EXPERIENCES IN
ARAB
AFFAIRS
1943-1958
Mohommed Fadhel Jamali..M.A..Ph.D., L.L.D.
Former Prime Minister of Iraq.
Located
in Widener
Library
Harvard
University
under the title:
Arab
Struggle;
Experiences of Mohammed Fadhel Jamali.
Syria and King Abdullah
Lebanon
The Ad-Hoc
Political
Committee
The
General Assembly Vote on Partition
Arab
Confrontation with Zionists at the United Nations
Palestine
and Western Interests in the Arab World
Oil
My
Recollections of the Palestinian War
Zionist
Expansionist Designs
Arab-Israel
Negotiation
The
Internationalization of Jerusalem
The
Palestine
Problem and Iraq’s Foreign Policy
Iraq and the United States
Secretary of
State Dulles's Visit to Iraq.
American
Military Aid to Iraq.
President
Eisenhower and
Palestine
Mr Dulles
prepares a public statement on
Palestine.
The Baghdad Pact and Palestine.
Positive
Neutrality or Non-alignment and
Palestine.
German Rparatuions for Israel
Israeli
Agression aginst
Egypt
The
Triple Invasion of Egypt
Kuwait
IRAQ and the ARABIAN PENINSULA
Egypt and the Sudan
Libya
Morocco
Tunisia
Algeria
by
Richard Wilson
Mallinckrodt Research Professor of Physics
Harvard University
In 1989 it was my privilege to invite Fadhel Jamali to spend a week at Harvard University to lecture and discuss whatever he chose. He gave me a typescript of these memoirs which I passed to Widener Library. It was hoped that the typescript would be edited and published to inform the Western World that there was a time when Iraq had tasted and struggled for freedom not only for themselves but also for other Arabs, and by extension for all peoples. Alas, funding for the editing and publication was not forthcoming at that time. Now it is my privilege to arrange for the scanning and placing on the World Wide Web this very important document.
Originally I planned to prepare two versions. One in Portable Data Format (pdf) and the other in Hypertext Markup Language (html). I did the initial text in html and edited it there. I planned links for convenience in accessing a particular section. I was assisted in this by four young visiting Iraqi scientists who did this in memory of a great Iraqi and a great human being. But then we ran out of steam. Some links have not been made and the PDF version is not made. I note that Fadhel's American wife (Sarah) was a great lady herself. Her humanitarian work on behalf of children firstly in Iraq, and later in Tunis, won the admiration of all who knew her. What other American has been pictured on the front page of a non-American (Tunisian) magazine at age 90, and called the woman of the year? She fully supported Fadhel in his work, and remained in Baghdad when he was in jail during 1958-1961 at great risk to herself.
For 17 years I have had the privilege of calling Fadhel and Sarah my friends. It is for their memory, which I cherish, that I undertake this task.
On the 14th of July 1958, one chapter of Iraq's history was closed by the fall of the Hashemite monarchy. The story of that chapter remains to be written, but some facts are already completely lost to future historians since many documents were destroyed by the 1958 revolution. Besides, the Iraqi government under the royal regime did not care much for publicity, nor did they keep well-documented records. This was especially true of foreign affairs where secrecy was observed. Some secret papers were kept in the private possession of those responsible for handling the affairs, and in certain cases, nothing whatever was put on paper.As one who took part in Iraqi foreign affairs from 1943 to 1958 I feel it a duty to put on record what I know about Iraq's policy in Arab affairs. During that period I was Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, then Minister of Foreign Affairs in eight Iraqi Cabinets. I presided over the Iraqi Chamber of Deputies for two sessions from 1951-53. I was Prime Minister of Iraq in 1953-54. I attended several of the meetings of the Council of the League of Arab States and the League's Political Committee. I presided over two sessions of the League's Council. In 1945 I attended the San Francisco Conference of the United Nations and signed The Charter on behalf of Iraq. I led the Iraqi delegation to the General Assembly of the United Nations at most of its sessions until 1958. I led the Iraqi delegation to the Asian-African Conference at Bandung in April 1955. and I also took part in most of the meetings of the Baghdad Pact.
On the morning of July 14, 1958.world news media said that I had been killed by the mobs in Baghdad. Actually some unfortunate fellow was mistaken for me and killed. On the morning of the 17th of July I was arrested in the wilderness north of Baghdad. In the following months I was interrogated. tried an sentenced by the Special High Military Court of Iraq. I was condemned to death. sentenced to fifty-five years of imprisonment. and fined over one hundred thousand dinars (pounds sterling). The death sentence was imposed for my supposed plotting against Syria. Actually I never plotted against Syria nor against any Arab state. I am a Muslim Arab nationalist who believes in the right of the Arabs to be free and to unite by democratic processes. Thanks to the intervention on my behalf of many people. including some great world figures, the death sentence was commuted to ten years of imprisonment: After spending three years in prison I was released on the night of July 14, 1961. For the next nine months I busied myself in collecting and classifying the important documents I happened to have at home. In May 1962 I was permitted to leave Iraq for health reasons. Since 1962, at the invitation of H.E. President Habib Bourguiba, President of the Tunisian Republic. I have been living in Tunis and teaching at its University. In 1970 I started writing my experiences in Arab affairs depending on my memory and on the documents in my possession. The fruits of my effort are by no means perfect or complete, but facts as I experienced them. Some known, others have never been divulged before. Still others have been ignored or distorted by propaganda or prejudice. With all fairness and objectivity one can say that Iraq had a clear and well-designed foreign policy in the period under discussion.
That policy was summarized in a speech which I made as Minister for Foreign Affairs before the Chamber of Deputies on May 5, 1949. There were four guiding principles:
1.. Achieving Iraq's independence and security.
2. Following the principles of the Great Arab Revolution of 1916 which aimed at the liberation and integration of all the Arab world.
3. Promoting good relations with Iraq's neighbours.
4. Using foreign policy as a means for the social and economic development of Iraq along constructive and evolutionary lines and not along revolutionary and subversive lines.
This book deals, mainly, with the second principle, which is the liberation and integration of the Arab world. although the principles above mentioned are really inter-related and the foreign policy of Iraq was, on the whole, coherent and consistent. In arranging the topics dealt with in this book, geographic contiguity was taken as a basis.
Thus we begin with Iraq's relations with the states of the Fertile Crescent: Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine and Kuwait. Then we deal with Iraq's relations with the Arabian Peninsula: Saudi Arabia and Yemen. This is followed by the Nile Valley: Egypt and Sudan. Then comes Iraq's work for North African independence: Libya, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria. After covering Iraq's relations with the individual Arab states we take up Iraq's role in the League of Arab states, in the Baghdad Pact, and in the Asian African Conference at Bandung.
The translation of the Arabic documents into English has been made by the author. The English spelling of Arabic names has also been decided by the author. The spelling has been kept as close to correct Arabic pronunciation as possible. I am indebted to many friends who helped me and encouraged me to write down these memoirs. My gratitude is due to my colleagues and collaborators in the Iraqi government in the past and to the hospitality of the Tunisian government and the Tunisian people in the present day. It is my sincere hope that Iraq will continue to move in the path of brotherhood, freedom and justice for the Arab world and all mankind.
Mohammed Fadhel Jamali
University of Tunis
20th April 1974
The achievement of pan‑Arab unity is one of the cardinal aims of all Arab nationalists. From the early rise of Arab nationalism, the concept of unity was inculcated in the minds and hearts of Arab nationalists who always aspired to gain the freedom of their peoples from foreign domination and to integrate them into one nation. Some Arab idealists think that all the Arab world could be amalgamated into one centralized state with one head running all. This dream is cherished by many, including the followers of President Gamal Abdul Nasir of Egypt. There are other Arab nationalists who, .like myself, think hat the best form of integration would be reached by the path of confederation, or, at most, of federation. They visualize something like a U.S.A.W., United States of the Arab World. We are of the opinion that, to achieve Arab unity, one should go by stages; integrating areas adjacent to one another and forming one geographic and economic unity. According to this theory, Arab unity could start with three or even four sub‑units. The first would be the Fertile Crescent, consisting of territory extending from the Gulf of Basrah to the Gulf of Aqaba and including Kuwait, Iraq and Greeter Syria which includes Syria, Jordan and Palestine. To my mind this might be a first step in Arab integration.The second unity would consist of the Arab peninsula including Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Southern Arabia, Oman and the Gulf Sheikhdoms. The third would consist of the Nile Valley which is made up of Egypt and Sudan.The fourth would consist of North Africa, including Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco.
It is to be understood that the achievement of this unity should come about by an evolutionary process and with the full consent of the peoples concerned. It should be the result of a truly democratic process. There should be no imposition or dictation from any part over the other. Any section of this grouping could stay out if she chose to do so. Lebanon, for example, would be free to remain outside the grouping unless and until its Christian population should deem it to their advantage to join the federation. Syria, before the First World War, was the geographic entity which included present‑day Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Trans‑Jordan. Beirut in those days was a part of Syria.
When I went to the American University of Beirut, the University had just changed its name from the Syrian Protestant College to the American University of Beirut..Syria was the hot‑bed of Arab nationalism. The Syrians provided the brains for the Arab revolt against the Ottomans. Nationalities in Istanbul before the first World War consisted mostly of Syrians and Iraqis. The majority of those attending the Arab Conference in Damascus, held in 1908 to promote the cause of Arab nationalism, were Syrians. There were also a few Iraqis. During the First World War, Syria offered many nationalist martyrs for the Arab cause who were hung in the large squares of Damascus and Beirut by the order of Jamal pasha, Commander in‑Chief of the ottoman army in that region.
During the First World War, Sharia Husein of Mecca and Sir Henry McMahon, the British High Commissioner in Cairo, exchanged a series of letters in which Britain encouraged the Arabs to rise against the Ottomans for the liberation of the Arab people from Turkish domination. In 1916, under the leadership of Sharif Husain of Mecca and his sons, Abdullah; Faisal and Zaid., the Arabs rose in revolt against the ottoman Empire. Many Arab tribesmen and volunteers were commanded by Iraqi and Syrian army officers who had been trained in the Ottoman army. The first fruit of the Arab Revolt against the Turks in the First World War was the liberation of Syria which was entered by the Arab army, headed by Emir Faisal, the third son of the Sharif of Mecca who had declared the revolt against the Turks: Emir Faisal became the first King of Syria, so Syria had its first Hashemite Arab King after centuries of non‑Arab rule. In March 1920, a Syrio‑Iraqi Conference was held in Damascus, presided over by Hashim al‑Atasi, at which the unity of Syria and Iraq was declared. Behind the backs of the Arabs, two damaging agreements had been made by the 'Allies' of the Arabs. One was the Sykes‑Picot Treaty between France and Britain by which they agreed to partition Syria and Iraq between themselves. This document came to light when the Russian papers were made public by Lenin after the Russian Revolution. As a result of the Sykes‑Picot agreement, the French invaded Syria and the Arab Kingdom headed by King Faisal came to an end, but only after a heroic resistance. The King had to leave Syria, but the Syrians cherish the fondest memories or King Faisal of Syria. The second damaging agreement was the Balfour Declaration in 1917 in which the British Government promised the Zionists a national home in Palestine. Aview with favour the establishment in Palestine of a National Home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object..."
Implementing these two plots, the League of Nations put Syria and Lebanon under French Mandate, and Iraq and Trans‑Jordan and Palestine under British Mandate. In 1920 the Iraqis revolted against Great Britain, and Britain found it impossible to rule a turbulent country like Iraq. At the time she wanted to partially correct her stance with the Arabs. Thus she yielded to the wish or the Iraqis and, in 1921, King Faisal, the ex‑King of Syria, came and established the new Kingdom of Iraq.
King Faisal the First championed the ideal or Arab nationalism. When he came to Baghdad he brought with him an Arab nationalist educator, originally from Syria, namely, Sati'al‑Hasri, who became Director‑General of the Ministry of Education. King Faisal was also accompanied by a great Arab nationalist brain, a Sorbonne‑educated Lebanese, Rustam Beg Haidr, who was appointed as Head or the Royal Diwan. These two men, along with the Iraq officers who had fought in the Arab Revolt, like Ja'far al‑'Askeri, Nuri as‑Sa'id, Jamil al‑Madra'i, 'Ali Jawdat, al‑Ayoubi. and others did much to promote the cause of Arab nationalism in Iraq. As a young man I was conscious or all these events. and. from the coming of King Faisal to Iraq. the idea of Arab liberation and Arab unity became one or my great objectives in life. Our whole educational atmosphere in Iraq was filled with inspiration and initiation into Arab nationalism which aimed at the liberation of all Arab lands and their integration The Arab youth were not happy to find that their nation had been cut to pieces and people separated from each other with walls created between one part or the Arab world and another. While there had been no frontiers between Syria and Iraq under the Ottoman Empire. all of a sudden Syrian and Iraqis found themselves separated .from each other by walls. I was one of six Iraqi students sent by the Ministry to study at the American University of Beirut. Our way in these days took from Baghdad to Basrah, to India, to Aden, to Egypt, to Haifa, .to Damascus and then Beirut. Thus I was a University student when I had my first glimpse of Damascus. Over the years I came to love that city of great history which was also a centre of Arab culture and power.
During the Easter vacation. I joined a group of about fifteen students from the American University of Beirut, led by the Instructor of Physical Education, Harry Foot, and went on a visit to Syria. On the way from Beirut to Damascus we stopped at Maysaloun to pay our homage to the souls of those martyrs who were killed there while defending their country against the French invasion. Syria in those days was in revolt against the French, but the cities were calm and orderly for the fighting was done in the countryside. Even in the cities we could see barbed wire at street junctions with French soldiers standing on guard. Travelling from one city to another required a pass from the French officer responsible for the district. I usually acted as the representative of the group in talking to the French officer in order to get the necessary permit. I also acted as an Arabic interpreter for Mr Foot whenever he spoke in the name of the group at a public function. We visited Damascus, Homs, Hama and Aleppo. We were entertained very generously by the Syrian people who were friendly to the American University of Beirut, for the University had alumni in all those towns. We also spent a night in a bedouin camp near Aleppo and introduced football to those bedouins for the first time. All of them, young and old, enjoyed kicking the ball and running after it. On our departure we presented them with a football.
On
that visit I
fell in love with Syria. I felt very much at home there and Syria
seemed as
much my country as did Iraq. I was filled with pride and
admiration for the
Syrian people who were fighting for the liberation of their country
from
foreign domination. That trip invigorated my sense of Arab
nationalism, and I
felt that an Arab, besides belonging to a province or specific region,
belonged to the whole Arab homeland extending from the Gulf of Basrah
to the
Atlantic Ocean. The partitions and the divisions in Arab world,
especially in
the Fertile Crescent, were the creation of Western imperialism.
It was Western
imperialism that divided the united region of Syria into Syria,
Lebanon,
Jordan and Palestine. To make it worse, the French subdivided
the lesser
Syria into separate entities ‑ Damascus, Aleppo, Alawites, Jabal
ad‑Druze
‑ each of' which had a separate and different administration. A young
Arab nationalist like myself would immediately detest and reject such a
state
of affairs for his people and nation. Before giving in to the French,
the
Syrians wrote a golden page in the history of Arab nationalism at
Maysaloun,
an army post between Beirut and Damascus, where, led by the Minister of
Defence, Yusuf al-Azmeh, the small Syrian army fought to the last man
against
the French. Thus the French could march on Damascus only over the
bodies
of' the
martyrs. Maysaloun, with the graves of the Arab martyrs,
including that
of
Yusuf 'al-Azmeh, represents a point of' pride and inspiration for
all
Arab
youth, and the name of' Yusuf al-Azmeh has become symbolic
of Arab readiness
to die for the safety of' the homeland. Professor Sati al‑Hasri wrote a
classical book in Arabic (now translated into
English)
commemorating Maysaloun.
In
1932 I returned
to Iraq from the U.S.A. after having attained my Doctor of' Philosophy
degree
in Education from Teachers College, Columbia University, New
York. I was
appointed as Supervisor General of Education. I remember that,
in the
Ministry of Education, we engaged hundreds of teachers
from Syria,
Lebanon, Palestine and Egypt who naturally acted as representatives of
Arab
nationalism. In the summer of 1932 Dr Sami Shawkat, then Director General of Education,
and I, as
Supervisor General of Education went to Syria and Lebanon to engage
teachers.
As it happened, the majority of the teachers we engaged
were Lebanese. On our way back from
Beirut we had
luncheon at the Iraqi Consulate in Damascus. Some prominent Syrian
nationalists
were present. At the luncheon table I was sitting between Dr 'Abdur
Rahman
Shabandar, a graduate of the American University of Beirut and a
well‑known
spokesman for Arab nationalism who later was assassinated by French
agents, and
Ma'arouf Arnawut, a well known author and journalist. During
our
conversation, Ma'arouf Arnawut asked me, "What has Syria done
against
you?" I replied, "Nothing at all. On the
contrary."
"But why, then, do you avoid the employment of Syrian teachers and pick
only Maronites from Lebanon?"
I said, "I never
differentiated between Syrian and Lebanese candidates, nor‑between
Muslims and Christians in choosing teachers. My choice
depended solely on
academic and professional
qualifications." Nevertheless, a
telegram was sent from Syria to
H.M.King Faisal I complaining that we were biased in the selection of
teachers
and that we favoured the Lebanese and the Christians. This
incident made me
think deeply about the cleavage between Syria and Lebanon both from a
denominational as well as a political point of' view.
It enabled me to
appreciate later the Lebanese jealousy for their own independence and
their fear
of' Syrian encroachment that might result from a Syrio‑Iraqi
federation.
It shed light on the fear of Lebanese Christians of domination by the
Muslims.
I come to understand this end I took it into account in all my later
activities
relating to the Syrio‑Iraqi federation. My attitude towards the
Lebanese
was that such a federation would surely reduce any denominational bias
rather
than
increase it, and that
it would be
to the advantage of the Lebanese.
Among the Syrian teachers
employed by Iraq were some outspoken Arab nationalists like Dr Farid
Zainuddin,
Alice Qandaleft and the greet Syrian poet, Badawi al‑Jabel. Some
of them became members
of the
Muthena Club, an Arab nationalist foreign yoke and the achievement of
Arab
unity. Badawi al‑Jabal composed and recited one of' his
historic poems
in the Club. A verse from this famous poem runs as follows:
"There is no frontier between Iraq and Sham (Syria). May Allah demolish the frontiers which they erected!"
"They" refers to imperialist powers. The echo of this verse rang in the ears and hearts of all Arab nationalists all the time, and I was no exception. Before his death in 1933. King Faisal I of Iraq was invited to Paris by the French government. He started to convince the French to grant Syria independence in the same way as the British had done to Iraq. The French seemed sympathetic at the time, but the King's untimely death put an end to his plans. To show the importance which the Syrians attached to King F'aisal's effort on their behalf I shall translate a passage from a book in Arabic entitled, AHizb.al‑Istiqlal al‑Jumhoury, which means the Independence Republican Party, by the Lebanese Arab nationalist, 'Adil as‑Sulh.
AAnd the
people of Syria
from various classes ceme forward signing petitions authorizing King
Faisal the
First, King of Iraq, to negotiate in Paris regarding the Syrian
question. A
delegation of Syrian journalists, some nationalist young men, and
delegation of Osbat
al‑Amal
al_Qawmy. The
League of Nationalist Action, travelled .to Amman to meet the King on
his way
to Paris. For the same purpose, the nationalist bloc delegated
Saledullah el‑Jebiri
as their representative. "
The King told these delegations that he would not let an opportunity pass without his using it to deal with the Syrian question and to strive for its solution. On the 10th or June (1933) in Cairo, King Faisal I received a delegation or the Executive Committee or the Syrian‑Palestinian Conference and a delegation or the Syrian‑Arab Society and some prominent Syrians in Egypt. They jointly presented him with a petition authorizing him to act for them in solving the Syrian problem. While the King was in Amman, the Secretary General of the Arab student conference in Europe, Mukhtar al Mukhish, addressed the following telegram to him:
'The Syrian Arab youth from the various parts of Europe met in the city or Paris to discuss conditions in Syria. They decided to request you to stretch out a helpful hand to them in their efforts, and to make the world hear, during your forthcoming trip to the West about the injustice and persecutions (we suffer). We want complete independence and a true Arab unity."
And Faisal the First, King of Iraq, arrived in Europe and made Geneva his headquarters. He had stated in Amman that he was travelling to Europe in order to try to solve the political problems that concerned the Iraqi Kingdom directly, especially the question or foreign privileges which the British had kept for themselves in Iraq. He said that he would also discuss with some European statesmen the Syrian problem and express his opinion about it. The London Times mentioned that the purpose or King Faisal's passing through Amman was to negotiate on the subject of federating the Arab regions.
The national bloc met in Damascus and delegated two of its leaders, Sa=adulleh al‑Jabiri and 'Afif as‑Sulh, to travel to Amman, contact the King, and discuss with him current Arab affairs in general and the Syrian question in particular. The two delegates had two meetings with the King at which they discussed for severa1 hours the topics that interested the Syrians, and they informed him that the nationalist bloc and the Syrian people were anxious that he should occupy the Syrian throne at the same time as the Iraqi throne. In Paris, Subhi Barakat, President of the Syrian Parliament, who had gone to Paris to discuss the Syrian situation, met with the King and had a lengthy talk with him in which Barakat explained his own stand, and confirmed that King Faisal should be enthroned in Syria in addition, to his Iraqi throne. The King and the President of the Parliament separated with the understanding that they would meet again in Geneva to continue the discussion. One day before the appointed date, Subhi Barakat came to the hotel (in Paris) and informed us of the sudden death of King Faisal in Berne.
This news fell as a thunderbolt on those present, Arab journalists and Arab students. They all rose to go to the Iraqi Legation to offer condolences. This was the 8th of September, 1933. I was aware of all this and it influenced me. In 1936, during the Cabinet of Léon Blum, the Syrian nationalists started negotiations with the French with a view to obtaining independence along the lines of the independence Egypt and Iraq, but they could not. Later on, some of the nationalists had to go underground as the French in Syria began to chase them, Some of the great leaders sought refuge in Iraq. Shukri al-Quwaitli, Saidallah al-Jabiri, Lutri al-Haffar, >Adil Azmeh and others came to Iraq and lived for sometime in Baghdad. This in itself kept the Syrian problems alive and gave greater impetus to the Iraqi government=s work for the freedom of Syria.
During the Second World War, I was transferred from the Ministry of Education to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In my new position I could see to it that the Iraqi government spared no opportunity to convince its allies, Britain and the United States, of the urgent need for the liberation of Syria and Lebanon from the French Mandate. General Sir Edward Spears. for the United Kingdom and Minister George Wadsworth for the United States did their best to promote the independence or these two states. Tahseen Qadri, the Iraqi Consul General and later Minister to Lebanon and Syria, was in constant touch with the political leaders in his area. Iraq worked hard to see to it that, after the downfall of the Vichy regime, the French recognized the independence of Syria and Lebanon. The Iraqi government also worked hard to make sure that Syria and Lebanon were invited, in 1945 to the San Francisco Conference for the founding of the United Nations Organization. The French bombardment of Damascus took place at the same time as the opening of the Conference. That gave me an opportunity to go to the rostrum at the General Meeting or the Assembly to denounce the bombardment or Damascus, an: unfortified city and the most ancient one in the world. I asked if the assault was consonant with the French principles or Liberté, Fraternité and Egalité.
I had further opportunity to challenge France in the Committee during the Section in the United Nations Charter dealing with the security Council. I raised the question or whether France was entitled to be named one of the guardians of peace in the world while she was attacking Damascus. I said that her attitude to Damascus should cause her to forfeit her seat as one of the five members of the Security Council. But the real victory for Syria and Lebanon was achieved when Article 78 for the United Nations Charter was adopted. This Article was especially meant to terminate the French Mandate over them. The Article reads as follows:
AThe Trusteeship system shall not apply to territories which have become Members of the United Nations, relationship among which shall be based on respect for the principle of sovereignty and equality.@
Since
Syria and
Lebanon were members of the San Francisco Conference they were
considered as
founding members of the United Nations, and the Trusteeship system
could not be
applied to them. The adoption of this Article was a big
victory for the
Syrian and Lebanese delegations whom Iraq in particular and other Arab
and
friendly states had whole‑heartedly helped in their
campaign. After
the San
Francisco Conference, the Syrians had to work hard to have the French
evacuate
Syria. The Syrian nationalist government, headed by Shukri
al‑Quwatli
as President, achieved the evacuation of the French from Syria by
1946. I was
a member or the Iraqi delegation that went to Damascus to attend the
celebrations on the occasion of the French evacuation. It
was a great
occasion and all the Arabs were jubilant. President al‑Quwatli
gave a
historic speech in which he stated, "There shall be no flag flying over
Syria except the Syrian flag and nothing shall be above it except the
flag of
Arab unity."
President
al‑Quwatli's
first move was to fly to Saudi Arabia to pay his respects and to
express his
affection for King 'Abdul 'Aziz Ibn Sa'ud. This was a very
strange incident,
for the rivalry between the Hashemite and Saudi families was well
known. The
Regent of Iraq, Prince 'Abdul Ilah was stunned by the Syrian
move. Tahseen al
Qadri, the Iraqi Minister to Syria and Lebanon was embarrassed.To
remedy this
embarrassment he arranged that President al‑Quwatli should
quickly pay a
visit to Iraq. But Prince 'Abdullah was psychologically
unprepared for such a
visit although he could not turn it down. The Regent did not wish to go
to the
airport to receive President al‑Quwatli, but, after some persuasion by
the Foreign Minister, Arshad wearing a sports shirt instead of formal
attire.
President
Shukri al‑Quwatli and Prime Minister Abddullah al‑Jabiri were somewhat peeved and
felt that they
had been treated with indignity and lack of courtesy
Premier Sa=Adullah al‑Jabiri asked to meet me behind closed doors. He said that I was the only one to whom he could talk frankly and open his heart. He explained, complaining of the lack of courtesy on the part of the Iraqi authorities. I pleaded for tolerance, big‑heartedness and the overlooking of the trivialities of officialdom and formalities. I said, "Iraq is your home and the Iraqi leaders are your brethren.". The visit certainly muddled rurther the waters it was intended to clear. The Iraqis were really hurt by having been given second place by the Syrians. It was also felt that Tahseen Qadri was wrong to arrange the visit before the Iraqi nerves had cooled down.
From then on.President al‑Quwatli and some of his entourage turned toward Saudi Arabia and Egypt instead of Iraq. It was al‑Quwatli's initial naive mistake and lack of consideration for Iraqi Hashemite sensitivities that led to this coolness in relations. My personal relations with many of the Syrian leaders of those days was always cordial and those who knew me well appreciated my genuine nationalist sentiments. For example, there was always whole‑hearted cooperation between me and Professor Faris al‑Khouri who was leader of the Syrian delagation at the Arab League Conference held at Bludan a mountain resort near Damascus in 1945,. the London Conrerence on Palestine in 1946, and the United Nations General Assembly in 1946 and 1947. Professor al‑Khouri was a wise old gentleman who truly represented political wisdom and acumen. He had an excellent legal mind and was the master or convincing argumentation. I used to cell him abune, Our Father, and we listened carefully to what each other had to say.
An
incident of
some human interest happened in the winter of 1946 when we were
attending the
Palestine Conference in London. Professor Faris al‑Khouri ceme
one day
Professor al‑Khouri protested, >Fadhel, do you want your father to be treated like a donkey?=
"Far from it. Our Father! Why do you say such a thing?"
"Because, he replied, "Dr Fawzi is a veterinary doctor and you want him to treat me."
We had a good laugh at my expense. I had always thought that Dr Fawzi al‑Mulqi, who had attended the American University of Beirut, was a medical doctor while he was in fact a vetinarian from Edinburgh University.
In 1946 the Arab League met in Cairo. I was the Head of the Iraqi delegation, and it was Iraqi=s turn to preside over the League Council. I was as strict as a teacher in keeping order in the meetings. Sa'adullah al Jabiri, then Prime Minister of Syria, commented once after the meeting, "Fadhel, heve you put us back into school?"
"Yes, Sa'adullah Beg," I said jokingly,"you need it."
This meeting of the Arab League Council was one of the longest ever held. It lasted nearly a month The most crucial issue in that meeting was a complaint to the League Council by the government of Syria against the Kingdom of Jordan. King 'Abdullah had made a call to the people of Syria to join a Greater Syria which would include Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Trans‑Jordan This call was circulated in a printed leaflet and distributed to the Syrian people. The Syrian government considered this a violation of the Arab League Covenant and as interference by one state in the internal affairs of another Arab state. The situation was very tense. The League Council consisted mostly of critics of the Jordanian move. I, as President of the Council, suggested that this Syrian complaint should be referred to a Committee of the Foreign Ministers of all states, members of the Arab League, which would study the matter and bring its recommendations to the Council.
My
suggestion was
accepted and that was the birth of the Political Committee of the Arab
League. After that date, several problems were referred to
the Political
Committee before being presented to the Arab League
Council. In the Political
Committee I defended King >Abdullah's
declaration as being an expression of a national ideal to be achieved
through
regular constitutional processes in the future. I argued that it was
not meant
to be an attack on the ruling government of Syria, since Article 9 of
the Arab
League Covenant entitles those states who wish to create closer ties to
go
ahead and do so. The Committee agreed to draft a formula by which
Jordan would
agree not to interfere in the internal affairs of Syria, but, could at
the same
time, continue to uphold the ideal of Arab unity.
After the meeting I made
the following
declaration on behalf of all the Arab League Foreign Ministers
attending the Political Committee:
"A dispute has arisen about the project of
Greater Syria for the sake of which the Foreign Ministers of the Arab
states held a special meeting and studied the matter in all its
aspects. It appeared that no one intended, by taking up the subject, to
interfere with the independence or sovreignty of any of the states of
the Arab League or to interfere with the form of government standing
therein. Therefore they all affirmed that each of these states upholds
the Covenant of the Arab League acting and continuing to act to respect
it and to implement it in letter and spirit. Signed:
Foreign Minister of Jordan, Mohammed Shuraiqi
Foreign Minister of Syria, Jamil Mardam Beg
Foreign Minister of Iraq, Mohammed Fadhel Jamali
Acting Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia, Yusuf Yaseen
Foreign Minister of Egypt, Ibrahim 'Abdul Hadi
Foreign Minister of Lebanon Philip Taqla
The Delegate of Yemen, AI-Qadhi Mohammed al-‘Amri"
It seemed that His Majesty, King 'Abdullah,
whose ambition for the unity of Greater Syria was always alive, was not
pleased with the published
statement. Accordingly, I, as President of the Arab League, received
the following letter from the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Jordan:
His Excellency, The President of the Council of the League of Arab
states,
To confirm the upholding by the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan of the Covenant of the League of Arab states, my government has charged me to present the attached memorandum which contains the Jordanian point of view on the matter of unity or federation with Syria. This is a national principle which has no relation to the propaganda against it The understanding between the Ministers of Foreign Affairs should put an end to that propaganda. We are anxious to remove all suspicions and to achieve the full solidarity of the states, Members of the League.
Signed. Mohammed Shuraiqi, The Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
The text of the
memorandum:
The Jordanian
Government
considers that any call for national unity or federation through
political
channels or by legally correct statements without
aggression on the
rights of
others. should not be a cause of disagreement. for the basic principle
is that
each Arab region must achieve the unity of its parts or their
federation when
the means of unity and federation are available and when the legal
possibilities, which do not do any harm to any private or public
right, are
made available; for it is for the good of the Arabs to remove
divisions which
are harmful to national interests and which contradict the welfare of
the home
land, its hopes and aspirations of the League, or interfere with the
government
ruling therein, so long as the decision on unity or federation belongs
to the
will of the people which is concerned and which is the source of all
authority,
and to the public national conscience and accepted agreements between
the
responsible governments. With our full appreciation for the
efforts of the
Committee of the Arab Foreign Ministers to put an end to biased
propaganda
concerning the project of Greater Syria contained in its common
declaration, we
present this memorandum to reserve the point of view of the Jordanian
government in dealing with a national principle to which it attaches
special
importance because of its basic connection to its regional interests
and national
covenant. Please accept the highest respects,
Signed: Mohammed Shuraiqi
Foreign Minister of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
I was also approached by some press men with a question about whether there were any more declarations to be made by any of the responsible leaders concerning the project of Greater Syria. I gave the following answer:
AI do not think so. The Arab nation is faced with several great national problems vis‑a‑vis the outside world, problems which require full dedication of thoughts and efforts to defend Arab lands threatened with danger, especially in Palestine, and to defend our suffering brethren in Libya and North Africa. I hope that the press and men of letters will help direct public opinion in the Arab world to serious efforts to secure the freedom of the Arab lands and to unite their world and come together vis‑a‑vis outside dangers.
One journalist asked if the debate on Greater Syria had done any harm to the mutual relations between states, Members of the Arab League. I answered:
AThe debate was
the means of
clearing the atmosphere between the Arab states, and it was
a proof that
the Arab states are all united within the bounds of the League Covenant
for
which they all cherish respect and loyalty.
The Jordanian Parliament held a special session to debate the issue and to support King 'Abdullah's policy. After lengthy discussion the following declaration was passed:
'14 Muharram. 1366.(8 December. 1946):
1. The Jordanian Legislative Assembly supports completely the principle of the Great Syrian unity and declares its adherence to the Mutual Syrian Pact emanating from the only Constituent Assembly which included representatives from all regions of Syria meeting together in the year 1920 (The General Syrian Conference).
2. The Jordanian Legislative Assembly confirms that the Pact of the great unity of the homeland which was supported at the time by the results of a referendum of the Syrian people in all the regions is also a national principle which is to be unanimously respected, and no one region of Syria has the right to annul it. This principle does not mean transgression on the rights of particular regions or systems of government standing therein since the matter. in its definitions and its executions, has to be supported by the general national will or mutually acceptable agreement entered into by responsible governments.
3. The Jordanian Legislative Assembly protests that His Excellency the Prime Minister of Syria is at the same time the Acting Foreign Minister of Syria, has annulled what was decided by the Committee of the Foreign Ministers of the Arab League Council regarding cooperation between Arab states. It protests, as well, against what some Syrian daily newspapers publish by way of bitter attacks directed against the dignity of this country and causing harm to mutual inter‑Arab relations and national interests.
4. The Assembly refers this Resolution to the government for publication and notification to the parties concerned.
King 'Abdullah never stopped his campaign for the unity of Greater Syria. He continued making declarations and. publishing leaflets addressed to the Syrian people. Take as an example the one that was published in Amman and dated 16 Holy Ramsdhan,1366, (4 August, 1947). It was entitled, A Royal Statement: The Great Syria State and Arab Union. Here is a translation of the last two sections of that statement:
'Dear People:
What we call for is not mere words. On the contrary, it is a desired hope and a forthcoming truth. National conscience is grieved that some say that the Covenant of the Arab League required the preservation of the status quo in Arab lands which means paralyzing the movement for Arab development by preserving the partitions which foreign imperialism imposed, not for the interests of Syria as a whole, nor for the interests of the Arabs in general.
