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Logical Idea That Could Have Prevented Strife

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  • Logical Idea That Could Have Prevented Strife

    LOGICAL IDEA THAT COULD HAVE PREVENTED STRIFE
    Michael Binyon

    Kurdistan Regional Government, Iraq
    Oct 12 2005

    HAD Lawrence's plan been accepted, much of the anti-Western bitterness
    of Arab nationalism might have been avoided. There would have been no
    quasi-colonial rule over Syria and Jordan; a state between Iraq and
    Turkey might have become a homeland for the Kurds; and the Armenians
    might have found refuge in a state north of Syria.

    The plan would probably have done little to forestall the partition
    of Palestine. Lawrence knew of the Balfour Declaration, which offered
    the Jews a national homeland. On his map Palestine is marked as a
    separate entity not awarded to any Arab ruler.

    His map was drawn up at the height of his influence, when he was
    attending the Versailles conference as an aide of Prince Feisal,
    the leader of the Arab delegation. It is unclear whether it was an
    attempt to sabotage the Anglo-French plan for Middle East "mandates",
    or a genuine attempt to reward the sons of Sherif Hussein of Mecca
    with kingdoms of their own.

    Lawrence proposes a Frenchcontrolled state in the mountains inland
    from Beirut, the traditional Christian enclave around Mount Lebanon.

    This later was enlarged by France to include an equal number of
    Muslims and separated from Syria to form Lebanon.

    Lawrence did not specify that the kingdom awarded to Zaid, the youngest
    son of Sherif Hussein, would be a Kurdish state, but its boundaries
    are very close to the area now populated by Kurds, who resent the
    failure to award them a homeland after the First World War.

    Since the map does not split Ottoman Syria into northern, French and
    British zones, the state awarded to Feisal would have had geographic
    and historical coherence. Iraq is placed under British administration,
    but unites only two of the three Ottoman provinces, comprising the
    Shia region in the south and the Sunnis around Baghdad. This would
    not have prevented anti-British uprisings and Shia-Sunni tensions.

    http://web.krg.org/articles/article_detail.asp?LangNr=12&RubricNr=&Art icleNr=6643&LNNr=28&RNNr=70
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