Early British support '' (Hobart, Tasmania, Australia), in 1841 Early British political support for an increased Jewish presence in the
region of Palestine was based upon geopolitical calculations. This support began in the early 1840s and was led by
Lord Palmerston, following the
occupation of Syria and
Palestine by
separatist Ottoman governor
Muhammad Ali of Egypt. French influence had grown in Palestine and the wider Middle East, and its role as protector of the
Catholic communities
began to grow, just as Russian influence had grown as protector of the
Eastern Orthodox in the same regions. This left Britain without a
sphere of influence, and thus a need to find or create their own regional "protégés". These political considerations were supported by a sympathetic evangelical Christian sentiment towards the "
restoration of the Jews" to Palestine among elements of the mid-19th-century British political elite – most notably
Lord Shaftesbury. The British Foreign Office actively encouraged Jewish emigration to Palestine, exemplified by
Charles Henry Churchill's 1841–1842 exhortations to
Moses Montefiore, the leader of the British Jewish community. Such efforts were premature, and did not succeed; only 24,000 Jews were living in Palestine on the eve of the emergence of
Zionism within the world's Jewish communities in the last two decades of the 19th century. With the geopolitical shakeup occasioned by the outbreak of the
First World War, the earlier calculations, which had lapsed for some time, led to a renewal of strategic assessments and political bargaining over the Middle and Far East.
British anti-Semitism Although other factors played their part,
Jonathan Schneer says that stereotypical thinking by British officials about Jews also played a role in the decision to issue the Declaration. Robert Cecil, Hugh O’Bierne and Sir Mark Sykes all held an unrealistic view of "world Jewry", the former writing "I do not think it is possible to exaggerate the international power of the Jews." Zionist representatives saw advantage in encouraging such views. James Renton concurs, writing that the British foreign policy elite, including Prime Minister David Lloyd George and Foreign Secretary A.J. Balfour, believed that Jews possessed real and significant power that could be of use to them in the war.
Early Zionism Zionism arose in the late 19th century in reaction to anti-Semitic and exclusionary nationalist movements in Europe.
Romantic nationalism in
Central and
Eastern Europe had helped to set off the
Haskalah, or "Jewish Enlightenment", creating a split in the Jewish community between those who saw Judaism as their religion and those who saw it as their ethnicity or nation. The 1881–1884
anti-Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire encouraged the growth of the latter identity, resulting in the formation of the
Hovevei Zion pioneer organizations, the publication of
Leon Pinsker's
Autoemancipation, and the first major wave of Jewish immigration to Palestine – retrospectively named the "
First Aliyah". " approved at the 1897
First Zionist Congress. The first line states: "Zionism seeks to establish a home (
Heimstätte) for the Jewish people in Palestine secured under public law" In 1896,
Theodor Herzl, a Jewish journalist living in
Austria-Hungary, published the foundational text of political Zionism,
Der Judenstaat ("The Jews' State" or "The State of the Jews"), in which he asserted that the only solution to the "
Jewish Question" in Europe, including growing anti-Semitism, was the establishment of a state for the Jews. A year later, Herzl founded the
Zionist Organization, which at its
first congress called for the establishment of "a home for the Jewish people in Palestine secured under public law". Proposed measures to attain that goal included the promotion of Jewish settlement there, the organisation of Jews in the
diaspora, the strengthening of Jewish feeling and consciousness, and preparatory steps to attain necessary governmental grants. Herzl died in 1904, 44 years before the establishment of
State of Israel, the Jewish state that he proposed, without having gained the political standing required to carry out his agenda. Zionist leader
Chaim Weizmann, later President of the World Zionist Organisation and first
President of Israel, moved from Switzerland to the UK in 1904 and met
Arthur Balfour – who had just launched his
1905–1906 election campaign after resigning as Prime Minister – in a session arranged by
Charles Dreyfus, his Jewish constituency representative. Earlier that year, Balfour had successfully driven the
Aliens Act through Parliament with impassioned speeches regarding the need to restrict the wave of immigration into Britain from Jews fleeing the Russian Empire. During this meeting, he asked what Weizmann's objections had been to the 1903
Uganda Scheme that Herzl had supported to provide a portion of
British East Africa to the Jewish people as a homeland. The scheme, which had been proposed to Herzl by
Joseph Chamberlain,
Colonial Secretary in Balfour's Cabinet, following his trip to East Africa earlier in the year, had been subsequently voted down following Herzl's death by the Seventh Zionist Congress in 1905 after two years of heated debate in the Zionist Organization. Weizmann responded that he believed the English are to London as the Jews are to
