Page 153 - Mastermind: The Truth of the British Deep State Revealed
P. 153

Adnan Harun Yahya



                            British author David Garnett, who wrote a biography of Lawrence, says

                        that he was an arrogant person with a victim complex. According to Richard
                                                                                 66
                        Aldington, Lawrence had 'pretentious egotism', was 'faked, boastful' and a 'ho-

                        mosexual'. In other words, Lawrence displayed the typical characteristics of
                                   67
                        the British deep state members.


                            At this point, it is important to remember that the British deep state takes
                        care to choose homosexuals to do its bidding and especially for risky missions.

                            Born on August 16, 1888, in Tremadog, Wales as an illegitimate child,

                        Lawrence began to take an interest in Arabs in 1909. Two years later he went
                        to Tripoli for excavations, and began to live with the Arab tribes, dressing and

                        acting like them. Despite his fascination with the Arabs, Lawrence harbored
                        an immense hatred for the Turks. In a letter he sent to Ms. Reider in Oxford

                        on April 5, 1913, he told of his dislike of them:


                            As for Turkey, down with the Turks! But I am afraid there is, not life, but
                            stickiness in them yet. Their disappearance would mean a chance for the

                            Arabs, who were at any rate once not incapable of good government.  68

                            In another letter he sent to Ms. Reider on September 18, 1914, he voiced

                        his thoughts on the prospect of Turks entering the war:


                            I have a horrible fear that the Turks do not intend to go to war, for it would
                            be an improvement to have them reduced to Asia Minor, and put it into com-

                            mission even there. 69

                            After WWI broke out, Lawrence was stationed at the British intelligence

                        office in Cairo as a lieutenant in December 1914. He would interrogate the
                        prisoners of war, draw maps, assess the intelligence reported by agents oper-

                        ating beyond the Turkish lines and build strategies with the input of the Arabs
                        in a bid to destroy the Ottoman Empire.

                            He later took over the 'Arab Bureau' newly set up in Cairo. His unbri-

                        dled Turkish hatred could not be contained and would show itself on many

                        occasions, including in a letter he sent to his archeologist friend D. G. Hog-
                        arth on April 20, 1915:
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