The first publication of the report in Editor & Publisher magazine in December 1922. The publication was described as a "Suppressed Official Document of the United States Government."
The King–Crane Commission, officially called the 1919 Inter-Allied Commission on Mandates in Turkey, consisting primarily of an American delegation was a commission of inquiry concerning the disposition of areas within the former Ottoman Empire.[1]
The Commission began as an outgrowth of the 1919 Paris Peace Conference. The Commission visited areas of Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, and Anatolia, surveyed local public opinion, and assessed its view on the best course of action for the region. Originally meant to be led by French, British, Italian and American representatives, it ended as an investigation conducted solely by the United States government after the other countries withdrew to avoid the risk of being "confronted by recommendations from their own appointed delegates which might conflict with their policies".[2][3] With the withdrawal of other allied nations, the commission lost any real credibility.[according to whom?]
The Commission submitted its report to the Paris Peace Conference in August 1919. Its working being undercut from the beginning by France and the United Kingdom's pact, the Sykes–Picot Agreement, and colonialist designs, the Peace Conference had largely concluded the area's future by the time the report was finished.[4][5]
Context
At the Paris Peace Conference, groups of imperial nations such as France and Britain sought to divide the Ottoman Empire among themselves using the mandate system while anti-imperialist leaders such as President Wilson and Amir Faysal sought to oppose such plans.[6] The conference began in 1919. In the wake of World War I, the participants were exhausted and particularly interested in the fate of their imperial rival, the Ottoman Empire.[citation needed]
The French, in particular, had extensive claims in the Middle East. Since as early 1900, the French began to build relationships and claims on political, moral and economic grounds.[7] They created a role for themselves as the traditional protector of Lebanese Christians. The French supported the Maronites in Lebanon with missionaries and schools, deepening their relationship with the Christian religious community.[7] Many Lebanese Christians feared domination as a religious minority and vocally supported the French Mandate. This gave the French political credibility in the region.[citation needed]
Finally, French capitalists controlled 63% of the Ottoman Public Debt.[7] This economic tie made France very concerned about the fate of the Ottoman Empire. The French were adamant that because of their unique relationship with Syria, they should be one of the nations to receive a mandate in Syria.[7]
Meanwhile, after World War I, Arabs in Greater Syria, including Palestine, sought independence due to the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and global revolutionary activities, namely, the “year of travelling revolutions” across the North Africa and the Middle East.[8] They aimed to establish independent nation-states, inspired by President Wilson's emphasis on self-determination. The King-Crane Commission played a crucial role in evaluating their aspirations. Arabs relied on Wilson's assurances of security and autonomy, expecting democratic principles to guide the postwar period. They hoped for Western support to achieve self-rule, marking the end of imperialism in the Middle East. However, their disillusionment was palpable as reflected in the reactions during the King-Crane Commission, where "William Yale’s disappointed expectations of Arab nationalist enthusiasm... found insufficiently proven by the Arabs' lackluster emotional reactions.[9]
The French allied themselves with the British in order to press their claims.[citation needed] While the British did not have the same connection with the Middle East, they were still interested in expanding and defending their existing colonial empire. In what came to be known as the Sykes-Picot agreement, the French and the British agreed to divide the Middle East between the two of them after the war.[10] When they reached the Paris Peace Conference, this agreement made negotiation on the Middle East nearly impossible.[citation needed] When American diplomats proposed the King–Crane Commission to investigate popular sentiment in the region of Syria, both French and British diplomats greeted it with public approval, but behind the scenes the outcome had already been decided.[citation needed] Lord Snell criticized the British government's handling of Arab nationalism, noting that the King-Crane Commission report commented: "Arab nationalism in Palestine has been artificially puffed up by methods which the Government should never have allowed. Only a little firmness is needed to deflate it.[11]
The British also engaged in secret negotiations with the emir of Mecca in the Hussein-McMahon correspondence before the conference occurred.[12] Ultimately, this would cause the British to fall into poor standing with the Arabs because they would betray Arab trust by conducting simultaneous negotiations in the Sykes-Picot agreement and the Balfour Declaration.[13]
The Commission was originally proposed by the United States as an international effort to assess ''the state of opinion there with regard to [the post-Ottoman Middle East], and the social, racial, and economic conditions.''[14] The plan received little support from the other nations, with many claimed delays.[citation needed] The Americans gradually realized that the British and French had already come to their own backroom deals about the future of the region, and new information could only muddy the waters. So, the United States alone sponsored the commission.
