence Officer Malta respecting 
		movements of German ships referred to & am being secretly helped by 
		wireless telegraphy of Greek Admiralty. Goeben was believed to be near 
		Syra evening of Aug 7. Greek Govt think she may contemplate going into 
		Black Sea & have warned Greek fleet not to expose themselves to possible 
		danger. |  
  
Not only did the telegram as sent hide Kerr’s involvement it 
was also far less definite with regard to its intelligence regarding the 
whereabouts of  Souchon and his destination. In the draft, Goeben is 
stated to be ‘off Syra’ while the ‘Greek Govt think she is going into 
Black Sea’. This was watered down in the amended final form so that Goeben 
‘was believed to be near Syra’ and ‘Greek Govt think she may 
contemplate going into Black Sea’; this was a far more equivocal evaluation. 
What happened on the morning of Sunday 9 August to make Erskine change his mind? 
There can be little doubt that, as the matter was of the greatest concern to the 
Greek navy as well, he must have seen Kerr that morning. In that case, why was 
Kerr so keen to disguise his involvement? Surely, if Erskine had cabled London 
that morning ‘Admiral Kerr believes, from wireless telegraphy and other 
intelligence, that Goeben is going to Dardanelles’ someone in the Foreign 
Office or Admiralty might have paid more attention? And if Erskine really was 
‘in constant communication with Intelligence Officer Malta’ why was this 
information not relayed to him as a matter of urgency? When Erskine’s telegram 
was received in London it was – at last – sufficient to alert the Admiralty as 
to the possibility that Souchon was making for Constantinople. Certainly, by 
first thing Monday morning (10 August), it was believed in the Admiralty that 
this was, indeed, Souchon’s destination; characteristically, Milne was not 
informed. 
                As far as Third Secretary Rendel was 
concerned, however, the Legation had done its job: after relaying the 
information to Milne that Goeben was near Syra on the night of 7/8 
August, he later recorded that, ‘we spent the next two days anxiously expecting 
news of her destruction. Instead the news suddenly broke on us that both ships 
had passed through the Dardanelles’. 
Just possibly Kerr was as dumbstruck as Rendel; he was certainly remarkably 
reticent in his post-war writings concerning the escape of Goeben and 
Breslau. His 1927 memoirs – running to 400 pages – contain not a single 
reference to the German ships. Six years later, in The Navy in My Time, 
his only comment on the escape is a swipe at Milne for not bottling up Souchon 
at Messina: ‘it is a primary maxim in strategy to go to the place where the 
enemy is, if you know it, and await his exit, and not to take a chance by going 
where you think his destination is.’ 
Was Kerr trying to absolve himself of blame for not divulging his knowledge of 
the destination? 
                He also refuted any suggestion that he might 
have been ‘placed’ deliberately in Athens: Battenberg had cabled Kerr on August 
7, via Grey and Erskine, ordering the naval mission to remain in Greece ‘ready 
for action afloat or ashore’ until it was decided whether Greece would join the 
Entente, 
yet a year later Kerr was still in Athens, chaffing at his ‘detention’. When 
malaria resulted from the bite of a ‘kindly’ mosquito while Kerr was undergoing 
a rheumatism cure his chance came to return to England where he found that ‘the 
Admiralty said the Foreign Office was responsible for our detention out there, 
and when I accused the Foreign Office they retorted that it was nothing to do 
with them, as it was entirely a naval affair.’ 
The Foreign Office might not have been as innocent as they made out, for 
certainly, as has been shown, Battenberg was of the opinion that they were 
responsible for starting the ‘stupid myth’ that Kerr prevented Greece from 
joining the Entente. Kerr’s most detailed mention of Goeben and 
Breslau is contained in his defence of King Constantine in his Morning 
Post article of 11 December 1920 where he placed particular emphasis on the 
fact that the King had no knowledge of the Germans’ coaling. The defence was 
straightforward: international law provided for a belligerent ship to obtain 
coal at a neutral port but, in any event, it was Venizelos, and not the King, 
who gave the permission. And, Kerr added speciously, the German ships ‘did not 
coal at any Greek Port.’ It was a defence that would not have withstood much 
cross-examination. 
							
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