My last review was rather negative and since I try to maintain a net positive trend, let's look at a winner. "The Last Ottoman Generation" (2017) by Michael Provence gives us an intriguing look not only at what happened in the last days of the Ottoman Empire and first days of the French and British mandates in the eastern Arab world, but hints at what could have happened. Not least among the possibilities that failed to come to fruition in this period would have been nationalisms or patriotisms not based on the geo-political lines sketched out by Picot and Sykes during WWI. In other words, there could have been advocacy of some kind of continuing ties to what was going to become Turkey; there could have been a stronger movement towards pan-Arabism, seen in the post-1950s world in the pronouncements of President Nasser, and in the Baath Party (the latter came to power in Syria and Iraq). Or there could have been stronger intra-regional groupings. None of these possibilities were realized.
In the period 1918-1940, when embryonic national movements were forming, there was no lack of bold Arab leaders, such as Yassin al-Hashimi in Iraq, and Fawzi al-Qawuqi in Syria. These were usually the products of Ottoman military training and academies, but these individuals were also capable of envisioning futures without an Ottoman sultan, or without Turkey at all. To put it another way, these individuals had one foot in the Ottoman age, and another in the modern age. Their influence has been little studied.
As usual, however, the French and British new arrivals had the technological edge: advanced weapons; in Iraq, air-power; and better-trained troops. On the French side, they were particularly good at dividing up and confusing the loyalties between Druze, Christian, Sunni and Shia groups in Lebanon and Syria, which facilitated their control. Viewers of the loved film "Lawrence of Arabia" (1962) will recall that at one point T.E. Lawrence was an advisor (though not a leading figure, of course) of the Arab Provisional Government in Damascus--thus pitting him against the very western allies he was representing. This speaks to the confusion of that immediate post-WWI age.
Citizens in our contemporary age frequently fall into the "logical fallacy of inevitability:" believing things were destined to turn out the way they did. This book shows us persuasively that events could have gone any number of other ways.
Outstanding work from this member of the faculty at UC San Diego.
Enjoy.