It is such statements which are a departure from the League Covenant and a shattering of its highest goals. This certainly motivates us to openly state with no hesitation or obfuscation that the principles of the liberating Arab revolution, emanating from national conscience and written with Arab tears and blood. these principles are still and will continue to be the guiding goal of the aspirations of all the Arabs. Believing that Syria is still cut to pieces physically and humanly, they shall not tolerate this tearing apart and closing the road towards unity. They shall assert the consciousness of their right. and they shall double, in God, their efforts.
Dear People:
To be vocal in expressing national rights is the right thing in every time and place, and it is this openness that the regions of Syria or their official governments should call to a national preparatory conference to decide the following matters:
1. To set a plan for Syrian unity or federation objectively, within the bounds of international covenants, national hopes and common regional interests.
2. To consider the union or the federation of Syria as a problem which concerns the Syrian states and the will of the Syrian people alone within the bounds of the whole homeland, geographically. historically and nationally.
3. To set up provisions guaranteeing that the unity or the federation shall refuse any diminution of national rights to independence acquired internationally within the bounds of the Charter of the United Nations.
4. To define the position of Palestine in relation to unity or federation in a manner which puts a stop to Zionist danger finally and completely.
5. To invite the governments of the regions of the Syrian homeland to a common agreement which ends with calling a general meeting (constituent assembly) which will include representatives of all the Syrian regions to set up a constitution of the state on the basis of unity or federation in the light of the agreed plan.
6. To call, as soon as the Greater Syrian state is formed, for the already sanctioned Arab federation of the Fertile Crescent, Syria and Iraq, which would implement the plans laid down according to the principles of the liberating Arab revolution and required by the Pact of the 8th of March, moving on the path opened by the Covenant of the Arab League. This is what we call for and this is what we work to realize, desiring nothing for this but the countenance of God's bounty and the great future of the Arabs. This is the clear truth "and you will hear its news eventually".
King 'Abdullah's words were highly poetic and literary with rhyme and rhythms. It is a pity that no translation into English can reproduce the literary quality. The squabble between Syria and Jordan continued. The Syrian government, while being vociferous about Arab unity, were proud of their independence and took a negative attitude toward any approach by Iraq or Jordan f'or any kind of' union or special arrangement outside the Arab League. In 1946, Nuri as‑Sa'id had proposed to both Syria and Lebanon that special treaty relationships should be established between Iraq and those two countries covering economics, communications, irrigation, judicial, cultural and other matters. The Syrian government, with al‑Quwatli as President of' the Republic and Sa=dullah al‑Jabiri as Prime Minister, turned down Nuri's proposals. Nuri then went to Turkey and reached agreement with the Turkish government on those proposed items. It was Sa=dullah=s opinion that Syria should take no step outside the Arab League. The Arab League, however, with its divided policies and divergent points of' view and the varied mentality of' its members could hardly take any step forward in any major question related to Arab affairs with the exception of Palestine and the liberation of' the North African states.
I visited Sa=dullah al‑Jabiri before his death in the Omayyid Hotel in Damascus, where he was lying ill. Sa=adullah, who confided in me and considered me a true friend, expressed to me his deep regret for having turned down Nuri's proposals, and his disillusionment with the great hopes he had had in the Arab League. He told me, "Fadhel, I regret very much not having gone along with Iraq. I am greatly disappointed in the achievements of' the Arab League."
I visited Syria again after the Palestine tragedy. In my memorandum I made the following notes which describe the atmosphere prevailing in Syria at the time.
Palestine.
1. All
those whom I met
in Syria considered it necessary to unify efforts and to harmonize
plans for
Palestine.
President Shukri a1‑Quwatli said that Syria adopts the Resolution
passed
by the Parliament of Iraq on Palestine (See pp. for that Resolution)
2. They all wanted a complete understanding with Great Britain on the solution of the Palestine problem and they all wanted Britain to appreciate the Communist‑Zionist danger.
3. They wanted a meeting of the Arab states to reach an agreement on a unified policy vis‑a‑vis the United Nations Conciliation Commission on Palestine.
4. They were very much concerned that there should be a clear atmosphere between Egypt and Iraq. The President of the Republic deputized Lutff al-Haffar to Egypt with a personal message to this effect.
5. Nabih al‑'Almeh
regretted
that the Arab states did not fight and did
not sacrifice
for Palestine. The President of the Republic hoped that at least one
successful military
move would
be attained.
The Arab League.
The Syrian
government is strongly is strongly attached to the principles of the
Arab
league and calls for reorganizing and reinforcing the League.
Syrio‑Iraqi
Federation.
I
found a strong inclination in non‑governmental circles for the
federation
of Syria and
Iraq. Nabih al‑'Azmeh,
President of the Nationalist Party, and 'Adnan al‑Atasi, for the
Peoples
Party, both expressed this desire. Atasi even informed me that his
Party had
submitted an official memorandum to the President of the Republic in
which they
asked for the federation of Iraq and Syria, but they are anxious about
two
points, first, the in fluence of H.M. King 'Abdullah on Iraqi
politics, and
second, the Anglo‑Iraqi Treaty.
I answered that, although Iraq was allied with the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, it was independent in its policies. As for the 1930 Treaty with Britain, the disposal of it had already been agreed in principle, and nothing would remain but our Alliance with Britain in facing an external aggression and that was what Syria wanted, too. They agreed. As for government circles, they think that union should take the form of treaties and agreements between two separate, independent states (as is the case between Iraq and Turkey) in matters affecting defence, communication, education, legislation, customs, navigation, etc., with special emphasis on unifying plans for defence. That is what the Prime Minister of Syria, Khalid al‑'Azm, emphasized to me, and that is what he wished to achieve as quickly as possible.
I
referred to the
scheme of Nuri as-Sa=id
along those very lines, which was rejected by the late Sa=adullah
al‑Jabiri who
said that such schemes should come through the Arab League. I spoke at
length
explaining the
futility of waiting for everything to be decided by the League. Article
9 of the
Covenant of the
Arab League is clear. It encourages the strengthening of relations
between Arab
states
wishing to do so beyond the limits of the League. Taha
Pasha al‑Hashimi
spoke to me about the urgency and necessity of the federation between
Iraq and
Syria because of Syria's need for Iraqi aid in defending its borders,
for Syria
was exposed to direct Zionist danger, and, if Syria went, there would
be no
direct connection between Iraq and the Arab world.
There was a prevailing fear of
H.M.King Abdullah, and various things
were
attributed to him by partisan people. One exception to this was Faris
al‑al-Khouri
whom I found appreciative of King 'Abdullah's idea about Greater Syria.
He
thought that the King should be trusted in the saving of Palestine, but
he
dared not make his views public nor did he wish to be quoted. He
attacked the
policy of isolation from the Greet Powers which was prevailing in some
Arab states
and he called for complete understanding with Britain. He criticized
H.M. King
'Abdul 'Aziz Ibn Sa'ud for refusing even to threaten to cut the flow of
oil.
Haji Ameen
al‑Husaini.
In Egypt, Lebanon and Syria, I found harsh criticism directed against
the
policies of Haji Ameen al‑Husaini. Among those who were
critical were
Jamal al‑Husaini and Faris al‑Khouri.
Everywhere I found criticism of
Iraq for not having gone to the help of
Egypt. I also found that many
have great
hopes in Iraq and its new government. They think that the Iraqi
government has
the cards in its hand and that it can now render the greatest service
to
Palestine if they are well played When that coup
happened
I was
Foreign Minister
in Nuri's Cabinet. The coup came as a big shock
and surprise
to us. We had no premonition or it at all.We
were greatly
concerned at the time about the safety of President Shukri al‑Quwatli
and
his colleagues. Upon being reassured about that, Nuri suggested
that we should
send Jamal Baban, a Senator and former Iraqi Cabinet Minister who was a
Kurd,
to Syria to meet as‑Za'im, who himself was a Kurd, and come to an
understanding with him on the need for cooperation and unity between
Syria and
Iraq. Jamal Baban left Baghdad on the 2nd of April and he sent us
the
following telegram:.
I arrived noon today Meza (airport).I telephoned Husni Za'im and asked for a meeting. Two o'clock was assigned at his headquarters. Accompanied our Minister was received cordially and with readiness. I told him first of all I am delegated by the Iraqi government to meet you and to meet the President or the House or Representatives for whom I carry a letter in his capacity as head of the legislative body. Last night, however, we heard rumours that the House of Representatives had been dissolved, and, since the Prime Minister of Iraq had no time to change the letter, he asked me to present it to you as if it were addressed to you. I wish that you would read the letter before we enter into discussion.
I told him: Iraq, government and people, sympathize with sister Syria and follow events with great concern.
It gives me pleasure to assure you on behalf of the Iraqi government that Iraq is ready to render any help of any sort which Syria needs. We are interested to know also what you intend to do after this coup.
He answered saying:
Please
present my
respects to His Royal Highness the Regent and to His Excellency Nuri
as-Sa=id,
wishing that they may
know thst I have not undertaken this move because of any outside
influence. The
army undertook the move as a result of public and army discontent
resulting
from the behaviour of the President of the Republic and his government
in
permitting carriers of subversive doctrines and severe attacks by
Members of
Parliament against the army. The public are very much relieved because
of this
coup.
When I started to
question him
about other subjects, especially Arab and foreign affairs he answered
me very
clearly after requesting me to keep confidential that he intended first
of all
to unite Syria with Iraq militarily and economically as a first step to
larger
union, so that we may be able to stand against outside aggression, for
it is
impossible for the Arabs to survive as small states. He gave as
an example the
tragedy of Palestine. But at the present it is not possible to open
this door
because the President of the Republic and previous governments have
unjustifiably created resentment against TransJordan and they threw
themselves
into the lap of the Saudi and Egyptian Kingdoms fruitlessly. I asked
him, "When
can we start with this?" He answered that he is
busy now forming
the government and he may be obliged to dissolve the House or
Representatives
and start elections immediately to form a constituent assembly that
will revise
the Constitution and this will take no less than a month. After that he
will
send a delegation to Iraq to negotiate this problem. He does not wish
the
Egyptian or Saudi governments to hear this. They both have
received his
movement with resentment at a time when he needs support and quiet.
When I
asked him on what basis he intended to revise the Constitution and
whether the
system of government was going to be republican or royal he
excused himself for not
answering, saying,
"You will hear about that in due time, but first I will not permit the election of any
representative
who opposes my principles".
When we moved to foreign policy he told me that he had met the British and American Ministers and notified them about his readiness to sign bilateral treaties with them on the basis of cooperation and participation in the Marshall Plan. Expanding on this subject he said: I wish you to notify His Royal Highness and the Prime Minister that I am preparing myself from now to annex to Syria the part of Lebanon inhabited by Muslims, when Syrian unity is complete. When I advised him that he should cooperate with the legal men of Syria he answered me that Faris al‑Khouri does not wish to cooperate with us and that he (Za'im) was in touch now with 'Adil Aralan to have him join the Cabinet.
I
asked him if he
had any objection to my meeting Faris al‑Khouri and 'Adil Aralan. He
agreed to that but asked me not to say a word to them about the
conversation
between us. My meeting with him lasted about two hours.
When I came out I
went immediately to see Faris
al‑Khuri whom I found
in bed.
I informed him about my meeting with Za'im, not mentioning the
important points
which I had been asked not to divulge and I handed him the letter of
His
Excellency the Prime Minister. He answered me that he had reached old
age and
he did not permit himself to take part from now on in any government
the
consequences of which were not known. He informed me that Za'im had met him
twice and
that he had done his best to help him ease the situation and quiet
conditions
and that was by asking Shukri al-Quwatli to resign, but Shukri refused
emphatically saying that he would not resign so long as he had a
beating pulse.
It is to be understood that the majority of the people are very much
relieved
by the removal of Quwatli from his
government post
and conditions are quiet as if nothing had happened. When I
informed Faris
al‑Khouri
that the Iraqi government welcomed his undertaking the responsibility
of
forming the Cabinet in order to save the situation, being sure of his
good
intentions toward Iraq he answered: I know that, and I know that His
Royal
Highness the Regent supports me also, but I regret to inform you that
the
matter has become an impossibility so far as I am
concerned. I have
not been able to meet 'Adil Aralan for he had an appointment with
as‑Za'im
for that day and he was still with him Al‑Za'im intends to
dissolve all
parties and organizations as he declared to
me. My personal conclusions
are that, although as‑Za'im is negotiating with 'Adil Aralan and Faris
al‑Khouri
to form a Cabinet I understand from meeting with him that he does
not wish to
form any government until after the elections and then he will form a
new
government from individuals who win his confidence, or he may head the
Cabinet
himself and retain the Ministries of Interior and Defence and he may
make 'Adil
Aralan and others participate with him.
I
met the
President of The Peoples Party in Orient Palace (hotel) and I could get
no
ideas from him because people are afraid. I shall meet some newspaper
men today
with complete reserve in order to find out prevailing opinions.
Tomorrow
morning I am leaving for Beirut to meet the responsible people there
and to get
their point of view. On
returning I
shall dine with As‑Za'im because he has invited me to resume
discussions
on a larger scale. As‑Ze'im requested me"not to reveal anything and
I request you to instruct the press and the Iraqi radio to support him
as much
as possible. I expect your instructions to guide me
in my resumption of
negotiations with as‑Za'im.
I ask you to telegraph to Beirut where I expect to stay three days.
After three days the following telegram arrived from Jamal Baban.
Foreign Affairs, Baghdad. Damascus 5/4/49.
The following to His Excellency the Prime Minister and copy to the Head of the Royal Diwan.
I left for Damascus immediately after receiving your telegram. I contacted various strata of the people. They were all happy with the coup at first.
The behaviour of as‑Za=im indicating the establishment of a dictatorship in the country, his dissolution of the Parliament, and his continued arresting of people without forming a Cabinet has caused a great reaction. His monopoly of authority has caused discontent amongst the army officers. They all seek the help of Iraq to federate the two states provided that Trans‑Jordan shall not interfere. The people here are not expected to realize this aim at the present without the support of Iraq. Taha Hashimi called on me and confirmed this point of view and requested that the opportunity should not be lost. Myself and our Minister had luncheon with as‑Za'im alone. We dealt with all the topics. I assured him about Iraq's readiness to help him. I shall present the details upon my return. The opportunity is available from all points of view to think of the subject seriously. Aralan is hesitant to take part in spite of my insistence in your name that he should do so. He is shortly leaving with al‑Khouri for the United States.It is necessary that I should stay here until Thursday morning. Please prepare a plane.
Jamal
Baban
From these telegrams I came to two basic conclusions. The first was that we should capitalize on the opportunity offered by the coup d'état to achieve Syrio‑Iraqi rapprochement. The second was that Husni as‑Za'im seemed to be lacking balance and therefore reliability. The Prime Minister, Nuri as‑Sa'id, decided to send another official, Awni Al‑Khalidi, with a personal letter from the Prime Minister to Faris Bey al‑Khouri in whose judgment we had confidence. Awni ai‑Khalidiarrived in Damascus on the 12th of April and went immediately to see Faris al‑Khouri with whom he had a full discussion about the existing situation.
In his written report dated April 14, 1949, Awni al‑Khalidi summarized Faris Bey's views as follows:
His Excellency believes that there is no crisis in Syria now. The military coup has settled down internally and the people gladly accepted it. That is why there is no need for any external mediation now. On the other hand, members of the Parliament or political parties cannot in the present circumstances stances put anything on paper in spite of the fact that some of them have some ideas and wishes. As-Zai'im dissolved the Parliament and the member showed no resistance to that dissolution, and, after the resignation of the President of the Republic and the Prime Minister the situation became legal. There is no House of Representatives since az‑Za'im himself has taken the legislative and executive authority into his own hands.
His Excellency 'al‑Khouri accepts the federation of Syria and Iraq under one crown and believes that the best method to achieve that would be through a military agreement or alliance which would gradually develop into a complete unity between the two states. That is because it is difficult for azsZa'im to face the Republic with the federation at once, it being understood that the people, the army and the political parties are all ready and desirous to achieve unity.
His Excellency had met as‑Za'im a few days before and tried to induce him to hasten an understanding with Iraq on the basis of unity. As‑Za'im expressed his desire for that and called the Iraqi Minister to Damascus with the purpose of initiating a military agreement. Faris al‑Khouri believes in the necessity of hastening this action before anything internal happens which might divide the word of the people, especially that now they are all unanimous in accepting mutual understanding and rapprochement of this kind with Iraq.
His Excellency still continues to refuse his cooperation with the coup movement, but, at the present time he does not oppose it, but sees the necessity of its continuing, of directing it and of helping it. He told me that he intends to leave for America after something like two weeks to resume his work in the United Nations. Having found out that as‑Za'im was interested in a military agreement with Iraq I was very enthusiastic that Iraq should go ahead and enter such an agreement. Prime Minister Nuri as‑Sa=id, however, was more cautious. He decided to go to Damascus and meet as-Zai'im personally. On the morning or the 16th or April, Nuri Pasha as‑Sa=id, dressed in the attire or a high‑ranking General, with all his military decorations, which put him on a much higher rooting than as‑Za'im, boarded a military plane accompanied by Shakir al‑Wadi, the Minister of Defence, General Saleh Saib, Chief of the Iraqi General Staff, Brigadier 'Abdul Muttalib al‑Ameen, Senator Jamel Baban and 'Awni al‑Khalidi. They landed in Damascus where they were joined by our Minister to Syria, Ibhrahim >Akif al-Alousi. Nuri Pasha told me that he first had a private meeting with as‑Za'im in which he discovered as‑Za'im's utter futility. It seems to me that Nuri must have scared as‑Za'im and given him a shock based on an inferiority complex.
After the private meeting, there was an official meeting of the Iraqi delegation headed by Nuri Pasha with a Syrian delegation headed by as‑Za'im Husni as‑Za'im. The following is the text of the minutes of that meeting:
Very confidential.
Minutes
of the
meeting between the Heads of the two governments of Iraq and Syria held
in
Damascus, the day of 16/4/1949.
At
1 o'clock on
the day of 16 April, 1949, the Heads of the two Governments of Iraq and
Syria
met in the Palace of the Presidency of the Republic in
Damascus. The
Iraqi
delegation was headed by His Excellency General Nuri Pasha as‑Sa'id.
His
Excellency was
accompanied by the following Iraqis: Their Excellencies, Shakir Pasha
al‑Wadi,
the Minister of Defence, Jamal Beg Baban, Brahim 'Aqif Beg al
Alousi,
Minister
Plenipotentiary in Damascus, General Saleh Saib Pasha, Chief of the
General
Staff of the Army, Brigadier 'Abdul Muttali`al‑Ameen,Sayed 'Awni
al‑Khalidi. There
were, on the
Syrian side, His Excellency Az‑Za'im Husni az‑Za'im, Head of the
Delegation, Emir Adil
Aralan, His Excellency Faidhi Al‑Atasi, Brigadier 'Abdullah
Lutfi.His
Excellency the
Prime Minister (of Iraq) opened the discussion by saying: Your
Excellency,
Mr President, I am very happy for the opportunity of meeting our
brethren, the
men of Syria and exchanging views with them and getting
acquainted with
the
steps which our sister Syria has taken, for the concern of Iraq with
his sister
is among the primary matters which never leave our thoughts. We follow
the
news of dear Syria
in full and
we wish her all success and prosperity. We
are happy to
see our sister moving steadily towards stability. It has quickly formed
a
responsible Cabinet and is returning to normal conditions which will
give
reassurance to all of us. In
this connection
Syria does not need new recognition of its present political status
from other
states, for Syria is an independent country and what happened is
something
which is the concern of its own people. It is they who
accept a
certain
rule and
this situation does not require recognition for no state can whittle
down the
right of Syria to the independence and sovereignty which she now
enjoys.
Two
weeks ago we
heard movement of the Jews in Palestine who were intending to exploit
the
events in Syria, a matter which made us anxious in Baghdad and aroused
all our
concern.
After
that we
received a telegram from Damascus requesting Iraqis military aid.
That is why
we thought of sending a military mission to understand the Syrian point
of view
and the nature and extent of the military aid required from Iraq
against the
Jewish aggression. That
is why I came
myself with the Minister of Defence and the Chief of the General Staff
to avoid
delays in communications and to assure you here that the Iraqi
government will
undertake to offer all necessary help in case of any aggression
falling on the
Syrian army. We do not consider this matter as a problem foreign to us.
And we
would be ready to render this help whether the Syrians asked us to do
so or
not, for we consider Jewish aggression on the Syrian army to be the
same as
an aggression on the Iraqi army. That is why we must come and
help. If
the intention,
however, has a broader meaning of military cooperation, like mutual
defence,
for example, we should like to know what your tendencies are on this
subject,
especially since the last Syrian delegation which came to Baghdad
carried a
long list of military material related to its needs. As
is well known,
Iraq is bound by a Treaty Alliance with Great Britain, and, although
only a rew
years remain till this treaty expires, we are still bound by its terms
and
articles. That
is why, if we
enter into a mutual defence agreement with Syria, we have to consult
Britain in
that respect, although I may say that the world is changing rapidly,
and it is
moving now with fast steps and it will shortly be possible to sign a
pact which
is larger than the alliance of two countries, a pact which may include
all or
most of the states of the Middle East and that pact will include
matters of
defence and all Arab states could join it. In such conditions the
pact will
guarantee the conditions required for mutual defence against
aggression. I
hope this will happen very shortly. The
question of cooperation
between Syria and Iraq has been occupying my mind for some
time. I did what I
could do in this respect in 1946 when I tried, with the late Sa'adullah
al‑Jabiri,
Prime Minister at that time, to unify communications, customs, economic
and
trade matters and irrigation. The late Jabiri agreed to this in
principle, he
and President Shukri al‑Quwatli, but they thought that undertaking such
steps might arouse the suspicions of' Egypt and Saudi Arabia and said
that it
would require preparing the atmosphere.
Four years have passed and the atmosphere has not been prepared. I must say that, in our desire to achieve cooperation between the two regions we did not forget Lebanon, for I spoke with Sami as-Sulh Prime Minister of Lebanon at that time, on the subject. The Lebanese Council of Ministers approved these suggestions, but I did not wish to take such steps with Lebanon without Syria. I told Sami as-Sulh that he should convince our Syrian brethren to go along with us together. Then we would achieve what we had agreed on. I am afraid that if Iraq were to come forward with a proposal or an opinion it might be accused of not having the genuine intention and sincere wish which we carry. That is why it may be good to wait now for a time with regard to taking any actual steps toward unity. We will wait also until our sister finds that opportunity is at hand and request us to fulfill or study one of' these projects in this respect. Then we shall look into every proposal of this kind with all concern and study it fully. But the problem of mutual defence against the Zionists now is a matter which is an obvious one. As for other problems it may be best to postpone them now.
His Excellency as‑Zai'im:
I welcome you very graciously and thenk you very much for the nice words which you were kind enough to utter. Syria and Iraq are not only two neighbours; they are more than that, and I believe that we must cooperate to the utmost in matters or frontiers, matters of customs, military matters and others. I am not familiar with the earlier proposals of Your Excellency. If they are in the Ministry or Foreign affairs in Damascus we shall study them fully, otherwise we shall request you to provide us with a copy thereof so that we may study them. The Jews have now stopped attacking Syrian positions and we have come not to fear them. I shall not hide from you that we are growing in strength. Some arms have arrived for us and more will arrive. These arms consist of tommy‑guns, cannons and armoured cars. Any Jewish aggression, therefore, will be costly for them. The only thing which we may need is the air weapons, end, probably in time of need, Iraq can help us with air force.
With regard to our policy now, our policy towards you should be a policy of friendship and brotherhood, and His Excellency Emir >Adil is studying all these problems now. Among the projects we should undertake is the establishment of a railroad from Homs to Palmyra and Deir ez-Zor. This is of military importance, not only for the defence of Syria and Iraq, but also for the possibility or Turkey taking part in a project of defending this region. We must also cooperate in combatting Communism.
After the Prime Minister's return to Iraq, the following statement was given to the press by the Iraqi Information Department:
The Iraqi government has for some time been watching with concern the process of truce negotiations between the Zionists and the Syrian government, and, since the Iraqi government is quite anxious that the Zionists should not exploit the Syrian coup and follow a hard line in negotiations or become aggressive on the Syrian borders, the Iraqi government felt that it was its duty to assure our Syrian brethren that Iraq is ready to come with all its force to the support of Syria if any Zionist aggression takes place on Syrian borders. For this purpose His Excellency the Prime Minister himself left yesterday for Damascus by plane accompanied by His Excellency the Minister of Defence) and the Chief of the General Staff of the Army to assure the Syrian government that Iraq would consider any Zionist aggression on the borders of Syria as aggression on Iraq itself, and that the Iraqi army would be ready at all times to respond to the call of brotherhood. His Excellency the Prime Minister and his company returned to the capital today.
Nuri's trip to Damascus bore no fruit. It immediately aroused King Farouq of Egypt, Azzam Pasha. the Secretary General of the Arab League, who was at that time the standard‑bearer of King Farouq and King 'Abdul 'Aziz of Saudi Arabia, rushed from Cairo to meet Husni as‑Za'im. I do not doubt at all that he did his best to turn him away from Iraq. Besides, through Netheer Fansa, brother in‑law of as‑Za'im, King Farouq could influence as‑Za'im. King Farouq invited as‑Za'im to Cairo where he was entertained lavishly with pomp, gifts and decorations. As‑Za'im began to suffer from megalomania. He ordered a golden baton from France and enjoyed the pomp and vanities of office.
On one occasion as‑Za'im sent Emir >Adil Aralan and Dr Farid Zeinuddin, to Baghdad. On talking with them I discovered that as‑Za'im was hopeless. He could not be relied upon. Some months passed and conditions in Syria began to slip from nationalist hands. On a visit to Lebanon I had a talk with Prime Minister Riyadh as‑Sulh which included a review of the situation in Syria I made the following record:
Riyadh Beg emphasized what he had already previously explained in Iraq, that the situation in Syria was not normal and not stable. People are dispersing from around Husni az‑Za'im from day to day, and it seems that the army officers and the soldiers are not pleased with the government of as‑Za'im or with his coup d'état, but, naturally they will not oppose his rule with force unless something induces them to do so. As for the men of politics in general those who supported the previous regime, or those who opposed as‑Za'im, not to speak of helping him or cooperating with him. Very few exceptions could be made to this statement, and the only important man who is cooperating with him is Emir 'Adil Aralan. As for the public it has waked up from the blow, for, when the public supported the coup at f'irst, it thought that the coup would lead to union with Iraq, but, when it appeared that it meant replacing Shukri al-Quwaitly by as‑Za'im, that did not please them. But none of' them dare oppose as‑Za'im for he has the power in his hands. But they can do much if Iraq goes forward with a quick positive action before they get involved, because of fear or benefit, in cooperation with as‑Za'im.
The Iraqi authorities had asked for petitions from some Syrian personalities or that some of' those personalities should come to Iraq asking for Iraq's help so that Iraq might have justification for interfering in Syria. Although some of' the personalities are ready to make petitions or come to Iraq, they feel that Iraq does not need such a move on their part before intervening in the affairs of Syria. On the other hand, they are afraid lest as‑Za'im, if Iraq does not intervene immediately, may deal a crushing blow to them and their relatives. That is why, if they are to come to Iraq, their stay must be very short.
Then I concluded my report: Most of' the Syrian nationalists, and they are the elite and the leaders of public opinion in Syria and Lebanon, support Riyadh Beg=s view and they deem it necessary that the Iraqi government should make a decisive move to realize union with Syria, and they think this could be achieved in one of two ways. The first is a quick one which would involve the Iraqi army's entering Syria and a guarantee that the Syrians would rise in support of the Iraqi army and that the Syrian army would show no resistance. I'he second is a slow method, namely, by providing a strong propaganda campaign centered in Damascus and Beirut, enlisting the Lebanese press, and making contacts with the tribes, the army and the political leaders or Syria, and by providing them with arms. It is advised that this should be done quickly before Za'im is elected as President or the Republic. I must say that the Iraqi government did not act in accordance with this advice. The truth or the matter is that Prime Minister Nuri as‑Sa'id did not believe in Syrio‑Iraqi federation although much later he came to see the situation differently.
With all this going on, King 'Abdullah of Jordan was greatly enraged at Iraqi interference with Syria. He sent the Prime Minister or Jordan, Tawfiq Pasha Abul Huda, to Baghdad to express his great concern and worry about Iraq's interference in Syria which His Majesty looked upon as his own domain. Tawfiq Pasha told me that His Majesty was enraged to the extent of thinking of marching on Iraq (sic) if Iraq did not refrain from interfering with Syria. I, as Minister of Foreign Affairs or Iraq, gave Tawfiq Pasha the true picture of the whole situation and told him to pay my respects to His Majesty and to assure him that Iraq would always be glad if His Majesty could achieve the unity of Syria and Jordan. If, however, that could not happen at present, would His Majesty prefer that Syria should be estranged from both Iraq and Jordan? Would not His Majesty prefer that Syria and Iraq should be closer together until an eventual unity of all three?
I said that I put myself at His Majesty's disposal for any policy which he might put forward on the subject, our aim and national objective being one and the same. Tawfiq Pasha returned and conveyed my views to His Majesty and telephoned back saying, "His Majesty kisses your cheeks and has full confidence in your stand. Pursue your policy."
While in Baghdad Tawfiq Pasha explained to me Jordan's policy of unifying the two sides of the Jordan river by referendum on the West Bank and by providing access to the sea. Of course the port of Aqaba was to be developed. Egypt was opposed to unity of the two sides of the Jordan. Tawfiq Pasha also told me that Jordan could not recognize Husni az‑Za'im until the constitutional problem had been settled. As for those Arab: governments who recognized as‑Za'im, they did so for self‑interest and with disregard for principles. He spoke about the interference in Syria of >Assam Pasha, the Secretary General of the Arab League, and about the question raised by Ibrahim Pasha 'Abdul Hadi, Prime Minister of Egypt, about Greater Syria and whether King 'Abdullah was still pursuing that policy. Abul Huda thought that the situation in Syria was very unstable because the Syrians, although they thought at first that as‑Za'im came as a saviour, soon discovered that he was a dictator. He himself told an Egyptian journalist, "I am a dictator." They discovered that Shukri al‑Quwatli was far better and more honourable. Besides, as‑Za'im did not stand for the Cause of Arab nationalism.
In a talk with Abul Huda, Nuri
Pasha said that our
approach to Syria would be one of military alliance. He outlined the
difficulties of recognition as well as the difficulties of
interference. Any interference in the affairs of Syria, according to
Nuri Pasha, might arouse the Zionists, the Turks, Egypt, Ibn Sa'ud,
and, in the case of conflict, it would be the powerful who would gain,
namely, the Zionists and the French. That is why Nuri thought that the
Syrians should be left to their own devices and that no incident should
be brought about which might be exploited. He said, "We will not
interfere unless we are asked to do so in case of trouble inside Syria.
We should let the Syrians express their own wish freely if they want
any association with the Hashemites. We will not work against Sidi
'Abdullah (H.M. King Abdullah) nor carryon propaganda against him in
Syria. Neither will we take any important step before informing Sidi
'Abdullah. I shall quote here a section from a
confidential report made by s trustworthy correspondent of Al Ahram,
the well-known Egyptian newspaper, and given to the Iraqi Charge
d'Affaires in Damascus. The report reveals a good deal about the
intricacies of power politics in Syria and the Middle East at the time.
2/8/1949. Terrorism prevails in Syria and men of the
former regime crowd the prisons and detention centres. As-Za'im invents
ways of torturing and abusing these people. That is why the public is
fed up with his eccentricities and irresponsible behaviour. The
following facts are submitted with caution for information only.
1) It is now decisively proven that France completely dominates Syrian economy and that the French Minister Plenipotentiary and the Director of the National Bank of Syria‑Lebanon, who is French, are the two who conduct the economic and financial policy there. They have succeeded in stopping the weaving factories in Aleppo and Damascus so that their manufactured goods shall not compete with French imports. The owners of these factories suffer from an acute financial crisis. They try to get loans from the Bank of Syria‑Lebanon without success. Many, including al‑Hariri, the ex‑Minister of Finance, who is a well- known wealthy Aleppo man, are threatened with bankruptcy.
2) Husni az‑Za'im provided facilities for the Syrian-Lebanese Bank to dominate farmers and landowners by passing a law authorizing the Syrian‑Lebanese Bank alone to give loans to farmers and landowners by passing authorizing the Syrian-Lebanese Bank alone to give loans to farmers and landowners with interest up to30%, and giving them the right to mortgage all the land and property of the debtors until the loan is repaid in full.
2) . All those who cooperated with the French Mandate were returned to their posts and a word from the French Minister or any member of the French Legation is not turned down in any government department.
4). The French offered Husni as‑Za=im seven cargo ships laden with arms, and the Bank of Syria‑Lebanon pays him great sums every month for the services he renders to France and to France and to French entrepeneurs. He intends to restore the system of advisors by calling them experts.
5). The French cooperate with the Americans and the Sa'udis to keep British influence out of' Syria. The Americans tolerate the extension of French influence now, for their aim is to strengthen the second line behind the Turkish front, and this is the reason behind the rapprochement between as‑Za'im and the Turks.
Signed, Chargé d=Affaires of Iraq
Relations between Syria and Iraq were deteriorating and the situation in Syria was going from bad to worse, day by day. I quote the following from an authoritative report:
1). Husni az‑Za'im told some press men that he is obliged to fight on four fronts, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and Israel... He asked them to attack the person of His Royal Highness the Regent of Iraq.
2. He calls merchants one at a time and imposes on them a certain levy in the name of the Army Tax which should be paid immediately otherwise they will be sentto AI‑Mezza prison or to Tedmur (Palmyra) where they will be tortured and degraded.
3.
Munir ar‑Rais,
the well‑known Syrian journalist, privately revealed that az‑Za'im
had asked him to carry on a strong campaign against Iraq and informed
him that
a million Syrian pounds had been allotted for propaganda and
information in
Iraq.
4.
Hashim‑Atasi
tried to go to France to visit his son but was prevented from
doing so. He
thinks that he
and his like should go to Egypt and Saudi Arabia to call their
attention to the
harm done by their helping az‑Za'im. He speaks of torture in
prisons and
extortion of money and the discontent that has started in
the ranks of
the
army.
5.
Muhsin al‑Barazi
said that he came into the government to check the excesses in the
actions of as‑Za'im. The truth is that they were both in agreement
before
the coup. This is the
unanimous view of the politicians.
6.
The French
influence is growing from day to day, and Barazi says that as‑Za'im is
pushed into that whenever he feels threatened by the Hashemites.
