Nomoss
17th May 2016, 11:49 PM
'Imperial Hubris': 100 Years Since Sykes-Picot Massacred the Middle East
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160516/1039714134/loud-clear-sykes-picot.html#ixzz48yqyMlTX (http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160516/1039714134/loud-clear-sykes-picot.html#ixzz48yqyMlTX)
One hundred years since the signing of the Sykes-Picot agreement, the Middle East remains a deeply divided region. Radio Sputnik’s Loud & Clear speaks with journalist Hafsa Kara-Mustapha and author Richard Becker to discuss the legacy of a document that carved up nations for the benefit of colonial powers.
"The problem with this is that it puts together communities, ethnic groups, that were not naturally inclined to live together," she says. "What it really did, in effect, was set the region up for inevitable civil conflict.
European powers planned to exploit the region’s riches, oil in particular, and the while the United States was not directly involved in the Sykes-Picot agreement, it did benefit.
"[The US was] granted, in the final agreement, 23.75% of Iraq’s oil," Becker says. "23.75% went to each Britain, France, and the Netherlands, together, leaving 5% behind, of all of Iraq’s oil, and that went to a man named Calouste Gulbenkian, who brokered this deal.
Netherlands = Jews.
"That left Iraq with…0% of Iraq’s oil. Which is why Iraq, despite all of its great natural resources, in the 1950s was one of the most destitute, poorest countries in the world."
Sykes-Picot was followed shortly by the Balfour Declaration, a letter from UK Foreign Secretary James Balfour to Walter Rothschild, which laid the groundwork for the creation of a Jewish state in the Middle East.
"This lord in the British House of Lords indeed promised something that was never his, to people that were not all his, to the detriment of another people who were not even consulted about this," Kara-Mustapha says.
"The Balfour Declaration epitomizes imperial hubris and the idea that you can just dispose of any land to the detriment of its inhabitants in any way you see you fit, irrespective of the consequences."
While Western narrative paints the creation of Israel as a solution following the atrocities of the Holocaust committed by the Nazis during Wforld War II, Becker points out that it was more accurately the result of European anti-Semitism and attempts to prevent a revolution.
"Churchill was such a profound racist and imperialist, he believed that…all the problems that have been caused…has been a worldwide conspiracy for the overthrow of civilization," Becker says. "In all those cases what he’s saying is that it’s Jewish people who are responsible for what he regarded as terrible events in history.
I SAY BULLSHIT! Churchill Was a TOOL for/of the JEW!
"His answer and his reason for supporting the Zionism that he gave then…was that this would divert Jewish people away from revolution and in the direction of something else that could be very useful to the British Empire."
The effects of Sykes-Picot can still be felt today, as Western powers continue to invade and intervene in Middle Eastern affairs.
"I think this is the basis of capitalist warmongering. It’s supply and demand," Kara-Mustapha says. "You create the chaos for which you then go on and provide the arms, the mercenaries, the security firms, selling the arms to the two warring parties."
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160516/1039714134/loud-clear-sykes-picot.html#ixzz48yw7HsGF (http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160516/1039714134/loud-clear-sykes-picot.html#ixzz48yw7HsGF)
On May 9, 1916, the terms of the Sykes-Picot agreement (http://sputniknews.com/analysis/20151013/1028458888/france-britain-imperialism-middle-east-syria.html) were outlined in a letter between the British and French, with the actual deal signed one week later, on May 15, 1916.
The agreement, negotiated by British diplomat, Sir Mark Sykes and Frenchman Francois Georges-Picot, aimed to divvy up large swathes of the Middle East that were at the time under the control of the Ottoman Empire, as the West believed Ottoman control of the area would not last beyond the end of World War One.
The deal, which ultimately triggered a series of other similar agreements relating to control of the Middle East, loosely led to the creation of a border between modern-day Syria and Iraq, with many others arguing that it laid the platform for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine.
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/europe/20160509/1039321498/sykes-picot-anniversary-middle-east.html#ixzz48yyhtljj (http://sputniknews.com/europe/20160509/1039321498/sykes-picot-anniversary-middle-east.html#ixzz48yyhtljj)
In a recent op-ed for Le Huffington Post, journalist and historian Dimitri Casali reflected on France's historical role in creating the crisis in the Middle East, commenting on the 'political autism' of contemporary Western leaders in their attempts to destroy the region's secular regimes.
