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! Moore 1 Daniel Moore Pete Rottier Middle East History November 25, 2012 Filling the vacuum with conflict: the mandate system in the post-WWI Middle East ! Perhaps no region of the world harbors more conflict and lacks as much stability as the Middle East. One need only to look at a political map — its states with jagged boundaries drawn up by European powers — to see how tensions can escalate among the many peoples within. However, a deeper analysis into the root cause of present-day crises and unrest reveals similar patterns of foreign influence, imperialism, state-building and nationalism. It also shows from both policy and implementation standpoints how the birth of present-day countries, from Israel in the Levant to Iraq in Mesopotamia, resulted from unequal, drawn-up mandates and broken promises after the World War I. Some nationalistic groups were honored; some werenʼt. This paper examines the effect of the first world war on the region in these respects — and how policies during the crucial postwar period still has lingering effects on entire populations of people. ! In order to understand the impacts of World War I, one must first consider a massive state that hasnʼt existed for more than 100 years: the Ottoman Empire. Those 100 years, however, seem insignificant considering its 623-year reign, which started in 1299 with a collection of fierce, aggregated Turkish tribes — ghazi warriors — in Anatolia and expanded into an empire with Mehmed IIʼs 1453 conquest of Constantinople from the Byzantines (“Ottoman Empire”). This effectively ended Roman reign and caused both a religious and ethnic shift in one of the most geographically advantageous sections of the world. At the Ottoman Empireʼs peak at the end of the 16th century, its far reaches snaked along North Africaʼs Mediterranean shores, encompassing the Balkans, Mesopotamia and the entire Anatolian Peninsula (“Ottoman ! Moore 2 Empire”). However, by the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Ottoman Empire began to fade as it struggled to keep up with Europeʼs degree of modernization. This struggle is particularly evident during Tanzimat reforms, which although helped Westernize the Ottoman military and central government — and burgeon power of Christians — it also disenfranchised some factions of its Islamic population, leading to the formation of such groups as the Young Ottomans to challenge authority with alternative ideas (Akgunduz 318). Wars like the Crimean (1853-56) and Turko-Russian (1877-78) ate away its boundaries as the state grew weaker (“Ottoman Empire”). This history is important when considering the World War I theatre because the Ottoman extent contained several present-day states. It included the people of Tunis and Damascus and Baghdad under the same umbrella. A sense of unity pervaded the empire. The sheer identity crisis many groups experienced at the Ottoman collapse in 1922 allowed ethnic groups to capitalize off nationalistic feelings that had been brewing for years previous. The problem that would inevitably emerge, however, is deciding who should draw new boundaries that would satisfy all nationalist groups. ! A growing sense of ethnic nationalism, a significant Western idea imported into the Ottoman Empire and amplified during its reform era, led to a dramatic increase in the number of revolutionary political parties. At its core, James Gelvin argues nationalism has five self-evident assumptions that surround a theme of “common interest,” or the belief that humanity can be naturally divided into distinct peoples with common characteristics and endeavors (Gelvin 209). A group linked by history is unchanged by time and circumstance, for example, and special relationships to a historically significant piece of land never end. Most importantly, selfgovernance is the only way to perpetually ensure a groupʼs well-being. These ideas, to various degrees, birthed boundaries and influenced the shape of the current Middle East: “In the modern world, everyone must belong to a nation” (209). The Ottoman Empire, during its Tanzimat reforms, fostered the culture of nationalism that would come into play during and after ! Moore 3 the war. Tanzimat decrees established the notion of a divided citizenry within a state, each with its own rights (210-11). This idea is an inevitable extension of the modern state in which trade and infrastructural development, such as telegraphs and roads, fostered both commercial, private and political ties among people (212-13). Another element of nationalism, however, is critical when considering the Middle East since WWI: nationalism as a defense. “All nationalisms arise in opposition to some internal