7. Some members of the Nationalist party are showing some cooperation with as‑Za=im in order to spite the People's Party who have become his enemy no. 1 after they had been the closest to him. The truth is that all nationalists, parties and politicians of various views are anti‑Za=im, even though they may appear otherwise, since they are all afraid of torture, degradation and imprisonment.
8. Muhsin al‑Barazi is the one who feeds the Egyptian papers with the help of Saudi money.
9. Riyadh as‑Sulh asked his friends, whether politicians or newspaper men, to denounce the campaign against Iraq and some newspaper men stated that they did not know the facts about Syria and that Iraq did not contact them to come to an understanding.
11. Syria and Lebanon exchange plots against each other. As‑Za=im instigates the Lebanese army and the Lebanese opposition to make President Bishara al Khouri and Prime Minister Riyadh as‑Sulh fall. These, on their part, work against as‑Za'im although not so openly, and the situation in Lebanon is bad and the discontent is great. The government fears an explosion.
12. The prevailing opinion here is that trouble in Syria will begin when schools open, for the students who supported the coup as a strong movement for liberation and reform have begun to feel that it is oriented towards French imperialism .and friendship with Turkey. This makes all the elements ‑‑ Arab nationalists, unite against as‑Za'im.
13. Shukri al‑Quwatli was disliked in the last days of his rule. That is why, as far as the people are concerned, the coup had to happen. Even members of the nationalist bloc say that they remained the masters in their country from 1920 on, but that Shukri al As‑Za'im exploited this degradation and struck the blow.
14. People in Syria of the various groups and tendencies think that federation with Iraq is the only way out of this impasse. They take it as a matter of fact. They differ in their estimation of the date of the downfall of Za=im rule.
15. Nationalist Party journalists, Nejib ar‑Rais, owner of Al-Qabas and Nassooh Babeel, owner of Al-Ayam say that articles were personally imposed on them by as‑Za'im. Nejib ar‑Rais told me, "Nuri Pasha is the wisest and the most far‑sighted Arab politician today. History will be just to him, for the Arabs have not produced a statesman after Faisal the First more gifted than Nuri."
As‑Za'im
had
definitely gone into the camp of Egypt and Saudi Arabia in Arab
affairs, which
meant no rapprochement with Iraq. Acting on this policy he had
appointed Dr Muhsin
al-Barazi, a highly educated Syrian young man of Kurdish descent, as
Prime
Minister. Dr Mughsin was very close to ex ‑President Shukri
al‑Quwatli.
At one time he was Minister of Foreign Affairs. I had had close
association
with him when I represented Iraq in Egypt and Muhsin al-Barazi was
Syrian
Minister there in 1949. Muhsin's memoirs, as revealed by Al‑Hayat
newspaper or Beirut. contain a pledge. which he and to King 'Abdul
'Aziz
Ibn.Sa'ud. not to unite Syria and Iraq. Thus Egypt and
Saudi Arabia had
blocked the way to rapprochement between Syria and Iraq.
In the
meantime. the People's
Party or Syria had definitely declared the federation or Iraq and Syria
as its
aim. The influence or the People's Party in Syria was at its acme in
those
days. They had many
followers
and
sympathizers. As‑Za'im's regime. by going anti‑Iraq developed
many
internal weaknesses. as‑Za'im's personal behaviour. his dictatorship
and
megalomania. as well as his close cooperation with France, revived the
Francophobia. This led to the great dissatisfaction on many
nationalists. some
or whom had contact with the Syrian army.
In the last days or July
1949 we received reports in Baghdad that Za'im's regime would be
liquidated
between the 11th and the 15th of August. Actually as‑Za=im and his Prime
Minister were both shot in an army putch on August the 13th. The
leader of the putsch
was as‑Za'im's Chief of Staf, General Sami Hannawi. who had family
connections with Iraq. He was pro‑Iraq and worked in harmony with the
People's Party who had included in their platform the federation of
Syria with
Iraq. The Nationalist Party at this time once more
proclaimed
their intention of federating with Iraq.
After
the putsch.
Hashim al‑Atasi. the old and respected nationalist leader became
President of the Syrian Republic and Dr Ma=aruf
ad-Dawalbi of the People's Party became Prime
Minister. President
Atasi himself had always been enthusiastic for Syrio‑Iraqi federation.
Our Minister to Syria, Dr Ibrahim 'Aqif al‑Alousi, was quite
active. He
was in close touch with General Hannawi. His reports on the
development toward
federation were encouraging and optimistic.
At
that time
several Iraqi nationalists went to Syria to promote the cause of
Syrio‑Iraqi
federation. At the beginning of September I had to leave Baghdad for
the United
Nations General Assembly meeting. I left with some hope that the
Syrio‑Iraqi
federation was on the way.
During
this period
I was Foreign Minister without being a Member of Parliament. According
to the
Iraqi Constitution I could maintain that status for six months only.
While I
was at the United Nations, the six months came to an end. I was
immediately
appointed Chief Representative of Iraq at the United Nations. My
relations with Syrian affairs came to a standstill. On
the 19th of
December, 1949, another coup d'état in Syria shattered our hopes.
Hannawi and all his
colleagues were
arrested. President Atasi was sent back to his native city of
Homs. The coup
was headed by General Fawzi Selu. General‑Hannawi was
later
released.
He went to live in Beirut, where, on the 30th of December, 1950,
he was shot
dead while waiting to catch a tram. He was shot by: a nephew of Barazi
in order
to revenge the death of Dr Muhsin al-Barazi.
Behind
Selu was
Colonel Adib ash‑Shishakli, the new dictator of Syria. Shishakli, a
shrewd and capable man, ruled Syria for the next four years, achieving
a good
deal of construction and economic development, but he was anti‑Iraq and
he was quite ruthless. During the first months of his rule I was at
the United
Nations. Later on I returned to Iraq. In 1952 as Minister of Foreign
Affairs
again in the Cabinet of Mustapha al‑Omeri I found Colonel Shishakli
very
active in attacking Iraq and its governing regime. I found that
diplomatic
relations between the two countries were very tense. The
Syrian Ambassador in
Baghdad was not invited to official Iraqi functions. Confidential
instructions
had been given to Iraqi consulates and embassies in the Arab world to
restrict
very severely the admission of Syrians into Iraq. One of the
first things I
did was to invite the Syrian Ambassador, Khalil Msrdam Beg, a
well‑known
Arab poet, to my house and to tell him that he should always feel at
home in my
house and that he should come to my home or office without
protocol. I also
sent a confidential message to the Ministry of Interior and all our
embassies and consulates telling them to remove all restrictions for
entry into
Iraq of
Syrians, Lebanese and Palestinians. In a note dated
July 20, 1952, I told the Ministry of Interior that Syrians, Lebanese
and
Palestinians were not foreigners in Iraq. The word 'foreigner'
should not be
applied to them. They should simply be
termed non
Iraqi. I expressed a protest about the fact that there were
restrictions for
the entry into Iraq of Arabs from sister countries and great ease for
the entry
of foreign artists. The
following is an
extract from the text:
Iraq, which
is well known for its pro‑Arab policy cannot harmonize between its
call
for federation and the severities laid on visas for the sons or Arab
sister
states. At a time when visas between France and Britain
have been removed.
and Italian and German labour is
rarely
exchangeable in western Europe and when we see western European
countries
moving toward economic and political unity. we think that the
restrictions
which you have promulgated represent a reactionary policy which we
cannot
uphold. In view or what we have said. we request you to
reconsider the matter
and provide us with your views et the earliest possible date.
I invited the Syrian
Ambassador to visit me and I informed him about the new facilities
which I had
arranged for Syrians to enter Iraq. I told him I did not mind if
thousands and
hundreds of thousands or Syrians poured into Iraq. They
should feel that Iraq
is their country just as an Iraqi should feel at home in
Syria. This move of
mine bewildered Shishakli. and he began to be very
apprehensive about
the intentions behind it. What I actually intended was to
win the Syrian
people for Iraq in spite of Shishakli's hostility. In that I
succeeded to some
extent.
In the same summer. 1952,
after the Egyptian revolution, I attended the Arab League meeting. I
also went
to Alexandria where ex‑President Quwatli was living. The
Iraqi
Ambassador, Nejib ar‑Rawi. and I spent the day with him. He spoke
to me
at length denouncing Shishakli's policies and cruelties. He told
me that it
was the duty of' responsible Arab lel1ders to save Syria from the cruel
dictatorship of' that man. In the fall I again went
as Head of' the Iraqi
delegation to attend the General Assembly of the United Nations. While
I was
there the Iraqi Cabinet of Mustapha al‑Omari
had to resign because of' a local anti‑American uprising in
Baghdad.
General Nureddin Mahmoud formed the new Cabinet. I retained my office
as
Minister of' Foreign Affairs in his Cabinet. The House of' Parliament
was
dissolved. New elections were held and I was again elected as
Member of'
Parliament from Diwaniyah. I was also elected as Speaker
of' the House of'
Representatives. I was no longer Minister of' Foreign Affairs,
but my interest
in Syria continued. I was the Speaker for two successive
sessions of' the
House. During this period His Majesty King Faisal the Second came of'
age (18
years) and Jamil‑al-Madfai
formed the Cabinet which organized the coronation
ceremonies. Elder statesmen
were included as members of' the Cabinet; 'Ali Jawdat
al‑Ayoubi was
Vice‑Premier, Nuri Pasha, Minister of Defence, and Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi,
Minister of Foreign Af'fairs.
.
During this period the Syrian elder statesmen were approaching Iraq asking her to come and save Syria from its dictator. I saw a note from ex‑President Hashim al-Atasi in his own handwriting, given to 'Ali Jawdat al-Ayoubi, who was married to a charming gracious lady from Aleppo, and who had been Military Governor of Aleppo in the days when King Faisal ruled Syria in the 1920's. In the note ex‑President al‑Atasi specified the financial help required to promote a movement in Syria to overthrow Shishakli. The Cabinet at the time did not act in response to that request. In the autumn of 1953 it was my lot to be the first Prime Minister of the newly crowned King Faisal the Second of Iraq. One evening in the first week of' my Premiership I was called to Qusr ar‑Rihab, the residence of His Royal Highness Prince 'Abdul Ilah. I went there and found Nuri Pasha with the Prince. Nuri Pasha had received a letter from Dr Ma=aruf' ad‑Dawalibi, ex‑Prime Minister of Syria, asking for Iraq's help to remove the dictator of Syria. After some discussion, we decided that we should invite Dr Dawalibi to come to Baghdad. His arrival and presence in Baghdad was to be kept a complete secret. I had to make personal arrangements with my friend, 'Abdul Hadi Chalabi, to have at my disposal a beautiful villa of his outside Baghdad. That villa happened to be surrounded by gardens and quite out of the way of wayfarers. We made arrangements for Dr Dawalibi to come and stay in that villa and to be our guest. We arranged for meetings between Dr Dawalibi, Prince 'Abdul Ilah and Saleh Jabr. The latter, a former Prime Minister of Iraq, and a close friend of mine, had Arab nationalism and Arab unity deep at heart. I won his support and cooperation in the affairs of Syria.
It
was Dr Dawalibi'
s argument ‑ that he was the legitimate and constitutional Prime
Minister
of Syria. He had been deposed and jailed unconstitutionally by
Shishakli, and
he wanted help from Iraq so that he might enter Syria and fight
Shishakli in
order to restore the legitimate government of' Syria. He, suggested
that, if
any volunteer from the Iraqi army were available, they showed up in
Syrian
uniform. They
and some
Syrian volunteers would be under Dawalibi's command and they would
bring a
downfall of' Shishakli. Prince 'Abdul Ilah asked Dawalibi
for a written
request stating that he wanted Iraqi help to save Syria from its
dictator. Dr
Dawalibi would not give such a document After over a month's study of'
the
situation and consultation with General Rafiq Arif, Chief of' the
Iraqi
General Staff', the Iraqi army found it was not ready to undertake the
adventure proposed by Dr Dawalibi. He returned to Beirut with the
hope of
future cooperation.
I
was amazed, at
the time of my trial by the special High Military Tribunal in
1958, to hear
read out in Court a letter addressed to the Court by Dr Dawalibi. In
the letter
he stated that be had been held under duress by Prince 'Abdul llah
pending his
signature of a document asking for Iraq's help. Besides, he claimed in
his
letter that he had known about the Iraqi Revolution of' July 14, 1958,
twenty
months before it took place, and that he had been an unknown soldier
who had
worked to bring it about. He said that he knew the leaders of the
Revolution
and that he prided himself on the downfall of Nuri as-Sa=id and Prince
'Abdul Ilah,
the man whose support he had requested to bring about the downfall of
Shishakli. He also expressed his pride in the downfall of Shishakli
which led
to the liberation of Syria and its movement in the path of' unity with
Egypt.
Dr Dawalibi, however, soon turned against the unity with Egypt and against President Nasir's policies in Syria. This shows the political instability and lack of consistency on the part of some political leaders such as Dr Dawalibi. This was a problem which I had not sufficiently taken into account in dealing with the question of Syrio‑Iraqi federation. After Dawelibi's departure from Baghdad our contacts with the Syrian nationalists who had Syrio‑Iraqi federation at heart were multiplied. We had some fine Syrian emissaries who kept us well informed of what was going on in different parts of Syria such as Damascus, Aleppo and Jabal ad‑Druze. We also had contacts with some prominent Syrian leaders like Hashim al‑Atasi and Sultan al‑Atrash, Faris al‑Khouri etc.
Syria's discontent with Shishakli was growing from day to day. He put in jail most of the active politicians, many of whom, when released, sought refuge in Lebanon. The leaders of the Nationalist Party, the People's Party, the Baath Socialist Party and the Syrian Nationalists were all to be found in Beirut, either in hiding or in the open I remember that, on one of my visits to Beirut, I saw Akram Hourani, Salaluddin al‑Bitar and Michel 'Aflaq in out‑of‑the‑way apartments. They express ed their fervent hope that the downfall of Shishskli might be achieved soon. It was at that time that Dr Constantin Zureiq, formerly President of the Syrian University, and a close friend of mine since student days in the American University of Beirut, came to consult me about accepting the portfolio of Foreign Affairs in the Syrian government. He had been asked by Shishakhli to accept the position. Dr Zuraiq told me that, if he undertook the responsibility, Syria's policy towards Iraq would certainly undergo a fundamental change, and rapprochement could be expected. I advised him against taking the position saying that it was too late, since Syrian political opinion was already anti‑Shishakli. and that there was no hope for a reversal. I think Dr Zuraiq acted on my advice. It seems to me that Shishakli must have known of my close friendship with Dr Zuraiq and thought that he, being a prominent scholar and Arab nationalist, might be the man to smooth Syrio‑Iraqi relations.
Early in January 1954 I was still Prime Minister of Iraq when I led the Iraqi delegation to the Arab League Council meeting. There I presented my project for an inter‑Arab federation. Before presenting it to the League Council, however, I discussed it at length with President Mohammed Nagib and the Prime Minister Abdul Nasser at a private dinner which I had at President Mohammed Nagib=s home. The Egyptian papers at government inspiration came out in support of the project. It seemed that my arguments for the federation appealed to Colonel Gamal Abdul Nasser who later on adopted the idea of pan‑Arab unity as his own.
My plan envisaged the federation of any Arab states that were close to each other geographically and that were ready to move in the path of federation by taking constitutional measures. The immediate objective of my plan aimed at Iraq's federation with Syria and Jordan. Syria's chief delegate to the Arab League, Minister of Agriculture, Abdul Rahman al‑Henaidi, could see that the plan aimed at the union of Syria and Iraq. He frankly told me in private that Shishakli was against Iraq and any federation with it. My plan was referred by the Arab League Council to the member states for study.
Conditions in Syria were going from bad to worse. In Damascus Iraq had a very active and devoted military attache, Colonel Salih Mehdi as-Samarra'a, who kept us well informed about what was going on within the Syrian army. Shishakli, feeling restless, declared Colonel Samarra'a persona non grata, so he had to leave Damascus and restrict his activities to our Embassy in Beirut. Shishakli had already bombarded Jabal ed‑Druze. The Syrian army, representing the various political elements of the country was beginning to show signs of unease. The Syrian political leaders, especially those of the Nationalist Party and the People's Party were insistent that Iraq must come to help.
On my return to Baghdad from Cairo I had a serious meeting about Syria with Prince Abdul Ilah in the presence of the of the Minister of Finance, Abdul Kareem al-Uzeri. After a long discussion we decided to ask ex-Premier Saleh Jabr to go to Beirut with full powers from the Iraqi government to help the Syrian leaders achieve their political objective. Around midnight Prince 'Abdul Ilah, 'Abdul Kareem al‑Uzri and I went to Saleh Jabr's house. Saleh had gone to bed. We woke him up and discussed his departure for Beirut and informed him about the mission which he was to undertake. With the agreement or 'Abdul Kareem al‑Uzri, Minister or Finance, we told him that 100,000 Iraqi dinars would be sent to our Embassy in Beirut to be put at his disposal.
At 7 o'clock in the morning Saleh Jabr took off for Beirut. He left on the declared mission or negotiating with the Lebanese government the transfer from Murraq to Sidon of the oil pipeline which extends from Murraq to Haifa. The Kirkuk‑Haifa pipeline had been closed since the establishment or Israel. and Iraq had been losing annually as much income as this pipeline had formerly produced. His other mission was to contact the Syrian political figures in Beirut who were working for the downfall of Shishakli and to render them any moral or material help that Iraq could give. Iraq's help took the shape or providing some finances for the political leaders so that they could carry on their struggle against Shishakli. These political leaders were backed by some publicity in the Beirut press and they themselves were in direct contact with army units inside Syria as well as with the tribal organizations that were all anti‑Shishakli.
On one occasion a messenger came to Baghdad to report a plot to assassinate Shishakli. I immediately revolted and answered in sharp words that my government would cooperate in no way with any red‑handed movement. Shishakli must be made to leave the country peacefully. In his last days Shishakli arrested some nation leaders. He also put under restricted residence the Druze leader, Sultan Pasha al‑Atrash, with whom we had been in contact. I received the following telegram from our Military Attache in Amman.
The army arrested Sultan Pasha al‑Atrash and held him in its barracks. Yesterday he and his group were transferred to Medowara, south of Ma=an, and made to live there under army supervision. His messenger did not reach us; the army arrested him on his way to us. Nawwaf al‑Atrash, the cousin and confident of Sultan is in hiding. He asked to be dispatched to Baghdad secretly to meet you. Do you agree? Inform us.
One evening there was an official function in the Municipal Hall of Baghdad attended by H.M. the King and H.R.H. the Prince. There was a very joyful atmosphere. While we were listening to some music I was called to the telephone to be told that Shishakli had fallen, and that he had left Damascus for Beirut. That was a very comforting moment for us. But his departure for Beirut gave us no assurance that he would not make a manoeuvre to return. He sought refuge in the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Beirut. The Lebanese government was alerted and they put pressure on the Saudi Arabian Embassy so that Shishakli should not sojourn in Beirut. Our Military Attache sent the following telegram:
I am assured that Shishakli is still hiding in the Saudi Embassy in Beirut in spite of the insistence of the Lebanese government that he should leave. President Sham Shishakli has had contact, during the day, with some of his Lebanese followers and I believe that if Shishakli stays long he will encourage an army uprising in Damascus. I explained this to our Ambassador who in turn explained it to President Sham'un who concurred in our opinion. Some Lebanese Druzes held meetings and that might bring about some danger to Shishakli's life The Lebanese government decided today to expel him if he did not leave the country voluntarily.
Later we had the following telegram from our Military Attache in Beirut.
As for the recent events which had led to the downfall of Shishakli 's we had the following telegram from our embassy in Damascus:
From a reliable source we learned the following details as to how the movement happened. The leader of the anti‑Shishakli movement was Brigadier Faisal al‑Atasi who was thought to be one of the supporters of the Baath Party. He started his move by arresting Brigadier 'Omar Tamr Khan chief of Aleppo region. He also sent Captain Mustapha Hamdun who is a Socialist Leftist, to occupy Aleppo broadcasting station. Around noon the Chief of the Deir ez‑Zor region joined the movement. Then the Chief' of Homs and Hama joined. In the afternoon the Chief of Latikiya region joined. Shishakli dispatched a force of armoured cars to the north, but that force refused to attack Syrian citizens. Shishakli sent some intermediaries to settle the matter peacefully. The group included 'Abdu‑Henaidi, Minister of Interior, and As'ad Harun, Minister of Justice, with some civilians and some army officers. Their intervention was unsuccessful. Around seven o'clock in the evening a meeting was held in Shishakli's home which was attended by some personalities including the Chief of the General Staff of the Army, the Lord Mayor of the city, the president of the House of Parliament and others. They discussed the critical situation. Around eight o'clock the Chief of the General Staff informed Shishakli that he had just received a report that Major Rasmi el‑Muqdisi, Chief of the region of Jabal ed‑Druze, and Colonel Talib ed‑Daghestani, Chief of the Qunattra region, both expressed their unreadiness to combat their brethren from the Syrian army. When Shishakli found that the majority of the army was against him and that none remained with him but the unit of Damascus, he tendered his resignation to the Parliament and left by plane at 10 o'clock P.M. With him left Brigadier Qasim Khalil. Chief of the Damascus unit, and his brother, Captain Salah Shishakli, who had been running the Syriana Cabaret, and Captain Asif al‑Qabban The Parliament is still meeting to decide on a future policy and form of government. It is expected to abrogate the present constitution and to revert to the Constitution of Hannawi or that of Quwatli. Well informed circles expect the election of His Excellency Hashim al-Atasi to the Presidency of the republic until the time for the new elections both for the new Parliament and the new presidency
Another telegram from our Military Attache in Beirut said:
We congratulated Dawalibi yesterday. This morning he left for Damascus and was followed by all the Syrian leaders who had been in Beirut. Snowfall prevented them from reaching Damascus so they went via Homs to meet with Hashim al‑Atasi who was still there. I am still waiting for our messenger and we will inform you of. what. follows. I am ending a messenger to our Embassy in Damascus and I will send you the information before going to Damascus myself. Our Ambassador in Beirut thinks I should postpone my trip to Damascus until we contact Dawalibi. We will convey to him Premier Jamali=s congratulations
From our Embassy‑in Damascus, 26 February, 1954:
There has been no agreement on the form of government until now. The politicians disagree among themselves, and the army officers are disagreeing. Fifty-two of the members of Parliament attended out of the eighty members, and they still defend the Shishakli regime with the incitement of their retired Captain 'Abdul Haqq Shehada who is trying, it seems, to take the place or Shishakli. He has surrounded himself with a number or army officers. The result is that Members of Parliament have maintained the stand that the President or the Parliament shall be acting‑President or the Republic in accordance with the present Constitution as was broadcast from the Damascus station in a statement made by the new acting‑President. It was decided that Parliament should meet tomorrow to elect the President of the Republic. The Chiefs of the army units who refused to fight for Shishakli refuse to right now to support the revolution. The Ministers met in the Ministry or Foreign Affairs and could not agree on a thing. The Chief of the General Staff is unable to control matters. Conditions in Damascus are apparently quiet, but the political situation is very much disturbed with unknown consequences. Please instruct Beirut to contact us by wireless for urgent reasons. We expect shortly to convey to you important matters.
Syria had been saved from one dictator, but it had not yet round peace or stability. After the downfall of Shishakli I received, through military code, the following telegram from Nabih Beg al‑'Azmeh. It was addressed to me as Prime Minister.
Today
the country
will enter a new phase and a new role. We require speed, wisdom,
determination and emphatic, sure directives. We wish to let you know
the difficulties
or steering and governing by the heterogeneous combination or elements
who are
united today in the political opposition front. When we know the
connection of
the united elements ‑ officers and junior generals ‑‑ to the
various political parties and that they are influenced by the parties
to a
great extent; and when we know also that the strongest active element
in the
united political rrant today, whether officers, students, youth or
workers,
are relat.ed to Akram al‑Haurani and Michel 'Aflaq , (when we know
these
things), we shall be able to appreciate the difriculty of the situation
and the
dirficulty of organizing the set‑up.
Moreover, if
we carefully
study the statement broadcast yesterday from the radio station in
Aleppo, we
rind that the statement embodies the spirit of Akram al‑Haurani.
The
statement broadcast today from the Damascus radio
station by
Shawkat Shuqair, who remained to direct the situation and correct the
deviations of Shishakli, describes the position of the army and its
function to
defend the independence of the country but makes no reference to a
return to
the barracks. In contrast was the broadcast by the commanders of the
northern
districts yesterday saying that the army would return to the
barracks. Then
there is the invitation to Shishakli from King Sa'ud. Taking all these
tbings
into account we realize what possible complications the new era
is racing.
That is why I deem it necessary to return quickly to Damascus to serve
and
stabilize and direct as much as possible. Please expedite material
assistance
before I leave Beirut.
The telegram of Nabih al‑'Azmeh and the one before it from our Embassy contain an accurate and objective description of the situation we raced after the fall of Shishakli. The fall of the anti‑Iraq dictator did not bring an end to the obstacles in the path of Syrio‑Iraqi federation. Efforts had to continue. A faithful Iraqi unionist who was enthusiastically active in those days was Dr Sa'id Hadba'y, a doctor from Mosul. Dr Hadba'y had his medical education in Damascus. He knew Syria well and he orten came to see me to express readiness to help and to bring me information from Syrian quarters which he knew. He had meetings with Fahmi al-Muhelry, owner of Al‑Hadhara newspaper,, Ahmad Sharabati, a former Minister of Defence, Kamil Hananu from Aleppo, and Nabih al‑Ghazzi. They were all ready to work for the union of Syria and Iraq. They were supported by a large number of the nationalist youth of the League of National Action (Al‑Osbawy) which was founded by a group of Arabs from various countries who met in 1932, and who took on themselves to work or the liberation and unity of the Arab world. I shall refer to some points in a report Dr Hadba'y sent me after a trip to Damascus in the month of May, 1954. sked me to join them in their meetings and convey their ideas to the responsible people in Baghdad. They are joined in that by the present Minister of Education of Syria, Dr Munir i al‑'Ajlani (Professor in the College of Law in the Syrian University). The activity of the Students Union of the Syrian University. This Union includes all the students from all the colleges of the University whose number is no less than 3000 from various parts of the Arab world. The Union fully dominates the University and its members are liked by all. They have undertaken to work for Syrio‑Iraqi unity all the way.
Some of the most prominent members of this Union, are Ahmad Aziz, the Secretary of the Union, Ridha Altunjy, Director of the Union=s club. And Malik al-Husini, one of the prominent members from the Law College and at the same time a journalist. He is the author of the article, 'Say it frankly', the article which moved the various Damascene circles, for it was the most courageous thing written on the subject of federation. He will continue to publish such articles which will carry the same title. If we provide the Students Union with money their activity may increase. The results of their activities are already seen by the leaning of the majority of independent students and the nationalists and part of the Baathists to the side of the idea. They all speak openly about the federation although formerly, either from fear or from lack of conviction, no one spoke about it.
One
of the most
outstanding demonstrations of their activity is the telegram sent to
Shukri
alQuwatli (who was living in Alexandria, Egypt) telling him not to
think of
returning. That telegram had a far‑reaching effect. It
strengthened the
position of the government and was a great blow to the Saudis.
The telegram
was published in the newspaper Al‑Sarkha (The Cry), issue no. 49, on
Tuesday, 6 April, 1954, and this is the text: 'The man who
directed a blow to
the heart of the homeland shall not return. The one who let
Palestine go shall
not return. No return for him who let corruption, chaos and
tyranny prevail.
No return for Shukri al‑Quwatli, perpetrator of shameful and ludicrous
things. The students of the Syrian University, male
and female insist no return
for him who was rejected by the nation forever.
This is the telegram, the like of which was never before expressed in such language. It shook to the core all those who work against Syrio‑Iraqi federation. The report also referred to the importance of Sami Kabbara, a well‑known and popular Damascene personality who should be won to our side. He happened to be a friend of Dr Hadba=y who said of him, AHe is the only man who enables us to deal with Akram al‑Haurani."
Dr Hadba'y had met with the Minister of 'Ali Boozoo and the report continued:
I am related to him through friendship of student days when we were both members in the Higher Committee. This is what he told me with great enthusiasm. 'It is established with us with certainty that whoever fights the federation or carries on propaganda against it must be either a Zionist spy or an imperialist agent.' The reports we had from various quarters convinced me more and more that was the general wish of the Syrian people themselves. The goal was clear, and genuine Arab Nationalists had no hesitation or equivocation about it. But obstacles consisting of foreign machinations and internal personal jealousy, greed and dissension stood in the way of moving towards the achievement of our national aspirations. I refused to give up. I refused to be discouraged by the many opposing forces from within and without. I continued to work for the national aim.
A new chapter in Syrio‑Iraqi politics began. Personally I continued to exert effort from 1954 to 56 to bring about a Syrio‑Iraqi federation in a democratic and constitutional way. It was my hope and my objective that a constitutional government in Syria would proceed in a democratic way to ask for a Syrio‑Iraqi federation.
After the fall of Shishakli, a conference of Syrian leaders was held in Homs and a transitional government was formed with former President Atasi at the head. Dr Dawalibi was Minister of Defence. The army began to play politics. The new government was not homogeneous. It was weak and wavering. It could take no great decisions. We started to work with the leed6rs of the Nationalist Party, especially Sabri al‑'Asali, Mikhail Ilian, and with the People's Party, especially with Dr 'Adnan al‑Atasi, the son of President Hashim al‑Atasi. Actually we had contacts with many leading politicians of those parties as well as others who were independent or who belonged to other parties, Nabih al-Azmeh, Husni al‑Barezi, Jalal as‑Sayyid, Faris a l‑Khouri, Hasan al‑Hakim, Faidhi al- Atasi, 'Abdur Rahman al‑'Azim, Majeddin al‑Jabiri. Sami al‑Khayyali and others. It was my intention to go ahead with a strong Syrio‑Iraqi campaign. Ten thousand copies of a brochure on unity containing articles by Sati' al‑Haari, Akram Zusiter and Kamil Muruwa was prepared in Beirut by Kamil Muruwa, owner of Al‑Hayat, a very influential Beirut daily newspaper.
While Iraq's effort for the promotion of federation with Syria was going on, opposing forces, such as the generous financing of the adversaries by Saudi Arabia, and Egyptian propaganda, revealed that a struggle for power in Syria was going on between Iraq on the one hand and Egypt and Saudi Arabia on the other. Major Salah Salem, Egyptian Minister of National Guidance, went to Syria and Lebanon to carry on a campaign against Iraqi policies. Still the overwhelming majority of the Syrians were in favour of federation.
Enthusiastic men like Sabri al‑>Asali and his colleagues were urging the Iraqi government to do its best to push the project of federation by allotting the money required which would not exceed a quarter of a million dinars (pounds sterling) to carry out an electioneering campaign to bring about a National Assembly which would demand federation wi th Iraq.
As Prime Minister of Iraq I had to get new legislation through the Iraqi Parliament to allot the amount because it did not exist in the budget. The parliamentary majority consisted of members of Nuri as-Sa=id=s party and Nuri was not enthusiastic about the federation of Iraq and Syria at that time. When he beard of my intention to go ahead with the federation project he sent me word through Mohammed >Ali Mahmoud, my Minister of Justice, expressing his opposition. I had already spent 100,000 Iraqi dinars before getting parliamentary authorisation, and, in the face of Nuri's opposition I decided that I could not carry the responsibility of the government since I would be unable to get parliamentary support for even the modest amount of money required for a noble and important project.
I went to the Royal Palace and expressed my desire to resign. I had two things, however, to achieve before my resignation. The first was to ensure that the 100,000 dinars already allocated to be spent be authorized, and the second was to conclude my negotiations with the American government on the Military Aid Agreement. His Majesty and his uncle both sympathized with my stand, and I stayed in office until I had taken care of the above‑mentioned items.
The Lower House of Parliament passed the legislation authorizing the 100,000 dinars, but, in the Senate, former Prime Minister Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi, who was chairman of the Finance committee, raised an objection and tried to obstruct the authorization of the amount. I asked that the Committee should have a short recess and I invited Tawflq as‑Suwadi to a side room. There I told him that he had better expedite the business or I would be forced to divulge a secret, namely, the fact that the amount of 250,000 had been proposed by the late Syrian president, . Hashim al‑Atasi, to free Syria from Shishakli, and Suwaidi, who was Minister of Foreign Affairs in the previous Cabinet had not been informed about it. I had seen Atasi's handwritten paper with the former Prime Minister, 'Ali Jawdat al‑Ayoubi, who was Vice‑Premier in the Cabinet of Jamil al-Madfai. The divulgence of this secret would have caused Suwaidi embarrassment, for it would have indicated that his own Cabinet lacked confidence in him. After this conversation we went back to the Committee which then passed the legislation.
Having finished this matter and having signed the Military Aid Agreement, I tendered my resignation. The disagreement on the question of unity with Syria was, therefore, the main cause of the fall of my Cabinet in 1954. On April 19, I tendered my resignation, and His Majesty celled on Nuri as‑Sa'id to form a new Cabinet. The next morning I was called to the Royal Palace to meet H.R.H. the Crown Prince and Nuri Pasha. Nuri asked me to join his Cabinet as Minister of Foreign Affairs. I declined the offer. When Nuri argued that I had promised to cooperate with him when he came to power, I replied that my promise was conditional on his coming to an understanding with Saleh Jabr, and now the issue of Syria and the obstruction created to it through parliamentary noncoperation made it impossible for me to join his Cabinet and to face the same Parliament. My refusal was final. At the same time Nuri invited Ahmed Mukhtar Baban, who was Vice‑Premier in my Cabinet, and 'Ali Mumtaz, who was Minister of Finance in my Cabinet, to join him. They also declined the offer. The refusal of all three of us made Nuri think that we were acting with royal approval.
Soon after that I collapsed one day in my office in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Medical examination with X‑rays revealed an ulcer in the duodenum for which I needed immediate hospitalization. I decided to go to the hospital of the American University of Beirut in Lebanon. While I was in Beirut, Syrian statesmen and friends began to frequent my room in the hospital urging action on Syrio‑Iraqi relations. My physical condition did not permit me to undertake long discussions and serious considerations so I telegraphed the Prime Minister in Baghdad asking him to request Saleh Jabr to come to Lebanon to take care of the problem. I depended on Saleh Jabr in the matter for he was as convinced as I was of its necessity and urgency both for Iraq and the Arab cause. For reasons unknown to me Saleh Jebr could not come to Lebanon, so Ahmad Mukhtar Baban was deputized instead. After leaving the hospital I went for convalescence to Hotel Mont Vert in Broummana, a well‑known mountain resort. It was there that the Syrian politicians and statesmen, enthusiastic about unity, began to visit me frequently and some serious talks about unity were held.
The following ere two letters which I addressed to the Prime Minister, Arshad al-'Omeri, summarizing the situation.