Jerusalem. In January 1914, Weizmann first met
Baron Edmond de Rothschild, a member of the
French branch of the Rothschild family and a leading proponent of the Zionist movement, in relation to a project to build a Hebrew university in Jerusalem. The Baron was not part of the World Zionist Organization, but had funded the
Jewish agricultural colonies of the First Aliyah and transferred them to the
Jewish Colonization Association in 1899. This connection was to bear fruit later that year when the Baron's son,
James deRothschild, requested a meeting with Weizmann on 25November 1914, to enlist him in influencing those deemed to be receptive within the British government to the Zionist agenda in Palestine. Through James's wife
Dorothy, Weizmann was to meet
Rózsika Rothschild, who introduced him to the
English branch of the familyin particular her husband
Charles and his older brother
Walter, a
zoologist and former
Member of Parliament (MP). Their father,
Nathan Rothschild, 1st Baron Rothschild, head of the English branch of the family, had a guarded attitude towards Zionism, but he died in March 1915 and his title was inherited by Walter. Prior to the declaration, about 8,000 of Britain's 300,000 Jews belonged to a Zionist organisation. Globally, as of 1913 – the latest known date prior to the declaration – the equivalent figure was approximately 1%.
Ottoman Palestine The year 1916 marked four centuries since Palestine had
become part of the Ottoman Empire, also known as the Turkish Empire. For most of this period, the Jewish population represented a small minority, approximately 3% of the total, with Muslims representing the largest segment of the population, and Christians the second. Ottoman government in
Constantinople began to apply restrictions on Jewish immigration to Palestine in late 1882, in response to the start of the
First Aliyah earlier that year. Although this immigration was creating a certain amount of tension with the local population, mainly among the merchant and
notable classes, in 1901 the
Sublime Porte (the Ottoman central government) gave Jews the same rights as Arabs to buy land in Palestine and the percentage of Jews in the population rose to 7% by 1914. At the same time, with growing distrust of the
Young Turks (Turkish nationalists who had
taken control of the Empire in 1908) and the
Second Aliyah,
Arab nationalism and
Palestinian nationalism was on the rise; and in Palestine anti-Zionism was a characteristic that unified these forces. Historians cannot say whether these strengthening forces would still have ultimately resulted in conflict in the absence of the Balfour Declaration.
First World War 1914–1916: Initial Zionist–British Government discussions In July 1914, war broke out in Europe between the
Triple Entente (Britain, France, and the
Russian Empire) and the
Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary, and, later that year, the
Ottoman Empire). The
British Cabinet first discussed Palestine at a meeting on 9November 1914, four days after Britain's declaration of war on the Ottoman Empire, of which the
Mutasarrifate of Jerusalemoften referred to as Palestinewas a component. At the meeting
David Lloyd George, then
Chancellor of the Exchequer, "referred to the ultimate destiny of Palestine". The Chancellor, whose law firm Lloyd George, Roberts and Co had been engaged a decade before by the
Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland to work on the
Uganda Scheme, was to become prime minister by the time of the declaration, and was ultimately responsible for it. '', as published in the British Cabinet papers (CAB 37/123/43), as at 21January 1915 Weizmann's political efforts picked up speed, and on 10December 1914 he met with
Herbert Samuel, a British Cabinet member and a secular Jew who had studied Zionism; Samuel believed Weizmann's demands were too modest. Two days later, Weizmann met Balfour again, for the first time since their initial meeting in 1905; Balfour had been out of government ever since his electoral defeat in 1906, but remained a senior member of the
Conservative Party in their role as
Official Opposition. A month later, Samuel circulated a memorandum entitled
The Future of Palestine to his Cabinet colleagues. The memorandum stated: "I am assured that the solution of the problem of Palestine which would be much the most welcome to the leaders and supporters of the Zionist movement throughout the world would be the annexation of the country to the British Empire". Samuel discussed a copy of his memorandum with Nathan Rothschild in February 1915, a month before the latter's death. It was the first time in an official record that enlisting the support of Jews as a war measure had been proposed. Many further discussions followed, including the initial meetings in 1915–16 between Lloyd George, who had been appointed
Minister of Munitions in May 1915, and Weizmann, who was appointed as a scientific advisor to the ministry in September 1915. Seventeen years later, in his
War Memoirs, Lloyd George described these meetings as being the "fount and origin" of the declaration; historians have rejected this claim.
