A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U-V W X-Z
1888-1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915-16
1917-18
1919-20
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
no date

union index
to letters recently published and the 1922 'Oxford' text of
Seven Pillars of Wisdom


Home


telawrence.info

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.

 

 
 
Source: DG 830-31
Checked: jw/
Last revised: 7 February 2006

T.E. Lawrence Studies is edited by Jeremy Wilson. Its costs are sponsored by Castle Hill Press.