Enemy on the Euphrates - Ian Rutledge - E-Book

Enemy on the Euphrates E-Book

Ian Rutledge

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Beschreibung

In 1920 an Arab revolt came perilously close to inflicting a shattering defeat upon the British Empire's forces occupying Iraq after the Great War. A huge peasant army besieged British garrisons and bombarded them with captured artillery. British columns and armoured trains were ambushed and destroyed, and gunboats were captured or sunk. Britain's quest for oil was one of the principal reasons for its continuing occupation of Iraq. However, with around 131,000 Arabs in arms at the height of the conflict, the British were very nearly driven out. Only a massive infusion of Indian troops prevented a humiliating rout. Enemy on the Euphrates is the definitive account of the most serious armed uprising against British rule in the twentieth century. Bringing central players such as Winston Churchill, T. E. Lawrence and Gertrude Bell vividly to life, Ian Rutledge's masterful account is a powerful reminder of how Britain's imperial objectives sowed the seeds of Iraq's tragic history.

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ENEMY ON THE EUPHRATES

 

 

ENEMY

ON THE

EUPHRATES

The British Occupation of Iraqand the Great Arab Revolt 1914–1921

Ian Rutledge

SAQI

 

 

 

Published 2014 by Saqi Books

Copyright © Ian Rutledge 2014

ISBN 978 0 86356 762 9eISBN 978 0 86356 767 4

Ian Rutledge has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the author of this work.

This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

Every effort has been made to obtain necessary permission with reference to copyright material. The publishers apologise if inadvertently any sources remain unacknowledged and will be happy to correct this in any future editions.

First published 2014 in Great Britain by

Saqi Books26 Westbourne GroveLondon W2 5RH

www.saqibooks.co.uk

A full CIP record for this book is available from the British Library.

Printed and bound by Bookwell in Finland

 

 

 

For Diana, as always.

And for my beloved children,Joanna, Daniel, Zoe and Emilie

 

 

 

What we want is some kind of modicum of Arab institutions which we can safely leave while pulling the strings ourselves, something which won’t cost very much … but in which our influence and political and economic interests will be secure.

Sir Arthur Hirtzel, February 1920

Whereas most westerners have no knowledge of the 1920 uprising, generations of Iraqi schoolchildren have grown up learning how nationalist heroes stood up against foreign armies and imperialism in towns like Falluja, Baquba and Najaf – the Iraqi equivalents of Lexington and Concord.

Eugene Rogan, The Arabs: A History

Contents

List of Illustrations

List of Maps

Note on Arabic Transliteration

Glossary

Abbreviations

Preface

The Principal Actors

PART ONE: INVASION, JIHAD AND OCCUPATION

1    Indications of Oil

2    Lieutenant Wilson’s First Mission

3    ‘Protect the oil refineries’

4    Arab Mobilisation on the Euphrates

5    The Jihad Defeated

6    Pacifying Arabistan

7    Imperial Objectives in the East

8    The Menace of Jihad and How to Deal with It

9    The Lieutenant from Mosul

10  The Peculiar Origins of an Infamous Agreement

11  Two British Defeats but a New Ally

12  Colonel Leachman and Captain Lawrence

13  Mosul and Oil

14  ‘Complete liberation’

15  Najaf 1918:First Uprising on the Euphrates

16  Britain’s New Colony

17  The Oil Agreements

18  The Independence Movement in Baghdad

19  General Haldane’s Difficult Posting

20  Trouble on the Frontiers

PART TWO: REVOLUTION AND SUPPRESSION

21  The Drift to Violence

22  The Revolution Begins

23  Discord and Disputation

24  General Haldane’s Indian Army

25  ‘The situation has come to a head’

26  The Destruction of the Manchester Column

27  ‘Further unfavourable developments’

28  The Structures of Insurgent Power

29  Trouble on the Home Front

30  The Siege of Samawa

31  Defeat

32  A Death on the Baghdad Road

33  The Punishment

34  A ‘friendly native state’

Afterword

Appendix: Some Biographical Notes

Acknowledgements

Notes

Bibliography

Image Credits

Index

List of Illustrations

Sir Mark Sykes, 1913

Churchill as First Lord of the Admiralty, 1912

Lord Kitchener, War Minister 1914–1916

Captain Arnold Wilson, 1916

Colonel Gerard Leachman, c.1912

T. E. Lawrence, 1918

Gertrude Bell, 1921

Ja‘far Abu al-Timman, c.1920

Sheikh ‘Abd al-Wahid al-Sikar, 1918

General Aylmer Haldane, 1921

Indian cavalry on patrol, c.1918

A Rolls Royce armoured car, used in Iraq in the 1920s

A DH9A aircraft

The gunboat HMS Firefly

Sayyid Muhsin Abu Tabikh, c.1924

List of Maps

The Ottoman Empire c.1900

Iraq, within Its Postwar Mandate Borders, and Neighbouring Regions of Syria, Turkey and Persia

Sykes’s 1915 Proposed Scheme for the ‘Decentralisation’ of the Ottoman Empire’s Eastern Possessions

The Division of the Ottoman Empire’s Eastern Possessions According to the Sykes-Picot Agreement 1916

The Division of the Ottoman Empire’s Eastern Possessions into the British and French Mandates 1920

The Middle Euphrates Region, Epicentre of the 1920 Revolution

The Scene of the Manchester Column Disaster, July 1920: the Camp on the Rustumiyya Canal

Note on Arabic Transliteration

This has been kept as simple as possible. The symbol ‘has been used for the letter ‘ayn and ’ for the glottal stop hamza. The feminine ending taa marbuta has simply been rendered as a final a (not ‘ah’ or ‘at’). No subscript or superscript marks have been used. When an Arabic word or name which has entered the English lexicon appears, its customary English spelling has been retained (e.g. sheikh, not shaykh).

Glossary

agha

Turkish title equivalent to Arabic ‘sheikh’.

al-‘Ahd

The Pledge. Secret organisation of Ottoman army officers opposed to Turkish domination, formed shortly before outbreak of the First World War.

al-‘Ahd al-‘Iraqi

Branch of al-‘Ahd formed after the end of the First World War and dedicated to some form of Independence in Iraq; generally more moderate than Haras al-Istiqlal and willing to seek accommodation with British interests.

ayalet

Name for a region of the Ottoman Empire. The system of ayalets was abolished in 1864 and replaced by a greater number of smaller vilayets. The term was resurrected in Mark Sykes’s proposals for the De Bunsen Committee in 1915.

bellum

Small, double-bowed, flat-bottomed Iraqi river vessel with a draught of less than eighteen inches, paddled, or powered by punt-pole; similar to but usually larger than the mashuf.

bey

Ottoman (Turkish) honorific title, in its military usage meaning a high-ranking officer, but subordinate to a pasha.

budoo

British Army slang for Bedouin. Generally, a term of abuse for all Iraqi tribal Arabs.

caliph

Successor to the leadership of the Islamic community. (

See also

Shi‘i and Sunni.)

