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Churchill's Folly: How Winston Churchill Created Modern Iraq
 
 
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Churchill's Folly: How Winston Churchill Created Modern Iraq [Hardcover]

Christopher Catherwood (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 22, 2004
As Britain's colonial secretary in the 1920s, Winston Churchill made a mistake with calamitous consequences. Scholar and adviser to Tony Blair's government, Christopher Catherwood chronicles and analyzes how Churchill created the artificial monarchy of Iraq after World War I, thereby forcing together unfriendly peoples under a single ruler. The map of the Middle East that Churchill created led to the rise of Saddam Hussein and the wars in which American troops fought in 1991 and 2003. Defying a global wave of nationalistic sentiment, and the desire of subject peoples to rule themselves, Winston Churchill put together the broken pieces of the Ottoman Empire and created a Middle Eastern powder keg. Inducing Arabs under the rule of the Ottoman Turks to rebel against their oppressors, the British and French during World War I convinced the Hashemite clan that they would rule over Syria. In fact, Britain had promised the territory to the French. To make amends, Churchill created the nation of Iraq and made the Hashemite leader, Feisel, king of a land to which he had no connections at all. Eight pages of photographs add to this fascinating history on Churchill's decision and the terrible legacy of the Ottoman Empire's collapse.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This compelling volume raises eerie echoes of present-day Iraq. In the aftermath of WWI, France and Britain competed for the Mideastern leftovers of the Ottoman Empire. The British grabbed Palestine, attempted to set up puppet monarchies in Arabia and in 1921 cobbled together hostile peoples—Kurds and Sunni and Shiite Arabs—into the artificial and unstable kingdom of Iraq, ruled by the imposed Hashemite king Faisal. Cambridge historian Catherwood asserts that this form of indirect rule was "empire lite" as fashioned by Churchill, then colonial minister. The British, drained economically by the world war, were greedy for spoils and wanted the benefits of empire on the cheap. The vastness of Iraq proved impossible to govern by a reduced garrison. Catherwood, a consultant to Tony Blair's cabinet, sees contemporary parallels in the unlearned lessons of "imperial overreach." Unwanted paternalistic protectorates have a way of imploding, Catherwood notes. Churchill conceded wryly that Britain was spending millions "for the privilege of living on an ungrateful volcano out of which we are in no circumstances to get anything worth having." In a readable historical essay stretched into a short book, Catherwood demonstrates yet again that one generation's pragmatism can be a later generation's tragedy. 8 pages of b&w photos not seen by PW.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

As consultant to the Strategy Unit of Blair’s cabinet, Christopher Cather-wood worked in the Admirality building, where Churchill was based as First Lord of the Admirality in 1939–1940. He teaches history at Cambridge University and each summer at the University of Richmond (Virginia), where he is an annual Writer in Residence for their History Department.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Basic Books (June 22, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786713518
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786713516
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,627,783 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Christopher Catherwood, a tutor for the Cambridge University Institute of Continuing Education and an instructor at the University of Richmond's School for Continuing Education, has written and edited more than twenty-five books, including Five Evangelical Leaders, Martyn Lloyd-Jones: A Family Portrait, and Christians, Muslims, and Islamic Rage. He holds degrees from Cambridge and Oxford in modern history and resides in Cambridge with his wife, Paulette.

 

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36 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How to Marry Money with Strategy, October 18, 2004
This review is from: Churchill's Folly: How Winston Churchill Created Modern Iraq (Hardcover)
Christopher Catherwood rightly reminds his audience that the course of history results from the decisions and whims of outstanding individuals as well as impersonal forces and inevitable economic factors (pg. 13). In March 1921, Winston Churchill, the newly appointed Secretary of State for the colonies and his advisers re-mapped the Middle East at the Cairo conference to primarily advance British interests in the region from the ruins of the disintegrated Ottoman Empire (pg. 125).

