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Nov. 20, 2008
MEIR ZAMIR , THE JERUSALEM POST
On February 18, 1948, representatives of a
Swiss company met secretly with Egyptian and Jordanian
envoys in the office of Hector McNeill, the British minister
of state for foreign affairs, to finalize the details of a
$140 million arms deal. Considering the price of arms at the
time, this was a major deal which, had it gone through,
would have completely changed the military balance between
the Arab states and the yet-to-be-established State of
Israel. It was presented as a contract between the Swiss
company Friedli and Kauffmann (Oerlikon) and the government
of Ethiopia, but the true destinations of the arms were
Egypt, Jordan and other Arab states.
The British Foreign Office, which mediated
the deal, maintained the utmost secrecy, as its involvement
contravened the UN resolution on partition and flouted the
appeal by the UN Security Council for an embargo on arms
sales to either Arabs or Jews. The United States, which was
one of the first to comply with the UN embargo, would have
undoubtedly reacted strongly if it had learned of Britain's
double game.
Information on the "Swiss-Ethiopian" arms
sale reached French Intelligence via the Jewish Agency.
French agents subsequently followed the Swiss company's
representatives on their travels between Geneva, London and
Cairo and eavesdropped on their telephone conversations. The
deal fell through, however, after the Swiss government
learned the true destination of the arms and the Ethiopian
government refused to comply so as not to re-export the arms
to a third country. (On February 2, shots were fired at the
Ethiopian consul general's car in Jerusalem.)
Documents on the deal, as well as on the
shadow war that was going on at the time between the
Hagana's secret service together with the French on the one
hand, and the British on the other, were revealed during
research conducted recently in archives in France. One major
finding was that the French Intelligence had planted an
agent in the Syrian Foreign Ministry who, from 1944 to 1949,
provided it with copies of hundreds of original documents on
Syria's foreign relations.
The French received copies of top-secret
correspondence between the Syrian president, Shukri
al-Quwatly, and the British, as well as Arab leaders,
including King Farouk of Egypt, King Ibn-Saud of Saudi
Arabia, King Abdullah of Jordan and the Iraqi regent, Abd
al-Ilah. They also received copies of telegrams from the
Syrian embassies in London, Washington, Moscow, Paris and
Arab capitals to the Foreign Ministry in Damascus.
From the documents of the secret
British-Syrian correspondence, it can be concluded that
Charles de Gaulle's accusations that Britain had
deliberately engineered the crisis in Syria in the summer of
1945 to oust France from its mandate states of Syria and
Lebanon was indeed justified. On May 29, with his capital
under fire from the French forces, Quwatly had no choice but
to sign a secret agreement with the British government
according it a privileged military and economic status in
Syria. Only then did the British army take action against
the French.
French Intelligence also placed a mole in
the British Legation in Beirut, which had become a center
for British political and intelligence activities in the
Middle East after World War II. The agent passed on copies
of top-secret documents on British intelligence operations
in the region, including names of agents, copies of receipts
for bribery payments to Arab leaders and secret agreements
by various Arab politicians to undertake to collaborate with
the British.
For example, Mohsen al-Barazi, the Syrian
president's private secretary, was a British agent who later
became foreign minister and prime minister. He was handled
by Walter Stirling, who operated in Damascus from 1946-1949
under the guise of a journalist for The Times of
London. In November 1949 Stirling was shot by an unknown
assailant in Damascus and severely wounded. Another informer
was Ibn Saud's private doctor, who was handled by William
Smart, a diplomat in the British Embassy in Cairo. The
information received gave the French ample opportunity to
blackmail Arab politicians and force them to collaborate
with them.
The British Legation in Beirut was also
the target of a joint operation by the Hagana (The Jewish
Agency Defense Force) and French Intelligence. On December
15, 1947, about 20 Hagana fighters seized a British truck
north of Acre carrying half a ton of documents from the
British Legation in Beirut's archives and 12 sacks of
diplomatic mail en route to Haifa Port and from there to
England. The documents were returned to the British only
after being thoroughly examined by the Hagana and a French
intelligence officer who was dispatched to Tel Aviv.
