Henry Srebrnik, [Calgary] Jewish Free Press
On May 19, 1916, representatives of Great
Britain and France secretly reach an accord, officially known as the Asia Minor
Agreement, by which most of the Arab lands under the rule of the Ottoman Empire
were to be divided into British and French spheres of influence with the
conclusion of the First World War.
The Ottoman Turks had entered the war on
the side of Germany and Austria-Hungary. While the Turks had already lost
virtually all of their European possessions, they still controlled a vast
expanse of territory in the Middle East.
On March 18, 1915, Britain had signed a
secret agreement with Russia, whose designs on the empire’s territory had led
the Turks to join forces with the Central Powers in 1914. By its terms, Russia
would annex the Ottoman capital of Istanbul (Constantinople) and retain control
of the Dardanelles, the important strait connecting the Black Sea with the
Mediterranean.
In return, Russia would agree to British
claims on other areas of the Ottoman Empire, including the oil-rich region of
Mesopotamia.A year later, Sir Mark Sykes and Francois
Georges-Picot, respectively acting on behalf of Britain and France, authored
another secret agreement to divide the Middle East.
With the Sykes-Picot Agreement, as it became known, France and Britain agreed to divide up the Arab territories of the former Ottoman Empire into spheres of influence. The Syrian coast and much of modern-day Lebanon went to France; Britain would take direct control over central and southern Mesopotamia, around the Baghdad and Basra provinces.
With the Sykes-Picot Agreement, as it became known, France and Britain agreed to divide up the Arab territories of the former Ottoman Empire into spheres of influence. The Syrian coast and much of modern-day Lebanon went to France; Britain would take direct control over central and southern Mesopotamia, around the Baghdad and Basra provinces.
Palestine would have an international
administration, as other Christian powers, including Russia, held an interest
in the region.
The map closely associated with their
names, with its borders cutting across ethnic, linguistic, and religious lines,
was formalized and made official in 1920 with the San Remo Agreement. It
defined the borders of what would become Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine (after 1948, Israel),
and Syria. These would all become League of Nations Mandates.
Of course, the Arabs, who had been
encouraged to revolt against the Turks by Sir Henry McMahon, Britain’s high
commissioner in Egypt, and T.E. Lawrence, among others,
were not informed of the deal, though Arab troops played a vital role in the
Allied victory over the Ottoman Empire.
In June 1916, Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the
Hashemite monarch who ruled over Mecca and the Hejaz, had initiated the Great
Arab Revolt against Ottoman rule. His sons, the emirs Abdullah and Faisal, led
the Arab forces, with Faisal’s troops liberating Damascus from Ottoman rule in
1918.
At the end of the war, Arab forces
controlled all of modern Jordan, and much of the Arabian peninsula and southern
Syria. They hoped to create a unified Arab state stretching from Syria to Yemen. But
their aspirations would be dashed.
Apart from the Arabs, the biggest losers
were the Kurds, a distinct ethnic and linguistic group who weren’t given a
state at all. Today the Kurdish heartland stretches into corners of Iraq,
Syria, Turkey, and Iran.
“Sykes-Picot was a mistake,” Zikri Mosa, an
adviser to Kurdistan’s President Masoud Barzani, has said. “It was like a
forced marriage. It was doomed from the start. It was immoral, because it
decided people’s future without asking them.”
Although the European powers left after the
Second World War, the states they created remained. Pan-Arabists and Arab
nationalists ever after have condemned the “Sykes-Picot borders” as artificial,
illegitimate, and undeserving of recognition.
Rejection of Sykes-Picot has, at times,
moved from discourse into action: the United Arab Republic (Egypt and
Syria,1958-1961), the United Arab States (Egypt, Syria and North Yemen,
1958-1961), and the Federation of Arab Republics (Libya, Egypt and Syria,
1972-1977) were among many attempts to create a pan-Arab alternative to the
post-1918 fragmentation.
Now we have a new entity determined to
erase these borders. In 2014, the militant Islamists who call themselves the
Islamic State (ISIS) proclaimed a caliphate in the region straddling the border
between Iraq and Syria. In a propaganda video, the group’s leadership chose to
highlight the destruction of the border; its title was “The End of
Sykes-Picot.”
The message of the fifteen-minute video is
clear: a former site of division, statehood, and military might is now an
unremarkable stretch of desert. By conquering this region, ISIS has triumphed
over the institutions that once governed the area.
ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has
boasted that the establishment of his Caliphate amounts to tearing the
Sykes-Picot Agreement to shreds. And at the moment, the Islamic State is
stronger militarily than many states in the region.
Both Iraq and Syria have indeed fallen into
virtual anarchy. Iraq is basically now three distinct regions of Sunni Arabs,
Shia Arabs, and Kurds. Syria has totally imploded and is now embroiled in a
vicious civil war. We may eventually be confronted with a new map of new
entities born or re-born.
Meanwhile, as millions of refugees flee and
try to enter Europe, we might term this the “revenge of Sykes-Picot.” Indeed,
not only has the mess in the Middle East rendered the 1916 deal null and void, but
the European Union, now trying to deal with the influx, may, ironically, itself
begin to disintegrate and so in a sense also fall victim to Sykes-Picot a
century later.
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