"The First World Oil War (Book Review)" by Timothy C. Winegard

Similar documents
UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS General Certificate of Education Ordinary Level

Turkish Foreign Policy and Russian-Turkish Relations. Dr. Emre Erşen Marmara University, Istanbul, Turkey

National Security Policy and Defence Structures Development Programme of Armenia

Strategic Intelligence Analysis Spring Russia: Reasserting Power in Regions of the Former Soviet Union

THE WORLD IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

The Dispensability of Allies

In the Aftermath of World War I, Nations Were Forever Changed

Name Class Date. The French Revolution and Napoleon Section 3

The End of the WWI [and the] Beginnings of a New Canadian Identity

THE FUTURE OF TURKISH - RUSSIAN RELATIONS: A STRATEGIC PERSPECTIVE

World History since Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History

POL 135. Session #9:

GCSE HISTORY (8145) EXAMPLE RESPONSES. Marked Papers 1B/E - Conflict and tension in the Gulf and Afghanistan,

Imperialism (acquiring overseas colonies) was empire building. Raw materials, Markets for manufactured goods, prestige, political/ military power

5. Base your answer on the map below and on your knowledge of social studies.

One war ends, another begins

End of WWI. Treaty of Versailles

NERVOUS NEIGHBORS: FIVE YEARS AFTER THE ARMENIA-TURKEY PROTOCOLS

Europe and North America Section 1

On the Road to 2015 CAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION LEAD TO TURKISH-ARMENIAN RECONCILIATION?

The Road to World War One

The Road to World War One

Unit 3 Chapter 10. The First World War and Beyond

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS General Certificate of Education Ordinary Level

- CENTRAL HISTORICAL QUESTION(S) - WAS THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES DESIGNED TO PRESERVE AN ENDURING PEACE?

The Israel-Lebanon War of 2006 and the Ceyhan-Haifa Pipeline

A Program to Enhance Scholarly and Creative Activities grant would be used to conduct research for my current book project, 1945: A Global History.

The Nazi-Soviet Pact and Eastern Europe

1. Militarism 2. Alliances 3. Imperialism 4. Nationalism

Turkish - Armenian. Rapprochement: Renewed Interest? CAUCASUS REVIEW BY ZAUR SHIRIYEV*

Amsco Chapter 22. Guided Reading and Analysis: World War I. Key Concepts for Period 7. Name: Class Period: Reading Assignment: Ch.

Chapter 21: The Collapse and Recovery of Europe s

America and World War I Notes

Why did revolution occur in Russia in March 1917? Why did Lenin and the Bolsheviks launch the November revolution?

New Paltz Central School District Global History and Geography 10

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge Ordinary Level

Table of Contents. Sample Essay Questions and Answer Guide pg 38 Essay Hints by Week pg 39

AP European History Study Guide Chapter 26 v Long term cause nationalism Ø Ignite competition Ø Increases in empire central and eastern Europe

Social Studies Related Issue #2: Should nations pursue national interest? Chapter 5: National Interest and Foreign Policy.

Changes in Russia, Asia, & the Middle East TOWARD A GLOBAL COMMUNITY (1900 PRESENT)

Relief Situation of Foreign Economic Relations and Geopolitical Prospects of Azerbaijan

GRADE 10 5/31/02 WHEN THIS WAS TAUGHT: MAIN/GENERAL TOPIC: WHAT THE STUDENTS WILL KNOW OR BE ABLE TO DO: COMMENTS:

After the Cold War. Europe and North America Section 4. Main Idea

Chapter 12 Section 3 Indian Nationalism Grows. Essential Question: How did Gandhi and the Congress party work for independence in India?

Jeopardy Chapter 26. Sec. 3 Sec. 3 Sec. 3 Sec. 3 Sec. 3 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200

Chapter 16 Section 1 Notes: The Eisenhower Era

Report Volume I. Halle/Saale

Turkey and NATO in Retrospect: Hard to Classify as a Win-Win Relationship

Remarks of Andrew Kohut to The Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearing: AMERICAN PUBLIC DIPLOMACY IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD FEBRUARY 27, 2003

Official Statistics on Refusals to Entry for Foreign Citizens at the Georgian Border

Any response to Uri must factor in the Pakistani state s relationship with non-state actors.