The dispatch of the Commission, combined with Wilson's claim that the “nationalities which are now under Turkish rule should be assured an undoubted security of life and an absolutely unmolested opportunity of an autonomous development,” sparked optimism in the Arab world that the era of imperialism was coming to an end.[14] The Arabs united to form their political proposals, based on ideas of self-determination and minority rights.[14]
The Commission's effectiveness was hampered by the fact that it was the British army that actually protected them and controlled the translators, giving a skewed view of opinion where it was considerably easier to decry the French than the British.[citation needed] In spite of this, based on interviews with local elites, the Commission concluded that, while independence was preferred, the Americans were considered the second-best choice for a colonial power, the British the third-best, and the French easily the worst choice.[16]
Based on these interviews, King concluded that while the Middle East was "not ready" for independence, a colonial government would not serve the people well either.[citation needed] He recommended instead that the Americans move in to occupy the region, because only the United States could be trusted to guide the people to self-sufficiency and independence rather than become an imperialist occupier.[citation needed] From King's personal writings, it seems that his overriding concern was the morally correct course of action, not necessarily tempered by politics or pragmatism.[citation needed] The Republicans had regained control of the United States Senate in the 1918 midterm elections. In light of Republican isolationism, the probability of a huge military involvement and occupation overseas, even given British and French approval, was practically nil.[citation needed]
The British Foreign Office was willing to allow either the United States or Great Britain to administer the proposed Palestine mandate, but not the French or the Italian governments.[17] The point ended up being moot in any case, as Lloyd George and Georges Clemenceau, heads of governments of Great Britain and France, prevailed in drafting the provisions of the San Remo conference and the Treaty of Sèvres. Lloyd George commented that "the friendship of France is worth ten Syrias."[15] France received Syria while Britain would get Mesopotamia (Iraq) and Palestine, contrary to the expressed wishes of both the interviewees and the Commission itself.[16] In the United States, the report floundered with Wilson's sickness and later death.[14]
Delay in publication
The Report was not intended to be published until the US Senate actually passed the Treaty of Versailles, which it never did.[citation needed] As a result, the report was only released to the public in 1922, after the Senate and House had passed a joint resolution favoring the establishment of a Jewish National Home in Palestine along the lines of the Balfour Declaration.[citation needed] Public opinion was divided when it was learned that the Arab majority had requested an American mandate with a democratically elected constituent assembly.[18]
Conclusions regarding Syria, Palestine and Lebanon
The Commission's "Report upon Syria" covered the Arab territories of the defunct Ottoman Syria, then under the Occupied Enemy Territory Administration. This area covered would today encompass Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine and Jordan, as well as Hatay and Cilicia.