The imperial, pan-Arabic ambitions of the Hashemite family, bone fide senior descendants of Prophet Mohammed, also played a key role in modeling the region (pg. 47, 50-51, 102, 123, 129, 143, 156). The ill-fated Sykes-Pico Agreement made in 1916 between France and Britain to contain Tsarist Russia in the region became meaningless after the fall of the Russian imperial government in 1917 (pg. 56, 64). However, this agreement was not far from the minds of conference participants. The Sykes-Pico Agreement has been perceived in some quarters as both a self-inflicted curse on the British and a betrayal to the Arab Revolt against Ottoman rule (pg. 42-43, 53, 61-62, 78-79, 122).

In addition, events outside the direct control of conference participants were shaping the outcome of this conference. The war-weary and very battered British Empire faced severe budgetary constraints following the ruinous Great War. Furthermore, the war between Greece and Turkey waged after the end of WWI represented an additional constraint placed on conference participants, and especially on Churchill whose position in the cabinet depended solely on the goodwill of Lloyd George, his political boss (pg. 107-108, 161). Churchill strongly opposed the disastrous pan-Hellenism of Prime Minister Lloyd George that ultimately resulted in the fall of the government by the end of 1922 (pg. 38-39, 60-61, 80, 198). Churchill sensibly believed in the appeasement of Turkey to avoid a widespread Muslim rebellion in some British colonies, one of the many ironies of his long political life (pg. 70, 82, 98).

One of the legacies of the Cairo conference was the creation of Iraq, the result of the amalgamation of the Ottoman provinces of Basra, Baghdad and Mosul. This creation had disastrous consequences for the Kurds until the instauration of the no-fly zones in 1991 and for the Shia Muslims until the toppling of former President Saddam Hussein in 2003 (pg. 26, 92, 106-107, 125, 135-136, 150, 221-224). At the insistence of Feisal, a Sunni Arab and the first King of Iraq, the British integrated the predominantly Sunny Kurds into Iraq to better balance the Shia Muslim majority in Southern Iraq with the Sunni Arabs in the center (pg. 26). The British wrongly assumed that nationalism was stronger than religion (pg. 229-230).

As Catherwood correctly points out, the real problem was ultimately how to square imperial designs of France and Britain in the region with President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points, and especially with the policy of self-determination described in the fifth point (pg. 66, 112, 172-173).

Britain had to do as if the Iraqi people had acclaimed overwhelmingly Feisal, while pulling the strings behind the scene to get the desired result (pg. 96, 124, 131, 151-152, 163, 170, 188). However, the British wrongly underestimated Feisal's determination to become his own man in the eyes of his new subjects (pg. 153, 171, 176, 185-190, 197). Unlike the French, the British did not, however, use force to get rid of Feisal but left him on his throne as the best deal available to them to preserve their interests in the region (pg. 142-144, 174-175).

To the British, having an Arab King in Iraq and having some form of indirect British rule there were not incompatible objectives. The British Empire was largely built on indirect rule that turned out to be a cheap way to run an empire (pg. 58, 142, 212). Surprisingly from the vintage of 21st century observers, oil was the missing factor in British political establishment's decision to become embroiled in Iraq (pg. 66-68, 113). In contrast, the British generals and Americans were not oblivious to the future potential of Middle Eastern oil (pg. 75, 178). However, the British ultimately stayed to obtain the oil of Iraq (pg. 205).

British overreach around the world after WWI and the disastrous British policy in the war between Greece and Turkey pushed Churchill to sensibly privilege budgetary considerations above anything else (pg. 69, 95-96, 116-118, 169, 182). Empire building on the cheap by propping up a friendly regime with the help of the sole Royal Air Force met the fierce resistance of the military establishment and their paymasters who were not enthusiastic about deep cuts in the Army's budget (pg. 72, 77, 101, 137, 165-169). At the same time, Churchill knew that he was weakening the Empire's capacity to crush any eventual rebellion against British interference in the new country as subsequent events proved him right (pg. 74, 81-83, 94). These contradictory considerations about how best to manage an occupied territory for the time needed to foster a friendly regime (read a capitalist democracy) are of course not foreign to the ultimate success of the Operation Iraqi Freedom (pg. 87, 133, 154).

