Small Wars Journal

Book Review: The Balfour Declation

Mon, 01/31/2011 - 5:01pm

The Balfour Declaration: The Origins of the Arab-Israeli Conflict

by Jonathan Schneer.

Published by Random House, New York. 

416 pages, 2010.

Reviewed by Commander Youssef Aboul-Enein, MSC, USN

Understanding the grievances and complexities of the Middle East requires

immersing yourself in the events of World War I and the way in which this war

was concluded.  It is vital to understand that the 1919 Versailles Conference

did not resolve the complex issues of World War I.  One item left undone was

what to do regarding the Ottoman Empire, which was on the losing side of this

conflict, and whose possessions were the subject of contention between Britain

and France.  Conferences undertaken include San Remo, 1920 and Cairo, 1921,

which created the modern states of Iraq and placed Egypt onto the path of

quasi-independence.  Historian Jonathan Schneer has written an excellent book

that untangles the more controversial documents regarding the Middle East,

chiefly the Balfour Declaration.  British Foreign Minister Arthur Balfour and in

reply to Lord Rothschild declared in 1917: "His Majesty's Government views

with favor the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish

people...  ...it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done to prejudice

the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine."

So begins perhaps the most controversial paragraph in diplomatic history that

has been the cause of much disagreement, strife and outright warfare that

continues to this day.

The book delves into the events leading to the Balfour Declaration, and how

this position was arrived at by the British Foreign Minister, Arthur Balfour. 

The author does an exemplary job un-packaging such controversial documents as

the 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement, a British and French agreement that divided the

Ottoman Empire into British, French, and Russian spheres of influence.  Perhaps

one of the more delightful chapters is the McMahon-Hussein Correspondence.  A

series of ten letters between British High Commissioner in Egypt Sir Henry

McMahon and Sherief of Mecca Hussein ibn Ali, attempting to reconcile territory

for an Arab Nation in return for an Arab Revolt against the Ottomans.  Schneer

makes a compelling case that McMahon's letters were translated imperfectly by

Ronald Storrs, with many errors in language from Arabic to English, for instance

there is a misunderstanding on the Arabic term willaya, in English does

this mean county, district, region, or city and environs?  Adding to this is

British having conflicting policies among British officials in London, Cairo, or

Delhi?  For instance, British officials in Cairo supported Hussein ibn Ali in

western Arabia; however Hussein's adversary Ibn Saud was sponsored financially

by British officials in India.  This is an excellent volume for those wanting an

immersion into the complexities of modern Middle East political history.   

Commander Youssef Aboul-Enein is the author of "Militant

Islamist Ideology: Understanding the Global Threat," published in 2010 by Naval

Institute Press.  He is Adjunct Islamic Studies Chair at the Industrial College

of the Armed Forces in Washington D.C. and an expert on Violent Islamist Ideology

at the Joint Intelligence Task Force for Combating Terrorism.