1915–16: Prior British commitments over Palestine In late 1915 the
British High Commissioner to Egypt,
Henry McMahon,
exchanged ten letters with
Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca, in which he promised Hussein to recognize Arab independence "in the limits and boundaries proposed by the Sherif of Mecca" in return for Hussein launching a revolt against the Ottoman Empire. The pledge excluded "portions of
Syria" lying to the west of "the districts of Damascus,
Homs,
Hama and
Aleppo". In the decades after the war, the extent of this coastal exclusion was hotly disputed since Palestine lay to the southwest of
Damascus and was not explicitly mentioned. The
Arab Revolt was launched on June5th, 1916, on the basis of the
quid pro quo agreement in the correspondence. However, less than three weeks earlier the governments of the United Kingdom, France, and Russia
secretly concluded the
Sykes–Picot Agreement, which Balfour described later as a "wholly new method" for dividing the region, after the 1915 agreement "seems to have been forgotten". This Anglo-French treaty was negotiated in late 1915 and early 1916 between Sir
Mark Sykes and
François Georges-Picot, with the primary arrangements being set out in draft form in a joint memorandum on 5 January 1916. Sykes was a British Conservative
MP who had risen to a position of significant influence on Britain's Middle East policy, beginning with his seat on the 1915
De Bunsen Committee and his initiative to create the
Arab Bureau. Picot was a French diplomat and former
consul-general in Beirut. Their agreement defined the proposed spheres of influence and control in Western Asia should the Triple Entente succeed in defeating the Ottoman Empire during World WarI, dividing many Arab territories into British- and French-administered areas. In Palestine, internationalisation was proposed, with the form of administration to be confirmed after consultation with both Russia and Hussein; the January draft noted Christian and Muslim interests, and that "members of the Jewish community throughout the world have a conscientious and sentimental interest in the future of the country." Prior to this point, no active negotiations with Zionists had taken place, but Sykes had been aware of Zionism, was in contact with
Moses Gaster – a former President of the English Zionist Federation – and may have seen Samuel's 1915 memorandum. On 3 March, while Sykes and Picot were still in Petrograd,
Lucien Wolf (secretary of the Foreign Conjoint Committee, set up by Jewish organizations to further the interests of foreign Jews) submitted to the Foreign Office, the draft of an assurance (formula) that could be issued by the allies in support of Jewish aspirations: In the event of Palestine coming within the spheres of influence of Great Britain or France at the close of the war, the governments of those powers will not fail to take account of the historic interest that country possesses for the Jewish community. The Jewish population will be secured in the enjoyment of civil and religious liberty, equal political rights with the rest of the population, reasonable facilities for immigration and colonisation, and such municipal privileges in the towns and colonies inhabited by them as may be shown to be necessary. On 11 March, telegrams were sent in Grey's name to Britain's Russian and French ambassadors for transmission to Russian and French authorities, including the formula, as well as: The scheme might be made far more attractive to the majority of Jews if it held out to them the prospect that when in course of time the Jewish colonists in Palestine grow strong enough to cope with the Arab population they may be allowed to take the management of the internal affairs of Palestine (with the exception of Jerusalem and the holy places) into their own hands. Sykes, having seen the telegram, had discussions with Picot and proposed (making reference to Samuel's memorandum) the creation of an Arab Sultanate under French and British protection, some means of administering the holy places along with the establishment of a company to purchase land for Jewish colonists, who would then become citizens with equal rights to Arabs. Shortly after returning from Petrograd, Sykes briefed Samuel, who then briefed a meeting of Gaster, Weizmann and Sokolow. Gaster recorded in his diary on 16 April 1916: "We are offered French-English condominium in Palest[ine]. Arab Prince to conciliate Arab sentiment and as part of the Constitution a Charter to Zionists for which England would stand guarantee and which would stand by us in every case of friction ... It practically comes to a complete realisation of our Zionist programme. However, we insisted on: national character of Charter, freedom of immigration and internal autonomy, and at the same time full rights of citizenship to [illegible] and Jews in Palestine." In Sykes's mind, the agreement which bore his name was outdated even before it was signed – in March 1916, he wrote in a private letter: "to my mind the Zionists are now the key of the situation". In the event, neither the French nor the Russians were enthusiastic about the proposed formulation and eventually on 4 July, Wolf was informed that "the present moment is inopportune for making any announcement." These wartime initiatives, inclusive of the declaration, are frequently considered together by historians because of the potential, real or imagined, for incompatibility between them, particularly in regard to the disposition of Palestine. In the words of Professor
Albert Hourani, founder of the Middle East Centre at
St Antony's College, Oxford: "The argument about the interpretation of these agreements is one which is impossible to end, because they were intended to bear more than one interpretation."