Personal and confidential
Mont Vert Hotel, Broummana, 3 May, 1954
Excellency Brother Abu Isam
Greetings and hearty affection!
I always think of your heavy duties and ask God to grant you success for the good of the country. I have already wired about the possibility of my meeting with a Syrian delegation. Last night in a private way I had the following gentlemen: Prime Minister Sabri al‑>Asali, Minister of Finance 'Abdur Rahman al‑Azm, Husni al‑Barazi and 'Adnan al‑Atasi. We met together until midnight. We surveyed the present conditions in Syria and the difficulties that beset and obstruct the Syrio‑Iraqi federation, and the means by which they could be overcome.
1. Conditions in Syria are unsettled because of lack of discipline in the army and the fact that the army is divided among five parties at least. Although the situation does not provide the Saudis with an opportunity for immediate action, the situation is dangerous in any case. This is the important question raised: Is Iraq ready to send power if a section of the Syrian army rises in mutiny? This would be after an official request by the Syrian government had been made as from now, so that Iraq might intervene if the Syrian army brings about a coup d'état. No doubt the possibility of calling in the Iraqi army is remote, especially if the Syrian government groups together its loyal officers and wins some others with money. They are all united on the idea that the entry of the Iraqi army into Syria, whether to stem a movement of mutiny or to face Israeli aggression is the greatest guarantee for the federation,
2. Reviewing the process of federation generally it was found to require the coming to an understanding with the two great western powers, the United States and Great Britain. I promised to undertake that mission. As for France, there is no hope that it will consent, nor will Saudi Arabia or Israel. Then, we need the consent of the Iraqi government and Iraqi public opinion. As for Syrian public opinion, it is easy to win its consent. Although most of the political leaders are champions of the federation, they are afraid to say so openly. If they see that the Syrian government is moving ahead with the project, they will all move with it, or at least most of them.
3. It was agreed that 'Adnan al‑Atasi should prepare a federation project and present it to us after two weeks. It is my view that Messrs. 'Abdullah Bakr, Yusuf al‑Gailani, aided by 'Abdul Majeed 'Abbas or 'Abdul Kareem al‑Uzri, should prepare a similar project.
4. The two persons most enthusiastic for the federation are Messrs. Sabri al‑>Asali and Husni al‑Barazi. It was agreed that a confidential committee should be formed of prominent personalities to pursue the matter.
5. Both Messrs. Sabri al‑'Asali and Barazi expect Iraq to put the necessary amounts at their disposal for the following purposes:
a) to control the army
b) to prepare for the election of a new parliament
c) to influence public opinion (propaganda).
I wired asking for 5000 dinars as a preliminary amount to be given to Husni al‑Barazi.
This is a summary of the situation. There are many details which I do not wish to mention. It seems to me that the question requires time and continued efforts, but, in my view, it deserves all attention, for it represents the corner‑stone in restoring the dignity of the Arab world and saving the honour of the Arabs. The military attache, Colonel Saleh Mehdi, is coming to you. I hope you will provide me through him with whatever ideas you have. He will explain the situation to you in full.
Signed: Your brother Fadhel Jamali
Personal and confidential
Mont Vert Hotel, 9 May, 1954
Excellency, Honourable Brother Abu >Isam,
Greetings and affection!
Last night, Monday, 8/6/54, I had with me Sayed Sabri al‑>Asali, Prime Minister of Syria, and Sayed Mikhail Ilian. Ahmad Mukhtar Pasha Baban was also present. The meeting lasted until one in the morning. I herewith summarize for Your Excellency the situation as it was revealed.
1. The Syrian army is the source of instability and the extreme weakness of the government makes the army master of the situation.
2. The Syrian army includes elements which are afraid of the federation. They think that the federation would deprive the army officers of their prestige.
3. The present Syrian Cabinet is weak and not harmonious. It is hoped that it will be strengthened before the next elections unless something unforeseen happens.
4. The Saudis are preparing a plot for a coup d'etat and for bringing Shukri al‑Quwatli to Syria. (He was living in Egypt at that time.)
5. Sabri al‑Asali criticizes Iraq's policy in the past for relying on the People's Party. He also criticizes Iraq's reliance on Sheikh Ma=aruf ad‑Dawalibi and other personalities. He thinks that if Iraq is serious in the matter it should rely on himself and on Mikhail Ilian for their faith in the union and their devotion to it is the best guarantee. Even at that he does not guarantee immediate success, but he is ready to devote his life and his efforts for the realization of his national aims. Although his relations with Quwatli are good, he does not agree with him on his pro‑Saudi policy and on his stand in relation to the Syrio‑Iraqi federation.
How to deal with the situation
We reviewed the possibility of sending the Iraqi army to Syria, and we found that it was not possible. There is no agreement between Syria and Iraq for the coming of the Iraqi army to keep internal order in Syria, and there is no majority in the Cabinet which dares sign such an agreement even if it were secret. Besides, Atasi, President of the Republic, for his part, is afraid of signing a request for the Iraqi army, and there is no possibility at the present of the armies of Syria and Iraq coming together for purposes of training and manoeuvres. One cannot exploit Israeli aggression on Syria because that might lead to an international struggle in which Israel might be the winner. That is why sending the Iraqi army to protect Syria from Israel must wait until a serious Israeli aggression occurs.
In the light of these facts, our Syrian friends leave the matter to us if we ever find a way for sending the Iraqi army they think that would be the best and the quickest way to achieve the Syrio‑Iraqi federation. If, however, the Iraqi army could not be sent, efforts should be exerted to win the Syrian army and rally it to the side of the Syrian government. That is why Sayed Sabri al‑'Asali expects financial help. Moreover, an election campaign for the federation should be undertaken so as to attain our goal through the parliamentary process. Sayed Sabri al‑'Asali asks that we should depend on him alone and that we should not disperse our money and efforts here and there. We do concur that we should trust Sabri al‑'Asali and consider him as the centre of gravity for the movement. This does not preclude our contacts with others provided the efforts are harmonized and that Sabri is informed of the efforts we exert.
Before the meeting ended I told Sabri I wanted to be clear on what we mean by the federation. He said, 'Federation in military, political and economic affairs.' I said, 'But the presidency of the federation is very important as far as we are concerned. We cannot afford to enter a federation which is not presided over by the King of Iraq, otherwise the instability which afflicts the Syrian republican system may affect Iraq, and this would cause exceedingly serious harm to the Arab interests. 'He agreed that the King of Iraq would be the head of the federation. H.E. Sayed Ahmad Mukhtar Baban closed the meeting by saying that to us it is important to strengthen the present government in Syria and to support al‑'Asali in every way possible. Thus 'Asali has to come forward with his requests and suggestions. We are always ready to render what help we can.
Signed: Your brother Fadhel Jamali
As had been decided, Dr 'Adnan al‑Atasi prepared two drafts for Syrio‑Iraqi federation, one providing for loose unity, and the other for a close form of federation. I have the original drafts in his own handwriting. The translated texts of the drafts are included in the appendices.
After my return to Iraq, Sabri al‑Asali continued to communicate with me through two trustworthy messengers whom he authorized to convey to me what he wished to say. One was Mohammed Shuqair, a young Muslim from Beirut who had an excellent record as an Arab nationalist. He was a graduate of the American University of Beirut, and he had taught in Iraq. At a later date I had a very sour letter from him criticizing the Iraqi government for enlisting the cooperation of the Syrian Nationalist Party which he considered anti‑Arab. Mohammed Shuqair was a loyal friend of Riyadh as‑Sulh, the Lebanese prime Minister, a well‑known Arab nationalist who was assassinated by the Syrian Nationalist Party.
The second messenger was 'Abdul Hadi al‑Ma=sarani, a Syrian merchant who devoted his time and money to the nationalist cause. Shuqair and Ma=sarani sometimes came to Baghdad to inform us about what was going on in Syria and to convey to us the views of Sabri al‑>Asali. During the summer of 1954 I received the following personal message from Dr Kayyali, chairman of the Nationalist Party in Aleppo:
The Nationalist Party did not deviate from the line of unity, but it was Shukri al‑Quwatli who deviated. In order to enable the Nationalist Party to enter the fight and oppose the propaganda and the help that comes to the Communists and the Independents who are benefitting from the influence of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, it is expected that the Iraqi government will render material help so that the Nationalist Party will be able to oppose the Parties and newspapers that work to alienate Syria from unity. That is in case the Iraqi government is able to do it and is concerned about the success of the affair.
Ihsan al‑Jabiri,
another
prominent member of the Nationalist Party, associated himself with the
above
statement. Another of the letters I received was from Dr As'ad Talas
Damascus, 6 May, 1954.
Sir, (After greetings)
I went to Damascus after resting a little in Aleppo and I contacted the following people: Hashim Beg, Sabri Beg and Rushdi Beg. I am certain of their sincerity and their firmness in all undertakings, especially that revered old man, Hashim Beg (President of the Syrian Republic) who sends you his greetings and requests you to act on his behalf in presenting expressions of his thanks and prayers for His Majesty, our Lord, and His Royal Highness, our Prince, may God preserve their leadership and protect them as pillars of Arabism and Islam. He told me, 'Tell them that I continue to stand firm on the Covenant and on what I dedicated myself to, and that I ask God to help us realize soon our hope of unity, and we ask God to make us this time more determined and more prudent and deeper in thought and study.' Then he told me, 'Meet with Sabri Beg and 'Adnan my son, and study the matter together and act with wisdom, quietness and secrecy until God brings victory.'
I met with brothers 'Adnan and Sabri Beg and we studied together what should be done, and they settled on the idea that Sayed Mikhail Ilian, the Secretary of the Nationalist party in Aleppo, should join us and prepare a plan and organize the work. When we have agreed on something I shall send you the details.
The
Saudis exert great efforts against Syrio‑Iraqi unity, and so do the
French. But the danger from the latter is smaller. Brother Kamil Muruwa
told me
yesterday in Damascus in the presence of Brother Akram Zu'aiter, who
came to us
for a short visit before returning to Nablus where his wife is about to
give
birth, that two of Shishakli's men, Nazih al‑Hakeem and Ahmed Assa, and
they are two
of the three persons who drafted the Shishakli Constitution and who
lately
began to publish a daily called Ar‑Ray
Al‑Am
which
is a Saudi‑Shishakli paper, Kamil told me that these two persons
negotiated with him to buy Al‑Hayat press for an enticing sum on
condition that the press be moved to Damascus. He rejected the offer
and
ridiculed them. The Saudis are using many means by which they buy
people's conscience.
It 1s essential that we should face them with some strength and I hope
that
Ahmad Pasha ar‑Rawi (Iraqi Ambassador to Lebanon) on his return will be
provided with adequate means to face this frightening current,
especially
during the electoral campaign.
I
met Sultan Pasha for a lengthy meeting. He presents his greetings to
you. He
told me that he had received your last message and that he
intentionally did
not send the answer because the bearer knew what the message was.
'That is why
I showed him that I didn’t want to answer at that time and that he
should never
reveal what that message contained.' He asked me to request you to
send a man
whom you trust, either by way or Amman or by way of Damascus to come to
an
understanding with him, and I suggest that the messenger should come to
Damascus so that we may agree on the plan.
Sultan requests that this matter should be confidential between you and him, and I suggest that you send Shaqrani to Damascus or any other whom you trust so that I may come to an understanding with him before his going to Suweida. The condition of the army, although not very good, does not call for pessimism. The group or Akram (Haurani) has begun to dwindle and we hope that the Army Law will soon be legislated in the Parliament so that the Minister or Defence will be able to control the army.
(After complimentary closing sentences)
As’ad
I was planning on my
return to Iraq to go to the United States for a medical check‑up, to
receive
an honorary degree from my alma mater, Columbia University, and to have
talks
with President Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles.
The
Syrians, hearing of my plan, asked me to raise the issue of Syrio‑Iraqi
federation both in London and Washington and to make sure that the West
would
not permit Israel to attack Syria in case she federated with Iraq.
(Israel had
been attacking her neighbours every now and then on one pretext or
another.)
In the first week of July 1954, I took off for London and the United States. In London I had a meeting with Mr Selwyn Lloyd, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. One of the important topics we discussed was the Syrio‑Iraqi federation. I asked him what the attitude would be of Her Majesty Government toward a Syrio‑Iraqi federation. He said:
"As
far as I
can see, the British government would welcome such an event and advise
you to
include Jordan also. This is my personal view. But to make the matter
formal, I
will submit the question to the Cabinet and give you Her Majesty’s
Government’s
point of view when you return from the United States.”
In Washington, D.C. on two successive days I had lengthy meetings with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. At those meetings we discussed Iraqi‑American relations, Arab affairs, and the international situation. The question of Syrio‑Iraqi federation was one of the major topics we discussed. When I asked Mr Dulles about the United States' attitude regarding the federation and whether the U.S. could insure that no Israeli attack on Syria would ensue, he frankly answered that he could not support such a federation at that juncture nor could he assure that Israel would not attack Syria. He stated:
"The
United
States has just signed an Arms Agreement with Iraq which has aroused
the
friends of Israel in the Congress, and, if the United States supports
Syrio‑Iraqi
federation, it will be taken that the United States is helping to
endanger
Israel's existence. On the other hand, if Iraq joins the Northern Tier
and then
federates with Syria, we can then say that the federation is formed
against
Communism and not against Israel."
Mr Dulles's advice was,
accordingly, to postpone Syrio‑Iraqi federation until after Iraq had
joined the Northern Tier arrangement which eventually developed into
the
Baghdad Pact. It was this line of thinking that prompted me to be very
enthusiastic for Iraqi participation in the Northern Tier. Besides, it
was my
belief that Iraq should be an active member in the free world and in
promoting
international peace and cooperation. While I
was absent from Iraq, the
Cabinet of Arshad al‑'Omari, in which I was the Minister or Foreign
Affairs, resigned and Nuri Pasha was called upon to form a new
Cabinet. O:n my return to Iraq I was
surprised to find that the relatively small amount of money which was
in the
budget (150,000 Iraqi dinars) and which I had planned should be used
for
promoting the cause or Syria‑Iraqi federation, had been channeled to
Jordan without my knowledge and without previous discussion. This
action was
taken by Prime Minister Arshad al=Omari
who was acting Foreign Minister during my absence.
Soon after reaching Baghdad I
went to Sirsank, the summer resort of H.M. the King. I went to pay my
respects
and to report to the King on my discussions in London and Washington. I
was his
guest, and, in the hotel I found myself staying in the room next to
Nuri
Pasha's. Nuri had been deeply hurt by my refusal to join
him in the Cabinet
he had tried to form after my resignation as Prime Minister. He said.
"I
thought I could always depend on you and I never expected you to let me
down." I replied, "The issue or Syria is so significant in my
political thought that I am not ready to compromise on it." He said,
"Fadhel,
I want you to know that the Syrio‑Iraqi federation can never take place
unless France is convinced. Besides, the poor Iraqis have been waiting
so long
to enjoy the fruits of the oil production and now you want the Syrians
to share
this little fruit with them. The Syrians are so clever in economic
affairs that
they might exploit the poor Iraqis."
I did not share either of his
fears. I did not think that Syrio‑Iraqi federation really depended on
the
consent of France, nor did I think that the benefits from the oil need
be an
obstacle to the federation. After a hot debate,
Nuri, in his customary
charming and obliging manner, embraced me and said, "I will always
depend
on you as a loyal friend and I want your continued support in foreign
affairs.
I would like you to lead the Iraqi delegation to the United Nations as
usual."
Although not a member of the
government, I continued my contacts with the Syrians as well as with
H.R.H. the
Crown Prince and H.M. the King on the subject of Syria. Some meetings
were held
in the royal palace to study the situation in Syria, and I was invited
to
attend. Early in 1955 president Adnan Menderes came to
Baghdad and signed the
Pact of Turkish‑Iraqi‑Mutual Cooperation which later on developed
into the Baghdad Pact. I was very enthusiastic in promoting and
supporting the
Pact because, in my view, it was essential both for security and
interest of
Iraq, and because it might pave the way for an eventual Syria‑Iraqi
federation. In chapter on the Baghdad Pact I describe Egypt's strong
reaction
against the Pact and how the Egyptian wished to arouse' Arab public
opinion
against it. This led Egypt to dispatch its vociferous Minister of
National
Guidance, Major Salah Salem to Syria to incite the Syrian government
and people
against the fact. The visit was intended to draw the Syrian government
away
from Iraq and to combat any idea of Syria’s joining the Baghdad Pact.
The
statement runs as follows:
Messers Sabri al‑'Asali; President or the Council of Ministers, and Khalid al‑'Azm, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Acting Minister of Defence, on the Syrian side, and Major Salah Salem, Minister of National Guidance, from the Egyptian side, met in Damascus from the 26th of February to the 2nd of March, and, since agreement between the Egyptian and Syrian governments was complete, the two parties held consultations about the Arab situation in the actual circumstances then existing. They exchanged views about means leading to the strengthening of the Arab unity, politically, militarily and economically, and they found that the following principles guarantee the realization of those aims:
1. Not to join the Turkish‑Iraqi Alliance or any other alliance.
2. To establish an Arab organization for mutual defence and economic cooperation based on the following principles:
a. To mutually undertake to ward off an aggression against any of the joining states
b. To set up one permanent, common Command with permanent headquarters which will supervise the training of the military forces put by each Arab state at the disposal of the command. It shall also deal with arming, organizing and distributing these forces in accordance with the common defence plan.
c. No state, member of this organization, shall enter any international military or political agreement without the consent of the other member of the organization.
d. To strengthen economic cooperation between the members of the organization in preparation for the realization of economic unity between them, the two parties undertake the following matters:
i. To establish an Arab bank which will issue Arab currency and to establish a technical committee to lay down the foundation of this project and prepare it for approval.
ii. To revise the present system of inter‑Arab commercial exchange which is in operation now with the intention of strengthening and fortifying this cooperation by exempting local produce and manufactured goods from customs duties or by reducing these duties to the lowest possible limit.
iii.
To encourage
the formation of companies representing common Arab shares and capital
which
will undertake vast agricultural and industrial projects
and establish
common
air and naval transport, insurance activities, etc.
iv. To establish an Arab economic council to direct economic activity and supervise it.
3. To contact Arab governments in order to present the principles and foundations mentioned in this statement and to invite the Arab states to accept them and to meet in a conference which will lay down the texts with their details, to ratify them and execute them as soon as they ere sanctioned. This conference should be held during the month of March and it should include the Heads of Governments, Ministers of Foreign Affairs, Ministers of Defence and Finance, and the Chiefs of the General Staff of the Armies.
Sabri al‑'Asali
Khalid al‑'Azm
Salah Salem
From reading the
statement one can easily deduce that the talk about a military and
economic
alliance was being used as camouflage and propaganda to make setting
for
Articles 1 and 2 and paragraph C which were Iraq and Iraq's policy of
joining
the Baghdad Pact. Khalid al-Agm
had hopes of becoming the next president of the Syrian republic with
the help
of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, France, the Leftists and the Army. He paid a
visit to
Riyadh, Amman and Beirut. After a meeting which I had in Beirut with
President Camille Shamoun and the Syrian nationalist Mikhail Ilian, it,
was
suggested
that Khalid al‑'Azm should be invited by the Iraqi government to visit
Iraq and that he should be, treated in a very friendly and hospitable
manner. I
conveyed the idea to Baghdad, and soon after that Khalid al‑'Azm did
visit Baghdad. While there we had very frank talks about Iraq's policy
of
joining the Baghdad pact and we emphasized to him the fact that the
Baghdad
Pact served Iraqi and Arab security and did not in any way interfere
with the
Arab Mutual Defence Pact. There was no discussion of federation between
us, but
we talked at length about Syrio‑Iraqi cooperation. To my mind that
visit
had no concrete results, but it was useful as a counter‑measure to
Egyptian and Saudi propaganda in
Syria.
I met Khalid al‑'Azm on more than one occasion in Damascus and I found that he had no intention of letting Syria federate with any part of the Arab world. At one time he frankly told me that he would not make any move unless all the Arab states decided to move together. He said,
"The Arab states should move together at all and any cost."
I asked, "If one Arab
state
does not want to move, should we all remain static? Or, if the Arab
states are
heading for an abyss, should we all follow? He answered in
the affirmative.
He believed in closer cooperation between the Arab states and he sided
with the
Arab state that provided him with political and material support. Iraq
was not
the first in that category.
This, to my mind, represents
a true picture of Khalid al‑'Azm's Arab policy. It was reasonable and
realistic as far as it went, but it divided the Arab world into two
camps with
Syria and Iraq on opposite sides, a principle which I could not
accept.
During the Asian‑African Conference in Bandung in April 1955, a meeting was held in the residence of Prime Minister Gamal 'Abdul Nasir which was attended by President Gamal and Salah Salem of Egypt, Prince Faisal of Saudi Arabia, and Khalid al‑'Azm and Ahmad Shuqairi of Syria. This tri‑partite meeting was probably held to counteract the policy of joining the Baghdad Pact and to ward against any potential Syrio‑Iraqi federation. I was informed that they had agreed among themselves on the following plan for the three states, a plan which was never put into effect:
1. A permanent council of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs to coordinate foreign policy and unify diplomatic representation. Political treaties undertaken collectively.
2. A council of Ministers of Defence to plan for defence in times of war and peace with a unified Command whose headquarters should be in Damascus and would have under its command units from the armies of the three states. A common financial pool representing the ratio of 10% of the budget of each state to be spent for common defence.
3. An economic council
to unify the
economic legislation and economic policy for the member states. Removal
of the
customs barriers between the states, considering these states as one
common
market with free movement of money, persons and goods, and a unified
monetary
system.
In February 1955 the Iraqi government received the following report from its Embassy in Damascus:
Confidential, personal and very urgent.
His
Excellency the President of the Syrian Republic (Hashim al‑Atasi)
believes
that the political situation in Syria is very serious and should
receive the
greatest attention from Iraq, for the friends of Iraq and Syria are
fighting
not only the adversaries of Iraq among the Syrians, but foreign powers
hidden
behind them. France, Saudi Arabia and Egypt are exerting all their
efforts and
powers in order to draw Syria to a line inimical to Iraq. Although the
purpose
of each of these states is different and their policies are varied,
they all
consciously or unconsciously work to serve the Communists of
Syria. There is
nothing on the other side to face the situation with a decisive action
which
could check these currents. The parties and groups known as inimical to
Iraq
and its politics, foremost of whom is Khalid al‑'Azm and his group, and
Akram al‑Haurani and his supporters, receive help from these three
states. Besides, the Communist party, due to its activity and the help
it
receives, is increasing the number of its supporters. On the other
side, the
members of the People's Party, which fundamentally believes in the
policy of
Iraq and federation with it, have been afflicted with a great deal of
despair
and disgust in addition to the timidity which characterizes them. They
cannot,
in their present condition, undertake any active role while they see
their
colleagues, members of the Nationalist Party; betray them at the most
critical
times.
The
President of the Republic spoke to the American Ambassador in his
meeting
yesterday and told him, “Your allies and your money combat the genuine
wish of
the Syrian people and combat your own interests. Your ally, France,
with the
pillars she has in the Syrian army, and with the money which she
spends,
cooperates with Saudi money and Egypt to push Syria against the United
States.
' He spoke to him about the federation with Iraq and told him that 80%
Syrians
support the federation with Iraq because it’s the only path for saving
Syria
from the chaos into which it has fallen and from the danger which will
threaten
it in the future. But the Syrian people cannot express this will of
theirs
because or the collusion or the forces of the army with the states
opposing the
idea or the federation, and because the Americans, the British and the
Turks
stand as onlookers if they do not also prevent federation under Israeli
pressure
or for other purposes.”
When the American Ambassador asked the President of the Republic for material proof showing French interference, the President showed him a report from the Ambassador of Syria in Egypt in which he says, “The French Ambassador in Egypt told him, in a tone of warning, that France cannot stand with folded arms vis‑α‑vis the alignment of Syria with Iraq. It also resists Syria's entry into the Turkish‑Iraqi agreement (Baghdad Pact).”
The President of the Republic informed some of his intimates that he is considering resigning so as not to bear responsibility nor events which might happen to Syria in the future due to it’s moving towards Communism. Syria will declare its enmity to Iraq if elements inimical to Iraq's policy take over the government by the collusion of Khalid al‑'Azm, Akram al‑Haurani and the Chief of the General Staff of the Army to bring in a new government. The Nationalist Party is leaning toward them.
Those close to him told him
that the Constitutional provisions do not permit him now to relinquish
authority
or to refrain from asking the man, nominated by the majority of the
Parliament,
to form the Government. He may, however, resign after forming a new
Cabinet if
it follows a policy which he does not approve. The President of the
Republic
believes that Iraq, for its on safety, for the future of the Arab
cause, and
for the future of Syria, must exert its efforts in order to avert the
danger.
There are two measures ‑‑ external and internal. Externally, Iraq
should urge its friends and allies, Turkey, Britain and the United
States to
support its plan for Syria and to support the confederation. Internally
Iraq
should provide counter propaganda in Syria, for Syrian public opinion
is naive
and they believe the falsehoods which are repeated over and over by
newspapers
bought by the French, Saudis and Egyptians. Reports presented to him
from
respective departments emphasize that the Saudis alone have spent the
amount of
one million dollars to cause noise about changing the Cabinet and the
deviation
of Syria away from Iraq. This is besides what other parties have spent
in other
quarters, for they have bought the majority of the press, and they have
bought
many officers, members of parliament and prominent political
personalities. He
believes that the opportunity is open for Iraq to work if Iraq combines
its
international efforts with some propaganda which will cost nothing but
a small
ratio of what it costs others. He is afraid that, if Iraq does not move
to
avert the danger, other states, Turkey for example, may undertake some
decisive
action. Turkey's Charge d'Affaires here has notified the Prime Minister
that
his Government cannot stand with folded arms if a Cabinet should come
dominated
by Akram Haurani and the Leftists, for that would provide a danger to
Turkey's life.
The President is afraid lest the Turkish Government take this as a
pretext to
occupy al‑Jezira and Aleppo, and the President believes that Iraq is
more
capable than any other to win Syria to its side before the time has
passed.
It was in the spring of 1955,
at the Bandung Conference, that I had a frank talk about Syria with
President
Nasir of Egypt. During one of the recesses of the Conference meetings
President
Nasir and I had a chat together about Iraqi‑Egyptian relations. Iraq
had
already signed the Baghdad Pact and a radio war had ensued between
Egypt and
Iraq. After reaching an agreement that an end should be put to this
radio war,
President Nasir told me, "Dr Jamali, hands off Syria."
I replied, "I think it is I who should tell you, hands off Syria. As for Iraq and Syria, there are no natural boundaries between them. The Euphrates unites them. Iraq's access to the Mediterranean is through Syria. Syria's economy complements Iraqis. It is natural that the two states should confederate. If they do not confederate they should develop close cooperation. If they do not actively cooperate they should at least be friendly toward each other. Anything less than that would lead to trouble in the area. That is why I beg you to stop the anti‑Iraq campaign in Syria if you have national Arab interests at heart." That was the last of our political talks, and I never had the opportunity of talking to President Nasir after Bandung.
On my return to Iraq the
Syrian affair was reviewed a few times at the royal palace. In the
spring of
1955 a Syrian parliamentary delegation of prominent Syrians was invited
to Iraq
on the occasion of Iraqis Development Week. It was Iraq's intention to
show our
Syrian brethren some of the achievements of the Development Board. They
were
also taken to Habbaniyeh to see the former British airbase which had
been
handed over to Iraq after the signing of the Baghdad Pact.
A meeting was held in the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs where Syrio‑Iraqi relations and cooperation
were discussed. Those present from the Syrian side included, Jihad
al‑Hawwash,
Mohammed al‑æAish, Elias Nowfal, Majdeddin al‑Jabiri, Salahuddin
al‑Bitar,
æAdnan al‑Atasi, Ihsan al‑Jabiri, Faidhi al‑Atasi and Akram
al‑Haurani.
From the Iraqi side those
present included, Prime Minister Nuri as‑Sa lid, and the following
former
Prime Ministers: Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi, Saleh Jabr, Noureddin Mahmoud,
Mustapha al‑‘Omari, Arshad al‑‘Omari, Jamil al‑Madfa’i and
Fadhel Jamali. Two main topics of
conversation
were discussed at length and various points of view considered. The
first topic
was Arab relations to the West. Akram al‑Haurani defended the idea of
positive neutrality. He said, "Positive neutrality does not permit
alliance with the West." He asked that the West should rectify the
injustice they had dealt to the Palestine Arabs, but he admitted that
it would
be better for the Arabs to be armed from whatever source than to remain
unarmed.
Elias Nowfal expressed his
disappointment with the West and said, "It is the unfairness of Western
policy that is making us lean to the East, and that is way our
cooperation with
the West should be conditional."
Nuri Pasha, the Prime Minister, was
very frank and clear about Arab relations to the west. He flatly
rejected the
idea of positive neutrality and maintained that the Arabs had to choose
either
the Eastern camp or the Western camp. "As far as Iraq is concerned we
have
chosen the Western camp because our economic, political and defence
interests
are with the West. Our oil goes to the west and we are receiving
military help
from them."
I maintained that Iraq and the
West were in the same boat. Our efforts should be exerted to come to an
understanding with the West on the basis of mutual respect, fairness,
justice
and cooperation. We must make the west see and appreciate Arab rights
and
realize for its own interests, as well as the interests of the Arab
world, that
all Arab rights should be respected everywhere in the Arab world and in
Palestine in particular. I said t hat any political machinations and
pressures
that undermine our good relations with the west are not in the
interests of the
Arab world. "We have freed ourselves from Western political domination.
We
must seek western help and friendship in facing the dangers of Zionism
and
Communism."
The second topic discussed was inter‑Arab politics Akram al‑Haurani said that any idea of Arab unity required the freezing of the Baghdad Pact. He was vigourously told that the Baghdad Pact would never stand in the way of Iraq's strengthening its relationship with other Arab states. It was meant to be a shield protecting Iraq and hence protecting all the Arab world. It did not reduce Iraq's responsibility or interest in the affairs of the Arab world. On the contrary, Iraq would always use the Baghdad pact meetings to defend Arab rights to freedom and justice everywhere.
In that meeting Iraq's stand on inter‑Arab relations was summarized as follows:
1. Iraq will not encourage or force any Arab state to join the Baghdad Pact. Other Arab states may join if they choose to do so.
2. Iraq seeks to strengthen the Arab Collective Security and Military Cooperation Pact with the intention of restoring Arab rights to Palestine.
3. Iraq will always take a positive attitude towards unity and federation of the Arab states which should be entered freely and with good will.
Thus the Syrians got a very
clear idea of where Iraq stood in world affairs as well as in Arab
affairs.
After an evening dinner given
in honour of the Syrian delegation in the Municipal Hall of Baghdad I
asked the
well‑known Syrian politicians, Akram al‑Haurani and Salhuddin al‑Bitar,
to come to my house. Those two men represented the Baath socialist
Party at
that time, abd, although they had welcome Iraqi’s help in eliminating
the
dictatorship of Shishakli from Syria, they were not enthusiastic about
Syrio‑Iraqi
federation at this time. We had a lengthy debate together which lasted
until
the early hours of the morning. Salahuddin al‑Bitar's argument was that
Syria could not federate with Iraq while Iraq was being run by Nuri
as‑Sa'id
and while British influence prevailed on him.
I
argued that the
question of Syrio‑Iraqi
federation should be dealt with irrespective of personalities and
passing
political conditions. Iraq was no longer under British domination as
propaganda
had made it out to be, and Nuri as‑Sa'id was not always in the saddle
in
Iraqi politics, nor would he last forever. "Besides, if you think that
Iraq's political situation is not healthy and not favourable to the
Arab cause,
why don't you join and help improve its conditions?"
To this argument Akram al‑Haurani concurred, but I could see very well that anti‑Iraq propaganda, both from Arab sources and Communist‑Zionist sources had made a great impression on some so‑called Socialist Syrians. It was during the summer of 1955 that the Royal Palace took up the Syrian issue again since Syria was headed towards a presidential election, and Iraq was concerned that the President to be elected should be a friend of Iraq and one sympathetic to rapprochement. Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi and I were invited to go to Sirsank to meet with His Majesty the King and His Royal Highness the Prince Regent. We were asked to go to Lebanon to watch conditions in Syria and to try to encourage candidates friendly to us.
The candidate most favoured by Iraq was Rushdi al‑Kikhia, the head of the People's Party. Other candidates favoured by Iraq were Lutfi al‑Haffar and Sabri a1‑'Asali of the Nationalist Party. Three other candidates were Khalid as‑'Azm, a Syrian statesman who was pro‑Russian, Shukri al‑Quwatli, an Arab nationalist who was pro‑Saudi and pro‑Egypt, and Akram al‑Haurani, a Socialist. Quwatli had returned to Syria in the summer of 1955 in time for the elections.
The most popular and the strongest of the six possible candidates was Rushdi al‑Kikhia. He was a clean, respectable and scrupulous man. But Rushdi al‑Kikhia declined to nominate himself is spite of his being encouraged by many people. Iraq thus lost its favourite candidate. The reason for al‑Kikhia's reluctance to become a candidate was that he thought that the Syrian army had become addicted to politics and that he would not like to become a puppet president at the mercy of the army.
While in Lebanon I
attended a
meeting in Suq al‑Gharb in the house of Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi with
Tawfiq himself, Jamil 'Abdul Wahab, the Iraqi Ambassador to Lebanon,
'Abdul
Jalil ar‑Rawi, the Iraqi Charge d'Affaires in Damascus and Colonel
Salih
Samarra'i, the Iraqi military Attache to Syria and Lebanon. We reviewed
the
Syrian situation and it was decided that 'Abdul Jalil ar‑Rawi should go
to Damascus and arrange a meeting between me and Shawkat Shuqair, Chief
of the
General Staff of the Syrian army. The meeting should be held at night
and
should not be publicized. The meeting was arranged, and at night I went
to
Damascus in the official car of our Military Attache. The car was not
stopped
for inspection either for customs or passport. I reached Damascus at 10
o'clock
at night and went from the Iraqi Embassy to the house of Natheer Fansa
without
letting anybody know about my arrival. There I met General Shawkat
Shuqair and
for two hours we talked over the political situation of Syria. I left
Damascus
after midnight and reached Souq al‑Gharb about 3 o'clock in the
morning.
Only three persons attended the discussions, Shuqair, Fansa and myself.
Herewith I give the translation of some excerpts from the memorandum
that I
wrote after that meeting.
Shuqair complains of
the worsening
of the political situation in Syria and the intense activity of foreign
ambassadors and their intervention in the internal affairs of Syria.
The
interference of these ambassadors in Syrian affairs reminds one of
similar
interference in the affairs of the Ottoman Empire 'The Sick Man of
Europe',
before and after World War I.
Syrian
political parties wish to
exploit the Syrian army and to depend on it to cover their own
weakness. He
advised the army to avoid political parties and he thought that the
army itself
should be its own party.