Reviving an Ancient Route? The Role of the Baku Tbilisi Kars Railway

The Challenge of Grand Strategy

Research Report. Leiden Model United Nations 2015 ~ fresh ideas, new solutions ~

DUNSTERFORCE: A CASE STUDY OF COALITION WARFARE IN THE MIDDLE EAST,

WARM UP: Today s Topics What were the major turning points. in WW2? How did the Allies compromise with one another?

Describe the provisions of the Versailles treaty that affected Germany. Which provision(s) did the Germans most dislike?

Political Science 12: International Relations. David A. Lake Winter 2015

REGIONS OF THE WORLD

Japan s Pacific Campaign Close Read

TOPICS (India's Foreign Policy)

Modern History 2005 HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION. Centre Number. Student Number. Total marks 100. Section I. Pages 2 8

CAUCASUS 2008 International Conference Yerevan, Armenia. The U.S. and the Caucasus in 2008

WORLD WAR 1. Causes of WWI

It s a great pleasure for me to join you this evening at the French Residence.

EOC Preparation: WWII and the Early Cold War Era

Teachers guide 1: The start and legacy of World War II

Masters in Middle East, Caucasus and Central Asian Security Studies

"Irish Canadian Conflict and the Struggle for Irish Independence, (Book Review)" by Robert McLaughlin

America's Image Slips, But Allies Share U.S. Concerns Over Iran, Hamas No Global Warming Alarm in the U.S., China

An assessment of NATO s command of ISAF operations in Afghanistan

The EU in the Asia-Pacific: Crisis Management Roles?

AP WORLD HISTORY GUIDED READINGS UNIT 6: 1900-Present

Unit 7.4: World War II

Book Review. David L. Phillips, 2005, Unsilencing the Past: Track Two. Diplomacy and Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation, New York and

MARKSCHEME. November 2010 HISTORY ROUTE 2. Higher Level and Standard Level. international relations Paper 1 Peacemaking, peacekeeping

Grade 9 Social Studies. Chapter 8 Canada in the World

FIGHTING WWII CHAPTERS 36-37

Journal of Military and Strategic. Studies. Bradley Martin

1. In 1914, combined to drag Europe into a world war. 1. Among the powers of Europe, nationalism caused a desire to.

Unit 5: World War I and the Great Depression

Chapter 5: National Interest and Foreign Policy. domestic policy

MEHMET ZEKİ GÜNAY

Unit 5: Crisis and Change

OBJECTIVE 7.2 IRON CURTAIN DESCENDS THE ANALYZING THE EVENTS THAT BEGAN THE IDEOLOGICAL CONFLICT BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOVIET UNION

Out With the Old and In With the New: Competing Imperial Models and the Political Engineering Behind Creation of Iraq

World War I. The Great War, The War to End All Wars

Mod Civ CST/STAR Review. CLUSTER 3: CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF WORLD WAR 1 (Standards )

World History Unit 08a and 08b: Global Conflicts & Issues _Edited

I Can Statements. Chapter 19: World War II Begins. Chapter 20: America and World War II. American History Part B. America and the World

Report. Iran's Foreign Policy Following the Nuclear Argreement and the Advent of Trump: Priorities and Future Directions.

POST VISIT REPORT. 4 TH PAK-TURKEY SECURITY ROUNDTABLE (19-20 December 2012) FOR STRATEGIC STUDIES, RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS (ISSRA)

World War I. The Great War, The War to End All Wars

EMBARGO 00:01 GMT Tuesday 20 January 2009

HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION MODERN HISTORY 2/3 UNIT (COMMON) Time allowed Three hours (Plus 5 minutes reading time)

RAF100 - PRESS BRIEF P1

Eastern Europe. Operational highlights. Working environment. Armenia. Azerbaijan. Belarus. Georgia. Republic of Moldova. Russian Federation.


AS History. The British Empire, c /1J The High Water Mark of the British Empire, c Mark scheme.

Economic Inequality and Victory in War. James K. Galbraith Corwin Priest George Purcell

Transcription:

Canadian Military History Volume 27 Issue 1 Article 13 2-28-2018 "The First World Oil War (Book Review)" by Timothy C. Winegard Corbin Williamson Recommended Citation Williamson, Corbin () ""The First World Oil War (Book Review)" by Timothy C. Winegard," Canadian Military History: Vol. 27 : Iss. 1, Article 13. Available at: http://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh/vol27/iss1/13 This Book Review is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Canadian Military History by an authorized editor of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact scholarscommons@wlu.ca.