SYRIAN AND British documents in the French
archives provide a rare glimpse of the modus operandi of the
British diplomats and intelligence officers in the Middle
East, which is seldom seen in the British archives. After
the war, British intelligence formed a chain of agents and
informers around each of the Arab kings or presidents,
including their trusted allies, the Hashemite sovereigns in
Iraq and Jordan. For instance, copies of private letters
from Jordanian Crown Prince Talal to his father King
Abdullah, and from the latter to his nephew, the Iraqi
regent Abd al-Ilah, reached the British Legation in Beirut,
and subsequently French Intelligence.
The British exerted considerable influence
behind the scenes in Arab politics after securing the secret
collaboration of prominent Arab nationalist leaders such as
Quwatly, his prime minister Jamil Mardam, the Lebanese prime
minister Riyad al-Sulh, as well as Abd al-Rahman Azzam, the
secretary-general of the Arab League. The British often
acted indirectly in the highly-divided Arab world,
particularly in the Jewish-Arab conflict in Palestine in
1947-1948, using their allies to conceal their involvement.
For example, in July 1947, following a British request,
Quwatly wrote to King Farouk of Egypt warning him not to
collaborate with France as it was supporting the Zionists.
Sulh and Azzam were to play key roles in
British covert activities in Palestine during the critical
months between the UN partition resolution on November 29,
1947, and the establishment of the State of Israel on May
14, 1948. At the end of April and in early May 1948, Sulh
mediated in an agreement between Jordan and Iraq on the one
hand and Egypt on the other, on the invasion of the Jewish
state. Azzam, who, according to French and Egyptian sources,
was being bribed by the British, worked closely with
Brigadier Iltyd Clayton, a shadowy personality. Clayton was
officially a liaison officer to the Arab League, but behind
the scenes he wielded considerable influence on British
policy in the Middle East after the war. Azzam was
instrumental in shaping the Arab policy in Palestine as the
Arab League, in the absence of a Palestinian government,
represented the Palestinian cause.
BRITAIN'S ROLE in the Arab-Jewish conflict
in Palestine in 1948 is still a subject of controversy among
historians. In the 1980s, the release of documents in
British archives did not dispel the controversy - on the
contrary, it provoked even more. However, the documents in
French archives reveal that in 1948, the British employed
tactics against the Zionists similar to those they had used
so successfully against the French in Syria and Lebanon
three years previously. In both cases, the official policy
of the cabinet in London was contradicted by the actions of
the British diplomats and military and intelligence officers
in the region. Whereas in London foreign minister Ernest
Bevin was declaring Britain's intent to end its mandate in
Palestine and maintain neutrality in the conflict between
the Arabs and the Jews, in the Middle East, British
officials openly supported the Arabs and sought to prevent
the establishment of the Jewish state.
Until now, historians have failed to find
conclusive evidence in British archives either validating de
Gaulle's accusations of a British conspiracy against France
in Syria and Lebanon, or David Ben-Gurion's charges that the
British strove to prevent the establishment of a Jewish
state. (Apparently, the British are extremely efficient when
it comes to concealing their dirty deeds.)
In 1947-1948, Britain's most pressing
agenda in the Middle East was to conclude defense treaties
with Arab states to secure its strategic position and
economic interests (oil) in the region in face of the
growing Soviet threat. The documents in the French archives
attest to Britain's cynical use of the "communist" and
"Zionist" cards to persuade reluctant Arab leaders - who
were under pressure from their anti-British nationalist
public - to realign themselves with the British Empire.
British diplomats intentionally fanned fears of a third
world war, in which the Middle East would become a
battleground. Arab communist parties, they warned, were
acting on Moscow's instructions to undermine the Arab
regimes, just like the Soviet Union was doing in Eastern
Europe.
From early 1948, British officials
increasingly equated Zionism with communism. They warned
that a Jewish state would become a center of communist
influence, disrupting the social and economic order in the
region. As the Cold War in Europe escalated, such claims had
considerable impact even in the State Department and the
Department of Defense in Washington.
British officials voiced these arguments
at a meeting with their French counterparts in Paris in
mid-February. They explained the dilemma facing their
government in Palestine: Support for partition and the
subsequent establishment of a Jewish state would turn the
Arab world against Britain, while British endorsement of the
Arab position would lead to a confrontation with the United
States. (The UN resolution also envisaged a Palestinian
state.) The main goal of the British policy at that time was
indeed to solve this dilemma by persuading the US to realign
its policy in the Middle East with that of Britain.