The commission's visit to the region was 42 days long, from June 10 to July 21, 1919; 15 days were spent in OETA South, 10 in OETA West, 15 in OETA East, and 2 in OETA North. With respect to OETA North ("Cilicia"), the Commission "did not endeavor to give thorough hearings... feeling that it is not seriously to be considered a part of Syria, and desiring not to open up as yet the question of the Turkish-speaking portion of the former Turkish Empire." The population estimates included in the report are as follows:[19]
OETA South
OETA West
OETA East
Totals
Muslims
515,000
600,000
1,250,000
2,365,000
Christians
62,500
400,000
125,000
587,500
Druses
60,000
80,000
140,000
Jews
65,000
15,000
30,000
110,000
Others
5,000
20,000
20,000
45,000
Totals
647,500
1,095,000
1,505,000
Grand Total
3,247,500
The Commission Report, which was published in 1922, concluded that the Middle East was not ready for independence and urged mandates be established on the territories whose purpose was to accompany a process of transition to self-determination.[citation needed]
The Commission hoped for a "Syria" built along liberal and nationalistic grounds that would become a modern democracy that protected the rights of its minorities.[citation needed] The Commission succeeded in convincing many of the educated, secular elite of this goal, but this didn't affect the negotiations at Versailles.[citation needed] Historian James Gelvin believes that the Commission actually weakened the stature of the pro-Western elites in Syria, as their vocal support of complete independence made no impact upon the result.[20] The French Mandate of Syria was the result regardless, and the native elites were left either powerless or granted power only at the whim of the French. This helped set back the cause of an actual Syrian liberal democracy in Gelvin's view.[21]
Although the commission was sympathetic toward Zionism,[22] the Balfour Declaration's requirement that "nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights existing in non-Jewish communities in Palestine" led the commission to recommend "that only a greatly reduced Zionist program be attempted by the Peace Conference, and even that, only very gradually initiated."[23] The commission found that "Zionists looked forward to a practically complete dispossession of the present non-Jewish inhabitants of Palestine, by various forms of purchase".[23] Nearly 90% of the Palestinian population was emphatically against the entire Zionist program.[23]
The report noted that there is a principle that the wishes of the local population must be taken into account and that there is widespread anti-Zionist feeling in Palestine and Syria, and the holy nature of the land to Christians and Moslems as well as Jews must preclude solely Jewish dominion. It also noted that Jews at that time constituted only 10% of the population of Palestine.[3]
The Commission Report was skeptical of the viability of a Jewish state in "Syria".[citation needed] The logic of the Commission went along the lines that the first principle to be respected must be self-determination. It pointed out that "feeling against the Zionist program is not confined to Palestine", but "people throughout Syria" were also against the formation of a Jewish state.[23] It concluded that the only way to establish a viable Jewish state would be with armed force to enforce it. This was precisely what the Commission wanted to avoid, so they dismissed the idea, saying that Zionists anticipated "a practically complete dispossession of the present non-Jewish inhabitants to Palestine, by various forms of purchase".[23] That said, there would be nothing wrong with Jews coming to "Israel" and simply living as Jewish Syrian citizens, but noted "nor can the erection of such a Jewish State be accomplished without the gravest trespass upon the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine".[23] The latter statement was based on the assumption that an army of at least 50,000 would be required to establish Jewish ownership by force.[23] In respect to the creation of a Jewish state in the Middle East, the report cautioned "Not only you as president but the American people as a whole should realise that if the American government decided to support the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine, they are committing the American people to the use of force in that area, since only by force can a Jewish state in Palestine be established or maintained."[24]
About the international importance of Palestine, the report noted:
"The fact that the Arabic-speaking portion of the Turkish Empire has been the birthplace of the three great religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and that Palestine contains places sacred to all three, makes inevitably a center of interest and concern for the whole civilised world. No solution which is merely local or has only a single people in mind can avail."[25]
Narrating the fear felt by Christians and Muslims over their holy places, it mentions: "With the best possible intentions, it may be doubted whether the Jews could possibly seem to either Christians or Moslems proper guardians of the holy places, or custodians of the Holy Land as a whole. ..... The places which are most sacred to Christians-those having to do with Jesus-and which are also sacred to Moslems, are not only not sacred to Jews, but abhorrent to them. It is simply impossible, under those circumstances, for Moslems and Christians to feel satisfied to have these places in Jewish hands, or under the custody of Jews."[23] The Commission recommended to include Palestine in a united Syrian State, the holy places being cared for by an International and Inter-religious Commission, in which also the Jews would have representation. All Syria should become under a single Mandate, led by a Power desired by the people, with America as first choice.[23]
Results of the petitions received
The King-Crane commission created "the first-ever survey of Arab public opinion," but its results went largely unheeded.[26] The table below shows results of the petitions received from OETA South (became Palestine), OETA West (became Lebanon and Western Syria) and OETA East (became Syria and Transjordan).[27]
OETA South
OETA West
OETA East
Syria Complete
No.
Per Cent.
No.
Per Cent.
No.
Per Cent
No.
