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The Sykes-Picot Agreement
16 May
1916
1. Sir Edward Grey to Paul Cambon,
15 May 1916
I shall have the honour to reply
fully in a further note to your Excellencys note of the 9th instant,
relative to the creation of an Arab State, but I should meanwhile be grateful
if your Excellency could assure me that in those regions which, under
the conditions recorded in that communication, become entirely French,
or in which French interests are recognised as predominant, any existing
British concessions, rights of navigation or development, and the rights
and privileges of any British religious, scholastic, or medical institutions
will be maintained.
His Majestys Government
are, of course, ready to give a reciprocal assurance in regard to the
British area.
2. Sir Edward Grey to Paul Cambon,
16 May 1916
I have the honour to acknowledge
the receipt of your Excellencys note of the 9th instant, stating
that the French Government accept the limits of a future Arab State, or
Confederation of States, and of those parts of Syria where French interests
predominate, together with certain conditions attached thereto, such as
they result from recent discussions in London and Petrograd on the subject.
I have the honour to inform your
Excellency in reply that the acceptance of the whole project, as it now
stands, will involve the abdication of considerable British interests,
but, since His Majestys Government recognise the advantage to the
general cause of the Allies entailed in producing a more favourable internal
political situation in Turkey, they are ready to accept the arrangement
now arrived at. provided that the cooperation of the Arabs is secured,
and that the Arabs fulfil the conditions and obtain the towns of Horns,
Hama, Damascus, and Aleppo.
It is accordingly understood between
the French and British Governments that
- France and Great Britain are prepared
to recognise and protect an independent Arab State or a Confederation
of Arab States in the areas (A) and (B) marked on the annexed map,
under the suzerainty of an Arab chief That in area (A) France, and
in area (B) Great Britain. shall have priority of right of enterprise
and local loans. That in area (A) France, and in area (B) Great Britain,
shall alone supply advisers or foreign functionaries at the request
of the Arab State or Confederation of Arab States.
- That in the blue area France, and in the
red area Great Britain, shall be allowed to establish such direct
or indirect administration or control as they desire and as they may
think fit to arrange with the Arab State or Confederation of Arab
States.
- That in the brown area there shall be
established an international administration, the form of which is
to be decided upon after consultation with Russia, and subsequently
in consultation with the other Allies, and the representatives of
the Sherif of Mecca.
- That Great Britain be accorded
(1) the ports of Haifa and Acre,
(2) guarantee of a given supply of water from the Tigris and Euphrates
in area (A) for area (B). His Majestys Government, on their
part, undertake that they will at no time enter into negotiations
for the cession of Cyprus to any third Power without the previous
consent of the French Government.
- That Alexandretta shall be a free port
as regards the trade of the British Empire, and that there shall be
no discrimination in port charges or facilities as regards British
shipping and British goods; that there shall be freedom of transit
for British goods through Alexandretta and by railway through the
blue area, whether those goods are intended for or originate in the
red area, or (B) area, or area (A); and there shall be no discrimination,
direct or indirect against British goods o any railway or against
British goods or ships at any port serving the areas mentioned. That
Haifa shall be a free port as regards the trade of France, her dominions
and protectorates, and there shall be no discrimination in port charges
or facilities as regards French shipping and French goods. There shall
be freedom of transit for French good through Haifa and by the British
railway through the brown area, whether those goods are intended for
or originate in the blue area, area (A), or area (B), and there shall
be no discrimination, direct or indirect, against French goods on
any railway, or against French goods or ships at any port serving
the areas mentioned.
- That in area (A) the Bagdad Railway shall
not be extended southwards beyond Mosul. and in area (B) northwards
beyond Samarra, until a railway connecting Baghdad with Aleppo via
the Euphrates Valley has been completed, and then only with the concurrence
of the two Governments.
- That Great Britain has the right to build,
administer, and be sole owner of a railway connecting Haifa with area
(B), and shall have a perpetual right to transport troops along such
a line at all times. It is to be understood by both Governments that
this railway is to facilitate the connexion of Baghdad with Haifa
by rail, and it is further understood that, if the engineering difficulties
and expense entailed by keeping this connecting line in the brown
area only make the project unfeasible, that the French Government
shall be prepared to consider that the line in question may also traverse
the polygon Banias-Keis Marib-Shalkhab Tell Otsda-Mesmie before reaching
area (B).
- For a period of 20 years the existing
Turkish customs tariff shall remain in force throughout the whole
of the blue and red areas, as well as in areas (A) and (B), and no
increase in the rates of duty or conversion from ad valorem to specific
rates shall be made except by agreement between the two Powers. There
shall be no interior customs barriers between any of the above-mentioned
areas. The customs duties leviable on goods destined for the interior
shall be collected at the port of entry and handed over to administration
of the area of destination.
- It shall be agreed that the French Government
will at no time enter into any negotiations for the cession of their
rights and will not cede such rights in the blue area to any third
Power, except the Arab State or Confederation of Arab States without
the previous agreement of His Majestys Government, who, on their
part, will give a similar undertaking to the French Government regarding
the red area.
- The British and French Governments, as
the protectors of the Arab State, shall agree that they will not themselves
acquire and will not consent to a third Power acquiring territorial
possessions in the Arabian peninsula, nor consent to a third Power
installing a naval base either on the east coast, or on the islands,
of the Red Sea. This, however, shall not prevent such adjustment of
the Aden frontier as may be necessary in consequence of recent Turkish
aggression.
- The negotiations with the Arabs as to
the boundaries of the Arab State or Confederation of Arab States shall
be continued through the same channel as heretofore on behalf of the
two Powers.
- It is understood, moreover, that measures
for controlling the importation of arms into the Arab territory will
be considered by the two Governments.
I have further the honour to state
that, in order to make the agreement complete, His Majestys Government
are proposing to the Russian Government to exchange notes analogous to
those exchanged by the latter and your Excellencys Government on
the 26th April last. Copies of these notes will be communicated to your
Excellency as soon as exchange.
I would also venture to remind
your Excellency that the conclusion of the present agreement raises, for
practical consideration, the question of the claims of Italy to a share
in any partition or rearrangement of Turkey in Asia, as formulated in
article 9 of the agreement of the 26th April, 1915, between Italy and
the Allies.
His Majestys Government
further consider that the Japanese Government should be informed of the
arrangement now concluded.
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