In an attempt to dissuade the French from
supporting the Zionists, British diplomats repeatedly warned
French officials of the dangers in a Jewish state becoming a
center for communism in the Middle East. While admitting
that Ben-Gurion was not pro-communist, they cautioned that
he might be ousted by parties on the Left, whose influence
in the Hagana was growing. Another argument used effectively
by the British in their psychological warfare was that the
Lehi - the anti-British Jewish underground group - had been
infiltrated by Soviet agents.
IN THE aftermath of the UN partition
resolution, the French identified two approaches toward the
crisis in Palestine among British officials in the Middle
East, which they termed the "Clayton" and "Glubb"
approaches. The first argued that Britain should rely on an
Iraqi-Syrian axis, forgoing the plan for a Greater Syria
(comprising Syria, Jordan, Palestine and Lebanon, under
Abdullah), which was putting Britain in direct confrontation
with Egypt, Syria and Saudi Arabia.
It advocated dividing up Palestine and
using its various parts to coerce the Arab leaders into
acquiescing in a defense alliance with Britain. Syria would
receive Galilee; Iraq would gain access to the port of
Haifa, where the pipelines of the Iraqi Oil Company
terminated and a refinery was located; Jordan would receive
the region known today as the West Bank and most parts of
the Negev; Egypt would get the adjacent Palestinian region
on the Mediterranean coast.
The Glubb approach, named after John Bagot
Glubb, the British commander of the Jordanian Arab Legion,
argued that Britain should rely primarily on King Abdullah
of Jordan and continue to promote the Greater Syria plan.
Most of Palestine, therefore, would be incorporated into
Jordan. In fact, both approaches envisaged either a Jewish
autonomous entity within a greater Jordan, or a smaller
Jewish state on the coast between Atlit (south of Haifa) and
Tel Aviv that would clearly be unviable and would not
endanger British or Arab interests.
Iraq's refusal to ratify its treaty with
Britain in January 1948, after the regent, Abd al-Ilah, had
to retreat in the face of large public demonstrations that
led to hundreds of casualties, bolstered the Jordanian
option. In February, the Jordanian prime minister traveled
to London with Glubb, where he concluded a new
Anglo-Jordanian treaty. But the Clayton formula was not dead
yet. It was to be revived in the following months.
The failure of British efforts to convince
the Iraqi regent to ratify the Anglo-Iraqi treaty, which was
intended to serve as a precedent for treaties with other
Arab countries, intensified the use the British made of the
Zionist card. French reports describe in detail the
repercussions of their failure in Iraq on British policy in
Palestine. Ben-Gurion, who was kept well-informed by his top
adviser on Arab affairs, Eliahu (Elias) Sasson, wrote in his
war diary on March 7: "Clayton went to Syria - the British
want to make Syria their base after failing in Iraq and
Egypt. The situation in the Arab world is difficult - riots
in Iraq and Britain is trying to concentrate Arab thoughts
on Palestine."
Ben-Gurion, head of the Jewish Agency, and
Moshe Sharett (Shertok), head of its Political Department,
were well aware of the British double game. They were both
receiving information not only from the Hagana's secret
service, but also directly from the French. The information
provided by the French in 1948, including from their agent
in Damascus, was crucial for the two Zionist leaders in
uncovering Britain's and the Arabs' secret plans in
Palestine.
Clandestine Franco-Zionist collaboration,
which began under General de Gaulle in the summer of 1945,
became institutionalized and intimate under the Fourth
Republic. A French memorandum on the eve of Sharett's visit
to Paris in April 1946 to conclude a secret agreement
defined the areas of possible collaboration with the Zionist
movement, as follows: "The envisaged collaboration could
operate in a very wide framework. It would be enough if
there was an agreement in principle, upheld by a discrete
connection, exchange of information and, at regular
intervals, joint decisions on certain points of the policy
to be followed. The object of this partnership, the Lebanese
Christian, could be completely unaware of the understanding
between his protectors.
