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T. E. Lawrence, 'Mesopotamia'
By ex.-Lieut.-Col. T. E. Lawrence
(Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford)
Sunday Times, 22 August 1920
(Mr. Lawrence, whose organisation and direction of the Hedjaz against
the Turks was one of the outstanding romances of the war, has written
this article at our request in order that the public may be fully
informed of our Mesopotamian commitments.)
The people of England have been led in Mesopotamia into a trap from
which it will be hard to escape with dignity and honour. They have been
tricked into it by a steady withholding of information. The Bagdad
communiqués are belated, insincere, incomplete. Things have been far
worse than we have been told, our administration more bloody and
inefficient than the public knows. It is a disgrace to our imperial
record, and may soon be too inflamed for any ordinary cure. We are
to-day not far from a disaster.
The sins of commission are those of the British civil authorities in
Mesopotamia (especially of three 'colonels') who were given a free hand
by London. They are controlled from no Department of State, but from the
empty space which divides the Foreign Office from the India Office. They
availed themselves of the necessary discretion of war-time to carry over
their dangerous independence into times of peace. They contest every
suggestion of real self-government sent them from home. A recent
proclamation about autonomy circulated with unction from Bagdad was
drafted and published out there in a hurry, to forestall a more liberal
statement in preparation in London. 'Self-determination papers'
favourable to England were extorted in Mesopotamia in
1919 by official pressure, by aeroplane demonstrations, by
deportations to India.
The Cabinet cannot disclaim all
responsibility. They receive little more news than the public: they
should have insisted on more, and better. They have sent draft after
draft of reinforcements, without enquiry. When conditions became too bad
to endure longer, they decided to send out as High Commissioner the
original author of the present system, with a conciliatory message to
the Arabs that his heart and policy have completely changed.
Yet our published policy has not changed, and does not need changing. It
is that there has been a deplorable contrast between our profession and
our practice. We said we went to Mesopotamia to defeat Turkey. We said
we stayed to deliver the Arabs from the oppression of the Turkish
Government, and to make available for the world its resources of corn
and oil. We spent nearly a million men and nearly a thousand million of
money to these ends. This year we are spending ninety-two thousand men
and fifty millions of money on the same objects.
Our government is worse than the old Turkish system. They kept fourteen
thousand local conscripts embodied, and killed a yearly average of two
hundred Arabs in maintaining peace. We keep ninety thousand men, with
aeroplanes, armoured cars, gunboats, and armoured trains. We have killed
about ten thousand Arabs in this rising this summer. We cannot hope to
maintain such an average: it is a poor country, sparsely peopled; but
Abd el Hamid would applaud his masters, if he saw us working. We are
told the object of the rising was political, we are not told what the
local people want. It may be what the Cabinet has promised them. A
Minister in the House of Lords said that we must have so many troops
because the local people will not enlist. On Friday the Government
announce the death of some local levies defending their British
officers, and say that the services of these men have not yet been
sufficiently recognised because they are too few (adding the
characteristic Bagdad touch that they are men of bad character). There
are seven thousand of them, just half
the old Turkish force of occupation. Properly officered and distributed,
they would relieve half our army there. Cromer controlled Egypt's six
million people with five thousand British troops; Colonel Wilson fails
to control Mesopotamia's three million people with ninety thousand
troops.
We have not reached the limit of our military commitments. Four weeks
ago the staff in Mesopotamia drew up a memorandum asking for four more
divisions. I believe it was forwarded to the War Office, which has now
sent three brigades from India. If the North-West Frontier cannot be
further denuded, where is the balance to come from? Meanwhile, our
unfortunate troops, Indian and British, under hard conditions of climate
and supply, are policing an immense area, paying dearly every day in
lives for the wilfully wrong policy of the civil administration in
Bagdad. General Dyer was relieved of his command in India for a much
smaller error, but the responsibility in this case is not on the Army,
which has acted only at the request of the civil authorities. The War
Office has made every effort to reduce our forces, but the decisions of
the Cabinet have been against them.
The Government in Bagdad have been hanging Arabs in that town for
political offences, which they call rebellion. The Arabs are not rebels
against us. They are still nominally Turkish subjects, nominally at war
with us. Are these illegal executions to provoke the Arabs to reprisals
on the three hundred British prisoners they hold? And, if so, is it that
their punishment may be more severe, or is it to persuade our other
troops to fight to the last?
We say we are in Mesopotamia to develop it for the benefit of the
world. All experts say that the labour supply is the ruling factor in
its development. How far will the killing of ten thousand villagers and
townspeople this summer hinder the production of wheat, cotton, and oil?
How long will we permit millions of pounds, thousands of Imperial
troops, and tens of thousands of Arabs to be sacrificed on behalf of a
form of colonial administration which can benefit nobody but its
administrators?

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