Dar al-Hujja

Conference hall of the Grand Mujtahid in Karbela’. Literally, ‘House of Religious Debate’.

division (1)

Administrative region in British-occupied Iraq of which there were sixteen in 1920.

division (2)

Unit of the British Army usually comprising three brigades and commanded by a major general.

fatwa

In shari‘a law, a decision made by a qualified person e.g. a mujtahid; it may constitute a legal precedent.

faylaq

A corps in the Ottoman army.

Haras al-Istiqlal

The Independence Guards – a nationalist organisation based in Baghdad.

havildar

Rank assigned to Indian soldiers in the British Imperial Indian Army, equivalent to sergeant.

Hejaz

The western part of the present-day state of Saudi Arabia, bordering the Red Sea.

heliograph

A means of military communication using a wireless solar telegraph that signals by flashes of sunlight (generally using Morse code) reflected by a mirror.

Istanbul

Capital of the Ottoman Empire on the European side of the Bosphorus. In 1920 the British still referred to it by its Christian name – Constantinople.

Jam‘iyya al-Arabiyya al-Fatat

The Young Arab Society – a secret organisation for the promotion of Arab interests within the Ottoman Empire, established before the First World War. Some of its members desired an independent Arab state.

Jam‘iyya al-‘Iraqiyya al-‘Arabiyya

A nationalist organisation based in the mid-Euphrates region which favoured an alliance with Mustafa Kemal and the Bolsheviks.

Jam‘iyya al-Nahda al-Islamiyya

The Islamic Renaissance Movement – a small, secret organisation formed in Najaf in 1918, dedicated to the expulsion of the British from Iraq.

Jam‘iyya al-Takhlis al-Sharq al-Islami

Organisation for the Liberation of the Muslim East. Bolshevik Organisation set up under the aegis of the Eastern Department of Narkomindel (People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs) whose function was to encourage the resistance of the Muslim peoples against European domination.

jemadar

Rank assigned to Indian soldiers in the British Imperial Indian Army, equivalent to second lieutenant.

jihad

A war or campaign in defence of Islam.

khan

Guest house for Muslim pilgrims or other travellers.

Khedivate

An autonomous tributary state of the Ottoman Empire. The British retained the name after they had effectively taken control of Egypt in 1882.

kufiyya

Typical headdress of tribal Arabs.

levies

British-officered Arab or Kurdish auxiliary troops.

madhbata

In this context, a set of demands or petition.

madrasa

An Islamic school, either religious or secular.

mahalla

A city quarter or district. Each of Najaf’s mahallas had its own headman and legal code.

mahayla

Iraqi river boat with lateen sail, between fifty and eighty feet in length and with a draught of between three and four feet; also known as a safina.

mandate

The right of control over a defeated enemy territory but with the assumption that the mandatory power will prepare it for eventual independence. In practice, a mandated territory was little more than a protectorate.

mashuf

Very small canoe-like Iraqi river vessel typical of the marsh lands, similar to but usually smaller than the bellum.

maulud

Celebration of the birth of the Prophet Muhammad.

memsahib

‘Respectable lady’; term used by Indians to denote European wives.

mirza

Honorific title of Persian origin, literally ‘prince’ but, more generally, ‘sir’.

monitor

A shallow-draught warship with heavy guns for coastal bombardment.

mujahid(in)

Person(s) fighting on behalf of Islam.

mujtahid(in)

Senior Shi‘i cleric(s), qualified to make independent decisions based on Islamic jurisprudence and theology.

mukarrama

Meaning ‘venerated’, ‘revered’, an epithet customarily used for the holy city of Mecca.

mulazim

Second lieutenant in the Ottoman army.

mulazim awwal

First lieutenant in the Ottoman army.

mutasarrif

Senior Ottoman official, usually translated as ‘governor’.

mutasarriflik

Administrative region of Ottoman Empire which (unlike the vilayet) was directly under control of Ottoman Ministry of the Interior. (Also known as a sanjak.)

Noperforce

North Persia Force – the contingent of British troops stationed in North Persia to defend the Persian Government against Bolshevik and nationalist forces.

pasha

Ottoman (Turkish) honorific military title meaning ‘general’.

qadi

Muslim judge administering shari‘a law.

qahwaji

A tribal sheikh's coffee maker, but also, often, his advisor and assistant

qishla

Turkish word for fort.

Qur’an

Islam’s holy book.

risaldar

Indian cavalry officer in British Imperial Indian Army equivalent to captain

safina

See

mahayla.

sanjak

See

mutasarriflik.

sayyid (pl. sada)

Lineal descendant of the Prophet Muhammad through his grandson Husayn ibn ‘Ali (Shi‘i usage). The authenticity of such claims may be questionable.

See also

sharif.

Sayyid al-Shuhada’

‘The Prince of Martyrs’, one of the Shi‘i titles for the Imam Husayn (

see

sayyid).

Senussi

A Muslim political and religious order in Libya and the Sudan. Fought against the Italian occupation in 1911 and against the British between 1915 and 1917.

sepoy

Indian infantryman in British Imperial Indian Army.

serai

Turkish word for palace. In this context meaning local administrative headquarters of the government.

shabana

Arab police in British service.

shamal

The prevalent north wind in Iraq which brings hot dry air in the summer and cool moist air during the winter.

shari‘a (law)

Islamic jurisprudence, of which there are four Sunni schools and three Shi‘i schools.

Sharif (of Mecca)

Senior Ottoman official responsible for the holy cities of Mecca and Medina; appointed directly by the Ottoman sultan from among high noble (sharif) families.

sharif (pl. ashraf)

Lineal descendant of the Prophet Muhammad through his grandson Hasan ibn ‘Ali (Sunni usage). The authenticity of such claims may be questionable.

See also

sayyid.

Shi‘i

The minority and second largest sect of Islam. Also the name for an adherent of the Shi‘i sect of Islam. Shi‘i Muslims believe that God (through his Prophet Muhammad) chose Muhammad’s closest living male relative, his cousin and son-in-law, ‘Ali ibn ‘Abu Talib, to be his rightful successor and subsequently through the family line of ‘Ali’s son, Husayn.

sirdab

An undergound living room whose cooler atmosphere provides relief from excessive summer heat.

sowar

Indian cavalryman in the British Imperial Indian Army.

Sunni

The majority and largest sect of Islam. Also the name for an adherent of the Sunni sect of Islam. Sunni Muslims believe that Muhammad decreed that his rightful successor was to be chosen from among the Prophet’s companions (regardless of family relationship). Although Sunnis recognise ‘Ali as one of the four ‘rightfully guided’ caliphs, he is the fourth one, rather than the first (as in Shi‘i Islam).

‘ulema’

Generic term for Islamic clergy whether Sunni or Shi‘i.

vali

Ottoman governor of a vilayet.

vilayet

Administrative region of Ottoman Empire, ruled by a vali; originally derived from Arabic

wilaya

. In the case of Iraq, there were three vilayets: Basra, Baghdad and Mosul.

Wahhabi

Puritanical sect of Sunni Islam founded by Muhammad ibn ‘Abd al-Wahhab in the eighteenth century and revived under the aegis of the Emir ‘Abd al-‘Aziz ibn Sa‘ud in the early twentieth century; fiercely anti-Shi‘i.