The map of today's Middle East and the problems still associated with this map owe their nature to the decisions made by Churchill and his advisers at the conference of Cairo (pg. 109, 227). A successful transition to a Shia-dominated federal Iraq that preserves the rights and freedoms of Iraqi minorities could be one of the key factors to help isolate the most hawkish Iranian powerbrokers and ultimately facilitate the beginning of a serious dialogue involving Israel, the U.S. and Iran (pg. 227). Furthermore, this successful transition in the core territory of Shia Islam could further foster tolerance between the two ancient branches of Islam in the countries of the region to the benefit of everybody (pg. 227-230).


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30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book for ordinary readers, November 1, 2004
This review is from: Churchill's Folly: How Winston Churchill Created Modern Iraq (Hardcover)
CHURCHILL'S FOLLY is a great book for ordinary readers.

One point: Catherwood has been at Cambridge since 1978. He lectures for their Institute of Continuing Education, which is part of Cambridge University. He lectured some years ago for courses organised by folk at the University's Centre (sic) of International Studies. Only snobs and pedants would say that the highly rated Institute of Continuing Education is not a full part of Cambridge University. His (very) long acknowledgements make it very clear who he is and for whom he teaches. Cambridge Continuing Education classes have pupils ranging from Nobel prizewinners to housewives.

This book will not win the Pulitzer. Nor does it aim to compete with the Macmillan and similar books, to which Catherwood makes copious references in his own work.

What it does is to give us a helpful snapshot of how Winston Churchill was involved in the creation of Iraq in 1921, something that has been in many newspaper articles in recent months.

Lloyd George was pro-Greek. As Catherwood does tell us, Lloyd George thought that Venizvelos was the greatest Greek since Demosthenes, a quote he got from Macmillan's book (see the numerous endnotes).

I am keeping my copy. Don't let snobs and pedants mislead you. This is a helpful book that you don't need a degree in history to read. That is the point of Continuing Education, and Catherwood fulfills his task.
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31 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An outstanding example of microhistory, September 28, 2004
This review is from: Churchill's Folly: How Winston Churchill Created Modern Iraq (Hardcover)
Some excellent books have been written about the macrohistory of the Middle East, of which the overall history of the region by Bernard Lewis is by far the best. Then as for the reconstruction of the entire Middle East after World War 1, there is Peace to End All Peace by David Fromkin.

However Catherwood's book is in an altogether and equally valid historical tradition.

Like the illustrious French Annaliste school, he examines a small part of the overall picture in great detail. This is a close up photograph of a particular tree in the forest, rather than an aerial picture of the whole wood.

In particular he looks at Churchill, and why Winston Churchill acted as he did, and with Churchill's Iraq policy in detail. (Churchill also created Palestine, but as this has been written to death, I presume that Catherwood sensibly avoided it, in order to replicate what is being written on elsewhere).

So this is as much a book on the European/Arab interface as it is on Iraq. It isn't a history of Iraq - and Catherwood helpfully lists many such detailed country specific histories in his extensive bibliography.

Catherwood is clearly a former policy wonk, and that, to me, is what makes the book so fascinating - he evidently understands the political process well and this shines through in the book.

There are, contrary to Green's sad review, maps in this book, and, most important, the one that Churchill himself used.

While Catherwood is careful not to go into too much contemporary analogy, one can all the same get a good idea of how our present rulers must have been acting in recent times.

This is detailed, up close, history at its very best, and with Iraq in the news at the moment it is well worth reading.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In March 1921, Winston Churchill, the newly appointed Secretary of State for the Colonies, summoned a large team of his advisers to meet together in a luxury hotel in Cairo. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Lloyd George, Middle East, Ottoman Empire, Sir Percy Cox, Ibn Saud, United States, League of Nations, High Commissioner, War Office, Lord Curzon, Saddam Hussein, British Empire, Mustapha Kemal, Royal Air Force, Sir Herbert, Great Britain, Sir Henry Wilson, Colonial Office, Foreign Office, Foreign Secretary, King Feisal, King Hussein, United Kingdom, General Haldane, Gertrude Bell
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