Arab Bureau

Arab Bureau terms of reference at the Interdepartmental meeting for establishment of the Bureau, 7 January 1916
Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Edward Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) (1888 - 1935, left); David George Hogarth (1862 - 1927) and Lieutenant-Colonel Dawnay (1878-1952), at the Arab Bureau of Britain's Foreign Office, Cairo, May 1918.

The Arab Bureau was a section of the Cairo Intelligence Department established in 1916 during the First World War, and closed in 1920, whose purpose was the collection and dissemination of propaganda and intelligence about the Arab regions of the Middle East.[1]

According to a Committee of Imperial Defence paper from 7 January 1916, the Arab Bureau was established to "harmonise British political activity in the Near East...[and] keep the Foreign Office, the India Office, the Committee of Defence, the War Office, the Admiralty, and Government of India simultaneously informed of the general tendency of Germano-Turkish Policy."[2]

Bruce Westrate wrote in his 1992 history of the Arab Bureau that "the agency has subsequently borne much of the blame for Britain's terrible mishandling of Middle Eastern policy during and shortly after World War I."[1]

  1. ^ a b Westrate, p.xii
  2. ^ Committee of Defence Paper, "Establishment of an Arab Bureau in Cairo", 7 January 1916, FO882/2 ArB/16/4, quoted in Polly Mohs, Military Intelligence and the Arab Revolt (New York, 2008) p. 34.