Abbreviations

ADC

Aide-de-camp; military officer acting as personal assistant to one of higher rank.

APO

Assistant political officer: junior administrative official of the British Empire, usually a military officer with the rank of lieutenant or captain.

AT (wagons)

Animal transport wagons pulled by mules, used extensively in the Indian Army.

AT (Wilson)

Affectionate nickname for Arnold Talbot Wilson used by his staff.

CIE

Commander of the Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire: military decoration of the Imperial Indian Empire.

CMG

Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George: an order of chivalry awarded by the monarch for some distinguished service (military or civilian) to Britain or the British Empire.

CUP

Committee of Union and Progress. Political organisation which overthrew the despotic Ottoman government of Sultan Abdul Hamid in 1908. Initially democratic in orientation, by 1913 the CUP had become a virtual dictatorship of its three leading members: Enver Pasha, Djemal Pasha and Talat Pasha.

DSO

Distinguished Service Order: military decoration in the British Army.

GHQ

General headquarters (of the British Army on campaign).

GOC(-in-chief)

General officer commanding (of a particular city, region, etc.). The GOC-in-chief, typically a general or lieutenant general, is the highest ranking British officer in a particular theatre of war.

LAMB

Light armoured motor battery: a squadron of four armoured cars.

MC

Military Cross: military decoration in the British Army.

NCO

Non-commissioned officer, e.g. sergeant or corporal.

PIPCO

Petroleum Imperial Policy Committee.

PO

Political officer: administrative official of the British Empire, usually a military officer with the rank of major or lieutenant colonel.

Rs

Rupees: Indian currency.

RUMCOL

Rumaytha relief column.

SAMCOL

Samawa relief column.

TPC

Turkish Petroleum Company.

Preface

Between July 1920 and February 1921, in the territory then known to the British as Mesopotamia – the modern state of Iraq – an Arab uprising occurred which came perilously close to inflicting a shattering defeat upon the British Empire. The story of this uprising is one which once engaged the closest of attention among the British public but over many decades slipped back into the mists of exclusively academic history, almost completely erased from the collective memory.1 And so it would have remained had it not been for the ill-fated US invasion of Iraq in 2003. Once the ‘insurgency’ against the subsequent occupation had begun, it wasn’t long before a much older, forgotten insurgency in Iraq came to light with journalists, historians and even functionaries of the US occupation drawing lessons and making comparisons – some appropriate, some less so – with that much earlier event.2 At the same time some of those fighting the Americans and their allies in Iraq began to portray their own violent resistance to foreign intervention by referencing that armed struggle in which some of their grandparents might have participated.3

To the vast majority of European and American historians of the twentieth-century Middle East, the ‘Arab Revolt’ has usually meant ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ and the pro-British rebellion of the Sharif of Mecca and his sons against the Turks during the First World War. However, in reality, this pro-British ‘Arab Revolt’ was a fairly puny affair involving only a fraction of the Arab combatants taking part in the anti-British revolt which took place in Iraq a mere eighteen months after the end of the war.

Indeed, the insurrection in Iraq of 1920, measured in enemy combatant numbers, was the most serious armed uprising against British rule in the twentieth century. At the height of the rebellion the British estimated that around 131,000 Arabs were in arms against them. Estimates by Iraqi historians are considerably greater – in one account around 567,000.4 By way of comparison, the British faced perhaps a maximum of 120,000 rebel fighters in the Kenyan ‘Mau Mau’ rebellion of 1952–6,5 15,000 rebel combatants during the Irish war of independence 1919–21, around 10,000 ‘regular’ Arab fighters during the Palestine insurrection of 1936–9, a similar number of jihadis in the second ‘Mad Mullah’ rebellion in Somalia in 1907–20, 8,000 guerrillas of the Communist Malayan Races Liberation Army supported by around 30–40,000 civilian support and supply forces during the Malayan ‘Emergency’ of 1948–60, and a mere 300–500 Greek EOKA fighters during the Cyprus emergency of the 1950s. As for Lawrence’s pro-British Arab Revolt in 1916–18, the maximum number of Bedouin mobilised never exceeded 27,000, supported by around 12,000 deserters from the Ottoman army; and of the Bedouin, only a small minority actually took part in combat operations.6

Moreover, unlike Lawrence’s ‘Arab Revolt’, the insurrection of 1920 was no affair of sporadic guerrilla fighting. It was a war: one in which a huge peasant army led by Shi‘i clerics, Baghdad notables, disaffected sheikhs and former Ottoman army officers and NCOs surrounded and besieged British garrisons with sandbagged entrenchments and bombarded them with captured artillery; where British columns and armoured trains were ambushed and destroyed; where well-armed British gunboats were burned or captured; a war in which the insurgents established their own system of government and administration in the ‘liberated zones’ centred on the two ‘holy’ cities of Najaf and Karbela’: a war which, at one stage, Britain came very close to losing and which was won only with the help of a massive infusion of Indian troops and, especially towards the end of the campaign, the widespread use of aircraft.

In addition to tracing the course of this great anti-colonial revolt, we also consider why it occurred and, in particular, why the epicentre of the uprising against the British was on the second of the two great Mesopotamian rivers – the Euphrates. Political events in Baghdad also made an important contribution to the revolt and, at its height, some of the tribes to the west and north-east of the capital also joined the uprising; nevertheless, it was on the middle reaches of the Euphrates and in the two ‘holy’ cities of Najaf and Karbala’ that the British faced the most violent and sustained opposition. Conversely, large areas bordering the River Tigris remained largely unaffected by the events of 1920–21.

What was it, therefore, about the mid-Euphrates region which made its more than half a million inhabitants so bitterly opposed to the continuing British occupation of Iraq after the Great War had ended? To answer this question we need to explore the region’s social, religious and political characteristics and the specific experiences of its sheikhs, tribesmen and Muslim clergy during both the war and its immediate aftermath.7

During the early stages of the First World War in the Middle East, this densely populated and predominantly Shi‘i part of Iraq became the major recruiting ground for the Ottoman jihad against the British invasion, a campaign in which – for a time – the Arab tribes threw their considerable weight behind the military operations of their Turkish overlords. However, after the defeat of the jihad in April 1915, the mid-Euphrates region enjoyed a two-year respite of almost complete freedom from both British and Turkish control and its inhabitants experienced an unprecedented period of anarchic independence. As a consequence, the imposition of British rule at the end of the Great War – in spite of wartime promises of ‘complete liberation’ – was felt to be particularly onerous among the region’s landlords and peasants alike. The manner in which this resentment grew and gradually came to express itself in armed resistance therefore forms a central part of our story. And, perhaps not surprisingly, it was from the ranks of the 1914–15 mujahidin that some of the foremost tribal leaders of the 1920 uprising emerged.

Finally, in discussing the causes of the 1920 uprising, some serious consideration must also be given to the reasons why – two years after the defeat of the Ottoman armies – Britain was still occupying Iraq and appeared to have every intention of remaining in de facto control for many years to come. This was in spite of the fact that in 1920 public opinion in Britain itself was strongly opposed to any continuing involvement in the Middle East generally and in Iraq in particular.

Although the men who ran Britain’s great empire quarrelled bitterly about exactly how Iraq should be held in the imperial grasp, they were generally agreed about why. When Britain, France and Russia went to war with Germany and Austro-Hungary in August 1914, these Great Powers did not have any plans to permanently dismember and retain each other’s territory (with the exception of France’s desire to recover Alsace-Lorraine – lost to the Germans in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71). But when the Ottoman Empire entered the war as an ally of Germany at the end of October 1914, the Allies had no such reservations about carving up that vast and venerable empire. After all, in the conventional European imperialist mindset, the Ottomans – Turks, Arabs, and Kurds – were ‘Orientals’ with a long history of lassitude, improvidence, corruption and cruelty and could not be allowed to continue to govern themselves in such an irresponsible manner. So, by early 1915, Russia had made it clear that, when the Ottomans were defeated, it expected to receive their capital, Istanbul, along with the Turkish Straits and two islands in the northern Aegean. France and Britain were therefore invited to identify which parts of the Ottoman Empire they would like to acquire.

The response of the British government was rather more subtle. It wasn’t so much territory Britain required (although that might eventually be necessary) but economic opportunities and access to natural resources. Perhaps these could be obtained without the actual partitioning of the Ottoman Empire? – at least that was the initial view of the government committee established to consider the matter in April 1915. And of all those tempting economic prospects which that committee considered, there was one to which its deliberations devoted more attention than any other – oil: specifically, the potentially huge oil resources which were believed to exist in the Ottoman vilayets of Baghdad and Mosul. In short, Britain’s presence in Iraq, which was initially prompted by threats to its nascent oil industry at the head of the Arabian Gulf, might need to be perpetuated for a number of years until suitable arrangements had been made for those, as yet unexplored, oil reserves to fall into the hands of British-controlled companies.

For a time – during the middle years of the Great War – this imperial quest for oil slackened somewhat as other, conflicting, objectives came to the fore, in particular the complexities of satisfying the territorial demands not only of Britain’s existing ally, France, but also those of a new ally, the Sharif of Mecca. However, by 1917 it had become clear to all that the nature of war had fundamentally changed: henceforth wars would be increasingly mechanised and oil-fuelled. Indeed, as the secretary to the Committee for Imperial Defence put it, ‘oil in the next war will occupy the place of coal in the present.’ Therefore, obtaining ‘possession of all the oil-bearing regions in Mesopotamia and Southern Persia’ would be ‘a first class British war aim’.

So, by early 1918 the War Office was conducting detailed geological surveys of Iraq’s petroleum resources in those parts of Iraq already under British occupation and, as hostilities came to an end in November of that year, the British government ensured that the frontiers of their new ‘friendly native state’ would encompass all those parts of ‘Mesopotamia’ which were believed to contain oil.

None of this is to claim that oil was the only motivating force behind British military and diplomatic policy towards Iraq as the First World War drew to a close: establishing a secure air route to India, countering the new ‘threat’ of Bolshevism and simply maintaining imperial prestige were also factors requiring some form of control over Iraq for the foreseeable future. Nevertheless, as our story will demonstrate, the ‘imperial quest for oil’ runs like a sinuous black thread through this particular piece of historical tapestry during the years 1914 to 1921, and beyond.

The Principal Actors

The British

GERTRUDE LOWTHIAN BELL

Arabist, explorer, travel writer. In 1920, oriental secretary in Baghdad. Originally an ally of Wilson but later turned against him. Friend of Lawrence.

WINSTON CHURCHILL

First Lord of the Admiralty, responsible for the part-nationalisation of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company in 1913. Resigned from the Liberal government after the failure of the Gallipoli campaign in 1915. In 1920, minister of war in the coalition government, where he was responsible for dealing with the revolution in Iraq.

SIR PERCY COX

Chief political officer in Iraq during the Great War. High commissioner for Iraq after his return to Baghdad in October 1920.

LIEUTENANT GENERAL AYLMER HALDANE

Commander-in-chief of British forces in occupied Iraq, 1920–21.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL MAURICE HANKEY

Secretary to successive War Cabinets. Friend and political ally of Sir Mark Sykes. Member of the De Bunsen Committee which established Britain’s economic objectives in the war against the Ottoman Empire.

COLONEL T.E. LAWRENCE

Self-aggrandising hero of the Arab Revolt against the Turks in the Hejaz in 1916–18. Between 1918 and July 1920 close confidant of Emir Faysal, ruling a semi-independent Arab government in Syria. By 1920 a fierce critic of Arnold Wilson’s administration in Iraq.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL GERARD LEACHMAN

Senior political officer responsible for the Dulaym Division in occupied Iraq.

MAJOR GENERAL GEORGE A.J. LESLIE

Second in command in Iraq at the time of the uprising. Commander of the Anglo-Indian troops in the key, mid-Euphrates region until his dismissal by Haldane in November 1920.

JOHN LYLE MACKAY, LORD INCHCAPE

Self-made businessman with strong government contacts and ambitions to control shipping on the Tigris and Euphrates. One of the two government-appointed directors on the board of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company.

SIR MARK SYKES

Catholic Tory landowner and amateur orientalist. Together with Hankey, a member of the De Bunsen Committee. In 1918, author of the Baghdad Declaration and the Anglo-French Declaration, both offering self-rule in Iraq.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL ARNOLD T. WILSON

Indian Army political officer and acting civil commissioner (head of the occupation administration) in Iraq until October 1920. Later, managing director of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company.

The Arabs

EMIR ‘ABDALLAH

Second son of Emir Husayn al-Hashimi, Sharif of Mecca. In early 1920 he was the favoured candidate of the nationalists to lead an independent Iraq.

JA‘FAR AL-‘ASKARI

Iraqi-born Ottoman army officer and member of the secret anti-Turkish organisation al-‘Ahd who deserted to the British during the war. Returned to Iraq towards the end of the 1920 revolution to become defence minister in a puppet government controlled by Britain. Brother-in-law of Nuri al-Sa’id.

‘ALI AL-BAZIRGAN

Former Ottoman official and leading member of the nationalist Haras al-Istiqlal. One of the founders of the Ahliyya public school in Baghdad whose teachers and alumni agitated against the British occupation.

LIEUTENANT MUHAMMAD SHARIF AL-FARUQI

Junior officer from Mosul in the Ottoman army and member of al-‘Ahd, the secret society of (mainly Iraqi) Arab officers opposed to the Turkish dictatorship. Defected to the British during the war. Returned to Iraq towards the end of the 1920 uprising.

EMIR FAYSAL

Third son of Husayn, Sharif of Mecca. Protégé of Lawrence during and after the Arab Revolt against the Turks. Emir of semi-independent Arab state of Syria (1918–20). In 1921, placed on the throne of Iraq in a move engineered by Churchill, Bell and Lawrence.

EMIR HUSAYN AL-HASHIMI

Sharif of Mecca and, later, King of the Hejaz. In late 1920 his short-lived kingdom provided sanctuary for some of the leaders of the Iraqi insurrection, including Ja‘far Abu al-Timman, Yusuf Suwaydi and Sayyid Muhsin Abu Tabikh, but avoided providing any material aid to the uprising for fear of losing British political support.