1916–17: Change in British Government In terms of British politics, the declaration resulted from the coming into power of
Lloyd George and his Cabinet, which had replaced the
H. H. Asquith led-Cabinet in December 1916. Whilst both Prime Ministers were
Liberals and both governments were
wartime coalitions, Lloyd George and Balfour, appointed as his Foreign Secretary, favoured a post-war partition of the Ottoman Empire as a major British war aim, whereas Asquith and his Foreign Secretary,
Sir Edward Grey, had favoured its reform. Two days after taking office, Lloyd George told
General Robertson, the
Chief of the Imperial General Staff, that he wanted a major victory, preferably the capture of Jerusalem, to impress British public opinion, and immediately consulted his War Cabinet about a "further campaign into Palestine when El Arish had been secured." Subsequent pressure from Lloyd George, over the reservations of Robertson, resulted in the recapture of the
Sinai for
British-controlled Egypt, and, with the
capture of El Arish in December 1916
and Rafah in January 1917, the arrival of British forces at the southern borders of the Ottoman Empire. Following two unsuccessful
attempts to capture Gaza between 26 March and 19 April, a six-month
stalemate in Southern Palestine began; the
Sinai and Palestine Campaign would not make any progress into Palestine until 31October 1917.
1917: British-Zionist formal negotiations Following the change in government, Sykes was promoted into the War Cabinet Secretariat with responsibility for Middle Eastern affairs. In January 1917, despite having previously built a relationship with Moses Gaster, he began looking to meet other Zionist leaders; by the end of the month he had been introduced to Weizmann and his associate
Nahum Sokolow, a journalist and executive of the World Zionist Organization who had moved to Britain at the beginning of the war. On 7February 1917, Sykes, claiming to be acting in a private capacity, entered into substantive discussions with the Zionist leadership. The previous British correspondence with "the Arabs" was discussed at the meeting; Sokolow's notes record Sykes's description that "The Arabs professed that language must be the measure [by which control of Palestine should be determined] and [by that measure] could claim all Syria and Palestine. Still the Arabs could be managed, particularly if they received Jewish support in other matters." At this point the Zionists were still unaware of the
Sykes–Picot Agreement, although they had their suspicions. One of Sykes's goals was the mobilization of Zionism to the cause of British suzerainty in Palestine, so as to have arguments to put to France in support of that objective.
Late 1917: Progress of the wider war During the period of the British War Cabinet discussions leading up to the declaration, the war had reached a period of stalemate. On the
Western Front the tide would first turn in favour of the Central Powers in
spring 1918, before decisively
turning in favour of the Allies from July 1918 onwards. Although the United States declared war on Germany in the spring of 1917, it did not suffer its first casualties until 2 November 1917, at which point President
Woodrow Wilson still hoped to avoid dispatching large contingents of troops into the war. The Russian forces were known to be distracted by the ongoing
Russian Revolution and the growing support for the
Bolshevik faction, but
Alexander Kerensky's
Provisional Government had remained in the war; Russia only withdrew after the final stage of the revolution
on 7November 1917. == Approvals ==