How France Sank The Original Mideast Peace
Posted 10/13/2004
By Edwin Black
At
the Paris Peace Conference in January 1919, in a flag-bedecked,
battle-scarred but victorious Paris, the great top-hatted Allied men of
vision and illusion gathered to remake the world and invent the
post-Ottoman Middle East. At those fateful meetings, the Arabs and Jews
formally agreed to mutually endorse both their national aspirations.
This
was the deal: The Jews could have an unrestricted Zionist state in
Palestine. The British could have Iraq and its fabulous albeit still
undrilled oil. The Arabs only wanted Syria and the holy cities of Mecca
and Medina in the Arabian Peninsula.
During the first days of
the League of Nation`s Paris Peace Conference, Faisal, accompanied by
T.E. Lawrence (widely dubbed Lawrence of Arabia) met in Paris with
Zionist Organization president Chaim Weizmann. Following up on meetings
the two leaders had held the previous June in Aqaba, Faisal signed an
enlightened and tolerant nine-point agreement endorsing the Balfour
Declaration and inviting the Zionists to coexist in Palestine.
“Article
II: Immediately following the completion of the deliberations of the
Peace Conference, the definite boundaries between the Arab State and
Palestine shall be determined by a Commission to be agreed upon by the
parties. Article III: All such measures shall be adopted as will afford
the fullest guarantees for carrying into effect the British
Government̓s [Balfour] Declaration of the 2nd of November 1917. Article
IV: All necessary measures shall be taken to encourage and stimulate
immigration of Jews into Palestine on a large scale, and as quickly as
possible to settle Jewish immigrants upon the land through closer
settlement and intensive cultivation of the soil. In taking such
measures, the Arab peasant and tenant farmers shall be protected in
their rights and shall be assisted in forwarding their economic
development.”
The entire agreement was typed in English. But at
the bottom, Faisal hand-penned in Arabic this stern warning: “Provided
the Arabs obtain their independence as demanded in my [forthcoming]
Memorandum dated the 4th of January, 1919, to the Foreign Office of the
Government of Great Britain, I shall concur in the above articles. But
if the slightest modification or departure were to be made [regarding
our demands], I shall not be then bound by a single word of the present
Agreement which shall be deemed void and of no account or validity, and
I shall not be answerable in any way whatsoever.” Directly beneath that
inscription the signatures of Weizmann and Faisal were duly affixed.
What happened, and why?
Arab
nationalism began in earnest as an early-20th century surge of Arab
intellectuals who envied Christian Europe̓s international movement to
achieve self-determination, autonomy, and national independence for its
ethnic and religious groups. Damascus had long been the intellectual
epicenter of the Arab national movement, and was for centuries a
keystone for the Islamic world. In addition, Faisal and the Hashemites
were direct descendants of the Prophet Muhammad, and the custodians of
Mecca and Medina, precious to all Moslems.
But barren Palestine
was considered a mere backwater, and Iraq a neglected Ottoman province
rich in something the Arabs did not need, but the West craved – oil.
The Arabs wre assured a seat at the victors` table because they fought
alongside the British and Lawrence against the Ottomans. Faisal became
the face of Arab nationalism to the Peace Conference. On January 1,
1919, he submitted a formal memorandum to the Supreme Council of the
Peace Conference outlining his vision for Arab nationalism throughout
the Mideast. It was not monolithic or pan-Arab.
“The various
provinces of Arab Asia – Syria, Iraq, Jezireh, Hijaz, Nejd, Yemen – are
very different economically and socially,” asserted Faisal̓s petition,
“and it is impossible to constrain them into one frame of government...
[But] Syria... thickly peopled with sedentary [settled] classes, is
sufficiently advanced politically to manage her own internal affairs.”
As
for Iraq, Faisal declared, “The world wishes to exploit Mesopotamia
[Iraq] rapidly, and we therefore believe that the system of government
there will have to be buttressed by the men and material resources of a
great foreign Power.”
He stipulated a British mandate.
Faisal`s
petition also stated that, “In Palestine, the enormous majority of the
people are Arabs. The Jews are very close to the Arabs in blood, and
there is no conflict of character between the races. In principles, we
are absolutely at one.”