SHEIKH AL-SHARI‘A AL-ISBAHANI

Senior mujtahid of Persian origin based at Najaf who took over leadership of the uprising after the death of Mirza Muhammad Taqi al-Shirazi.

MIRZA MUHAMMAD RIDHA

Son of the Grand Mujtahid Mirza Muhammad Taqi al-Shirazi. President of al-Jam‘iyya al-‘Iraqiyya al-‘Arabiyya which stood for Iraqi collaboration with the Turkish nationalist leader Mustafa Kemal and the Bolsheviks. Exiled to Persia by the British in 1920 before the outbreak of the insurrection.

NURI AL-SA’ID

Iraqi-born junior Ottoman army officer and member of the secret anti-Turkish organisation al-‘Ahd who deserted to the British during the war. Returned to Iraq towards the end of the 1920 insurrection after offering his services to the British in crushing the uprising. Brother-in-law of Ja‘far al-‘Askari.

SAYYID MUHAMMAD AL-SADR

Son of the Kadhimayn mujtahid Sayyid Hasan al-Sadr. Along with ‘Ali al-Bazirgan, one of the founders of the Ahliyya public school in Baghdad, a hotbed of nationalist agitation. Leading member of the nationalist Haras al-Istiqlal and insurgent commander during the insurrection.

MIRZA MUHAMMAD TAQI AL-SHIRAZI

Shi‘i Grand Mujtahid of Persian origin and spiritual leader of the 1920 uprising. Died in August 1920 in Karbela’ at the height of the rebellion.

YUSUF AL-SUWAYDI

Elderly Baghdad Sunni notable and leading member of the nationalist Haras al-Istiqlal.

SAYYID MUHSIN ABU TABIKH

Wealthy landowning sayyid and veteran of the jihad against the British invasion in 1914–15. One of the principal leaders of the uprising in the mid-Euphrates region, he was appointed mutasarrif, to govern insurgent-controlled territory.

JA‘FAR ABU AL-TIMMAN

Baghdad Shi‘i merchant and one of the most important leaders of the nationalist organisation Haras al-Istiqlal. Campaigned for the Shi‘i and Sunni Muslims to unite against the British occupation.

PART ONE

Invasion, Jihad and Occupation

THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE C.1900, SHOWING THE PREDOMINANTLY ARABIC-SPEAKING VILAYETS AND OTHER ADMINISTRATIVE REGIONS

Sir Mark Sykes, May 1913

1

Indications of Oil

One morning sometime in October 1905 – we don’t know precisely when or where – the twenty-six-year-old Sir Mark Sykes, ‘honorary attaché’ at the British embassy in Istanbul, capital of the Ottoman Empire, made contact with an employee of a German engineering company surveying the territory of northern Iraq for the planned Berlin to Baghdad Railway. Perhaps they met in one of those ubiquitous Istanbul coffee houses, sipping that dark viscous liquid flavoured with cardamom, chatting and smoking just like any pair of European merchants doing a little business. We do know, however, that at some stage in the proceedings, the German gentleman passed a small package to Sykes which he quickly slipped inside his jacket pocket and in return – so we might reasonably surmise – an equally small package containing a sum of money was passed to the German engineer. Back at the embassy, Sir Mark unwrapped the package and checked the contents of the small notebook which it contained. Satisfied that the material he had been promised was actually there, he telephoned the British ambassador, Sir Nicholas R. O’Conor, to arrange an appointment with him at the ambassador’s earliest convenience.

Sir Mark Sykes was no ordinary junior embassy official. He was the only son of Sir Tatton Sykes, an extremely wealthy landowning grandee with estates in the East Riding of Yorkshire. Over the previous ten years he had travelled widely in the territories of the Ottoman Empire and had gained the reputation of being an expert on ‘the East’. Over the next ten years he would become, successively, the Conservative Member for the parliamentary constituency of Hull Central, the commander of the Yorkshire Territorial Army Battalion and the personal representative of the war minister, Lord Herbert Horatio Kitchener of Khartoum, in all matters pertaining to British strategic and commercial interests in the Middle East. By 1916 he would be the government advisor whose opinions, ideals and prejudices were the most influential factor shaping the British Empire’s war aims in the struggle against the Ottoman Empire.

Sykes’s chief, O’Conor, a tall, languid Irish landowner and Britain’s ambassador in Istanbul (which the British persisted in calling Constantinople) since 1898, was rather fond of his earnest young attaché, a fellow Catholic, who seemed happy to relieve him of some of the more tedious diplomatic work. Moreover, in those years before the First World War, O’Conor and Sykes shared a certain affection for the old Ottoman Empire. This once-great multiethnic and multireligious super-state, with a population of 21 million (a third of whom were Arabs) distributed over thirty-three vilayets and stretching from the Balkans to the frontier with Persia, had long since become critically weakened by a combination of war, rebellion, debt and the economic penetration of European capitalism. It was debt in particular that was the Achilles heel of the Ottoman state. Failure to repay immense loans from European banks had resulted in the creation of a European-controlled Ottoman Public Debt Administration which syphoned off the empire’s taxes and customs duties. Britain was part of that organisation, but since the 1850s had also seen the Ottomans as a useful bulwark against tsarist Russia’s attempts to expand south and gain access to the Mediterranean. So in 1905, this affection for Sultan Abdul Hamid II’s ramshackle empire on the part of O’Conor and Sykes was also a reflection of Britain’s longstanding foreign policy.

When Sykes made his telephone call to Sir Nicholas, the ambassador was ensconced aboard his yacht anchored in the Golden Horn, his preferred place of residence. However, in due course he received Sykes’s message and shortly afterwards asked the attaché to join him for dinner. After the meal Sykes was invited to outline the contents of the small notebook he had obtained from the German engineer and which he had meanwhile written up as a detailed memorandum. The ambassador was impressed and the following day, 15 October 1905, he dispatched Sykes’s document to the Foreign Office, with a covering note of his own and marked ‘SECRET’.1

Ten days later, Mr Richard P. Maxwell, senior clerk in the Commercial Department of the Foreign Office, selected a dossier from the pile upon his desk and read the following:

SECRET. From H.M. Ambassador in Constantinople. ‘Report on the Petroliferous Districts of the Vilayets of Baghdad, Mosul and Bitlis; prepared by Sir Mark Sykes, Hon. Attaché.

The following accounts of the various Petroleum springs and asphalt deposits have been compiled from a report made to the Imperial Ottoman Government by an Engineer dispatched to the above mentioned Vilayets in 1901. The large map shows the distribution of the springs and deposits, the red Roman Numerals corresponding with the numbers scheduled in the following order. Where obtainable a large scale sketch has been appended to the verbal description showing the nature of the locality described.2

Maxwell ploughed on,

No. I, Bohtan. 30 Kilometres up the Bohtan river … No. II Sairt … No. III Zakho … No. VI Baba Gurgur … The Petroleum Springs of Baba Gurgur are among the richest and most workable in the Vilayet of Mosul. They are situated in the vicinity of Kirkuk, being about 6 miles from the town at the foot of the Shuan Hills. They cover an area of about half a hectare and owing to the great heat are constantly burning, the petroleum in this zone seems limited to an area of 25 hectares, but still the deposits [are] of great promise.3

There followed descriptions of a further nine petroleum deposits, at the end of which the author had made the suggestion that they ‘could be worked by means of pipelines leading from the springs to the sea’.