Per Cent
Total Number of Petitions Received:
260
446
1157
1863
A—Territorial Limits:
1. For United Syria
221
85.0
187
41.9
1022
94.3
1500
80.4
2. For Separate Palestine
3
1.1
1
0.22
2
0.17
6
0.32
3. For Separate Palestine under British if French have Syrian Mandate
1
0.3
0
1
0.08
2
0.1
4. For Autonomous Palestine within Syrian State
24
9.2
0
0
24
1.29
5. For Independent Greater Lebanon
0
196
43.9
7
0.6
203
10.9
6. Against Independent Greater Lebanon
0
108
24.2
954
82.0
1062
57.0
7. For Autonomous Lebanon with Syrian State
0
33
7.4
0
33
1.76
8. For Inclusion of Bekaa with Damascus
0
1
0.22
3
0.25
4
0.21
9. For Inclusion of Bekaa with Lebanon
0
7
1.5
4
0.34
11
0.59
10. For Inclusion of Cilicia with Armenian State
0
3
0.67
0
3
0.16
11. For Inclusion of Cilicia with Syrian State
0
2
0.45
0
2
0.1
B—Independence:
1. For Absolute Independence of Syria
174
67.0
130
29.1
1066
92.2
1370
73.5
2. For Independence of Iraq (Mesopotamia)
26
10
76
17
976
84.3
1278
68.5
3. For Independence of all Arab Countries
30
11.5
9
2
58
5.0
97
5.2
C—Form of Government:
1. For Democratic Kingdom
5
1.9
96
21.5
1006
87.0
1107
59.3
2. For Emir Feisal as King
2
0.8
95
21.2
1005
86.9
1102
59
3. For Democratic Representative Government
0
26
5.8
8
0.68
34
1.82
4. For Guarding of Rights of Minorities
4
1.5
19
4.2
1000
86.5
1023
54.9
5. Arabic to be Official Language
10
3.8
0
1
0.08
5
0.27
6. For Abolition of Foreign Capitulations
5
1.9
0
0
10
53
7. For Autonomy for all provinces of Syria
0
13
2.9
1
0.08
19
1.02
D—Choice of Mandate:
1. British—
a. For British Mandate
48
18.4
4
0.9
14
1.2
66
3.53
b. For British Mandate if mandate is obligatory
0
0
0
0
c. For British “Assistance”
0
4
0.9
0
4
0.21
Total British First Choice
48
18.4
8
1.8
14
1.2
70
3.75
d. For British Mandate as second choice
2
0.8
26
5.8
13
1.1
41
2.19
e. For British “Assistance” as second choice
0
70
15.7
962
82.2
1032
55.3
2. French—
a. For French Mandate
17
6.5
213
47.7
41
3.5
271
14.52
b. For French Mandate if mandate is obligatory
0
1
0.22
0
1
0.05
c. For French “Assistance”
0
1
1
0.08
2
0.1
Total French First Choice
17
6.5
215
48.1
42
3.6
274
14.68
d. For French Mandate as second choice
0
0
3
0.25
3
0.15
e. For French “Assistance” as second choice
0
0
0
0
3. American—
a. For American Mandate
2
0.8
36
8
19
1.6
57
3.05
b. For American Mandate if mandate is obligatory
3
1.1
3
0.66
2
0.17
8
0.4
c. For American “Assistance”
3
1.1
86
18.2
975
84.3
1064
57.0
Total American First Choice
8
3
125
28.0
996
86.1
1129
60.5
d. For American Mandate as second choice
5
1.9
3
0.66
4
0.34
8
0.4
e. For American “Assistance” as second choice
0
3
0.66
0
3
. 15
4. Choice of Mandate left to Damascus Conference
23
8.9
0
0
23
1.23
E—Zionist Program:
1. For Complete Zionist program (Jewish State and immigration)
7
2.7
2
0.45
2
0.18
11
0.59
2. For Modified Zionist program
8
3
0
0
8
0.4
3. Against Zionist program
222
85.3
88
19.7
1040
90.0
1350
72.3
F—Protests and Criticisms:
1. Anti-British—
a. General Anti-British Statements
0
2
0.45
1
0.08
3
15
b. Specific Criticisms of Administration
0
0
0
0
c. Protests against Interference with free access to Commission
0
0
0
0
2. Anti-French—
a. General Anti-French statements
4
1.5
114
25.5
983
85.0
1129
60.5
b. Specific Criticisms of Administration
0
12
2.7
12
1.04
24
1.29
c. Protests against Interference with free access to Commission
6
1.3
5
0.51
11
0.59
3. Anti-Arab—
a. General Anti-Arab Statements
7
2.7
23
5.1
5
0.51
35
1.87
b. Specific Criticisms of Administration
0
0
4
0.34
4
0.2
c. Protests against Interference with free access to Commission
