(Redirected from A. T. Wilson)'Sir Arnold Talbot Wilson' (
July 18,
1884 –
May 31,
1940) was the
British civil commissioner in
Baghdad in
1918-
1920. Wilson became publicly known for his role as the colonial administrator of
Mesopotamia (geographic
Iraq) during and after the first
World War. His high-handedness arguably led to an
Iraqi revolt in
1920. He was replaced by Sir
Percy Cox.
Early life and career
Wilson was born in 1884 and educated in England at
Clifton Public School, where his father was a headmaster. He started his career as an officer of the British army in
India. In
1904, he went to
Iran as a Lieutenant to lead a group of
Bengal Lancers to guard the British consulate in
Ahwaz and to protect the work of the D’Arcy Oil Company, which had obtained a sixty-year oil concession in Iran and was pursuing oil exploration in partnership with the Burma Oil Company. Wilson was an officer in the
32nd Sikh Pioneers, a regiment of the
Indian Army.
In
1907, Wilson was transferred to the
Indian Political Department and sent to the
Persian Gulf, where he served as a
political officer, soldier and senior administrator. In
1920, he joined the
Anglo-Persian Oil Company as resident director in the
Persian Gulf. He worked for the company until
1932. Wilson oversaw the discovery of the first oil site in the
Middle East,
Masjid-i-Suleiman in
1908.
World War I and afterwards
In
1915, as the British were moving troops from India into Mesopotamia through the Persian Gulf and Basra, Wilson was designated as the assistant, and then deputy, to Sir
Percy Cox, the British Political Officer for the region. Based in Baghdad, he then became the acting Civil Commissioner for Iraq.
During his tenure in Iraq, Wilson worked to improve the country's administration according to the principles he learned in India. In Wilson’s views, the priority was to reconstruct and stabilize the country, by establishing an efficient government and administration as well as a fair treatment and political representation of the various ethnic and religious communities (i.e., in the case of Iraq:
Arabs,
Kurds,
Persians, of religions such as Muslim
Shiite and
Sunni,
Christian and
Jews). In doing so, he was nicknamed The Despot of Mess-Pot". However, after the end of WW1, he found himself progressively opposed to other British officials, who believed that Arab countries should be granted independence under British supervision.
In
1919, during the Paris international conference which followed WW1, he was amongst the few who successfully recommended adopting the Arab name Iraq instead of the Greek name Mesopotamia. This name change was intended to cover the planned northern expansion of the newly created country under British Mandate to include the oil rich
Mosul region of
Kurdistan, in addition to the Mesopotamian provinces of Baghdad and Basra.
In April
1920, at the
Conference of Sanremo, the
League of Nations agreed to the British mandate over Iraq. In the spring and summer of 1920, various riots erupted across central and southern Iraq. These riots were often violently repressed by Wilson's administration. The total number of Iraqi casualties of these riots was estimated at 10,000 people.
In the summer of
1920, Wilson proposed a compromise, suggesting that
Faysal, the former King of
Syria, be offered the Iraqi throne. This proposal was intended to obtain support from the Iraqi population as well as by the British officials who favored a controlled Arab independence. It was eventually accepted by the British Government and by Faysal, but Wilson would not be there to participate in its implementation. The British government decided not to follow Wilson's views, and instead grant independence to Iraq. The British government removed Wilson from his position in Iraq, and knighted him. Deeply disappointed by the turn of events, he left the public service and joined
APOC as manager of their Middle Eastern operations.
World War II
In
1933, he was elected as MP for
Hitchin. Before
World War II, his outspoken views evoked a lot of criticism. The
New Statesman described him as "an admirer of
Hitler and an unscrupulous propagandist for
Mussolini and
Hitler".
However, at the outbreak of the war, he joined the
Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, becoming an air gunner in
37 Squadron of
Bomber Command. Still an MP, he was killed in action over northern
France, around
Dunkirk, on May 31st,
1940. He is buried at
Eringhem churchyard, half-way between Dunkirk and
St. Omer.
His book, ''S.W. Persia: Letters and Diary of a Young Political Officer 1907-1914'' (
1941) was published posthumously.
References
''Late Victorian: the life of Sir Arnold Talbot Wilson'', by John Marlowe.
''A Periplus of the Persian Gulf'' by Arnold Talbot Wilson.
''S. W Persia: Letters and Diary of a Young Political Officer 1907-1914'' by Arnold Talbot Wilson.
External links
★
Winning his spurs as a stoker -- this includes a photograph of Wilson, taken around 1916.