That said, he acknowledged that
Palestine was important to many faiths and therefore the Arab national
movement “would wish for the effective super-position of a great
trustee, so long as a representative local administration commended
itself by actively promoting the material prosperity of the country.”
Again, a British mandate was stipulated.
But at the Paris
sessions, the French snubbed Faisal. Regardless of prior
representations by the British, the French were uninterested in
relinquishing their designs on greater Syria, especially since the
Lebanon region was overwhelmingly Maronite Christian. Many French
officials simply considered the Arabs a threat.
Typical was a
memo from the Quai D`Orsay that stated, “Damascus is a Moslem center
which is very hostile to France, to tell the truth, the most hostile in
all Islam.... It is there where all the plots against our authority in
the Moslem countries are hatched, and it is there where the agitators
come and preach rebellion... Damascus [must] be placed under our
control.”
In mid-April 1919, Faisal met with President Georges
Clemenceau and was promised total Arab independence for Syria. A
declaration was typed up on April 17. But according to the French
document, the French army would occupy Damascus, and the new Arab
nation would actually exist as a mere federation of local autonomous
states in which all the government advisers – including the governors
and heads of major government bureaus, as well as the judiciary – would
be French under Paris`s control as they were in Lebanon. Plus Faisal
would be compelled to publicly declare the importance of France̓s
historic relationship with the Maronite Christians. Other than that,
said the French, Syria would be completely independent.
Faisal
quickly refused, encouraged by Lawrence of Arabia who advised him to
demand total independence “without conditions or reservations.”
Clemenceau, however, would not tolerate what he considered Arab
impudence. Faisal summarily left Paris for Syria to claim his nation.
Throughout
late 1919, multilateral negotiations dragged on with the usual
permutations, frustrations, and reversals. But in the French view, it
could not retreat from dominating Greater Syria, especially from
Lebanon. French troops, religious groups, and civilian organizations
had undertaken an impressive economic and administrative reconstruction
of the neglected Turkish provinces. One leading French columnist and
government adviser warned that if forced out of Syria and Lebanon,
“World opinion would consider France `a finished people.` ”
Using
blunt language, an adamant Clemenceau made it clear: if Faisal and the
Arab nationalists did not have “absolute respect... [and] satisfy me,”
the entire region would be taken ough force.”
Meanwhile, Moslem
rejectionists had already been attacking the existing French troops in
the region. Rapidly, the situation deteriorated. Faisal now had to
choose between the possibility that ingenuous French promises might be
kept, and fervid and distrusting Arab nationalists who everywhere
demanded instant independence.
On March 7 and 8, 1920, the
Second General Syrian Congress, a representative assembly of Arab
nationalists from many countries, raced ahead of any League of Nations
decision. It vehemently declared independence for a Greater Syria, to
extend both into Lebanon and south into Palestine. The Congress elected
Faisal king of Syria.
The Allies were outraged. On March 11, the
French premier insisted to Prime Minister Lloyd George that the Second
General Syrian Congress was an illegitimate enterprise and its
decisions of no value or import. Lord Curzon, the British foreign
secretary, angrily scolded the French ambassador in London, “The future
of France and Great Britain in [the seized Turkish Mideast] was
imperiled because of the way in which the French Government, in
pursuance of traditional or historical aspirations, had insisted on
forcing themselves into areas where the French were not welcomed by the
inhabitants.”
About a month later, on April 19, 1920, the
Allies, working through the League of Nations, gathered at San Remo,
Italy to carve up Turkey. With the last dusk of the San Remo
Conference, the conferees granted France the mandate for both Syria and
Lebanon. The British received the mandate for Iraq, and also Palestine,
under a provision creating a Jewish homeland.
On April 24,
away from the main diplomacy of the San Remo Conference, Anglo-French
petroleum negotiators concluded their own secret agreement to divide up
the oil of Iraq and transport it through pipelines yet to be built in
Syria to the Mediterranean.
News of the League mandates in
Syria, Iraq and Palestine, denying Arab sovereignty in Syria and
establishing a Jewish national home in the process, quickly burned
throughout the Arab world.
On May 8, a dismayed Faisal sent a
formal protest to the Supreme Council of the Peace Conference that he
“was much surprised to learn, through public channels, the decision
taken at the Conference of San Remo on the Arab countries... The wishes
of the inhabitants have not been taken into account in the assignment
of these mandates.”
