|
T. E. Lawrence to B. H. Liddell Hart
Ozone Hotel,
Bridlington,
York. 28.XI.34 I found this today, digging
deep into the pile of slowly-rotting letters that await a reply: I fear
it is yours, and should have gone back long ago. I've not anything to say
about it. The 'trace' of the Hejaz Railway was drawn by Meissner, a
German Engineer. The technical staff (foremen and section men) were
mostly Greek and Italian.
Mustapha Kemal was a great patriot, and anti-foreign from
1913 onwards. His Nationalism was founded to combat the pro-German
tendency of Enver.
The Oil Company had (contrary to rumour) little or no
influence in deciding our policy towards Mesopotamia. I can say this
with complete assurance. I know foreigners are always smelling rats -
but in practice if you tell a F.O. man that 'Oil' wants this or that,
his reaction is to go dead contrary to their wishes, in the name of
honesty. I can truthfully say that neither Ll.G., nor Curzon, nor Bonar
Law, nor Arnold Wilson nor myself paid any heed to the Anglo-Persian or
the Imperial Petroleum Co. The British policy in Mesopotamia was decided
on purely Imperial lines.
P.S. I think the German Bagdad participation offers were
more onerous than advantageous to us.
 |