It is clear that the Franco-Zionist
collaboration could intervene in many other places besides
the Levant, without ever being exposed: study of the
development of political, social, cultural and economic
trends in the Middle East, North African policy or
international propaganda."
The memorandum reveals that one of the
main goals of France's secret collaboration with the
Zionists was protection of the Christians in Lebanon. In
fact, in May 1946, the French were secretly involved in
promoting an agreement between the Jewish Agency and the
Maronite Church. The French were also involved behind the
scenes in an agreement concluded that year between the
Jewish Agency and the Egyptian prime minister, Ismail Sidqi,
on a two-state solution in Palestine.
THE FRANCO-ZIONIST collaboration was based
on shared interests. Apart from taking vengeance on the
British for their role in expelling them from Syria and
Lebanon, the French were extremely concerned about British
subversion in North Africa. Syrian Foreign Ministry
documents reveal that British officials in Cairo were
directly involved in undermining France's position in North
Africa and even pressed Arab leaders to act against the
French there. Arab League secretary-general Azzam
collaborated closely with Clayton in these activities. When
French officials complained at their meeting with the
British in mid-February 1948 about Clayton's subversive
activities in French North Africa, the British response was
evasive.
It is understandable, therefore, that in
discussions in French military circles on whether France
should support the establishment of a Jewish state, it was
argued that an Arab victory in Palestine would strengthen
Syria, the center of anti-French activity, as well as the
Arab League, and threaten France's position in North Africa.
For its part, an alliance with France was
essential for the Zionist movement, as it would facilitate
illegal immigration and the purchase of arms, and help in
the propaganda campaign, as it had in the Exodus
affair.
The French, however, were extremely
anxious to conceal their collaboration with the Jewish
Agency in clandestine activities. France, which was
undergoing acute political and economic crises and
desperately needed Britain's support to regain its position
as a great power, could not afford to antagonize the British
by openly collaborating with the Zionists. Moreover, the
French feared a reaction in the Arab world, where they still
had considerable political, economic and cultural interests,
as well as among the Muslims in North Africa, if their
support of the Jewish cause was revealed.
The French Intelligence Service took
extraordinary steps not to endanger its agent in Damascus
and was extremely cautious with the information it relayed
to the head of the Jewish Agency. Only a handful of people
in the Jewish Agency were involved in the clandestine
collaboration with the French, and even fewer were aware of
the true source of the information on the Arab and British
secret plans provided by the French. So far, it has been
possible to establish that only Ben-Gurion; Sharett; Reuven
Shiloah (Zaslany), Ben-Gurion's chief intelligence adviser;
Eliahu Sasson, Ben-Gurion's top adviser on Arab affairs;
Morris Fischer, the Jewish Agency representative in Paris
(who was formerly an intelligence officer in de Gaulle's
Free France in Syria and Lebanon); Tuvia Arazi, head of the
Hagana's secret service in Haifa; and Eliahu Epstein
(Elath), who served in the Jewish Agency's office in the US,
were involved.
Sasson, head of the Arab Section in the
Political Department of the Jewish Agency, was a key player
in this secret collaboration with the French from 1946-1949.
Intelligence information from the French was relayed mainly
through him directly to Ben-Gurion during the critical
months from December 1947 until May 1948. Born in Damascus,
Sasson, who joined the Jewish Agency in 1933, was an entire
intelligence organization in himself. His role in the
establishment of the State of Israel is yet to be revealed,
as these activities were conducted in utmost secrecy.
Reports by French officers of their
meetings with him provide only a glimpse of his clandestine
activities. He had intimate knowledge of the complex Arab
arena and knew personally many of the Arab leaders. It was
no coincidence that among Ben-Gurion's advisers on Arab
affairs, he was the only one who warned early on that the
Arab states would go to war and that King Abdullah, caught
in a British snare, would be unable to conclude an agreement
with the Jewish Agency on the partition of Palestine.
Sasson stayed in besieged Jerusalem until
April 1948 to maintain his contacts with the French
consulate, through which information arrived from Beirut and
Paris. Only when the consulate came under constant Arab
fire, which disrupted its operations, did he move to Tel
Aviv. In fact, the French were convinced that the British
had an inkling of what was going on and were behind the
shelling of their compound, which continued throughout the
war. In early May, Sasson traveled to Paris, where he had
direct access to intelligence information acquired by the
French from their agents in the Middle East. He remained
there until 1949, renewing his contacts with Arab officials.
