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Roots of the Middle East Conflict:
Palestine's Nakba in the Larger Arab Catastrophe
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 23, 2016
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Sykes-Picot Map of dividing
the Middle East between Britain and France, 1916 |
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On May 15th of every year, over the past 68 years, Palestinians have
commemorated their collective exile from Palestine. The ethnic cleansing of
Palestine to make room for a ‘Jewish homeland’ came at a price of
unrelenting violence and perpetual suffering. Palestinians refer to that
enduring experience as ‘Nakba’, or ‘Catastrophe’. However, the ‘Nakba’
is not merely a Palestinian experience; it is also an Arab wound that never
ceases from bleeding. The Arab ‘Nakba’ was namely the Sykes-Picot
Agreement, which divided much of the Arab world between competing Western
powers. A year later, Palestine was removed from the Arab equation
altogether and ‘promised’ to the Zionist movement in Europe, creating one of
the most protracted conflicts in modern human history. Despite all
attempts at separating the current conflict in Palestine from its larger
Arab environs, the two realities can never be delinked since they both go
back to the same historical roots. How Did This Come
about? When British diplomat, Mark Sykes, succumbed to
the Spanish flu pandemic at the age of 39, in 1919, another diplomat, Harold
Nicolson, described his influence on the Middle East region as follows:
"It was due to his endless push and perseverance, to his enthusiasm and
faith, that Arab nationalism and Zionism became two of the most successful
of our war causes." Retrospectively, we know that Nicolson spoke
too soon. The breed of ‘Arab nationalism’ he was referencing in 1919 was
fundamentally different from the nationalist movements that gripped several
Arab countries in the 1950s and 60s. The rallying cry for Arab nationalism
in those later years was liberation and sovereignty from Western colonialism
and their local allies. Sykes’ contribution to the rise of Zionism
did not promote much stability, either. The Zionist project transformed into
the State of Israel, itself established on the ruins of Palestine in 1948.
Since then, Zionism and Arab nationalism have been in constant conflict,
resulting in deplorable wars and seemingly perpetual blood-letting.
However, Sykes’ lasting contribution to the Arab region was his major role
in the signing of the Sykes-Picot Agreement, also known as the Asia Minor
Agreement, one hundred years ago. That infamous treaty between Britain and
France, which was negotiated with the consent of Russia, has shaped the
Middle East’s geopolitics for an entire century. Throughout the
years, challenges to the status quo imposed by Sykes-Picot failed to
fundamentally alter its arbitrarily-sketched borders, which divided the
Arabs into ‘spheres of influence’ to be administered and controlled by
Western powers. Yet, with the recent rise of ‘Daesh’ and the
establishment of its own version of equally arbitrary borders encompassing
large swathes of Syria and Iraq as of 2014, combined with the current
discussion of dividing Syria into a federation, Sykes-Picot’s persisting
legacy could possibly be dithering under the pressures of new, violent
circumstances. Why Sykes-Picot?
Sykes-Picot was signed as a result of violent circumstances that gripped
much of Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East at the time. It
all started when World War I broke out in July 1914. At the time, major
European powers fell into two camps: the Allies - consisting mainly of
Britain, France and Russia - vs. the Central Powers - Germany and
Austria-Hungary. The Ottoman Empire soon joined the war, siding
with Germany, partly because it was aware that the Allies’ ambitions sought
to control all Ottoman territories, which included the Arab regions of
Syria, Mesopotamia, Arabia, Egypt and North Africa. In March 1915
- Britain signed a secret agreement with Russia, which would allow the
latter to annex the Ottoman capital and seize control of other strategic
regions and waterways. A few months later, in November 1915 -
Britain and France began negotiations in earnest, aimed at dividing the
territorial inheritance of the Ottoman Empire should the war conclude in
their favor. Russia was made aware of the agreement, and assented to
its provisions. Thus, a map that was marked with straight lines
with the use of a Chinagraph pencil largely determined the fate of the
Arabs, dividing them in accordance with various haphazard assumptions of
tribal and sectarian lines. Dividing the Loot
Negotiating on behalf of Britain was Mark Sykes, and representing
France was François Georges-Picot. The diplomats resolved that, once the
Ottomans were soundly defeated, France would receive areas marked (a), which
include the region of south-eastern Turkey, northern Iraq - including Mosel,
most of Syria and Lebanon. Area (b) was marked as
British-controlled territories, which included Jordan, southern Iraq, Haifa
and Acre in Palestine and the coastal strip between the Mediterranean Sea
and the River Jordan. Russia, on the other hand, would be granted
Istanbul, Armenia and the strategic Turkish Straits. The
improvised map consisted not only of lines but also colors, along with
language that attested to the fact that the two countries viewed the Arab
region on purely materialistic terms, without paying the slightest attention
to the possible repercussions of slicing up entire civilizations with a
multifarious history of co-operation and conflict. The Sykes-Picot
negotiations concluded in March 1916 and was official, although it was
secretly signed on May 19, 1916. Legacy of Betrayal
WWI concluded on November 11, 1918, after which the division of the
Ottoman Empire began in earnest. British and French mandates were
extended over divided Arab entities, while Palestine was granted to the
Zionist movement over which a Jewish state was established, three decades
later. The agreement, which was thoroughly designed to meet
Western colonial interests, left behind a legacy of division, turmoil and
war. While the status quo it has created guaranteed the hegemony
of Western countries over the fate of the Middle East, it failed to
guarantee any degree of political stability or engender economic equality.
The Sykes-Picot Agreement took place in secret for a specific reason:
it stood at complete odds with promises made to the Arabs during the Great
War. The Arab leadership, under the command of Sharif Hussein, was promised
complete independence following the war, in exchange for supporting the
Allies against the Ottomans. It took many years and successive
rebellions for Arab countries to gain their independence. Conflict between
the Arabs and colonial powers resulted in the rise of Arab nationalism,
which was born in the midst of extremely violent and hostile environments,
or more accurately, as an outcome of them. Arab nationalism may
have succeeded in maintaining a semblance of an Arab identity but failed to
develop a sustainable and unified retort to Western colonialism.
When Palestine - which was promised by Britain as a national home for the
Jews as early as November 1917 – became Israel, hosting mostly Europeans
settlers, the fate of the Arab region east of the Mediterranean was sealed
as the ground for perpetual conflict and antagonism. It is here,
in particular, that the terrible legacy of the Sykes-Picot Agreement is
mostly felt, in all of its violence, shortsightedness and political
unscrupulousness. 100 years after two British and French diplomats
divided the Arabs into spheres of influence, the Sykes-Picot Agreement
remains a pugnacious but dominant reality of the Middle East. Five
years after Syria descended into a violent civil war, the mark of
Sykes-Picot are once more being felt as France, Britain, Russia - and now
the United States - are considering what US Secretary of State, John Kerry,
recently termed ‘Plan B’ – dividing Syria based on sectarian lines, likely
in accordance with a new Western interpretation of ‘spheres of influence.’
The Sykes-Picot map might have been a crude vision drawn hastily during
a global war but, since then, it has become the main frame of reference that
the West uses to redraw the Arab world, and to “control (it) as they desire
and as they may see fit.” The Palestinian ‘Nakba’, therefore, must
be understood as part and parcel of the larger western designs in the Middle
East dating back a century, when the Arabs were (and remain) divided and
Palestine was (and remains) conquered. – Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been
writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of
several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books include
‘Searching Jenin’, ‘The Second Palestinian Intifada’ and his latest ‘My
Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story’. His website is: www.ramzybaroud.net.
***
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