ABSTRACT

Off to the sidelines of the brutal western front of World War I was a nasty little campaign by British and India troops sent to secure Persian oil fields. Explaining what and how this happened in the early decades of the twentieth century goes beyond being just another history of a distant campaign in the 1914 to 1918 war. The highs and lows of what many British military planners in London considered to be a minor campaign in a distant theatre of operations proved to be a long, costly conflict the results of which still influence events today.

Oil and the Creation of Iraq describes how the policies of allied military leaders of the time resulted in pushing the Ottoman government into partnership with Germany and Austria during World War I, resulting in its disintegration and loss of its Middle Eastern territories. The book then describes how the political and economic aims of the nations involved in the Mesopotamian campaign influenced the fighting and subsequent creation of Iraq, a new nation with few defensible boundaries, but one sitting atop an almost inexhaustible supply of oil and gas.

part I|40 pages

Prelude to War

chapter 1|13 pages

The Eastern Question

chapter 2|9 pages

The Ottoman Empire

chapter 3|16 pages

Mesopotamia in 1914

part II|42 pages

Forces Shaping Prewar Foreign Policy

chapter 4|14 pages

Forces Shaping Ottoman Foreign Policy

part III|44 pages

The War in Mesopotamia

chapter 7|13 pages

War Aims of the Ottomans and Germany

chapter 8|13 pages

War Aims of Britain

chapter 9|16 pages

The War in Mesopotamia

part IV|42 pages

Creating Iraq

chapter 10|14 pages

Creating the Iraq Nation

chapter 11|14 pages

The Role of Oil in Forming Iraq

chapter 12|12 pages

From a British Mandate to Independence