The Baghdad Set_ Iraq through the Eyes of British Intelligence, 1941–45
71 Desert, became the first member of Stark’s staff, which was never large, meaning that everyone including Stark had to work ex ...
72 At the end of July 1941, Hanbury Dawson-Shepherd, the Defence Security Officer (DSO), released one of the most important secu ...
73 ities concerned to keep them under close observation and to submit a weekly report on each of them.^26 The occupation of Syri ...
74 After the armistice, as CICI became ever more expert at penetrating and analysing the forces at play in the newly configured ...
75 propaganda disappeared completely from the Iraqi street. There were no signs, however, of any attempts to boost the British c ...
76 wide range of subjects such as the reality of fascism, Soviet women, Murmansk, Soviet writers in the Red Army, Armenian worke ...
77 It is difficult to reconcile these facts with an obscure appendix, undated and unattributed, attached to a CICI summary dated ...
78 One of the most dangerous among them was Rashid Ali’s former econom- ics minister, Yunis Sabawi.^39 It turned out that Sabawi ...
79 who were responsible for the flooding of the country that so impeded the progress of KINGCOL during its advance on the Iraqi ...
80 paganda was made to subject these young people to discipline, to interest them in organized sport and physical training, and ...
81 expatriates of Egypt since the summer of 1939.^44 After disagreement with his SOE handlers over the editorial policy of the p ...
82 The question that arises out of Sereni’s dual role is of course that of the extent to which he may have been conflicted, sinc ...
83 the Defence Security Office [DSO] Iraq) in his clandestine work.^49 The curious thing about Sereni is that, as far as one can ...
84 those interned, the most dangerous on the British list remained at large. Nevertheless, the disconcerting effect of the arres ...
85 on the verge of starvation. Members of the local police shared their plight, so it would not have been difficult for an enemy ...
86 main commodity was tyres, stolen with great audacity from both civilian and military vehicles by highly organized criminal ga ...
87 Cornwallis to Eden, 6 June 1941, reprinted in Robert L. Jarman, ed., Political Diaries of the Arab World: Iraq, vol. 6 (193 ...
88 continuing on its own lines ‘a little apart.’ Stark, Dust in the Lion’s Paw, 119. Appendix to MEIC Summary 564, 26 July 1941 ...
89 Ibid., 4–5. See James R. Vaughan, The Failure of American and British Propaganda in the Arab Middle East, 1945–57: Unconquer ...
90 Jews in Modern Iraq (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2012), 112–25; Hayyim J. Cohen, ‘The Anti-Jewish Farhud in Bagh ...
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