Declaration To The Seven
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The Declaration to the Seven was a document written by the Sir Mark Sykes, approved by Charles Hardinge, the
Permanent Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office This is a list of Permanent Under-Secretaries in the British Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (and its predecessors) since 1790. Not to be confused with Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. Permanent Unde ...
and released on June 16, 1918 in response to a memorandum issued anonymously by seven Syrian notables in
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that included members of the soon to be formed Syrian Unity Party, established in the wake of the Balfour Declaration and the November 23, 1917 publication by the
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s of the secret May 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement between Britain and
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. The memorandum requested a "guarantee of the ultimate independence of
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". The Declaration stated the British policy that the future government of the regions of the
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occupied by
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"should be based upon the principle of the
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".


Significance of the Declaration

The Declaration to the Seven is notable as the first British pronouncement to the
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s advancing the principle of national self-determination. Although the British sought to secure their position by adopting the
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doctrine of
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, neither Britain nor France was prepared to implement their promises to the Arabs nor to abdicate the position won by victory over the Ottoman Empire. The document was not widely publicised. The Declaration may explain the action of General
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, who ordered a halt to the advance after the rout of Turkish forces outside Damascus and allowed the city to be captured by Arab forces in September 1918 after the Battle of Megiddo acting on instructions from London, thus bolstering the Arab claim to the independence of Syria whilst simultaneously undermining the French claims to the territory under the terms of the Sykes–Picot Agreement.


The Seven

* Rafiq al-Azm; * Sheikh Kamal al-Qassab; * Mukhtar al-Sulh; *
Abd al-Rahman Shahbandar Abd al-Rahman Shahbandar ( ar, عبد الرحمن الشهبندر; ALA-LC: ''‘Abd al-Raḥman al-Shahbandar''; November 1879 – July 1940) was a prominent Syrian nationalist during the French Mandate of Syria and a leading opponent of comp ...
; * Khaled al-Hakim; * Fauzi al-Bakri (brother of Nasib al-Bakri, both members of
Al-Fatat Al-Fatat or the Young Arab Society ( ar, جمعية العربية الفتاة, Jam’iyat al-’Arabiya al-Fatat) was an underground Arab nationalist organization in the Ottoman Empire. Its aims were to gain independence and unify various Arab te ...
); * Hasan Himadeh.


See also

*
Damascus Protocol The Damascus Protocol was a document given to Faisal bin Hussein on 23 May 1915 by the Arab secret societies al-Fatat and Al-'Ahd on his second visit to Damascus during a mission to consult Turkish officials in Constantinople. The secret societ ...
* Hussein-McMahon Correspondence * Anglo-French Declaration


References

{{Arab–Israeli diplomacy World War I documents British Empire Documents of Mandatory Palestine 1918 in British-administered Palestine 1918 documents