He was also involved in the cease-fire negotiations in
Rhodes.
IN DISCUSSIONS with their French
counterparts in February and March 1948, British diplomats
were confident that the US would withdraw its support for a
Jewish state in light of the Arabs' violent resistance and
military successes. Britain, they argued, would again be
asked to play a central role in Palestine. On one occasion,
a British diplomat remarked that the besieged Jewish city of
Jerusalem, whose 100,000 inhabitants lacked food and water,
might surrender to the Arabs, forcing Ben-Gurion to resign.
He might be replaced by a more moderate leader such as
Yehuda Magnes, president of the Hebrew University, who would
accept a compromise solution such as a binational state.
British and Arab expectations were
reinforced by growing opposition to the UN partition
resolution in the US State Department and Department of
Defense. But their hopes were dashed in April, after the
Hagana's counterattack and the occupation of the mixed towns
of Tiberias, Safed, Jaffa, Acre and Haifa. This was a clear
message to the Arab states, Britain, the United States and
the UN that the Jews in Palestine were determined to win the
war and establish their own independent sovereign state.
As tens of thousands of Palestinian
refugees streamed across their borders and public demands
for immediate military intervention intensified, the Arab
leaders were trapped between the expectations raised by
their declarations of an imminent victory and the
realization that their countries were ill prepared for an
all-out confrontation. Egyptian army commanders warned King
Farouk that they lacked sufficient arms and ammunition for a
war in Palestine, while the Lebanese premier, Sulh, later
admitted: "If the Jews want to take Beirut, they can take it
with no difficulty."
In these critical weeks at the end of
April and early May, Britain was to make its most
underhanded move in its entire controversial policy in
Palestine, when it deliberately manipulated and urged the
Arab leaders to go to war against the Jewish state.
Asked by a French officer on his country's
stand on a possible all-out confrontation between the Jews
and the Arab states, a high-ranking British officer
responded that Britain would not necessarily see such a
conflict as a bad thing. An Arab victory would strengthen
Britain's influence and prestige in the Arab world, while a
defeat would weaken the Arab states, whose leaders would be
have to turn to Britain for support.
Such views were prevalent at the time
among many British officials in both the Middle East and the
Foreign Office. Arab officials made similar charges. For
example, after Golda Meir's meeting with King Abdullah on
May 11, in the Jewish Agency's last attempt to persuade the
Jordanian sovereign not to go to war, Muhammad al-Zubati,
his private secretary, told Ezra Danin, who accompanied Meir
as a translator, that "it was the British who were pushing
him [the king] and involving the Iraqis too, because the
Iraqis had refused to sign a treaty and the British
therefore wanted to send them to the front so that they
would be beaten and brought to their knees."
In fact, before the Arab invasion, the
British army command was confident that the Jewish defense
forces, exhausted by more than five months of civil war,
would be unable to withstand an all-out offensive by the
Arab states' regular armies. The British nevertheless wanted
to ensure an Arab victory.
SHORTLY AFTER the Arab forces invaded the
newly established State of Israel, the French ambassador and
the military attaché in Cairo reported that King Farouk
decided to take part in the invasion only after receiving
assurances from the British that they would secretly provide
arms and ammunition to the Egyptian army from their depots
in the Suez Canal zone. They also reported that Azzam was
instrumental in persuading the king and his reluctant prime
minister, Mahmud Fahmi al-Nuqrashi, to change their stand.
French diplomats in Cairo also reported that British
officers stationed in Libya were helping volunteers from
French North Africa to join the war in Palestine. The French
documents seen so far do not clarify what the British
officials in Cairo promised Farouk to obtain his agreement
to go to war.
An intelligence report prepared by the
French military attaché in Beirut on May 11 sheds new light
on direct British involvement in the war in Palestine. The
report, which was clearly based on inside information,
reveals details of the discussions in the Arab League's
political and military committees convened in Damascus on
the eve of the invasion. For the first time, we have
confirmation of British intervention in the planning of the
Arab invasion, including the last-minute change of the
commander of the joint Arab forces.