However, in a rather complacent letter to the ambassador of 25 October also classified ‘SECRET’, Maxwell merely commented that printing the report with or without the maps … ‘was hardly worthwhile, although it might be shown to D’Arcy if he would call to see it’. (William Knox D’Arcy’s company was currently exploring for oil in southern Persia.) Finally, the Foreign Office official added that Sykes ‘might be thanked for the trouble he has taken’.4

In Istanbul Sir Nicholas must have read the reply with some irritation. This was not the first occasion on which the embassy had informed the Foreign Office about the existence of potentially rich oil deposits in northern Iraq. A year earlier, with rumours circulating that the sultan had recently awarded an oil concession to the German company planning to build the railway to Baghdad, he had sent the foreign secretary, the Marques of Lansdowne, a map of the oil-bearing districts obtained by the embassy secretary, also from German sources.

On that occasion the foreign secretary had instructed O’Conor to pass the map on to the representative of the British D’Arcy Group who were showing interest in obtaining their own oil concession in Iraq. O’Conor had suggested to D’Arcy’s agent that the embassy might intervene with the sultan’s ministers using its diplomatic influence to expedite a favourable response. But D’Arcy’s representative had declined the offer, replying that diplomatic intervention might actually complicate his current negotiations with those same ministers. It had been a serious miscalculation: negotiations had subsequently broken down. And now the Foreign Office seemed to be losing interest in the matter altogether in spite of the fact that Sykes’s report had provided precise details of the different oil deposits which confirmed the veracity of that original map O’Conor had sent to London. There was no doubt about it: in the matter of oil concessions the Germans were stealing a march on Britain.

Sykes must also have been frustrated by the Foreign Office’s rebuff to his intelligence-gathering efforts. But then, he knew there were those in Whitehall who regarded him as just an amateur, a ‘gentleman’ interloper among seasoned professionals. Indeed, in reality, his claim to expertise on matters pertaining to ‘the East’ was somewhat flimsy. Although Sykes had usually travelled on horseback on the eastern journeys of his youth, these had not been dangerous adventures of discovery like those of the great Victorian explorers of the Middle East, men like Sir Richard Burton, Charles Doughty or William Palgrave. He had usually been accompanied by a retinue of Turkish soldiery, guides and servants and was offered considerable hospitality at the various staging posts along his route. Between journeys Sykes had begun to study Arabic in a desultory way, tutored for a time by one of Britain’s foremost experts on both Persian and Arabic, Professor E.G. Browne of Cambridge University; but Sykes never mastered the Arabic script and what little he learned was transliterated into the Roman alphabet.5

Although well received at the time, Sykes’s scholarly accomplishments in this area were rather meagre. They were confined to a travel book, Through Five Turkish Provinces, published in 1900, and another in 1904 entitled Dar-ul-Islam: A Record of a Journey through Ten of the Asiatic Provinces of Turkey. Sykes’s writing had a keen eye for the picaresque and exotic with flashes of real humour; but it also displayed a darker side where Sykes gave voice to his prejudices against Jews, Armenians and urban Arabs. The latter were denigrated as ‘cowardly’ as well as being ‘insolent and despicable’ and ‘vicious as far as their feeble bodies will admit’.6 Turks and Kurds, on the other hand, who from time to time massacred their wretched Armenian neighbours, Sykes regarded as ‘good, rugged fighters’. Nevertheless, in the company of his friends he was not averse to posing as an experienced orientalist, smoking a hubble-bubble and sitting cross-legged on the floor.

So, when Ambassador O’Conor informed Sykes of the Foreign Office’s unenthusiastic response to the intelligence on potential Iraqi oil resources which he had gathered, Sykes must have been equally irritated; but he probably shrugged off the slight, his imagination already moving on to new enthusiasms – more horseback journeys to distant locations; more friendly encounters with cheerful bandoliered cut-throats; more amusing after-dinner anecdotes for his rich friends.

Nevertheless, ten years later, with the strategic importance of oil better understood, Sykes’s attention would be drawn once again to the petroleum potential of Iraq, and by then, he himself would be occupying a far more influential position in the machinery of state. On the other hand he was never to see the day – 14 October 1927 – when the top of the number 1 well at Baba Gurgur, that ‘richest and most workable’ deposit cited in his report, blew out and the first major discovery of oil in Iraq was made.

2

Lieutenant Wilson’s First Mission

One hundred and twenty miles inland and north-west from the head of the Arabian Gulf, and fifty miles upstream of the port of Basra, the great Mesopotamian rivers Tigris and Euphrates merge to form a broad navigable waterway known as the Shatt al-‘Arab. This immensely wide waterway then flows on, in a south-easterly direction, before emptying its coffee-coloured contents into the blue-green Gulf. Along its southern half the Shatt al-‘Arab forms the boundary between the Arab lands and the ancient civilisation of Persia. About halfway between Basra and the sea, on the Persian side, the Shatt al-‘Arab is joined by the River Karun which rises in Persia’s Bakhtiari mountains, thence curving southward through a broad alluvial plain before adding its turbid, reddish stream to those of the Tigris and Euphrates. Adjacent to the mouth of the Karun lies the tip of the forty-mile-long island of Abadan, separated only by a narrow waterway from the Persian mainland. In the early 1900s it was an almost featureless area of mud flats and a few date-palm gardens, occasionally subject to inundation, whose future economic and strategic importance could never have been remotely imagined by the Arab and Persian tribesmen who occasionally traversed its dreary landscape.

About one hundred miles up the Karun lies the once small town of Ahwaz, capital of the Persian province of Arabistan (now Khuzistan), where the British maintained a strong consular presence in the years before the First World War under the watchful eye of the imperial government in India. It was to Ahwaz that Lieutenant Arnold T. Wilson of the 32nd Sikh Pioneers was ordered on 29 November 1907, accompanied by twenty Indian troopers of the 18th Bengal Lancers, ostensibly to reinforce the guard of the Ahwaz consulate but in practice to protect the employees of the British Concession Syndicate drilling for oil in the foothills of the Zagros mountains, seventy miles to the north-east.

Lieutenant Wilson was just twenty-three years old, one of seven children of a twice-married Rochdale clergyman. Educated at Clifton College and the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst, he was a rather gauche and lonely young man who spent much of his leisure time avidly reading British imperial history. His greatly admired older half-brother, Edward, who had gone to South Africa to work for the British South Africa Company under the celebrated empire-builder Cecil Rhodes, was a formative influence on his political education and by his late teens Arnold had become a fervent imperialist. At Sandhurst he excelled in every field and at the end of his first year passed out First and was awarded the Kings Medal and Sword for General Proficiency and Military Engineering. Something of a prig, he didn’t make friends easily and could sometimes be unfeeling in his treatment of those he considered less able than himself. A competent horseman, he had little patience for a skittish or recalcitrant mount. One particular horse he describes to his parents as a ‘brute’ which ‘needed rough handling and a firm hand, which is more in my line than gentle handling’.1 It was a description of his attitude to rebellious independence which would later manifest itself on a grander scale.

