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File 2182/1913 Pt 9 'Arabia Policy towards Bin Saud' [‎136r] (269/406)

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The record is made up of 1 item (203 folios). It was created in 27 Dec 1918-2 Jun 1919. 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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/
1
To—
Bt. Lt.-Col. A. T. Wilson, C.M.G., C.I.E., D.S.O.,
Officiating Civil Commissioner for the
Occupied Territories in Iraq,
TV vr 01 q Baghdad.
" ^ ‘ Bated Baghdad, the 12th Nov.. 1918.
Sir,
i • , T 1 llave honour to submit a report on the operations of the Mission,
Inch I was privileged to conduct into Central Arabia to treat with His
Excellency the Imam, Abdul Aziz ibn Abdul Rahman ibn Faisal al Saud,
i- ru f of J N i t JD an . d . lt 1 s dependencies, of certain matters of mutual
import to himself and the British Government in pursuance of the instruc
tions ot His Majesty s Government communicated to Sir Percv Cox in a
telegram, dated the 20th October, 1917, from the Secretary of State for India
•,. reports cover a period of almost exactly one calendar vear, beginning
with the Mission s departure from Baghdad on the 29th October, 1917, and
-ending on the 1st November, 1918, when I arrived at Baghdad on my return
rom Central Arabia on the closing down of the Mission’s operations.
I have deemed it convenient to abandon any attempt at a chronological
narrative of the Mission s work in favour of a full and separate discussion of
the various problems which have called for consideration during the period
under report. Furthermore considerations of space have deterred me from
including m this review any detailed account of mv journeyings in Arabia or
ot the geographical and other incidental results obtained in the course thereof
except m so far as may be necessary to elucidate the matters with which the
Mission was more directly concerned. I have already contributed brief
accounts ot some of my journeys for publication in the Arab Bulletin, and I
look iorward now to a period of leisure wherein to sort out and arrange in a
form suitable for publication the copious notes which I have collected on a
'variety ot interesting subjects during my long sojourn in Arabia.
. 2. Previous Relations between Britain and Najd.
P/j, 01 * to the outbreak of the Great War there had for obvious reasons been
but little official intercourse between the British authorities and the rulers of
JNajd. Apart from the fanatical inhospitality and aloofness of the people
themselves the long-standing friendship of Britain and Turkey precluded anv-
thmg like political recognition by the former of the latter’s rebellious and
independent dependency.
Indeed the first occasion on which a British Officer visited Najd in an
0 cia capacity v as when 99 years ago Lt. Sadlier, deputed for the purpose
•i . Jx udian Government, traversed the devastated territories of the Wah
abi Fmpire with the sole object of conveying to the destroyer the congratula-
10 ns o overnment on his handiwork and of urging him to take drastic pre-
■ cautions against a revival of the Wahhabi power. Fortunately Ibrahim Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
an 086 or whom he acted were not men to take good advice, and if the
purpose ot Ft. badiier s mission ever became known in Arabia it had certainly
been forgotten before the next British Mission visited Riyadh.
That was in 1865 when Colonel Lewis Pelly, who, as Political Resident A senior ranking political representative (equivalent to a Consul General) from the diplomatic corps of the Government of India or one of its subordinate provincial governments, in charge of a Political Residency. in
tbe i ersian Gulf, had been called upon to deal with matters arising out of
tiie piracy and slave trade still practised on the Arabian shore of the Persian
Guit decided on his own initiative to visit the Wahhabi Monarch with a
small informed Mission. His reception by Fasal ibn Saud and his Wazir Minister. was
not encouraging; and the British Mission returned to the coast being conscious
ia , t lough much had been learned, little had been accomplished in the direc
tion of establishing permanent friendly relations with the Wahhabi Court.
There ensued a long break in official intercourse between Britain and
1 Av ’ w i Se ^tunes during the interval were rudely shaken by the aggression
of the newly risen Rashid dynasty at Hail. Riyadh and all its provinces were
occupied by Muhammad ibn Rashid and the Saud family sought refuge at
p 'nu lW j lt x^ 11 G e -»r e Y^ ere 011 ^ ie coast where they remained in exile until 1902.
ibe death of Muhammad ibn Rashid in 1898 and the recovery of Riyadh and
its provinces four years later by their present ruler were followed by a period
of consolidation during which the ambitions of Ibn Saud in the direction of
asa and the difficulties in which he became involved with the Turks disposed
nm to look with friendly eyes on the power which he had learned to know as
the protector of Kuwait, and Captain W. H. C. Shakespear, I.A., Political

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Part 9 primarily concerns the dispute between Bin Saud [‘Abd al-‘Azīz bin ‘Abd al-Raḥmān bin Fayṣal Āl Sa‘ūd] and King Hussein of Hejaz [Ḥusayn bin ‘Alī al-Hāshimī, King of Hejaz], and British policy towards both. The item includes the following:

  • a note by 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. 's Political Department, entitled 'Arabia: The Nejd-Hejaz Feud', which laments the fact that relations between Bin Saud and King Hussein have to some extent been reflected in the views of the two administrations with which they have respectively been brought into contact (i.e. the sphere of Mesopotamia and the Government of India in Bin Saud's case, and the Cairo administration in King Hussein's case);
  • reports on the presence of Akhwan [Ikhwan] forces in Khurma and debate as to which ruler has the stronger claim to it;
  • attempts by the British to ascertain whether or not a treaty exists between King Hussein and Bin Saud;
  • a copy of a report by Harry St John Bridger Philby entitled 'Report on Najd Mission 1917-1918', which includes as appendices a précis of British relations with Bin Saud and a copy of the 1915 treaty between Bin Saud and the British government;
  • reports of alleged correspondence between Bin Saud and Fakhri Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. , Commander of the Turkish [Ottoman] forces at Medina;
  • reports of the surrender of Medina by Ottoman forces;
  • discussion as to whether Britain should intervene further in the dispute between Bin Saud and King Hussein;
  • details of the proposals discussed at an inter-departmental conference on Middle Eastern affairs, which was held at Cairo in February 1919;
  • reports that King Hussein's son Abdulla [ʿAbdullāh bin al-Ḥusayn] and his forces have been attacked at Tarabah [Turabah] by Akhwan forces and driven out.

The principal correspondents are the following:

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1 item (203 folios)
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English in Latin script
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File 2182/1913 Pt 9 'Arabia Policy towards Bin Saud' [‎136r] (269/406), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/10/390/1, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100036528095.0x00004d> [accessed 6 May 2024]

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