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With the withdrawal of Ottoman State from the Northern Iraq after the World War, Britain contacted with the local elements in order to control the areas where the Kurdish were living, especially in Mosul. The British administration in Iraq sent liaison officers to the region with the directives of London Government and began field work in order to be able to establish a satellite Kurdish state, including parts of Anatolia. The British administration in Baghdad, especially in Suleymaniye wanted to strengthen their dominance over Kurdish tribes by getting in touch with Kurdish tribal chiefs,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
With the withdrawal of Ottoman State from the Northern Iraq after the World War, Britain contacted with the local elements in order to control the areas where the Kurdish were living, especially in Mosul. The British administration in Iraq sent liaison officers to the region with the directives of London Government and began field work in order to be able to establish a satellite Kurdish state, including parts of Anatolia. The British administration in Baghdad, especially in Suleymaniye wanted to strengthen their dominance over Kurdish tribes by getting in touch with Kurdish tribal chiefs, making promises and providing money, weapons and equipment. Several negotiations were held between the Allies at the stage of partitioning the Middle East and creating new states there in the aftermath of the World War I. In the traffic of negotiations starting with the Paris Peace Conference, how to establish the states planned to be created in Syria and Iraq was put on the agenda during the secret diplomatic talks with both the Arabs and Frenchmen.
Autorenporträt
He was born in 1976 in Rize, in Turkey. He finished PhD. with the thesis "The Turk¿sh Diplomacy in the Process The Armistice Treaty of Moudros to The Peace Treaty of Sevres" in 2016 in Dokuz Eylul University. At present, Dr. Resul Yavuz continues his career as the principal at Republic Education Museum.