In 1903 Wilson had been commissioned with the 2nd Battalion of the Wiltshire Regiment and posted to Rawalpindi, a garrison town in Britain’s vast Indian Empire. However, he soon found life in a peacetime British regiment boring and chafed at what he considered his underemployment – something which did not seem to bother many of his fellow junior officers. An intelligent and ambitious individual, Wilson began to feel increasingly frustrated by the lack of opportunities to exhibit the knowledge and skills with which Sandhurst had furnished him and in December 1904 he transferred to an Indian regiment, the 32nd Sikh Pioneers, where opportunities for both promotion and adventure seemed more promising.

Wilson also began to take an interest in army sanitation. Indeed, matters of health, general orderliness and ‘clean-living’ became something of an obsession with him. Wilson’s prescription for maintaining his own robust good health was a cold bath taken at sunrise. At the same time, his hitherto conventional Christianity was evolving into a more earnest dedication to Bible-reading. The hymn ‘Onward Christian Soldiers’ came to mean something intensely personal for this fourteen-stone, physically strong, self-confident and intensely patriotic young man. He remained, however, something of a loner. He had none of the social graces or accomplishments: he did not dance or play tennis, golf or bridge. He disliked games, although he forced himself to acquire some proficiency at football and hockey. He had little opportunity to be in the company of women and remained intensely shy of them.

By 1907 Wilson had become interested in the political life of the Indian Empire and wrote a number of articles for various Anglo-Indian journals. He began to see his future as an officer of the Indian Political Service which administered almost every aspect of daily life throughout the subcontinent’s sprawling land mass. In September 1907 he presented himself to the Foreign Department of the government of India at Simla, where he was offered the first step on the ladder towards becoming a ‘Political’ – a six-month posting with the Intelligence Branch of the chief of staff. Only twenty-four hours after his appointment to ‘I’ Branch was confirmed, Wilson received an urgent telegram advising him that he was to be sent to south-west Persia on ‘special duties’.

Persia was then in a state of political flux. The territories of this nominally sovereign state owed allegiance to a central government in Tehran ruled by the weak and corrupt Muzaffar ed-Din Shah of the Qajar dynasty, whose predecessor, Nasr ed-Din Shah, had compelled his reluctant harem to dress as Parisian ballet girls as part of a somewhat misconceived modernisation drive.2 Modernisation of a very different kind had arrived in 1901 when William Knox D’Arcy, an English millionaire who had made his fortune in Australian gold mines, acquired a concession from Muzaffar ed-Din Shah to search for oil in return for a down payment of £20,000, a further £20,000 in shares and 16 per cent of the net profits of any company formed to work the concession. The contract area covered half a million square miles and would last for sixty years.3

Thereafter, reaction to the shah’s propensity for granting concessions to Europeans in return for payments which were squandered on royal extravagance led to demands for a curb on the shah’s powers and the establishment of the rule of law. In 1906, Muzaffar ed-Din was compelled to accept the setting-up of a constitutional council, the Majlis, by a revolution led by merchants, artisans and mullahs. But after his death the following year and a counter-revolution by his son Muhammad Ali Shah in 1908, the country became mired in civil war. Meanwhile, in 1907, an agreement between Britain and Russia carved Persia up into spheres of influence – for the Russians, the north including the capital, and for the British, the south, with a so-called ‘neutral zone’ in between. In practice, however, the southern parts of the neutral area, believed to contain valuable oil resources, became increasingly under the influence of the British zonal headquarters at Bushire on the Arabian Gulf.

This was the political and social environment into which Lieutenant Wilson and his men headed on New Year’s Day 1908. Leaving Ahwaz, he and his men rode to Mamatayn, a few miles north of the town of Ram Hormuz and one of the two places where the Concession Syndicate’s Canadian drillers and their Persian labourers were hammering through layers of rock with simple percussion rigs in search of the so-far elusive oil.

One can imagine the enthusiasm of this dedicated young soldier of the empire as he embarked on this, his first real independent mission in a land barely touched by European civilisation and largely under the control of the Bakhtiari khans, chieftains of a fiercely independent nomadic people who scorned any allegiance to Tehran. As he and his cavalry troopers rode through sweltering desert, fertile river basins and towering gorges cut through gypsum and limestone cliffs, the young lieutenant was elated by the scenery and wildlife, the unfamiliar trees and flowers and the frequent encounters with remnants of ancient civilisations. In his diary for March 1908 he notes, in particular, the ‘great beds of wild narcissus’ carpeting the hills and valleys. ‘My men, like Persians’, he records, ‘bend low to their stirrups to smell them as they ride slowly through,’ adding, ‘I can remember no time when my mind, and eyes and ears enjoyed during all my waking hours such a feast of beautiful and interesting things.’4

Arriving at Mamatayn, one of the two places where the Concession Syndicate is drilling, in a narrow gorge smelling of hydrogen sulphide with sheer cliffs of gypsum overlaid with gravel, Wilson is welcomed into the camp by G.B. Reynolds, the manager of the company’s operations and a self-trained geologist who has previously been in the service of the Indian Public Works Department. The two men quickly become friends. Reynolds is the older man at fifty, but very active in body and mind. Like Wilson, he is accustomed to long journeys on horseback or mule; a successful autocrat in his dealing with both his Canadian roughnecks and the local Bakhtiaris – ‘a solid British oak’, as Wilson would later describe him.

In the following months Wilson and his men patrol the rugged mountainous regions surrounding the oil company’s field of operations. The local Bakhtiari khans, whom he describes as ‘looking like stage assassins with Martini-Henry rifles and fifty or more cartridges and a knife or two’, are being paid £2,000 a year for ‘safeguarding’ the oil company’s property and plant. Wilson quickly recognises that this is little more than protection money. Nevertheless, he soon comes to like them and to envy their hardiness.

One spring evening, while the Canadians, mistrustful of ‘dirty native food’, consume their canned European provisions and drink whisky to excess, Wilson and Reynolds share a meal of fresh local food: soup made from the bones of an old cow his cavalrymen have killed and eaten, chicken – boiled first and then grilled – stuffed with raisins, pistachio nuts and almonds and afterwards, dried figs, apricots, cherries and plums.

Afterwards, Reynolds explains his predicament. Hundreds of thousands of pounds have already been spent and there is still no discovery of oil. Reynolds is worried that the oil company’s shareholders are losing patience. One final possibility remains: to move the drilling operations to Maidan-i-Naftun, a location whose name, ‘the plain of oil’, certainly sounds promising. Moreover, an ancient temple nearby is supposedly of fire-worshipping Zoroastrian origin, giving further credence to the notion that there are petroleum resources somewhere in the vicinity. Reynolds therefore tells Wilson that he is going to move all the equipment there – it will be their last chance.

