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Arab War Lords and Iraqi Star Gazers: Gertrude Bell's <i>The Arab of Mesopotamia</i>
 
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Arab War Lords and Iraqi Star Gazers: Gertrude Bell's The Arab of Mesopotamia [Paperback]

Paul Rich (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 4, 2001 0595149448 978-0595149445 0
One very determined woman uncontestably held her own and more with the great figures of the Middle East in the early twentieth century. That was Gertrude Bell. Highly strung, petulant, aggressive, and gossipy, she occasionally provided tea but rarely sympathy to the extraordinary group of British Imperial administrators whose adventures centered on Basra at the head of the Gulf in 1914-1916. Not enough has been made of this Basra cabal as a group rather than individuals. Nor have the machinations of the 'Basra gang' had the attention given to figures such as Lawrence of Arabia and General Allenby, individuals who when all is said and done were not deeply involved in Gulf and Iraqi affairs.

The Arab of Mesopotamia is a collection of once confidential briefing papers that Bell helped to produce for British army officers new to the Mesopotamia theatre, published in Basra by a military printer. The tone confirms views that Gertrude Bell and her colleagues were interested in the possibility of playing on the world stage and wanted quiet in the shaikhdoms while they pursued notions of a Middle East empire that would rival the Indian empire. Heady plans were made for an Imperial service that would include Arabia, Iraq, the Trans-Jordan, and even the Sudan. While exciting, this 'mega outlook' was opposed to Arab concerns.

The apotheosis for Bell was reached in 1921 when Winston Churchill called a famous meeting of forty Middle East experts in Cairo. The conference photograph shows her as the lone woman. Secreted in the Semiramis Hotel, she and the other 'forty thieves' laid out the policies whose failures (and Lawrence's disillusionment) are well known. Therein lies the tragedy of her life, perhaps more of a tragedy than that of Lawrence. Almost none of the undertakings to the Arabs to which she was an enthusiastic participant were realised. There were a number of these promises, although they were less publicized than those made in the famous McMahon letters. For example, the assurances at the 1916 dubar of Kuwait were equally dishonored: the shaikh of Kuwait received a CSI and Ibn Saud got the KCIE along with pledges that with the defeat of the Turks: 'The dream of Arab unity has been brought nearer fulfillment than dreams are wont to come, but the role of presiding genius has been recast.'

Instead of an Arabian viceregality that would justify the wonderful title of 'Viceroys of the Gulf,' or of a 'final' resolution of the region's conflicts, British Imperial administration between the world wars became a long and unsatisfactory interlude in which little was accomplished. Hobson remarks in Imperialism about the use of 'masked words' and an Imperial Genius for inconsistency: 'Most of the men who have mislead have first been obliged to mislead themselves.' This was the case with Gertrude Bell, who committed suicide in 1926. After she and her friends departed the scene, the air went out of the balloon, and the 'countervailing disadvantages' of being mislead became apparent to the Arabs. This little-known book is one key to heady days at Basra when the Middle East Empire seemed likely.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Paul Rich is Titular Professor of International Relations and History at the University of the Americas-Puebla, Mexico, and Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford university. He is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, London, and the recipient of the James Carter and Cameron awards for social science research. He is a life governor of Harris College, Oxford University, and author of several hundred journal articles on the relationship between ritual and politics.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 270 pages
  • Publisher: Authors Choice Press (February 4, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0595149448
  • ISBN-13: 978-0595149445
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,900,740 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Scenes of Old Still Relevant Today, March 26, 2005
By 
Robert S. Ford (Diplomat in Algiers) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Arab War Lords and Iraqi Star Gazers: Gertrude Bell's The Arab of Mesopotamia (Paperback)
This book is a reprint of two pamphlets about Mesopotamia and Anatolia written by the famous British orientalist Gertrude Bell during the First World War. Bell's writing is easy and the reader can glide through the discourse in only a few hours.

The book starts with a long forward by Paul Rich that provides historical context. He reviews British strategy in Mesopotamia in the Great War and the role of Bell's office. He also describes British regional strategies after the war.

Bell's short "Arab of Mesopotamia" follows with vivid descriptions of tribes and towns that she had visited before the war. She includes brief histories of tribal migrations around the Euphrates and Tigris, highlighting the relationship between the tribes in modern day Iraq and those still in modern day Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. There is also a relatively detailed description of the Arab tribes living in Khuzestan, on the eastern side of the Shatt al-Arab. Saddam claimed he sought to liberate Khuzestan as one of his excuses in attacking Iran in 1980. Thus, a reader seeking detailed insights into the forces that move modern Iraqi politics would benefit from the background about these tribes, as they remain an influential element of contemporary Iraqi society.

This edition then includes Bell's pamphlet "Asiatic Turkey" which includes desciptions from her travels of pre-war Syria, Baghdad, Turkish and Iraqi Kurdestan and Anatolia. As in her Mesopotamian pamphlet, Bell's wartime bias against the Ottomans and Germans is evident troughout. That said, there are interesting, short vignettes of sites she visited before the war and brief discussions of local histories such as the Kurdish persecution of Christian communities in predominantly Kurdish regions. These too are relevant today: while Westerners may not remember these massacres, Iraqis most certainly do.

In sum, this book won't explain everything about modern Iraq, but it certainly would help a reader who wants to understand the currents underlying many current events in the country.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Arab War Lords, August 1, 2007
This review is from: Arab War Lords and Iraqi Star Gazers: Gertrude Bell's The Arab of Mesopotamia (Paperback)
We thank you for suggesting other titles in the same interest group.
Have expanded our knowledge and found Gertrude Bell to be a fascinating
character.

Thank you for a good book at a good price and in good condition !
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