Williamson: "The First World Oil War (Book Review)" by Timothy C. Winegard 44 Book Reviews Timothy C. Winegard. The First World Oil War. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2016. Pp. 416. Timothy Winegard seeks to highlight the role of oil in shaping the First World War and the resulting peace arrangements by examining a little-known British military force sent to Baku, the capital of modern-day Azerbaijan, in 1918. 1 Drawing upon Australian, Canadian, and British sources, The First World Oil War argues that the war and its immediate aftermath created Anglo-American hegemony over world oil supplies. The centenary of the First World War brought forward a number of works on the war, with a particular focus on the conflict s origins. Christopher Clark s Sleepwalkers (2013) and Thomas Otte s July Crisis (2014) are two of the more prominent works. 2 Those authors who have dealt with the war s legacies have focused on topics such as veterans and commemoration. 3 In contrast, Winegard highlights the war s long-term geopolitical consequences by examining the struggle for oil supplies, which set in motion a number of contemporary challenges such as the heterogeneous origins of Iraq. While oil did not cause the First World War, the author shows how oil already played an important role in advanced economies by 1914 and shaped wartime strategy and operations. The Royal Navy s conversion from coal to oil for propulsion led Whitehall to acquire a controlling interest in the Anglo-Persian Oil Company. Unlike coal, Britain had few native oil supplies and had to find reserves elsewhere. The First World War witnessed the first instance of military operations focused on seizing territory for the oil beneath it. The British incursion into Mesopotamia in 1914, for example, sought to secure Ottoman oil supplies in modern-day Iraq. Winegard notes that this pattern has continued to shape military plans such as Operation Blue, the German assault into the Caucasus in 1942. 1 The views expressed in this academic research paper are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the U.S. government, the Department of Defense, or Air University. 2 Christopher Clark, The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914 (New York: Harper, 2013); and Thomas Otte, July Crisis: The World s Descent into War, Summer 1914 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014). 3 For a useful survey see Jay Winter and Antoine Prost, The Great War in History: Debates and Controversies, 1914 to the Present (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005). Published by Scholars Commons @ Laurier, 1

Canadian Military History, Vol. 27 [], Iss. 1, Art. 13 CANADIAN MILITARY HISTORY 45 The British sought to secure the oil fields of the Caucasus in the First World War, though without deploying a large force. Instead, Major General Lionel Dunsterville and 450 elite soldiers were sent to secure Baku s oil fields on the western edge of the Caspian Sea. Baku accounted for roughly half of worldwide oil production at the turn of the century and in 1918 continued to produce oil on a large scale. Russia s withdrawal from the war after the Bolsheviks began to seize power worried British leaders. Prior to their withdrawal, Russian forces in the Caucasus were linked with British forces in Mesopotamia and the Russian departure created a strategic vacuum into which the Germans or Ottomans might move. If Germany or the Ottoman Empire acquired the Caucasus resources, the crushing effects of the ongoing Allied economic blockade would be undermined. The Young Turks hoped that oil could resurrect the Ottoman Empire by uniting Turkic peoples throughout the Middle East. For their part, the Soviets wanted to secure the valuable oil reserves. Whoever controlled the Caucasus could threaten Persia and the Anglo-Persian Oil Company s holdings. As a result, the Germans, British, Ottomans, and Soviets all set their sights on the Caucasus, especially the Baku oil fields, in 1918 (p. 41). Winegard also demonstrates the critical role of Indian defence in British strategic planning. If German forces reached Persia, they would be in a position to assault the gateways to India, the crown jewel of the British Empire. While historians often treat the Middle East and South Asia as separate regions, Winegard shows that British leaders could not afford this luxury. They viewed the Middle East, the Suez Canal, and Egypt collectively as part of the western frontier that safeguarded India. Any growth in foreign influence in these areas weakened India s security from the British perspective. The First World Oil War makes a valuable contribution by highlighting the mental map through which British officials viewed the region. In response to these potential threats and the growing naval demands for oil, the British senior committee charged with oil policy determined in 1917 that Britain needed to take control as much as possible of global oil supplies (p. 101). The increasingly prominent place of oil as one of Britain s strategic interests was captured in a key July 1918 paper prepared by the Navy s oil expert Admiral Sir Edmund Slade, which is reproduced in an appendix. British officials also sought to arrange postwar British control of Middle Eastern oil fields and Prime Minister Lloyd George authorised the occupation http://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh/vol27/iss1/13 2

