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'Relations with Ibn Sa'ud: note prepared by Arab Bureau, Irak Section' [‎1v] (2/10)

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The record is made up of 1 file (5 folios). It was created in 12 Jan 1917. It was written in English. 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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secured it, overran the JIasa, ejected without difficulty the small I. urkisli
garrisons and established himself on the coast at Qatif and Ojair. Captain
Shakespear, on his return to England in June 1914 from a long projected
journey across Arabia, in the course of which he had visited Riyadh, bore
witness to the strong personal domination which Ibn Sa nd's vigorous and
commanding personalit} 7 " had established, and from other reports it was
clear that lie was regarded beyond his own frontiers as the coming man.
lie proved more than a match for tlie ineffective efforts of the Turks to
retake the Ilasa: they resorted to diplomacy and opened negotiations with
him through Saiyid Talib of Basrah. Early in May Tal'at Beg had
formulated in private conversation at the British Embassy the expectations
of the Ottoman Government in terms which seemed to his hearers little
consonant with actual conditions. He proposed to establish a strictly
delimited frontier between Ibn Sa nd and Ibn Rashid, place representatives
of the Sultan at Riyadh and at Hail, and rely upon the guile of these
officials to control without the aid of force the actions of the two Amirs. As
for the Hasa, Ibn Sa'ud would be appointed Mutasarrif of the province, but
the collection of the Customs would remain in Turkish hands and Turkish
garrisons would be replaced in the ports.
3. Nothing was more certain than that Ibn Sa'ud's appearance on the coast
must ultimately bring him into direct contact with ourselves, whether we
welcomed it or sought to avoid it; and this anxiety underlay and possibly
accelerated the action of the Porte. But at the moment Turkish fears were
groundless. We were concerned wholly with the conclusion of prolonged
negotiations with Constantinople, touching interests in Mesopotamia and the
Gulf which were of vital importance, and were less inclined, if possible,
than before for Arabian adventure. We made a friendly offer of mediation
which was refused, and when in April 1914 the Amir met the British Agent,
Colonel Grey, outside Kuwait, he was given to understand that we-had
recently concluded a comprehensive agreement with Turkey and could hold
out to him no hope of support. Ibn Sa'ud was thrown back on his own
resources, but these were considerable, and the secret treaty which was
signed in May i)y himself and the Wall of Basrah fell short of Tal'at Beg's
anticipations. He accepted the title of Wali and Military Commandant, of
Najd which was offered to himself and his descendants as long as they
should remain loyal, and engaged to fly the Turkish flag, but he was to have
charge of the Customs on behalf of the Ottoman Government, raise his
own levies and provide the garrisons for Qatif and Ojair. Deficiencies in
the Najd budget were to be met from the Customs, and no revenue from any
local income was to be paid to Constantinople until such time as there was
a surplus, an eventuality of doubtful occurrence. But while exercising in his
own territories an authority which was in all but the name that of an inde
pendent ruler, his correspondence with foreign Powers was to be conducted
solely through the Porte, and in case of war he was to come to the assistance
of the Sultan.
4. W hat would have been the upshot of a treaty which so imperfectly
reflected the convictions of the contracting parties can scarcely admit of
doubt. The guiding trait of Ibn Sa'ud's character is what must be called a
racial rather than a national patriotism, but this sentiment was not likely to
evoke sympathetic consideration from the leaders of the Committee of Union
and Progress, who were blindly determined on the Ottoinanization of the
Arabs. As a strict Wahabi, the new Wali of Najd looked with abhorrence
on the loose religious principles of the Turks and was far from admitting
their pretensions to represent and direct Islam. He had, in conversation
with Captain Shakespear, spoken with unexpected vehemence on this point,
saying that in his eyes the Infidel was preferable to the Turk, since the
latter broke the rule he professed to follow while the former acted in
accordance with his own law : and to the same listener he declared that he
had accepted the terms of the agreement only because he was assured
privately that even the small measure of sovereignty accorded to Turkey
would never be claimed. The Kuwait treaty was put to the test by the
outbreak of European war and found wanting.

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Content

This note was written by the Arab Bureau, Iraq Section, in Basra in January 1917. It reviews the rise of Ibn Sa'ud [‘Abd al-‘Azīz bin ‘Abd al-Raḥmān bin Fayṣal Āl Sa‘ūd], his fight against Ibn Rashid and the role of Captain William Henry Irvine Shakespear, Political Agent A mid-ranking political representative (equivalent to a Consul) from the diplomatic corps of the Government of India or one of its subordinate provincial governments, in charge of a Political Agency. , Kuwait, in this conflict. Other topics are Ibn Sa'ud's relationship with Shaikh Mubarak of Kuwait and Ibn Sa'ud's battle against the Ottoman Turks in the context of British interests.

Extent and format
1 file (5 folios)
Arrangement

The note is arranged in twenty seven paragraphs.

Physical characteristics

Foliation. There are three copies of this item, of which only one copy (the foliated copy) has been digitised. The foliation sequence is circled in pencil, in the top right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. of each folio. It begins on the first folio, on number 1, and ends on the last folio, on number 5.

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English in Latin script
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'Relations with Ibn Sa'ud: note prepared by Arab Bureau, Irak Section' [‎1v] (2/10), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/18/B251, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023493118.0x000003> [accessed 19 April 2024]

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