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File 2182/1913 Pt 8 'Arabia – Policy towards Bin Saud' [‎324r] (232/602)

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The record is made up of 1 item (300 folios). It was created in 7 Aug 1918-26 Dec 1918. 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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This treaty, therefore, although it was never intended to be exhaustive, is on
sounder lines than our treaty with the Idrisi or our more informal arrangements with
King Husein, and there ought to be considerably less difficulty in expanding it, when
the time comes, into a definitive treaty settling our relations with Bin Saud in detail.
^ There are, however, several positive points affecting British desiderata to which
the present treaty appears to commit us
(1 .)—Demarcation of Territories.
In article 1 we recognise Bin Saud as independent ruler of certain enumerated
countries “ and their dependencies and territories, which will be discussed and deter
mined hereafter.”
This is less explicit than our undertaking to the Idrisi (article 6 of Idrisi Treaty,
for which see Memorandum on British Commitments to the Idrisi), in which we under
take “ at the conclusion of the war to adjudicate between the rival claims of the Idrisi
Saiyid and the Imam Yahya, or any other rival.”
But in effect it commits us to arbitrate on the territorial questions at issue between
Bin Saud and King Husein, and in the last resort to impose an effective sanction for
our award.
(2 .)—Keeping of the Peace.
In the original trucial treaties with the Independent Chiefs of “ Trucial Oman A name used by Britain from the nineteenth century to 1971 to refer to the present-day United Arab Emirates. ,
His Majesty’s Government’s rights and obligations were strictly limited to the main
tenance of peace at sea, and we did not attempt to control the mutual relations on land
of the Arab parties to this series of treaties.
This formula set a very desirable limit to His Majesty’s Government’s liabilities,
while covering most of the causes of strife between the local Arab rulers. The trucial
chiefs of Oman hold sway in a narrow strip of territory between the sea and an
uninhabited desert. The activities of their subjects are almost wholly maritime, and
there are no nomadic tribes in their area of jurisdiction to create difficulties of allegiance
and demarcation. # i r •
But it is evident that if the British trucial system, hitherto confined to the fringe
between the south and east coasts and the great south-eastern desert, is to be extended,
as it has been extended during the war, to the remainder of the Peninsula, we shall
have to keep the peace between rulers whose prosperity depends, not upon the coasting
trade or the pearl fisheries, but upon the command of inland oases and Bedouin tribes.
Bin Saud, the Idrisi, and King Husein, with whom we have entered^ into relations
during the war, are rulers of this latter kind. A “ Pax Britannica in the Persian
Gulf and the Bed Sea, valuable and indeed indispensable as it is, will do comparatively
little to remove the causes of friction between them, or to enable His Majesty s
Government to deal effectively r with such friction when it arises.
If we are to keep the peace between them, we shall be driven eventually to control
their relations with one another by land. To a certain extent this may be done by a
maritime blockade. But apart from the fact that, where political authority is as lax as
it is in Arabia, it is difficult to blockade one State effectively without blockading t e
whole Peninsula,* it is in the nature of things more difficult to bring pressure to bear
on Hail or Er-Biadh by this method than on Sharjah, or even Maskat Besides this,
our new Arab Allies are considerably more powerful than most of the Arab rulers w o
have previously entered into a trucial relationship with us. And in the case or mg
Husein, who is likely to be the most troublesome of all over his relations wit ns
neighbours, it is peculiarly difficult for His Majesty’s Government to exert pressure,
whether by blockade or otherwise, owing to the sanctity of his territory m the ®y es ^
the Moslem world, and the traffic of pilgrims between his ports and every other Moslem
COim The keeping of the peace on land thus appears to be the crucial problem in that
extension of the British trucial system over the remainder of the Arabian Pemnsu a,
which has been carried a long way towards completion during the war. .
The Treaty with Bin Saud is our first experiment in this more highly-developed
and difficult form of trucial relationship, and in their ruling on the Treaty a short I 1 ^ 116
after its ratification (see above), the 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. laid down the important^ doctrine t at
“ we cannot admit that Article 2 is binding on us as against other Arabs.
On this ruling, our obligations to Bin Saud by land would be confined to securing
him against aggression on the part of some outside Power {e.g., Turkey, I ersia^
[939]
This seems a fair induction from our experiences during the war at Koweit.
E

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Part 8 primarily concerns relations between Bin Saud [‘Abd al-‘Azīz bin ‘Abd al-Raḥmān bin Fayṣal Āl Sa‘ūd] and King Hussein of Hedjaz [Ḥusayn bin ‘Alī al-Hāshimī, King of Hejaz]. Included are the following:

  • discussion as to which ruler has the stronger claim to Khurma, and whether Bin Saud should be encouraged to begin hostilities against Bin Rashid [Saʿūd bin ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz Āl Rashīd, Emir of Ha'il], as a way of diverting the former's attention from other matters;
  • copies of a treaty between the British government and Bin Saud, which was signed on 26 December 1915 and ratified on 18 July 1916;
  • debate about whether the British should supply Bin Saud with more arms and ammunition (to make amends for providing him with 1000 cheap Winchester rifles);
  • discussion of the possible benefits of arranging a meeting either between King Hussein and Bin Saud or between the former's son and the latter's brother;
  • discussion about the possibility of an officer from the Egyptian service succeeding Harry St John Bridger Philby as the British representative to Bin Saud;
  • reports of Bin Saud having begun operations against Bin Rashid, and discussion as to how the British should respond;
  • speculation on King Hussein's actions in Khurma and the implications for Britain's policy in the region;
  • a copy of a memorandum from the Foreign Office's Political Intelligence Department, entitled 'Memorandum on British Commitments to Bin Saud';
  • reports of an Ikhwan force advancing towards Mecca, and discussion as to how the British should respond.

This item features the following principal correspondents:

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1 item (300 folios)
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English in Latin script
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File 2182/1913 Pt 8 'Arabia – Policy towards Bin Saud' [‎324r] (232/602), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/10/389/2, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100032845624.0x00003e> [accessed 29 March 2024]

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