Williamson: "The First World Oil War (Book Review)" by Timothy C. Winegard 46 Book Reviews of Mosul with the intention of retaining control of the region in any peace settlement. As an initial step to securing the Caucasus, Dunsterville headed north from Baghdad in early 1918 with a small advance party. One of his missions was to mobilise irregular Armenian groups in the Caucasus which were already battling Ottoman forces in response to Turkish and Armenian atrocities in eastern Turkey. The wider region was home to a variety of ethnic groups, complicated by numerous external actors, whose disparate goals Winegard nicely summarises in a list (p. 130). Dunsterville s force, commonly referred to as Dunsterforce, relied heavily on experienced Canadian, Australian, and South African soldiers and initially reported directly to the War Cabinet, not the local commanding general. Initially, Dunsterville hoped to reach Baku in twelve days; however, internal squabbling and unforeseen setbacks meant it took seven months, from January to August 1918, for his force to arrive at its destination. During this delay, Ottoman forces launched an offensive into the Caucasus, which strained relations with their German allies who viewed operations against the British in Mesopotamia and Palestine as more important. In response, Germany reached a deal with Georgia, now threatened by Turkish forces, which gave Germany military access to Georgia. The Germans hoped to use Georgia as a springboard for their own offensive towards Baku. By July the Turks were within sight of the Baku oil fields, leading to a coup against the local Baku Bolshevik government. The coup leaders promptly invited Dunsterville into Baku where the Armenian population feared a Turkish occupation. The situation was complex: The Germans armed the Georgians, while the Bolsheviks countered by arming Muslims in Abkhazia, Chechnya, and Ossetia to invalidate German territorial claims. The British equipped the Armenians to withstand the Turks, while the Turks funneled weapons only to the Muslims of Azerbaijan to eradicate the Armenians (p. 199). However, just as Dunsterville reached Baku, he undermined his position by slandering his superior in Baghdad and then evacuating Baku in the face of a Turkish attack. Winegard relates how the Ottomans allowed Azerbaijani troops to enter the city where they massacred thousands of the city s Armenian inhabitants. Dunsterville was branded as a failure in the press and sent to India. After so much planning, preparation, and scheming, Dunsterforce turned out to be rather anticlimactic. Published by Scholars Commons @ Laurier, 3

Canadian Military History, Vol. 27 [], Iss. 1, Art. 13 CANADIAN MILITARY HISTORY 47 In the latter half of his book, Winegard surveys the role of oil in shaping the Versailles peace accords, specifically the British insistence on controlling Mesopotamia. He goes on to show the importance of oil in the creation of the state of Iraq during the 1920s. The work then highlights similarities between Britain s interwar Middle East policy and current day American policies in the region. Both nations struggled to find military solutions to local insurgencies in Iraq while at the same time combating violence in Somalia and Syria. He also demonstrates how arrangements created between oil companies in the 1920s and 1930s continue to shape the modern oil market. He traces another link between the two periods, arguing that the Taliban s ideological roots date to the First World War and harken back to oil (p. 267). The conclusion extends this contemporary focus, noting the role of oil in recent international events, while an epilogue highlights the importance of hydraulic fracturing on oil markets. Winegard convincingly demonstrates that the struggle for control of oil in the First World War and its immediate aftermath led to tensions and unresolved issues that still trouble the Middle East today. Winegard effectively argues for a prominent role for oil in understanding the First World War and the resulting peace settlements. His use of the Dunsterforce to draw out these themes works on two levels: exploring this little-known piece of First World War military history expands our knowledge of the conflict and the force s specific mission directly relates to the larger issues the author wishes to raise such as the ongoing competition for oil resources and oil as a source of conflict. The writing style is engaging and draws upon a number of personal accounts held privately to bring the narrative to life. This work is an important contribution to First World War history and is recommended for interested readers as well as undergraduate and graduate audiences. corbin williamson, air war college http://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh/vol27/iss1/13 4