He
said that he wanted a
respectable, stable government for Syria, a government which would be
friendly
and cooperative with Iraq. I said that Iraq's objective was that Syria
should
have a stable, constitutional government which would cooperate with
Iraq and
come to an understanding with the Iraqi government to the extent the
Syrians
themselves might deem desirable. 'We are ready to move with any Arab
country to
the extent which that Arab country desires. We have no policy which we
want to
impose on anybody.'
We discussed in detail the question of the Tripartite Pact between Syria, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, and I told him that the Pact was futile and absurd.
'We all know that it won't work and that it will bring no benefit to anybody. We would not have cared about it were it not intended as an offence to Iraq and as a move to isolate Iraq from her Arab sisters.
He said, “Far be it from Syria that she should intend to offend Iraq!”
“But”, I said, “that is the motive of the Egyptians; and the Saudis, and the recent statement of King Ibn Sa'ua about isolating Iraq is a proof of what I say.”
He
said that he regretted that
statement.
I said, “No, on the contrary. I am happy for it because I prefer that facts should appear and their motive be known rather than hidden and covered.”
He tried to find a way out of this Tri‑partite impasse. I told him, “There is no way out except by the Arab states agreeing to amend the Covenant of the Arab League and the Mutual Defence Pact, or by Syria putting some conditions in the Tri‑partite Pact which would make their acceptance difficult for the Saudis and the Egyptians. I feel that this is what could happen and that they would relieve themselves of signing the Pact.”
He
said that he wanted to come
to an understanding with the United States, it being understood that he
could
not join the Turkish‑Iraqi Pact, for, even though he was convinced of
its
wisdom, for his own personal interest and public security he could not
make
this fact public, for the people do not like Britain and America.
America
should show its goodwill towards Syria. The oil companies should be
more
lenient and increase what they pay to Syria, and Ambassador Eric
Johnston,
special representative of President Eisenhower, should be called to be
fair to
the Arabs in the distribution of waters.
We
discussed the Communist
danger in Syria and he affirmed that he had started combatting
Communism. We
reviewed the Communist danger in the Syrian army and Foreign Service.
We
discussed the Baath Party. He said the Party wanted cooperation with
Iraq. We
also discussed his cooperation with the People's Party. said that he
was
inclined to believe that Nazim al Qudsi of the People's party would win
the
election. He also said that there was small hope for Quwatli or 'Azm to
succeed. He said that he was going to arrange for a meeting with Rushdi
al‑Kikhia.
He said that he greatly respected the President of the Republic, Hashim
al‑Atasi,
but that he had no confidence in his son 'Adnan.’ I asked, 'Why don't
the two
parties, the People's Party and the Nationalist party, cooperate with
each
other?' He said, 'The People's Party uses intrigues and
clever methods and
they want their party alone to rule although they don't have a majority
in the
Parliament.'
I
learnt from him
that the relations of France with Syria and with Khalid al'Azm were
strained
and that France had stopped providing them with arms, and that was why
they
wanted arms from the United States. I repeated to him that Iraq
desired a
stable, constitutional government for Syria, one respected by the
Syrian
people, friendly to Iraq, and considering Iraq as the first brother. He
confirmed the necessity that Iraq should occupy first place in relation
to
Syria, and that Egypt and Saudi Arabia should in no way replace Iraq,
for Saudi
Arabia could not replace Iraq militarily, and Egypt could not replace
Iraq
economically.
I
explained to him, 'Iraq is
strong and is getting stronger and richer. Any Syrian policy which does
not
move in the line of fraternity with Iraq would be a mistaken policy.
Iraq believes
in federation (ittihad), but that should be attained by the wish of the
people
with complete liberty and by constitutional methods. We harbour no
specific
plan and we have no specific policy which we wish to impose on Syria.
False
propaganda is being made against Iraq, namely, that Iraq wishes to join
Syria
in order to disband its army and dominate it. I know of no responsible
Iraqi
who would consider such a policy. We want Syria to be an independent
state,
brotherly to Iraq. Any cooperation, rapprochement, or federation must
issue
from the will of the Syrians themselves and not from invitations from
Iraq, or
intrigues, or coup d'etats. If the hearts are not united, there is no
good in
any political unity.
He spoke about the mistakes of Iraqi politics in Syria during the last 10 years. I answered that the mistakes started with Syria at the hands of Quwatli who forgot what Iraq had done for Syria's independence and after that mutual mistakes began to follow one after the other.
We reviewed the policy of Syria, Iraq and Egypt in the Arab League and in the international field, and I proved to him that Iraq's policy had been realistic and stable. Experience had proved its validity. 'Our brethren in Cairo are not realistic. They lack experience in the international field.' He agreed that the Egyptians talk a lot but in practice are not realistic.
We separated with the hope of meeting again on another occasion, and I promised him that Iraq was ready to render any service for the good of Syria, and that I, personally, was ready to cooperate with the Syrians.
In conclusion, I find that the Chief of the General Staff has a new outlook towards Iraq and the United States. I do not know whether that is temporary or permanent. Anyway, we must profit from this new trend. As for the Presidency, so long as the army thinks that neither Quwatli nor 'Azm might succeed, I see no big difference among the rest, especially since Sabri al 'Asali, Nazim al‑Qudsi and Lutfi al‑Raffar all have good sentiments toward Iraq.
Dring the summer of 1955, while staying at Mont Vert Hotel in Broummana, I had lengthy discussions with several Syrian visitors.from both the Nationalist Party and the people's party one was Jalal as‑Sayyid,a very interesting serious nationalist who was a sincere unionist. He was a strong pillar of the Ba'ath Party. He came from Deir ez‑Zor, the part of Syria on the Euphrates adjacent to Iraq where the people are related by family and tribal ties to the northern part of Iraq. It has often been considered as a natural part of Iraq.
In
Broummana I
also had two lengthy meetings with the ideologist of the Baath Party,
Michel
'Aflaq, who summered in a house just below my hotel. I called on him
one
evening and we had a long talk about Arab and world affairs. I invited
him the
next evening to have dinner with me and Dr Constantin Zuraiq. I found
Michel
'Aflaq to be a theoretician with very little understanding of the
realities of
the Arab world. He did not impress me much and I thought that he did
not provide
the type of leadership which the Arab youth needed. He used slogans,
some of
which were high‑sounding and noble in words but he had no practical
programme in deeds. Besides, his preaching of secularism or laicism
would rob
the Arab nation of its soul and its message to the world ‑‑ the
message of faith in one God, human brotherhood, justice and equality
for all
mankind. His attitude toward Syrio‑Iraqi rapprochement was theoretical
and non‑realistic as well. 'Aflaq's later role in Syrio‑Iraq
politics confirmed my first impression. His recent ideological message
has been
a call for a rapprochement between the Baath Party and the Communist
Party!
Another very interesting personality summering in Broulnmano was Colonel Ghassan al‑Jadid, an ardent member of the Syrian Nationalist Party who was later assassinated in Beirut by the Syrian army. I saw him a couple of times through arrangements made by the Iraqi Military Attache. Ghassan al‑Jadid, who was from the Alawite district of Syria, played a role in the downfall of Shishakli. He had to quit Syria after the assassination of 'Adnan al‑Malki by a member of the Syrian Nationalist Party. Ghassan al‑Jadid, a brilliant, courageous, vigourous army officer, was very enthusiastic for the Syrio‑Iraqi federation. He was ready to play any role which would lead to that objective. His Party believed in the unity of the Fertile Crescent ‑‑ Syria, Iraq, Jordan, Palestine ‑‑ and that the people of these countries formed one nation which had its distinct characteristics, and which formed a part of the Arab world. They were not part of one Arab nation, for, to them, the Arabs are not one nation, but several nations. This ideological distinction made the Party seem heretical in the sight of the Arab nationalists who considered the people of the whole Arab world to be one nation.
The
Syrian Nationalist Party
had its Para‑military organization whose members were well disciplined,
courageous and adventuresome. That is why the founder of the Party,
Antun
Sa'ada had a clash with the Lebanese government which led to a good
deal of
bloodshed. Sa'ada went to Syria where he was betrayed by Husni az‑Za'im
who handed him over to the Lebanese government headed by the great Arab
nationalist, Prime Minister Riyadh as‑Sulh. Ryadh had him tried and
shot,
Soon after, while visiting Jordan, Ryadh himself was shot dead by the
Party.
I
met several other members or
the Syrian Nationalist Party including George 'Abdul Messih, Asad
al‑Ashqar,
Moneer Ba'alebeki, Adeeb Qaddura, and most important, as far as I was
concerned, my old friend and classmate, Sai'id Taqiyiddin, a graduate
of
the
American University of Beirut, whose literary genius, charm and
devotion I had
always admired.
I was fully convinced of the sincerity or this group in their desire to achieve Syrio‑Iraqi rapprochement. I worked hard to convince them that their ideology needed revision as rar as the Arab world went. They later changed the name or their party from the Syrian Nationalist Party to the National Socialist Party. My contacts with this party, in spite of our ideological divergence, continued to be friendly and cooperative until the downfall of the Iraqi royal regime in 1958.
Shukri al‑Quwatli was carrying on his electoral campaign with Saudi money which was lavishly provided. A telegram from our Military Attache in Amman gave us an indication of what was happening. He stated:
A
new propaganda activity on
behalf of Quwatli and against unity (Syrio‑Iraqi) has appeared recently
from the Mufti (Haji Ameen
al‑Husaini) and from the members of the
Syrian
Deuxieme Bureau (lntelligence) who are still in Jordan. Behind all that
is
Saudi gold.
All these and the Press are anti‑Iraq.
Before the election I sent a
message to Rushdi al‑Kikhia charging him with a great historical
responsibility for evading the duty of leading the country in the path
of our
common ideals.
At the end of the summer of 1955 Shukri al‑Quwatli was elected President of Syria. I sent him a telegram of congratulations and best wishes. His answer to my telegram ran as follows: "I received with thanks and appreciation your fine congratulations and I reciprocate with you your good wishes for the Arab nation and the attainment of its goals in unity and strength."
With
the coming of Quwatli a
new chapter of alienation from Iraq started. From then on Syrian
politics began
to move in a direction away from Iraq and two new forces prevailed in
Syria.
One was the growth of army influence in Syrian politics, and the second
was the
growth of Communist and BaÆth influence.
Instead of turning to Iraq for
help and cooperation, Syrian politics, with strong Egyptian Arab
propaganda,
turned towards Egypt. The BaÆath Socialist Party grew in influence and
importance and Akram al‑Haurani, its most prominent politician became
Head of the National Assembly and 'Afif al‑Bizri, a confirmed
Communist,
took over the army and became Chief of the General Staff.
It may be interesting to add to this report the translation of a letter which I received from Natheer Fansa, a well‑known Syrian journalist and a brother‑in‑law of the first dictator of Syria, Husni as‑Za'im.
October, 1956
You have undoubtedly heard the latest news from Syria and to what extent it has gone to the Left, especially after the recent statements of Sayed Sabri al‑'Asali to the press in which he expressed the necessity of marching in company with the communist states and warning and threatening anyone who goes contrary to this trend. And I believe you may have read our strong reactions to his statement and our ridicule of his stand and his latest trend. But what is the use, dear Sir, while Syria has been overwhelmed by this sweeping Communist propaganda, especially after the Western stand on the question of the Suez Canal and on arming the Arabs?
I do not want to make long statements for the subject should leave the realm of words, but I want to repeat what I told your Excellency some days ago in the Iraqi Embassy in Beirut, namely, the disease is known and the remedy available...
The Minister of Defence is your friend. The Chief of the General Staff is on your side, and some great officers are still loyal to you. Then there are some great political men like Rushdi Kikhia, Michail Ilian, 'Adnan al‑Atasi, Faidhi al‑Atasi and His Excellency Hashim Beg (Ex‑President of the Syrian Republic) all are with you and their hearts bleed for the present situation and for the recent trend.
Dear Excellency, the danger is not limited to Syria alone. It is now more serious than you think and more difficult than you imagine. I am afraid lest this danger will approach you and I have exact information to confirm this... I am very much afraid, very much, dear Sir.
Conditions have reached a stage when it is not permissible at all that Iraq should take such a passive stand and I‑told‑you‑so attitude. You may be entitled and have the full right just to look on and laugh at us, but I repeat that the situation is serious and the condition is dangerous. 'Your friend is he who tells you the truth and not he who says Yes to you.' Some friends asked me to go to Baghdad to explain to you the seriousness of the situation, but I thought that I had better write to you before coming. If you are ready 'to listen' I am at your disposal.
Please, Sir, accept my sincerest respect.
During
the 1956
assault of Israel, Britain and France on Egypt, one of the first things
the
anti‑Iraq forces in Syria did was to blow up the pumping stations of
the
Iraqi Petroleum Company near Homs. The flow of oil from Iraq to the
Mediterranean was cut for several months. Iraq lost something like 50
million
pounds sterling of its revenue that year. It was at this
juncture that Nuri
as‑Sa’id began to feel how vital Syria was to Iraq and he began to
think
about the matter seriously. It was then that he started to work for the
overthrow of the Syrian regime. I was at the United Nations General
Assembly in
New York City when I heard about the failure of a plot in Syria against
the
Syrian government. Nuri, without my knowledge, had contacted Colonel
Shishakli,
who had been overthrown by Iraq. Shishakli had come to Beirut and asked
for
30,000 Iraqi dinars, 10,000 of which he received in advance from
General Ghazi
ad‑Daghistani. After having entered Syria incognito and having studied
the situation with his army friends, Shishakli found that he was unable
to
arrange a coup and left the Middle East definitively. The
meetings which had
been held in Beirut between Shishakli and Daghistani and some prominent
Syrians
included an agent who went and reported to the Syrian government, and
some
prominent Syrians had to suffer as a result. I must put on record here
that I
knew nothing about that movement until the news became public.
After my return from the
United States Nuri told me all about the plot and said, "Thank God that
it
did not succeed, for, had it succeeded, they might have considered it
as part
of the Israeli, French, British aggression."
In the summer of 1957 I
was the guest of the Turkish government for a month. During this period
I was
in touch with my Syrian brethren, especially Mikhail Ilian, a prominent
member
of the Syrian Nationalist Party who was living in Hilton Hotel,
Istambul, where
I was staying. His Majesty the King of Iraq and his uncle were
summering on the
King's private yacht in the Bosphorus. One afternoon His Royal Highness
Prince
'Abdul Ilah, Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi, who was also a guest of the Turkish
government, and I were taking tea with Mikhail Ilian in his suite at
the
Hilton. The issue of the Communist takeover of the Syrian army was
discussed
with the possible repercussion of such a move on Iraq. Tawfiq
as‑Suwaidi
suggested contacting the Turkish government and seeking its advice on
the
situation.
A few days later I had a
telephone call from the Iraqi Ambassador, Nejib ar‑Rawi, asking me to
attend, before noon, at the Yeldiz Palace. H. M. the King, H. R. R.
Prince
'Abdul Ilah, H.E. the President of the Turkish Republic, Jalal Bayyar,
Premier
'Adnan Menderis, Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi, the Iraqi Ambassador, some Turkish
officials and I were there. We discussed the situation and then had
lunch
together. It was confirmed by the Turks that the Communist danger was
growing
in Syria and that the danger would affect the whole area of the Middle
East. Mr
Menderes suggested that both Iraq and Turkey should approach the United
States.
At that time Iraq had 'Ali
Jawdat al‑Ayoubi as Prime Minister. 'Ali Jawdat wished to get along
with
the Syrian regime as it stood. He did not seem to be concerned or
worried about
the Communist danger so he had nothing to tell the United States.
Turkey, on
the other hand, immediately contacted the United States, and within a
few days
Mr Loy Henderson came to Istanbul to discuss the situation with us. In
the
meeting Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi had left Istanbul.
A few days after his departure
I was called again to attend at Yeldiz Palace. This time Mr Loy
Henderson was
present at the meeting. He confirmed the growth of the Communist
influence in
Syria, but he said that the United States did not wish to intervene and
left
the matter to the states in the area. If the states in the area were
involved
in any trouble, then America was bound to come to the aid of her allies
and the
Sixth Fleet might be called upon. Turkey said, "We do not wish to
intervene in Syria. We leave it to Iraq. It is an inter‑Arab problem,
but, if Iraq is threatened and involved, we are ready to help Iraq."
The
Iraqi government, headed by Premier 'Ali Jawdat, saw no danger coming
from
Communism in Syria.
Mr Henderson, in a private meeting with me, asked if Iraq was really going to move and do something about Syria. I answered frankly that, considering 'Ali Jawdat's present mood, I foresaw no such possibility. In Syria the Ba’ath Party and the Communists were competing for power, and the communists were successful in some municipal elections. That scared the Ba’ath and other Syrian nationalists. Some thought that the best way to save the situation would be to throw Syria into the lap of Nasir. The Syrian parliament, by an overwhelming majority, voted for the union with Egypt, and a Syrian delegation went to Cairo and offered Syria to Nasir unconditionally on a golden tray.
At that time I was in Ankara
with Nuri as‑Sa'id attending a Baghdad Pact meeting. I immediately
wrote
an article for my daily newspaper, AI‑'Amal, which was appearing in
Baghdad. The article was entitled, "Defiance or Unity" (Tahaddi Em
Ittihad). That article aroused a storm of opposition against me. How
could
Fadhel Jamali condemn Arab unity! In truth I was not against Arab
unity, but I
was against the unnatural, illogical step taken in uniting Syria with
Egypt
before Syrian unity with Iraq. I would not have objected to Syrio‑Iraqi
unity with Egypt. Besides I do not believe in Egyptian domination over
any
other Arab state. I believe in a federation based on equality and
brotherhood,
but not in amalgamation. My article raised a storm, and
after that a
political war ensued between me and President Nasir. Addressing one of
the
greatest rallies ever held in the Marja Square of Damascus, President
Nasir
spoke to the masses telling them: "AI‑Jamali‑‑ and you
all know who al‑Jamali is ‑‑ al‑Jamali is an agent of
imperialism and his paper is financed by the imperialists."
In an
article answering President Nasir I said, "I do not blame H.E. the
President for what he said about Jamali, for he may not know him well
enough
personally, but I do blame his Egyptian and Syrian aides who know
Jamali's
services to the cause of Arab independence and freedom and who may not
have
told him the truth. Besides, my paper was financed by a mere thousand
dinars
put up half and half myself and my colleague, Dr 'Abdul Majeed 'Abbas,
with no
financial help from any outside source If the imperialists should ever
provide
me with any money I would put it on a silver tray and present it to
H.E.
President Nasir."
After the Syrian‑Egyptian
union in l958, Syria became a source of danger to the regimes of Arab
neighbours. Syrians were mobilized to penetrate Lebanon and create a
civil war
inside Lebanon. The Syrians in the Deuxieme Bureau, led by Colonel
'Abdul
Hameed as‑Sarraj, were active in Jordan and Iraq. Iraq had had two
short‑lived
Cabinets, one led by 'Ali Jawdat al‑Ayoubi, and the other by 'Abdul
Wahab
Mirjan, both of which were not alert to the struggle with the anti‑Iraq
forces in the Middle East.
After the Syrian‑Egyptian amalgamation, I was active in trying to convince the Palace of the urgent need for the Iraqi‑Jordanian federation. Once the principle was accepted, a new Iraqi Cabinet was formed under Nuri Pasha in 1958 in which I entered as Minister of Foreign Affairs. That Cabinet was to be a transitional one:‑
‑ to implement the Arab Union comprising Jordan and Iraq.
‑ to revise the Iraqi Constitution accordingly.
‑ to request the United States to furnish Iraq with 80 planes
‑through the Military Aid Plan. This item was never provided because of America procrastination
The
fact remains
that Syria was and is divided by many political parties, provincial
interests,
and various stages of culture as well as by varieties of religions and
religious sects. Although Syria presents the most vocal aspects of Arab
nationalism, it is so divided ideologically and politically that its
free
democratic regime was badly abused and the parties encouraged the army
to enter
politics. The army discovered that playing politics pays. But
successive coup
d'etats and assassinations deprived the country of some of its best
army
officers, and, by engaging almost exclusively in politics, the army
neglected
its technical advancement. Foreign powers found ample opportunity to
fish in
the muddy waters of Syria. My conversation with the Chief of the
General Staff,
Shuqair, showed that many states were meddling in Syrian affairs. Saudi
Arabia
had oil money flowing there. Egypt sent one of its most active men,
Mahmoud
Riadh, as Ambassador. Israel had spies like Eli Cohen. Turkey was ever
alert to
see what was happening to Syria. Jordan wanted Syria to be a Hashemite
state.
Iraq worked for a federation with Syria. France considered Syria as one
of its
zones of influence. Britain was playing with some political parties and
groups.
The Druzes are traditionally known to depend on Britain. The United
states had
its Central Intelligence Agency and its cultural and missionary work in
Syria.
The Soviet Union had the Communist Party headed by Khalid Baqdash. The
prominent nationalist, Shukri al‑Quwatli, and the capitalist, Khalid
al‑'
Azm were both invited to Moscow. Thus Syria was divided from within and
was
never left in peace from without. In my opinion Syria's highest
interest would
be best served by a genuinely democratic nationalist government which
would
core for and harmonize all its diverse elements and which would
federate with a
nationalist democratic government in Iraq which integrated all the
elements of
the Iraqi people. Both Syria and Iraq represent a rich variety of human
elements, but all these elements should feel loyalty to the state and
should
have their voice and interests represented in the state.
I worked hard and spent much
time and energy to promote Syrio‑Iraqi federation. I convinced my
friend,
the Turkish Premier, 'Adnan Menderis, that Turkey should withdraw its
objection
to such a federation. I worked hard with the British and the American
for the
same objective. I had tea with the French Ambassador in Beirut and
tried to
convince him that such a federation would not undermine Lebanese
independence,
and that unity would not harm the intersects of French culture in the
Middle
East. I had a lengthy meeting with the Maronite al‑Kataib Party in
Lebanon assuring them that Iraq would always respect Lebanese
integrity. The
only three powers which Iraq could not overcome in Syria were Saudi
Arabian
generosity, Egyptian propaganda and Israeli intrigues. Saudi Arabian
and
Israeli influence in the United States both affected the United States
attitude
on the question or Syrio‑Iraqi federation. Nevertheless I was working
hard to win American acquiescence to Iraq's policy of Syrio‑Iraqi
federation.
Of course the Soviet Union profited most from the condition of chaos and division. The Arab themselves and the Western powers, having no positive constructive policy for the Middle East, opened the way for Russia to easily exploit the situation. My approach to the Syrian problem was always guided by the following principles:
1. Support for the return to a constitutional system of government in Syria.
2. Readiness to move with Syria by constitutional means towards a confederation headed by H.M King Faisal II of Iraq.
3. Readiness to offer help to the Syrian government provided the request came from the legal representative body.
4. Readiness to respond to any request for help in case of internal disorder in Syria.
5. Desire that the Syrians themselves should govern Syria without any external interference.
6. Encouragement for non‑governmental, economic and personal contacts as well as enlightenment of the public on the principles of confederation through all mass media.
I must express my deep
respect and appreciation for the efforts and encouragement of Crown
Prince
'Abdul Ilah whose genuine faith in Syrio‑Iraqi federation was an
expression of honest national sentiment. It is most unfair to accept
the
propaganda directed against him after his death which said that he was
working
primarily to secure a throne for himself in Syria. I have two proofs to
support
my view that this insinuation was untrue. The first is that, in
discussions and
arrangements with the Syrian leaders in 1955, it was understood that
King
Faisal II of Iraq was to be the head of the federation. That was Prince
'Abdul
Ilah's own view. The second was that, in 1955, when Tawfiq as‑Suwaidi
and
I met with him in the presence of H. M. the King at Sarsang he bluntly
told us,
"Tell the Syrians that, if the Iraqi throne stands in the way of
Syrio‑Iraqi
unity, we are ready to leave the throne of Iraq if that will serve Arab
national interest." I think that was an expression of readiness to
sacrifice self‑interest for national interest. A man who makes such a
statement is not working selfishly to get a throne for himself.
Until his death, my friend
and colleague, former Prime Minister of Iraq, Saleh Jabr worked with
faith and
devotion for the Arab cause everywhere and especially for the
federation of
Syria and Iraq. He never failed to render all the encouragement, advice
and
help that I asked for in my endeavour for Syrio‑Iraqi federation.
I wish also to put on record
my appreciation and esteem for Colonel Saleh Mahdi as‑Samarra'i who was
our military attache in Beirut and Damascus until the downfall of the
royal
regime. He was also working with faith and devotion for the national
cause.
I should like to thank the
late Riyadh as‑Sulh, former Prime Minister of Lebanon, whose help and
guidance I shall never forget. He was a great Arab nationalist who had
Syrio‑Iraqi
federation at heart. I well remember that he arranged a meeting between
Nazim
al‑Qudsi and me in Shtawra. He took me in his car from Beirut to
Shtawra,
a point midway between Beirut and Damascus, while Nazim al‑Qudsi came
from Damascus. We talked about federating Iraq and Syria. Nazim Beg was
not
interested in the union of Iraq and Syria alone. He wanted all the Arab
world
to unite at one and the same time. In other words, he held an
all‑or‑nothing
policy which would result in nothing. My reaction was to cite a Persian
proverb
which I had learnt at school. Sanga buzurg 'alamata nazadanist. "To
lift
too big a stone is a sign (there will be) no hitting." Riyadh was on my
side and he worked hard to convince Nazim Beg, but to no avail. This
was only
one example of Riyadh as‑Sulh's genuine efforts.
President Camille Sham’un of
Lebanon is a true Arab nationalist and a sincere friend of Iraq. He had
Syrio‑Iraqi
Federation close to his heart and he rendered all the help and advice
Lebanon
could offer to the cause. I often had meetings with him when we
discussed the
question of Syrio‑Iraqi federation and reviewed the whole situation. I
benefited by listening to his comments and advice.
I have no words to express
my gratitude for my friend and brother, Kamil Muruwa, for his devotion
and
enthusiasm for the cause of Arab unity. Kamil put his influential
paper, Al‑Hayat,
at the service of the sacred cause and exerted all the effort he could
muster
in studying the situation and reporting on developments. He went ahead
with
preparing and publishing a Monograph on Unity of which he distributed
10,000
copies in Syria. Another brother whose
services and enthusiasm I must acknowledge is Professor Akram Zu'aiter
whose
eloquence and charming style in the speeches he gave and the articles
he wrote
for the national cause provided a big unifying force. Professor Sati'
al‑Hasri,
Kamil Muruwa and Akram Zu’aiter together wrote the Monograph on Unity.
In
spite of
everything I still think that
Syrio-Iraqi federation is a living issue which will continue to be
important.
The federation of Syria and Iraq is a step in the path of an all-Arab
federation-which remains to be achieved. Past mistake s should be
avoided and
obstacles, whether Arab or foreign, should be overcome. It is incumbent
on
those who have the destiny of the Arab nation in hand to carry the
torch of
unity and move forward. Syrio-Iraqi unity has to be realized soon if
the Arab
world is to fulfill its national aspirations.
Syria
Lebanon
Jordan
The relations between Iraq and Lebanon have been educational, economic
and
political at the same time. Lebanon is a great centre of modern
learning which
provides a meeting place for Western and Arab cultures.
Over fifty years ego, in 1921, when the Kingdom of Iraq was established
and
King Faisal the First was enthroned, I was among six students chosen by
the
Iraqi Ministry of Education to study at the American University of
Beirut in
Lebanon. We want by the sea route which took us via Basrah, Karachi,
Bombay,
Aden and Suez to Haifa. From there we took the train to Damascus and
Beirut.
The other members of the group were, Mohammed Deshti, Khalil Feddoo,
Hasan
Jwad, Muhyiddin Yusuf and Yusuf Zainal. The trip took us 39 days. Two
years
later the desert route was opened, and people began to cross the desert
by
automobile And bus, a journey which took some 24 hours. Today the trip
by jet
plane takes less than one hour.
In 1924 we suddenly and unexpectedly found that we had become Lebanese
citizens. This happened when Turkey and the Allies signed the Lausanne
Treaty,
for it stated that all subjects of the old Ottoman territories would
become
citizens of the territory in which they were at the time of signing.
This
provision of the Treaty made us Lebanese citizens. We had to go through
the
process of re-establishing our Iraqi citizenship based on the fact that
we were
in Lebanon on an Iraqi government educational mission.
At the American University I majored in Education and minored in
Natural
Sciences. In addition to my academic education, I practised and lived
inter-Arab unity. In the student society of 'Urwat al-Wuthqa, Arab
students met
together -- Iraqis, Syriens, Lebanese, Palestinians, Jordanians,
Egyptians,
Sudanese -- and we all worked together for our national aims, namely,
the
liberation and union of the Arab nation. Besides, in the Brotherhood
society,
we learnt to practice tolerance in inter-religious relationships.
Muslims,
Christians, Jews and Druzes used to meet to learn to understand and
respect
each other. Beirut was a great centre for education in Arab nationalism
And
religious tolerance.
After the arrival of our group in Beirut the flow of students from Iraq
increased, from year to year. Hundreds of students from Iraq, men and
women,
went to the American University of Beirut for their university
education or for
a year or two as a preparation for going to other universities-in the
United
States. Very soon Iraqi graduates of the A. U. B. began to occupy
responsible
positions in the various Ministries of the Iraqi government.
After my graduation in 1927 I returned to Iraq and started teaching at
the
Teacher Training College of Baghdad. In those days Iraq needed teachers
for its
educational development, and Beirut was an important center for
recruiting teachers.
Since I often spent my summer vacations in Lebanon, I was Asked by the
Ministry
of Education to take pert with the American University in the selection
and
recruitment of teachers for Iraq. The teachers were usually graduates
of the
A.U.B. and included Lebanese, Syrian, Jordanians and Palestinians.
When crossing the desert became easy due to better mean of transportation, Iraqis began to spend the summer months in Lebanon where they could escape the heat of Baghdad and enjoy the beautiful weather and scenery of the mountains of Lebanon and the Mediterranean Sea. Thus Iraqi-Lebanese educational and economic relations become well established over the years, and those of us who had been educated in Beirut felt quite at home in Lebanon. In 1929 I went to the United States for my post-graduate studies in Education. On my return in 1932 up until the end of l942, I occupied administrative posts in the Ministry of Education, progressing from Supervisor General to Director General of Education. One of my functions in Education was the recruitment of Lebanese teacher and the sending of Iraqi students to the American University of Beirut. The numbers continued to increase with the development of Iraq up till the Second World War. Beirut continues to be an important educational centre attracting students from all over the Middle East.
During
World War II, I was transferred from the Ministry of Education to take
up the
post of Director General of Foreign Affairs. It was at this time that
the
Lebanese national leaders, side by side with the Syrian national
leaders, began
to struggle for the termination of the French Mandate and for the
independence
of Lebanon. In Beirut Iraq had an accomplished Consul General, Tahseen
Qadri,
of Syrian descent. He later became the Minister at the head of the
Iraqi
diplomatic mission to Syria and Lebanon. He was well known to the early
Arab
nationalist for he had been aide-de- camp to King Faisal I. He had the
friendship of the Lebanese political leaders and he reported their
views and
problems faithfully. At the same time he had the cooperation and
confidence of
both General Edward Spears, the British representative, and Mr George
Wadsworth, the American government's representative in Beirut. It was
Iraqis
role to plead for the termination of the French Mandate and for the
recognition
of Lebanon as an independent state.
When the Lebanese leaders, including Bishara al-Khuri, Riyadh as-Sulh,
Camille
Sham’un, Saleem Taqla, 'Abdul Hameed Karami, 'Adil 'Usayran and others,
were
arrested by the French I wrote a few strong article for the Iraqi press
defending the cause of Lebanon. Being Director General of Foreign
Affairs at
the time I could not sign my own name to what I wrote and so I used a
pen name.
Fortunately the United Kingdom and the United States both stood by
Lebanon and
defence the cause of its independence. Iraq, then did its best to see
to it
that Lebanon and Syria were both invited to the United Nations
Conference in
San Francisco 1954.
At San Francisco the Iraqi delegation worked hand in hand with the four
other
Arab delegations, namely, Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon. I
established
Friendly relations with Lebanese delegates, Wadi’ Na'im, Josef Salem
and
‘Abdullah al-Yafi. Dr Charles Malik, another member of the delegation
was
already an old friend and classmate of mine. We thus had fine team work
in San
Francisco.
I was on the Trusteeship Committee that drafted Article 78 of the
United Nation
Charter which put a legal end to the French Mandate over Syria and
Lebanon and
assured them of achieving political
independence. The Article stated
that "The Trusteeship system shall not apply to territories which have
become Members of the United Nations, relationship among which shall be
based
on respect for the principle of sovereign equality."
Before the United Nations Conference in San Francisco, Lebanon had
already
taken part in the establishment of the League of the Arab States and
from then
on Iraq's cooperation with Lebanon on a new political dimension. The
Iraqi
delegation which I used to lead to the United Nations cooperated fully
and
harmoniously with the delegation of Lebanon. Our policies in the world
body
were very close although Iraq usually was more forward, sharp and
direct in
stating them.
In the autumn of 1946 the British government called for an Arab
Conference in
London. As Foreign Minister I led the Iraqi delegation to that
Conference. It
was there that I came to know Camille Sham’un for the first-time. He
was the
Lebanese Minister to Great Britain and he headed the Lebanese
delegation to the
Conference. I came to appreciate his fine qualities and his zeal in
defending
the Arab cause. Later on we worked together in the United Nations
fighting
against the partition of Palestine And the establishment of Israel.
Camille
Sham’un was brilliant speaker and a charming states man. Our friendship
and
cooperation continued when he became President of the Lebanese Republic.
Riyadh as-Sulh, a well-known Arab nationalist, who became the first
Prime
Minister of Lebanon, was a loyal friend to Iraq, and we could cooperate
with
him in all matters and situations arising in the Arab League. The Arab
League
was often divided about the way to handle the Palestine problem and
about
matters arising from differences in points or view where Iraq was on
one side,
and Syria, Saudi Arabia and Egypt on the other. Riyadh as-Sulh acted as
an
intermediary and harmonizer. Before going to the Arab League, we often
had a
preparatory meeting in Beirut which included representatives or Iraq,
Syria and
Lebanon. Unfortunately my Syrian and Lebanese colleagues sometimes came
to one
decision in Beirut and then had to reverse it in the meeting in Cairo
when they
found Egypt or Saudi Arabia in determined opposition. Syria and Lebanon
felt
that the Arab League structure was not yet strong and homogeneous and
that it
was important to hold all the members together.
Riyadh's zeal and work for Syrio-Iraqi unity and inter-Arab harmony was
genuine
and memorable. I shall never forget his efforts in the last days of his
life to
bring me together with Nazim a1-Qudsi of Syria in Shtawra
(See Syria,129 ).
