File 87/1926 Pt 2 'Arabia: Bin Saud: Relations with H.M.G. Revision of Treaty.' [529r] (745/840)
The record is made up of 1 item (421 folios). It was created in 22 Dec 1925-14 Dec 1926. 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. .
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25
with regard to inspectors of boundaries which had not been agreed
upon, but that was a measure which could be discussed after other
matters had been settled ; it was not yet clear what the duties of
these inspectors would be, and the matter could be left for the pre
sent.
That I thought was the general situation, and it appeared to me
that the main point of difference concerned the return of tribes by
one Government on the demand of the other. 1 asked whether His
*3 Highness would tell me if any general point of principle had been
omitted.
His Highness intimated that he would like to reply informally. In
the first place, he said, all agreement should aim at promoting peace
and tranquillity on the border. He must state frankly that the inci
dents and happenings in ‘Iraq had been caused by people wishing
to promote trouble, and it was his firm conviction that, however far-
reaching an agreement, the desired peace and tranquillity would not
be attained unless one principle was laid down and acted upon by
both parties. The principle he advocated was to make the tribes in
both countries responsible to their Governments. So long as it
remained possible for certain tribes to leave their Government and
seek shelter under another Government, so long would there be no
peace whatever. An agreement which did not rest upon that
principle would not be worth five days’' purchase.
I observed that this was the main principle on which the two
parties at Kuweit had been unable to agree. It meant that each
Government, in His Highness’ view, should undertake, at the
request of the other Government, to return any tribe or portion of
a tribe or party of individuals which might seek refuge in the ten i-
tory of the other government.
Ibn Sa‘ud said that was what he asked for.
I enquired if His Highness found that tribes were in fact con
tinually passing from his territory to the other. He replied that this
did not happen on any large scale ; a few might go over for climatic
reasons—the absence or presence of rain would account for most of
those who did go—but they were isolated cases. Ihere were ex
ceptions in the case of the Shammar and other tribes, but generally
speaking he knew his own people and did not think they would leave
him in any r appreciable number, although trouble was always liab e
to be caused by intrigues.
I stated that I was trying to get at the actual existing conditions,
and it appeared to me that, unless there was a general tendency of
his tribes to go over, the practical benefit of the measure for which
he was pressing was not very apparent. I had some difficulty in
appreciating the practical value of what His Highness laid down as
an essential principle for the prevention %f raids.
Ibn Sa‘ud said that the main reason on which he based his demand
for laying down the principle referred to was that it would enable
him to check the movements of tribes who raid and those who cross
the border. It had been said that tribes raiding in another territory
would hardly be likely to raid tribes in their own territory, but that
kind of thing did happen. He instanced the case of \ usuf Sa dun,
an ‘Iraqi Chief, who came over to His Highness but who was tel usee
About this item
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The papers cover the recognition of Ibn Saud [‘Abd al-‘Azīz bin ‘Abd al-Raḥmān bin Fayṣal Āl Sa‘ūd] as King of the Hedjaz and Sultan of Nejd and its dependencies by foreign countries, and also contain:
- Report by Sir Gilbert Clayton, KBE, CB, CMG, on his Mission to negotiate certain Agreements with the Sultan of Nejd, and Instruction issued to him in regard to his Mission , 1926 (ff 516-560)
- Negotiations for revision of the 1916 Treaty with Ibn Saud
- A conference held at the Colonial Office to discuss HM Government's relations with Ibn Saud, 1926
- Relations between Ibn Saud and Persia
- Agreement with the Sultan of Nejd regarding certain questions relating to the Nejd-Trans-Jordan and Nejd-Iraq frontiers , 1925 (ff 395-402)
- The Hejaz- Transjordan Used in three contexts: the geographical region to the east of the River Jordan (literally ‘across the River Jordan’); a British protectorate (1921-46); an independent political entity (1946-49) now known as Jordan border.
The principal correspondents are the Secretary of State for the Colonies, the 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. , the Colonial Office, the Foreign Office, HM Consul at Jeddah, and the Viceroy.
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- File 87/1926 Pt 2 'Arabia: Bin Saud: Relations with H.M.G. Revision of Treaty.'
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- 157r:394v, 403r:576v
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- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
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