Faisal reminded the League of Nations that
the stated intent during the Arab uprisings against Turkey was “nothing
less than their complete deliverance from a foreign yoke, and the
establishment of a free and independent government.”
Ominously,
Faisal added, “The decision of San Remo puts an end to this hope. The
moderate elements in the young nation, who...are still endeavoring to
guide it towards a policy of sincere collaboration with the Allies, are
now discouraged and rendered powerless by this decision.”
As the
fuse of San Remo burned, Arab militancy and violence across the
occupied Mideast — in Palestine, Mesopotamia, and Syria — already a
problem, now ratcheted up.
On May 18, 1920, Britain`s foreign
secretary, fed up with the violence, washed his hands of Syrian Arabs,
cabling Paris, “The French authorities must be the best judges of the
military measures necessary to control the local situation.”
Quickly,
French president Millerand confirmed to his commanders: “Action against
Faisal is indispensable and urgent.” France̓s army immediately prepared
to invade Syria with several divisions backed by tanks, airplanes, and
heavy artillery.
France issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Faisal to
desist and facilitate French efforts to restore order – or else. This
ultimatum was calculated to be unanswerable because of the sheer
difficulties of rapid communication across the region. Nonetheless,
Faisal instantly agreed to the demands, but his reply came one day
late. Therefore, the French march on Damascus began.
July 24,
1920 was the turning point for the Arabs and the word. On July 24,
1920, en route to Damascus, French forces met belligerent Arab forces
at Maysalun, just west of the city. Charging with swords and
bolt-action rifles, the Arabs displayed “strong resistance.” But they
were no match for French tanks, airplanes, machine guns, and
overwhelming infantry force. The Arabs were nearly all slaughtered
within eight hours. The French now occupied Damascus and successfully
established their mandate.
That same day, July 24, 1920, after
persistent fragmentary leaks, the secret San Remo oil agreement became
public. That same day, July 24, 1920, the Zionist Conference concluded
in London with a flourish for the future.
Gathering in a large
hall dominated by Jewish-star-emblazoned flags hanging vertically from
the balconies and across the stained glass windows at the front, the
Zionists created Karen Hayesod to support the Jewish National Fund. The
fund would legally purchase lands for kibbutzim and finance the
formation of new Jewish villages in Palestine. Just days earlier,
Whitehall had appointed Sir Herbert Samuel as High Commissioner of
Palestine, empowered to oversee the orderly immigration of Jews into
Palestine. The Jewish homeland was being slowly brought to life.
On
that day, July 24, 1920, for the Arabs, it was over. The Jews had
gained Palestine. The West had gained oil. The Arabs had lost Syria.
Three intertwined evils — the infidel European Allies, the infidel
Zionists, and the black substance the West craved – became conflated in
the Arab mind to create one great Satan. Indeed, these three evils
would galvanize the Arab consciousness for virtually the next century.
For
the first time in centuries, the Arabs stopped fighting each other.
Sunni and Shi̓a, tribal enemies, those of the desert and those of the
city, the intellectual and the peasant could all unite under one
Islamic banner, because this was Am al-Nakba. Forevermore, 1920 would
be a black year in the collective Arabic consciousness. In Arabic, Am
al-Nakba means “The Year of the Catastrophe.”
Now, across the
off-kilter Arab rectangle, a great jihad would be unleashed. Faisal had
earlier warned the peace conference: “The unity of the Arabs in Asia
has been made more easy of late years, since the development of
railways, telegraphs, and air-roads. In old days the area was too huge,
and in parts necessarily too thinly peopled, to communicate common
ideas readily.”
Arab anger could now move quickly and with
coordination. The Arabs would strike most fiercely where it would hurt
most. They would strike in Iraq, where Britain and France dreamed of
the oil that had not yet been drilled and that had not yet flowed, but
that the Allies could already taste. The Arabs wanted that taste to be
bitter and bloody. That bitter taste has become permanent.
Edwin
Black is the New York Times bestselling and award-winning author of
“IBM and the Holocaust.” This article is adapted from his just-released
book, “Banking on Baghdad” (Wiley), which chronicles 7,000 years of
Iraqi history. Black will speak on the topic at Manhattan̓s
Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun on October 14 at 7:30 p.m.