Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Book: Lawrence In Arabia; Veteran War Correspondent Scott Anderson T

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Book: Lawrence In Arabia; Veteran War Correspondent Scott Anderson T

    LAWRENCE IN ARABIA; VETERAN WAR CORRESPONDENT SCOTT ANDERSON TRACES THE INVOLVEMENT OF T.E. LAWRENCE AND THREE OTHER WESTERNERS DURING A CRITICAL AND TURBULENT PERIOD IN THE MIDDLE EAST

    The Christian Science Monitor
    August 7, 2013 Wednesday

    by Nick Romeo Contributor

    SECTION: Books

    For most of World War I, the American intelligence presence in the
    Middle East consisted of a 29-year-old man named William Yale, an
    employee of an oil company who had approached the State Department
    to see if he could avoid the draft by parlaying his experience in
    the region into an overseas posting. He'd observed the positions of
    Turkish military bases while traveling in the Ottoman Empire before
    America joined the war, but he was largely innocent of deeper knowledge
    of the region.

    As he later wrote, "I lacked a historical knowledge of the background
    of the problems I was studying. I had ... very little understanding
    of the fundamental nature and function of the [regional] economic
    and social system." Undeterred by his lack of expertise, the State
    Department arranged for Yale to return to the Middle East as a
    special agent.

    Yale is one of a quartet of scheming characters in Scott Anderson's
    new book Lawrence in Arabia: War, Deceit, Imperial Folly and the
    Making of the Modern Middle East, which seeks to remedy some of the
    American ignorance of Middle Eastern history that Yale represents.

    Shortly after arriving in Cairo to begin his new posting, Yale managed
    to get access to a weekly British report called the "Arab Bulletin"
    that summarized sensitive intelligence gathered from around the Middle
    East. Yale, who was still receiving half of his former salary from
    the Standard Oil Company of New York, scanned the report for any
    references to oil.

    He also broke his word to the British by communicating its contents
    to the US State Department. He justified his behavior by invoking
    the corrupting influence of living and working among "European and
    Oriental officials."

    Despite a penchant for deception and bigotry, Yale isn't necessarily
    the most repugnant character in Anderson's book. Another strong
    contender is Aaron Aaronsohn, a botanist, anti-Ottoman spy, and
    ardent Zionist. These diverse roles were often complementary. He
    helped design and run a British-supervised spy ring in Palestine in
    part because the British were receptive to his dreams of a Jewish
    state in Palestine after the war.

    His interest in agriculture was also political: to build a Jewish
    state in the desert would require an intimate knowledge of the soil
    conditions and crop varieties that could sustain a large population.

    Some Jews in the early 20th century saw Zionism as an anti-Semitic
    ruse, an attempt to suggest that Jews of various nationalities lacked
    loyalty to their homelands. Others envisioned Zionism as a peaceful
    mingling of Jews, Christians, and Muslims.

    Aaronsohn, however, wanted to expel the "squalid, superstitious,
    ignorant" Palestinian serfs known as fellaheen to create a Jewish
    state. To promote this end, he and his British handlers launched a
    propaganda campaign. After both Jewish and non-Jewish residents of
    the town of Jaffa were evacuated by the Ottomans prior to an attack,
    Aaronsohn and the British disseminated alarmist accounts hinting
    darkly that Jews were the targets of atrocities. The attempt to
    rouse international panic and bolster the Zionist movement worked,
    though it also deflected attention from the hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians facing a Turkish genocide.

    A third schemer of the period was the German spy Curt Prufer, who
    engineered elaborate plots to spark anti-British revolts in the Arab
    world. The idea of inflaming Arab tribes also appealed to the French
    and British. Suffering enormous losses on the Western front, they saw
    in the Middle Eastern theater the chance to win a desperately needed
    victory against the Ottoman Empire by inciting an Arab revolt.

    But the agendas of two of Europe's most rapacious colonial powers
    aligned only imperfectly with the interests of Arab tribesmen.

    British officials actually referred to the Ottoman Empire as "the
    Great Loot," and well before the war had ended, France and Britain
    had already carved up the Middle East for themselves in the infamous
    Sykes-Picot Agreement. But in the Hussein-McMahon Correspondence,
    Britain had promised some of the same lands to Emir Hussein, the
    leader of the Bedouin tribes in the Hejaz region of western Arabia.

    One of the few members of the British military elite who considered
    this duplicity a problem was a young colonel named Thomas Edward
    Lawrence. Unlike Peter O'Toole, who played Lawrence in David Lean's
    1962 epic film "Lawrence of Arabia," the actual Lawrence was 5 feet
    3 inches tall and had an uncannily youthful appearance: Those meeting
    him for the first time often thought he was a teenager.

    Even before World War I, Lawrence lacked the colonial hauteur
    typical of his generation. After living and working in Carchemish
    as an archaeologist, he complained of the arrogance of Europeans
    in the Middle East. "The foreigners come out here always to teach,
    whereas they had much better learn."

    Once the war began, Lawrence left a desk job in Cairo to undertake a
    variety of missions throughout the Middle East. His views of colonial
    ambition were only solidified by the experience of war. Reflecting
    on the heavy casualties he witnessed in Iraq in 1916, Lawrence
    later wrote: "All our subject provinces to me were not worth one
    dead Englishman."

    To British military commanders, however, even the semblance of victory
    was worth a great many dead Englishmen. At the Battle of Passchendaele,
    for instance, the 70,000 British casualties represented one dead man
    for every two inches of ground wrested from the Germans.

    Lawrence fought a style of war very different from the entrenched
    exchanges that caused such carnage on the Western Front. Leading small,
    mobile units of camel-mounted tribesmen, he sabotaged Turkish garrisons
    and supply lines throughout the Middle East. Anderson suggests that
    one reason Lawrence quickly became a legend was the shattered British
    public's desperate need to find some trace of grandeur and romance
    amid the desolate slaughter of the war.

    He also emphasizes Lawrence's courage in defying the colonial policies
    of his superiors. Lawrence had a convenient way of "not receiving"
    cables with orders contrary to his own plans, and when he learned
    that the British promises to Emir Hussein of an independent Arab
    nation were outright lies, he took the arguably treasonous step of
    revealing the contents of Sykes-Picot to Hussein's son Faisal.

    Anderson interweaves the stories of Lawrence, Prufer, Aaronsohn, and
    Yale to create a rich and detailed account of European machinations in
    the Middle East during a critical and turbulent period. The subtitle
    of Lawrence's sprawling autobiography "Seven Pillars of Wisdom" is
    "A Triumph," but it's hard not to feel that his story is closer to a
    tragedy. After the war ended, Lawrence was sidelined at the 1919 Paris
    Peace Conference as Britain and France lived out their fantasies of
    a "Great Loot," dividing up the Middle East and ignoring their own
    promises as well as innumerable religious and political subtleties
    in the region.

    Anderson's narrative clarifies the origins of some of the seemingly
    intractable struggles that still beset the Middle East. It might
    seem surprising that contemporary American military leaders would
    appreciate Lawrence's insights, but in 2006, General David Petraeus
    ordered his senior staff to read Lawrence's "Twenty-Seven Articles,"
    a short treatise offering advice on working with the Bedouin.

    What Petraeus missed, apparently, was Lawrence's reminder that his
    advice applied only to the Bedouin, and the non-Bedouins, who represent
    nearly 98% of the Iraqi population, would require "totally different
    treatment." William Yale would have been proud.

    Nick Romeo is a regular contributor to the Monitor's Books section.

Working...
X