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/analysis/20151013/1028458888/france-britain-imperialism-middle-east-syria.html#ixzz48yzXGbB2 (http://sputniknews.com/analysis/20151013/1028458888/france-britain-imperialism-middle-east-syria.html#ixzz48yzXGbB2)
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160516/1039714134/loud-clear-sykes-picot.html#ixzz48yqyMlTX (http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160516/1039714134/loud-clear-sykes-picot.html#ixzz48yqyMlTX)
One hundred years since the signing of the Sykes-Picot agreement, the Middle East remains a deeply divided region. Radio Sputnik’s Loud & Clear speaks with journalist Hafsa Kara-Mustapha and author Richard Becker to discuss the legacy of a document that carved up nations for the benefit of colonial powers.
"The problem with this is that it puts together communities, ethnic groups, that were not naturally inclined to live together," she says. "What it really did, in effect, was set the region up for inevitable civil conflict.
European powers planned to exploit the region’s riches, oil in particular, and the while the United States was not directly involved in the Sykes-Picot agreement, it did benefit.
"[The US was] granted, in the final agreement, 23.75% of Iraq’s oil," Becker says. "23.75% went to each Britain, France, and the Netherlands, together, leaving 5% behind, of all of Iraq’s oil, and that went to a man named Calouste Gulbenkian, who brokered this deal.
Netherlands = Jews.
"That left Iraq with…0% of Iraq’s oil. Which is why Iraq, despite all of its great natural resources, in the 1950s was one of the most destitute, poorest countries in the world."
Sykes-Picot was followed shortly by the Balfour Declaration, a letter from UK Foreign Secretary James Balfour to Walter Rothschild, which laid the groundwork for the creation of a Jewish state in the Middle East.
"This lord in the British House of Lords indeed promised something that was never his, to people that were not all his, to the detriment of another people who were not even consulted about this," Kara-Mustapha says.
"The Balfour Declaration epitomizes imperial hubris and the idea that you can just dispose of any land to the detriment of its inhabitants in any way you see you fit, irrespective of the consequences."
While Western narrative paints the creation of Israel as a solution following the atrocities of the Holocaust committed by the Nazis during Wforld War II, Becker points out that it was more accurately the result of European anti-Semitism and attempts to prevent a revolution.
"Churchill was such a profound racist and imperialist, he believed that…all the problems that have been caused…has been a worldwide conspiracy for the overthrow of civilization," Becker says. "In all those cases what he’s saying is that it’s Jewish people who are responsible for what he regarded as terrible events in history.
I SAY BULLSHIT! Churchill Was a TOOL for/of the JEW!
"His answer and his reason for supporting the Zionism that he gave then…was that this would divert Jewish people away from revolution and in the direction of something else that could be very useful to the British Empire."
The effects of Sykes-Picot can still be felt today, as Western powers continue to invade and intervene in Middle Eastern affairs.
"I think this is the basis of capitalist warmongering. It’s supply and demand," Kara-Mustapha says. "You create the chaos for which you then go on and provide the arms, the mercenaries, the security firms, selling the arms to the two warring parties."
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160516/1039714134/loud-clear-sykes-picot.html#ixzz48yw7HsGF (http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160516/1039714134/loud-clear-sykes-picot.html#ixzz48yw7HsGF)
On May 9, 1916, the terms of the Sykes-Picot agreement (http://sputniknews.com/analysis/20151013/1028458888/france-britain-imperialism-middle-east-syria.html) were outlined in a letter between the British and French, with the actual deal signed one week later, on May 15, 1916.
The agreement, negotiated by British diplomat, Sir Mark Sykes and Frenchman Francois Georges-Picot, aimed to divvy up large swathes of the Middle East that were at the time under the control of the Ottoman Empire, as the West believed Ottoman control of the area would not last beyond the end of World War One.
The deal, which ultimately triggered a series of other similar agreements relating to control of the Middle East, loosely led to the creation of a border between modern-day Syria and Iraq, with many others arguing that it laid the platform for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine.
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/europe/20160509/1039321498/sykes-picot-anniversary-middle-east.html#ixzz48yyhtljj (http://sputniknews.com/europe/20160509/1039321498/sykes-picot-anniversary-middle-east.html#ixzz48yyhtljj)
In a recent op-ed for Le Huffington Post, journalist and historian Dimitri Casali reflected on France's historical role in creating the crisis in the Middle East, commenting on the 'political autism' of contemporary Western leaders in their attempts to destroy the region's secular regimes.
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/analysis/20151013/1028458888/france-britain-imperialism-middle-east-syria.html#ixzz48yzXGbB2 (http://sputniknews.com/analysis/20151013/1028458888/france-britain-imperialism-middle-east-syria.html#ixzz48yzXGbB2)