or external nemesis,” Gelvin writes, “All are defined by what they oppose” (222). Indeed, even for urban notables benefiting from the reforms of the modernizing Ottoman state, “there was only so much imperial patronage to go around. Some were sure to feel slighted.” (213). This perspective will come even more pronounced with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. With the idea of how nationalism can take root and fill an political vacuum, one can now examine WWIʼs true impacts through the lens of the mandated state system. ! WWI was sparked by shots fired on the streets of Sarajevo, once an Ottoman city, killing Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife. The assassination pitted the AustroHungarian Empire, where Ferdinand was an heir to rule, against Serbia, where the assassins were harbored (Willmott 10-11). As previously discussed, the Ottoman Empire, though at the time crumbling and entering its second constitutional era, still represented a critical position in 1914, ruling Anatolia, Levant, Mesopotamia and Egypt. The fact that Europe was divided into unequal alliances secured by a web of treaties — a result of a disrupted balance of power and “concert” on the continent — meant that the Ottoman Empire now faced either one side or the other (Gelvin 180-81). Joining the Central Powers with Germany and Austria, the empire opposed Britain, France and arch-rival Russia, with the intention of gaining back some territory lost in the Russo-Turkish War in 1877 (“Ottoman Empire”). While the physical casualties were remarkable — nearly a quarter of the Ottoman population were decimated — the negotiations connived among the Allies during the war later impacted the collapsed state wherein millions of ! Moore 4 ex-citizens would roam with only old ethnic ties to self-identity (Gelvin 180). For example, the British feared losing valuable trade routes and oil exploration in the region (Woodward). Because of this fear, they ventured to protect important possessions in the Middle East by partnering with Arabs who were in revolt against the Ottoman Turks. ! Britain developed a strategy during the war to feed internal uprisings against the Ottoman Empire. The two-year Arab Revolt was one of the seminal and effective events in the Middle East theatre. A June 1908 military coup by the Young Turks had stripped Sultan Abdul Hamid II of his power, and a countercoup the following year failed to regain it (Woodward). However, secret societies of Arab nationalists displeased at this “Turkification” of the empire called upon Hussein ibn Ali, a highly respected Muslim ruler of the Hejaz, a strip of land in Arabia that includes the Islamic holy city of Mecca (8). Ali had solicited British support for an Arab uprising in the years leading up to WWI, but it wasnʼt until Ottoman troops were marching towards the Suez Canal — threatening important access to Asia did the Allies need a true revolt to work for their benefit (Browne). In a correspondence of letters between the British and Ali in 1915, High Commissioner Sir Henry McMahon promised the creation of an Arab state in exchange for a full-scale revolt against the Ottoman Empire (“United States”). Britain lent money — as much as 220,000 pounds a month by 1918 — and arms — rifles, mortars and explosives — to the effort, the command of which was divided among Aliʼs four sons: Emirs Faisal and Zeid in the north, Emir Abdullah in the east and Emir Ali in the south (“United States”). Providing counsel was T.E. Lawrence, an Oxford-educated archaeologist and historian who the British government had asked at the outset of the war to assist with military intelligence. Lawrence ultimately became a liaison officer who worked alongside the Faisalʼs Hashemite forces in 1916 (Parnell). Britain even sent the Royal Navy to assist in defending Yanbu from the Ottomans December 1916 (7). The fighters were mostly Bedouin tribesmen who, although formally untrained, knew the battlefields better than anyone else and utilized guerrilla warfare tactics and ! Moore 5 other strategies of modern desert warfare. They racked up win after win, ultimately taking land from Medina to Damascus (Browne). Ottoman troops, under the command of Fakhri Pasha, swelled to 12 battalions to defend the supply lines and infrastructure of the empire, which was growing weaker every day. But, as they would later realize, success on the battlefield did not bring Arabs any closer to a unified Arab state. ! The Arab Revolt laid the groundwork toward the nation-building that would take place at the warʼs end. The devil was not just on the battlefield; it was also in the details of the backroom negotiations between imperial powers. For example, during the Arabsʼ successes over the Turks in the Hejaz, British Col. Gilbert Clayton had written to Lawrence: “It is thus essential that Aqaba should remain in British hands after the war” (Browne). Even Lawrence, who had grown so empathetic with the Arabs that Faisal presented him with the silken robes of a Bedouin leader, kept quiet, though not without guilt (Browne). On the surface, the prospects of an Arab state didnʼt seem impossible to the fighters. In the Versailles peace settlement that ended World War I, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson espoused the principle of self-determination, or the right for nationalities to choose their form of government and, to an extent, their boundaries (Kegley 121). In January 1918, Wilson delivered “14 Points” of postwar world order; the 12th demanded “other nationalities which are now under Turkish rule should be assured an undoubted security of life and an absolutely unmolested opportunity of autonomous development” (Browne). But in their book “World Politics,” Charles Kegley and Eugene Wittkopf explain how, in practice, the principle was applied almost exclusively to war-torn Europe, where six new states were created from the territory formerly the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The Middle East, meanwhile, fell under the rule of the mandate system (121). The Ottoman Empire was transferred under League of Nations auspices and then to countries that would govern new, drawn-up states as mandates, pending their eventual self-rule (121). The people, as the leagueʼs justification spelled out in Article 22 of its covenant, were “not yet able to stand by themselves” and that mandates provide ! Moore 6 the best method of governance: “Advanced nations, who by reason of their resources, their experience or their geographic position can best undertake this responsibility,” the covenant reads (“The Covenant”). However, this paternalistic view of the division and management of new nations had little regard for future ethnic conflicts. Despite the League of Nationsʼ claim that Western powers had the “experience” to draw nations, the mandate system lacked foresight and logic. ! The rise of ethnic nationalisms in the Middle East had finally reached fruition, each brand demanding a piece of what the Ottomans left behind. However, the power was in the hands of the West. Britain assumed the mandates for modern-day Iraq, Palestine and Transjordan; France assumed Syria (Kegley 121). Gelvin points out how, simply on paper, the partitions created conflict. Jordan, for example, was drawn so that half its government revenue by 1979 depended on foreign money because it had virtually no economic resources of its own (Gelvin 193). Iraqʼs boundaries, on the other hand, created a political nightmare, a “platform for asserting political claims” (193). Political scientist Charles Wheelan described how this lack of foresight during the partition continues to affect the country today, particularly in the handling of rebuilding Iraqi civil society after the 2003 U.S. invasion. Problems with drafting a new constitution after the fall of Saddam Hussein reinforced the glaring ethnic differences within its boundaries, leading to a challenge “made difficult not only by years of dictatorship but also by deep religious and ethnic schisms” (Wheelan 479). Although they made up less than 20 percent of the population, Sunni Muslims dominated Husseinʼs government (480). Iraqʼs Shia majority, who had been denied power for hundreds of years, were now in the driverʼs seat and clung to it. Meanwhile, Iraqi Kurds, concentrated in the northern part of the country and also oppressed during Husseinʼs rule, wanted autonomy (480). All this conflict ties back to the mandate system. While the Allies walked into political and economic catastrophes that could have been avoided from the start, other problems were carried over from secret agreements made during the war. ! ! Moore 7 Alliances formed during the Arab Revolt ultimately came back to haunt the British policymakers as they were dividing nations. In Syria, French claim of the territory meant the overthrow of its newly crowned king and British ally Emir Faisal, who occupied Damascus at the warʼs closing. Britain made no move to stop the overthrow — “The friendship of France is worth ten Syrias,” declared British Prime Minister David Lloyd George (Pipes 25). Faisal attempted diplomacy with Paris for the recognition of an independent Syrian nation — knowing he had no military capacity to fight (27). Emir Abdullah, furious at his brotherʼs troubles in Syria, began to march north, threatening a fight. To appease him, the British in March 1921 divided its Palestine mandate into western Cis-Jordan — “this side