of Al-Askari in Jordan by
Paul Castelneau, 2 March 1918 When
World War I broke out, al-Askari first fought on the side of the Ottomans and the
Triple Alliance in Libya. His campaign started in the
Dardanelles, after which he received the German
Iron Cross and was promoted to General. After his promotion, he was sent to command the
Senoussi Army in Libya. At the
Battle of Agagia, al-Askari was captured by the British-led forces and imprisoned in a citadel in Cairo with his friend, and later brother-in-law,
Nuri al-Said. Al-Askari made one escape attempt by fashioning a rope out of blankets to scale the citadel walls. During this attempt, the blanket tore and al-Askari fell, breaking his ankle and leading to his capture by the guards. According to his obituary, al-Askari offered to pay for the blanket, as he was on friendly terms with his captors. Sometime after his escape attempt, al-Askari learned about the nationalist
Arab Revolt against the Ottomans led by the
Hashemite leader of the
Hijaz,
Hussein bin Ali, the
Sharif of Mecca. This revolt had been sponsored by the British and the Triple Entente to weaken the Ottoman Empire. In exchange, the British had promised, during the
McMahon–Hussein Correspondence, to create an Arab country led by Hussein. Upon learning about the Arab Revolt, and due to an increasingly hostile Ottoman approach to Arab affairs as embodied by the execution of a number of prominent Arabs for nationalist activities by
Jamal Pasha, al-Askari decided that this was precisely in line with beliefs he had and decided to join the Hashemite Revolt along with Nuri al-Said. At first, Sharif Hussein was hesitant to let al-Askari, a former general in the Ottoman army, join his forces, but eventually relented, and al-Askari was invited by Hussein's son,
Prince Faisal, to join in the fight against the Ottoman Empire. Al-Askari fought under Prince Faisal throughout this period up until the
fall of the Ottoman Empire, and participated in Faisal's
assault on Damascus in 1918. ==Governor of Aleppo and Iraqi nationalism==