0
0
0
4. Against Article 22 of League Covenant
0
78
17.4
955
82.1
1033
55.3
5. Against Secret Treaties, especially treaties dividing Syria
Even though the Commission's report did not lead to Palestinian independence, it acts as an important historical reference point for Palestinians to prove the existence of their movement, nationhood, and political goals as early as 1919.[14]
The Report
Its publication was initially suppressed for various reasons,[28] and later reported by the State Department that publication "would not be compatible with the public interest".[29] The Commission's report was ultimately published in the December 2, 1922 edition of the Editor & Publisher magazine.
^Harms, Gregory (20 March 2008). The Palestine Israel Conflict (2nd ed.). Pluto Press. p. 73. ISBN9780745327341.
^Nutting, Anthony (1964). The Arabs: A Narrative History from Mohammed to the Present. C.N. Potter. Britain and France backed out rather than find themselves confronted by recommendations from their own appointed delegates which might conflict with their policies
The proposal was viewed as childish by the French and British career officials, who did not believe that public opinion, in the European and American sense, existed in the Middle East. Nonetheless the British Prime Minister tried to make the best of it by attempting to get the commission to focus exclusively on the claims of France--and the resistance to those claims by the Arabs whom France sought to rule.... The British, like the French, had staked out an enormous claim in the Middle East, but Lloyd George successfully kept the British claims from being scrutinised. When President Wilson's Commission of Inquiry went out to ascertain the wishes of the Middle Eastern peoples, it did not go to Mesopotamia, where British India had instituted direct rule.
^Ingrams, Doreen (1973). The Palestine Papers, 1917–1922: Seeds of Conflict. George Brazziler. p. 51. ISBN0807606480. Minutes of the Eastern Committee, UK Archives, PRO CAB 27/24.
^Letter from Undersecretary Henry Fletcher to Secretary of State Leland Harrison, April 7, 1922. Record Group 59, General Records of the Department of State, 763.72119/7161, Microfilm Publication 367, Reel 439, National Archives and Records Administration, quoted in Restoring Lost Voices of Self-Determination, King-Crane Commission Digital Archival Collection, Oberlin College Archives, Ken Grossi, Maren Milligan, Ted Waddelow, August 2011
Smith, L.V., 'Wilsonian Sovereignty in the Middle East: The King–Crane Commission Report of 1919', in D. Howland and L. White, The State of Sovereignty, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009.
The Israel-Arab Reader: A Documentary History of the Middle East Conflict, edited by Walter Laqueur, 31-33. New York: B. L. Mazel, 1969.
Friedman, Isaiah. The Question of Palestine, 1914-1918: British-Jewish-Arab Relations. New York: Schocken Books, 1973.
Hourani, Albert. Syria and Lebanon: A Political Essay. London: Oxford University Press, 1946.
Ingrams, Doreen. Palestine Papers 1917-1922 Seeds of Conflict. New York: Braziller, George, 1972.
Khoury, Philip. Syrian and the French Mandate: The Politics of Arab Nationalism. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987.
Longrigg, Stephen Hemsley. Syria and Lebanon Under French Mandate. London: Oxford University Press, 1958.
Petran, Tabitha. Syria. New York: Praeger Publishers, 1972.
Tibawi, Abdul. A Modern History of Syria: Including Lebanon and Palestine. London: Macmillan and Co, 1969.