of Jordan,” which retained the name Palestine — and eastern Trans-Jordan — “across the Jordan” (28). They named Abdullah king of TransJordan, which received independence in 1946 and is still to this day a Hashemite kingdom ruled by Abdullahʼs descendants (Gelvin 192). Meanwhile, Faisal was ushered into the monarchy of Iraq in August 1921 which, as previously discussed, was not well planned politically, its borders incorporating the three former Ottoman regions of Baghdad, Basra and Mosul. Britain abandoned the Iraq mandate in 1932 but remained heavily involved as much as it suited its interests, such as the Anglo-Iraqi war in the 1940s to ensure the Hashemite monarchy maintained its power, which led to even more nationalistic resentment in the country (Hughes). The monarchy was eventually overthrown by a military coup in 1958, and weak attempts at peaceful coexistence among Arab nations, such as CENTO (Central Eastern Treaty Organization), had little impact, especially when the Cold War further divided the East and the West and left the region open to exploitation from both sides. The mandate system birthed much of the present-day conflict in the Middle East, and no conflict is a more glaring extension of nationalistic tension created by this unfair partition than that of the Israelis and Palestinians. ! Despite the complexities lobbed by experts about the geopolitics of an area as conflicted as Palestine, it all boils down to a simple real estate issue — and the fact that Zionism was ! Moore 8 favored and more integrated with the international community than Arab or Palestinian opposition. The idea of a Jewish state was first supported by the British in 1917 — ironically enough, during the Arab Revolt — then granted by the League of Nationsʼ 1922 British Mandate for Palestine and officially recognized as independent by the United Nations in 1948 upon expiration of that mandate (Ben-Gurion). It was the result of a half-century of growing Zionism, Jewish nationalism in part founded by an Austro-Hungarian journalist in the late 1800s and fueled by rising anti-Semitic activity in Europe (Gelvin 229). In his own words, Theodor Herzl explains how Zionism acts as a defense: “We are one people — our enemies have made us one in our despite, as repeatedly happens in our history. Distress binds us together, and thus united, we suddenly discover our strength” (229-30). Fast forward to the numerous, bloody wars over borders, cities and resources in Palestine, and one can see how the mandated state of Israel, whether morally justified or not, allowed one nationalism to gain ground over another. Part of the reason for that gain lies in the degree of adaptation to the modern world. Zionism is no more or less legitimate than any kind of Arab or Palestinian nationalism. Just as “distress binds” Zionists together, Jewish settlement in Palestine, no doubt seen as encroachment by those who had lived there for centuries, sparked nationalistic sentiment in these peoples. Jenin, for example, is one of the most violent cities in all of Palestine. Located in the northern part of the West Bank — a disputed territory — that has throughout history been claimed by Palestinians, Israelis and Jordanians, the city is for the time being under the control of the Palestinian National Authority (Lee). During the Ottoman era, it was ruled by Bedouins, which rendered it somewhat autonomous from the functions of the empire. Thus, when it was brought under the British Mandate, itʼs no surprise the cityʼs residents launched aggressive opposition. In 1938, Britain reported to the United Nations “an intensified campaign of murder, intimidation and sabotage” from the Jeninʼs residents; later that year, British forces blew up parts of the town ! Moore 9 with explosives (Corera). This kind of back-and-forth retaliatory violence is seen nonstop in this region of the world largely due to a difference in power of the nationalistic groups. ! The way nationalistic sentiment glued Palestinian efforts together was different from that of the Zionists. Nationalism for Palestinians often manifested in militant operations (16). For example, Islamic militarism is associated with terrorist tactics such as targeting civilians, taking hostages, and using suicide bombers. Terrorism by definition is used when groups feel desperate, as if thereʼs no other way to communicate (White 10). Magnified by media, terrorist acts get the message across because of the horror they cause. A myriad of militant organizations — some harbored and supported by Arab nations, some rogue — have emerged with the sole purpose of destroying the state of Israel (White 217-44). Meanwhile, there is only one — and a very powerful one at that — Israel defense