So by April 1908, with the temperature already reaching 115°f and the nomadic Bakhtiari tribesmen departing for their summer pastures high in the Zagros mountains, Reynolds and his drilling team are at Maidan-i-Naftun, grimly persevering with two new wells. Then Reynolds receives the telegram from the Concession Syndicate which he has been dreading. He should continue drilling down to 1,600 feet and then, if no oil is found, abandon the operations and transport his equipment back to Ahwaz and thence down the Karun river to Muhammara.

On hearing this Wilson is enraged. He immediately writes to his direct superior in the Indian Political Service, Major Percy Cox, warning that if the British pull out, their place will soon be taken by the Germans or by one of Rockefeller’s companies. ‘Cannot government be moved to prevent these fainthearted merchants masquerading in top hats as pioneers of Empire, from losing what may be a great asset?’ he writes despairingly to Cox. Meanwhile, Reynolds decides to continue drilling for a little longer, convincing himself that it is possible that there has been error is the coding of the telegram and that it would be unsafe to follow its instructions until he receives further written confirmation. With luck this should give him about one more month.

Tuesday 26 May, 1908: it is an exceptionally hot night and Wilson is sleeping outside his tent. Just after 4.00 a.m. he is awakened by a great rumbling noise and shouts of jubilation from the Persian oilfield labourers. He runs towards the sound of the commotion and witnesses an amazing sight: the long-awaited breakthrough. A huge column of oil is spouting from the primitive percussion drilling rig, fifty feet above the top of the rig, tumbling down over the delighted drillers and labourers and almost smothering them with the accompanying gas. The Concession Syndicate – later to become the Anglo-Persian Oil Company; and later still, British Petroleum – has struck oil at a depth of 1,200 feet. The first commercially exploitable oilfield in the Middle East has been discovered.

Wilson quickly swallows some yoghurt and flat bread, mounts his stallion and gallops to the Persian telegraph office, thirty miles away at Shushtar, to inform his superiors at Bushire on the Gulf coast of the important news. But when he arrives he realises that he doesn’t have the current secret telegraph code book with him. Instead he gets out the Bible which he always carries with him and consults the Old Testament. Having found the verses he is looking for, he wires to Bushire the following: ‘See Psalm 104 verse 15, third sentence and Psalm 114, verse 8, second sentence.’ When the officers of the Indian Political Service at Bushire check the message against their own Bible, they read ‘That he may bring forth … oil to make his face shine’ and ‘Who turned the flintstone into a springing well’. They know instantly what Wilson is referring to and the information is immediately sent off to the Concession Syndicate’s offices in Glasgow, the Foreign Office and the Admiralty.5

The Admiralty were delighted. Since 1904, when Admiral John ‘Jackie’ Fisher had become First Sea Lord, it had been encouraging and supporting D’Arcy’s oil-exploration activities. Fisher had set up a special committee to study the question of converting the Royal Navy’s warships from coal to oil and he used his considerable influence to encourage the Scottish directors of what was then Britain’s only oil company – Burmah Oil – to refinance D’Arcy’s struggling Persian enterprise when its expensive drilling operations were failing to find reserves. The Concession Syndicate Ltd, which acquired D’Arcy’s original company, First Exploitation Ltd, in May 1905, was the outcome of those endeavours. Following the successful discovery at Maidan-i-Naftun, a new company with a capital of £2 million – the Anglo-Persian Oil Company – was established in April 1909 and Fisher was now able to push forward with his plans to revolutionise the British navy in the knowledge that in years to come the country would have control of a major oilfield in a region effectively under British rule and with good communications with its Indian Empire.

By 1912, a 138-mile, eight-inch-diameter pipeline had been laid from Maidan-i-Naftun – now renamed Masjid-i-Sulayman after the nearby ancient fire temple – to an oil-receiving terminal and refinery at Abadan island. Meanwhile, Wilson had become de facto advisor to the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, personally undertaking land and property acquisitions on its behalf, and in May 1909 he accompanied his immediate superior, Major Percy Cox, to begin negotiating the agreement for the lease of part of Abadan island with Sheikh Khaz’al of Muhammara, the wily Arab potentate whose domain lay on the neighbouring Persian mainland and who, although nominally a vassal of the shah, was, in reality, an independent ruler.

Although the negotiations were protracted, Sheikh Khaz’al was eventually given assurances of continuing British protection while he himself relented on certain contractual demands, and the agreement to lease part of Abadan was signed. Afterwards Cox, who by now had formed a very high opinion of Wilson’s work, appointed him as his assistant and he was instructed to carry out detailed topographical investigations of the whole area surrounding Anglo-Persian’s field of operations in case disturbances among the local tribes should require military intervention. A few years later Wilson was to tell his parents, ‘Whatever happens to all the other matters I have dealt with in this part of the world I shall, I am sure, always be proud of having helped to start the Oil Company on sound lines.’6

However, difficulties at Anglo-Persian’s operations continued. On its first test, in July 1912, the refinery broke down. When it was finally in operation it became clear that the quality of its products was poor: the kerosene extracted for lighting – still a major market for the crude oil – had a dirty yellow tinge and quickly filmed-up the oil lamps in which it was used. And lurking in the background, the huge Royal Dutch/Shell Company, with whom Anglo-Persian had a contract for the marketing of its products, was beginning to deploy its formidable financial power towards a possible takeover of its smaller partner – or at least that was what the directors of Anglo-Persian feared.

By the autumn of 1912, with problems such as these still mounting, the Anglo-Persian Oil Company was fast running out of capital; but millions more were needed for development of the company’s oilfields. Charles Greenway, Anglo-Persian’s first managing director, a monocle- and spats-sporting gentleman who in spite of his ‘Champagne Charlie’ image had a sound experience of the oil business, now began pressing the government for a subsidy. But although the initial response from government was encouraging, by the following year no practical outcome had been achieved, although Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty, had made it clear that he was sympathetic towards the company’s plight.

Churchill as First Lord of the Admiralty, 1912

The navy was now building more oil-fired warships but the great battleships of the fleet remained coal-fired. Admiral Fisher, now in retirement, continued to campaign for these super weapons of the day to be fuelled by oil. This would increase their speed from an average twenty knots to a world-beating twenty-five. But with Anglo-Persian once again struggling to survive, where were the future secure supplies of oil to come from? Not from a monopoly controlled by Royal Dutch/Shell, argued Anglo-Persian and its supporters in the Admiralty who questioned the ‘Britishness’ of a company which was only 40 per cent British-owned and whose two managing directors were respectively Dutch and Jewish. So the solution had to be Anglo-Persian, but how were its chronic financial problems to be solved?

Churchill responded with a proposal of breathtaking originality. On 17 June 1914 he introduced a Bill in the House of Commons to partially nationalise Anglo-Persian. The Bill contained two principal elements: firstly, the government would invest £2.2 million in the company in return for 51 per cent of its equity, and secondly, the government would place two directors on the Anglo-Persian board. Despite strong criticism both within Parliament and outside it, the Bill was eventually passed by an overwhelming majority, 254 to 18: the British government was now a direct participant in the international oil business. But the new Anglo-Persian remained a far cry from any kind of experiment in state socialism.7