HOW THE BRITISH DIVIDED UP THE ARAB WORLD
The development of the
modern nation states throughout the Arab world is a fascinating and
heartbreaking process. 100 years ago, most Arabs were part of the Ottoman
Empire/Caliphate, a large multi-ethnic state based in Istanbul. Today, a
political map of the Arab world looks like a very complex jigsaw puzzle. A
complex and intricate course of events in the 1910s brought about the end of
the Ottomans and the rise of these new nations with borders running across the
Middle East, diving Muslims from each other. While there are many different
factors leading to this, the role that the British played in this was far
greater than any other player in the region. Three separate agreements made
conflicting promises that the British had to stand by. The result was a
political mess that divided up a large part of the Muslim world.
The Outbreak of World
War I
In the summer of 1914,
war broke out in Europe. A complex system of alliances, a militaristic arms
race, colonial ambitions, and general mismanagement at the highest government
levels led to this devastating war that would claim the lives of 12 million
people from 1914 to 1918. On the “Allied” side stood the empires of Britain,
France, and Russia. The “Central” powers consisted of Germany and
Austria-Hungary.
The Ottoman Empire in 1914 at the start of the war
At
first, the Ottoman Empire decided to remain neutral. They were not nearly as
strong as any of the other nations fighting in the war, and were wracked by
internal and external threats. The Ottoman sultan/caliph was nothing more than
a figurehead at this point, with the last powerful sultan, Abdulhamid II, having been overthrown in 1908 and replaced
with a military government led by the “Three Pashas”. They were from the
secular Westernized group, the Young Turks. Financially, the Ottomans were in a
serious bind, owing huge debts to the European powers that they were not able
to pay. After trying to join the Allied side and being rejected, the Ottomans
sided with the Central Powers in October of 1914.
The British
immediately began to conceive of plans to dissolve the Ottoman Empire
and expand their Middle Eastern empire. They had already had control of Egypt
since 1888 and India since 1857. The Ottoman Middle East lay right in the
middle of these two important colonies, and the British were determined to
exterminate it as part of the world war.
The Arab Revolt
One
of the British strategies was to turn the Ottoman Empire’s Arab subjects
against the government. They found a ready and willing helper in the Hejaz, the
western region of the Arabian Peninsula. Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the amir
(governor) of Makkah entered into an agreement with the British government to revolt against the Ottomans. His reasons for allying with
the foreign British against other Muslims remains uncertain. Possible
reasons for his revolt were: disapproval with the Turkish nationalist
objectives of the Three Pashas, a personal feud with the Ottoman
government, or simply a desire for his own kingdom.
Whatever his reasons
were, Sharif Hussein decided to revolt against the Ottoman government in
alliance with the British. In return, the British promised to provide money and
weapons to the rebels to help them fight the much more organized Ottoman army.
Also, the British promised him that after the war, he would be given his own
Arab kingdom that would cover the entire Arabian Peninsula, including Syria and
Iraq. The letters in which the two sides negotiated and discussed revolt were
known as the McMahon-Hussein Correspondence, as Sharif Hussein was
communicating with the British High Commissioner in Egypt, Sir Henry
McMahon.
Arab rebels with the British-designed Flag of the Arab Revolt
In June of 1916 Sharif
Hussein led his group of armed Bedouin warriors from the Hejaz in an
armed campaign against the Ottomans. Within a few months, the Arab rebels
managed to capture numerous cities in the Hejaz (including Jeddah and Makkah) with
help from the British army and navy. The British provided support in the form
of soldiers, weapons, money, advisors (including the “legendary” Lawrence of
Arabia), and a flag. The British in Egypt drew up a flag for the Arabs to use
in battle, which was known as the “Flag of the Arab Revolt”. This flag would
later become the model for other Arab flags of countries such as Jordan,
Palestine, Sudan, Syria, and Kuwait.
As
World War One progressed through 1917 and 1918, the Arab rebels managed to
capture some major cities from the Ottomans. As the British advanced into
Palestine and Iraq, capturing cities such as Jerusalem and Baghdad, the Arabs
aided them by capturing Amman and Aqaba. It is important to note that the Arab
Revolt did not have the backing of a large majority of the Arab population. It was a minority movement of a couple
thousand tribesmen led by a few leaders who sought to increase their own
powers. The vast majority of the Arab people stayed away from the conflict and
did not support the rebels or the Ottoman government. Sharif Hussein’s plan to
create his own Arab kingdom was succeeding so far, if it were not for other
promises the British would make.