force; one Israeli government; one organized, pro-Western, Zionist people with the legitimacy of a mandate. As Gelvin puts it, Zionists played by the same book and embraced the mandate system while Palestinian movements faced competition and internal fissures (Gelvin 221). This could lead to a misconception that one nationalism is less purposeful than the other, when the difference in tactics actually result from uncontrollable situations. This is not to say terrorist attacks are uncontrollable or even remotely justified, but merely to argue the consideration of where this culture of terrorism began. ! Conflicts in Palestine offer some final insight into how the mandate system both appealed and enflamed the natural characteristics of nationalism in the Middle East. Itʼs important to expand on the idea of the Middle East as the cradle of all civilization (“Iraq Timeline Part I:”). Whether writing in evolutionary terms, in which humans first evolved in the Horn of Africa, or settlement terms, in which the most ancient of all civilizations span Mesopotamia (now Iraq), the Levant (now Israel and Palestine) and the Persian Plateau (now Iran). This point is ! Moore 10 emphasized by the fact the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world, Damascus, is also currently the center of civil war. The ancient history of the Middle East is vast and has become an area of increasing study in the modern era, especially during the crucial period of time after WWI. Using history is a popular way to subscribe oneself to a brand of nationalism. Ottoman and Persian intellectuals who had been trained in Europe in new tools of archaeology could, during the early twentieth century, finally trace a “historical evolution” of their nation (Gelvin 213). This allowed resurgent, post-WWI nationalism to be supported with evidence for a claim of homeland. This is seen through Israelʼs desire for what is known internationally as the West Bank; what is known to Jews as ancient Judea and Samaria. Herzl suggested Israel to be the Jewish homeland because the ancient Kingdom of Judah existed there before Christ (229). The lengthy Middle Eastern inhabitance is such an obvious fact that its significance is often overlooked, especially in regard to modern times. But it cannot be emphasized enough in reference to current conflict. ! World War One, true to its name, left a dent in the previous structure of the world. It further advanced the most advanced nations, destroyed others, created others still. Closely following the worldwide trend of modernization — state creation and an integration into a market economy — the war also placed more pressure on those who hadnʼt already converted to do so. During the postwar period, the West stepped up this pressure on fractured people who were once were all under the ethnic umbrella and longtime governance of the Ottoman Empire. To fill the vacuum, Britain and France draw new boundaries and empowered new leaders in a way that they hoped would be favorable to protecting their revitalized interests in the region. The spoils of war, divided by mandates, turned out to be conflict-ridden with tensions extending into present times. Nationalism, an inevitable effect of the imposed state system, also harbors the claimed legitimacy of the right to self-rule. All these political and social processes met in the Middle East during and after WWI. The “war to end all war” did not succeed in its goal. But ! Moore 11 perhaps, understanding the nature of the present-day conflicts through the lens of history, all parties can work toward more stable and peaceful futures living side by side. ! Moore 12 Works Cited Akgunduz, Ahmed, and Said Ozturk. Ottoman History: Misperceptions and Truths. N.p.: IUR, 2011. Print. Ben-Gurion, David. "Declaration of Establishment of State of Israel — 14 May 1948." Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, n.d. Web. 19 Nov. 2012. <http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Peace +Process/Guide+to+the+Peace+Process/Declaration+of+Establishment+of+State+of +Israel.htm>. Browne, O'Brien. "Creating Chaos: Lawrence of Arabia and the 1916 Arab Revolt." History Net: Where History Comes Alive. MHQ Magazine, 10 Aug. 2010. Web. 19 Nov. 2012. <http:// www.historynet.com/creating-chaos-lawrence-of-arabia-and-the-1916-arab-revolt.htm>. Corera, Gordon. "The British in Jenin." History Today. N.p., 2002. Web. 19 Nov. 2012. <http:// www.historytoday.com/gordon-corera/british-jenin>. Gelvin, James. The Modern Middle East: A History. Third ed. New York: Oxford UP, 2011. Print. Hughes, Matthew. "Anglo-Iraqi War (1941)." The Encyclopedia of War (2011): n. pag. Wiley Online Library. 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