Italians have been already listed here. While I'd like to counter what has been said, I have to admit that we rarely get our act together long enough to make a difference in the other way.
Case in point: the [[
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Lissa_%281866%29 Battle of Lissa]]. The Wikipedia article is good, but forgets a few things: Persano had not been at sea for years before being ordered to take command of the fleet; the Italian fleet was a ragtag mix of the pre-unification navies of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (providing most of the ships and crews, plus the uniforms and naval traditions), Kingdom of Sardinia, Papal States (Adriatic fleet only) and Grand Duchy of Tuscany (very little), with former Sardinian officers placed over the more competent and experienced Sicilian officers and relative rivalry; the only thing that made the officers of all pre-unification navies agree on it was that Persano was an incompetent, resulting in his direct subordinates rear admiral Vacca and vice admiral Albini ignoring him during the battle; the crews of the best ships of the fleet (most of which, including the flagship
Affondatore, had not been built in Italy), had little to no experience (particularly the
Affondatore's crew: the ship had arrived in Italy incomplete due the Italian government fearing the British would confiscate her at the start of the war, and, being an ironclad ram with turret-mounted guns, was unlike anything the crew had ever seen); somehow, the Italian Ministry of Navy had no map of the area near Lissa (it's unknown if they managed to buy one at some stationery), and yet choose it as site of the battle.
The end result, as seen in the article, was two Italian ironclads sunk,
Affondatore so damaged she sank in harbour a few days later, and Tegetthoff and his crews rightly laughing at Italian incompetence.
Carinthium wrote:-Sea Skimmer, isn't it rather easy to explain why the Italians did what they did? A combination of racism and not realising the degree the Ethopians had modernised works quite well. The Italians, like other Europeans at the time, had simply failed to realise "Non-White" does not necessarily mean "Ineffectual at modern warfare."
The problem is not that my compatriots of the era had failed to realise that "Non-White" does not necessarily mean "Ineffectual at modern warfare", the reasons Adowa is one of the greatest Epic Fails in military history is that part of their modern weapons
had been given to them by the Italian government itself: in 1889 Ethiopia had signed the Treaty of Wuchale, under which Ethiopia ceded modern-day Eritrea and was scammed in becoming an Italian protectorate (the reason of the campaign was that they were obviously furious when they realized that and wanted to renegotiate the treaty, but Italy refused) in exchange for a loan of 4,000,000 lire and supplies of rifles Vetterli-Vitali Mod.1870/87 (Italian standard issue even at Adowa due insufficient production of the Carcano Mod. 1891), that had been already delivered before the Ethiopians realized the scam.
Long story short: Adowa is an epic fail because not only because we knew they had the modern weapons they used to defeat us, but because
we gave them the modern weapons they used to defeat us.
CaptHawkeye wrote:I would argue Italy's stillborn invasion of Egypt during WW2 makes Adowa look like something worthy of Sun Tzu. Just how did the Italians lose a 150,000 man Army to an inflated 30,000 man garrison? The world wonders.
Because the Italian army was underequipped, technologically inferior, plagued by officers that should have been hanged for gross incompetency in face of the enemy as soon as they peeked at the British lines with binoculars, and had orders to sit there and wait for Britain to desperately beg for peace.
The point of the invasion was not to conquer Egypt, was to kick a supposedly already defeated enemy to earn some gain at the peace conference. [[
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Compass With obvious results]] as soon as the British Empire [[
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Taranto established a naval superiority on the Mediterranean]] and gave adequate supplies and support to that garrison.