The Sykes-Picot
Agreement
British and French control according to the Sykes-Picot
Agreement
Before the Arab Revolt
could even begin and before Sharif Hussein could create his Arab kingdom, the
British and French had other plans. In the winter of 1915-1916, two diplomats,
Sir Mark Sykes of Britain and François Georges-Picot of France secretly met to
decide the fate of the post-Ottoman Arab world.
According
to what would become known as the Sykes-Picot Agreement, the British and French
agreed to divide up the Arab world between themselves. The British were to take
control of what is now Iraq, Kuwait, and Jordan. The French were given modern
Syria,Lebanon,
and southern Turkey. The status of Palestine was to be determined later, with
Zionist ambitions to be taken into account. The zones of control that the
British and French were given allowed for some amount of Arab self-rule in some
areas, albeit with European control over such Arab kingdoms. In other areas,
the British and French were promised total control.
Although it was meant
to be a secret agreement for a post-WWI Middle East, the agreement became known
publicly in 1917 when the Russian Bolshevik government exposed it. The
Sykes-Picot Agreement directly contradicted the promises the British
made to Sherif Hussein and caused a considerable amount of tension between the
British and Arabs. However, this would not be the last of the conflicting
agreements the British would make.
The Balfour
Declaration
Another group that
wanted a say in the political landscape of the Middle East were the Zionists.
Zionism is a political movement that calls for the establishment of a Jewish
state in the Holy Land of Palestine. It began in the 1800s as a movement that
sought to find a homeland away from Europe for Jews (most of which lived in
Germany, Poland, and Russia).
Arthur Balfour and the original Balfour Declaration
Eventually the
Zionists decided to pressure the British government during WWI into allowing
them to settle in Palestine after the war was over. Within the British
government, there were many who were sympathetic to this political movement.
One of those was Arthur Balfour, the Foreign Secretary for
Britain. On November 2nd, 1917, he sent a letter to Baron Rothschild, a leader
in the Zionist community. The letter declared the British government’s official
support for the Zionist movement’s goals to establish a Jewish state in
Palestine:
“His Majesty’s government view with favour the
establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will
use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it
being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the
civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or
the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.”
Three Conflicting
Agreements
By 1917, the British
had made three different agreements with three different groups promising three
different political futures for the Arab world. The Arabs insisted they still
get their Arab kingdom that was promised to them through Sharif Hussein. The
French (and British themselves) expected to divide up that same land among
themselves. And the Zionists expected to be given Palestine as promised by
Balfour.
In 1918 the war ended
with the victory of the Allies and the complete destruction of the Ottoman
Empire. Although the Ottomans existed in name until 1922 (and the caliphate
existed in name until 1924), all the former Ottoman land was now under European
occupation. The war was over, but the Middle East’s future was still in dispute
between three different sides.
The mandates that the League of Nations created after WWI
Which
side won? None fully got what they wanted. In the aftermath of WWI, the League
of Nations (a forerunner to the United Nations) was established. One of its
jobs was to divide up the conquered Ottoman lands. It drew up “mandates” for
the Arab world. Each mandate was supposed to be ruled by the British or French
“until such time as they are able to stand alone.” The League was the one to
draw up the borders we see on modern political maps of the Middle East. The
borders were drawn without regard for the wishes of the people living there, or
along ethnic, geographic, or religious boundaries – they were truly arbitrary.
It is important to note that even today, political borders in the Middle East
do not indicate different groups of people. The differences between Iraqis,
Syrians, Jordanians, etc. were entirely created by the European colonizers as a
method of dividing the Arabs against each other.
Through the mandate
system, the British and the French were able to get the control they wanted
over the Middle East. For Sharif Hussein, his sons were allowed to rule over
these mandates under British “protection”. Prince Faisal was made king of Iraq
and Syria and Prince Abdullah was made king of Jordan. In practice, however,
the British and French had real authority over these areas.
For
the Zionists, they were allowed by the British government to settle in
Palestine, although with limitations. The British did not want to anger the
Arabs already living in Palestine, so they tried to limit the number of Jews
allowed to migrate to Palestine. This angered the Zionists, who looked for
illegal ways to immigrate throughout the 1920s-1940s, as well as the Arabs, who
saw the immigration as encroachment on land that had been theirs since Salah al-Din liberated it in 1187.
The political mess that Britain created in the
aftermath of WWI remains today. The competing agreements and the subsequent
countries that were created to disunite Muslims from each other led to
political instability throughout the Middle East. The rise of Zionism coupled
with the disunity of the Muslims in that region has led to corrupt governments
and economic decline for the Middle East as a whole. The divisions that the
British instituted in the Muslim world remain strong today, despite being
wholly created within the past 100 years.
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