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The Arab Bureau: British Policy in the Middle East, 1916-1920

✍ Scribed by Bruce Westrate


Publisher
Penn State University Press
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Leaves
256
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Founded in 1916, the Arab Bureau was a small collection of British intelligence officers headquartered in Cairo and charged with the task of coordinating imperial intelligence activities in the Middle East. It is most often remembered for its flamboyant cast of characters, particularly T. E. Lawrence, and its role in instigating the Arab Revolt to break Turkish control over the Arab-speaking Middle East. From the beginning, however, the Bureau was vilified within imperial circles as a group of amateurish and incompetent pro-Arab dilettantes. And ever since, it has borne much of the blame for Britain's terrible mishandling of Middle Eastern policy during and shortly after World War I. In this first full-length study of the Arab Bureau, Bruce Westrate challenges these stereotypes and reassesses the role that the Bureau actually played within imperial policy-making circles that stretched from London to Cairo to Delhi. Through close analysis of personal papers and Foreign Office records, including Arab Bureau documents, Westrate concludes that Bureau members were in fact sober-minded strategists who were skillfully working to secure the region for imperial interests.

✦ Table of Contents


Contents
Preface
Introduction: Images of the Arab Bureau
1 Flawed Foundations
2 Profile of a β€œBrilliant Constellation”
3 Growing Pains: The Hajj, Rabegh, and Monsieur Bremond
4 The Way of Wrong Impressions: The Arab Bureau and the Raj
5 Wrapping Bananas: The Arab Bureau’s Propaganda Dimension
6 A Stake in Disorder: In Pursuit of Arabian Balance
7 Discordant Mosaic: The Bureau and Arab Unity
8 β€œUn Fait Accompli”: The Bureau, the French, and Syria
9 Unease in a Promised Land: The Arab Bureau and Palestine
10 Demise and Eclipse
Conclusion: Triumph of Perversity
Notes
Bibliography
Index


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