Page 216 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
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                                        GERTRUDE BELL
                   The Viceroy was delighted to pass on this glowing tribute to
                  Gertrude’s work, but he was no more persuaded of the good of
                  the Bureau s work under Wingate than his predecessor had been
                  when McMahon was the unsuspecting instrument of Kitchener’s
                  and the Foreign Office’s policies. One notion of which the Vice­
                  roy was uncomfortably aware was the desire of the Bureau to
                  obtain the release from confinement in India of the prominent
                  Basra citizen Sayid Talib, whom Cox had sent away at the begin­
                  ning of the war. The Foreign Office had been warned before the
                  outbreak of war that this man was a ‘rogue’ and ‘murderer’ who
                  was  in the pay of the Turks though he was prepared to sell his
                  services to either side. In March 1916, while he was in Basra,
                  Lawrence received an unsigned letter from a member of the
                  Bureau which read: ‘The Colonel has asked me to put you an fait
                  with the situation as it stands ... The only difficulty that has been
                  encountered so far is the refusal of the Indian Government to
                  send Talib to Basra. However, we wrote a pretty strong telegram
                  yesterday practically that Talib’s co-operation was essential and
                  added that at least he might be allowed to come to Cairo ... When
                  Talib is in Cairo we shall work him into a good humour and then
                  write the WO saying that we have seen him and we think he is
                  quite safe and hope in this way to get him off as No. 3 party ...
                  General MacMunn is going out as I.G.C. to Basra. We have had a
                  talk with him and he has promised you all die support possible.
                  He knows all about you ... The most important thing of all (at all
                  events when we are getdng into touch and buying people and so
                  on) will be cash. Finally, the WO have asked us for the names of,
                  and given permission for the going to Basra of any Turkish,
                  Arab and Kurd officers at present in India who wish to co-operate
                  with us ...9 It was not die kind of letter to insdl confidence in
                  the Indian Government or in Cox. It seems that the scheme at
                  that time was to appoint Talib in the place of Farouki, the go-
                  between in the Sharif negotiations, and send him with Nuri Said
                  an  ex-Turkish officer then working with the Bureau, and with
                  Storrs’s friend and Enver Pasha’s rival for the leadership of the
                  Young Turks, Aziz al Masri, to complete the negotiations with
                  the Sharif. In an outgoing letter at the same time, Lawrence had
                  written to Mark Sykes: ‘Indian interests are secondary ... He
                  [Cox] thinks that Lord Hardinge is very sound ... Cox is entirely
                  ignorant of Arab societies and of Turkish politics ...
                    Now, after the taking of Baghdad, the Indian Government was
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