Page 186 - Life of Gertrude Bell
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                    Gertrude arrived in India at the nadir of the allies’ fortunes in the
                    war. The appalling casualty lists from the Western and Russian
                    fronts and the tactical stalemate of the European campaigns gave
                    the public of the allied powers no hint of relief from their
                    sacrifices. Now the Dardanelles were closed and only the long
                    Arctic route to Russia remained open. The great hero of the
                    British public Lord Kitchener was in disgrace, having been told
                    that the new Chief of the General Staff Sir William Robertson
                    would henceforth have direct access to the Cabinet and War
                    Committee and that he, Kitchener, would have no further say in
                    strategic matters. Sir Henry McMahon carried on his negotiations
                    with the wily Sharif of Mecca in an effort to raise an Arab rebellion
                    in return for the stewardship of practically all Arabia and a sum
                    of £225,000 a month from Britain. In Mesopotamia, the capture
                    of Basra, the advance through marsh and swamp to Nasiriyah on
                    the Euphrates and Amara on the Tigris, and the capture of Kut-
                    al-Amara, the litde township in a bend of the Tigris about 300
                    miles from Basra, had provided the only comfort for Press and    i
                    public of the Allied Powers in 1915. The commander of the
                    assault on Kut, General Sir Charles V. F. Townshend, issued a
                    statement on September 28th, 1915 which said: ‘The battle of
                    Kut-al-Amara may be said to be one of the most important in the
                    history of the British army in India.’ There had, he said, been
                    ‘nothing of its magnitude either in the Afghan War or the
                    Mutiny’, for it was fought against troops ‘equally well armed and
                    of equal numbers to ourselves’. His remarks were reported glee­
                   fully and gratefully, and the high command began to entertain a
                   grander strategy in Mesopotamia. The Turks were in retreat.
                   Baghdad, showpiece of the second Arab Empire, a name which




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