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File 4722/1918 Pt 1 'Mesopotamia: administration of policy and situation' [‎228r] (471/687)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (326 folios). It was created in 23 Oct 1918-2 Nov 1919. It was written in English, French and Arabic. 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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iiv
JX
I ■+
TELEGRAM FROM POLITICAL, BAGHDAD.
DATED lltL DECEIiBER, 1918.
RECD. 12th at 11.45 p.ia.
‘flov
XU *
f
1 U Ci 0
Jit\
i ■ ~
l * I Q
IT
074 . 1 ^
l W-'-i
November refers
publication by
nd
my telegram of 24th
ntronr^l
de oadl 'dae
1* In
(R). , 10973. Reuters telegram of ^
oo series of articles on Arab Campaign unde
^Times * 151 and refers to ^
i ?^ 0 )-^ees* lixguiy conwroversiai assertion
uxiat a nation thaw once achieved such brilliance must have roo
oi iuture greatness witnin if only circumstances are favourable".
• no ° , re P u ff t s Ripg ( tjais or similar communiques which at this
01 - nooning out t harm; political arguments based on oast
ae , ca y ? 2 ^tions may go down witli British public*but
ser Y e exciwe uis'wrusw and misapprehension here among
sooer and swell the neads of the political theorists of
CV-^jA ICLcl cl»
In tliis connection I would refer to
November, in which I informed Government t^iat I was
opposed to nomination of a
for a reasons connected with ,.*
politics and on other grounds*
l venture with much diffidence to place on record in greater
grounds on which I base this opinion. 6
— Persia and in Mesopotamia we have to deal with a ponu-
lation almost exclusively Shiah by faith and by all indications
iiuw coming oo hand bitterly opnosed to idea of Arab hknir) undev
Sunni auspices.
, , % 1^ Central Arabia we have to reckon with.. Ibn Baud whose
a<iwitude wowards Sheriff tod his family is known to Government.
I oil Sauo. s independence is cased upon nis geographical position
ana upon aeeo-seated racial and religious prejudices of the people
of Paid by whose consent he rules. ^ J ‘
undue # support to King Hussein will accentuate these preind
ices and migat result m a situation in which we should have to
choose between upen estrangement with Ibn Saud or with King
hussein ; onere is no question which way the choice would rail
ouw we must oe prepared for continuaus friction on coast of Gulf.
. ,° 9 ^ Bagdad and Caucasus are the strade-
gic-ai centres ci middle East; m both Mahometans greatly predom-
maoe. encouragement of idea of Arab as against Furooe^h predomi
nance m Arab-speaking territories which British blo&d and British
treasure nave wrested from the Turks cannot fail to excite"
latent leiigious hatreds between Sunnis and Shialis in Iraq and
Oxxus deprive us ox some of the strategic advantages which foil
from possession of this ganglion.
In Caucasus the natural effect of our Arab policy will be
uo encourage mie nascent ambition for establishment of a Mahometan
btate m this region witn boundaries cutting across all three
limitrophe ouates, an amoition which if realised will make imposs-
// ( ^ Christian principality, of Armenia,
// cnf c on duct I personal ly ao not regard as a business proposition
l?AtL 4 h . Tne trend^of our present Arab policy if followed to
(group omitwed) may m certain circumstances result in creation of
a series ox .-ionommedan ^ S ‘oa w e s, with noth in xy in p.nmmnn Vai 4 '. *f.V i o n v*
ow
nothing
in common but their
an
series of
religion and
consummation would be the negation
J e !' ce in East j/ithin a reasonable’period
^ a “ m ar ^ danger of creating strsething
resembling a new Balkan problem.
5. Occupation of Hesonotamia during the war drove
u.ae manometan world and prevented a possible
combination against ua in Mi ^ Wna* t
‘tiieir antipEuropean (i.e.racial) prejudice;
oe ’die ne^atinn of progress ana put °
of
such
end
T
closel
a
to
*
into
wedge
iXahome tan
that unde
peace
against us in Middle Easy
conditions we- should see to it
submit
Mesopotamia
remains
that
lv

About this item

Content

The volume contains correspondence, memoranda, reports, telegrams and minutes regarding the administration of, and situation in, Mesopotamia [Iraq] following the Asia Minor Agreement of 1916, more commonly known as the Sykes-Picot Agreement, between the French and British governments, and the Anglo-French Declaration of November 1918. The volume also concerns the subject of self-determination in Persia [Iran].