Side by side with Riyadh as-Sulh I should like to remember with appreciation the wise and respected Foreign Minister of Lebanon, Hameed Franjia, who played a constructive role in handling Lebanese relations with sister Arab states. Lebanon was deprived of a highly qualified man when he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and fell ill. In succeeding years at the United Nations I continued to cooperate with leaders of the Lebanese delegation –- Philip Taqla, Charles Helou, Fuad Ammun, and most of all, Dr Charles Malik. We usually consulted on all matters affecting our policies. We were united in defending the Arab cause, standing by the liberation movements in Asia and Africa, and following an anti-Communist line. This same policy was followed by Iraq and Lebanon in the Asian-African Conference in Bandung in 1955, where Dr Charles Malik was the embodiment of Lebanese policies and the Lebanese delegation was the closest one to the delegation of Iraq.
Lebanon, although a small Arab state, had a great advantage in
international
affairs because of its Christian-Muslim character and because it
represented a
meeting place for the occident and orient, culturally and politically.
In 1952
the government of Pakistan proposed a summit meeting for the heads of
Muslim
states. Teheran was suggested as the place of meeting. I went to
Karachi to
discuss the matter with the Governor-General, my friend Ghulam
Mohammed. From
Karachi I flew straight to Beirut where I had a meeting with President
Bishara
al-Khouri, a Maronite Christian and a broadminded, wise statesman. I
put before
him the idea of the Islamic summit conference and suggested that
Lebanon should
certainly take part, for the presence of Lebanon would serve the cause
of
Christian-Islamic brotherhood and mutual understanding. Furthermore,
the
presence of Lebanon would ally any suspicious or misunderstanding in
the West
towards the Islamic conference. I emphasized the importance of
Lebanon’s role
as a connecting link and a symbol of brotherhood between Islam and
Christianity. Sheikh Bishara listened very carefully and responded very
generously. Unfortunately the summit conference was never realized --
not
because of Lebanon, but mainly because Egypt and Turkey for the moment
showed
no interest in the
project.
At the time of my Premiership, 1953-54, Beirut was the meeting place of
Syrian
Arab nationalists who had sought refuge there from the dictatorship of
Shishakli. Since Shishakli's policy was anti-Iraq in those days, we
contacted
the Syrian leaders and helped them in their efforts to rid Syria of
Shishakli.
My friend, ex-Premier Saleh Jabr, was requested to go to Lebanon to
achieve two
purposes. The overt one was to study with the Lebanese government the
possibility of diverting the oil pipeline which used to run from Kirkuk
to
Haifa to make it run from Mafraq in Jordan to a port in Lebanon. At the
same
time he was authorized to contact the Syrians and render them all the
help they
needed.
I myself made occasional trips to Beirut and contacted personalities
there like
Sheikh Ma’aruf Dawalibi, 'Adnan al-Atasi, Salahuddin al-Bitar and
Michel
'Aflaq, and others. Besides, the Lebanese press, and especially
Al-Hayat, owned
by my friend Kamil Muruwa, volunteered to serve the cause of
Syrio-Iraqi
federation. President Sham’un was aware of Iraq's intentions and
policies with
which he was quite sympathetic. He often gave valuable advice.
One of the big obstacles to Syrio-Iraqi unity was the Lebanese
Christian fear
of Muslim domination. That fear had some historical roots from the
Ottoman days
and it was nurtured by old French colonial policies. France used to
consider
herself as the protector of the Christians of Lebanon. Christian-Muslim
feelings have been largely harmonized in modern times and a sense of
national
unity and brotherhood prevails today in Syria and Lebanon and religious
tolerance has become the order of the day, but there will always be
some
residue of the past in the subconscious.
Fortunately, on account of Iraq's record of amity and understanding of
the
Lebanese situation, the Christians of Lebanon harboured confidence in
her good
intentions towards Lebanon in the case of federation between Iraq and
Syria. To
emphasize this fact and to assure my Christian brethren in Lebanon that
Iraq
would always stand by them and appreciate their point of view, I had a
lengthy
session at the headquarters of Al-Kataib, the Maronite Christian Party
and
Organization, with the leaders of the movement headed by Sheikh Pierre
al-Jumayyil. Accompanied by my friend, Muhsin Saleem, a well-known
lawyer, I
also had an excellent session with His Eminence the Maronite Patriarch
Maoushi
with whom I had a very friendly and frank talk about Muslim-Christian
brotherhood and the need for checking the tide of materialism and moral
disintegration in modern times. Patriarch Maoushi is a man of high
standing in statesmanship
and religious affairs. He is one of those who see the value of
Lebanese-Arab
unity and harmony. The important thing to the Christians of Lebanon is
to
preserve the unity and identity of Lebanon and to see to it that
Lebanon is not
swallowed by or amalgamated with its Arab neighbours. This wish I was
ready to
support.
Emir Abdullah's relations with Iraq. a country which was also poor at the time, rested mainly on family ties which made the younger brother, Faisal. act as generously as possible towards his elder brother. But Transjordan depended mainly on British subsidies for maintaining its army and administration. Transjordant’s importance to Iraq was partly due to the oil pipeline which ran from Kirkuk in Iraq and across Trans-Jordan before reaching the port of Haifa in Palestine. The much-spoken-of Baghdad-Haifa railway which was to have given Iraq access to the Mediterranean, would also have had to pass through Transjordan. The idea of the railway was not pursued after the desert route to Beirut was opened to motor transport. The use of the pipeline was stopped after the 1948 occupation of Haifa by Israel.
Emir 'Abdullah paid occasional visits to Iraq, and it was during one of those visits in the 30' s that I first went to pay my respects to His Royal Highness Emir ‘Abdullah an impressive Arab personality, well cultivated in Arab tradition and literature. He was more conservative than his younger brother Faisal. I also had the pleasure or meeting Emir 'Abdullah's eldest son, Emir Talal, who paid occasional visits to Baghdad. He was a very polite and subdued Arab nationalist.
In the 30's, After having achieved independence, Iraq had a succession or internal troubles -- the Assyrian problem, the death or King Faisal the First, tribal upheavals, the Bekr Sidqi coup d'etat, the killing of the Minister of Defence, Ja’afar al-Askeri, the killing of the Minister of Finance, Rustam Haidar, the death of young King Ghazi in a car accident in 1939. During these years there was not much give and take between Iraq and Transjordan, but the family ties among the members of the ruling house were always alive.
King Ghazi was succeeded by his son, King Faisal the Second, who was a baby at the time. His uncle, Prince 'Abdul Ilah son of King ‘Ali, the eldest son of King Husain of Hejaz, acted on his behalf as Regent. Prince 'Abdul Ilah was the brother of Queen 'Alia, who was the mother of King Faisal the Second. The prince was very considerate and respectful towards his uncle, Emir 'Abdullah, whom he considered as the head of the royal Hashemite family.
When Prince 'Abdul Ilah had to flee Iraq at the time of the clash
between the
Rasheed 'Ali Gailani government and the British in 1941, Prince 'Abdul
Ilah and
a small team of Iraqi statesmen sought refuge in Transjordan. They
returned to
Iraq at the head of the Transjordanian army and entered Baghdad as
seviours.
From then on, Iraq's ties with Transjordan became more vital. Emir
'Abdullah's
visits to Baghdad and Prince 'Abdul Ilah's visits to Amman became more
frequent
during the Second World War. In 1945 the Arab League was formed
with both Iraq and Transjordan among
the
founding members. The year 1946 saw the termination of the British
Mandate over
Transjordan and the declaration of its independence, at which time Emir
'Abdullah became King 'Abdullah and Transjordsn 'became the Hashemite
Kingdom
of Jordan.
Immediately after independence King ‘Abdullah sought complete
cooperation with
Iraq in political, economic, military and cultural. fields. In Februery
1946
Prince 'Abdul Ilah led a delegation consisting of the Minister of
Finance,
Saleh Jabr, the Minister of Justice, Ahmad Mukhtar Baban, and the
Minister of
Defence, Isma'il Namuq, to a meeting in Shuna, Jordan. Topics discussed
included ways and means for Iraqi- Jordanian cooperation in achieving
the aims
of the Arab national revolution and in fulfilling the objectives of the
Pact of
the League of Arab States. A joint declaration was issued regarding
what was
called the Shuna Conference. While returning from Jordan there was a
car accident
in which my friend, Saleh Jabr suffered severe injuries to his right
arm. He
was taken to England for treatment.
In 1946 the Syrian government complained to the Arab League Council about King 'Abdullah's interference in the affairs of Syria by propagating printed material inviting Syrians to unite with Jordan. I was instrumental in preventing the League Council from condemning King 'Abdullah for his activities. (See Syria, PP.) On the 14th of April, 1947, as Foreign Minister in the Cabinet of my friend Saleh Jabr, I signed a Treaty of Alliance and Brotherhood between the Kingdom of Iraq and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The Preamble of the Treaty expressed the fraternal ties and national unity which exists between Iraq and Jordan and the desire of the two parties for complete mutual understanding and cooperation in fulfilling national objectives as expressed in Article 9 of the Covenant of the Arab League.
Article 4 provided agreement for common defence in the face of a third-party aggressor.
Article 6 provided for cooperation in dealing with internal troubles or conspiracy.
Article 7 provided for the unification of the military system and exchange of military mission.
Article 8 provided for one country to represent the other when one party did not have a diplomatic mission in a certain country.
Article 9 provided for setting up permanent committees representing the
two
parties to deal with matters enumerated in Article 2 of the Covenant of
the
Arab League and those included economic and financial matters,
communication,
culture, questions of nationality, passports, visas and extradition of
criminals, social affairs and health.
A big debate took place in the Iraqi parliament and specific objections
were
raised concerning Article 6 which provided for cooperation in dealing
with
internal troubles, for that might mean that the Jordanian army. which
was
British led, could interfere in the internal affairs of Iraq. In the
end, the
Treaty was ratified by the Iraqi parliament.
Although the Treaty was never fully implemented, its spirit prevailed
and
influenced events during the lifetime of King 'Abdullah. Jordan was not
a
member of the United Nations, but, acting in accordance with Article 8
of the
Treaty, Iraq presented Jordan's point of view in the United Nations in
particular cases. I recall that one time, while debating with Aba Eban
of
Israel, I got up from the Iraqi chair where I had presented Iraq's
point of
view, and went to Jordan's choir to answer Eben after he had attacked
the
representative of Iraq.
In 1948 the first War of Palestine was going on, and the Egyptian army
was
beseiged in Falouga. I was then a minister plenipotentiary in the
Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. Prime Minister Muzahim al-Pachachi asked me to go to
Cairo to
talk over the situation with my friend, Naqrashi Pasha, the Egyptian
Prime
Minister. (See Egypt pp.) I was accompanied on this mission by General
Isma’il
Safwat Pasha.
On the way we stopped at Amman and I had an audience with H. M. King
'Abdullah.
He opened his heart to me and told me that, while he had been appointed
by. the
Arab League as Commander-in-Chief of all Arab armies in Palestine, he
had no
knowledge of what was going on along the Egyptian front. The Egyptians
had not
arranged for him to visit their front nor did they answer his inquiries
about
their needs and difficulties. He told me th3t Egypt had already
confiscated a
shipload of arms intended for the Jordanian army. He told me that his
army,
which was British led and subsidized, was not his own. It was a British
army in
Jordan, but those who criticized Jordan and its military achievements
should
rather pay for the army and make it an Arab army. Actually no other
army saved
as much of Palestinian territory as did the Jordanian army, although it
has
been established that Glubb Pasha, who commanded the Arab Legion, never
occupied Palestinian territory which had been allotted to Israel
according to
the United Nations plan of partition.
In 1949 Husni az-Za'im carried out his coup in Damascus and dismissed President Shukri al-Quwatli. Iraq responed to overtures by az-Za'im and there was an exchange of delegations between Damascus and Baghdad. This worried three Arab countries, namely, Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia. King 'Abdullah of Jordan thought that Iraq's rapprochement with Syria might cause him to lose the opportunity of becoming King of Greater Syria. Egypt and Saudi Arabia did not wish to see a power made up of a federated Syria and Iraq.
One day Jordanian Prime minister Tawfiq Pash Abdul Huda was sent to
Baghdad by
H. M. King 'Abdullah to convey a very frank message to me as Foreign
Minister of
Iraq. He told me that His Majesty was enraged by the Iraqi activities
concerning
Syria and that he was even threatening to invade Iraq. I laughed and
said that
Iraq would certainly welcome His Majesty and the Jordanian army. I
asked Tawfiq
Pasha to pay my respects to His Majesty and tell him that Iraq was
ready to
keep hands off Syria and to let His Majesty take it over. If, however,
that
should not be possible, what would His Majesty command? Would it be
better for
the Arab nation that Iraq and Syria remain apart, or would it be better
for
Arab states should eventually join them? I, as Foreign Minister would
be
delighted to get some high national guidance from His Majesty.
Tewfiq-pasha returned to Jordan, and, after presenting my point of view
to King
'Abdullah, the Pasha telephoned me from Amman to tell me, "His Majesty
kisses your cheeks and says that he was full confidence in your policy
towards
Syria." In the United Nations I continued to work on behalf
of Jordan. I
defended the Arab character of Jerusalem and opposed the United Nations
plan
for internationalization. That was King 'Abdullah's policy. But, when I
found
that all the other Arab states were backing the internationalization or
Jerusalem, and that Israel was the main opponent or the scheme, I could
not
continue opposing internationalization. I joined the ranks of the other
Arab
states and the overwhelming majority or the members of the UN who stood
for
internationalization. Again this enraged King 'Abdullah who made a
special trip
to Baghdad to quarrel with Prime Minister Nuri as-Sa'id over the stand
I had
taken on the question of Jerusalem.
The Trusteeship Council of the UN met in Geneva to draft a constitution
for an
internationalized Jerusalem. Iraq was a member of the Council at the
time, and
I was the representative of Iraq at that session. Jordan sent its
Consul
General in Paris, Hafiz 'Abdul Hadi to be an observer at the Council's
meetings. Through him I received a message from His Majesty to the
effect that
the internationalization of Jerusalem meant its destruction as a holy
city, and
that the Arabs would never rise unless all Syria was united and
federated with
Iraq. I assured His Majesty through Hafiz 'Abdul Hadi that, in spite of
our
best efforts to draft a good constitution for an internationalized
Jerusalem,
such internationalization would never be implemented so long as Israel
and
Jordan both resisted it.(see Palestine, pp.)
At the United Nations I worked for Jordan to be admitted as a member. Jordan was one of several states whose admission to the UN was blocked at the time by the Soviet veto in the Security Council. In Florence at the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization conference in 1950, I worked for the admission of Jordan as a member of that body. To my regret the Egyptian delegation, led by Dr Taha Husain, voted against the admission of Jordan, the reason being that relations between King Farouq and King 'Abdullah were strained during that period. I tried to convince Dr Taha Husain to change his mind and give a positive vote, but without success. Jordan was admitted to UNESCO, but Egypt and Israel were conspicuous by voting against it.
I had a few opportunities of visiting Amman and talking tête-â-tête
with H. M.
King ‘Abdullah. As head of the Hashemite family he had to tackle some
family
problems in which his views differed from those of Prince 'Abdul Ilah.
King
'Abdullah had' a much more liberal outlook on family problems than did
Prince
'Abdul Ilah, and His Majesty asked me to do my best to influence Prince
'Abdul
Ilah to be more tolerant and merciful.
King ‘Abdullah was also determined to see that the Iraqi and Jordanian
thrones
were united. He confided to me that neither of his sons was qualified
to carry the
burden.
Twice I was honoured by receiving Jordanian decorations. The First
Order of al
Istiqlal (Independence), and the First Order of an-Nahdha (Renaissance)
were
bestowed on me. Actually I felt the complete unity of interest and
policy of
both Jordan and Iraq. I never thought of Jordan as another state, but
felt that
it was a part of a Greater Syria which was a part of a greater Arab
homeland.
At the beginning of July 1951, a meeting was held in the mountain
village of
Sarsang in the north of Iraq where there was a royal summer residence.
Present
were several Iraqi statesmen including myself as President of the
Chamber of
Deputies and Tawfiq as-Suwaidi as Minister of Foreign Affairs. Prince
'Abdul
Ilah presided at the meeting which discussed a draft agreement for the
unity of
the throne of Jordan and Iraq which had been prepared by King 'Abdullah
in his
own handwriting.
Article 1 of the document stated, "The two kingdoms of Iraq and Jordan shall be united (federated) in accordance with conditions agreed upon." A Council of the Union was to be formed which would meet annually and alternately in one capital or the other, and which would be presided over by the King of the country in which the Council met.
Article 10 stated, "The two united (federated) kingdoms shall have one foreign policy and shall be represented by the sister state in any foreign country in case of one of them does not have a representative in that foreign country.
Article 12 stated that “The ruling family in the two kingdoms is
considered to
have the same right in the two countries in such a way that, if the
King dies
without en heir, the heir to the throne shall be a suitable personality
from
the off spring of the Greet Saviour, Al-Husain Ibn 'Ali." (King Husain
of
Hejes, father of King 'Abdullah of Jordan and King Faisal I of Iraq)
The meeting approved the principle of union and asked Foreign Minister Tawfiq -suwaidi to go to Amman to negotiate the draft agreement with H. M. King 'Abdullah. The handwritten draft prepared by King 'Abdullah remained in the pocket of the Foreign Minister who, on returning to Baghdad, resigned his post over a disagreement with the cabinet concerning the appointment of his brother as President of the High Court of Appeal. While ministerial squabbles were taking place in Baghdad, King 'Abdullah was assassinated in Jerusalem on July 20, 1951.
Prince Abdul Ilah accompanied by Nuri as-Said and Saleh Jabr, took King
'Abdullah's handwritten document and went to Amman to attend the
funeral and to
present the document to the Jordanian government. Some young Iraqi
nationalists
also went to Jordan to help build up public opinion in favour of
Iraqi-Jordanian unity. The Jordanian Prime Minister, Tawfiq Pasha Abul
Huda,
prompted by the Saudi Arabians and the British in Jordan, especially
Glubb
Pasha and Sir Alec Kirkbride, British Ambassador to Jordan, worked
together to
install King 'Abdullah's eldest son. Talal, as King of Jordan.
The Iraqis returned disappointed, but wishing Jordan and its new King
all the
best. Cooperation between Iraq and Jordan continued as before,
although, from
that time on, Saudi machinations along with those of Egypt began to,
influence
Jordan's policy vis-a-vis Iraq.
The attitude of the British officials in Jordan rather puzzled me, for
I had
more than once discussed the eventual federation of Iraq, Syria and
Jordan with
the Foreign Office in London and I had had no negative response. This
shows
that, either there was no unified policy between London and Amman, or
that my
friends in London had not been frank about their real intentions.
King Talal could not carry the burden of the kingdom for long. He had
to retire
and R.M. King Husain Ibn Talal ascended the throne of Jordan. King
Husain is a
brave Arab nationalist who is, at the same time, a political realist.
His
relations with the Royal House of Iraq was cordial and correct, but he
tried to
be friendly with conflicting Arab sides, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
He tried
to keep a balance between Iraq where his heart would be inclined, and
Saudi
Arabia and Egypt where other forces were involved. Jordan's politicians
were
also divided. Some, like Sulaiman Tuqan and Hezza’a al-Majali were
known to be
inclined to Iraq, and others, like Tawfiq Pasha Abul Ruda and Waleed
Salah,
were on the Saudi and Egyptian side.
I became Prime Minister of Iraq in September of 1953. At that time there was a Jordanian delegation headed by Hikmet al-Misri negotiating 3 million dinar loan for Jordan and other financial and economic help. The negotiations were concluded, and, on the 1st of October the following communiqué was issued:
Negotiations between the Jordanian delegation and the representatives
of the
Iraqi government took place in Baghdad .from the 21st till the 30th of
September with a genuine brotherly spirit. The Iraqi side .fully
realized the
situation in our sister state and the heavy burden it carries after the
tragedy
of Palestine -- a situation which requires every Arab state to take
part in
protecting Jordan from the dangers that threaten it. The negotiations
led to a
trade agreement between the two states, and the Iraqi government
offered
financial help amounting to 150 thousand dinars to the front villages.
This
amount will include the 80 thousand dinars which is Iraq's share of
help
designated by the League of the Arab states. The Iraqi government also
decided
to take measures to open branches in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
for both
the Iraqi Industrial and Agricultural Banks. In order to complete the
studies
the two parties agreed to leave the door open for further negotiations
regarding the loan and other economic projects.
Soon after, Israeli forces invaded Jordan and attacked the village of Qibiya killing men, women and children. On hearing the news I immediately flew to Amman to attend the meeting of the Political Committee of the Arab League which was called to study the situation. I went to Qibiya where I saw the extent of the destruction. I was deeply touched by seeing the village school which had been bombarded and destroyed. I had a meeting with the Jordanian authorities and discussed measures to be taken to defend Jordan and to present the case of Qibiya and its innocent victims to the world. On behalf of the Iraqi government I announced the donation of 10,000 Iraqi
diners
for rebuilding the Qibiya school and asked that it be named the
Faisal-Husain
school.
In January 1954 I went to Cairo to attend the Council of the Arab
League and
presented the Council with a project for Arab unity. (See Egypt pp. )
It seems
that by presenting that project without previous consultation with
Jordan I had
unintentionally been negligent concerning our brotherly ties, and H. M.
King
Husain was displeased.
After returning to Baghdad it was reported to me that King Husain had been told that Jamali had dedicated 100,000 Iraqi dinars for a plot against His Majesty and that Iraqi troops were ready to move into and take over Jordan when the time came. I was stunned by that fabrication. I went to King Faisal II, informed him of the malicious story and told him that I thought I must go to Amman personally to talk over the matter with H. M. King Husain. On the 11th of February I took a small military plane to Amman from where I went Straight to the King’s palace. After embracing his Majesty I set down and discussed the false rumours. I told His Majesty, "There are no 100,000 dinars in the Iraqi budget for your assassination and there are no Iraqi forces on the border with Jordan." I told him I have always cherished loyalty to the Hashemite House and I make no distinction between the Hashemite House in Jordan and the Hashemite House in Iraq, for in my view it is one House. I believe in the unity of the Hashemite House and Your Majesty has a home in Baghdad just as you have a home in Amman. For my part I am always ready to receive your direct commands by telephone. Mischief-makers should not be given a chance to intervene between Iraq and Jordan, or between Your Majesty and myself."
King Husain was deeply impressed by my coming personally to see him to dispel the false rumours and to demonstrate the spirit of unity and loyalty which I cherished. He expressed his regret for the time that had, elapsed with no contact with Iraq. He had been expecting a word from H.M. King Faisal since a letter from him had indicated that he intended to visit Amman and Jordan. At one time King Husain had almost reached the border of Iraq and had wished to continue on to Baghdad, but he had held back on account of having had no word from Faisal.
His Majesty wished to know something about our aims concerning Arab federation. He was frank to tell me that my going to the Council of the Arab League with the project of Arab unity had aroused his suspicions. He did not know what our plans were, and he asked why we had not come to an understanding with him before going to the League of Arab States.
My answer was, "Any work towards unity is only a fulfillment of the message of your great grandfather, King Husain of Hejaz, and we all carry that message with equal zeal." I continued with a history of the concept of Arab unity and the stand of his grandfather on the unity of Syria and the negative attitude taken by the Arab League on the subject. I said, "Iraq has no specific plan to offer to a specific country, but Iraq has approached the Arab states with new thinking -- thinking which realizes the difficulty of implementing complete Arab unity now. At the same time it is not satisfied with what the Arab League is achieving for the Arabs. The history of the Arab League shows that it has been very slow in moving, for it moves at the pace of the weakest and slowest of its members. Besides, the League is being hampered by the political blocs among its members. Syria's attitude toward federation is being vitiated by Saudi gold and foreign influences. Saudi fears of federation have no justification. Our attitude towards the Saudis is brotherly and correct. We do not know what the Saudis are worried about." I touched on Nuri Pasha's project for Syria and Iraq and how it was turned down by Sa’adallah al-Jabiri who thought that the Arab League should provide all the measures for unifying the Arab states.
Then I spoke about the role of the Hashemite House in promoting the Arab cause and the need for cooperation between Amman and Baghdad. There was a mutual Faisal Husain responsibility for achieving the mission of the Hashemite House and its unity. I said, "There should be no barriers and no formalities between Baghdad and Amman. Mutual visits and consultations between the two capitals should continue informally in the manner set by H.M. King 'Abdullah. We must combat foreign intrigues between us. “The welfare of Jordan is the welfare of Iraq, but the welfare of some other countries may not be the welfare of Jordan." I touched on the readiness of the Iraqi government to offer any help she could to the Jordanian government.
Then I touched on the attacks which Colonel Shishakli was addressing to Iraq. I described his policy and intentions. His Majesty said that he wished we could be in constant communication so that Jordan would not remain silent vis-a-vis the Shishakli campaign.
We touched on Egypt and the questions or defence, neutrality and pacts. We agreed on the necessity for a continued exchange or visits and readiness for continued cooperation and consultation. I said that the Arab states are more bound together than the states of the Benelux. We live in a world or blocs and groupings. I emphasized our respect for the independence or Jordan and the throne of Jordan. The cooperation and unity which we sought did not mean the eradication or political entities as envisaged by the Syrian Constitution. Rather we would start with the integration or economic, military, educational and foreign policy while retaining our political entity.
I expressed my view on the role or the Hashemite family in cementing the unity or the people, something I thought a republican regime could not guarantee. This required, however, that the monarchical regimes should provide honest constitutional governments.
His Majesty sent greetings and deep thanks to King Faisal and his thanks and affection to Crown Prince 'Abdul Ilah and expressed the wish to visit Iraq before going to Egypt.
Having achieved the purpose or my visit I intended to return to Baghdad in the afternoon of the same day. His Majesty objected to my quick return and insisted that I should pass the night in Amman and spend the next day also in Jordan. He kindly offered his personal plane to take me to visit Petra where I had a most delightful experience. Sa'id Pasha al-Mufti, President of the Senate, accompanied me on the visit.
I returned to Amman and spent a second night there. His Majesty would not permit me to leave Jordan the next morning for he had arranged an official luncheon in my honour at the royal palace. It was only in the afternoon of that day that I could return to Baghdad with our relations with Jordan most cordial and clear.
Two weeks after my return H.M. King Husain arrived in Baghdad to visit King Faisal. He also visited Basrah which was having an industrial fair. On the 2nd of March I had an audience with him in the presence of H.M. King Faisal on the royal yacht, Queen 'Alia. We discussed the project of federation which I had presented to the Arab League. King Husain stated that the way in which the project had been presented to the Arab League had embarrassed Jordan for there had been no previous consultation with them. I answered that Iraq had not presented a concrete project but a general invitation for a federation which should be followed by consultations and preparations on the part of those who accepted the principle of federation. I said that Iraq was always ready to initiate discussion on the subject with Jordan however the Jordanian government was ready for such a move. King Husain expressed the existence of a desire on the part of the Jordanian government to enter such negotiations for a federation with Iraq. I mentioned that Iraq's invitation for a federation with Jordan could imply three basic principles:
1) The unity of the army. I expressed Iraq's wish to achieve unity on condition that there should be no foreign command at the head of the Jordanian army.
2) Integration of financial matters. In this respect Iraq would be ready to offer the financial help and economic cooperation required for the interest of the two countries.
3) Unity of foreign policy. I said that Iraq would be ready to represent Jordan in any country where Jordan had no representation, but the important thing was not representation but complete understanding on the objectives and lines of foreign policy. Iraq's foreign policy, for example, was inclined to the west. Iraq's relations with Syria were vital, for the Euphrates united the two states. Iraq's oil and commerce had to pass through Syria, and Iraq provided a big market for Syrian products. Jordan, like Syria, had to turn to Iraq for economic development. Saudi Arabia should be convinced that such cooperation, which should lead to a federation, would in no way be contrary to her interests. It was on matters like these that our foreign policy should be clear and unified.
After King Husain's return to Jordan Israel attacked Jordan again in the village of Nahaleen, another act of destruction and loss of Arab life. I was Prime Minister and acting Foreign Minister of Iraq. We sent asking what we could do and I received the following message from the Jordanian Legation in Baghdad.
In response to your telegram of the 24th of March. Present H. E. Jamali with the thanks of the Jordanian government for what was contained in your telegram. Inform him the details of the incident at the Nahaleen village and ask His Excellency to order the sending of one military expert or more to discuss with the Jordanian military authorities the readiness of the Iraqi army and air force to help Jordan to fill the vacuum in the necessary means of defending the country. Inform us about results immediately.
I received a telegram dated the 30th of March to the same effect from our Legation in Amman. It stated that H. M. King Husain had called the Iraqi representative and the Military Attache and expressed to them his fear that the Israelis might undertake an attack greater than that at Nahaleen and on a large scale. His Majesty wished to know what military help Iraq could render. I immediately answered:
“Iraqia, Amman.
Iraq is ready to send all that is within its military capacity. An officer of the General staff is coming to you to study the situation and estimate the quantity and quality of help in accordance with our potentiality.
Foreign Affairs.
These telegrams coincided with an unusually severe flood that threatened to wipe out the city of Baghdad. The 29th of March was the worst night. On the 19th of April I resigned as Prime Minister for reasons that had nothing to do with Jordan or the flood. (See Syria pp.)
The next Iraqi Cabinet was formed by Arshad al-Omari and I accepted the post of Foreign Minister. We had an amount of 150,000 dinars in the budget which was intended to be spent for promoting the cause of Syrio-Iraqi federation. This amount was diverted to Jordan by the Prime Minister as a financial aid.
In 1955 apolitical tug-of-war took place in Jordan between Iraq on the one hand and Egypt-Saudi Arabia on the other. The rift between Iraq and Egypt over the Baghdad Pact and over cooperation with the West had its effect on Jordan's politics. This was shown during the meeting of the Prime Ministers in Cairo when President Nasir called on the Arab states to pass a resolution against Iraq's joining the Baghdad Pact. Prime Minister Nuri as-Sa'id did not attend that meeting and I was asked to represent Iraq on his behalf as Head of the Iraqi delegation. I joined the meeting on the 27th January 1955. (See Egypt and Baghdad)
At that meeting the Jordanian delegation consisting of Prime Minister Tawfiq Pasha Abul Huda and Foreign Minister Waleed Salah, did not support the Iraqi stand. As a matter of feet, Waleed Salah openly took the Egyptian side. He joined the committee sent by the meeting to Baghdad. The committee, headed by Prime Minister Sami as-Sulh of Lebanon, included Faidhi al-Atasi, Foreign Minister of Syria and colonel Salah Salem, Minister of National Guidance of Egypt. Waleed Salah acted in unison with Colonel Salah Salem and supported his point of view.
The same Jordanian personalities had shown no cooperation with the Iraqi delegation at Bandung, but thanks to Hezza'a al-Majali, a member of the Jordanian delegation, there had been no conflict between the two delegations at that conference. Hezza’a al-Majali, a noble Arab character, believed in the unity of the destiny and interests of Iraq and Jordan. He was a devout Muslim who had no tolerance for Communist infiltration and domination. At Bandung I discovered him to be a sincere friend and companion. Hezza'a al-Majali later became Prime Minister of Jordan and his government tried to have Jordan join Iraq in the Baghdad Pact. Egyptian propaganda and machinations, however, were strong enough in Jordan to prevent its joining the Baghdad pact, some time later al-Majali was killed by a bomb explosion in his office.
The incidents at the Asian-African Conference in Bandung and those
concerning
the Baghdad Pact proved that Arab disunity, especially between Iraq and
Egypt,
had its effects on Jordan’s politics, for the Jordanians were sometimes
the
victims of the tug-of-war. Another Jordanian who
demonstrated the will for
cooperation and unity was Wasfi at-Tell. In 1958 I had a letter from
Wasfi
at-Tell, who was Jordanian Charge d’Affaires at Teheran at the
time, commenting
on the Algerian war and regretting the great losses of life which the
Algerians
were suffering. Wasfi, who had been trained as an officer, thought that
the
Algerians needed special training in guerilla warfare, an art of war
which had
special methods and techniques with which he was familiar. He suggested
that
Iraq and Jordan together should provide up to 1000 volunteers whom he
would
train and lead in Algeria. (See Algeria pp. 54)
Relationships between President Nasir and King Husain fluctuated. There
were
times of friendship and cooperation and times of propaganda war in
which
President Nasir himself and the Egyptian radio station, Sawt ul-Arab.
Voice of
the Arab, would direct abusive language to King Husain and the
Hashemite
family. At such times Jordan would be closer to Iraq, for Iraq was
already getting
its share of the abusive propaganda. It was in such an
atmosphere that the
Egyptian-Syrian unity took place in the form of Egyptian annexation and
domination of Syria. When that happened, I rushed to the royal palace
in
Baghdad and said, "Unless Iraqi-Jordanian federation is announced at
once,
we are headed for trouble in the Arab world." King Faisal and Prince
'Abdul Ilah both shared my point of view and they called on Prime
Minister
'Abdul Wahab Mirjan to send a delegation to Amman to discuss the
federation of
the two countries. ‘Abdul Wahab's Cabinet initiated the process in 1958
but had
to resign. Nuri as-Sa'id formed his last Iraqi cabinet. I
had the post of
Foreign Minister. We negotiated the Arab Union of Iraq and Jordan and
revised
the Iraqi Constitution to facilitate the implementation of the Arab
Union.
Nuri as-Sa'id was not enthusiastic for that union. He did not wish to
make Iraq
carry the financial burdens of Jordan which was receiving financial aid
from
both Britain and America. I had a different outlook. To me Jordan was a
part of
my nation. It was an Arab state which should be supported by its sister
Arab
states. Its army was an Arab army which should be supported by Arab
money. No
needy Arab state should depend on foreign support while sister Arab
states
could come to its aid. To alleviate Nuri's worries about the financial
burden I
suggested that efforts should be exerted to invite Kuwait to join the
Arab
Union in which case Kuwait and Iraq together would shoulder the
Jordanian
financial burden.
'Ibn il-Iraq’
No one problem has ever occupied time, energy and thought in my life equal to the Palestine problem. As a student, as a teacher, as a member or national and social organizations, I have always sympathized with my brethren, the Arabs of Palestine, in their suffering due to the grafting onto the Arab world of a foreign body which has so far been most poisoning to the health and vitality or the Arab nation. In 1944 I was appointed as Director General in the Ministry or Foreign Affairs or Iraq. In that post I had access to Zionist material coming to us from the United States. I could watch the increasing Zionist activity and machinations aimed at achieving the goal or creating a Jewish state in Palestine. I began to publish articles in the Iraqi daily press telling the public of the potential Zionist danger to the Arab world. I could not sign my name in my official capacity, so I chose a pen-name, 'Ibn il-Iraq', Son of Iraq. Immediately after the Second World War those articles were published in Arabic in a booklet in Cairo, Egypt, entitled, The Zionist Danger, by 'Ibn il-Iraq'.
