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Papers written by Curzon on the Near and Middle East [‎138v] (276/348)

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The record is made up of 1 file (174 folios). It was created in 16 Nov 1917-17 Jan 1924. It was written in English and French. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .

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Dr. Nihad Kechad expressed the utmost alarm at this situation, which had
apparently come upon him as a £reat shock, and he announced his intention of
telegraphing at once to Mustapha Kemal on the point. He believed that he could
reach him by wireless before to-morrow morning.
I suggested that, it there were still time, orders should be given to the Kemalist
cavalry—of whom there were now 4,500—to retire ; and that, even if these orders
came too late and an unfortunate incident occurred, it whs still possible for Mustapfia
Kemal to explain that the incident had been due to an error on the part of his troops,
and to order their instant withdrawal from the neutral zone. It might be too late to
prevent hostilities, but it might still be possible to avert a war.
Dr. Nihad liechad then proceeded to give me his own explanation of the Kemalist
position. He said that Kemal was in great alarm lest, owing to the revolution in
Athens, we were already arranging with the new Greek Government that they should
re-enter the war and join us in the occupation of the Marmora and in the retention of
Ihrace. further, in the event of the Greek troops retiring, as was proposed in the
Paris note, either to the Maritza or to another line in Eastern Thrace, what guarantee
had the lurks as to the nature of the administration to be set up in the evacuated
territory ? 1 hey were desperately afraid that it would not be a Turkish administration,
and that some attempt would be made to rob them of the spoils which they appeared
to have won. It was these doubts more particularly which had restrained Mustapha
Kemal from returning an immediate answer to the Paris proposals—a delay which
Dr. Nihad Rechad, for his own part, joined with me in deeply regretting.
1 replied that, on the two points which he had mentioned, I wotdd be as explicit
with him as 1 had l>een in respect of Chanak. It was not true that so far any step
whatever had been taken to encourage the Greeks. I was not in communication with
the new Government in Athens. I did not even know who they were. I was unaware
of the disposition of their troops, and of their military intentions. We had given
them no encouragement whatsoever in Thrace. On the contrary. Dr. Nihad Rechad
must know quite well that we had obliged the Greek man-of-war to leave Constantinople,
and that we had prohibited Greek transports and vessels of war from entering the
1 Dardanelles. We could not possibly have acted in a more strictly neutral manner.
But I must warn him frankly that, if the incidents which 1 had described resulted in
hostilities, this attitude would at once be changed. There would then be no reason
whatsoever why we should prevent Greece from doing anything that she pleased in
i espect of 1 brace or the Marmora ; and, if Mustapha Kemal chose to fight us, he would
have no cause to be surprised at the re-entry ot Greece upon the scene. As regards
i brace, I ^aid that 1 had not the slightest difficulty in rebutting the suspicions of
Mustapha Kemal. As a matter of fact, the British Government had already had in
contemplation the necessity of instituting a civil administration in those parts of
Eastern i brace which would be evacuated by the Greek army, and, although the
assistance of Allied officers might be required in reporting upon the situation and
setting up an administration, I had always contemplated that it should be in the main
I urkish in character, and that certainly no attempt should be made to get behind the
terms of the Paris note. But how, 1 asked, was this to be brought about if Mustapha
Kemal refrained from coming to Mudania ? Mudania, I repeated, was the first step ;
the line of evacuation was the second; and the setting up of some form of civil
administration was the third. r l hat at such a moment Mustapha Kemal should be in a
train going to Angora instead of expediting these issues so favourable to him, was to
me quite incomprehensible.
Dr. Nihad Rechad asked my permission to include in his message to his chief the
observations which I had just made.
I readily gave him permission, and urged upon him the utmost speed and the most
definite presentation of the case if he was to have any chance of avoiding what we both
regarded as the disastrous contingency of a new war. No one wanted such a war
certainly not Great Britain. But, if it were provoked in the particular circumstances
which I had described, I did not think think that public opinion would be left in the
smallest doubt as to where the responsibility lay.
I am, &c.
CURZON OF KEDLESTON.

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Content

The file contains correspondence, memoranda, maps, and notes on various subjects connected to the Near and Middle East. The majority of the papers are written by George Curzon himself and concern the settlement of former territories of the Ottoman Empire following its break up after the First World War. Matters such as the Greek occupation of Smyrna, the division of Thrace, the Greco-Turkish War, Georgian independence, and the Treaties of Sèvres and Lausanne are all discussed.

Other matters covered by the file include those concerning the Arab territories of the former Ottoman Empire, American advisers in Persia, and the future of Palestine, including a report by the Committee on Palestine (Colonial Office) dated 27 July 1923 (folios 168-171).

Correspondence within the file is mostly between Curzon and representatives of the other Allied Powers, as well as officials from other governmental departments and diplomatic offices.

Extent and format
1 file (174 folios)
Arrangement

The file is arranged in chronological order from the front to the back.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the first folio with 1, and terminates at the last folio with 174; these numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and are located in the top right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. side of each folio.

Written in
English and French in Latin script
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Papers written by Curzon on the Near and Middle East [‎138v] (276/348), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F112/278, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100076917036.0x00004d> [accessed 12 May 2024]

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