Page 259 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)_Neat
P. 259

FAISAL’S KINGDOM                   *35
        —I was glad to see him. We retired at once to my bedroom ... and
        had an hour’s talk, after which I had a long talk with Clementine
        [Churchill] while Sir Percy was cosseted with Mr Churchill. A.T.
       is herd — not at the Conference but as Managing Director of the
       Anglo-Pcrsian Oil Company. We had a cordial meeting but I’ve
       not seen him to talk to and don’t much want to.’ The main deci­
       sions of the Conference amounted to a nearly complete affirmation
        of Britain’s war-time promises to Husain of Mecca. Faisal was
       invited to proceed to Baghdad as a candidate for the throne of
       Iraq, and his brother Abdullah, who had already declared himself
       King of Iraq and who was conveniently in Jerusalem when
       Churchill went on there, was invited to become sovereign of the
       artificially created state of Transjordan. ‘Faisal,’ said Churchill,
       ‘was an ideal candidate.’ He had ‘very special qualifications for
       the post... Fie had himself fought gallantly on our side and had
       taken part in the various exploits of desert warfare with which the
       name of Colonel Lawrence will always be associated.’
          Gertrude described the conference to Frank Balfour who had
       left his job as Military Governor of Baghdad to marry and was
       now in England:
          My beloved Frank, I’ll tell you about our Conference. It has
          been wonderful. We covered more work in a fortnight than
          has ever been got through in a year. Mr Churchill was admir­
          able, most ready to meet everyone halfway and masterly alike
          in guiding a big political meeting and in conducting the small
          committees into which we broke up. Not die least favourable
          circumstance was that Sir Percy and I, coming out with a
          definite programme, found when we came to open our packet
          that it coincided exactly with that which the Secretary of State
          had brought with him. We are now going back to Baghdad to
          square the Naqib and to convince Sayid Talib, if he is con-
          vincible, that his hopes are doomed to disappointment...
        She returned after a brief holiday in Egypt with her father and the
       taking of a photograph with Churchill, Clementine and Lawrence
        on camels in the shade of the Pyramids, the occasion on which
        the Secretary of State fell from his steed to provide the world
       with its most vivid picture of the Cairo gathering. The first of the
       ‘Politicals’ encountered by Gertrude on arriving back in Iraq was
       Ronald Wingate and she greeted him with the words: ‘We’ve
       pulled it off!’ She proceeded to tell him that Churchill had agreed
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