'Report on Najd Mission 1917-1918' [19r] (37/60)
The record is made up of 1 volume (28 folios). It was created in 1918. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .
Transcription
This transcription is created automatically. It may contain errors.
Ghat Ghat contingent and sent it off for service with Tnrki against the Sham-
mar, and wrote, at my request, to Khalid Ibn Luwai, assuring him that he was
making representations in the matter to the British Government and directing
him to retrain from forward action in the confidence of his ability and deter-
miiiation to protect his frontiers against attack.
, Sharif, in the course of the discussion, which followed, justified his
action on the ground that Khalid Ibn Luwai owed his appointment as Amir
of Khurma to himself—this claim was, according to my information, extremely
doubtful, as Khalid had succeeded his cousin Ghalib in the ordinary course of
inheritance on the death of the latter about four years ago, and that Khurma
itself lay within his own frontiers. In the meantime, he did not consider it
necessary to interrupt his operations against' the " rebels " and preparations
were pushed on for the renewal of the expedition. Khurma was attacked a
second time in July; the Sharif's troops were again routed with the loss of two
guns and two automatic rifles and the affair was reported to Ibn Saud by
Khalid in a letter, in which he pressed for assistance and threatened to take
matters into his own hands, if Ibn Saud found himself unable to support him,
by sending forth his women and children to rouse Najd to action. Meanwhile
there was little room for doubt that the tribes of the south were collecting for
the defence of Khurma and that the Turkish authorities were watching the
development of the situation with interest. The letters of the Asir chiefs and
of lakhri
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
, referred to in another part of this report, provided sufficient
confirmation of the suggestions to this effect I made in my reports.
My efforts were devoted to engaging Ibn Saud actively in hostilities with
the Shammar, if only to keep his attention off the Khurma trouble and to
ensure the employment of as large a part of his available force as possible.
He naturally emphasised the delicacy of the situation, protested against the
unprovoked aggression of the Sharif and wrote to Ibn Luwai, assuring him
that, while the British Government had not had time to consider my represen
tations before the second attack occurred, he would, without fail, go to his
succour in the event of a third attack becoming imminent.
I was not in a position to do more than guarantee to Ibn Saud that the
British Government would not suffer a violation of his territorial integrity,
but the course of the correspondence, which ensued, made it evident that such
a guarantee was meaningless. Ibn Saud, while assuring me once more that
the Khurma people would not adopt an aggressive policy, warned me that he
was pledged to go to their assistance in the event of another attack, and dis
claimed all responsibility for the,consequences, if the Sharif persisted in his=
course. At the same time, he offered to submit the boundary dispute involved
unreservedly to the arbitration of the British Government'with a guarantee
that he would accept their decision, whatever it might be. Eeporting thepe
conversations I pressed for a settlement of the boundary question or^in the
event of that being impossible under war conditions, for the imposition on
both parties of a provisional boundary from Marran to Turaba along the line
of the Shaib Shaba, which forms the natural boundary between the Subai and
Buqum tribes.
My greatest hope lay in the fact that some time must necessarily elapse-
before the Sharif could renew his operations, and I felt confident that H.M.'s
Government would insist on his holding his hand pending consideration of the
issues in dispute. In this I was mistaken. The Sharif opposed the idea of
arbitration on a question regarding the rights of which he had no doubt, and
H.M.'s Government in a placatory message to Ibn Saud, without committing
itself to any definite decision on the matter in dispute, adopted the Sharif's:
formula that he had no intention of allowing his operations, which were directed
solely against the " rebel " Amir of Khurma, to develop into hostilities east
of Khurma against Ibn Sand's territory.
Such a message, evading the whole point of the dispute as it did, was
little consoling to Ibn Saud, who took strong exception to the wording of the
clause of Government's message relating to the matter and repeated his in
ability to accept responsibility for the consecjuences of further aggressive
action by the Sharif. Thus matters drifted inevitably towards war^H.M.'s
Government had reassured Ibn Saud regarding his prospects in the event of
his undertaking active measures against Ibn Rashid, and I made the most of
this message to press him into action, conscious that it was a race with Sharif
Shakir, who was known to be preparing for another descent on Khurma.
As a matter of fact, the news of his third attack on Khurma, undertaken,
according to information culled from deserters from his force, in conse
quence of the receipt of peremptory orders from the Sharif to take action or
surrender his command, and ending like its predecessors in the defeat of the
Sharifian force with the loss of two g-uns and two automatic rifles, arrived on
the day I rejoined Ibn Saud at Qusaiba after his successful raid against Hail.
Ibn Saud, delighted at his own success and equally so by the offer I was
now able to make to him, on your authority, of a regular subsidy of £10,000'
per month, so long as he maintained active operations against Jabal Sham'mar
and, above all, convinced, by the result of the third attack on Khurma, of
About this item
- Content
The volume is entitled Report on Najd Mission, 1917-1918 (Baghdad: Government Press, 1918).
The report describes the mission headed by Harry St John Bridger Philby to Ibn Saud [‘Abd al-‘Azīz bin ‘Abd al-Raḥman bin Fayṣal Āl Sa‘ūd (Ibn Sa‘ūd)], ruler of Najd and Imam of the Wahahbi [Wahhabi] sect of Islam, 29 October 1917 - 1 November 1918. The report contains a section on the previous relations between Britain and Najd; describes the personnel, objects and itinerary of the mission; and includes sections on relations between Najd and Kuwait, the Ajman problem, Ibn Saud's operations against Hail [Ha'il], the Wahhabi revival, arms in Najd, and pilgrimage to the Shia Holy Places.
- Extent and format
- 1 volume (28 folios)
- Arrangement
There is a summary of contents on folio 2.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: the foliation sequence commences at 1 on the front cover and terminates at 30 on the back cover. These numbers are written in pencil, are enclosed in a circle, and can be found in the top right hand corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. page of each folio. An original printed pagination sequence is also present.
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- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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- Reference
- IOR/R/15/1/747
- Title
- 'Report on Najd Mission 1917-1918'
- Pages
- front, front-i, 2r:29v, back-i, back
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence