Author/Authors :
Şerif Kaymaz, İhsan Department of History - Gazi University, Ankara, Turkey
Abstract :
In the aftermath of the First World War, Britain aimed to create an autonomous
Kurdish state – or states – in the northern Mesopotamia to be
governed under its protection. It therefore experimented with various
different methods between the years 1918 and 1920. All those attempts
were proven futile. Using mainly the British and Ottoman archival material,
it has been inquired how the British authorities had developed
the plan for Kurdistan, how they tried to implement it in the northern
Iraq (then the Mosul vilayet) and the southeastern Anatolia respectively,
and how they failed. The reasons for Britain’s failure had been
discussed. After the failure, new policy options had been given consideration
among which the debates on retreat came into prominence.
The diplomatic negotiation process between the allies and the legal arrangements
on Kurdistan that took pace in the Treaty of Sevres was of
a nature of keeping up appearances. The Kurdistan plan, though failed
in 1920s, gained ground in the following years as the international
conditions became more convenient. As the Kurdish problem has once
again become an issue of worldwide concern, it will be interesting to
see how the British government dealt with this complicated problem
when it first emerged, some ninety years ago
Keywords :
Britain , Kurdistan , Mosul Vilayet , Iraq , Turkey