The papers notably cover:

  • Discussion of advance interpretations of the 1916 Agreement
  • The Anglo-French Declaration of November 1918, which publicised their intentions and policy in the former Ottoman territories of Syria and Iraq
  • Presentation of the 1918 Declaration to the President of the United States of America by the French Ambassador to the US, Jean Adrien Antoine Jules Jusserand
  • Disagreement between the British and French visions of the future administration of Mesopotamia
  • The situation in southern Kurdistan
  • The 1919 Paris Peace Conference
  • Apprehensions of the Baghdad Jewish community about the tenor of the Anglo-French Declaration, including a petition to the Civil Commissioner, Baghdad, requesting to be made subjects of the British Crown
  • Reaction to the Declaration from the across the Arab world
  • Disagreement among the British over the form that Britain’s control in Mesopotamia should take
  • The views of the principal sheikhs [shaikhs] of Mesopotamia on the 1918 Agreement
  • Discussion among British officials of the benefits of control over Mesopotamia and the view of the Civil Commissioner, Baghdad, Arnold Talbot Wilson, on the situation in Mesopotamia
  • Discussion of the potential candidates for the head of the new state of Iraq
  • Reports on consultations with political and religious leaders and inhabitants from across Iraq on the future Government of Iraq
  • The views of Sir Percy Cox and Arnold Wilson on the situation in Mesopotamia
  • The question of the future political status of Mesopotamia, including the views of British officers serving in Syria and the Hejaz
  • Discussion of the question of Iraqi self-determination.

Notable documents in this volume include:

  • Text by Sir Percy Cox regarding ‘The Future of Mesopotamia’ (ff 308-310 and ff 270-272)
  • Extracts from The Times , 26 November 1819, including a series of articles under the title ‘The Arab Campaign’ (ff 230-232)
  • The statutes for the independence of Iraq (ff 127-130)
  • A memorandum by Major W H Young regarding the future of Mesopotamia (ff 99-112)
  • Copies of ‘Self-determination in Iraq’ in Arabic (ff 75-97) and English (ff 57-73).

The principal correspondents are: 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. , Political Department; the Governor-General of India; the Civil Commissioner, Baghdad; the Military Governor and Political Officer, Baghdad; Government of India, Military Department, the French Ambassador to the United States; and the British Embassy, Paris.

The volume includes a divider, which gives the subject number, the year the subject file was opened, the subject heading, and a list of correspondence references by year. This is placed at the back of the correspondence.

Extent and format
1 volume (326 folios)
Arrangement

The contents of the volume are arranged in approximate chronological order from the rear to the front of the volume.

The subject 4722 (Mesopotamia) consists of ten volumes, IOR/L/PS/10/755-764. The volumes are divided into twelve parts, with parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11 and 12 comprising one volume each. Part 10 is missing. Part 7, entitled ‘Mesopotamia: Sir A. Wilson’s invitation to Syrian Baghdadis’, was transferred to File 5268/20 Parts 1 and 2 (see IOR/L/PS/10/913).

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the first folio with 1 and terminates at the last folio with 334; these numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and are located in the top right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. side of each folio. Multiple intermittent additional mixed foliation/pagination sequences are also present. The foliation sequence does not include the front and back covers, nor does it include the leading and ending flyleaves. The sequence contains two anomalies: f 181a and f 181b.

Written in
English, French and Arabic in Latin and Arabic script
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File 4722/1918 Pt 1 'Mesopotamia: administration of policy and situation' [‎228r] (471/687), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/10/755, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100188328444.0x00007d> [accessed 10 June 2026]

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