At the
beginning of the Second World War there
were only four more or less independent Arab states, namely, Egypt,
Iraq, Saudi
Arabia and Yemen. The Arab states, notably Iraq, joined the Second
World War on
the side of the Allies, just as they had done under King Husain of
Hejaz in the
First World War, to achieve the liberation and independence of their
Arab
brethren everywhere, including those of Palestine.
During the Second World
War the Zionists expressed their determination to establish a Jewish
state in
Palestine. The Biltmore Resolution passed in New York City in 1942 was
the
first open official declaration by the Zionists of their intention to
establish
a state in Palestine. The Zionists began to exert their political
influence in
American elections. They worked on the two major American parties in
such a way
that the parties began to compete with each other in pouring out
promises for
the Zionists. The bidding between the Republican Party, headed by
Thomas Dewey,
and the Democratic Party, headed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in
support of
Zionist ambitions is well known. When the Arabs saw the
enthusiasm of
American politicians to win Zionist favour, the Arab states, especially
Iraq
and Saudi Arabia, made one protest after another, warning the American
government of the international consequences.
In 1944,
during the War, I became Director
General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iraq. Arshad al-‘Omari,
then
Minister of Foreign Affairs, was firm and forceful in his defence of
Arab
rights in Palestine. Hamdi al-Pachachi, the Prime Minister, and Saleh
Jabr, The
Minister of Finance, were both enthusiastic in support of the Palestine
cause.
The American Minister to Iraq, Mr Loy Henderson, faithfully transmitted
to his
own government the honest and frank views and sentiments of the Iraqi
government.
Probably the most outstanding diplomatic acts in defence of Palestine during the War were personal letters written by King 'Abdul 'Aziz Ibn Sa'ud of Saudi Arabia and Crown Prince 'Abdul Ilah (in the name of the King of Iraq) to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt of the United States. The texts of the two letters were alike as far as I can recall. I was responsible for rendering the Iraqi letter into English. The letter reminded President Roosevelt of Arab friendship and referred to the Covenant of the Calipha Omar Ibn al-Khattab (Allah be pleased with him!) to the Arab army which undertook the conquest of Palestine in early Islamic history. That great Calipha commanded the conquering army to treat the Christians in a just and humanitarian manner. The letter further reminded the President that Palestine having passed through so many historical developments belongs to its legal inhabitants, the Arabs. President Roosevelt was asked to uphold the principles of the Atlantic Charter of which he was the co-author. President Roosevelt's answer, dated April 12, 1944, included the following statement:
"...In the view of the Government of the United States no decision affecting the basic situation in Palestine should be reached without full consultation with both Arabs and Jews. Franklin Roosevelt"
The answer certainly contained an injustice to the Arabs who formed the majority in Palestine. Still, it gave the Arab rights equal weight with the Zionist claims, a fact which was completely ignored by Roosevelt's successor, Harry Truman, who yielded to Zionist pressure in whatever concerned Palestine.
Arab Publicity for the Palestine Cause
Propaganda plays a very important role in modern times. Its role is not less than that of the army or the diplomatic service in the cold war and the struggle amongst nations. Since the Arabs are the rightful possessors or Palestine it was their duty to undertake a vast publicity campaign for the Palestine cause in order to enlighten world public opinion. The Arabs were slow in this matter and trailed dismally in making their case known to the Western world. I thought that one or the important things that should be done for the Arab cause in Palestine was to in form public opinion in the West and especially in the United States, where the Arab point or view on Palestine, although based on history, justice and human rights, was never widely known. The United States, while playing a major role in influencing the destiny or Palestine, was saturated with Zionist propaganda which was not equaled by a knowledge or the Arab side of the question.
In December 1944, as Director General of Foreign Affairs, I submitted the following memorandum to the Minister or Foreign Affairs, Arshad al-‘Omari:
Subject: Project or Publicity in the United States. His Excellency the Minister,
Having seen
the great
importance which Your Excellency gives to the question or Palestine, I
am
encouraged to present to Your Excellency some
observations regarding
the
organization or public information based on my personal knowledge or
the United
States, its special conditions, and the power of Zionism
there. I am hoping
that you will please look into these
suggestions, and, if they meet with your approval in full or in part,
that they
may be implemented as soon as Your Excellency gets to Egypt and is able
to
convince the representatives of other Arab states to cooperate. It will
appear
to Your Excellency that the question is not one of sending two or three
persons
to the United States. The situation demands a campaign on a large
scale, the
establishment of an adequate structure and the allotment of large sums
for this
purpose.
My observations can be summarized as follows:
1. To counteract Zionist propaganda in the United States we must inform and influence American public opinion. It is not enough to work with personalities in the American government and members of the Congress in Washington. We must reach men of politics, leaders of big business, men of the church, the universities, scientific institutions, societies, clubs and the press. We must struggle hard and fight Zionist propaganda in every corner of the United States.
2. America is a great continent and working in Washington alone is not enough. Organization should not be restricted to Washington. There must be central headquarters in Washington, but there must be at least four auxiliary centres outside Washington, namely, a Centre in New York City which will feed the eastern states as far as Canada, a Centre in the city of Chicago which will feed the mid-western states, a Centre in San Francisco that will feed the western states, and a Centre in Dallas, Texas, which will feed the southern states. This is the smallest number of Centres which might have some effect. Without them the efforts of the body in Washington alone will prove ineffective.
3. The main Centre in Washington must be manned by at least five qualified persons besides the secretarial personnel. As for the other Centres, they should each be staffed by at least three persons with secretarial help as required. The Centre may find it necessary to employ some American newspaper correspondents or specialists in publicity with regular salaries.
4. We propose that these Centres should be independent of the Arab Legations and Embassies in their work and administration and that they should be headed by a prominent personality with rank not less than that of a Minister.
5. Activities (given in detail)
6. Budget (given in detail)
7. We can imagine that the Centre in Washington would be equivalent to an Embassy and that each of the other Centres would be equivalent to a Consulate General. It is not too much for the Arab states to support these establishments if they intend to achieve serious, fruitful work. We support the point of view of Musa al-‘Alami of the necessity for an extensive structure, but we go farther than he does. As for the point of view of 'Abdur Rahman 'Azzam that only three persons should be sent, that looks like a drop compared with the Zionist sea in the United states.
8. The success of the whole project depends mainly on the ability of the persons, the harmony amongst them, the degree of their zeal for the Arab cause and their adaptability to the American mentality and environment. I was pleased to read in the local press that Sayid Musa al-'Alami had a meeting in Beirut with Dr Constantine Zuraiq to discuss this project with him, for Dr Zuraiq (I have already introduced him to Your Excellency) should be considered as an active supporter of this project. Besides him there are other young Lebanese, Syrians and Palestinians who could be depended upon. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia could delegate Sayid 'Ezzeddin Ash-Shawwa, a graduate of Cambridge University. He is one of the distinguished young men qualified for the purpose. In Iraq we could choose three or up to five persons if required. Egypt is rich in qualified journalists and publicists. Dr Philip Hitti will undoubtedly offer his valuable advice for this project of information if it is not possible to convince him to become an adviser.
9. After appointing the person to head the organization, a statute should be drafted which will include principles and instructions to be followed by the Centres and to detail duties and functions. Much freedom will be left for each Centre to adapt its activities to local needs.
10. Besides establishing these Centres of Information, we propose that responsible personalities from the Arab world should visit America every now and then .Political and scientific delegations should be organized to contact responsible personalities who carry political and moral weight and to arrange dialogues with them. That is what the Zionists are doing. Great Zionist personalities frequently travel between Palestine and London, and Palestine and America. Such activities have increased in these days. We have just heard that Weizmann will visit America shortly. As for Shertok, the Secretary for Foreign Affairs in the Zionist organization, he is on the move constantly and the same holds true of several other well-known Zionist personalities.
These are a few points which may be useful to Your Excellency when looking into the question of publicity in the United States.
With my respects,
Mohammed Fadhel Jamali
Director General of Foreign Affairs
After hearing
an Iraqi proposal, the Arab League
resolved to establish Arab Offices for Palestine propaganda in both the
United
States and Greet Britain. Musa al 'Alami, a prominent Palestinian
leader, was
asked to organize these offices. But the Arab states, with the
exception of
Iraq and Syria, did not take part in financing them. As for Syria, she
paid her
share for the first year only. Iraq was then left alone to support the
offices
up till the time of the tragedy of Palestine, when the offices were
closed.
Unfortunately they were closed at a time when they were most badly
needed.
As for
the Zionists, we find that they did not
leave any sensitive spot in the world untouched by their propaganda.
The Arabs
on the other hand, rarely cared for the affairs of propaganda in those
days, and never paid enough attention to them. It may be
interesting to
note that,
when the Arab Office in New York was started, the Zionists agitated
against it,
and the police authorities were instigated to go to inspect it. When
this
happened I invited the American Ambassador in Baghdad to the Ministry
of
Foreign Affairs and protested against the act which I considered
unfriendly and
harmful to Arab-American good relations I said that, if such acts were
repeated, the Iraqi government might consider taking similar measure in
connection with American institutions located in Iraq.
Five years after the partition of Palestine, when I was Prime Minister of Iraq, 1953-54, Dr’Izzet Tannus, a devout and loyal Palestinian, visited Baghdad. He discussed with me the importance of enlightening American public opinion regarding Arab rights in Palestine. He suggested opening an information office in New York City. I concurred and stated that Iraq was reedy to offer ten thousand diners annually (a dinar equaled one pound sterling) for the purpose from its very tight budget. I suggested that he should also contact Saudi Arabia for support. I learnt later that Saudi Arabia offered to match Iraq's contribution. Thus Dr Tennus was enabled to start the office. He did a very good job of publicity and education for the Palestine cause. The office worked well until the Iraqi Royal regime was overthrown in 1958.
President
Truman's policy of partiality towards
the Zionists began to show itself openly in the Conference in San
Francisco where
the United Nations Charter was laid down in 1945. The Arabs
were represented by five delegations
from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, although Syria and
Lebanon
were not yet fully independent. The Arab delegations exerted their
efforts so
that texts would be included in the United Nations Charter guaranteeing
the
independence of both Syria and Lebanon, guaranteeing the rights of
non-independent Arab states to self determination and independence, and
protecting Palestine from Zionist invasion. The Arab delegations
achieved
relative success in all their objectives except in that concerning
Palestine.
A special
Article, Article 78, was put in the
United Notions Charter to ensure the independence of Syria and Lebanon
although
these countries were not mentioned by name. The Article stated that
"The
Trusteeship system shall not apply to territories which have become
Members of
the United Nations, relationship among which shall be based on respect
for the
principle of sovereign equality." Iraq fought hard, side by
side with
Egypt, the Soviet Union, China and the Philippines to put a text into
the
United Nations Charter in the chapter on Trusteeship which would
guarantee the
right to self-determination and independence to all countries under
trusteeship
or colonial rule. After a struggle with the colonial powers that lasted
almost
a month we succeeded in putting into the Charter texts which, no matter
how
weak they were, could be considered as a big initial victory for the
people of
Asia and Africa. Many of these people have already profited from the
provisions
of the Charter. And others will profit from them in the future.
I represented
Iraq on the Committee of
Trusteeship, Dr Mohammed 'Owadh Mohammed represented Egypt, Mr Andrei
Gromyko
represented the Soviet Union, General Carlos P. Romulo represented the
Philippines, and Dr Wellington Koo represented China. We five fought
hardest in
order to insert in the United Nations Charter the right of
self-determination
and/or independence for all peoples who were being ruled under
mandatory or
colonial systems.
But an
impasse was reached in the Trusteeship
Committee when the Arab states asked for a text which might protect the
Arabs
of Palestine from immigration and guarantee their independence. The
struggle in
the Trusteeship Committee between the American delegation, behind whom
the
Zionist delegation was sitting, and the Arab delegations lasted more
than a
month. It concerned the drafting of Article 80 of the United Nation
Charter.
The Arab delegations wanted the Article to include a guarantee for the
rights
of the majority in any country under mandate, and for their right to
self-determination The American delegation, headed by Commander Harold
Stassen,
stubbornly resisted and fought the Arab proposal, thus serving the
Zionist aim.
That is why Article 80 was left devoid of a guarantee of the rights of
the
Arabs of Palestine, and the path remained open for Truman to muck up
Arab
rights to Palestine and to involve the U.S.A. in support of the ugliest
imperialistic
operation enacted in modern history.
After the failure of the Arab delegations to guarantee Arab rights in Palestine, the Head of the Iraqi delegation, Arshad el-'Omari, Iraq's Minister of Foreign Affairs, left San Francisco in protest. I was entrusted with the affairs of the Iraqi delegation, and I signed the United Nations Charter on behalf of the government of Iraq.
The Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry
No sooner did
the San Francisco Conference end,
then President Truman began to ask that the provision of the British
White
Paper of 1939 be no longer enforced. That white paper limited Jewish
immigration into Palestine to 15,000 a year for a period of five years,
after
which immigration would stop and Palestine would be independent. Truman
asked
for 100,000 Jewish immigration to admitted into Palestine immediately.
The Zionists
had already started to defy the
British government. The terrorist gangs of Irgun and Stern threatened
British
officials in Palestine and kidnapped chosen ones, killing some, and
using
others as hostages. The Jewish Agency began to use various means for
illegal
immigration into Palestine. King David hotel in Jerusalem was bombed.
British
ships were boycotted in New York harbour. When Truman insisted on
the entry of
100,000 Jewish immigrants into Palestine, the British Foreign
Secretary, Ernest
Bevin, opposed the idea openly in the British Parliament. After
negotiations
between the two governments, it was agreed that an Anglo-American
Committee of
Inquiry should be sent to Europe and the Arab lands to study the
conditions and
to submit a report on what it deemed appropriate with regard to Jewish
immigration and the future of Palestine. The Committee
included amongst its
member some who were very enthusiastic for Zionism and who defended the
cause
like the British Labour Member of Parliament, Richard Crossman. The
committee
came to Cairo and began to listen to the Arab point of view in Mena
House
Hotel.
The Iraqi
government delegated me to go to Cairo
to submit to the Committee the Iraqi point of view on the Palestine
question. I
did my best to make the statement strong in argument and clear in
thought
regarding natural Arab rights to their land in Palestine. Zionist
claims were
refuted with forceful logic. I requested the Committee to apply one
moral
principle to Arabs and non-Arabs alike, using the dictum: "Do unto
others as you
would have others do unto you." Just as an Englishman, an American or a
Frenchman will not accept the detachment of any part of his homeland
for any cause
whatsoever, but will defend it with his life, so will the Arabs of
Palestine
and the Arabs of other parts of the Arab world defend their homeland.
In the
name of the government of Iraq I invited the Committee to come to Iraq
to
listen to the views of a number of Iraqi political leaders including
Iraqi
Jews. The Committee accepted the invitation and came to Baghdad after
finishing
its sessions in Cairo and Jerusalem. In spite of the peaceful
defence
undertaken by the Arabs, the Committee Report came out, as we had
expected, in
agreement with the wishes of President Truman, for the Committee
recommended
the entry of 100,000 Jewish immigrants into Palestine.
The Bludan Meeting of the League of Arab States
The Arab
states were outraged by the contents of
the Anglo-American Committee Report, so prejudicial to Arab rights. The
Arab
League held a meeting in Bludan, Syria, to study the situation. It was
decided
at that meeting that the Arab states should each send a note of protest
to
Great Britain and the United States of America. It was also
decided that the
Arab states should attend the London Conference called by the British
government to discuss the Palestine problem.
The Iraqi
delegation proposed that the Arab
states should contribute two million dinars (pounds sterling) a year
for the
Palestine cause, one million to be spent on an information service, and
another
million for buying up Arab lands which might pass into the hands of the
Zionists, and for organizing Palestine Arab affairs. This proposal was
not
accepted.
As for the
famous Confidential Resolutions of
Bludan, they were no more than ink on paper. They resembled a big drum
which
echoes after but which is entirely empty. When I stood in Bludan as a
member of
the Iraqi delegation to belittle the Resolutions and to criticize the
weakness
of the stand of the Arab states with regard to the Palestine problem,
brother
members of the Conference shouted at me and addressed me with harsh
protests, a
fact which made the Head of the Iraqi delegation, Hamdi Pachachi,
ex-Prime
Minister of Iraq, stand up and ask that my speech be deleted from the
minutes.
By so doing he calmed the temper of the brethren.
The
Confidential Resolutions passed by The Council of the League of Arab
States in
its 4th Session, Extraordinary, in Bludan in June 1946.
After discussion the Council of the League recommends the following:
1. The condition in Palestine moves towards violent confrontation due to Zionist military organization and terrorist societies. The Zionists are acquiring the habit of using force to dictate their will. This may lead to the Arabs of Palestine taking measures to protect themselves by similar arrangements. This will lead to friction between the two forces in which case the stand of the Arab governments will become extremely critical for they will not be able to prevent the Arab peoples from volunteering by all means to support the Arabs of Palestine with money, arms and volunteers.
2. If the recommendations of the Anglo-American Political Committee of Inquiry are adopted and a start is made to implement them, conditions between these two governments and the Arab states will worsen to a great degree so that it will become incumbent on the Arab states to defend themselves by taking some necessary measures and among these measures the following:
a. Acting not to permit the two states or either one of them or their nationals any new economic or other concessions.
b. Not to support their special interests in any world body.
c. Moral boycott.
d. Looking into the abrogation of what concessions they may have in the Arab states.
e. Complaint to the Security Council and the General Assembly of the United Nations.
On reading
these resolutions one can see the
weakness and lack of seriousness with which the Arab states began
handling the
Palestine problem. On my return from Bludan to Baghdad, the
Iraqi government
asked me to prepare a memorandum of strong protest to be presented to
both the
British and American governments regarding their unfair stand on the
problem of
Palestine which had led to the inimical proposals made by the
Anglo-American
Committee and the illegal flood of immigration into Palestine, and
charging the
governments of Britain and the United States with responsibility for
the
terrible consequences of their policy which WAS partial to the
Zionists. The
British Ambassador, Sir John Stonehewer-Bird, refused to receive the
memorandum, and requested very earnestly that we should convey the
message to
the British government orally and put nothing so harsh as that on
paper.
One of the basic factors which led to the Palestine tragedy was the problem of leadership and the lack of democratic organization on the part of the Palestinians. The Leadership of the people was attained by arousing popular sentiment. Personalities might rise to leadership by personal charm, family background and a does of nationalism. Once a leader was in the saddle, he was usually not removable or changeable by democratic procedure. Authoritarianism on the part of a leader might lead to dissensions and conflict of personalities, which might weaken the whole national body. This was true of most of the Arab world and the Palestinians were no exception.
In the '30's the Grand
Mufti of Jerusalem Haji Ameen al-Husaini, rightfully achieved
leadership or the Arabs of Palestine and won the respect and affection
of the Arab messes. Before the Second World War he came to Iraq where
he enjoyed great respect and prestige among the nationalists. He also
exerted some influence among the army officers who led the Rasheed
'Aali al-Gailani movement or 1941. That movement was anti-British and
it led to the flight to Amman or the Regent or Iraq and a number or
Iraqi statesmen. When the movement was crushed by the Jordanian army
led by Glubb Pasha, Rasheed 'Aali and his regime fled the country. So
did the Grand Mufti, Haji Ameen al-Husaini and his followers. Both
Rasheed 'Aali al-GailaniaHaji Ameen al-Husaini landed in Berlin and
were honoured guests of the Axis during the War
The Mufti
since coming
to Beirut has shown great activity with the intention of forming a
Palestine
Arab government which for the present would reside somewhere outside
Palestine.
It is understood that he wants to preside over this government which
will be
made up of his followers and supporters. The head of one of the Arab
delegations in a sub-committee opened the subject. He asked the
sub-committee
which was made up of Riyadh (as-Sulh, Lebanon), Jamil (Merdam, Syria),
Sameer
(ar-Rifa'i, Jordan), Naqrashi (Pasha, Egypt), Sheikh Yusuf al-Yaseen
(Saudi
Arabia), and Sayid Mu'een al-Madhi for Palestine, to discuss the matter.
Iraq's enthusiasm for the cause of Palestine was at its height from 1944 to the beginning of 1948. Iraq allotted from its budget, which was small at the time, hundreds of thousands of dinars for the Arab Offices of Information and for saving Palestinian Arab lands from passing into Zionist hands and making Arab peasants homeless. In this the Iraqi government depended on one of the most loyal and best educated and realistic sons of Palestine, Muse al-'Alami. He was entrusted with both the projects until the downfall of the Saleh Jabr Cabinet in January 1948. In the meantime Haji Ameen al-Husaini felt that his leadership was being defied and weakened by the work that Musa al-'Alami was doing outside the Mufti’s realm of influence. It was to overcome this situation that Haji Ameen came to see me in Cairo.
This is the last part of a telegram which I sent from Cairo to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iraq on the 25th of March 1947.
The Mufti asked to meet me. I met him tonight at the (Iraqi) Legation and the discussion lasted more than two hours. He began by thanking Iraq for its stand on behalf of Palestine and he said that the things that Palestine needed most were unity inside and solidarity outside amongst the Arab states. He hopes that the atmosphere will be clarified between the Higher Arab Committee and Iraq. He says that it is not reasonable or possible that there should be any alienation between them while Iraq is motivated so vigourously for the cause of Palestine.
Then he spoke of his old friendship with H.E. the Prime Minister and how he believed in his broad mindedness as well as his sacrifices for national goals.
Then he spoke at length about his life in Iraq and declared his innocence concerning what had happened (the Rasheed ‘Aali al-Gailani movement). He said that he is writing some brief memoirs and that he will offer a copy for the information of H.R.H. the Regent and H.E. Sayid Nuri Sa’id, and it will appear from it that he was an agent only of goodness, and that he did not take part in the unfortunate movement. He brings as witness the report which George Antonius made about him to the British government. He is searching for all the means that will improve his relations with Iraq.
Then he discussed at length the project of the Arab Offices (of Information) and Musa al-‘Alami. He expressed the necessity for Musa’s joining the higher committee if only morally. He had proposed to Musa to become a member of the Higher Committee and undertake the Offices and the Development Project. He refused. Then he (the Mufti) had proposed to him that his work should be under his (the Mufti's) auspices in his capacity as President of the Higher Committee. He refused. When Musa decided to leave (the Arab Offices of Information) he (the Mufti) asked him to hand over the Offices to persons on whom he (the Mufti) could rely like Raja'i al-Husaini or Ahmad Shuqairi. He refused. He (the Mufti) had proposed to him that he should become Director of Political Affairs. He refused. He (the Mufti) blamed Musa for Iraqis stand concerning the Offices. I told him that Musa was not responsible for Iraq's stand, but that Iraq found in the person of Musa a capable, loyal and reliable character. They (the government of Iraq) have entrusted him with the affairs of the Offices and the Development Project and I explained to him that it would be better for the public good if he supported Musa without interfering in his affairs. He promised to exert his efforts to come to an understanding with Musa on the basis of respecting Muse's dignity and the dignity of the Arab Higher Committee, but he wants to come to an understanding with Iraq by any means possible. He is thinking of sending a delegation to Iraq.
I asked him about his relations with the British. He said that the atmosphere was beginning to clarify between them and that if the British had been wise they would have depended on him in Palestine and their burden would have been much lighter. He said that world-wide Jewish propaganda against him has been unequalled by any propaganda, and it was that propaganda which made the British see him not as he truly is.
After a long discussion he requested me to exert my efforts to do away with whatever alienation there might be between Iraq and the Arab Higher Committee which represents Palestine. He charged me with his respects and greetings for H.R.H. the Regent and H.E. Sayid Nuri Sa’id.
The London Conference on Palestine
The British government invited the Arab states to Round-Table Conference to discuss the Palestine problem. It also issued a separate invitation to the Zionists in order to be able to negotiate with them simultaneously The London Conference was held in two sessions; the first towards the end of 1946, and the second early in 1947. The British side was represented by Mr Ernest Bevin, Secretary of state for Foreign Affairs, and Mr Creech-Jones, Minister for the Colonies. The Arab states were headed by Prince Faisal Al Sa'ud, for Saudi Arabia; Prince Saif-ul-Islam 'Abdullah, for Yemen; Faris al-Khouri, for Syria; ‘Abdur Razzaq Sanhouri Pasha and later Isma’il Haqqi Pasha, the Egyptian Ambassador to England, for Egypt; Sameer Pasha ar-Rifa'i, for Jordan; Camille Sham'un, for Lebanon; and Mohammed Fadhel Jamali, for Iraq. 'Abdur Rahman 'Azzam Pasha (Egypt) Attended as Secretary-General for the Arab League. The Arabs of Palestine were represented by Jamal al-Husaini, Sami Taha and others.
The Arab delegations worked together in presenting the Arab point of view. They defended the Arab character of Palestine with full strength and clarity. They also took part in proposing a solution, based on a democratic constitution for an independent Palestine, which would be ruled by the legitimate inhabitants of the land irrespective of their race or creed. After the Arabs had completed the text of their project, the British side notified us that the Zionists flatly rejected the Arab project for the solution of the Palestine problem. This was to be expected.
Mr Bevin, on his part, suggested a solution for Palestine, the Morrison Provincial Plan, analogous to the Swiss cantonal system, whereby Palestine would be divided into Arab cantons where the Arabs formed the majority, and Jewish cantons where the Jews formed the majority. The Arab delegations rejected this solution. It was also rejected by the Zionists, as we learned.
The following statements represent Iraqi reasoning at that Conference:
Extracts from Notes of the Third-Meeting Speech made by H.E. Dr Jamali.
I should like first of all to thank Mr Bevin for turning his cards face-upwards on the table. I think that is the best way to reach complete mutual understanding. I also wish to register here that we in Iraq received with great pleasure Mr Bevin's statement that friendship with the Arab world is much more important for Great Britain than armies stationed in the Middle East. We certainly think that the mutual friendship of our two peoples is vitally important to us both, but I am afraid that the Palestine problem may overtax that friendship.
I should like to state here that we in Iraq are deeply concerned with the problem of Palestine. For us, it is a matter of internal affairs, besides its national and international significance, for our peace and stability are directly affected by events in Palestine. We have about 120,000 Jews in Iraq. For centuries Jews have lived with the Muslims and Christians in complete peace and harmony in Iraq. There was nothing in the political atmosphere to disturb peace and harmony until Zionism came to Baghdad. Then the Jews in Iraq began to find themselves, through no fault of their own, greatly embarrassed by Zionism, and the government is doing its utmost to prevent any intolerance which might lead to trouble between members of the various faiths.
Before dealing with the Morrison Provincial Plan, I should like to raise a few points which, to my mind, have direct bearing on any feature settlement of Palestine.
1. The first is that the Arabs desire peace and security but peace and security have been disturbed by political Zionism. The Arabs have always expressed their grievances and raised their voice asking for their rights. What they ere after is to reach a final settlement of their just cause. They are in despair. They have lost faith in Commissions and official statements, for, so far, they have seen shelved any decision which has been cognizant of their rights, while those decisions which favour the intruders have been carried out. I earnestly plead, in the name of Peace and justice, that peace and justice be granted to the Arabs in Palestine.
2. A very important point which needs to be settled once and for all is that Palestine has no magic about it. It is a small piece of country which has its natural physical capacity. There is nothing mystic about its capacity, nothing supernatural about it. Like any other country, it is inhabited by a people. The fact that it contains the Holy Places for the three great religions does not add to its natural capacity, nor should it create political complications. The mystic urge which the Zionists claim for Palestine is a myth, and should be exploded In the first place, Zionism is not a religious movement but e temporal political idea. In the second place, if we were to accept the precedence of mystic attachment for other peoples' lands we might very wall start a new cause for conflict allover the world, for any aggressive nation could develop a mystic attachment to someone else's land. Thus, it seems to that the Palestine problem should be dealt with naturally and humanly, without any mythology.
3. It seems to me that the basis of all trouble in Palestine lies in the nature of political Zionism, for political Zionism is an aggressive movement. We know of no limits to its aims and ambitions. Its ideology, combining race, religion Bnd nationhood has much in common with Nazi ideology. The very idea of a Chosen People and a Promised Land is nothing very different from Nazi ideology. Chosen People? Maybe. Promised Land? What is it that is promised? Is it part of Palestine? All of Palestine? Palestine and Transjordan? Palestine, TransJordan, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq? These are questions to which various answers have been given, according to expediency. We know very wall that the Zionists are not such fools as to spend millions, hundreds of millions of pounds, for a small arid country. They have come with much wider ambitions, ambitions to dominate at least economically all the Arab world, nay, all the Middle East. The Arabs certainly cannot stand indifferent to such aggressive intentions.
In their tactics, the Zionists have proved to be much deadlier than the Nazis, for they use methods of infiltration and squeezing-out of people from land and commerce which the Nazis never knew how to apply. In their deadly methods, and their terrorism, they are as efficient, if not more efficient, than the Nazis. The situation which I would like to lay before the British Government is that the Arabs are facing a big danger. They are faced with an invasion, for the Zionists are doing nothing less than invading Palestine. This aggressive invasion, coupled with aggressive ideology and tactics must be exposed to all the world. We hope that the British Government, which has the Arabs' friend ship so much at heart, will sympathize with the Arabs and decide to put a final stop to this danger.
I should like to ask Mr Bevin how he would welcome 500,000 Nazis imported into England to build a Nazi national home? I am sure he would oppose it and fight against it. But something similar to that is happening to the Arabs in the Middle East, and the danger is still growing.
4. With
regard to the
interference of the United States in the question of Palestine, I have
two remarks
to make. First of all, I am sure that the great American people, whose
sincere
stand for democracy and justice I never doubt, have been exploited by
influential propaganda. I am sure that, once they are shown the truth
and
justice of the Arab Cause on the one hand. and the peril to their
friendly
relations with the Arab world on the other, they will cease to champion
Zionism. In the second place, if we accept the premise of American
interference,
we should have to grant the same right to other nations. That is why we
feel
that the settlement of the Palestine affair should be the concern of
the Arabs
and the British Government alone. As for the Zionists, they have no
basic
rights in Palestine. They were given a favour by Britain which they
misinterpreted and misused.
One of the
fundamental
facts that should be recognized is that the Arabs and the Jews in
Palestine are
never on an equal footing. The Arabs are the legal owners of the
country, while
the Zionists are aggressors and invaders. It is not a question of right
versus
right, but of right versus wrong.
5. We have to separate, completely and finally, the World Jewish Problem from that of Palestine. The Jewish Problem should be dealt with in Europe, for Europe needs builders who can repair the destruction wrought by the Nazis. We cannot claim to have won the war if the roots of Naziism continue in Europe, and continue to preclude the people of the Jewish faith in Europe from enjoyment of full civil and religious right. The truth is that malicious Zionist designs have been applied to de-nationalize European Jewry and make them believe that they do not belong where they are and that they should go to Palestine. The Arabs cannot be responsible for such inhuman designs.
6. Are the democratic principles implied in the United Nations Charter, the Atlantic Charter, the Four Freedoms to be applied to the people of Palestine? Or are the people of Palestine to be victimized by designs and problems for which they are not responsible? Why are the Arabs of Palestine, through no fault of their own, to be penalized by deprivation of self-government and self-determination, simply because ambitious dreamers intend to establish a foreign state on an Arab land?
7. On more than one occasion, the British government has solemnly declared that they do not meet the Jewish national home to be a Jewish state, and that the Balfour Declaration was not intended to prejudice the rights and privileges of the Arabs to their own land. I should like to know whether the British Government still maintains the same position. If so, we hope that they will put en immediate and final stop to Zionist aims and ambitions, end see to it that no plan which is proposed for Palestine will lead to a Jewish state.
8. I am sure that, if Mr Balfour were alive, he would regret his own Declaration. That greet philosopher seems to have been misled and to have been told that Palestine was a land with relatively no inhabitants, or at least inhabited only by primitive peoples with no ideals or aims of their own. Now that that experiment has been tried for a quarter of a century, it is only great and noble to recognize that such a policy was not right and that it cannot lead to right. It is high time to make big decisions and to correct or at least to stop the wrongs of the past. The world needs to be established on principles and not on expediency. We should recognize the right of peoples and nations to live their own life in their own homes, and to enjoy self-determination. It is time that this should be recognized for the Arabs of Palestine.
9. No matter what view we hold about the use and value of history, the Arabs cannot give up their historical and legal rights to Palestine. No promises, declarations or statements acknowledging these rights can be ignored or forgotten. The McMahon correspondence and other First World War pledges; Paragraph 4, Article 22, of the Covenant of the League of Nations and Article 73 of the United Nations Charter; the various statements of policy made by His Majesty's Government; the Churchill White Paper of 1922; the Passfield Paper of 1930; the White Paper of 1939, are all British pledges which we continue to regard H1s Majesty's Government in honour bound to fulfill insofar as Arab rights and complaints are recognized in these documents.
Bearing the above points in mind, the Iraqi government cannot but reject the Morrison Plan of Federation, or, as it is now called, the Provincial Plan. This Plan certainly contradicts the following points:
(1) The Plan will most probably lead to partition. The Arabs will never acquiesce to partition, for, to recall the story of the two women before King Solomon, they are the true mother of the child.
(2) Partition will mean a Jewish state, and the Arabs will never acquiesce in any plan that might lead to that. A Jewish state would not only be a misfit in the Middle East, but a danger to all concerned. It would certainly be more than anything that the British government has never intended to grant to the Jews.
(3) The Plan would reduce a big portion of the Arab population to the status of a minority in a Jewish state. That we strongly oppose.
(4) The Plan might lead to further immigration, end, by artificially overcrowding a Jewish province, the Zionists might use every means to overflow and exploit neighbouring Arab lends.
(5) The Plan has all the defects which were clearly demonstrated by the Woodhead Report. In the long run, it will not work.
(6) The Plan deprives the Arabs of the best part of their country and makes them unable to support themselves financially. In this connection, I should like to refer to a point raised by Mr Bevin in his statement yesterday, that he cannot see how the Palestine budget could be met without Jewish money. I wish to state that the greater part of the Palestine budget is spent on the maintenance of a police force for the sake of security disturbed by the presence and actions of Zionism.
(7) We strongly object to the Plan for supporting the Anglo-American Enquiry Commission's view that Palestine should be neither Arab nor Jewish. That is a violation of the most elementary principles.
(8) We also object seriously to the reference made in the Plan to money to be spent on the Arabs in Palestine, and to a loan to be made to the Arab states. This may be due to a lack of understanding of Arab nature and character. The Arabs will never agree to give up their rights to their own homeland in exchange for bribes or material gain, from whatever source. An Arab would rather die of hunger than have his honour and dignity violated. National honour and dignity make us flatly reject such proposals.
(9) Iraq will never acquiesce in the establishment of a Zionist bridgehead in Palestine. We feel that there cannot be peace in the Middle East until the poisonous fangs of political Zionism have been pulled out.