The report highlights the Arab leaders'
hesitation to go to war and confirms that most of them were
willing to endorse the last-minute American initiative to
delay the British evacuation by 10 days in order to continue
diplomatic efforts to prevent an all-out war. It reveals
that the Arab leaders were willing to agree to this
initiative, but were forced to fall in line with Abdullah's
decision to go to war. The British government, in fact,
which had not only rejected the American appeal but had
brought forward the evacuation of its troops from Palestine
to May 14, was behind Abdullah's stand.
French documents reinforce allegations
made by Israeli leaders at the time that Britain had left
little choice for Abdullah but to go to war. Indeed, the
attack of the Arab Legion on the four Jewish settlements of
the Etzion Bloc south of Jerusalem on the morning of May 12,
upon the instructions of its British commander, Glubb Pasha,
had a clear political motive: to demonstrate the Legion's
military superiority to the wavering Arab leaders, including
Abdullah himself. (Scores of the settlers who had
surrendered were murdered and 320 of the survivors were
taken as prisoners of war to Amman the following day.)
The French attache's report explains the
last-minute change in the command of the Arab forces and its
invasion plan. The original plan had called for the
occupation of Haifa by joint Iraqi-Jordanian forces and for
the Syrian forces to invade Galilee from Bint Jbail in
Lebanon. In the revised plan, Tel Aviv was the main target
and was to be attacked by the Egyptian army from the south.
The Jordanian Arab Legion was to renew the siege on Jewish
Jerusalem and advance westwards on Tel Aviv through the Arab
cities of Lydda and Ramle.
The Iraqi and Syrian forces were given a
secondary role. The Syrian brigade, which was already in
Nabatiyeh, near Bint Jbail, was forced at the last minute to
move to Kuneitra, in the Golan Heights, losing precious
time. This change in the Arabs' strategy was the outcome of
the British success in persuading Abdullah and Farouk to
collaborate.
The first part of the report was encoded
and wired from Beirut to the French consulate in Jerusalem
on May 12 omitting details that could have revealed that the
French had inside information. The same evening it was
passed on to Shiloah, Ben-Gurion's chief intelligence
adviser, with a comment added by the Israeli liaison
officers: "The information on the Arab forces was sent to us
by our French friends in Beirut. Their reports are usually
accurate."
The information received from the French
was crucial. Three days before the Arab invasion, Ben-Gurion
learned of the Arab decision to attack the new state;
Egypt's intention to join the attack; the size of the Arab
forces involved; the directions of the attacks; the nature
of the offensive; that Tel Aviv was to be the main target
and was to be bombed from the air. It can be ascertained
from previous occasions that on the following day a French
intelligence officer was sent from Beirut to Haifa to update
the Israelis face to face.
Apart from the report received from
Beirut, Ben-Gurion almost certainly received information
from the French through Moshe Sharett. Sharett had left New
York on May 9 aboard an Air France flight to Paris,
continued via Athens, and arrived in Tel Aviv late in the
evening of May 11. His daughter, Yael, who accompanied him,
recalls that he was met at the airport by several "familiar
faces," one of whom was Sasson, who, as mentioned above, had
arrived in Paris in early May to speed up the evaluation and
transfer to Ben-Gurion and Sharett of the intelligence
information received in Paris from Beirut. The meeting was
probably used to brief Sharett on last-minute decisions
taken by the Arab leaders in Damascus.
Late at night on May 12, 10 of the 13
members of the provisional Israeli government, by a majority
of six to four, made the historic decision to establish an
independent Jewish state, named Israel. On May 14, at a
ceremony held at the Tel Aviv Museum, Ben-Gurion declared
the establishment of the State of Israel. The following day,
the Arab forces invaded.
On November 7, 1945, Constantine Zurayk, a
diplomat in the Syrian Embassy in Washington, informed his
Foreign Ministry in Damascus of a conversation he had with
an American State Department official, who stressed that
whereas the United States was striving for a friendly
agreement between the Jews and Arabs in Palestine, Britain
was exploiting the conflict there to secure its control over
the Arab world and wouldn't stop until there was bloodshed
in Palestine. Two and a half years later, his warning came
true.
The writer is a professor in the
Department of Middle East Studies at Ben-Gurion University
of the Negev.
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