These, in brief, are the views of my country. I have presented them very frankly, and, I am afraid, bluntly, but I Can assure you, honestly and sincerely. I also have laid my cards face-upwards on the table. I hope that the views which I have expressed will be taken in a spirit of friendship and sympathy, because it is only thus that we can lay the foundations of a just solution of the Palestine problem. Since the British government could not find the possibility of an agreement between the Arabs and the Zionists on any particular solution, and, since Mr Truman, the President of the United States of America, was steadily increasing pressure on the British to open the gates of Palestine to Zionist immigration, the British government decided to relieve itself of the question of Palestine by referring it to the United Nations Organization for a decision on what was to be done.
The United Nations Special Session
In response
to a request
by the British government, the General Assembly of the United Nations
held a
Special Session in the spring of 1947 to look into the Palestine
problem. I led
the Iraqi delegation to the Special Session which met at Flushing
Meadows and
Lake Success. My efforts were directed to defending the right of the
Palestinian Arabs to self-determination and independence, to proving
that
Palestine could not provide a solution of the Jewish problem which is
universal
in character, and to showing that any denial of the application of the
fundamental principles of the Charter of the United Nations to the
Arabs of
Palestine would lead to bloodshed and racial and religious
conflicts.
The Arab delegations to the Special Session met together regularly to coordinate their efforts. Besides we approached the Asiatic and African states like Iran, Turkey and India (before its division into India and Pakistan) to take a united stand to defend the inalienable rights of the Arabs of Palestine.
It was at Flushing Meadows and for the sake of Palestine that the Asian-African states first began to work together as group. I approached the leader of the Indian delegation, the Indian Ambassador to United States, Mr Assif 'Ali, to bring the Arab and other Asian and African delegations together to discuss cooperation in handling the Palestine problem. Mr Assif 'Ali invited heads of delegations to a luncheon at a restaurant near Flushing Meadows and it was there that the Asian-African cooperation movement was initiated.
The General Assembly in the Special Session decided to establish a United Nations Committee of Inquiry to study the question of Palestine in all its aspects and to submit its recommendations to the General Assembly. I emphasized that the membership of the 6ommittee should not include those who were already known to be biased in favour of Zionism. In fact the Committee did include some members who were very enthusiastic for the Zionist cause such as the delegates of Uruguay and Guatemala.
After the Special Session I gave a press conference to the United Press in Washington, May 22, 1947, which reported:
Jamali sharply scorned what he called the Zionists ideals of conquest, declaring they were a hang-over from the ill-advised Balfour Declaration which was based on the 19th century imperialist outlook, when the Western world imposed its thoughts and desires on the East forgetting that the East has a culture and has potentialities to grow, develop , rise and build anew civilization.
Fadhel Jamali emphasized that the Arab states would not be bound by any united nation committee of Inquiry decision which recommended partition of Palestine or the imposition of a Jewish state.
Fadhel Jamali expressed the opinion that all that was needed to settle the Palestine situation was to leave the people of Palestine alone and let them lead a democratic life without distinction as to race or religion.
This, he emphasized, was the only solution in conformity with the United Nations Charter.
The Committee of Inquiry came to Sofar, Lebanon, in the beginning of the summer of 1947 to listen to the Arab point of view. I was in London at the time but I flew to Lebanon to appear before the Committee and present the point of view of the Iraqi government on the Palestine problem. (See Appendix )
In August the Committee of Inquiry submitted its report to the Secretary General of the United Nations. The members of the Committee were not unanimous in their recomendations. The majority recommended the partition of Palestine into an Arab state, a Jewish, state and an internationalized Jerusalem (Corpus Separatum). The minority, which included members from Iran, India and Yugoslavia, recommended the establishment of Arab end Jewish regional zones which would be confederated in something like the Swiss cantonal pattern.
The Secretary General circulated the Report of the Committee of Inquiry to the member states.
The Political Committee of the Arab League met and decided that the Arab states should address communiqués to both the United Kingdom and the United States warning them against the implementation of the Majority report of the Committee of Inquiry and holding them responsible for the consequences in case the partition plan was implemented.
The notes
addressed to
the United Kingdom and the United States were very similar in their
content.
Because of their historical importance it may be useful to give a
translation
of the note addressed to the United Kingdom by Iraq.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs presents its greetings to His Britannic Majesty’s Embassy in Baghdad, and it has the honour of informing the Embassy of the unanimous Resolution of the Political Committee of the Council of the League of Arab States passed on the 19th of September, 1947, and wishes to call the attention of the honourable Embassy to the following points and requests it to convey them as quickly as possible to His Britannic Majesty’s Government.
1. When the British Government's Mandate over Palestine was decided, although it was basically invalid because of the people's opposition to it, it was intended, in accordance with Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations, that it should prepare the original inhabitants of this land to be an independent nation, and to achieve their political maturity in the shortest possible time so that, when the basic requirements for independence were completed, the Mandate would be terminated and independence declared. On the 18th of April, 1946, the League of Nations was dissolved and the Mandate emanating from the League supposing it was valid, ceased. But the British Government wished to continue its supervision of this land in order to achieve the prosperity of its original inhabitants. It was a wish offered by the British side and opposed by the Arabs of Palestine and rejected by all means by which they had been accustomed to express themselves from the time the Mandate was established. In February, 1947, the Foreign Secretary of the British Government declared in the British Parliament that the people of Palestine had achieved a cultural and political maturity which qualified them to practise the independence of their land. Their case would be like that of other Arab lands which were severed from the Ottoman Empire in accordance with the Treaty of Lausanne and who now in fact enjoyed independence. In spite of this and in spite of successive promises made to the Arabs by the British Government. It has not followed the natural course by declaring the independence of Palestine.
2. Since the Committee of Inquiry formed by the United Nations has submitted proposals which, in total and in part, demolish the independence of Palestine as an Arab State, the Arabs of Palestine and all inhabitants of the Arab lands deplore these proposals and refuse them and their foundations and declare to His Britannic Majesty’s Government from now that there is no legal authority anywhere which has the right to cut a piece from Arab Palestine and offer it to the Zionists to erect a Jewish state thereon. They also declare that there is no legal authority which is capable of permitting the invasion of Palestine by Jews who have no relation with it and who are not entitled to enter it.
3. The invasion of Palestine by Zionist elements has been associated with acts of violence and terrorism in order to enable them to establish their feet in the land so as to be able later on to achieve their ambitions in neighbouring Arab states.
4. For this reason the Governments of the Arab states have already warned the afore-mentioned Committee of Inquiry of the consequences of recommending the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine end revealed to them that this would certainly lead to troubles which would engulf the whole Middle East, the reason being that the Arabs of Palestine will not yield to any measure which will do away with the unity end independence of their lend. They will surely wage a war which knows no relaxation in order to repel that aggression from their land, especially since they know that all Arab lands will stand behind them to support them and provide them with men, money and ammunition for self-defence. The Arab Governments themselves will not be able to suppress the rebellious feelings of their peoples aroused by the injustice imposed on them. Nor will the Arab Governments stand with folded hands vis-a-vis a danger which threatens all Arab lands. They will be obliged to undertake some decisive action in order to repel aggression and restore right to its position.
A stand of this kind on the part of the Arab peoples or their Governments is not an exceptional matter since it has been proved on various occasions that the Zionists depend for their armament, terrorist movement and war activities, by which they inflict harm on the Arabs of Palestine, on political and material help offered to them by some foreign governments and by some bodies and organizations which encourage those governments. Besides, the problem of disarming the Jews to stop their terrorist activities has been the subject of repeated requests and protests made by the Arab Governments to the British Government without those efforts leading to any decisive success.
5. For these reasons it is the view of the Iraqi Government, which is still tied to His Britannic Majesty’s Government with the strongest of ties, that it is her duty to make clear to them the danger which is actually engulfing security and peace in the Middle East and to charge them with the responsibility for all the events that may follow in case a resolution is taken which infringes the right of Palestine to become an independent Arab state.
The Ministry takes this opportunity to express its highest esteem and respects.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iraq to the British Embassy, Iraq
I am sure that the British and American governments did not give much weight to such memoranda presented by Arab governments who were not strong enough to defend Arab rights or threaten Western interests. But certainly both the United States and Britain underestimated the potential danger to peace and relations with the West which would be engendered by the frustration of the Arabs of Palestine and the Arabs in all other lends.
The General Assembly of the United Nations, 1947
Organization and meetings of the Arab delegations
Before
going to the Regular Session of the United Nations General Assembly I
went to
the Ministry of Defence in Baghdad and had a meeting with the Minister,
Shakir
al-Wadi. I put before him the possibility of the United Nations passing
a
resolution which might prejudice Arab rights in Palestine. That might
lead to
trouble and blood shed that would endanger Arab lives and security. I
inquired
about the policy of the Ministry vis-a-vis such a situation And whether
the
Iraqi Ministry of Defence could come to the help end defence of our
Palestinian
brethren, because that would have a great effect on the stand Iraq
would take
in the United Nations. He assured me that the Ministry of Defence would
take
all measures to defend the rights of our Palestinian brethren and that
I could
speak with full assurance that the Ministry of Defence supported my
words.
The major work done by the Arabs together in a united way for the sake of Palestine was their struggle in the United Nations Session, in the autumn of 1947, to try to prevent the partition of Palestine.
The Arab
delegations included some strong and
experienced persons. From the Egyptian delegation I remember Mohammed
Husain
Heikal Pasha, Dr Mahmoud Fawzi and Memduh Riyadh. The Lebanese
delegation
included Camille Sham’un Dr Charles Malik and Dr Victor Khouri. The
Syrian
delegation included Faris al-Khouri, Ameer 'Adil Arsalan and Dr Farid
Zainuddin. The Saudi Arabian delegation included H. R. H. Prince Faisal
and Dr
'Awni Dajjani. The Iraqi delegation included Nuri as-Sa’id and Dr
Mohammed
Fadhel Jamal. The Palestine delegation was headed by Jamal al-Husaini.
I wish
to put on record here the name off Sir Muhammad Zafrullah Khan, then
the
foreign Minister of Pakistan, who took an active and whole-hearted part
in the
defence of Palestine.
The Arab
delegations met frequently to integrate
their activities. They held some general meetings for all the members
of the
delegation. They also formed a higher political committee attended by
the heads
of delegations and one other member from each delegation. They formed a
liaison
committee to contact the various delegations and another to draft
memoranda and
statements for publicity and the press.
We all worked
with zeal and passion to defend
the cause of justice and humanity for the Arabs of Palestine. We
worked day
and night under constant strain. The pressure of power politics was
great and
we sometimes had to speak as fighters and not as diplomats.
The Opening the Session of the General Assembly
At the opening of each session of the General Assembly, heads of delegations make speeches setting out the general lines of their policy. General Marshall, Secretary of state for the United States, said that his government "gave much weigh" to the report of the majority of the Committee of Inquiry which recommended the partition of Palestine. Heads of several Arab delegations, including Iraq, expressed in their statements of policy their dismay at the attitude taken by the United States and advised the United States government not to be rash in taking a stand under the influence of Zionist propaganda and pressure. General Marshall met the heads of the Arab delegations at a luncheon party and assured them that America was still open minded and had reached no final decision yet, and that "giving weight" to the majority report did not mean final acceptance of it.
Next came the allocation of the items of the agenda of the Session to the various Committees. The Palestine problem, being major political question, should have been sent to the Political Committee for debate. Instead an Ad Hoc Political Committee was formed to deal with it. This was done over the objections of the Arab delegations who wanted the First Committee, namely, the Political Committee, to deal with Palestine, since the heads of delegations usually sat in the First Committee.
The Ad Hoc Political Committee
When the Ad
Hoc Political Committee was formed,
Dr Evatt, the Foreign Minister of Australia, was elected as its
Chairman. The
representative of Australia on the Committee of Inquiry had been quite
neutral
and he had not voted for partition. Thus the Arabs were deceived by
thinking
that Dr Evatt would be an impartial Chairman. Actually he proved to be
a master
of tactics in steering the Ad Hoc Political Committee toward achieving
Zionist
ends.
When the Ad Hoc Political Committee first met it decided that the representatives of both the Arab Higher Committee and the Jewish Agency should be invited to take part in the discussions and to answer questions. The Arab Higher Committee was led by Jamal al-Husaini. The representatives of the Jewish Agency were led by Moshe Shertok (Sharett).
When the general debate was opened, various delegations began to express their views on the report of the Committee of Inquiry. Some states criticized the majority report and some agreed with it. Others celled for conciliation and understanding between the Arabs and the Jews. Others dealt with the legal aspects of the subject. From the Iraqi delegation Nuri Sa'id end I made statements. The former dealt with the betrayal of the Arabs and the injustice of the Balfour declaration imposing Zionism on Palestine, and showed how all of that was contrary to the letters of Sir Henry McMahon to King Husain in the First World War and e violation of Arab natural rights. In my speech I dealt with the fundamental principles in the light of which the Palestinian problem should be examined. I showed that the recommendation of the majority of the Committee of Inquiry as well as the Zionist claims were all contrary to democratic principles and the principles of the United Nations Charter. I refuted the claim of Jewish right to a national home as well as their need for such a home. The Jews, citizen in any country, must consider that country as their home. I criticized the United States which contradicted itself when it called for the application of some principles in Greece and denied the application of the same principles to the Arabs of Palestine.
One of the
most important speeches defending the
Arab cause was made by Sir Muhammad Mafrullah Khan, leader of the
Pakistan
delegation. He reviewed the Palestine question and proved the legality
of Arab
rights therein, refuted all Zionist claims of the partition, proposal.
His
speech made a deep impression on the Committee.
Many people
were waiting to hear what the representatives
of the United Kingdom, the United States and the Soviet Union had to
say. Mr
Creech-Jones, British Secretary of State for the Colonies, made an
important
statement. He spoke in the name of the British government explaining
that the
Mandate is unworkable and stating that his government would not
undertake any
solution which did not please both Arabs and Jews. The statement made
some
members doubt the possibility of imposing partition so long as the
Arabs
opposed it and so long as Britain was not willing to use force to
implement it.
A speech by
Jamal al-Husaini followed in which
he explained that the rights of the Palestinian Arabs to their own
country,
Palestine, was a natural, unquestionable right and that they would not
yield a
span of Palestine before shedding the last drop of their blood and that
the
Palestine Arab delegation was not ready to take part in any discussion
regarding
the partition plan for it was absolutely rejected from its very
foundations.
He was followed by Rabbi Silver on behalf of the Jewish Agency who
claimed that
the Jews had historical connections with Palestinian support by the
Balfour
declaration and that the Mandate gave them rights in all of Palestine.
But they
were ready now to sacrifice and let TransJordan be excluded and they
also would
accept the part left to them. In other words, he accepted the partition
scheme.
Everybody was
anxious to hear the statement of
the delegate of the United States. Mr Hershel Johnson made the
statement which
endorsed the partition scheme and called for an international militia
of
volunteers to implement it. He stated that he took it for granted that
United
Nations member states surrounding Palestine would not undertake any
aggressive
(sic) move. This was a reference to the Arab states.
The American
statement came as a great
disappointment to the hopes of the Arab delegations who had seen the
statement
24 hours before it was delivered and who had asked Faris al-Khouri to
make a
reply immediately after its delivery. He did make a very forceful
reply. He was
followed by a number of speakers, some of them from the Arab
delegations.
Later I
prepared a
speech refuting the statements of all those who supported the partition
scheme
like Uruguay, Poland and Guatemala. I then turned to the United States
and
explained American relation to the Zionist and how Zionist propaganda
in the
United States and the Zionist role in American electioneering and
elections had
led to this harmful plan for partition, harmful to American interest,
the
interests of the United Nations itself and the interests of world
peace. Then I
dealt with the Committee of Inquiry and exposed the partisanship to
Zionism of
some of its members. Next I refuted the proposed plan for partition in
the
light of the principles of justice, politics, economics, peace and
stability,
and emphasized that partition was not practical and could not succeed.
Of those who spoke in the Ad Hoc Committee 16 states were in favour of the partition and 12 including the Arab states were against partition. The Iraqi delegation, supported by the Syrian delegation, questioned the legality of the United Nations passing a resolution of partition against the wishes of the majority of the inhabitants of a country. The Charter does not authorize the United Nations to take such measures. If the UN should pass such a resolution they would be acting illegally and openly violating the Charter. I suggested, then, that the matter should be referred to the International Court of Justice at the Hague for consultation to avoid the passing of a mistaken resolution.
The proposal
was a reasonable one, and we had
enough votes to carry it in the morning when it should have come to the
vote in
the Ad Hoc Political Committee. However, voting was postponed until the
evening
session. A dinner party had been arranged by the opposition to which
some of
those who supported the Resolution were invited so that they would be
absent at
the time of voting. The Resolution came to the vote in the evening and
the
number of votes for and against were equal. The deciding vote against
going to
the International Court was cast by the Chairman of the Ad Hoc
Political
Committee. Some years later I came across a book called,
The Law of the
United Nations, by a well-known professor of International Law, Dr Hans
Kelsen,
who himself is a Jew. He comments in one of the footnotes of his book
that the
objection raised by the delegate of Iraq, as well as by others, to
the legality
of the partition Resolution was valid. (Footnote: Hans Kelsen,
The Law of the
United Nations, Stevens & Sons Ltd., London,
1951, p. 197 )
The United Nations, from a strictly legal point of view, was not entitled to take a decision to partition a country against the wishes of the majority of its inhabitants. Dr Hans Kelsen is an important witness and he comes from the Jewish side. When the general debate was over, three sub-committees were formed. The first was to study the project of partition and to put it in its final shape. The second was to study the project of the unitary state and to prepare a final draft proposal. The third was to study the question of conciliation and of reconciling the Arab and Zionist views. The formation of these committees was entrusted to the Chairman. He formed the first and the second sub-committees from delegations who favoured the purpose of the committee. The sub-committee on partition was made up of USA, USSR, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Canada, Guatemala, Uruguay, the Union of South Africa end Venezuela. The sub-committee on the unitary state was made up of the six Arab states (Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Yemen), Afganistan, Pakistan and Columbia. As for the sub-committee for conciliation, it was made up of the Chairman, the Vice-Chairman, Prince Wan of Thailand and the rapporteur from Iceland. Britain was requested to send representatives to both the first and second sub-committees. The Jewish Agency was to send a representative to the first sub-committee and the Higher Arab Committee to send a representative to the Second sub-committee. In the second sub-committee I nominated the representative of Columbia to become Chairman and the representative of Pakistan to become rapporteur. The representative of Columbia asked Mr Evatt to include some impartial members in the committees. When he declined to do so the representative of Columbia withdrew from the sub-committee. The representative of Pakistan acted as both Chairman and rapporteur of the sub-committee.
The sub-committee on the unitary state made the following proposal:
We hereby submit the following proposal as being the only just, practical and democratic way to achieve the independence of Palestine and its future constitutional organization:
1. That an Arab state in the whole of Palestine be established on democratic lines.
2. That the said Arab state of Palestine will respect human rights, fundamental freedoms and equality of all persons before the law.
3. That the said Arab State of Palestine will protect the legitimate rights and interests of all minorities.
4. That freedom of worship and Access to the Holy Place will be guaranteed to all
The following steps will have to be taken to give effect to the aforesaid principles:
(a) A Constituent Assembly shall be elected at the earliest possible time. All genuine and law-abiding nationals of Palestine will be entitled to participate in the elections for the Constituent Assembly.
(b) The said Constituent Assembly shall, within a fixed time, formulate and enact a Constitution for the Arab State of Palestine, which shall be of a democratic nature and shall embody the above-mentioned four principles.
(c) A government shall be formed within a fixed time, in accordance with the terms of the Constitution to take over the administration of Palestine from the Mandatory Power.
The third sub-committee did nothing but send a letter to Prince Faisal, the representative of Saudi Arabia, and to General Marsahll, Secretary of State of the United States, asking them to meet and reach a settlement. Prince Faisal expressed his willingness to meet with General Marshall, but the letter did not respond to the sub-committee's request. The first sub-committee took some time to do the work entrusted to it. It met some legal and practical difficulties which it could not overcome, especially in the question of implementing partition, for Britain would accept no responsibility in this connection. The Zionists took part in the sub-committee with vehement zeal, and Moshe Shertok sat with the butchers who were cutting up Palestine bit by bit. He chose and asked for the pieces of meat which suited Israeli interests. While this dissection was going on, a conflict started between Shertok and the United States delegate Ambassador Hershel Johnson, about the allotment of the Negev. The Special Committee of Inquiry had recommended the Negev, at least most of it, should be included in the Arab state of Palestine. As for Shertok, he insisted that it should go to the Zionists. After some give And take in the sub-committee, Johnson was celled to the telephone. Truman in person was on the line ordering him to give Negev to the Zionists, contrary to the recommendations of the Special Committee of Inquiry. Johnson returned from the telephone to the sub-committee, changed his stand, and yielded to the wishes of Shertok. Thus the sub-committee, and later the General Assembly, gave the Zionists more than had been proposed by the special committee which had recommended partition. It gave them practically all that Shertok asked for, and that was due to the intervention of Truman who had succumbed to Dr Weizmann's influence.
After a week or so the Ad Hoc Committee met to consider the reports of the three sub-committees. They started with the report of t he sub-committee on partition. Questions were addressed by the representatives of Pakistan and Syria regarding the legal foundations of the Palestine question and the partition project. The delegate of Lebanon asked some embarrassing questions which showed the impossibility of partition from the practical point of view and the absurdity of partition. As for me, I asked about the stand of the United Nations vis-a-vis a people who will defend themselves if their country is invaded. would the United Nations declare war on e people who would surely defend them selves driven by the instinct of survival. Then several delegates spoke, some approving the project of partition and others objecting. I spoke for the second time calling attention to the fact that the partition project contradicted the United Nations Charter in letter and spirit. I warned of the dangers which would ensure from imposing partition and stated that the Arab countries would all be disturbed and resort to force. I addressed the American delegate very sharply requesting him to follow the path of peace and justice and not the path of force and imposition by influencing the neutral states. I asked him if the United States was reedy to send force to fight the Arabs, and, if that were the case, would she provide the opportunity for others states also to send force? If both the United States and the Soviet Union send force to Palestine, what would the effect be on the international situation?
The next day Nuri as-Sa'id delivered a speech regarding the Communist danger facing the Arab lands from the ports of the Black Sea and how there are persons, who are not Jews, who infiltrate with the Jewish immigrants for political aims which will cause trouble throughout the Middle East. I intended to speak for the third time but Chairman Evatt would not permit it, so I passed my word to my Egyptian colleague who read it after his own speech without reference to Iraq. Some amendments were proposed to the partition project to avoid British objections regarding implementation and regarding reference to the Security Council for the General Assembly had no competence in this matter. The vote on the project for partition was taken in an evening session. There were 25 votes in favour, 13 against and 17 abstention. The project for a unitary state was automatically rejected since the plan for partition had received a majority vote.
The General Assembly Vote on Partition
Next came the struggle to prevent the passing of a Resolution to partition Palestine. To be accepted, the resolution would require a vote in favour by two-third of the voting. It is customary in the United Nations at times to do some 'horse trading’ between member states. When you request a delegation's support in a question which concerns, you, that delegation will expect your support in a question that concerns it. The Arab delegations had six votes in the United Nations at that time, for Yemen had joined the UN in that session. We were ready to exchange votes with whoever supported us in defeating partition. When the Greek government brought a complaint to the United Nations against Soviet intervention in northern Greece where the Greek rebels were getting soviet support in their activities, the complaint was discussed in the General Assembly. When the question came to a vote, most of the Arab states abstained. Iraq was the only Arab state that voted on the side of Greece. Iraq had, as a principle, always stood against Communist intervention and against subversive movements anywhere in the world.
When the time came for voting on the partition of Palestine, Mr Dandramis, Head of the Greek delegation was including to abstain from voting thus returning tit-for-tat to the Arab states who had abstained on the Greek question. I sought the help of the head of the Turkish delegation Saleem Sarper, And we went together to meet Mr Dandramis and to ask that he should reciprocate in the matter of the Iraqi vote for Greece with a vote against the partition of Palestine. We said that it would not be appropriate for him to refrain from giving Iraq a supporting vote. On the contrary, it would be most appropriate for him to vote against the partition of Palestine. Ever since, so far as I know, Greece has supported the Arab stand on the Palestine question.
At a meeting of the Heads of Arab delegations Faris al-Khouri and Farid Zainuddin, who were in contact with the Soviet bloc, suggested that we should come to un understanding with the Soviets that we would vote with them on their problems if they would help us by voting against partition. In the name of the Iraqi delegation I said that we were ready to do that. We were ready to cooperate with the Soviets in the United Nations if they would guarantee their stand on our side and their votes against the partition of Palestine. But we would not support them without previous assurance that they would stand with us. The meeting authorized Faris al-Khouri to contact the Soviet bloc on this basis. Not many days passed before Andrei Gromyko, delegate of the Soviet Union, went to the rostrum of the General Assembly to announce the sympathy of the Soviet Union for the Jews who had been persecuted by Hitler and to say that they deserved to be helped to establish a state of their own in Palestine. He said that the Soviets would support the partition of Palestine.
The Arab delegation continued to exert great efforts to win support for Arab rights in Palestine and their efforts were about to yield fruit, for there were enough votes to ensure that the General Assembly would reject the Resolution on the Partition of Palestine. Had the General Assembly voted before the American Thanksgiving Day recess there would not have been a two-thirds majority in favour of the Resolution. But, due the influence of the American delegation and the machinations of the United Nation Secretariat led by Trygvie Lie, a postponement of the voting was arranged. The argument against taking the vote was that there were still several speakers on the list and that it would not be possible to take the vote on the day before Thanksgiving Zafrullah Khan and I went to the President of the General Assembly, Dr Arania, and asked to withdraw our names from the list of speakers and we assured him that other delegates including those of the Arab delegations were willing to withdrew their names from the list of speakers. Dr Arania did not grant our request for he was under political pressure.
In the Session a motion was made to adjourn until after the American Thanksgiving Day. This was passed by a simple majority vote. During the recess came President Truman’s intervention and his pressure on some states needing American aid. The Zionists redoubled their efforts in the capitals of the world. As a result, several European and South American delegations changed their stand from anti-partition or abstention to the stand for partition. Thus, when the Session was resumed we found ourselves facing defeat. As a last resort I went to the rostrum and delivered a speech asking for time for further negotiation and efforts to reach en agreed solution of the Palestine problem and to avoid a greet catastrophe. Many eloquent speeches were made, notably by Sir Zafrullah Khan and Dr Lopez, the Head of the Columbian delegation, in which they challenged the legality of partition and its violation of the principles of the Charter. They emphasized the danger to peace and stability in the Middle East. The Columbian, refuting the arguments in favour of the partition policy, revealed the greet pressure being brought on him to vote for partition. He warned the UN against taking precipitous action which would endanger world peace. He stated that the question of Palestine could be deferred for another two months for further study and negotiations. The delegate of France stated that he saw a ray of hope in the speech of the-Iraqi delegate and he proposed a postponement of the debate for 24 hours so as to permit the two parties to reach an understanding. The motion was carried.
The Arab delegations welcomed the postponement. The Americans and the Soviets, on the other hand, opposed it, for it was hoped that voting on the partition would be concluded without delay. The Zionists had prepared in advance their jubilant celebrations. The success of the French proposal was a disappointment for them. The Arab delegations met and their meeting continued until late at night. It was thought that it was in the interests of the Arabs that they should make a last attempt and a show of good will in an effort to come to an understanding with the Zionists. The Arab delegations decided to submit a federal plan for Palestine, a plan in the formulation of which Jamal al-Husaini, representative of the Arab Higher Committee of Palestine, would not take part and for which he would accept no responsibility. Faris al-Khouri of Syria and Camille Sham'un of Lebanon were asked to prepare the draft resolution and to contact Mr Lopez, the leader of the Columbian delegation, on the method of its presentation.
The draft resolution was submitted by Camille Sham’un in the afternoon session. The American, Russian and Canadian delegations opposed it vigorously and refused to discuss it. Each of them emphasized that there was no solution except partition and that any attempt at conciliation was designed for procrastination and to gain time. The delegate of Columbia was ready to propose adjournment in order to give time to study the federal plan, but the American delegate requested him not to do so. On learning of this, I asked the Head of the Iranian delegation, Mr 'Adl, to ask for the adjournment, which he did. He submitted a proposal asking for adjournment long enough to study the Arab draft resolution. President Arania refused to submit the proposal for discussion or a vote. Faris al-Khouri went to the rostrum end criticized the manner in which the question was being treated and the spirit prevailing in pushing the partition plan through the United Nations. He said that the United Nations had not exerted any effort to bring about an agreed settlement.
President Arania went ahead and put the Resolution on the Partition of Palestine to the vote. The result was 13 states against, 33 for, and 10 abstentions.
Voting against partition were: Afghanistan, Cuba, Egypt, Greece, India, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey and Yemen.
Those voting for partition were: Australia, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Bylo-Russia, Canada, Costa Rica, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Equador, France, Guatemala, Haiti, Iceland, Liberia, Luxembourg, Holland, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Sweden, Ukrania, South Africa, the Soviet Union, the United States, Uruguay and Venezuela.
Those that abstained were: Argentine, Chili, Chine, Columbia, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Honduras, Mexico, the United Kingdom and Yugoslavia.
The delegate of Thailand absented himself.
After the result of the vote had been announced, Prince Faisal for Saudi Arabia, Zafrullah Khan for Pakistan, I myself for Iraq and Emir ‘Adil Arsalan for Syria, each went to the rostrum to deprecate the Resolution on Partition and to express bitter disappointment in the United Nations and to announce that the Arab states would not be bound by the Resolution which was unjust and unfair to Arab rights and contrary to the letter and spirit of the United Nations Charter. Then all the Arab delegations quit the Assembly in protest. Their departure created a sad and solemn atmosphere. Next the Arab delegations met and prepared a strong statement which was delivered to the press. The Arab delegations had tried actively to convince other delegations to vote against partition by appealing to logic, justice and law. Their efforts were successful with delegations who had a living conscience end an independent judgment. But some delegations were compelled to change their stand when they saw power end the material interests of their countries on the other side. We remember how the delegate of Haiti shed tears when he was forced to change his country's vote to one in favour of partition. We recall how General Romulo of the Philippines left the U.S.A, because of Zionist threats. Dr Arce of the Argentine, who had stood against partition, came to me and said that he was sorry that he had to abstain rather than to vote against partition, but this was the result of pressure on his government. These are a few of the several delegates who were forced to vote against their convictions.
Sometime
before the vote was taken I was talking
with Lester Pearson, then Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada and
later Prime
Minister. I said, "Mr Pearson, do you believe that the act of
partitioning
Palestine against the will of its inhabitants is an act dictated by
conscience
and law?" He answered me frankly, "Dr Jamali, politics doesn't know
conscience or law unless they are supported by power. As for us
today, we are
obliged to comply with the policy of the U.S.A. in what she decides on
Palestine." Thus Lester Pearson remained a strong supporter of Zionism,
not because of conscientious conviction or for legal reasons, but
because power
and political interests required it of him. The same held true
for the
representative of Czechoslovakia who also said that the legal aspect of
the
Palestine problem had been ignored and that the politics of the Great
Powers
decided the issue and that the U.S.A. had the last word in the matter
of
Palestine.
The Arabs owe a debt of gratitude to Ambassador Belt of Cuba who courageously and forcefully fought the resolution on the partition of Palestine on the basis of its being unjust, illegal and not conducive to peace in the Middle East. When, at the last minute, his government decided to change its position and vote partition he resigned his post rather then to follow his government's instructions and vote against his own conscience.
Arab Confrontation with Zionists at the United Nations
The Arab delegates had to enter into lengthy debates with other United Nations delegates privately or in the United Nations to refute Zionist claims. This is the Arab point of view:
The Arabs are not anti-Jewish, for the Jews have lived with them for centuries in peace and harmony. There is much in common between them racially, religiously and culturally. It is the invading, aggressive Zionism that they oppose and object to, for it is poisoning the atmosphere in the Middle East. Zionism is a reactionary, nationalistic movement. It is based on racial and religious discrimination and segregation by the Jews. In reality it represents neither race nor religion. The Jews of the world do not represent one race. They have mixed with several other human races" and they have assimilated non-Semitic peoples who were converted to Judaism. As for religion, not all Zionists practice Judaism. There are those who are laic, and there are those who are anti-religious atheists. There are also those Jews, a respectable group, who refuse to march under the Zionist banner. The non-Zionist or anti-Zionist Jews hold to their religion as a religion and do not mix it with nationalism. So Zionist nationalism based on race and religion is a myth. Furthermore, it is a reactionary myth because it tries to undermine Jewish loyalty in any country where it penetrates. It tries to inculcate amongst the Jews a new loyalty which alienates them from the mother country in which they live. It disunites humanity instead of uniting it. In this sense it is a reactionary movement.
As for Zionism being an aggressive movement, this hardly needs an explanation, for the Zionists invaded a country inhabited by its people and evacuated those people by force and, took their place. That is aggression in its worst form. The Zionists came to the United Nations using the following arguments:
Palestine has been the national home of the Jews for thousands of years, and the Jews dispersed allover the world, have never cut their spiritual relations with Palestine at any time.
The Arabs possess vast lands. Why should they not give up a small portion of their lands to the Zionists?
The Zionists developed Palestine and brought modern civilization to the Middle East.
Hitler persecuted the Jews and exterminated millions of them. After this persecution the Jews deserve to have a home of their own to which they can go.
The Arab delegations would answer as follows:
The whole of Palestine has never been the home of the Jews at any time in history. The Jews did rule over parts of Palestine for a period of about 400 years, but that was over 2000 years ago. As for the existence of a Jewish minority in Palestine throughout this period, this does not give the Jews who are outside Palestine any right to the country. What is to apply to Palestine should be a general rule made to apply to all human beings. If the people of the world today are to return to the homes of their forefathers of thousands of years ago, the whole map of the world would have to be revised today.
As for the argument that the Arabs possess vast lands, so does the U.S.A., so does Canada and China and Australia and Brazil, etc. Does the vastness of a country give others the right to come and occupy it? Here again there must be a general rule which is applicable to all the world. Nothing should be applied to Palestine which is not applicable to other lands as well.
As for the argument that the Zionists developed Palestine and introduced modern scientific methods in agriculture, health, etc., this is exactly the logic of the old European imperialism, and imperialism is what definitely characterizes Zionism in addition to reaction and aggression. What the Zionists did in Palestine in the way of development is no different from what the white colonialists did in Asia and Africa. It does not give them the right of domination. In their new renaissance the Arabs do not need Zionism, for the main sources of modern civilization are available to all mankind.
As for the cruelties of Hitler, they were directed toward all the enemies of Naziism, Jews and non-Jews alike. Granting, however, that Hit